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The Rural Voice, 2001-12, Page 48GREAT LAKES FOREST • PRODUCTS Buy * Sell * Transport of Standing Timber, Logs & Lumber * FREE ESTIMATES * ALL WOODLOTS PAID IN FULL BEFORE LOGGING BEGINS (519) 482-9762 Jake or Bob Hovius 142 Maple St., Clinton, Ont. NOM 1 LI) "Our Money... Grows on Trees" WE WANT YOUR GRAIN Elevator - Seaforth 519-527-1241 • Corn • Soybeans • Feed Grains • Feed Ingredients • Food Quality Soybeans CASH & FORWARD CONTRACTS Call us today for Quotes Dave Gordon Elizabeth Armstrong Richard Smibert Ian Carter Tom Meilke LACit london agricultural commodities, inc. 1615 NORTH ROUTLEDGE PARK UNIT 43 LONDON, ONTARIO, N6H 5L6 519-473-9333 Toll -Free 1-800-265-1885 44 THE RURAL VOICE News You hear them expounding this great new global world we're involved in." In the earlier round of globalization under colonialism, the great powers bought slaves and brought them to the work, he said. Now they take the work and take it to the poor people who work like slaves. • On terrorism: "I have some strong feelings about terrorism. When you look at the world how many of your realize that today in Africa and other parts of thee world there are at least 10,000 people dying every day because of starvation? I've visited those famine camps when I was president of the World Food Council. You think there's nothing more terrifying than dying of starvation over a lengthy period of time of not just days, but weeks? "And we pay no attention because we've got to balance our budget. We can say 'you're going to die, and you're going to die but we've got to balance our budget and if your friends are alive when we're finished we're going to come and look after you. We're that civilized group of Christians." "We're not. We're the worst uncivilized group of barbarians the world has ever seen and we have the most education and technology in the world." He recalled a trip to an Ethiopian refugee camp that he still wakes up dreaming about. He met a teenager whose mother a sister and brother died of starvation up in the hills before he, his father and brothers had escaped to the camp. "If that little guy ever survived and realized what we didn't do — if he knew what we could do, what we should have done — how do you think he would feel? You think he'd be bitter? Boy he'd have to a strong believer not to be bitter. "Maybe this terrible thing in New York and Washington that shook us to our bootstraps, made us think about those millions or billions of other people that we could help if we really wanted to." • On genetic engineering: "I'm so mad when I sit and watch TV and I read the farm papers and they're making comparisons of artificial insemination and embryo transplants with crossing a bacteria with a shotgun approach, which is not natural, into a plant. "You should be concerned about that. I have a lot of scientists who are concerned. I have over 1,000 letters in my file and I don't have the resource to answer them." He talked about a doctor of biology with two children who wrote to him saying she wanted to know what was in her food. "When you talk about voluntarylabeling (of food with GMOs) that's a terrible lie!" Whelan said, condemning OFA President Jack Wilkinson for his opposition to mandatory labeling. The same kind of scare tactics are being used as when bilingual labels were mandated by the government — that it would cost too much, he said. "I don't think the farm organizations have any business backing genetic engineering." You can't prove the negative, he says, and there hasn't been enough research done on the safety of GMOs and they haven't been available long enough for problems to show up in consumers. • On privatization of agricultural research: "We had the biggest and the best research (resources). We had scientists who were independent, that made the decisions for you and I. We developed some of the best products in .the world. How do you think we developed canola? How do you think we developed lentils? How do you think we developed the different strains of barley? How do think we made our dairy herds the best in the world? We didn't cross it with no elephant gene or mouse gene or anything. We did it through good scientists and good research. "You're even scared to get a government researcher today to make a statement because they don't know if tomorrow they're going to be let go, and if they don't agree with Monsanto or one of these big outfits, they're not going to get a job. "We've destroyed a big part of a system that we built. It's not hard to be a wrecker, but it's a lot harder to