“Just in time for the holiday season, the ugliest car in the United States has ended a cross-country journey right here in the Big Apple. The News caught up with this and several other ‘fishy’ rides in lower Manhattan, for an educational lesson in nutrition – and how to manage a fleet of veggie cars on the streets of NYC.
It’s not everyday you spot a large vegetable on the roof of a car.
“We’re here with the fishy food tour. We’re touring across the Western United States to call attention for the need for labeling genetically engineered foods also known as GMOs”
The vegetables represent the most common genetically modified crops.
“Labeling GMOs is important not only to the health of our families and farms but also for our food democracy.”
A battle that Rica Madrid says has been ongoing with global GMO producers Monsanto and Syngenta.
“Monsanto would have you believe that GMOs are nutritionally equivalent to any other food that farmers can produce.”
But Madrid begs to differ.
“GMOs are quite different from traditional farmers methods of selective breeding and hybridization. GMOs are created in a labratory by scientists who can turn genes on and off, but we have no idea what the long-term impact is going to be.”
And for that reason Madrid and the Fishy Fleet crew started their campaign in Seattle in August and will end up in New York City sometime in December, in hopes of spreading awareness about labeling GMOs.
Source: Roma Villavicencio, KOBI 5
Also see:
+ ArkLaTex: “Fishy Food Fleet” hits the streets
+ WWLP: “Fishy Food Fleet” hits the streets
The other day Fishy Corn & Fishy Apple were in Tacoma, Washington and had their photograph taken by Associated Press photographer Ted S. Warren. Here are some of the places the photograph has been used on-line:
Washington residents may notice two cars unlike any others. A wide-eyed tan and green fish/beet known as “Rooty” and a cherry red fish/tomato known as “K-Sup” smile down at spectators from the tops of two cars.
The cars were created for the Right2KnowMarch against genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in Washington D.C. this summer and were driven across the country to Washington state in mid-August.
Nancy Metcalf, a local anti-GMO activist, has been driving K-Sup since August.
“[My car] features what was known as the ‘flavor savor tomato,’” Metcalf said. “It was the first genetically engineered food available on the market to consumers, but it totally failed because people were not trustworthy of GMO food at that time.”
The red tomatoes were injected with flounder fish genes to help support America’s industrial food chain to keep tomatoes ripe on the vine longer during cold months, Metcalf said.
Except the GMO chemicals injected into the soil inhibit the plant from absorbing all the minerals it needs to be healthy, Metcalf said.
In return people who eat the plant are also mineral deficient, Metcalf said.
The car also captures the attention of many onlookers.
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“One day I went out to run errands and thought it would take me about an hour and a half, but it ended up taking me about four hours because I ended up chatting with so many people about the car and about GMOs,” Metcalf said.
Reactions to the cars have been almost entirely positive with people smiling and waving as it putters down the road.
“We’ve only had one person loud and proud flip us the bird,” Metcalf said.
At first, Metcalf said she was very cautious driving over 55 mph. On windy days she can feel K-Sup wiggling on top of the car.
The key is to accelerate and take corners slowly as well as give cars in front a comfortable distance, Metcalf said.
K-Sup has been driven back and forth to Washington multiple times in order to raise awareness for GMOs in support of Initiative Measure No. 522, which would require GMOs to be clearly labeled and is featured on the general election ballot in November.
The other cars feature fishy-wheat, fish-corn and fishy-apple, fishy-soybean and fishy-sugar beet. They will tour the country a second time back to their proper owners in Washington D.C. by New Year’s.
The cars were designed by César Maxit and built by fiberglass and welding specialist David Jackson from Washington D.C., with funding from Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, according to the Label GMO Food website.
The sculptures on the cars are reinforced with steel and the shape was molded with chicken wire and papier-mâché with a fiberglass glossy finish, Metcalf said.
Metcalf will continue to drive the cars until after the November election, she said.
