Court Rules Proposition 8 to be Unconstitutional

In a ruling that surprised no one, a three-judge panel of the liberal 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that a lower court judge correctly decided that California’s ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional and allowed his decision to stand.

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Bishops Refute Obama Spin on HHS Mandate

In response to a misleading White House blog in which the administration tried to defend its widely criticized mandate for contraception and sterilization coverage in private health plans, the U.S. bishops have published a point-by-point rebuttal which reveals the amount of subterfuge the Administration is using in order to quell the rising public outcry against this mandate.

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Living Faith

“Living faith is the firm conviction that God exists, the acceptance – as truth – of all that has been revealed by God, and a loving readiness to be led by the divine will.”                                 

                                St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith Stein)

For Reflection: 

Mary and Joseph had “living faith” according to this definition –    even being led to Egypt at the direction of an angel in a dream. On a scale of 1 to 10, one being “no faith at all” and 10 being “living faith” per the above quote, where are you? Where do you want to be? What can you do today to move yourself one step forward?

No Longer My Own

I am no longer my own. Whether I live or whether I die, I belong to my Savior. I have nothing of my own. God is my all, and my whole being is His.”

                                                                         St. Catherine of Genoa

For Reflection:              How do the saint’s sentiments of heart echo Our Lady’s? How does Mary exhibit this in the second dolor? In the first? To what extent can you make the same statement about yourself?

Food Gone Global: Seeds of Destruction? by Mary Jo Anderson

Women of Grace enjoyed a lively response from the TV episode on genetically modified organisms (GMOs).  What is a GMO? Essentially a genetically modified organism (typically food) is the insertion of gene components from one species into a target organism of another species. For instance, a fungus-eating bacteria may be coded via bio-technology into a variety of corn so that the resulting GMO corn seed is more resistant to fungus.  The new seed is then patented by the bio-tech corporation.  Such seeds are attractive to agribusiness because they increase yields (less loss to pests) and profits. Proponents argue that GMO seeds will “feed the world.”  But, are there risks?

Most of us have simply trusted that a trip to the grocery meant a purchase of nutritionally sound food for our families. While trust in our food sources was once well placed, we no longer have such assurances. Today we face an urgent food crisis, literally seeds of our destruction.

Perhaps you recall the panic in Great Britain in the late 1990s over “mad cow disease.”   Soon afterwards, the rest of Europe, Canada and the United States refused to allow imports of British meats. Governments moved to protect their populations from deadly food contaminations. More recently, Chinese baby food exports were found to contain melamine, a by-product of plastic manufacturing. Why would plastic be used in infant formula? Melamine was used as an additive that mimics protein at a fraction of the cost. And this past summer Germany was put on alert when over 3000 people were sickened and more than 50 died from consuming sprouts on their salads. The sprouts were grown in Germany from bacteria-contaminated seeds shipped from Egypt.

These three examples (and there are thousands more!) illustrate the point of this post: Food has gone global. Food is a key element in the global economy. Giant corporations seek advantages in the international markets. Governments regulate the import and export of food products and food additives to protect their populations and their own agribusinesses. Global trade in food is often a blessing—surplus food can be shipped to nations where crop failures cause famines. Food aid is rushed to countries suffering from natural disasters. However, food can also be used as a political tool, an economic club, or even a means to curb population growth.

Yet, a second factor to the globalization of food is more alarming: Some globalized mega- corporations seek to control the very genetic code of the food that is produced everywhere on the planet. This is the crucial difference: A few corporations no longer hope to create a product that will sell well in global markets; they seek to control all commercial-grade seeds so that farmers will be dependent on such seeds each year. That is, they seek to control the food of the world.  How?   Two methods overlap.  The first is the production of seeds deliberately engineered not to germinate from saved seeds.  Community or small scale farmers cannot save seed for the next season’s crop. Second is the growing dominance of GMO seeds.  It’s true that nature cannot be patented.   Bio-tech firms splice genes to create a new organism—one that has never existed before –and the new gene code (for seeds or animals) is then patented. These patents permit a few international corporations to “own” the seeds of basic food crops.

In just15 years the avalanche of genetically modified foods (GMOs) has taken huge a market share of commercial agribusiness. Soy, corn, canola, papaya, sugar beets, alfalfa and cotton have been modified for mass market farming. Conceivably, farmers will soon lose the ability to grow crops from traditional seed, and, will be forced to re-purchase new seeds each year.

Does this sound like science fiction?  Let’s look at what one company spokesman said, “The hope of the industry is that over time the market is so flooded that there’s nothing you can do about it. You just sort of surrender.” (quoted in Toronto Sun 1.9.2001)

Next: Are GMO Foods Safe?

©Mary Jo Anderson  February 2012