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Organics: The Blurred Vision of ABC’s 20/20
by by J. Robert Hatherill, Ph.D, Environmental Studies
Program, University of California at Santa Barbara.
A recent segment of ABC’s 20/20, entitled “How Good is
Organic Food?” grossly misrepresented the safety and value
of organically grown food crops. According to the 20/20 show
that aired on February 4, 2000, commercially grown food is
superior to organically grown produce because organic food
has higher concentrations of bacteria and is “dangerous,” and
because organic farmers waste land and resources compared
to commercial growers.
An Unbiased Expert?
The organic food critic, Dennis Avery, was identifi ed on the
20/20 show as a former researcher for the USDA and as a
leading critic of organic produce. 20/20 failed to disclose Mr.
Avery’s full credentials. He is presently the Director of the
Center for Global Food Issues for the Hudson Institute,
and the author of such books as Saving the Planet with
Pesticides and Plastic: The Environmental Triumph of High-Yield
Farming.
Mr. Avery’s employer, the Hudson Institute, is a duplicitous,
non-profit “watch dog” group that serves as a mouthpiece for
big business. Hudson identifies many of its corporate sponsors
on its website, including AgrEvo, Dow AgroSciences, Monsanto
Company, Novartis Crop Protection, and Zeneca — the very
companies whose bottom lines are most threatened by organic
agriculture.
Mr. Avery is also a member of the American Counsel on Science
and Health (ACSH), another chemical, pharmaceutical
and food industry-funded PR organization, which specializes
in orchestrating media assaults on scientists and activists who
take positions contrary to the interests of ACHS funders.
ACSH asserts, for example, that trans-fatty acids pose no health
risks, and they champion everything from red meat to pesticides
and genetically modified foods (GMOs) — even Ritalin and junk
food for kids. ACSH tries to debunk the link between the standard
American diet and cancer, and claims that global warming
doesn’t exist or is of no real concern.
In short, 20/20 failed to reveal that the anti-organic “expert”
they presented has strong ties to business interests in the
organic debate, and a vested interest in promoting the use of
herbicides, pesticides and GMOs.
In his 1998 book, Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental
Rhetoric Threatens Our Future, celebrated
scientist Paul Ehrlich, Bing Professor of Population Studies
and Professor of Biological Studies at Stanford University,
details the current scheme whereby industry-paid pitchmen
promote highly questionable, discredited – or sometimes non-existent
– studies to try to minimize the seriousness of environmental
problems. Ehrlich cites ACHS and specifi cally Avery as
purveyors of what he terms “brownlash” – the practice
of “distorting or misstating research fi ndings” in an
attempt to “fuel a backlash against ‘green’ policies.”
Individuals like Avery, “aided by allies in the media,
have been surprisingly effective in getting brownlash
messages across to the public,” Ehrlich writes. “In
some cases, the messages simply confuse the issues;
in others, they offer a seemingly credible (though generally
unfounded) rationale for relaxing or eliminating
environmental regulations or forestalling development
of new policies to address serious global problems….
[Using science in this way] is anti-science.
It sounds authoritative, but it is well known among
scientists as a totally incorrect conclusion.”i
20/20’s Hack Job
The 20/20 show is a perfect illustration of how
groups such as Hudson and ACHS help ensure
that the media does not present a balanced
account of the facts concerning organic food. The
show spotlighted a rather meaningless and flawed
study undertaken by ABC reporter and 20/20
host John Stossel, intended to create the impression
that organic produce is “dangerous.” Stossel
implied that the unscientific study showed
organic produce contained higher levels of pathogenic
(disease-producing) bacteria than commercially
grown produce. In truth, pathogenic bacteria
was not specifically measured in the 20/20
study, there was no peer review and no apparent
statistical analysis that is typical to a scientific
study. In fact, to term it a “study” is anti-science
at its best.
