Corporate Communism
“In any civilized society, it is every citizen’s responsibility to obey just laws. But at the same time, it is every citizen’s responsibility to disobey unjust laws.” - Martin Luther King Jr.
OH WAL-MART, HOW YOU PAIN ME
Please join the boycott of Wal-Mart. This sinister monarchy is at it again, passing off foreign foods as organics when they are nothing of the sort. Realize this, my fellow liberators – there is nowhere near enough REAL organic food production to keep up with demand nationwide. And there sure as hell isn’t enough to stock all the Wal-Marts. Think about it. If it comes from South or Central America and is labeled “organic,” there is a 99% chance it is not organic. Squiggy the Third Eye.
AN OPEN LETTER TO WAL-MART Dear Soul-Sucking Tyrant:
I’ve had a while to chew the cud of your letter and the challenges you’ve imposed on the American farmer’s dreams and even a hippie-redneck’s ambitious rebellions. While it is apparent you and your oligarchy of inbred board members will plot the hostile takeover of yet another third-world country, allow me to put on my Made in the USA work boots to kick some ass in your corporate kingdom.
With all due respect to the free-mason like empire your Uncle Sam built, do know all empires were built to fall. And yours especially, since the walls of your kingdom were stacked with the cheapest mud brick made in China. All we must do is simply turn those sprinklers 180 degrees and your brothel will boil into the tar pits overnight. And I’ll be there smirking, flashlight and sticky-icky in hand, as the mice and illegal immigrants (you have handcuffed, bound, and gagged in shipping/receiving), adjust their bedeviled eyes to the great outdoors as they attempt to scurry toward the hills. And let me assure you Wallace, it is a long way to the hills out here.
I’ve boycotted your stores, Wallace. Somewhere in the distant shadows, I clutch your voo-doo doll (stuffed with American cotton) in my hands, surrounded by rusty nails. While most Americans drudge their deflated souls through your harlot aisles, I stand from afar, crossing your parking lot only to steal your plastic bags (so I might sell my home-grown fruits and vegetables in recycled bags) and grease the wheels of your shopping carts with my own urine (comprised mostly of American beer). I’ll warn others of your evil-doings, of how you bankrupt one American company (see Vlasic Pickles) after another, and how you degrade the American farmer, ignore American products, manipulate importing and exporting, encourage free trade, and how you also plan to ruin organic farming in this country. You hoist your muddied mini-skirt (made of the finest Egyptian cotton), leapfrogging across the big pond into whatever country will sell you the most for the least. You jump in bed (courtesy of Nike sneakers made in Taiwan) with the first foreign-tongued sailor (his suit is polyester, made in a Thai sweat shop) who crosses your path, making sick, sad love on sheets (made in an Indian sweat shop) as you later cry into a South American handkerchief (yes, also courtesy of a third-world sweat shop) sown by a four-year old girl. You are a leach, a preying mantis, Wallace. Your Tower of Babel is nearing its peak. I am the sledge hammer with a country accent and the bulldozer with a farmer’s tan. The American consumer is slowly waking up to your factoried nightmare. Even if I have to continuously turn their cradles upside down.
I have broken free of your hypnotic grip. It is true, I’ve only been in your store once in the past three weeks, Wallace. That was to scout out your weaknesses…okay, and to buy an inexpensive breast pump (emergency only!!!) Damn you and your low, low prices. What a tangled web you have weaved, Wallace. What a tangled web indeed.
But alas, I witnessed first-hand your shrinking supplies, your dissipating shelves, your cleverly spaced aisles to give the illusion there are more goods (sic) than ever, and yes Wallace, I stole a copy of the Wal-Mart employee rulebook. No fraternizing of employees after hours? No purchases outside the store borders? No naps? No contact with family members for at least 10 days after hiring? No bathroom breaks between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m? Mandatory lobotomies on the hour? And seriously, coercing employees to sleep with their blue vests on while listening to Sam Walton’s all-time greatest motivational speeches (available in Chinese, Spanish, Indian, Taiwanese, Portuguese, Pig Latin, German, Italian, French, Russian, Estonian, Tex-Mex, and ASL) as Lee Greenwood’s God Bless The USA whimpers in the background? It all seems a little much…even for you, Wallace, and your Nazi-like embrace of the marriage between corporation and state, also known as fascism. I’m looking for the armbands with the swastika on employee uniforms or a peculiar tattoo on their foreheads. It’s coming, isn’t it, Mart-ee? I can hear the ominous sounds of polished leather boots echoing in unison across your spotless floors.
