Say No To GMO Trash

David and I ran past several empty GMO corn and soy bags along the side of the road in Illinois. As a non-farming Alaskan, I found the text on the bags to be fascinating. Fascinating, I suppose, because I still hold the quaint idea that seeds and life belong to God or Nature, and that we humans have the sacred opportunity to care for seeds and life as part of our stewardship on the Earth.

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Silly me! Corporate overlords and attorneys own, bastardize, and license seeds for farmers’ one time use. Just make sure you don’t touch the seeds. They’re covered in poison. Later, they’ll be poisoned again with Roundup. Hello sterile fields. Good-bye bees, good-bye monarchs, good-bye seed freedom and seed sovereignty.

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Others have already noted that GMOs are worse than chemical pollution. Chemical pollution dissipates over time. GMOs propagate and contaminate. They contaminate other crops, they contaminate weeds, they contaminate soil organisms, and they contaminate your gut bacteria and health. The potential to pollute and contaminate spreads every time the wind blows and every time an insect plays in their pollen. They are the gift that keeps on giving . . . long after you and everyone else has said no their presence on the Earth.

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Of course, GMOs and their attendant poisons are both: the GMOs are biological trash and their attendant poisons are chemical trash. Two for one. What a deal!

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Labeling GMOs is a fine first step, but it’s only a first step. As brilliant as Mother Nature is, She can’t read labels. Bees can’t read labels. Contamination is inevitable. Co-existence is a lie.

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How many more years will pass before we rid the Earth of GMO trash? How many more years will pass before we no longer have the option?

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Say no to GMOs in the grocery store. Say no to GMO fed meat and dairy, say no to GMO processed foods, say no to GMO junk foods and desserts. If that’s hard for you, just think of it the way many free animals think of it: Eat food. GMOs aren’t food. Period.

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Organic blessings to you!

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Brett Wilcox is the author of We’re Monsanto: Feeding the World, Lie After Lie. Brett and his 15-year old son, David, are currently running from coast to America coast promoting a GMO-Free USA. Brett and David blog at RunningTheCountry.com. Brett wrote this blog in Dunreith, Indiana. Support their run and mission at RunningTheCountry.com/donate.

Family Setting Record in Cross Country Run

Jackson Adams
Effingham Daily News

Source: http://www.effinghamdailynews.com/local/x998002367/Family-setting-record-in-cross-country-run?zc_p=0#sthash.wQfWn6HM.dpuf

EFFINGHAM — For David Wilcox of Sitka, Alaska, it’s all about the competition — but not for grades, games or sports. It’s setting a record as the second youngest person to run across the country.

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“I try not to think about quitting,” he said during a stop in Effingham this week.

David started looking into the run as a young teenager after learning about other teens who had made the run across the country.

He was determined to be the first to make the run himself, going from Huntington Beach, California, all the way to Atlantic City, New Jersey, before his 16th birthday. The challenge was convincing his parents to let him.

“We’re middle class people with middle class jobs,” said Brett Wilcox, David’s father. “And doing this was going to be a big thing for us. We were going to have to quit our jobs and go on the road. We sat David down and told him if he wanted to do this, it was all on him. If he wanted to do this, we’d be in 100 percent.”

And that’s how it’s been since Jan. 20, when Brett and David took off from California, running nine miles a day for the first few days of the 3,000-mile journey before taking on 20 miles of the sun-drenched Southwest on their way to the East Coast. Keeping Brett and David going is Kris, David’s mom, and his younger sister, 13-year-old Olivia, who drive ahead of the guys in a truck and camper.

“I turned into the early bird,” Kris said. “The ideal day is we wake up, have breakfast, get them on the road, get in the car and they run for the early day, we get the trailer set up and have a meal ready on the stove.”

Once the pair reach Atlantic City, hopefully in July, David will be the second youngest person to ever make the trip and, together, he and Brett will be the first father and son team to run the country together.

But the run isn’t solely about setting records. Brett said one of the family’s primary goals is communicating the dangers of GMOs (genetically modified organisms). He and David have been handing out packets of heirloom lettuce seeds. It’s a cause Brett is passionate about, having gone so far as to write a book, “We’re Monsanto: Feeding the World, Lie After Lie” and speaking with anyone the pair come across about the dangers of genetically modified food.

“I’ve been into healthy eating for a long time and when I learned what Monsanto and other chemical companies were doing with our food, I was very upset,” he said. “It was easy to attach the GMO thing to the run. We give presentations along the way.”

In addition to running six hours a day, six days a week, David said keeping up with school work has also been a challenge.

“The hardest thing for me is after running for six hours, I still have to do school work,” he said. “On top of the running, I have to do a large enough amount of school work to stay on the goal. I’m still not close to being done.”

Running side by side has been an eye-opening experience for father and son.

“It’s incredibly important, because I’m rewriting my own family history,” Brett said. “I didn’t get along that well with my dad and 10 minutes would have been enough on any given day. Spending basically 24/7 with David and Olivia and Kris requires that we do our best to respect and be with one another.”

To read the Wilcox’s blog about the run, visit their website at https://runningthecountry.com.

Jackson Adams can be reached at 217-347-7151, ext. 131, at jackson.adams@effinghamdaily news.com or via Twitter @EDNJAdams.

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