With consumer
demand for organic products continuing to grow, more
large corporations are entering the organic market.
To maximize profits, some of these companies don't
follow organic standards but still label products
as organic. For example, Horizon Organic and Aurora
Organic, sold by Wal-Mart and other retailers, continue
to produce "organic" milk under factory-farm
conditions that few reasonable people would consider
truly organic.
According to the Organic Consumers Association,
half of Horizon's "organic" milk today
comes from what can only be considered "factory" dairy
feedlots -- and much of Aurora's organic milk does
as well. Rather than buy organic calves that have
been raised from birth on organic farms, these companies
seemed to have discovered it's cheaper to buy conventional
calves that have been raised on conventional farms,
install them in factory feedlots, then milk them
and call it organic.
The situation has become so alarming that the Organic
Consumers Association ultimately called for a boycott,
and many knowledgeable consumers are now avoiding
the Horizon brand entirely.
The organic milk controversy extends to organic
soy milk as well. Horizon Organic's parent company,
Dean Foods, also bought out Silk, the leading organic
soy milk brand in the United States. Dean Foods has
pushed for lower organic standards in the United
States and to allow industrial-style production to
be called "organic."
Meanwhile, major grocery chains import cheap, so-called "organic" soybeans
from China, where the workers are treated much like
slaves and organic standards are dubious. They are
also imported from Brazil where the Amazon rainforest
is being bulldozed in order to create more acreage
for growing soybeans.
To gain more insight on the details of this emerging
battle over organic standards, NewsTarget editor
Mike Adams sat down with Ronnie Cummins of the Organic
Consumers Association for some straight talk on organic
milk. What follows is the full interview.
Mike: I am here today talking with Ronnie Cummins,
National Director of the Organic Consumers Association.
That is at www.OrganicConsumers.org. What's the overview
of the situation on organic milk, Ronnie?
Ronnie: Well, the good news is, there is such a
huge demand for organic products across the United
States and North America that there is a serious
shortage of supply. One of the types of products
that are in serious short supply is organic milk.
This is already more than a $1-billion-a-year industry
in the United States, out of the $15 billion in organic
food sales last year.
The problem is that our government - specifically
the U. S. Department of Agriculture - takes about
$90 billion of our tax money every year, and they
give subsidies to all of these factory farms to go
organic, but they give no subsidies to help family-scale
dairies make the transition to organic. We literally
do not have enough family farmers with the wherewithal
to achieve organic certification and make the product.
At the same time, we have these giant retail giants
like Wal-Mart who have noticed that the public wants
organic food and they are willing to pay a premium
price for it, so they and the other retail chain
stores have moved with a vengeance to dominate the
organic market. Wal-Mart is now the number-one seller
of organic milk in the country. The problem is that
the milk they are selling - Horizon Organic - is
not really organic. It is coming from the factory-style
dairy farms where the animals are kept in intensive
confinement and have been imported from conventional
farms as calves. They simply label it organic, and
the USDA lets them get away with it.
Mike: Let us get into more detail on that, because
I want people to understand how they do an end-run
around this organic label. First, do you agree that
there is some degree of success in the fact that
consumer demand for organic products is now so strong?
Is that not a success by itself?
Ronnie: It is a tremendous success. It is attributed
to the fact that a lot of us spent the last 30 years
building up an alternative food and farming system
in the United States. This alternative system has
proved to be much better than industrial agriculture,
and so now the latest polls show 75 percent of Americans
say they are shopping for healthier food. If you
look at the statistics, about 12 cents of every grocery
store dollar are going for foods that are labeled
as either natural or organic.
Mike: Well, that is a substantial sum. That is growing
at, what, about 20 percent a year or something?
Ronnie: Growing at 20 percent a year, whereas conventional
food sales tend to grow about 2 percent a year. This
20 percent-a-year growth has been steady ever since
1991. It appears that it will continue through the
end of this decade, so by then most food sold in
grocery stores will have a label that says 'natural'
or 'organic'.
The question is: If we let these gigantic corporations
like Horizon and Wal-Mart take over the industry,
will it really be organic?
How the USDA enables big business to corrupt organic
standards for profit
Mike: Let's talk about the definition of organic,
then. What should organic really mean in terms of,
not only the treatment of the cows, but also what
chemicals are not in the milk, for example? What
is the real definition?
Ronnie: There are organic farmers all over the world
- in about 100 countries - who are certified organic
nowadays. Traditionally, organic has always meant
that you raise crops without chemical pesticides
or chemical fertilizers and that you raise animals
without drugging them up with hormones or antibiotics.
You cannot take sewage sludge and put it on farmlands.
You cannot feed animals things like blood, slaughterhouse
waste, manure and municipal garbage, and you cannot
use untested and hazardous technologies like genetic
engineering or fruit irradiation. The animals have
to be raised on pasture - which is their natural
behavior - where every day of the growing season,
weather permitting, they are out on pasture eating
grass and foraging as they have evolved to do.