Why would a reporter like John Stossel permit
himself to be used in this way? An article in
the March, 2000, edition of the magazine Brill’s
Content provides some insight.ii Entitled Laissez-Faire
TV, the article exposes Stossel’s ties to a
number of the same pro-business organizations
that Professor Ehrlich cites in his book. According
to the article, Stossel is the only correspondent
in 20/20’s history to get his own weekly segment,
and he has the power at ABC to produce
prime-time specials on any topics he chooses.
How does he use that power? According to Brill’s
Content, he often uses it to promote pro-business
positions and rail against government regulation.
“Once a consumer reporter who rallied against
corporations, Stossel has become a friend of big
business. He has suggested shrinking the Environmental
Protection Agency and boarding up
the Food and Drug Administration.” Stossel is
described as “enemy No. 1” to Jeff Cohen, who
runs Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR).
“He’s clearly one of the most openly and proudly
biased reporters in the business,” says Cohen.
In his 20/20 piece smearing organics, Stossel
also interviewed Katherine DiMatteo, the Executive
Director of the Organic Trade Association.
Before the show was aired, Ms. DiMatteo wrote to
20/20: “Based on our further in-depth research,
we feel Mr. Stossel is misrepresenting the
facts from a study
20/20 conducted. Mr. Stossel asked several times
if ‘organic food will kill you.’ Numerous questions
along these lines were posed to me during
the interview, many of which were citing non-existent
data or incorrect information. 20/20’s
own consumer poll showed that consumers
purchase organic products fi rst and foremost
because of benefi ts to the environment. Organic
food production is an agricultural system that
helps reduce environmental damage. Organic
food is not deadly, and to cause consumer alarm
based on the results of one small study would be
irresponsible.”
As for Mr. Avery, he has repeatedly gone on the
record as he did in the broadcast stating that
“people who eat organic and natural foods are
eight times as likely as the rest of the population
to be attacked by the deadly new strain of E.coli
bacteria (0157:H7).” Mr. Avery claims “recent
data” compiled by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control (CDC) as the source for this inaccurate
statement. The Organic Trade Association, in its
mission to protect the organic label and to educate
consumers, investigated these claims by contacting
the CDC directly. According to Robert
Tauxe, M.D., chief of the food-borne and diarrheal
diseases branch of the CDC, there is no
such data on organic food production in existence
at their centers. In fact, Tauxe stated that Avery’s
claims were “absolutely not true.”
According to Tauxe, “The goal of the CDC
is to ensure food is produced using safe and
hygienic methods, and that consumers also practice
safe and hygienic methods in food preparation,
regardless of the source, be it organic, commercial,
imported or otherwise.” It would appear
that Mr. Avery’s remarks, all premised on CDC
data, have no foundation. In fact, the disease
strain of E-coli (0157:H7) originates from animal-
sources.
Piling It Higher and Deeper
Mr. Avery further states that “organic food is
more dangerous than commercially grown produce
because organic farmers use manure…”.
But manure use is a common agricultural practice
for both commercial and organic food production.
Certifi ed organic farmers, however, must
adhere to additional and more strict limitations
on the application of manure, as mandated by the
Organic Foods Production Act (OFPA) of 1990.
The OFPA prohibits the harvest of organic crops
for human consumption for at least 60 days
after the application of raw manure. Furthermore,
organic certifi cation agencies and OFPA
require longer intervals between manure application
and harvest if soil or other conditions warrant
it.
Mr. Avery claims organic farmers “compound
the contamination problem through their reluctance
to use antimicrobial preservatives, chemical
washes, pasteurization or even chlorinated
water to rid their products of dangerous bacteria.”
We question how Mr. Avery measures
“reluctance” among organic growers. Any
organic grower that uses the certified organic
label must abide by safe food production standards,
and, as with all food producers, must be
in compliance with his or herself local and state
health standards.
The 20/20 segment also falsely claimed that
organic farmers waste land and resources. The
fact is, organic farming is not low-yield farming.
