Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Monsanto Stomps Down Budding Seed Competitors
ST. LOUIS - Confidential contracts detailing Monsanto Co.'s business practices reveal how the world's biggest seed developer is squeezing competitors, controlling smaller seed companies and protecting its dominance over the multibillion-dollar market for genetically altered crops, an Associated Press investigation has found.
A farmer holds Monsanto's Roundup Ready Soy Bean seeds at his family farm in Bunceton, Mo. Confidential contracts detailing Monsanto Co.'s business practices reveal how the world's biggest seed developer is squeezing competitors, controlling smaller seed companies and protecting its dominance over the multibillion-dollar market for genetically altered crops. (Dan Gill/AP Photo) With Monsanto's patented genes being inserted into roughly 95 percent of all soybeans and 80 percent of all corn grown in the U.S., the company also is using its wide reach to control the ability of new biotech firms to get wide distribution for their products, according to a review of several Monsanto licensing agreements and dozens of interviews with seed industry participants, agriculture and legal experts.
Declining competition in the seed business could lead to price hikes that ripple out to every family's dinner table. That's because the corn flakes you had for breakfast, soda you drank at lunch and beef stew you ate for dinner likely were produced from crops grown with Monsanto's patented genes.
Monsanto's methods are spelled out in a series of confidential commercial licensing agreements obtained by the AP. The contracts, as long as 30 pages, include basic terms for the selling of engineered crops resistant to Monsanto's Roundup herbicide, along with shorter supplementary agreements that address new Monsanto traits or other contract amendments.
The company has used the agreements to spread its technology - giving some 200 smaller companies the right to insert Monsanto's genes in their separate strains of corn and soybean plants. But, the AP found, access to Monsanto's genes comes at a cost, and with plenty of strings attached.
For example, one contract provision bans independent companies from breeding plants that contain both Monsanto's genes and the genes of any of its competitors, unless Monsanto gives prior written permission - giving Monsanto the ability to effectively lock out competitors from inserting their patented traits into the vast share of U.S. crops that already contain Monsanto's genes.
Monsanto's business strategies and licensing agreements are being investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice and at least two state attorneys general, who are trying to determine if the practices violate U.S. antitrust laws. The practices also are at the heart of civil antitrust suits filed against Monsanto by its competitors, including a 2004 suit filed by Syngenta AG that was settled with an agreement and ongoing litigation filed this summer by DuPont in response to a Monsanto lawsuit.
The suburban St. Louis-based agricultural giant said it's done nothing wrong.
"We do not believe there is any merit to allegations about our licensing agreement or the terms within," said Monsanto spokesman Lee Quarles. He said he couldn't comment on many specific provisions of the agreements because they are confidential and the subject of ongoing litigation.
"Our approach to licensing (with) many companies is pro-competitive and has enabled literally hundreds of seed companies, including all of our major direct competitors, to offer thousands of new seed products to farmers," he said.
The benefit of Monsanto's technology for farmers has been undeniable, but some of its major competitors and smaller seed firms claim the company is using strong-arm tactics to further its control.
"We now believe that Monsanto has control over as much as 90 percent of (seed genetics). This level of control is almost unbelievable," said Neil Harl, agricultural economist at Iowa State University who has studied the seed industry for decades. "The upshot of that is that it's tightening Monsanto's control, and makes it possible for them to increase their prices long term. And we've seen this happening the last five years, and the end is not in sight."
At issue is how much power one company can have over seeds, the foundation of the world's food supply. Without stiff competition, Monsanto could raise its seed prices at will, which in turn could raise the cost of everything from animal feed to wheat bread and cookies.
The price of seeds is already rising. Monsanto increased some corn seed prices last year by 25 percent, with an additional 7 percent hike planned for corn seeds in 2010. Monsanto brand soybean seeds climbed 28 percent last year and will be flat or up 6 percent in 2010, said company spokeswoman Kelli Powers.
Monsanto's broad use of licensing agreements has made its biotech traits among the most widely and rapidly adopted technologies in farming history. These days, when farmers buy bags of seed with obscure brand names like AgVenture or M-Pride Genetics, they are paying for Monsanto's licensed products.
One of the numerous provisions in the licensing agreements is a ban on mixing genes - or "stacking" in industry lingo - that enhance Monsanto's power.
