The Top 20 Reasons not to Feed your Family Organic!

Recently the Mommy-bloggers paid by the organic industry lobby have been hitting the scientific and corporate communities quite hard with fear campaigns and ‘if you love your children’ guilt trips. Money is pouring in from all angles and even Hollywood stars are reading from their prepared scripts: “Pesticides and GMOs = evil”, and “Organic is what good mothers do”. As many others in the risk management world, I had tolerated their baseless scaremongering as meaningless, eco-religious feel-good pulp from the privileged classes that was better left ignored … until I started to see the mainstream media pick up on them and the marketing managers of many large food and restaurant corporations begin to cowardly bow to every little FoodBabeArmy email campaign. Ignoring them was a mistake as their use of anecdotes in the court of social media seems to have successfully replaced the role of academic evidence.

When I read the rather weak, low-ball piece in Mamavation (“Changing Lives One Mom at a Time”) called “The top 10 reasons to feed your family organic”, I thought: “This is nonsense made up to make people feel good about themselves”. It challenged me to come up with 10 reasons not to feed your family organic and within a few minutes I was at 15 reasons and shortly after, up to 25. I grouped them together for a round 20. If it had been so easy for me, why hasn’t the scientific community taken the time to shut these idiots up?

With these 20 reasons, I want you to consider your position on the use of crop protection substances:

  • Have you been manipulated by good story-tellers?
  • Have the scare campaigns been over-played by groups or individuals who have profited from fear-mongering?
  • Should we stop with these name-calling debates and activist marches and concentrate on important, evidence-based discussions?

I used a pro-organic campaigner’s template for this list to highlight the emotional blackmail used in the debate by the pro-organic lobby (“Are you a good mother?”).

Food is a very personal and very emotional issue for each individual. Concerns multiply when, as parents, we struggle with decisions that affect those precious to us. I totally get that, so I do not expect you to agree with all 20 reasons. But if you accept even 5 of the 20 reasons, then you should reconsider your position before you decide to share or retweet some feel-good argument from someone paid by the organic food industry. Stopping the spread of stupid is the first step in enlightenment.

Here are the first 10 reasons not to feed your family organic!

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You don’t have to agree with all of these reasons, but if you agree with some and still argue against conventional farming, you need to reflect some more!
  1. Too expensive and poor quality

    There are actually two reasons here and both call for more speculation than research. Why is organic food more expensive? Some argue that corporations like Whole Foods have spotted a vulnerable, rich market niche of aging Baby Boomers afraid of dying and willing to happily dispose of their income to rampant price gougers who help fund the scaremongering. Given the average lower yields from organic farming, the higher risk of crop failure tends to be priced into the market. Others would say “organic” has become a green designer label but this seems to contradict the second element, that organic is of a lower quality.
    Many pesticides are used to keep produce looking good and edible and preventing them from rotting on the branches. Food is emotional so for many, quality in appearance is important. Organic shoppers have other emotional stimuli which allow them to look beyond the inferior quality. I, myself, use no pesticides on the apples I grow at home and when I eat them, I core and slice them to get the wormy parts out. I accept that as part of my produce but I would not pay for such poor quality in a store.

  2. Promotes child labour in Africa

    This is an endemic issue in many African subsistence farming communities. See an ILO report that breaks down child labour in Africa according to gender and type of farming. The logic is quite clear. Only 5.4% of European agricultural land use is organic, while the market for organic is growing much faster. African family farms are organic by default (due to the high cost of pesticides and fertilisers as well as pressure from EU import/export regulators to deny African agriculture the benefits of using modern technologies like GMOs). While the focus of child labour in Africa has largely been on cocoa production from West Africa, the inability of Europe to be able to feed itself (due to an absurd reliance on medieval agricultural technologies) has led to an increase of African “organic” agricultural exports. The organi-gurus seem content in denying this correlation when they choose organic, pretending they are not actually supporting those little hands that are manually pulling out the weeds and breaking off pest-ridden leaves rather than going to school.

