Genetically Engineered Milk Campaign - New Zealand
To support the billboards' message, MAdGE staged public protests. In collaboration with Greenpeace, the group organised thousands of demonstrators (police estimate 15,000; MAdGE estimates about 30,000) who marched in Auckland and Wellington on October 11 2003 to protest the lift of the genetically modified organisms ban. In addition, Currie and 10 other MAdGE women staged a protest in the debating chamber in the New Zealand Houses of parliament during question time. The women removed their shirts, revealing pink and black bras; they also carried banners that said "GE Free".
The public response to the campaign was mixed. In the words of William Rolleston, chairman of the Life Sciences Network (a biotech industry organisation for New Zealand and Australia), "MAdGE's latest grasp for public attention denigrates women and illustrates what little grasp this group has of reality. New Zealanders will be justified in relegating MAdGE to the pages of bad-taste science fiction." MAdGE's Currie acknowledged that the campaign "is definitely degrading to women, but more degrading to women is putting human genes in milk. It's punk art." Others said that the billboards only add to public confusion about genetic engineering.
MAdGE is a network of politically non-aligned women who actively resist the use of genetically engineered organisms in food and the release of those organisms into the environment. In addition to carrying out advocacy actions, MAdGE collects, correlates, and distributes information relating to genetic engineering. MAdGE believes that "GE ingredients must be proved to be 100% safe before we feed them to our families. Our children are not guinea pigs... we want the freedom to choose what we grow and eat".
The American Journal of Bioethics Weekly News & Updates October 27 2003 - Volume 3 No. 13; and "Moms Battle Genetic Engineering" by Kristen Philipkoski, Wired News October 18 2003; and "Why not just genetically engineer women for milk?", MAdGE press release dated October 1 2003.
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