One contract provision likely helped Monsanto buy 24 independent seed companies throughout the Farm Belt over the last few years: that corn seed agreement says that if a smaller company changes ownership, its inventory with Monsanto's traits "shall be destroyed immediately."
Quarles, however, said Sunday he wasn't familiar with that older agreement, obtained by the AP, but said, "as I understand it," Monsanto includes provisions in all its contracts that allow companies to sell out their inventory if ownership changes, rather than force the firms to destroy the inventory immediately.
Another provision from contracts earlier this decade- regarding rebates - also help explain Monsanto's rapid growth as it rolled out new products.
One contract gave an independent seed company deep discounts if the company ensured that Monsanto's products would make up 70 percent of its total corn seed inventory. In its 2004 lawsuit, Syngenta called the discounts part of Monsanto's "scorched earth campaign" to keep Syngenta's new traits out of the market.
Quarles said the discounts were used to entice seed companies to carry Monsanto products when the technology was new and farmers hadn't yet used it. Now that the products are widespread, Monsanto has discontinued the discounts, he said.
The Monsanto contracts reviewed by the AP prohibit seed companies from discussing terms, and Monsanto has the right to cancel deals and wipe out the inventory of a business if the confidentiality clauses are violated.
Thomas Terral, chief executive officer of Terral Seed in Louisiana, said he recently rejected a Monsanto contract because it put too many restrictions on his business. But Terral refused to provide the unsigned contract to AP or even discuss its contents because he was afraid Monsanto would retaliate and cancel the rest of his agreements.
"I would be so tied up in what I was able to do that basically I would have no value to anybody else," he said. "The only person I would have value to is Monsanto, and I would continue to pay them millions in fees."
Independent seed company owners could drop their contracts with Monsanto and return to selling conventional seed, but they say it could be financially ruinous. Monsanto's Roundup Ready gene has become the industry standard over the last decade, and small companies fear losing customers if they drop it. It also can take years of breeding and investment to mix Monsanto's genes into a seed company's product line, so dropping the genes can be costly.
Monsanto acknowledged that U.S. Department of Justice lawyers are seeking documents and interviewing company employees about its marketing practices. The DOJ wouldn't comment.
A spokesman for Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller said the office is examining possible antitrust violations. Additionally, two sources familiar with an investigation in Texas said state Attorney General Greg Abbott's office is considering the same issues. States have the authority to enforce federal antitrust law, and attorneys general are often involved in such cases.
Monsanto chairman and chief executive officer Hugh Grant told investment analysts during a conference call this fall that the price increases are justified by the productivity boost farmers get from the company's seeds. Farmers and seed company owners agree that Monsanto's technology has boosted yields and profits, saving farmers time they once spent weeding and money they once spent on pesticides.
But recent price hikes have still been tough to swallow on the farm.
"It's just like I got hit with bad weather and got a poor yield. It just means I've got less in the bottom line," said Markus Reinke, a corn and soybean farmer near Concordia, Mo. who took over his family's farm in 1965. "They can charge because they can do it, and get away with it. And us farmers just complain, and shake our heads and go along with it."
Any Justice Department case against Monsanto could break new ground in balancing a company's right to control its patented products while protecting competitors' right to free and open competition, said Kevin Arquit, former director of the Federal Trade Commission competition bureau and now a antitrust attorney with Simpson Thacher&Bartlett LLP in New York.
"These are very interesting issues, and not just for the companies, but for the Justice Department," Arquit said. "They're in an area where there is uncertainty in the law and there are consumer welfare implications and government policy implications for whatever the result is."
Other seed companies have followed Monsanto's lead by including restrictive clauses in their licensing agreements, but their products only penetrate smaller segments of the U.S. seed market. Monsanto's Roundup Ready gene, on the other hand, is in such a wide array of crops that its licensing agreements can have a massive effect on the rules of the marketplace.
Monsanto was only a niche player in the seed business just 12 years ago. It rose to the top thanks to innovation by its scientists and aggressive use of patent law by its attorneys.
First came the science, when Monsanto in 1996 introduced the world's first commercial strain of genetically engineered soybeans. The Roundup Ready plants were resistant to the herbicide, allowing farmers to spray Roundup whenever they wanted rather than wait until the soybeans had grown enough to withstand the chemical.