  3. Organic uses more land with lower yields, reducing biodiversity

    Loss of natural habitat, according to the UN, is one of the greatest threats to biodiversity. Depending on the crop and the region, organic farming tends to yield between 19-60% less than conventional farming (see a list of recent academic studies). I know that many organic lobbying organisations like IFOAM are trying to juice the numbers with their own studies (or the cute claim that more weeds are better for biodiversity), but the point is that organic yields are significantly lower in the best of situations and can be catastrophically lower during years with high pest outbreaks. If we were to convert all farms to organic, we would have to do two things – prepare for less food (the organic lobby is trying to bring in the food waste trick as the answer) or plough under more meadows and forests. With a growing global population, it would be advisable to rely on technology rather than eco-religion. Higher yields on less land, allowing for larger habitat restoration, seems to me a better solution.

  4. The organic industry uses unethical lobbying tactics

    marketingIn the Risk-Monger blogs, I have been cataloguing a long litany of organic industry funding of questionable activist science, non-transparent funding of food gurus and scaremongering and the outright witch-hunts that I could only describe as Neo-McCarthyism. If ever there were lobbyists who should be ashamed of their practices and code violations, it would be those acting on behalf of the organic food industry.

  5. Natural pesticides are toxic to bees

    One very common misperception is that organic food contains no pesticides. Of course they do, otherwise organic farmers would grow food only to feed the insects and remediate the soil. In most countries, pesticides are permitted in organic farming if they come from a natural source (and thus not of a synthetic origin). In some cases, these natural substances can be synthetically manufactured although it depends from one country’s standard to another’s. In order to combat pest infestations, fungus and mould, organic pesticides need to be toxic (another point the organic industry lobby has not been very forthcoming on). If it is less toxic, higher volumes will need to be used, as that is, simply put, the nature of farming.
    The eco-version of the naturalist fallacy assumes that anything natural is benign and acceptable, but many organic-approved pesticides are far worse for the environment that the well-tested synthetic substances. Pyrethrins, sulphates, nicotine … are all meant to kill, and being of a natural source does not mean they are harmless to the environment. I did a blog earlier this year where I looked at how two organic pesticides (Rotenone and Azadirachtin) were extremely toxic to bees and how the organic lobby was fighting to keep them on the market (see Reason 4).

  6. Natural pesticides are toxic to humans

    Dirty Dozen
    The Risk-Monger’s Dirty Dozen

    There are two ways to explain this. As in Reason 5, pesticides from a natural source are also toxic, in some cases much less tested because we rarely test natural chemicals. Rotenone, a nasty organic farming pesticide, has been clearly linked to Parkinson’s disease. I cannot begin to underline all of the health risks from ingesting pyrethrins.
    More interesting perhaps is the level of toxicity of naturally occurring pesticides, toxins and carcinogens that evolution has brought about. Bruce Ames has highlighted the difference of the health risk from exposure to naturally occurring pesticides as opposed to the much more benign exposure we risk from synthetic pesticides. The “You’re a Monsanto shill!” readers have all stopped reading by now, but have a look at Ames’ article and ask yourself what all of the fuss is about.

    About 99.9 percent of the chemicals humans ingest are natural. The amounts of synthetic pesticide residues in plant food are insignificant compared to the amount of natural pesticides produced by plants themselves. Of all dietary pesticides that humans eat, 99.99 percent are natural: they are chemicals produced by plants to defend themselves against fungi, insects, and other animal predators.

    I keep reminding myself that Ames was the darling of the environmental movement in the 1970s.

  7. Research shows no difference, at all, in taste, health or safety

    This one gets to the organi-gurus the most, especially as taste is an emotional sentiment and thus based on purely anecdotal perception (in other words, a “scientific fact”). But in blind taste-tests, time and time again, people could not spot the difference. As far as health and safety issues are concerned, look, people will believe what they want to believe, but any studies not done by the organic industry lobby simply cannot ground that in evidence. As religion, it is fine to believe that, but don’t call it science.

  8. Higher tillage releases more CO2

    CFS tillThere is a lot of debate among conventional farmers on whether no-till farming is better (I grew up on a disking farm!), but given that organic farmers do not use herbicides, they need to till the land more frequently to control weeds. This of course consumes more tractor fuel (although we want to believe organic farmers use solar-powered tractors), but also, increased tillage separates microorganisms in the soil, releasing carbon into the atmosphere (see a list of studies on carbon challenges for organic farming). I am going to get into the emissions from cow manure in another point, but few would argue with me that more CO2 is emitted per production unit from organic tillage than from conventional farming (no matter how scary organic industry lobbyists try to portray the “factory farm”).

