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Then you've shown exactly what I was saying, that man creates not-natural plants and has been doing so for a long time.Or bring the plant here... there are numerous plants that are not indigenous to the US (kudzu is a well known example) yet have cross pollinated with native plants to create new species.
If you look at the article you cited you will not find tomatoes broken down into varieties - nor does the government list I cited do that. The farthest the USDA went was specifying "tomatoes, red", which is a huge group including many others besides the ones you just named.Not knowing the exact tomato is the reason they are averaged in their nutritional value. Having a particular one weighted heavy for X content would throw that average out of balance, of course. Weighted averaging for something as variable as all tomatoes would be an effort in futility, hence sub groupings such as Roma or Beefsteak. Since a tomato specifically manipulated to be heavy for X vitamin (a selling point for GMO, supposedly) would need a separate classification so it didn't weight those averages.
You're assuming only GMOs would have a change in nutrients, which is a false assumption. You're also assuming a change in nutrition must come from a GMO, which is another false assumption.I said five years to show that rate of change to the market share would need to update it frequently if GMOs were grouped with non GMOs.
There are usually signs that show tomato type, they do not include any other information. Lettuce and other plants work the same way - iceberg, leaf, etc. No other indicators.So, you as the consumer just look at a bin of tomatos and pick what looks good without knowing what kind of tomato you're buying... as I mentioned earlier, which tomato makes a good paste? A good sauce? A slicing tomato for on your burger? (rhetorical) There are no signs in your store that say Romas or Beefsteak/slicing, Jersey or heirloom, with pricing? Just one big bin, take your chances. :wink:
I have no idea what you're getting at here unless it's types as described above. There is no nutritional information, origin indications, whether pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers - and what specific type of each - or whatever else may have been sprayed on the plants or their field prior to planting.For those concerned with nutrient, a reference point of a list matched with the product... but you aren't even will to grant ANY identification to the consumer, and that is where I disagree. Something being put on the market without any identification of what it is for that reference point.
Nutritional information doesn't say anything about a plant being GMO or not. If you want to argue for better nutritional labels that is certainly your choice but it has nothing to do with a plant being GMO or not.You brought up that GMO's aren't necessarily created for pesticide resistance, and I added nutritional value (a point argued by other pro-GMO posters) and this thread has gone from there.... so the pick a reason GMO's shouldn't be labeled, and stick with it.... other than the supposed negative connotation, you have yet to make a solid argument that they shouldn't be.
You seem to be laboring under the false impression that all GMOs are the same but they're not. Some are drought tolerant, some are herbicide tolerant, some are for more nutrition, some are for faster growing, and the list goes on and on. Labeling something GMO won't tell you a damn thing about what kind of changes have been made and unless you're going to add a whole sheet of paper to cover all the options you will never know. You've graduated far, far beyond your "few drops of ink" and at that point, I'd say farmers who use pesticides should label their foods with the pesticide and amount, same for herbicides, and fertilizers, greenhouse or field, state in which grown, small or corporate farm, etc., etc. I mean, seriously how far down do you want to take this? You can have a whole sheet printed up for each batch of produce so you know exactly which field of which farm is was taken from and exactly how it was grown and what chemicals it contains. That certainly could be done but it's silly to do all that or any of it, for that matter, including your GMO label. If you want organic, then buy what's labeled organic.
I assume you mean a negative connotation - by the public at large? I didn't make that claim. I just think the whole idea of labeling foods as GMO is wasteful (costly) and ridiculous. If it comes to labeling them as GMO I can only hope my can of GMO corn stays the same price and the additional cost is added to the non-GMO corn.We've both divert from the subject at hand, the labeling of GMO's, and my reasoning for believing GMOs should be labeled, and your argument that they shouldn't be, based on a supposed negative connotation.
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