The company soon released other genetically altered crops, such as corn plants that produced a natural pesticide to ward off bugs. While Monsanto had blockbuster products, it didn't yet have a big foothold in a seed industry made up of hundreds of companies that supplied farmers.
That's where the legal innovations came in, as Monsanto became among the first to widely patent its genes and gain the right to strictly control how they were used. That control let it spread its technology through licensing agreements, while shaping the marketplace around them.
Back in the 1970s, public universities developed new traits for corn and soybean seeds that made them grow hardy and resist pests. Small seed companies got the traits cheaply and could blend them to breed superior crops without restriction. But the agreements give Monsanto control over mixing multiple biotech traits into crops.
The restrictions even apply to taxpayer-funded researchers.
Roger Boerma, a research professor at the University of Georgia, is developing specialized strains of soybeans that grow well in southeastern states, but his current research is tangled up in such restrictions from Monsanto and its competitors.
"It's made one level of our life incredibly challenging and difficult," Boerma said.
The rules also can restrict research. Boerma halted research on a line of new soybean plants that contain a trait from a Monsanto competitor when he learned that the trait was ineffective unless it could be mixed with Monsanto's Roundup Ready gene.
Boerma said he hasn't considered asking Monsanto's permission to mix its traits with the competitor's trait.
"I think the co-mingling of their trait technology with another company's trait technology would likely be a serious problem for them," he said.
Quarles pointed out that Monsanto has signed agreements with several companies allowing them to stack their traits with Monsanto's. After Syngenta settled its lawsuit, for example, the companies struck a broad cross-licensing accord.
At the same time, Monsanto's patent rights give it the authority to say how independent companies use its traits, Quarles said.
"Please also keep in mind that, as the (intellectual property developer), it is our right to determine who will obtain rights to our technology and for what purpose," he said.
Monsanto's provision requiring companies to destroy seeds containing Monsanto's traits if a competitor buys them prohibited DuPont or other big firms from bidding against Monsanto when it snapped up two dozen smaller seed companies over the last five years, said David Boies, a lawyer representing DuPont who previously was a prosecutor on the federal antitrust case against Microsoft Corp.
Competitive bids from companies like DuPont could have made it far more expensive for Monsanto to bring the smaller companies into its fold. But that contract provision prevented bidding wars, according to DuPont.
"If the independent seed company is losing their license and has to destroy their seeds, they're not going to have anything, in effect, to sell," Boies said. "It requires them to destroy things - destroy things they paid for - if they go competitive. That's exactly the kind of restriction on competitive choice that the antitrust laws outlaw."
Some independent seed company owners say they feel increasingly pinched as Monsanto cements its leadership in the industry.
"They have the capital, they have the resources, they own lots of companies, and buying more. We're small town, they're Wall Street," said Bill Cook, co-owner of M-Pride Genetics seed company in Garden City, Mo., who also declined to discuss or provide the agreements. "It's very difficult to compete in this environment against companies like Monsanto."



74 Comments so far
Show AllObvious solution: divide Monsanto into multiple companies, put the rights of research of GM crops back under public control (though given how openly pro-business is, I wouldn't trust the USDA any more than I do Monsanto, since the same groups of people are running both), lift patents on life, or at least roll them back to the better standards used by plant breeders since the 1920s.
Yes, Monsanto is one of many examples of out of control corporate control that continues to transfer ever more wealth from 99% of the world's population to the top 1%.
While the trusts and monopolies Teddy Roosevelt (TR) faced when he became president in 1901 were formidable, they were small potatoes compared to today's economic landscape of too big to fail banks, railroad monopolies, agribusiness behemoths, insurance syndicates, ever larger drug makers, and other corporate entities with revenues exceeding the GNP of most nations.
Whereas TR established the legacy of populist trustbuster, getting kicked out of the Republican Party in the process, Obama and Congress continue to pander to the corporations that have a stranglehold on the US and global economy.
I'm not a lawyer but it seems that the problem lies somewhere in patent law.
First it was an unusual decision of the patent office to allow biological self-replicating units (genes) to be patented. The reason for patents in general is to allow companies a reasonable return on their invention and to enable further invention. Notwithstanding that Monsanto never invented any genes it is impeding further innovation because of the nature their patent agreements. They seem to have learned from Microsoft which also patented self replicating units. Just as Microsoft has been enjoined from preventing competing software to run on their OS so Monsanto should be prevented from prohibiting genes to be stacked (using the article's term) on their patented gene.
