poofyhairguy
Lifer
- Nov 20, 2005
- 14,612
- 318
- 126
"Costs 10 cents less" "OMG MIGHT KILL YOU OR TURN YOU INTO A MUTANT FISH!!!!!"
You tell me what is more marketable.
"KILLER OF THE AMERICAN SMALL BUSINESS!!!" "We are always rolling back prices"
I don't have to ask which one is more marketable, as Wal-Mart is the biggest company in America. The most sensational message doesn't always win out. The best crafted message does.
The people that want GMO stuck on everything clearly want you to believe that GMOs are bad despite all evidence contrary.
And the honest truth is even if they were labeled many people wouldn't care or ignore the label either way. Heck when I first heard of GMOs I though it sounded cool, some sort of "Superfood."
But if it is labeled at least the consumer has a choice to avoid it or not.
Except that preventing the adoption of GMO is bad for society which ultimately is bad for the consumer and government.
Tons of personal choices are bad for the society, consumer and government. Smoking, fatty foods, alcohol, motorcycles, etc. In America we just don't go for optimal because that is what our glorious leaders say we should do. This isn't China.
The American spirit is consumerism and enabling me to make my choices, even bad ones. I think a lot more than GMOs should be labeled personally to give the consumer as much information (to possibly ignore) as possible.
The whole purpose of the label is to imply that GMO foods are bad. Why should individual consumers be forced to figure out that it is complete subterfuge and there is no issue with them? Why should the government be complicit in this subterfuge.
Individual consumers will be forced to do nothing. The vast majority that only care about price will buy the GMO food and never notice the label, while those who are ALREADY OPINIONATED ABOUT IT might choose to avoid GMO food based on the label. Nothing wrong with empowering that choice.
When they forced nutritional information be put on foods it wasn't to "imply fatty foods are bad." It was to allow the consumer to be as informed as possible and to force the transparency required for efficient markets. Same thing here.
GMO is only a brand liability for as long as it is cheaper to pay some lobbyists to hide the brand rather than fix the brand. THAT is why I am sad this didn't go through, as forcing these companies to that tipping point is good for the American consumer. If GMOs are really a good thing time to repair that brand now, not tomorrow.