What has happened recently is that Wal-Mart was
buying their organic milk from genuine organic dairy
farmers that pastured their animals, and then they
turned around to that company - Organic Valley -
and they said, "Hey, we want a lower price," just
as Wal-Mart always does. Organic Valley said no,
so Wal-Mart then turned to Dean Foods, the largest
dairy conglomerate in the world - which had bought
out Horizon Organic - and said, "Would you sell
to us?" To which Horizon said, "We will
sell you the cheapest organic milk you have ever
seen."
Horizon conveniently took advantage of the fact
that Federal Organic Standards say the cows must
have access to pasture, and they said, "Oh well,
I guess theoretical access to pasture is good enough.
We are going to chain up our cows and milk them three
times a day, and they will never get out pasturing
unless there is a news organization coming to the
farm that day. We will still call it organic." They
have been doing this for four years, and there have
been complaints from the Organic Consumers Association
and organic farmers all over the country.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has completely
ignored these complaints for four years. However,
now this controversy has reached such a state, with
the mass media covering it and retail stores across
the country starting to drop Horizon and Aurora Organic,
that the USDA is finally making noises that they
will clear up this situation and promulgate federal
regulations that actually require the animals to
be pastured.
They will make sure that the animals were not imported
from some conventional dairy farm where they were
weaned on blood, fed antibiotics, slaughterhouse
waste and chicken manure and then called "organic." The
animals must be raised from birth as organic, and
they must be pastured every day during t he growing
season - a minimum of 120 days a year. This is what
organic has always meant in terms of raising cows,
and it is what it should mean now.
Mike: Now, these are pretty serious accusations
of Horizon Milk or Dean Foods' behavior. How are
you able to support this? Do you have an insider
taking pictures, or how did you become aware of this
behavior on their part?
Ronnie: It was called to our attention by a watchdog
organization called The Cornucopia Institute, which
actually visited some of these factory-style dairy
farms that Horizon and Aurora call organic. They
witnessed first-hand things like a farm where there
are 4,000 animals, but only a few hundred acres of
pasture. You cannot possibly pasture animals on that
little pasture, especially when they are in semi-arid
parts of Idaho, Colorado and West Texas.
Then beyond that, workers on these farms started
coming forth as whistleblowers. There was a story
in the Chicago Tribune about one of these whistleblowers
who pointed out that these cows are not put out to
pasture. The only time they are put out to pasture
is when there is a media organization or an important
person coming out.
Yes, it is first-hand information. It is a look
at the terrain that these factory-style dairy feedlots
are set on. Look at the size of their pasture, and
then the fact that there was a national survey of
organic dairy farms that came out March 22 - which
the unethical dairies did not respond to or they
got really low ranks - whereas, the ethical producers
were happy to be transparent about their practices.
The good news is, almost all the organic farmers
in the country are actually practicing real organic
standards. The bad news is that the market leader,
Horizon Organic, and their junior partner, Aurora
Organic, are flagrantly violating organic standards
to the point where we, the Organic Consumers Association,
had to call for a boycott. We have never called for
a boycott against an organic product before. This
was going too far, so starting in early April, we
called on consumers across the country to start boycotting
the products of Horizon Organic and Aurora Organic,
and to boycott the brand names that the leading retailers
are selling from Horizon and Aurora at Wal-Mart,
Costco, Safeway, Giant, Publix and Wild Oats.
Mike: Well, this seems like a clear case in which
big business is now seeing dollar signs whenever
the word "organic" appears, so they are
doing the minimum necessary or even just blatantly
violating the rules in order to put that word on
their products, regardless of the spirit of the law
or the original intent of organics. Is this just
corporate greed?
Ronnie: This is, and the sad thing is, how easy
it would be to help 5,000 or 10,000 conventional
family farmers make the transition in their dairies
to organic. It would not be that hard. It would not
cost that much money, and this way we could still
have organic standards that were real, animals treated
humanely and not damage the environment.
Of course, we have not even mentioned that one of
the reasons you want organic animals to be outdoors
and pastured is because the quality of the meat and
milk is much higher if the animals are raised naturally
on grass. The other organic requirements mean that
the end product is going to be healthier as well.
They are not going to have antibiotic residues or
genetically engineered hormones. They are not going
to be spreading mad cow disease and so on. We, right
now in the United States, have an excess of milk
being produced by family-scale dairy farmers who
are not yet organic. It would be very simple to help
those who want to make the transition do so if we
were to force the government to give us a fair share
of our subsidies to help these farmers do that.
Lax standards of corporate manufacturers and retailers
affect both organic milk and soymilk products
Mike: Now, you mentioned that pasture-fed cows are
healthier cows. This gets back to something you mentioned
earlier that needs to be emphasized, because most
people simply do not believe this is happening. Conventional
cows, in fact, are being fed chicken litter and other
animals.