I see these two areas (computer software and genes) as quite analogous, since they are both concerned with instructions for running systems. Just as Microsoft has felt the imposition of anti-trust regulation as it became too dominant so Mosanto needs to be controlled, particularly from imposing these draconian user agreements.
The bottom line for Monsanto is the sale of their TOXIC HERBICIDE "Roundup"
Monsanto IS NOT an environmentally friendly corporation.
Monsanto manufactures POISON and then obliges farmers to buy not only their genetically modified, poison resistant seed, but the poison to contaminate the soil in which those seeds are planted.
Monsanto needs to be called out and prosecuted for more than just their questionable seed contracts. They are poisoning the planet and whole food chain.
Wildly hysterical assertions about Roundup are not helpful. Farmers will use herbicides. Alternatives are often worse. Saving our soil with Roundup and no-til farming is FAR more important than trying to use tillage to control weeds. I used to spend endless hours on the tractor, cultivating. What a waste of time, fuel, and soil.
Another industry troll. Accusing someone of being unreasonable without dealing with the points raised is a classic deflection technique.
There is nothing wild or hysterical about Lily's observation. Glycophosphate has already been linked to non-Hodgkins lymphoma (http://www.organicconsumers.org/monsanto/roundup.cfm).
Also, Roundup-resistant strains of weeds are causing unexpected problems (http://www.france24.com/en/20090418-superweed-explosion-threatens-monsanto-heartlands-genetically-modified-US-crops). Using chemicals becomes an upward spiral of increasing application and pollution.
Furthermore, Monsanto has been less than honest about the toxic properties of its products (http://www.holisticmed.com/ge/roundup.html).
Some farmer you are. You are quite willing to deliver potentially health-threatening crops to the market just because you're lazy.
If farming is so tough, perhaps you should sell your farm to someone who can handle the work while you do something less demanding.
q
Thousands of family farms have been driven out of business. It is not the personal failings of the farmers, but the economic matrix in which they must function. It does not help any of us if farmers leave their land and concede the entire playing field to agribusiness. For decades now agricultural policy and farm support has been controlled by agribusiness. They get most of the money for socially questionable purposes. Mean while family farms have been allowed to languish and pull themselves up by their bootstraps, encouraged to sell land to developers, sell off herds in government buyouts, etc. They have been pushed out and not helped to stay in business.
This is bad news for all of us including city dwellers.
Joe
It's worse for you than me. I have some land, a tractor, and some memory of farming.
You can't save soil by pouring poisons into it. That's like saying "You save water by dumping in oil to kill the fish." Nonsensical.
'RoundUp' is the trademark name for watered down Agent Orange of Viet Nam fame, sold for domestic use.
I betcha didn't know that Monsanto was the creator of Agent Orange, and all the other hellish defoliants used in that other illegal war started with a lie. You know, the one about the Tonkin Gulf?
And ask Percy Shmeiser, an organic farmer from Saskatchewan, Canada who along with a neighbor were driven out of business when early versions of Monsanto's 'RoundUp Ready' wheat had pollen blow from the Monsanto test farm onto Mr. Shmeiser's crop which had been accredited and verified to be chemical and GMO free. Mr. Shmeiser and his neighbor were sued for 'infringement of patent' when it was discovered that the contaminated wheat was now 'RoundUp' ready. The only thing that separated the Monsanto crop from Percy Shymeiser was a property line and a wire fence. Shmeiser and his neighbor tried to counter sue for loss of livelihood, but were bankrupted by SLAPPs (Selective Litigation Against Public Participation) brough forth by Monsanto, as well as prohibitive court costs. The CANADIAN GOVERNMENT, who is supposed to be protecting *ALL* of it's citizens, not just the Corporate ones, failed in it's duty.
In India, there is mountains of evidence that Monsanto and Dow are working a concerted effort to eradicate the practice of seed saving by the small farmer. This has led to many farmer suicides when they are left with nothing to plant, and can't afford the expensive GMO Monsanto seeds.