  9. Anti-GMO / anti-pesticide research based on poor activist science

    co5erk4w8aafvlnLast year I coined the term “activist science” to describe a research malpractice. A traditional scientist gathers the evidence and draws a conclusion. An activist scientist starts with the conclusion and searches for evidence. In the last year we have seen, and I have exposed, some very ethically challenged activist science accepted into the mainstream, including scandals around the neonicotinoid /bee health research, the IARC glyphosate debacle and of course, the celebrated Seralini study. All of these were funded or influenced by organisations tied to the organic industry (see Reason 4).

  10. One year of pesticide residues is less toxic than one cup of coffee

    Once again, back to Bruce Ames (although he is in his 80s, someone should introduce him to the FoodBabe!). In an interview over 20 years ago, he stated:

    A cup of coffee is filled with chemicals. They’ve identified a thousand chemicals in a cup of coffee. But we only found 22 that have been tested in animal cancer tests out of this thousand. And of those, 17 are carcinogens. There are 10 milligrams of known carcinogens in a cup of coffee and that’s more carcinogens than you’re likely to get from pesticide residues for a year!

    But I like coffee! The point is that the risk from synthetic pesticides at the maximum residue exposure levels is practically meaningless. It is no surprise that caffeine is ten times more toxic than glyphosate – a lot of other natural chemicals are far more toxic but the organi-gurus are too busy scaring us to make us get this point. One little addendum to make today’s anti-pesticide campaign seem even more ridiculous: Ames made this statement 21 years ago, so considering that synthetic pesticides were much more toxic then than they are today, we might need to radically revise Ames comparison downwards (perhaps to the equivalent of a sip of coffee today).

If you can accept five reasons why you should not feed your family organic, and you still do, then you have some serious issues you need to settle (internally, and with the people paying you to spread the nonsense).

Part 2: Reasons 11-20

Mamavation top 10 alternative 2

  1. GMOs save lives

    Today (10 September 2015) the BBC entered the debate on whether the genetic modification of human embryos should be allowed. They made the argument quite clear, GM saves lives. Anyone who takes medicines every day or injects insulin to fight diabetes with the hope of enjoying more good quality years appreciates the achievements of biotechnology. Plant biology is no different, no matter how the opportunists try to scare it up with the M word or calling them “chemicals”. We have a technology that can increase food supply, reduce hunger, fight diseases like Vitamin A Deficiency that kills half a million children a year, and neo-Luddites are going around shouting slogans, destroying test fields and spreading falsehoods in their witch-hunts. History will look back and scoff at this period (which I call the Age of Stupid).
    The most ridiculous element of the organic lobby’s big jump into the GMO debate is that GM technology is a tool for reducing both organic and conventional pesticide use. It should be welcomed as a scientific advance for organic farming. Instead they have created a fiction, to milk the anti-Monsanto crusade, that GMOs lead to more pesticide use, and that glyphosate causes all sorts of diseases. It does not. A shameful pack of Luddites with blood on their hands.

  2. Hormone scaremongering is overplayed

    There has been a lot of fear about conventionally farmed livestock being given growth hormones and for many, the amount of hormones does not matter, but rather that it is not natural and hence is not supposed to be there. The organic industry lobby uses this chapter of the naturalist fallacy to get nervous consumers to act against conventional livestock farming, but the numbers are so ridiculously insignificant as to make this argument embarrassingly overplayed. See a clear example comparing levels of hormones in beef compared to potatoes, peas and cabbage. If you choose to eat beef and you are concerned about hormones, then stop eating … everything!

    This of course is nowhere even on the scale when one considers the level of endocrine disruptors found naturally in coffee, soybeans and chick peas (and we are not even talking about hormones from birth control pills and HRTs flushed into the water systems). See a useful table that puts stupid into its place.
    Sorry to be blunt, but hormones in beef is an over-hyped argument to prey on the fears of the vulnerable and insecure. “Hormone-free” is a meaningless marketing pitch by unethical snake-oil salesmen.

