The value of US agricultural exports in 2003 neared $60 billion. That's not pocket change. I've come to understand that agricultural subsidies play too big a role in our nation's economy for them to go away any time soon. (Pass the subsidized, genetically engineered corn and soy, please.)Subsidies keep prices for US goods on the international market low (so low that our farmers, in fact, sell their goods at a loss - but our government pays them the difference). Keeping prices low keeps exports high. Exports are a vital source of revenue (see above).
An aside - subsidies and other government handouts to agriculture encourage overproduction, increasing supply and lowering the price of goods on the market even more, which creates an even greater dependence on exports and subsidies ... which leads to overproduction ... in a self-propagating cycle. (Paul Roberts' recent book goes into more detail.)
Anyway......
Shaun sent this article today that depicts beautifully what I was trying to say with all those words above.
It's from today's Washington Post:
Bush War on Roquefort Raises a Stink in France
Europe doesn't want our beef because we put hormones in it. But we have to export our beef! (See above.) So, tit-for-tat, we're blocking Europe's cheese:
No more San Pellegrino? It's cutthroat out there.In its final days, the Bush administration imposed a 300 percent duty on Roquefort, in effect closing off the U.S. market. Americans, it declared, will no longer get to taste the creamy concoction that, in its authentic, most glorious form, comes with an odor of wet sheep and veins of blue mold that go perfectly with rye bread and coarse red wine.
The measure, announced Jan. 13 by U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab as she headed out the door, was designed as retaliation for a European Union ban on imports of U.S. beef containing hormones. Tit for tat, and all perfectly legal under World Trade Organization rules, U.S. officials explained.
Besides, they said, Roquefort is only one of dozens of European luxury products that were attacked with high tariffs. The list includes, among other things, French truffles, Irish oatmeal, Italian sparkling water and "fatty livers of ducks and geese," which apparently is how Washington trade bureaucrats say foie gras.

Why I think labeling of genetically engineered (GE) foods is the power broker:
I was reading the Bill that was introduced a few months ago in Congress (but that languished in Committee and died a few weeks ago when the new Congress was seated - never to become law).
Just a few more things about saw palmetto before I move on. Tuck it away. (My
I was in a vitamin shop yesterday:
Good news.
Q. The inauguration is tomorrow. Do you have any advice for our soon-to-be president ... About food?
Lewis Regenstein, in "How to Survive in America the Poisoned," (1986, nominated for a Pulitzer Prize):
This post may be helpful for men with urination difficulties related to an enlarged prostate.
The photo shows genetically engineered coho salmon on the right, and natural coho salmon on the left. All salmon are one year of age.
Just one more excerpt (another
There were actually some choice words during this hearing, although not by Mr. Vilsack - the chap is smooth and practiced, a true politician. No, these choice words came from the Republican Senator from Kansas, Pat Roberts (pictured), the same Pat Roberts who, from my
Just hours ago, 5 days before the changeover to the new administration (they must have been in a hurry to get this done, did they anticipate resistance?), the FDA released its "Final Guidance on Regulation of Genetically Engineered Animals".
The
I take that to mean that foods which display the USDA Organic label are free from genetically engineered ingredients ... mostly. (Foods bearing the USDA Organic label are only
After listening to the confirmation hearing for Obama's pick to lead the USDA, former Iowa governor Tom Vilsack, I've concluded that his fate as our next Secretary of Agriculture is sealed - regardless of the
Over on
Last Friday, Jan 9, we received a letter back from one of our Senators, 
In 2003, Dean Metcalfe from the NIH's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases published a mini-monograph in the government's peer-reviewed journal
CNN Money:
A few years ago, I thought genetically engineered plants weren't much different from plants that had been crossbred, e.g. cross a white rose with a red rose, get a pink rose. I was naive.
This is fresh news...
Someone said to me, "Great, it seems everything raises the risk for prostate cancer! What doesn't?"
Since I'm on the topic of prostate cancer, I may as well post this study from a few months ago:
There's a heated discussion going on at
In a
Why does the European Union deem labeling for presence of GMOs a priority, but the US doesn't?
This story is troubling: Any soy product - soybeans, soybean oil, tofu, tempeh, miso, soy nuts, soy flour, soy protein supplements, soy cheese, soy anything - that doesn't say "organic" is, if you live in the US, probably genetically modified.