As a hippie-farmer I do take great offense to many of your practices, particularly your use of the ‘smiley-face’ as the official Wal-Mart mascot. Disguised as a widget-dealer from Papa New Guinea during my last visit, I was able to unearth even more horrors about your cute little icon. That’s right! I located your herd of midget illegals (feeding themselves on cardboard crumbs and one gallon of Vlasic pickles, available now for just 65 cents) whom you force to dance around your stores like pharmaceutically-induced topless dancers at a Shriner’s convention. For shame, sir. For shame.
And stealing away America’s social security solely so you might scam presently-tense challenged octogenarians into meeting and greeting your customers at 1967 minimum wage prices! How do you sleep at night? Your answer I’m sure would be, “On the least expensive mattress made in Asia.” Or is it Mexico now? South America? Hmm. The possibilities are increasing, aren’t they, Wallace?
While you may scoff at my boycott and rebellion against your oligarchy, know this you son of a hording free mason. It has always been farmers who begin revolutions. It has always been farmers who finish them. Independence and freedom still rings true far from the concrete jungle. Your tattered flag is being lowered, Wallace. Your kingdom is crumbling before your very eyes. And as for my nag champa, it is heating the coals that will roast the spic of your corporate carcass as the rest of my tribe dances naked in the parking lot, celebrating your last flimsy brick (batteries not included) that is melting in the night sky.
(this is the previous letter I received from Satan’s brother-in-law a while back.)
Well, well, well, Mr. organic onion man has learned to operate a computer, as well as string consonants, vowels and sometimes punctuation together in what appears to be an English dialect. Not bad for a chromosomally comprimised, frisbee chucking, patchouli bathing hipster from this so called \”Big Spring\” Texas USA!
Ha! Sounds to me like a place way beyond \”the sticks\”. You know, out in Butt-Poke County, where the lazy-eyed sheriff and the half-witt deputy sip Dairy Queen coffee while nervously fingering their revolvers.
The old timers clad in carharrt and wrangler hang on their every thought:
Indeed, Mr. OnionHippieMan: Your level of piety. Is…well…um…it\’s at a level so pious that even the most pious person in the whole wide world would look at you and be like, \”Damn Man! that\’s some pretty pious shit\” (And also he would be saying it in a deep Isaac Hayes kinda voice!)
Let me introduce you to my concept. The Hippie Crushing machine. When I\’m through with you and your ilk. Your naked corpses will be exported to third world countries, at a profit. To be used as fertilizer for these miracle crops you so disparage. Your heads will be placed on punjii sticks and will line the entrances of Wal-Mart produce sections all over the world. As a warning to future hippies who, when not in the midst of \”sticky-icky\” inhalation, have some failed notion of changing American consumer habits.
Ha! Onion Man! Ha! Let me give you a piece of advice: I\’ll never go broke overestimating my ability to exploit the sweat of Latin Peoples. In fact I even turn a profit on their actual sweat ( it\’s the secret ingredient of Red-Bull.)
Still you continue your crusade. Resitance is futile hippy. You, too, will sucuumb to our market savvy wiles. You, too, will feel the wrath of the roll-back. You, too, will know the agony of the AARP Greeter!
Do yourself a favor hippy–plant something Americans really want, like a golf course.
Sincerely,
Wallace T. Mart
CEO Wal-Mart Oligarchy
PS: I think your nag-champa is on fire!
(Monsanto Whistelblower story continued from blog page)
Kirk felt let down. “I went in there with the idea of helping and healing and came out with ‘Oh, I guess it is just another profit-oriented company.’” He returned to California, still holding out hopes that the new technology could make a difference.
