General Mills bows to consumer paranoia, makes GMO-free Cheerios

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Thursday, opponents of genetically modified food celebrated a big victory: They managed to get a major American food company to do something it didn't feel was necessary, just because public pressure had mounted to the point where resistance took more energy than it was worth.

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Soon even purer than pure. (Paul Sakuma/AP)

The company is General Mills, maker of America's most iconic cereal brands, which found a way to make a line of Cheerios without any genetically modified ingredients. Not because it thinks there's anything wrong with GM crops: Its Q&A on the Cheerios site clearly states that they're safe, and a longer Web page explains the scientific consensus behind its position. Rather, simply: "We did it because we think consumers may embrace it," the company wrote in a blog post.

Despite the lack of evidence that there's anything wrong with eating GM foods, the demand for alternatives seems to exist. More than half of Americans worry that they're unsafe, according to an ABC News poll from the summer, and 93 percent support mandatory labeling. The concern is even higher among women, who also do more of the family shopping. Meanwhile, Whole Foods is asking its suppliers to develop special lines of non-GM products. General Mills may have figured it might as well get out in front of its Big Food competition -- there's always something to be said for gaining a first mover advantage.

And anyway, Cheerios were a relatively easy lift for General Mills. There are no GM oats, as it pointed out multiple times, so the recipe was most of the way there. It just needed to switch from beet sugar to cane sugar, find some non-GM corn starch, and figure out how to separate the streams of cereal production so the non-GM Cheerios could stay pure. It's almost the equivalent of slapping a "Trans Fats Free" label on something that never contained trans fats, or a "gluten-free" label on something that doesn't even have wheat, just because something "free" of anything must necessarily be better for you. (Unless it's "made with whole grains," which Cheerios could already claim as well.)

There are risks to that strategy. Even labeling some of its foods as GM-free might create the misperception that the rest of its foods are somehow unsafe, pushing consumers toward a product that's harder to make, or other brands that specialize in all-natural recipes. That's the argument that giant food companies have made against labeling requirements (General Mills says it supports a national labeling standard, which would be preferable to having to deal with the state laws that are cropping up around the country). To capture both types of consumer, some companies have created entirely different-looking brands, like Dannon's Stonyfield Farms Greek Yogurt -- which is organic and GMO-free -- and its Oikos version, which is not.

In that way, it's kind of similar to how Philip Morris gave in and started producing electronic cigarettes, even though they might cannibalize its traditional tobacco business -- except that smoking has lost popularity in the United States for solid health reasons. In the case of genetically modified foods, the reasons for concern are much less clear.
 

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which side do you take on this @Candor ?
I don't know enough to even fully stake out a position, but I think the paranoia is justified. It's not like companies haven't lied or downplayed the effects of products before. I've actually enjoyed watching the back and forth on wonkblog. At the very least it shows that companies often choose something with potentially negative consequences when the cost of greater safety is negligible.
 

Hawaiian Punch

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The question is do you want generically modified foods? Even if the current scientific consensus is they are ok, then so wasn't asbestos? Hell even orange juice can harden arteries, yet contain folic acid which is good for you. Different comparisons but the point is scientific opinion changes as time goes by. Maybe the effects of GM products won't be realized until another generation comes :manny:
 

Domingo Halliburton

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I don't know enough to even fully stake out a position, but I think the paranoia is justified. It's like companies haven't lied or downplayed the effects of products before. I've actually enjoyed watching the back and forth on wonkblog. At the very least it shows that companies often choose something with potentially negative consequences when the cost of greater safety is negligible.

and its because of lawyers like you
 

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and its because of lawyers like you
I have no idea what that even means. It's because of lawyers that companies choose to put out products that might potentially be harmful when there are more proven and safer alternatives that will cost them next to nothing to use instead....what in the world are you talking about....
 

Domingo Halliburton

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I have no idea what that even means. It's because of lawyers that companies choose to put out products that might potentially be harmful when there are more proven and safer alternatives that will cost them next to nothing to use instead....what in the world are you talking about....

I was joking, breh
 
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