The Rodale Institute of Kutztown, PA, recently
completed a 15-year study comparing organic
farming methods to commercial agricultural
methods. Its findings, published in the November
11,1998, issue of the journal Nature, showed that
organic yields equaled commercial agricultural
yields after only four years. The study also demonstrated
that, in organic farming, the quality
of the soil continues to improve; carbon dioxide
emissions are reduced; and in periods of drought,
organic fields are more resilient and can actually
out-perform the yield of commercial farm plots.
(Although 20/20 traveled to and interviewed
researchers at the Rodale Institute, they were not
included in the broadcast.)
Experts have also shown that pesticide application
does not guarantee increased crop yields.
According to David Pimentel, Professor of Insect
Ecology and Agricultural Sciences at Cornell
University, “Although pesticides are generally
profitable, their use does not always decrease
crop losses. For example, even with the 10-fold
increase in insecticide use in the United States
from 1945 to 1989, total crop losses from insect
damage have nearly doubled from 7 percent to
13 percent.”
Furthermore, in 1998, the EPA reported that
agriculture is the single largest nonpoint polluter
of our rivers and streams, fouling more than
173,000 miles of waterways with chemicals, erosion
and animal waste runoff from livestock
production.iii As we can see from the USDA land
use figures above, aside from the waste runoff, a
good share of this chemical pollution is also the
result of growing livestock feed using chemically
dependant agriculture.
Of Pesticides and Sewage Sludge
As media megamergers continue to swallow
up smaller news agencies, unbiased news may
become a thing of the past. Yet consumers should
not be left in the dark while bought-and-paid
industry scientists obscure the essential truth of
the issue — organically grown food has many
benefits that make it safer than commercial produce.
One major difference lies in the use of pesticides
and commercial fertilizers. Commercially grown
fruits and vegetables will often have multiple pesticide
residues. Commercially grown strawberries
alone, for example, can contain up to 64 different
pesticides. Washing your hands and your veggies
is a simple and effective defense against manure.
Pesticides, on the other hand, are harder if not
impossible to wash off, especially when plants are
genetically engineered to express those pesticides
in every cell in the active form, like the Bt toxin
found in corn, soybeans and cotton.
Recent studies show that trace levels of multiple
pesticides cause increased aggression. It is note-worthy
that aggression was triggered with trace
combinations of pesticides, but not with exposure
to a single pesticide. Specifically, trace pesticide
mixtures have induced abnormal thyroid hormone
levels. Irritability, aggression and multiple
chemical sensitivity are all associated with thyroid
hormone levels.iv
Also, compounds such as nitrates (which can be
converted into cancer-producing chemicals) are
more prevalent in commercially grown produce
because of the overuse of nitrogen-containing
fertilizers.v
The 20/20 segment mentioned how a young girl
became ill after she ingested lettuce that was contaminated
from sewage. Because of the order of
presentation, the viewer was falsely led to believe
the lettuce was organically grown. The truth is,
however, certified organic growers cannot use
sewage sludge to amend the soil – but commercial
operations can and do.
Unlike organic produce, which is grown using
careful stewardship of the soil and time-proven
farming techniques, commercially grown crops
are often not rotated in different plots, and therefore
tend to deplete the nutrient content of the
soil. This is why extensive use of commercial fertilizers
is required for the growth of these crops.
In fact, many water supplies have been contaminated
with nitrates because of the over use of
commercial fertilizers. Although manure used in
organic farming also contains nitrates, it does not
migrate to the ground water as quickly as does
commercial grade fertilizer.
