In Michael Pollan’s essay, “Playing God in the Garden”, we are introduced to
the New Leaf Superior, a genetically engineered potato. This is not the first of
its kind, for it is only one of the many foods that are products of an emergent
development here in the United States. Monsanto and other giant transnational
companies are carrying out a dangerous global experiment by introducing large
numbers of genetically engineered foods into our diet. Genetic manipulations can
result in unanticipated harmful effects, and because genetically engineered
foods are not sufficiently tested, this experiment not only jeopardizes the
health of individuals, but also affects the natural flow of nature.
Pollan
writes, “genetic engineering overthrows the old rules governing the relationship
of nature and culture in plants.” He argues in his essay that the “old rules”,
or natural (organic) ways of farming are no longer being valued, but rather
overthrown and replaced by this new technology. We get the impression that
Pollan does not trust this genetically engineered food because it is completely
unnatural.
There are numerous benefits to genetic cultivation as well as
many farmers who agree with and practice this way of life. Biotechnology food
produces its own insecticide, and its final product is better looking than that
of organically grown food. Due to genetically modified food’s unique and unknown
nature, however, there is potential for adverse health side effects. On page
467, Pollan writes:
“When I called the E.P.A. and asked if the agency had
tested my Bt potatoes for safety as a human food, the answer was . . . not
exactly. It seems the E.P.A. works from the assumption that if the original
potato is safe and the Bt protein added to it is safe, then the whole New Leaf
package is safe . . . the original potato is safe, so that left the Bt toxin,
which was fed to mice, and they ‘did fine, had no side affects’”.
Pollan
here implies that it is unknown whether or not these foods are safe. The fact
that these products were tested on mice does not mean that they are safe for
people. Maybe genetically engineered food does not harm people in any way, but
no one knows for sure. It is impossible to predict the impact of genetically
engineered food; it is a matter of waiting for and observing future
consequences.
Genetically modified food farmers, such as Dan Forsythe and
Steve Young, all agree that this new gene technology will supply plentiful
amounts of food, but they themselves would not eat these foods. Forsythe says,
when asked about the agricultural chemicals used in his crops, “None of us would
use them if we had any choice.” This, to me, shows how much more profit driven
than science driven this new technology is. Biotechnology companies like
Monsanto will concentrate power into the hands of a few, which in turn will
enhance farmers’ dependence and force them to pay inflated prices for
seed-chemical packages.
In the process of succeeding organic farming,
genetic engineering takes away the natural occurrence of how farming should be
or how it was. Natural is planting crops and allowing them to grow into whatever
shape form or quantity that nature decides for them. It is not splicing together
genes of one organism and another and adding a little pesticide to it. There is
a natural flow of things in this world and technology, as great as it is, should
not try to impose upon that because no one knows how or why things are the way
they are, so who has the right to change the way things are? No one has the
right to “play God” in terms of deciding on which kinds of new species to
create, or which ones to get rid of. Once a genetically modified organism has
been released into the environment it can reproduce, move and even mutate. This
could jeopardize the environment in a way that no one knows possible. If genetic
engineering is continuously allowed in the development of food, the lives of
many people will be consequently handed over to these Biotechnology companies.
In the struggle for survival there is a delicate balance between nature and
humanity crucial to all species. Monsanto and the rest of these companies are
slowly shifting this balance in order to control nature. No one knows the
effects of what is being done; yet it continues to occur. The dynamics of
creation are being taken and converted into a motive of power in which
everything revolves around money. Instead, unity should be created and the
balance of existence should be protected.
I think that science should be
used where properly necessary, not where nature abides. Using an empirical
knowledge base, instead of a strictly theoretical one, science could facilitate
growth, providing wisdom. Then science could contribute a better insight into
the survival of most of the world’s species and stop people from destroying the
balance in the environment that they are dependent upon, thus aiding mankind in
the struggle for survival.
Genetic engineering poses the greatest danger of
any technology yet introduced. The damaging effects of genetic engineering are
irreversible, but if it is stopped before it occurs then a catastrophe will have
been prevented. Precautionary actions must be taken on the part of the consumers
as well as the farmers to be protective of themselves and the generations to
come. People must immediately reject genetically modified food, as it is been by
nature, to prevent an avalanche of deviant foods from permeating the market and
placing the world at risk.