Occupy Monsanto Founder Fritz G. Kreiss: Momentum is Building for GMO Labeling

Posted on Mar 13 2013 - 9:39pm by Sustainable Pulse

Sustainable Pulse Interview with the Founding Head of Occupy Monsanto, Fritz G. Kreiss, on GMOs, Monsanto and much more besides.

Occupy Monsanto

Occupy Monsanto sprung up soon after the Occupy Wall Street campaign got in to full flow. What makes these campaigns similar?

Occupy Monsanto was simply created to recognize at an opportune time to highlight the endemic problems in our food and economic situations and how they relate. That, combined with my own training in natural health and nutrition, allowed for the chance to create a movement to highlight the corruption in our food system, along with the FDA, and the USDA themselves as well as raise awareness on many health and sustainability issues that people can make differences in their own lives by choosing foods, products, and sources that both increase their own health as well as that of the environment while also helping support the small scale farmers that need our support to protect them against the industrial mega-farms that have taken over in recent years.

Prof. Gilles-Eric Seralini’s 2012 study on GM Maize and Roundup made headlines worldwide – what is Occupy Monsanto’s view on the reaction to it from the mainstream media?

I was disappointed more than anything that it was met with such criticism without proper consideration, I have not read the entire study but even in the original statements and the brief abstract it was quite clear that there was very significant evidence pointing to the probability that these GMOs and the RoundUp that goes with them are carcinogenic to at least a degree. Even to those that reject the study altogether for not meeting some personal standards of “purity” forgets to pay attention to the fact that this is the only lifetime long term study of its kind ever done on Genetically Engineered Crops, outside of course the experiment being conducted upon all of us in the arena of daily life.

What forms of protest work best regarding opposing GMOs?

It’s my philosophy that the number one focus is to create awareness and help educate the public. First off, there is the strange truth that most people are not only unaware that they are eating GMOs, a great many still don’t know that such things even exist. I myself was once a big fan of the possibilities of biotech being used for good, I still remember reading about the magical superfood tomato that would be so enriched with nutrition that it could supply 100% of all our nutritional needs. That article was printed in 1992, saying that we’d have these tomatoes by the year 2000 or so; it’s now 2013 and not one single actual improvement in our foods has been made by genetic engineering and instead we’ve been bilked into switching over to seeds created to sell more pesticides that have since failed and the industries only response is to create new versions of the same technology so that farmers need to dump even more and more harmful pesticides and herbicides on our crops.

A couple of my biggest favorites have come from the Label It Yourself campaign and the very successful concepts started up by GMO Free USA’s campaigns to boycott the companies who fought labeling in order to keep the truth about what they put in their products hidden.

The Just Label It campaign is now finding its feet in states across the US, what is Occupy Monsanto’s view on the Prop 37 vote in California and the way forward for the campaign?

I see the prop failing as nothing more than a great shame due to a massive disinformation and propaganda campaign used to lie and delude the public. I’d love to see if there were actual lawsuits that took place to make the companies and organizations that lied to the public take responsibility for their illegal and immoral actions. The way forward is already coming as the momentum is still continuing to build in the aftermath and while we don’t know for sure what state will pull it off first or which one will be the tipping point to make it national and eventually start changing regulations in Canada and other countries as well. I don’t have direct contact with the most of the people that are running the campaign to get it back on the ballot for 2014 but look forward to hearing more and I certainly wish them the best of luck.

Who are the main Monsanto supporters in the US government and how can the general public stop them from pushing all of their pro-Monsanto policies through?

That’s a very complex issue in many ways. Monsanto is so enmeshed and entwined in many aspects of our government that it is more along the lines of everything in shades of gray and while Obama himself (I think with legitimate intention behind it at the time) promised to have GMOs labeled, obviously he has not only done nothing to do so but also put together one of the most pro-Monsanto administrations of the last 20+ years since Bush Sr. first put them in power.

Does Occupy Monsanto concentrate solely on opposing Monsanto in the US, if not then which are the most important parts of the World in the fight against GMOs?

Monsanto must be “occupied” wherever they go to ensure that they cannot further harm those who can’t protect themselves from a multinational behemoth, whether small scale farmers, peasants that get trapped in bad economic situations or are harmed through the work they do on farms owned by others, or the general public that deserves a healthy and nutritious food system. The US is certainly the key as we are also the source and main home of Monsanto et al, but other particularly important battlegrounds are India where they’ve already directly caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands, Africa where they would likely put thousands of innocents in economic servitude as they did in India, and South America where they’ve had dozens of activists killed over the years and is also one of the continents most covered in pesticides and GMOs.