  3. Higher levels of pollutants in groundwater from organic fertilisers

    Organic farmers only use cow, pig and poultry manure and other natural composts to fertilise their fields. This runs off into surface and groundwater, increasing nitrate and acidic levels which can have enormous consequences on local ecosystems. See an EPA supported study. As organic farming increases to meet the growing demand, are we prepared for the onslaught to the environment? As well, creating a larger market for livestock manure at a time when we need to reduce meat consumption is counter-productive to our goal of reducing CO2 emissions to combat climate change.
    Conventional farmers have the option to use synthetic fertilisers which, when used precisely, are more efficient for direct nutrient management, emitting far fewer pollutants and reducing CO2 emissions. It is pure madness to reject this technology just because it is not natural, given the dire environmental consequences organic fertilisers are causing. And yet the organic lobby continues to tout the environmental benefits of their medieval farming practices.

  4. Organic farming has led to serious E. coli outbreaks and fatalities

    The over-emphasis on cow manure in organic farming has led to many serious human health crises, including most importantly, E. coli outbreaks due to fecal contamination from manure. In the US, E. coli affects thousands each year in everything from mild stomach discomfort to fatalities particularly among the vulnerable, elderly and disabled. A study comparing organic and conventionally farmed vegetables found E. coli traces on 10% of organic but only 2% of conventionally farmed vegetables. Indeed, bacteria are natural and organic consumers need to understand that natural is not always desirable.

    The worst recent case of E. coli occurred in Germany in 2011. The public panic and regulatory mismanagement created headlines during an outbreak that affected almost 4000 consumers, 800 with long-term illnesses, killing 53. Months later, after so many conventional farmers were falsely put under suspicion and had lost markets and international exports, the source of the outbreak was found to be an organic sprout farm (growing produce directly in fresh cow manure).
    Strangely, it was fortunate that the source of the crisis was an organic farm. If a conventional, industrial-scale farm had been implicated in the E. coli outbreak, the environmentalist activists would have run opportunistic campaigns to undermine public trust in the food chain and reduce fruit and vegetable consumption for a significant duration. In the German case, the hypocrites said nothing.

  5. Organic food causes increased cancer susceptibility

    “If you want to prevent cancer, eat at least five servings of fruit and vegetables per day!” We hear this often but what does it mean in an economy or region where a significant part of the population cannot afford to buy five fresh servings? Organic is a luxury brand for the wealthy or aspiring populations (why Hollywood celebrities have jumped onto the “Bash conventional farming” bandwagon). Organic has no health benefits (outside of psychological) – see Reason 7 – but rather, by artificially interfering with the agricultural marketplace and campaigning to handcuff conventional farming , the organic lobby is putting price pressure on the availability of fresh fruit and vegetables. While this does not affect the arrogant, affluent FoodBabes of the world, it denies a significant part of the population from access to cancer-fighting micronutrients.

    Bruce Ames did a study on this, finding that the lowest 20% income bracket in the US had the highest cancer rates. Excluding lifestyle issues like smoking, diet and the lack of access to fruit and vegetables was the highest contributing factor to cancers. Ames’ conclusion is to increase access to fruit and vegetables for the poorest population.

    I just think all this business of organic food is nonsense basically. We should be eating more fruits and vegetables, so the main way to do that is to make them cheaper. Anything that makes fruits and vegetables more expensive may increase cancer.

  6. Animals suffer when denied medicine

    This is the barbaric face of the organic lobby. Fearing the overuse of antibiotics in livestock management, organic activists like the FoodBabe are demanding that large retail and restaurant business source only drug-free meat. Animals, like people, get sick, and when a child is suffering from an illness, most parents would want to ease that suffering with medicines (including antibiotics if serious). So too with animals. That organic requirements or standards in many countries forbid such interventions means animals will suffer for some rich person’s narrow self-indulgence in steak purity. Let Vani Hari raise her own cows and pigs.

