I agree that the term GMO is too broad.
Cross pollination occurs in nature and doesn't need to happen on the DNA level. The plants work out if compatibility is sustainable.
Where I have an issue is putting toxic substances like Roundup into crops via viral manipulation of the DNA. We just don't know the long term hazards of DNA manipulation.
Secondly, there are sustainable answers that Agribusiness simply doesn't want to listen to. Rather than embrace biodiversity, they actually WANT monocrops or as close to it as possible which couldn't be worse for farmers, big and small. Ask French grape farmers in the 1850s-1870s... the aphid wiped out their crops and they had to "reconstitute" using the CA grape. Without it, we wouldn't have French wine.
Lastly, Monsanto has abused the legal process and been careless with their seeds. Seems they want their seeds to scatter to the winds... And if any of their patented DNA ends up in another seed, even part, they swoop in and not only confiscate all of that Farmer's seed stock, but because Monsanto in several instances is the ONLY seed vendor, that farmer now must buy his seeds from the very company that hijacked the farmer's field in the first place.
And they didn't need to use anything more than the wind and a complete lack of a moral compass.
My ears always perk when someone makes the argument for why they should HAVE to keep a secret. Rarely, short of state secrets, Christmas presents or Wedding proposals are there good reasons for secrets. And corporations? If they want to protect their trade secrets as they should be allowed, they should have to bear the responsibility for containment.
I LIKE knowing that the milk my family drinks has no rBST. I mean, the meat in most fast food does and so we don't eat fast food. As a result, my daughters didn't enter puberty early, like SO MANY of their classmates. Some were very far along as young as 8 years old. That used to be extremely rare, but a recent book talked about on NPR pointed to the fact that early puberty rates used to be 5%. Now it's around 18%. And adjusting for income levels, it got worse the farther down the ladder one went.
So, I have a real problem with Agri-business in this country that only wants to improve year over year and quarter to quarter and doesn't really care if the product they sell is quality or kills us. There are ways to make quality products that are attractive. Heck, the numbers bear that out. When people climb the economic ladder, they avail themselves of those opportunities to eat better...because they CAN.
What I find problematic is that there are tremendous economic opportunities being left in the market place because of entrenched bias against poor people. There are folks who truly believe that poor people shouldn't be ABLE to eat well as if that doesn't cost us all at some point.
I tend to take a more organic approach to problem solving. People have to make better choices. That's for certain. And when they don't, it's on them. That said, in many situations, there's just a dearth of choices and that's not okay, either.
Like so many issues, GMO labeling is just a part of a much larger "how we feed ourselves as a nation" issue. It's endemic of how Agri-business is clear that they want to make as much profit as possible and take the risk. If they lose ALL of the alfalfa seed (which would kill the beef industry in this country in about a minute), what are they going to say? Ooops?
Heck, the reason the Human Genome Project had to be finished by donations was that all the big sponsors found out that they couldn't patent human DNA and they pulled out. Any cures could be replicated in other countries, for maybe pennies a dose and they couldn't sue. So F curing cancer, Alzheimer's, ALS or the hundreds of other genetic disorders. But animal DNA CAN be patented which is why every strand of every DNA of just about every animal on the planet is patented or folks are racing TO patent it.
I don't need an 8 page label on every can of soup, but labeling is important. Ask anyone with allergies or someone like me who gets sick from MSG.
A free market is one where the buyers and sellers have low barriers to entry and both have full understanding of the transaction prior to completion and there is no coercion on either part to engage in commerce.
I don't understand why these corporations are so danged opposed to a free and open market...