We asked you to send us nominations for the ugliest cars in your neighborhood, and you sent us hundreds of nominees, each one stranger than the next.
After much staff nausea and vomiting, we narrowed it down to the Top 10 (or twelve, but who’s counting?) semi-finalists… and then we turned it back over to you.
Now, the people have spoken.
Which car will take honors in this race to the bottom?
The winner is . . . Drum roll please . . .
The Beet!
Congratulations to Steve who spotted this unique ride. You’ve Beet-en the competition!
In keeping with this competition, the staff at Car Talk Plaza has awarded Steve something really ugly: a Car Talk mug with Tom and Ray’s faces on it. And, a signed photo. More ugly!
As for the car, turns out this is one ugly ride with a not-so-ugly purpose: educating the public about GMO foods. You can read about it right here.
Port Townsend organic food outlets support GMO labeling
By Charlie Bermant, Peninsula Daily News
PORT TOWNSEND — The Food Co-op and the Jefferson County Farmers Markets have endorsed an initiative on the state Nov. 5 general election ballot that would require the labeling of foods that contain genetically modified organisms, or a GMOs, in food outlets.
Port Townsend two major organic food merchants announced support of Initiative 522 last week.
If passed, it would require all genetically modified food sold in the state to be identified on its packaging.
“It’s important that people know what’s in their food and can make a choice about what they are eating,” said Ann Pougiales, vice president of the Jefferson County Farmers Market board.
Pougiales said that GMOs are not an issue at the farmers markets in Port Townsend and Chimacum, since organically grown produce is almost always free of modifications, aside from corn.
“Those selling at the farmer’s markets use organic seeds and know the source, so if there is any GMO food there, it is without the knowledge of the vendor,” she said.
Kathie Meyer, the Food Co-op’s marketing and outreach, education and marketing manager, said the requirement to label GMO food wouldn’t change how food manufacturers do business “because they are changing their labels all the time.
“We believe that everyone has the right to know what is in their food,” she said.
On Friday, the Co-op hosted an appearance from Nancy Metcalf, a farming activist from Van Zandt, a small Whatcom County town, who drove a car decorated with a representation of a giant tomato with the fins and tail of a fish on its roof and a host of pro-522 signs.
The car, a 2003 Honda Civic with 83,000 miles, was driven from Washington, D.C., and will be circulating around the Northern Olympic Peninsula over the next few weeks as part of the I-522 campaign.
Metcalf said the giant tomato fish weighs 300 pounds and consists of a steel frame covered by chicken wire and wrapped in papier-mache and fiberglass.
“When the car is parked outside of a store, people come up to me out of the blue and want to talk about the issue,” she said.
“So what would normally be a 90-minute shopping trip can take six hours.”
Pamm Larry — who started Proposition 37, the GMO labeling act that was voted down by California voters in 2012 — also will be appearing at speaking engagements in Port Angeles, Sequim and Port Townsend.
Major grocery chains and agribusiness interests spent $46 million fighting Propostition 37, the online Seattle PI said.
Larry will speak at:
— Quimper Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 2333 San Juan Ave. in Port Townsend, at 7 p.m. Friday.
— Nash’s Farm Store, 4681 Sequim-Dungeness Way in Sequim, at 1:30 p.m. Saturday.
— Little Theater at Peninsula College (Room J-16), 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. in Port Angeles, at 6:30 p.m. Saturday.
These events are free and open to the public.
Larry will speak about Prop 37, why it failed in 2012, and why she feels it is important to pass I-522.
Larry, a farmer, midwife and grandmother of three, said she was so concerned about the modern-day food system that she quit her day job to educate herself on GMOs and how to apply for a ballot initiative.
Annmarie Gianni Skin Care is funding the tour.
“I-522 will require that most foods containing GE [genetically engineered] and/or GMO ingredients must be labeled, and will give each of us the Right To Choose what we eat and feed our families,” the Community Rights Coalitin of Jefferson County says on its website, http://communityrightsjeffersoncountywa.org.