It is widely known that organic farms have higher
concentrations of organic matter in the soils. A
soil high in organic matter has improved water-holding
capacity and therefore is more drought
tolerant and reduces the activity and migration of
pesticides. Further, organic matter in soil serves
as a repository for select nutrients and assists in
keeping these nutrients available.vi
While there have been conflicting studies on the
superior nutritional value of organic produce –
with some studies showing organic food to be far
more nutritious than commercially grown, while
others showing it to be the same – the jury is still
out. Far more research has been directed to aid
mechanized, commercial agriculture in producing
foods of uniform size and uniform dates of
ripening. Commercial agriculture, with its focus
on mechanical harvesting and large-scale storage,
transport and processing also consumes vast
quantities of energy in the form of oil, gas and
electricity.vii
Organic farming does not rely on the intensive use of inputs
such as chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Instead, it relies on
natural soil builders and biological control of pests. Organic
farming uses much less energy than commercial farming, and
therefore generates fewer greenhouse gases, such as carbon
dioxide.viii
Just about any consumer can note the difference between an
organically grown tomato and a commercially grown tomato.
The organic tomato has a rich, deep red color that is indicative
of the red pigment lycopene, which has been shown to have
health-protective properties. Commercial grown tomatoes are
often picked green and put in a chamber with sulfur dioxide
to force the ripening of the tomato. Tomatoes treated in this
manner will often have much lower amounts of health-protecting lycopene. Studies also show that health protective plant
chemicals called phytochemicals are higher in organic produce. Many of these phytochemicals such as lycopene (tomatoes) and resveratrol (grapes) have been linked to reduced
heart disease and cancer risk. And let’s not forget that organically grown produce just tastes better!
On March 20, 2000, researchers from the EPA and Population
Council announced that a commonly used pesticide, methoxychlor, may interfere with levels of the male hormone testosterone, affecting male fertility. Interestingly, to lessen this
risk, the lead researcher advises washing fruits and vegetables
thoroughly before eating them or simply switching to organic
produce.ix
John Stossel, Dennis Avery, 20/20 – and the corporations
behind them, which profit from the sale of pesticides, fertilizers and genetically modified substances – seem to hope we
will all forget that the human species has been eating organic
food for all but the last 50 years of life on this planet. It is
commercial food, the product of chemical farming, that is the
real experiment on the health of the public.
Dr. Hatherill is a research toxicologist at UCSB, the
author of the national bestseller “Eat to Beat Cancer”
(Renaissance Books; September 1999), and chief scientific
advisor to EarthSave International.
End Notes
i Ehrlich,Paul andAnne, “Betray of Science and Reason” Island Press, 1996
p.38
ii Brill’s Content Magazine, “Laissez-Faire TV” by Ted Rose, March, 2000
iii US Environmental Protection Agency. 1984. Report to Congress: Nonpoint
Source Pollution in the US
Office of Water Program Operations, Water Planning Division. Washington, D.C.
Chesters G. and L J Schierow. 1985. A Primer on Non-Point Pollution. Journal
of Soil and Water
Conservation 40:14-18.
iv C.A. Boyd, M.H. Weiler and W.P. Porter,” “Behavioral and neurochemical
changes associated with chronic
exposure to low-level concentration of pesticide mixtures, ”JOURNAL OF
TOXICOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH Vol.30, No. 3(July1990),pgs.209-221.
W.P.Porter et al.,“Groundwater pesticides: interactive effects of low
concentrations of carbamates aldicarb and methamyl and the triazine
metribuzinonthyroxine and somatotropin levels in whiterats, ”JOURNAL OF
TOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTALHEALTH Vol.40, No.1(September
1993),pgs.15-34.
v Brown &Smith, AgronJ. 58,1966 iv Harris, RS.,Nutritional Evaluation of
Food Processing,Wiley &Sons,NY 1960
vi Harris, R.S., Nutritional Evaluation of Food Processing, Wiley&Sons, NY,
1960
vii Science, Vol 189, No.4205, 9/5/75p.777
viii Brown&Smith, AgronJ.58,1966
ix B.Akingbemi, M.Hardy,et al, Biology of Reproduction 2000;62:571-578
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