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SEQUENCE:18819647
CREATED:20120910T003400Z
DESCRIPTION:Learn about genetically engineered foods with a double feature movie night! 
  Join a panel discussion in between the films with local leaders on the Yes 
 on 37 campaign regarding the efforts to label GMOs and how you can get 
 involved.  Stay for one film or watch them both!  Donations are never 
 required but always appreciated!\n\nEasy parking around the back of the 
 building or on the street.  For questions, please contact: 
 SFPeninsulaLabelGMOs@gmail.com\n\n\n \n \n6:30 - The Future of Food 
 showing\n \n8:00 - Followup discussion and break\n \n8:30 - Bitter Seeds 
 showing\n \n \n \nThe Future of Food, Deborah Koons Garcia’s documentary, 
 distills the complex technology and key regulatory, legal, ethical, 
 environmental and consumer issues surrounding the changes happening in the 
 food system today -- genetically engineered foods, patenting, and the 
 corporatization of food -- into terms the average person can easily 
 understand with unprecedented clarity. It empowers consumers to realize the 
 consequences of their food choices on our future. While genetically 
 modified organisms (GMOs) are sprouting up throughout our food supply, 
 government and agribusiness are like foxes guarding the hen house - 
 promoting more GMOs while completely ignoring the potential risks. This is 
 a powerful and influential film on what has happened to our food supply.  
 88 minutes.\n \n \n \nBitter Seeds is the final film in Micha X. Peled’s 
 Globalization Trilogy, following Store Wars: When Wal-Mart Comes to Town 
 and China Blue, winners of 18 international awards and screened in more 
 than 100 film festivals. Following a U.S. complaint to the World Trade 
 Organization, India had to open its doors to foreign seed companies. Within 
 a few years, multinational corporations had taken over India’s seed 
 market in a number of major crops. Now only much more expensive GM seeds 
 are available at the shops, requiring India’s farmers to pay an annual 
 royalty on top of additional fertilizers and insecticides. While large 
 farms have prospered, the majority of farmers find it increasingly more 
 difficult to make a living off their land.  Like most of his neighbors, 
 cotton-farmer Ram Krishna must borrow heavily in order to afford the 
 mounting costs of modern farming. Required by a money-lender to put up his 
 land as collateral, he gambles on everything he has. Manjusha, a college 
 student, is determined to become a journalist and tell the world about the 
 farmers’ predicament – her father was one of the suicide victims.  
 Bitter Seeds follows a season in a village at the epicenter of the crisis, 
 from sowing to harvest. 88 minutes.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/09/09/18721309.php
SUMMARY:Movie Double Feature Night - Genetically Engineered Food
LOCATION:San Mateo Democrats HQ\n650 El Camino Real\nBelmont, CA 94002
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/09/09/18721309.php
DTSTART:20120915T013000Z
DTEND:20120915T053000Z
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