The initiative has drawn heavy opposition.
Supporters of the initiative have put together a $3.5 million war chest, the Seattle PI said last week.
Contributors include DuPont, Dow Agrisciences, BASF Plant Science and Montsanto.
The “No on I-522” campaign quotes Mike LaPlant, president of the Washington State Farm Bureau, as saying that “I-522 would force Washington farmers and food companies to implement costly new labeling, packaging, distribution and recordkeeping requirements that do not exist in any other state.”
The campaign against the measure also says that 522 would require fruits, vegetables and grain-based products to be labeled but would exempt meat and dairy products from animals fed GE grains.
• Nation Weighs In On State’s Genetically Engineered Food Label Law Initiative
By Cindy Teixeira, Nisqually Valley News Correspondent
Seen around the Nisqually Valley and Olympia quite a lot lately is “Poppy,” the fishy corncob which sits atop a small Ford driven by Florence Vincent.
It grabs attention wherever it goes just as it’s meant to do, she said.
“It’s so much fun to drive,” she said.
“Poppy” is one of five “fishy” cars that will soon be making their way around the state to bring awareness to Initiative 522, a law requiring genetically modified foods to be labeled.
The other cars are “K-Sup,” the fishy tomato; “Rooty,” a fishy sugar beet; “Goldie,” a fishy apple; and “Soja Girl,” fishy soy.
The cars are on tour across the country and several arrived in time to make an appearance at Seattle’s Hempfest last month.
Washington has become the battleground for GMO labeling since a similar bill in California was defeated. According to Vincent, the law was trounced by opponents of labeling because they spent a lot of money to frighten people into thinking labeling would cost consumers more at the register.
Vincent bought a box of American brand-name cereal on a recent trip to England and totes it around to prove her point. The box has no GMO label because, she said, the company decided to change the recipe in order to avoid having to label it.
“It only cost me $3,” she said.
I-522 means different things depending who you ask.
For two Yelm women, labeling provides information which helps them shop. To Rosie Sowles, labeling means freedom to decide for herself, while Kathy Peterson believes non-GMO food tastes better.
Opponents say GMO food is scientifically safe and there is no need to scare people away from it with labels.
Proponents say they want to know which food is genetically modified. Some will extol the evils of genetically modified food, but I-522 is not about food safety, per se.
I-522 separates itself as supporting a consumer’s right-to-know and leaves the crusade against GMOs out of the discussion.
In a recent email, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said she supports efforts to “promote agricultural research, food safety, nutrition education and consumer awareness.”
She supports consumer awareness “without imposing extraordinary burdens on producers.”
“During Senate floor consideration of the 2013 Farm Bill, Senator Sanders offered an amendment to allow states to have a label indicating that the food, beverage, or other edible product contains a genetically engineered or genetically modified ingredient.
“I supported this amendment, but it failed by a vote of 27 to 71,” Murray said.
Fishy Fleet tour driver Kate Bell, attorney, talks about the highlights of the coast to coast Fishy tour that got her to Seattle, GMOs and where she is going next on her world wide backpacking tour.
Traveled from DC to Missouri in mid-August with “The Fishy Fleet” (an offshoot of anti-GMO protest group Occupy Monsanto). It was a convoy of 17 activists piled into a 1960s-era RV and 5 “fishy” cars with friendly looking frankenfood sculptures on top…
Near Pittsburgh the fleet held up traffic when a toll booth attendant took a pix with her iPhone. One Ohio woman, who followed “Fishy Sugarbeet” into a gas station, proclaimed: “That’s the freakiest thing I’ve seen in Perry County — lately!”…
Outside Monsanto Corporation’s global headquarters in Creve Coeur, Mo., company stock holder and convoy organizer Adam Eidinger read aloud from his shareholder resolution asking Monsanto to “work with the FDA to develop food labeling guidelines for American consumers that discloses whether genetic engineering was used to produce the food”…
When asked for a statement, Monsanto says it supports voluntary labeling, but that mandatory labeling in the “absence of any demonstrated risks…could imply that food products containing these ingredients are somehow inferior to their conventional or organic counterparts.”