At one point Monsanto considered inserting a 'terminator' gene which would have limited the seed to a single crop, which would bear sterile seeds,useless for seed saving and later planting, but still saleable otherwise. A Monsanto in-house experiment showed that the pollen of such plants, bearing the terminator gene, would rapidly spread to every other plant in the grass family, wiping out every single food grain around the world, as well as wild grasses and their relatives within a year. Sale of such seed would have rendered the planet uninhabitable, and there fore, profitless. The idea was shelved, but makes almost predictable reappearance as Monsanto considers way to increase it's market share.
Monsanto is also the creator of synthetic bovine growth hormone (rBGH) intended to stimulate industrial milk production, which has proven to have effects on humans, in speeding puberty and secondary sexual development in children as young as three. The synthetic hormone is present in the meat and milk consumed by humans, and is passed to the developing fetus, as well as direct consumption by children. Two reporters who tried to bring this information to public awareness were shut down by their TV station, who was a major recipient of Monsanto advertising dollars, specifically for 'RoundUp' herbicide/defoliant and 'RoundUp Ready' GMO grain.
It is interesting that, like a successful parasite, Monsanto stops short of causing downright death of its host. In this case death being the demise of all the grasses and grains of of the earth, and the ensuing loss of the customer base (in other words, the end of all human life). That is the only thing that stops them, if they are lucky enough to find out before it happens.
Informative comment, galen. Can you advise us about good sources of information on Monsanto?
Thanks.
Joe
Check the book 'Toxic Waste Is Good For You: Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics. The story of the PR industry.' and back issues of the magazine 'Common Dreams'. I think Naomi Klien also mentions Percy Shmeiser in her book 'The Corporation'.
The big idea that Monsanto has is to "sue" for their gene, whether naturally propogated or not. It's not up to the farmer then, the government will settle "out of court" as has happened recently with the banking system.
Dreams and delusions on Monsanto's part,, or maybe not.
For Christ's sake, do some actual research on Agent Orange before spouting off idiocies.
Calm down. Galenwainwright's error regarding Agent Orange was simply to mistake glyphosate rather than 2,4-D as the close relative and to make the mistake of claiming Monsanto was the creator rather than a supplier. It's not like he was trying to force industrial monocultures on a natural system and dousing his fields with a chemical that has been linked to non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, reductions in local bird populations, toxicity to fish, toxicity to mycorrhizal fingi, toxicity to Rhizobium bacteria and toxicity to amphibians or anything like that.
Dioxin, as a contaminant of 2,4,5-T was the main culprit in Agent Orange. Yes, a corn monoculture is, in most cases, a bad idea. I don't do monoculture. The risks you point out are thought to be generally small by most experts. I have buffer strips next to my creek which protects fish and helps to keep soil, fertilizer and chemicals out of the water. Having billions of humans living on this small planet is toxic to a great deal of life.
Excellent call on not doing monoculture, and for buffer strips. And yet I and many other farmers I know manage just fine to get by without glyphosate.
We have to help farmers escape from the box of two impossible choices - fail or cover everything with toxins.
How about agricultural research and development by someone other than the purveyors of expensive and toxic products? Are not health and agriculture areas of national interest just as much as mowing down people thousands of miles away? How about deploying and paying unemployed people to help farmers with the admittedly labor intensive work of more organic methods?
Joe
I agree with the no-till methodology, but defending Monsanto and its use of Roundup (which requires monocropping and soil depletion) is anathema to diversity, which is necessary in nature.
What I'd like to see is the return of many more small, local farms using organic, no-till methods. At the least, I would love to see herbicides like Roundup banned, and companies like Monsanto blown up. They are a scourge on the planet and the end to diversity.
Thanks Ted. Hang in there. Either Peak Oil will set in or Washington/UN will finally back off subsidizing Monsanto to pave the way for returning to small, local, organic farms just like the ones about 50 years ago.
You know I won't hang in there for anything, Jennifer - too busy being busy! ;-)
Honestly, you should check out the transition towns movement. This is exactly what they're/we're working on.
And yes, Peak Oil will set in...no matter what.
"And yes, Peak Oil will set in...no matter what."
They have been saying that for decades and decades Ted. I believe we will change fuel basis before we ever run out of oil.
I dunno but those oil shocks of the 1970s and that 2008 gas price hell is still not a distant memory. It has already happened in some countries but Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq are predicted to get their turn this coming decade.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_prices#History
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predicting_the_timing_of_peak_oil
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000s_energy_crisis
My guess is Peak Oil will be global but slowly catching up to us. If the gas prices go to $5 and stay higher for about a year then the fuel change will be inevitable.