What is next for Occupy Monsanto and its supporters – what is the ultimate target for you?

Currently I’m considering the possibility of making it into more of a long term actual full non-profit institution for promoting sustainable food, nutrition, and health related knowledge in regards to toxins both environmental and ingested. As for more direct goals I prefer to wait “until the water clears” as Lao Tzu said so that I/we can more clearly see the truth and know how to most effectively act. Essentially, I want us to win battles and causes as they come up and help make the world a happier, healthier, and more just place to live for all of us.

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Sustainable Pulse provides the general public with the latest global news on GMOs, Sustainable Food and Sustainable Agriculture from our network of worldwide sources.

7 Comments so far. Feel free to join this conversation.

  1. Up next we are having an “Eat-In for GMO Labeling” at the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition in College Park, MD on Monday, April 8:
    http://occupy-monsanto.com/eat-in-at-the-fda-to-label-gmos/

  2. Paul E. Nehrig March 19, 2013 at 15:53 - Reply

    Thank you so much for the work you do! I am so upset about this Monsanto stuff!

  3. linda bishop March 19, 2013 at 19:01 - Reply

    MISSOURI STATE SENATOR NASHEED HAS INTRODUCED A GMO LABELING BILL IN THE LEGISLATURE!

  4. Robert Hauser March 19, 2013 at 23:02 - Reply

    By another’s faults, the wise man learns;
    His own the fool as well.
    Heeding neither council the American earns
    His rightful place in Hell…. Robt John Spittler

    Tragically we live in a de facto dumbocracy—-this means that ten drooling mongoloid idiots have ten times the say in what the gubmint says as a sane and rational person. I draw a distinction between a person who is ignorant of the ugly facts about this country because they have been ruthlessly concealed from him but nonetheless has an honest and healthy curiosity and a person who is coprophagously and arrogantly stupid by choice and vocation and, as now in America, by proud national tradition….and in this palsied land today the latter grossly swamps out the former. “Educating the masses” is probably the single most obscene wastes of time and other resources and the most dismally and distastefully thankless tasks from here to the far side of Hell.

    If there be so much as a ray of hope of smashing Monsanto and every sociopathic thing those bottomfeeders symbolize, it lies in the CommonLaw courts and before the federal grand juries. I stand ready…but like Milton Wm. Cooper, I suffer not fools…

    From sequestered fold of the kindest heart
    ‘Gainst arrogant fool is loosed cruelty’s dart.

  5. angela March 24, 2013 at 17:25 - Reply

    In 2003 , I got really sick…almost die and doctors couldn’t find a reason for my illness… neither did I.. but Ca Prop 37 woke me up. Help educate the public… is the solution and ONE day, government can’t STOP the CROW … Same as Occupay Wall Street, one day sooner in front of all City Hall in every single USA town and city, people will demand our rights. No question

  6. sv May 14, 2013 at 09:53 - Reply

    Most evil company ever!

  7. sv May 14, 2013 at 09:55 - Reply

    Please join following page https://www.facebook.com/GmoFreeIndiaNow

  8. Concerned Collie December 9, 2014 at 22:48 - Reply

    Thank you everyone for all you do. Please keep up the excellent work.

    I want to share with you something you might find interesting.

    I live in Boulder, Colorado which has a reputation for being very liberal, very progressive, and very pro-organic. How I wish that the reality remotely lived up to the hype, the image. Boulder County appears to becoming quite anti-organic: GMO sugar beets are planted on Boulder County Open space, pesticides and herbicides are “liberally” used all over Boulder County, and pro-GMO articles and sentiments are frequently to be found in the press.

    For years, Boulder’s organic movement has been undermined by the GMO industry. In the blogs Boulder’s newspaper, the Daily Camera, there is an army of GMO trolls and shills who mercilessly attack anyone who dares to speak against GMOs. While organic food is abundantly available in Boulder, it is typically quite expensive — as it often is everywhere. (Funny how all of those “inputs,” those pesticides and herbicides may be indirectly keeping the costs high for real food, organic food. But the system is rigged for America’s fake agriculture, not real agriculture).

    Please look up the following in one of Boulder’s Independent newspapers: “GMOs: Boulder County’s November Surprise.” While this article doesn’t necessarily represent the opinion of the newspaper and its staff, it does reflect the very strong pro-GMO sentiment in Colorado. The author (a wonderful man in a lot of ways) thinks GMOs will save the world. Perhaps someday, but such certainly doesn’t seem to be the case in 2014.

    Hopefully, Boulder will one day be an authentically progressive leader once more. Never give up hope!

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