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RE: "Natural" Kashi cereal uses Roundup-ready... - 6/1/2012 11:09:46 AM   
Karmastic


Posts: 1650
Joined: 4/5/2012
From: Los Angeles
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Missokyst

FR
:) Soylent Green was a natural product.

lol! IT'S PEOPLE!


mmm, protein!

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RE: "Natural" Kashi cereal uses Roundup-ready... - 6/5/2012 4:03:55 PM   
outhere69


Posts: 1302
Joined: 1/25/2011
Status: offline
Yep, it's natural which is meaningless. The news was spread about that over a decade ago, IIRC.

The corn syrup guys lost the fight to be declared sugar.

I heartily dislike crops engineered with pesticide resistance because those same genes have entered other species, and the widespread us of Roundup is finally causing Roundup immunity among weeds. Just wunnerful. When it comes to other traits (increased yield, vitamin or mineral fixation, etc.) I don't see a problem. Man's been doing that for millenia (take a look at the evolution of corn.) I draw the line at suing farmers when those traits wander off to other crops, however.

(in reply to Karmastic)
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RE: "Natural" Kashi cereal uses Roundup-ready... - 6/5/2012 4:16:23 PM   
UniqueIntensity


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Watch Food Inc. if you would like a better handle on just how aggressively the makers of genetically modified soy are pushing to make natural seed obsolete.

(in reply to sophia37)
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RE: "Natural" Kashi cereal uses Roundup-ready... - 6/5/2012 7:08:42 PM   
LookieNoNookie


Posts: 12216
Joined: 8/9/2008
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quote:

ORIGINAL: kalikshama

Executive summary - "natural" is a meaningless marketing term; buy organic to avoid genetically modified soy and corn.



Kashi cereal's 'natural' claims stir anger

Kellogg is facing anger on social-media sites because of complaints that its popular Kashi brand of cold cereals doesn't live up to the company's "natural" billing on ads and boxes.

The controversy went viral a week ago after a Rhode Island grocer tacked a note to one of his store shelves, telling customers he wouldn't sell the cereal because he found out the brand used genetically engineered, non-organic ingredients. Photos of the note began popping up on Facebook pages and food blogs as some consumers claimed Kellogg was misrepresenting its cereal.

The soy in Kashi cereals comes from soybeans that have had a gene inserted to protect the soybeans from the herbicide Roundup, which kills weeds.

Kashi has done nothing wrong, says David DeSouza, Kashi general manager. "The FDA has chosen not to regulate the term 'natural,' " he says. The company defines natural as "food that's minimally processed, made with no artificial colors, flavors, preservatives or sweeteners."

Still, some consumers say they felt duped into believing the cereal was organic and free from genetically modified ingredients because of Kellogg's use of the word on packaging and its website.

They've taken to the digital streets with their anger, posting on Kashi's own Facebook page, as well as the pages of several organic cereal makers and organic stores.

Kellogg is not misleading people, says Barbara Haumann of the Organic Trade Association in Brattleboro, Vt. Consumers "are totally confused" and don't understand that the only way to get organic food is to buy organic, she says.

The shelf tag wasn't meant "to stir up trouble or cause controversy," says John Wood, owner of The Green Grocer, in Portsmouth, R.I. Wood is the grocer who posted the note.

He made the decision to remove Kashi after reading a report about what "natural" means in the cereal aisle by the Cornucopia Institute, an organic and agriculture policy group.

Many posters on the Kashi site seemed especially angry about the presence of genetically engineered soy in some of its cereals. One wrote that by marketing its products as whole foods and healthy, but choosing genetically engineered soybeans as an ingredient, the company had destroyed people's trust in its product.

DeSouza says consumers who want clear guidance about genetically modified ingredients can look to U.S. organic regulations, which prohibit their use in products called "organic."

Kellogg got itself into trouble by "not being entirely transparent," says Roger Nyhus, president of Nyhus Communications in Seattle. He sees a trend among some companies "of fudging language to allay consumer concerns and jump on the green bandwagon, and I think it's starting to backfire."

Consumers drawn to a "natural" marketing message could also have their anger fueled by a sense that they were buying from a "small, pure" company, says consultant Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing in Stevens, Pa. "They disdain large corporate entities," and now they find that Kashi "is, in fact, part of this big multinational conglomerate."

Kashi's DeSouza says that by 2015, all new Kashi products will "contain at least 70% USDA organic certified ingredients."


"Organic" is meaningless as well:

http://www.chron.com/news/nation-world/article/Organic-made-meaningless-by-USDA-changes-1504840.php

(in reply to kalikshama)
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