Lawsuit Alleges Whole Foods Sold Frozen Vegetables from China Grown in a Polluted Region by Prisoners and Certified as Organic

June 17th, 2011

Ahh, imagine my shock.

Rant mode: On.

We buy some organic foods in bulk from wholesale distributors here in New Zealand. Increasingly, if we want to buy these ‘certified organic’ bulk foods, the country of origin is China.

We refuse to buy any food from China, regardless of which organic certification it has. We’ve indicated this to the distributors (Ceres and Chantal) and they said that they hear it all the time, but, according to them, they are just buying what’s available, and apparently, that means the only option is China for an increasing number of foods. (Becky orders thousands of dollars worth of products from these places for a co-op we’re in with other families.)

Now, that’s the organic stuff, where we can at least find out where the food originates. What happens with the supermarket duopoly here?

Part of New Zealand’s take over by Chinese interests is related to country of origin information on food labels. In New Zealand, there’s no requirement to indicate where food is from on the packaging. All kinds of nonsense reasons are given for this, but the main one (now) is that seeing “China” on so many food labels would cause difficulties for the politicians who exist to sell New Zealand down the river. People would really start to wonder, “WTF is happening here?” Why is a country like New Zealand, so easily capable of producing an abundance of food locally, importing F*@^!%$ beans from CHINA!? Nobody in polite circles will discuss this.

The short answer is that New Zealand is a company town, and that company is Fonterra. New Zealanders use a Fonterra Milk Buck as a national currency. You may know it as the New Zealand Dollar. The largest component of the agricultural sector involves maximum output of dairy products for export. Why grow food for consumption here when you can make more money by milking cows for Fonterra… As a result of this, we get the ubiquitous, “Packaged in Auckland,” on a lot of things, which just means “Made in China” almost all of the time. That food is cheap, cheap, cheap. High quality dairy products go out, and garbage from China comes in. The change is paid to foreign creditors, which is never enough, and the deficit grows by the day. The End.

Almost all fertilizer used commercially in New Zealand has to be imported. This is a company town, forget it. Water pollution? Never mind. Soil erosion? What’s that? Deficit getting worse all the time? More milk solids! MOOOOOORRRRRRE! “Packaged in Auckland”? Look away, and be a happy Kiwi.

In other news: Fonterra Selling Yuan Denominated Bonds in Hong Kong:

Fonterra Co-Operative Group Ltd. is poised to become the first company from New Zealand to raise funds in the offshore yuan bond market with a 300 million yuan (US$46 million) bond it aims to price later Friday.

The dairy giant’s treasury manager, Stephan Deschamps, said the company hopes to sell more so-called “dim sum” bonds in the future. The decision to raise funds in Hong Kong, the center of the rapidly growing international yuan bond market, reflects the growing importance of China to Fonterra’s business operations, he said.

Look at the Hell on Earth that the Chinese regime has created in their own country. Now, they want us to eat it, in, “Clean green New Zealand,” and everywhere else.

Not me. Not my family. No way.

Via: Bloomberg:

A Florida judge allowed a lawsuit to proceed that claims Whole Foods Market Inc. (WFMI) violated the state’s deceptive trade-practices law by selling frozen vegetables from China grown in a polluted region by prisoners and certified as organic.

Miami-Dade County Circuit Judge Amy Steele Donner yesterday denied the grocery chain’s motion to dismiss the suit filed on behalf of the Southeast Consumer Alliance Inc., a non-profit organization based in Boca Raton, Florida.

The suit claims that Whole Foods knew that its Silver River supplier, based in the Chinese province of Zhejiang, was actually a front company for a network of farms where Chinese prisoners are forced to work and that the farms are irrigated from a highly polluted river.

The suit also claims that Austin, Texas-based Whole Foods knew that the company providing the initial organic certification is owned by the Chinese government, which also owns the farms, creating a conflict of interest.

“They’re doing everything they can to conceal this bogus or shaky certification,” Bruce Baldwin, the group’s attorney, said. “Whole Foods brags about its social accountability audits of all of its foreign suppliers. So either they knew about these forced labor camps, or they didn’t actually check.”

A spokeswoman for the grocery store chain didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment. Whole Foods attorney Christopher Wayne Wadsworth said he wasn’t authorized to comment on the case.

Research Credit: JH

8 Responses to “Lawsuit Alleges Whole Foods Sold Frozen Vegetables from China Grown in a Polluted Region by Prisoners and Certified as Organic”

  1. realitydesign says:

    Things are indeed a mess.

    Here in Sweden, a country that has a robust agricultural tradition- especially in terms of clean, high quality DOMESTIC meat production- Swedish sheep farmers only account for 30% of the consumed lamb meat…the rest is imported from New Zealand! Here, the farmers are being undersold by New Zealand lamb prices or in the beef sector- Brazilian stuff (in Brazil they pour on the old-school nasty banned fertilizers). It’s all just dumb. I’m always reminded of what Daniel Estulin says: the elite do not want any country to be able to provide for themselves.

  2. savethepopulation says:

    Its really sad. In Croatia, years ago, I would go to the local market for homegrown food. Then, one summer, I noticed that the food being sold as homegrown was actually bought at discount from the big cheap chains down the road and sold as homegrown.

    The masses there, who grew up on homemade food, have witnessed the explosion of big chain stores…so obscene, there is even one giant intersection with one on each corner!

    The majority now flock to the cheap crap foods at the chains as homegrown fades away. Welcome to the new world order.

  3. tochigi says:

    Kevin, that is an extremely concise, accurate description of the situation in NZ. food labeling is a scam, the intensive dirty dairying industry is a scam, the supermarket industry is a scam, the telecom industry is a scam, and the current govt wants to turn the whole place into a giant motorway with south Florida-style subdivisions. the main media are also a scam. the country is run for the benefit of: 1. the aussie banks, 2. Fonterra (a country within a country), 3. the property developers (sic), and 4. importers of crap from China and Chinese investors (sic).

  4. Kevin says:

    This food issue has to be the single most important factor to getting people to understand the rest of the picture.

  5. Kevin says:

    @tochigi

    The latest from The Wayne Brown Apocalypse Now Show:

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/australia/news/article.cfm?l_id=15&objectid=10732021

    Mining, mining, mining is the answer for anything that ails ya.

    We’re in bad trouble here.

    Not only is the enemy inside the gates, the people elected him mayor. Unemployment crisis? Almost one out of two Maori on the dole? Mining, mining, mining to the rescue.

  6. Kevin says:

    @tochigi re: Telecom

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/technology/news/article.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10732819

    Telecom has admitted a software error has caused over-counting of broadband usage since November – affecting 35,000 customers who will be now be offered compensation.

  7. Ann says:

    It’s happening in America too. I’ve seen a lot of food with the Made in China label on it.

    Furthermore, what annoys me even more is what savethepopulation said about Croatia. I’ve seen “farmers” around her buying whole crates of cheap veggies at the produce distribution center and then reselling them for a premium as ‘local and organic’ and pocketing a tidy profit. If you can buy tomatoes for 50 cents a pound wholesale and sale them for $4 (tax free no less) why bother with all the dirt and bother of farming?

  8. Eileen says:

    Shame on ‘Whole Foods”
    Greedy idiots.
    Oh there goes thAT SAYING again: Give people enoug rope and an idiot will “always” hang themelves
    God luck you blastards.

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