Ronnie: Yes, they take it from birth. Cows were
traditionally weaned on their mother's milk, but
industrial agriculture figured out that it's pretty
expensive to wean the calves on milk, so they decided
to wean them on blood. That is common practice nowadays
on a conventional dairy farm. Then, you feed them
primarily grains that are genetically engineered,
but mixed in with those grains are things that make
the animals grow faster and put on weight, like slaughterhouse
waste - basically ground up pigs, chickens, dogs,
cats and everything else are fed to them.
They found out all these factory poultry farms around
the country were producing billions of pounds of
manure that pollute the environment. What can we
do with all this manure? Presto, they feed it back
to cows. They sweep up the manure, the feathers and
the dropped bits of cattle that are fed to chickens
in their feed. They sweep that all up, turn around
and feed it back to cows.
Most people in the United States are shocked when
they hear that 80 percent of the drugs and antibiotics
made in this country are not fed to humans to cure
them of some illness, but fed to animals in their
feed every day to make them grow faster. Scientists
do not totally understand why, but they do know that
if you cram thousands of animals together in unsanitary
or unhygienic - not to mention inhumane - conditions,
they all get sick and die.
The only way to keep them alive is to constantly
feed them antibiotics. Of course, what that means
is you turn around and drink a glass of dairy milk
from a conventional farm, and you are getting residues
of antibiotics in every drink. They also figured
out, "We could use our genetically engineered
hormone to shoot up these cows with this hormone
produced by Monsanto, even though it is banned in
just about every industrialized country in the world
except for the United States." If you shoot
up dairy cows with this hormone, you can force them
to give more milk, and you can keep milking them
even past their lactation period. You can actually
milk a cow not for a year, but for up to a thousand
days. Of course, the cow will drop dead after that,
but they do not care.
For all these reasons, there is a huge movement
on the part of American consumers and especially
concerned parents and concerned grandparents - if
they drink milk and if their kids and grandparents
drink - to switch to organic.
Mike: Is it fair to say, Ronnie, that the organic-labeled
Horizon Milk on the shelves in Wal-Mart right now
comes, at least in part, from cows that were at one
point in their lives fed blood, manure, chicken litter
and some other things you mentioned? Is that accurate?
Ronnie: Yes, half of Horizon Organic's milk today
comes from these factory dairy feedlots. One hundred
percent of Aurora Organic's milk comes from these
factory dairy feedlots. It is cheaper to not buy
organic calves that have been raised from birth on
an organic farm, but to buy conventional calves that
have been raised as cheaply as possible on a conventional
farm. The routine practice today on a conventional
farm is feeding the animals blood plasma as a milk
replacer. You feed them genetically engineered grains,
slaughterhouse waste and chicken manure. That is
industry standard. Why? You can make more money doing
it that way.
Mike: Okay, so for those reading this, take a closer
look at that bowl of cereal next time. If you are
pouring cow's milk in there, you might want to buy
genuine organic and not the cheap stuff.
Ronnie: Here is another point that you might think
about: for those people who do not drink dairy milk,
but who buy organic soy milk, the leading organic
soy milk brand in the United States is Silk. Many
consumers have no idea that Silk - just like Horizon
Organic Milk - was bought out by this giant conglomerate,
Dean Foods.
Silk used to buy their organic soybeans from U.S.
and Canadian organic soybean farmers, and they paid
them a decent price - $16 to $21 a bushel - for these
organic soybeans. Well, now that Dean Foods has bought
out Silk, they are starting to import cheap, so-called
organic soybeans from China, where the workers are
treated like slaves and organic standards are dubious.
Or, they are importing soybeans from Brazil where
there is a huge uproar over the fact that people
are whacking down the Amazon - the lungs of the planet
- in order to plant export crops, specifically soybeans,
to export.
Even if we think this does not affect us, because
we do not eat meat or we do not eat dairy, we have
to see the effect of these big corporations like
Dean Foods coming into organic. Wal-Mart wants to
sell you stuff that is cheaper than their competitors,
and the only way they can do that is to outsource
it from overseas - places like China and Brazil -
where worker rights and environmental standards are
routinely violated, or else lower standards in the
United States and allow industrial-style production
to call itself organic.
Mike: Now, this is obviously a very important story
for consumers to follow. How can they continue to
get updates from you on this story?
Ronnie: Every day on our news site, www.OrganicConsumers.org
you will find updates. We have a whole section of
our website called "Safeguard Organic Standards," where
you can take action … send a message to what
we are calling the "Shameless Seven." These
are the large corporations trying to defraud consumers
and put ethical organic farmers out of business by
labeling factory farm production - and slave labor
production, in the case of China - as organic.
Mike: I want to thank you, Ronnie, for taking the
time to give us all of this shocking information
today.
Ronnie: Thank you.
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