Lethos said:
So the points of this thread are kind of multiple:
1. What do you think about organic farming?
2. Why do you think there is such a large amount of antagonism towards organic farming?
3. Why does there appear to be such a large culture divide between American and European perceptions of organic farming?
1)There's a lot of varying definitions of "organic" that make that a really tenous question. Even in your supermarkets, most countries don't even have regulations before you slap organic on it. I'm not entirely against GM-ing stuff (which we've been doing since nearly the dawn of agriculture, breeding animal species into another, or cross-breeding plants for efficiency or even just aesthetics). Not to mention transplanting crops outside their normal growth regions, which has to involve some level of forced mutation. That said, there's a very questionable level of testing to some of the procedures currently being done in GM, which we'll cover in #3.
2)Basically it makes food more expensive if you grow it in less efficient way. I guess it comes down to personal preference. Some people will prefer a book to an e-book. Some people will prefer well=constructed handmade wood furniture to Walmart sawdust board held together by pegs. It's also very obvious that we can't support 9-10 billion people on Earth with organic methods, though in the same argument, the ludicrously unchecked population growth is the problem there (also causing power shortages, water shortages, pollution, rising real estate prices, unemployment, etc).
3)Carrying immediately over, America has a massively over-dense population. They literally can't feed themselves with an all organic model. They're also very concerned about maintaining a low cost of living as much of the ever-mentioned 99% are somewhat scraping buy for living costs. Also, America is home to one of the biggest (if not the biggest), and most affluential GM-crop producers in Monsanto. They're also one of the most questionable in regards to properly testing their stuff in regards to dangerous effects. Monsanto on the other hand is banned in most of Europe. In more generalized terms, any european nation is easier to win over then the full mass of America. Its a significantly smaller (and thereby more representative, and accountable) government, and a much smaller audience to inform with a message.
Bullet Points
-GMO is probably useful, and not nearly as much of a new Michael Crichton esque technological boogeyman as some would state.
-The US is terrible at regulating stuff, which has led to their GMO makers being really poor for making and releasing things that should still be in years of testing. Subsequently, half of Europes banned US GMOs, and they take huge hits in the press. Less so in US press due to interweaving corporate politics.
-Organic Farming is generally equally poorly regulated in its definition, and operating under nebulous definitions. Its also not Free-Trade or Cruelty Free in of itself.
-Both models will never sustain human population at current expansion rates. Human Population reaching critical mass is probably its own discussion that I tangented on enough already.