Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 170 pages
- Published by: iUniverse, Inc. November 13, 2007
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0595451802
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0595451807
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Book Dimensions:
8.9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
- Weighs: 8.8 ounces
Product Description
The evidence is clear and overwhelming: genetically engineered food is big business, a profitable product on the global market, and as a $6.15 billion industry in 2006, its growth and corporate power are undeniable. Despite the United States government and biotechnology industrys assertion that genetically engineered food is harmless, Americans must question its safety. The truth is that genetically engineered food has never been tested for human consumption.
When genetically engineered food was introduced in America more than a decade ago, it was promoted as a solution to some of the worlds food problems; however, the promised advantages have never been realized. Beth H. Harrison, PhD, explores why these crops do not benefit consumers, do not feed the world, do not help the environment, and are not rigorously regulated. Yet the government and the biotechnology industry expend questionable efforts to educate consumers, the media, and politicians with propaganda championing genetically engineered food as safe and necessary. Meanwhile, an unsuspecting public continues to be force-fed untested, unlabeled food that carries potential adverse health effects.
Harrison provides a convincing argument as to why American consumers must question the collusion between their government and the biotechnology industry: their healthand yoursdepends on it.
About The Author
Beth H. Harrison, PhD, has been in public relations, marketing, and consulting and involved in the health field for more than twenty years. Her doctoral dissertation in natural health focused extensively on the politics and health risks of genetically engineered food. Visit her Web site at www.TheTruthAboutGMOs.com.
Reader ReviewsThis book provides interesting information I hadn't read anywhere else. It is easy to read (for the average person who is not a scientist) and shows how it affects me and my family. It made me think twice about what I buy at the grocery store and what my children are eating. Not only did it present the disturbing reality about genetically engineered food and how we have all been kept in the dark about the serious health risks, it also gave me ideas about what I can do and what options I have. If someone reads this book and doesn't stop eating genetically modified food, at least now the consumer will make a conscious decision about it (to eat it or not). That's more than our government or the biotechnology companies have done. I appreciate having read this information.