What fuel/power source will be there in any quantity to meet the demand? What will you make it out of? How much lead time do you need to get the infrastructure in place?
And more importantly, will the feed stock of the new fuel/power source be able to replace the vast multitude of products currently made from oil?
I dunno the answer on which fuel to meet the demand so I guess we will have to scale back on the demand to make more choices viable. Infrastructure shouldn't be as much of an issue if the operation can be decentralized.
And they were right.
Peak oil is not about running out of oil, it is about running out of cheap oil. What the US is running on now is expensive oil which has been made cheap through the process of cost shifting where we shift the cost of the oil we use onto other nations. This is coming to an end simply because it has to.
No one knows how long it will take for oil to be prohibitively expensive, even for the Unites States. But the cost of our military, which is necessary for cost shifting, is breaking us.
The Pentagon and the "intelligence" agencies have been aware of this for a while and have been training folks just for this occasion. What do you think Iraq, Afghanistan, Central America, and next, Iran, are all about?
As for other fuels - possibly. There are many things on the horizon, but the sheer amount of oil that is necessary to run, ship, produce, and grow what we consume cannot be substituted without a great deal of redesign and dislocation.
"Farmers will use herbicides" If your herbicides would stay in your soil forever then no one would care how much poison you use. Eventually your land would be worthless and you would learn there's no such thing as a free lunch. Then someone could buy it real cheap and detoxify it.
But no one has a right to impose a cost on anyone else so you should be paying for water reclamation downstream and to replace contaminated well water. Or maybe the medical costs of those 100 or so cases of cancer that are deemed "acceptable".
You don't have to pay directly but Monsanto should pay and then you'd pay in the price of the seed.
Personally, I'd just ban the stuff but if you want a free market, try a real one, not some phony "Waaa, waaa, I can do what I want and who cares who gets hurt"
There is published, peer-reviewed research into the toxic effects of glyphosate - hardly "hysterical assertions." You might want to bother reading them.
You might also want to call Rodale for helps on no-till without glyphosate. They'll be glad to help you out.
MILLIONS AGAINST MONSANTO - share it with a friend (or 50)
http://www.organicconsumers.org/monlink.cfm
monoculture - the green desert
Obvious solution: Refuse to eat Franken Foods!
That is assuming that most actually have the choice. It takes gas and time to comparison shop. Labels are deceptive. Organic food is more expensive. It takes the same to get the word out. Gas and time are shrinking commodities. It is all part of the plan.
This coming year, I will, for the first time, spend more than $100/acre for corn seed cost. While this seed is a quality product from a grower's point of view, the cost outlay is sobering. I appreciated the article's quoting Neil Harl. When it comes to agricultural economics, no one has more respect, in my opinion. Monopolistic enterprises have been on the increase the past few decades. A too strong stance against moneyed interests is often political suicide. The politician better be squeaky clean is he chooses a strong attack. However, a 'swift-boat' ad campaign may do him in regardless.
*duplicate*
q
A threat from an industry troll.
Given your worship of Monsanto, your complete acquiesence to corporate control of our food supply, and your unwillingness to do the work necessary to produce a healthy product, I question your use of the word 'quality.'
q
Industry trolls have always been a big part of the problem.
Despite Teddy Roosevelt's success in breaking up trusts and monopolies during his presidency (1901-1909) he was shot (but not killed) by a corporate goon while campaigning in the 1912 election.
Businessmen don't take kindly to people who break up their monopolies.
What you said.
I find Greg's point of view, as a farmer enlightening, and not in the least threatening. He's a regular here and in many threads. He knows what he's talking about when he took Galen to task over calling glyphosphate watered-down agent Orange. No till farming is well known to preserve soil carbon content.
quickstepper, I find your comments bigoted, you probably support free speech but not if it interferes with your own agenda.