    Bottom line, if you choose organic because you think it is healthier and better for the environment, what the hell are you even doing eating meat??? The hypocrisy of the watermelon-type environmentalists outrages me. Worse, they then demand grass-fed beef or free-range chicken because they think it is better. All I can say is for you to go to an abattoir and watch your dinner get its throat cut and bled out, then tell me what a marvellous humanist you are.
    If people want to eat and enjoy meat, that is perfectly fine. Just don’t go about drawing lines where you are better than others because of your organic pretentiousness. That is just obscene hypocrisy.

  7. Reduction in agricultural yields creates more global food insecurity

    12650869_456429131226825_5137865773739698428_nThis is a no-brainer and perhaps the strongest reason we should prevent the selfish endeavour of encouraging organic farming. With a growing global population, yields per hectare need to be going up, not down. We have had the good fortune of not having any significant crop failures in the last few years – there has been little impact on global food reserves. But as more extreme weather conditions are expected in the coming decade, the idea that we can be complacent about food production levels is troubling.
    Besides weather and disease outbreaks, there are also man-made stresses that play havoc with global food security. A decade ago, environmentalists had pushed for increased biofuels production and as agriculture recalibrated for the new energy opportunities, food stocks decreased dramatically, prices soared and many poor economies faced crises. I have argued that the Arab Spring phenomenon was due to the fall-out from the food price increases that had affected most middle and lower income countries at that time.
    Rising demand for lower-yielding organic food production will irresponsibly add stress to the global food production levels. The organic lobby’s reply is smug and cynical: there is no problem, we just need to reduce food waste (… and lower population levels). But here is an issue to ponder. Consider tomorrow what would happen if Coca-Cola bowed to activist pressure and committed to sourcing only organic, non-GMO sweeteners. It would be impossible to produce sufficient maize for this one global client and prices in poor countries would go through the roof. What a great victory that would be!

  8. Organic accentuates social exclusion

    “I enjoy shopping in organic islands of food purity in suburbia since there are no lower class, noisy, smelly people. I feel better about myself when I eat organic because I want to have only the best for me and my family. I understand it is expensive, but quality always is, and I can afford it! Indeed, I am a total asshole!”

    Organic is just one piece of a nasty fabric I have referred to as the economic injustice of environmentalism. The Green Movement has influenced policies to help the rich, aristocratic class do well at the cost of the poor, working class. Whether it is subsidies for solar panels (paid in the form of higher rates on those who could not afford panels) or electric cars, the affluent do not think about the consequences of their actions on the poorer classes. As prices increase on food and choices go down, will the FoodBabe feel sorry for those without?

  9. Exporting anti-technology ideologies on poor economies is immoral

    Many of the comments I have read against my first ten reasons on the Risk-Monger Facebook page have been narrow and locally based. They only buy locally, don’t worry how their food demands affect global food security, they shun large global food companies, and expect that everyone in the world will do just fine making the same food decisions they make in their isolated economic wonderland. But putting organic, anti-GMO demands on poor, developing countries is immoral. I have lashed out regularly at Greenpeace for its environmental colonialism and attacks on the capacity of developing countries to try to have access to modern food technologies. Their campaigns against Golden Rice exemplify the moral vacancy of that horrid organisation.

  10. Organic campaigns create an unfair prejudice of conventional farmers

    neighboursPro-organic groups like Pesticides Action Network or Friends of the Earth are trying to portray conventional farmers as “industrial farming” or faceless factory farms. They have created a public villain, indiscriminately pouring chemicals down the throat of Mother Nature, mistreating poor animals and not caring about nature or our health, but only big, Monsanto-sized profits. This is contrasted by the saintly, bucolic image of the organic farmer, who loves the land, is concerned for our health and earns just enough to support his children who will lovingly take over the homestead some day. I have given examples in what I refer to as the vulgar vilification of farmers, and as someone who grew up on a small family farm, I resent the arrogance of these cosmopolitan zealots.

You are perfectly free to choose to eat organic if that makes you feel good and you can afford it or live with the consequences and contradictions – that is why we have religion. But if you feel compelled to tell others to do the same, share pro-organic arguments on your social media pages or try to influence policy-makers and companies to change widespread behaviour patterns, then you had better have your facts straight. Bear in mind that feeling good and wanting to believe certain claims does not count as evidence.

