Comparing Vitamin, Mineral and Energy Content of GMO vs. Non-GMOApril 18, 2013
Marco Torres,
Waking TimesConsumers select organic foods over genetically modified organisms
(GMO) for a variety of reasons, however besides the long list of
potential health implications from consuming GMO, the one thing that
impacts decision making more than anything else is nutrition. There are
convincing differences between organic and
GMO foods in nutrient content and health benefits.
Higher antioxidant levels, lower pesticide loads,
better farming practices all lead to a more nutritious end product when choosing organic over GMO foods.
For example, tomatoes grown by organic methods
contain more phenolic compounds than
those grown using commercial standards. That study — published in the
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry — analysed the phenolic
profiles of Daniela tomatoes grown either using ‘conventional’ or
organic methods, finding that those grown under organic conditions
contained significantly higher levels of phenolic compounds than those
grown conventionally.
Other findings published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry showed that
organically produced apples have a 15 percent higher antioxidant capacity than conventionally produced apples.
A stunning report on GMO vs. organic corn posted on
Moms Across America clearly showing the nutritional value difference between GMO corn and NON GMO corn.
“The important thing to note in these deficiencies is that these are
exactly the deficiencies in a human being that lead to susceptibility to
sickness, disorders and cancer. People who have osteoporosis are low in
calcium and magnesium, people who have cancer are low in maganese. The
list goes on and on.”
- Non-GMO corn has 6130 ppm of calcium while GMO corn has 14 — non-GMO corn has 437 times more calcium.
- Non-GMO corn has 113 ppm of magnesium while GMO corn has 2 — non-GMO corn has about 56 times more magnesium.
- Non-GMO corn has 113 ppm of potassium while GMO corn has 7 — non-GMO corn has 16 times more potassium.
- Non-GMO corn has 14 ppm of manganese while GMO corn has 2 — non-GMO corn has 7 times more manganese.
Overall, the paper found that non-GMO corn is
20 times richer in nutrition, energy and protein compared to GMO corn.
“Agritech companies have given themselves veto power over the work of
independent researchers.” Scientists must literally ‘ASK’ these
corporations for PERMISSION BEFORE publishing
independent research on GMO crops.” (Scientific Amerian, August 13, 2009.)
This article written by the Editors in Scientific American goes on to
mention how Elson J. Shields an entomologist at Cornell University and
spokesperson for a group of 24 corn insect scientists who protested
against the ‘blocking’ of ‘unfavourable’ GMO research (ie. research that
may not promote GMOs), actually wrote to the EPA. These protests were
about the “…selective denials and permissions based on industry
perceptions of how ‘friendly’ or ‘hostile’ a particular scientist may be
toward (seed enhancement) technology.”
Most nations in the world have no GMO-Free platform to protect their citizens and
although this is slowly changing, most nations are far behind places
like Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela, Egypt, Russia and others who have
GMO-Free or national bans on GMOs. Nations such as The United States,
Canada, China, UK, Australia, Mexico, and most of South America, Asia
and Africa who have no formal GMO-free platforms so that they continue
their unrestricted and widespread use in all foods.
Source:-
http://www.wakingtimes.com/2013/04/18/comparing-vitamin-mineral-and-energy-content-of-gmo-vs-non-gmo/