Thank you for posting this here in CD. It is tough enough trying to get ignorant people to listen to what is hurting them let alone convincing them to take the correct action. It is bad enough that I have to put up with lame brains saying "well, it's your personal responsibility so you get off your ass, blah-blah-blah !" Oh, so let us just ignore the corporate rapists behind the scenes ! Let us ignore the UN and Washington who are responsible for shamelessly and "boldly" TRASHING individual and collective efforts to survive the tyranny of Big Agri ! It is frustrating enough when it is hard to get people to conquer Big Agri but it is even more upsetting when some people go out of their way to shamelessly and "boldly" apologize for the status quo and try to pin the blame on the working class instead of the elites. I challenge all you "make him do it" followers to answer for why you think it's ok for Washington, UN, and Big Agri to crush the valiant efforts of small farmers already under the knife. And don't even think about giving another "well you got to do something about it on your own" lame brain excuse because that is only a message that you support those corporate criminals and the UN and Washington that "boldly" and shamelessly deliver for them !
The only solution to these problems is to change Congress next year. And to apply pressure on this one locally and state by state.
On the issue of agriculture, it is amazing that the conservative Republicans in the rural districts out here in the heartland actually side with the small farmers against Big Agri. It's bad enough that HR 875 and NAIS are circling around small farmers like vultures. On the local level, for this issue I seem to be getting better luck getting the suburban mayors to listen more than the inner city ones.
Good prople are always good people no matter their designation. There are a number of Democratic politicians and "Progressives" I wouldn't give space in the dog's house to.
The current crop of nasties will pass soon enough I think and we'll have better times with politicians that actually care about the American people.
I'd say, forget the large cities. Its coming from the rural and suburban areas.
Jen, I understand that you are upset about efforts getting wasted but I would not give up efforts to get your city to rein in Monsanto even if Washington and the UN are defending that devil of a corporation. Local efforts can in turn expose the rot in Washington and the UN. Do not allow frustrations and upset feelings to thwart your honest efforts. I know how frustrating it can be to watch your best efforts getting trashed but think of this. Those of you who voted third party made a lot of efforts to prevent the two parties from swaying your vote and you did what you could to try warn the voters of the fallacies of voting for Mccain or Obama. Maybe your efforts did not win you that candidate but you did not lose for trying either. I think that Ted is trying to say the same thing on trying to fight the system on all levels. I hate to say this but in the heartlands a lot of farmers too easily gave up the agri-giants and the consequences were obviously disastrous. I have to concede that it will take team efforts by more people willing to help more small farmers to tame, let alone defeat, Monsanto. I have read about your efforts to rein in Monsanto on this site and on Alternet. That is remarkable for your age and the only way your efforts will be guaranteed wasted is if you give up your part. I think that is what Ted was trying to tell you earlier.
Family farms need help with the real stresses of running a small business in a corporatist environment. But that help should not be based on toxifying the natural environment. The appointment of Islam Siddiqui is a strong indicator of how well the current administration will support the public and family farms on a responsible and sustainable food policy. Once again, we cannot hope for help from the corporatist government.
Joe
Well said!!!
Two years ago 2.5 gallons of round up sold for $30.00. This year it was $100.00
That's because the feed stock (petroleum) to make the defoliant had doubled in price in two years.
RoundUp and it's chemical poison brethren are all made from crude, as are the fertilizers modern large scale farming depends on. The oil goes, the food follows.
"RoundUp and it's chemical poison brethren are all made from crude..."
Galen, I enjoy your posts but please stick to stuff you know or research and verify. Posting untruths simply destroys your credibility. Glyphosate is a simple N-substituted (phosphonomethyl) glycine, can be and is synthesized without using any chemicals derived from oil.
Glyphosate may be a simple N-substituted (phosphonomethyl) glycine, as you assert as though it were cookies & milk, but it's a poison.
http://www.environmentalhealthnews.org/ehs/newscience/roundup-mix-more-toxic-to-liver-cells-than-glyphosate/
Glyphosate is meant to be a poison, since its action is to inhibit an essential enzyme required for the biosynthesis of phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan. It was invented and synthesized.
BTW the article you cite relates the toxic effects to unknown compounds in the Round up mix or to interactions between these compounds and Round up since the toxicity is greater than glyphosate alone.
The patent on Round up expired in 2000, hence the rush to develop secondary patent protection through genetic engineering using a gene for the inhibited enzyme from a bacterium that is unaffected.
This whole business of being able to patent non-inventions that are simply already existing compositions of matter (to use a patent term) is ridiculous.
It's back down again. I just bought my generic roundup for $10/gal. I don't know why anyone would buy the expensive stuff from Monsanto. OOOOOps. I suppose a "monsanto troll" like myself, shouldn't say things like that.