So I have proposed at least 20 reasons not to feed your family organic. If you disagree, you can either call me names (that seems to be the fashion today) or debate me on each of them. If there are at least five reasons that you can accept as valid, I would suggest that you also re-examine your position. It would be more intellectually honest to realise flaws in arguments than to continue to push bad ideas that have enormous consequences.

And please, people, I know for most of you, this is religion, but try to lighten up just a little!

 

19 Comments Add yours

  1. Reblogged this on Peddling and Scaling God and Darwin and commented:
    This highlights some of the dangers of the Organic food movement.

    Many make sense to me but would need to check them all out, but I bet it is better science than the Organic lobby

    Liked by 1 person

  2. HotScot says:

    Isn’t it strange that when you peel back the layers of the green movement, all sorts of skeletons come clattering out the cupboard.

    This organic nonsense bears a striking resemblance to the Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming rubbish (or Climate Change as it has been cunningly re-branded) largely driven by hysterical green zealots.

    The Age of Stupid is, indeed, upon us.

    Like

    1. riskmonger says:

      What I enjoy is the utter hypocrisy of these delightfully lost souls. They will yip and yap about the evils of big business without realising they have turned into that. Whole Foods is bigger than Monsanto, and the industry providing solutions for climate change? I refer to it as the environmental industrial complex.

      Like

  3. HotScot says:

    “They will yip and yap about the evils of big business without realising they have turned into that.”

    They know full well what they are doing. Ambition is ambition. They want to tell people what to do rather than have people exercise free will and achieve their own success.

    The greens deliberately load the dice with their emotive lobbying and underhand methods. They have perverted the best of capitalism, turning it to their own advantage whilst promoting a caring socialist façade. They have mercilessly lied and cheated their way through Polar Bears and Bees, presented wayward computer models as indisputable fact and terrorised the western world with our children’s futures.

    Distorted science is their route to success, and they have violated the reputation of a noble profession.

    Thirty years of NASA data proves it. Despite their collusion in the theft of scientific integrity, they couldn’t hide the results of their own study into their scientific data. The planet is flourishing. Greened by 14% over the last 30 years, unprecedented in recorded history, thanks to increased atmospheric CO2. And 70% of the greening is solely down to increased CO2, a net 9% benefit to the planet in that time.

    In the entire portfolio of predicted climatic disasters, the collective negative effects of increased atmospheric CO2 (if there are any) don’t come close to the positive benefits man enjoys today.

    I welcome, and congratulate you, on your efforts to work within the European Union to expose the green movement for what they are, utter frauds. Only last weekend, following the march for science, the office of a prominent sceptical climate scientist at the University of Alabama, Huntsville, was targeted by a gunman who loosed off seven shots at his office. An act of eco-terrorism.

    Please continue to write in the clear and forthright manner layman like me can understand. It’s important. We are the voters, and scientists and politicians are charged with the responsibility of communicating complicated matters in simple ways to us, honestly and factually. A detail frequently overlooked by other well meaning sceptics.

    I wish you well sir.

    Regards,
    David.

    Like

    1. riskmonger says:

      Thank you very much for your comments David – I whole-heartedly agree. These hypocrites stand on the shoulders of giants … and then piss down on them!

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Haley. W says:

      To Hotscot:

      Sorry Sir, I happen to disagree.
      If you really think there is nothing wrong with the planet at all, I challenge you to spend a month in Shanghai. Stroll up Nanjing Rd Pedestrian St every day so you can breath in the fresh air there. OR swim in all the lovely lakes that clean green New Zealand promotes to the world, with a thumbs up by a government who thinks like you. Hope you enjoy the experience! Please write back with your conclusions. I think you will find you have suddenly changed your mind! (Don’t reply till you have done it with evidence. Evidence!!!! We all love that word). That’s just two random countries. Let me know if you want some more lovely places to visit.
      From a hippy tree hugger who you would love to hate x
      (Based on comments here, this is really not a popular site is it?! Hmmmm I wonder why)

      Like

      1. riskmonger says:

        Thanks for your snarky reply and condescension Haley. Air pollution is a serious issue that most greens ignore (quite simply since people rarely donate for something that doesn’t make them feel good about themselves) so I applaud you for going outside of the narcissism of your tribe.
        But, … what the hell does your little rant have to do with organic food??? If anything, if you had read the blog, you would have to conclude that more organic will lead to more deforestation (unless you are assuming that the migrant workers who came to Shanghai would all return to the countryside to manually farm organic). Better land-use will improve air, allow for more greening around cities and improving the green-belt your home country has been blessed with (and which you use as the basis for your self-righteousness!)