Riding around in a car topped with a giant half-vegetable, half-fish is bound to attract attention.
As Nikolas Schiller drives past the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., pedestrians gawk, kids point, and tourists snap pictures.
An oncoming driver pulls up in a stretch of slow traffic and asks, “What is it?”
Schiller explains it’s a Fishy Food Car and hands the man a card bearing a cartoon that asks, “Are we eating fishy food?”
It’s a visual pun. For opponents of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), there’s something fishy - suspicious - about putting genes from other species into food crops, and they want foods containing GMO ingredients to say so on the label.
Labeling laws
There are no fish genes in the GMOs on the market today, but nearly all of the corn, soybeans, cotton and sugar beets growing in the U.S. contain bacterial genes that help farmers control weeds and insects.
Schiller’s day job is with a D.C.-based public relations firm. But this summer his fishy apple car will join the fishy corn, soybean, sugar beet and tomato cars driving cross-country to Washington State, where a GMO labeling law is on the ballot this fall.
Momentum is behind them. Labeling laws were approved in Connecticut and Maine earlier this year.
Labeling everything containing a GMO ingredient would take a lot of ink. They’re in 80 percent of the foods on supermarket shelves, according to the Grocery Manufacturers Association, especially anything processed, in a bottle, box or bag.
Novel food
But are they bad for you? Schiller acknowledges that the only evidence of harm from GMOs is anecdotal, but he’s suspicious.
“This is a novel food. Our grandparents and previous generations didn’t eat this,” he said. “And now all of a sudden we’re seeing higher incidences of food and health issues. And so if [GMO makers] are saying, ‘Oh, everything’s safe,’ but nothing’s labeled, we really can’t trace the safety.”
Health authorities from the U.S. Institute of Medicine to the World Health Organization have said there’s nothing to fear from GMOs.
And the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says there is no substantive difference between GMO and conventional ingredients, so it can’t require labels.
On the other hand, products without GMOs may say so on the label, and these are now some of the hottest items in the supermarket. Last year, sales of certified-organic products grew 7.4 percent, twice the rate of the food sector as a whole. And foods with the “Non-GMO Verified” seal passed $1 billion in sales in 2011.
‘We should’ve been talking about this’
This has not gone unnoticed by the biotech industry.
This summer, the industry-sponsored Council for Biotechnology Information made an unusual, if understated, admission.
“We recognize we haven’t done the best job communicating about GMOs,” Executive Director Cathy Enright said in a press release.
She was more frank in person.
“We should’ve been talking about this for two decades,” she said, adding that in the last few years in particular, social media have taken opposition to GMOs to a new level. “We haven’t even been near social media.”
Transparency
But for opponents like Schiller, it’s not about a failure to communicate. For one thing, he wants to see the results of safety tests the companies submitted to the FDA.
“And they can say, ‘This is proprietary information. We’ve done our testing. We don’t have to disclose to the public,’” he said. “Anytime you have a veil over something, people are going to want transparency. People are going to want sunshine. And as long as you withhold that, people are gonna think, ‘This is kinda fishy.’”
Sunshine might be about to break through. For the first time, Enright said, the companies’ testing data will be available online at a new website: GMOAnswers.com.
“It’s gonna be technical,” she said. “But we’ve been asked, ‘Show us your data.’”
It’s part of a new pledge of openness and dialogue. Enright said the big seed companies will be opening their doors for people to come and see what they do. There will be dinners where supporters and opponents can sit down and talk. She said a panel of volunteers will be answering any questions the public might have.
“We believe that if people have the information at hand, that it won’t feel fishy; that they’ll be more comfortable with this technology,” she said.
But with a growing number of states considering GMO labeling laws, the industry has a lot of catching up to do.