        Liked by 1 person

      2. HotScot says:

        I was born in Hong Kong. Kindly don’t impose your sanctimonious attitude on people who have walked the walk.

        Densely populated conurbations are happy to squeal about the pollution they bring upon themselves because they are driven by a profit motive irrespective of the consequences. They then seek to blame everyone else for their malpractices and impose crippling tax burdens on the rest of the population to pay for it.

        Please don’t bleat to me about pollution levels in cities, I now live in London and the levels of pollution there are utterly inconsequential, yet still there is the cry for more restrictions, more taxes, more government intervention, in a non problem.

        And the rest of the country has to pay. Try and persuade a farmer in Highland Scotland that his air is dirty and he has to pay the price for it.

        And the same farmer will produce better quality products with scientifically proven insecticides than all the organic farmers using virtual slave labour pursuing the ideological green concept of farming, which was, historically, low paid labour.

        The socialist movement doesn’t know which way to turn. Reduce people to minimum wage to survive off the land and satisfy their ideological cravings, or create well paid jobs via technology and development and, rightly, abandon their 19th Century labour movement, which no longer exists.

        The pollution problems in Shanghai are a consequence of the regions attempts to catch up with the west, and why shouldn’t they? Nor do we have the right to dictate how they conduct their lives, far less restrict them from doing what’s necessary and learning the lessons we learned.

        Like

  4. Haley. W says:

    Dear Riskmonger (and Hotscot).
    Not sure how to respond to your first sentence, you seem to chide me and applaud me at the same time. Um…thanks?!
    My rant was spurred on by your friends’s quote “The planet is flourishing”, and the fact that he has seemed to lump all us greenies together. He needs to get out more. The planet has declined severely. Greenpeace is doing a lot in terms of trying to save our lakes and rivers etc etc etc. (Hey, if it wasnt for them, people wouldn’t have anything to argue about so they would probably just retire to bed early and in the next morning they might find they are expecting a baby. Surprise…more babies! More problems! So at least Greenpeace is making us think more. Hope they keep you up at night) So many problems…so many issues… so many people involved. Like you have observed….us Greenies are not all the same, so sorry if comments like “Isn’t it strange that when you peel back the layers of the green movement, all sorts of skeletons come clattering out the cupboard” make me cross!
    The Green movement has many layers. Not all are bad. Please talk to friend and tell him to stop being so negative.
    The Green movement, in my opinion:
    (listen up you two for the record)
    Is the best damn thing that is happening right now…it has the potential to save so many things that the people who are not green-minded take for granted.
    -Haley
    FYI- I’m on the fence about your organic sheet. Some points are valid…

    Like

  5. Haley. W says:

    Dear Hotscot (and Riskmonger)

    And you think I haven’t walked the walk too?!

    Before I go on please read above comment I wrote to Riskmonger.

    Nobody knows which way to turn really. If we did, we wouldn’t have this massive problem. I think the solution is to keep listening to each other. Forgive me if I think your attitude towards the green movement is too harsh.

    China is backtracking a lot of traditional practices to follow the green movement. I think the government is beginning to listen to its own people for once…
    “Nor do we have the right to dictate how they conduct their lives, far less restrict them from doing what’s necessary and learning the lessons we learned”.
    They don’t need the West, they are finding things out on their own terms….

    We may have to agree to disagree on “utterly inconsequential” pollution levels in London and what everyone is doing about it.
    My 2nd home is London…and I’m currently here till August.
    Want to meet up?!

    Again, I suggest you pull back on your largely negative attitude about the green movement, there are just too many levels to it, and too many people involved for it to be laughed into the ground completely.

    Have a good day, from the Bleater x

    Like

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