Possible Toxins in GM Plants
Kirk was developing the market in the West for two types of GM cotton. Bt cotton was engineered with a gene from a soil bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis. Organic farmers use the natural form of the bacterium as an insecticide, spraying it occasionally during times of high pest infestation. Monsanto engineers, however, isolated and then altered the gene that produces the Bt-toxin, and inserted it into the DNA of the cotton plant. Now every cell of their Bt cotton produces a toxic protein. The other variety was Roundup Ready® cotton. It contains another bacterial gene that enables the plant to survive an otherwise toxic dose of Monsanto’s Roundup® herbicide. Since the patent on Roundup’s main active ingredient, glyphosate, was due to expire in 2000, the company was planning to sell Roundup Ready seeds that were bundled with their Roundup herbicide, effectively extending their brand’s dominance in the herbicide market.
In the summer of 1997, Kirk spoke with a Monsanto scientist who was doing some tests on Roundup Ready cotton. Using a “Western blot” analysis, the scientist was able to identify different proteins by their molecular weight. He told Kirk that the GM cotton not only contained the intended protein produced by the Roundup Ready gene, but also extra proteins that were not normally produced in the plant. These unknown proteins had been created during the gene insertion process.
Gene insertion was done using a gene gun (particle bombardment). Kirk, who has an undergraduate degree in biochemistry, understood this to be “a kind of barbaric and messy method of genetic engineering, where you use a gun-like apparatus to bombard the plant tissue with genes that are wrapped around tiny gold particles.” He knew that particle bombardment can cause unpredictable changes and mutations in the DNA, which might result in new types of proteins.
The scientist dismissed these newly created proteins in the cotton plant as unimportant background noise, but Kirk wasn’t convinced. Proteins can have allergenic or toxic properties, but no one at Monsanto had done a safety assessment on them. “I was afraid at that time that some of these proteins may be toxic.” He was particularly concerned that the rogue proteins “might possibly lead to mad cow or some other prion-type diseases.”
Kirk had just been studying mad cow disease (bovine spongiform encephalopathy) and its human counterpart, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). These fatal diseases had been tracked to a class of proteins called prions. Short for “proteinaceous infectious particles,” prions are improperly folded proteins, which cause other healthy proteins to also become misfolded. Over time, they cause holes in the brain, severe dysfunction and death. Prions survive cooking and are believed to be transmittable to humans who eat meat from infected “mad” cows. The disease may incubate undetected for about 2 to 8 years in cows and up to 30 years in humans.
When Kirk tried to share his concerns with the scientist, he realized, “He had no idea what I was talking about; he had not even heard of prions. And this was at a time when Europe had a great concern about mad cow disease and it was just before the noble prize was won by Stanley Prusiner for his discovery of prion proteins.” Kirk said “These Monsanto scientists are very knowledge about traditional products, like chemicals, herbicides and pesticides, but they don’t understand the possible harmful outcomes of genetic engineering, such as pathophysiology or prion proteins. So I am explaining to him about the potential untoward effects of these foreign proteins, but he just did not understand.”
Endangering the Food Supply
At this time, Roundup Ready cotton varieties were just being introduced into other regions but were still being field-tested in California. California varieties had not yet been commercialized. But Kirk came to find out that Monsanto was feeding the cotton plants used in its test plots to cattle.
“I had great issue with this,” he said. “I had worked for Abbot Laboratories doing research, doing test plots using Bt sprays from bacteria. We would never take a test plot and put into the food supply, even with somewhat benign chemistries. We would always destroy the test plot material and not let anything into the food supply. Now we entered into a new era of genetic engineering. The standard was not the same as with pesticides. It was much lower, even though it probably should have been much higher.”
Kirk complained to the Ph.D. in charge of the test plot about feeding the experimental plants to cows. He explained that unknown proteins, including prions, might even effect humans who consume the cow’s milk and meat. The scientist replied, “Well that’s what we’re doing everywhere else and that’s what we’re doing here.” He refused to destroy the plants.
Kirk got a bit frantic. He started talking to others in the company. “I approached pretty much everyone on my team in Monsanto.” He was unable to get anyone interested. In fact, he said, “Once they understood my perspective, I was somewhat ostracized. It seemed as if once I started questioning things, people wanted to keep their distance from me. I lost the cooperation with other team members. Anything that interfered with advancing the commercialization of this technology was going to be pushed aside.”
He then approached California Agriculture Commissioners. “These local Ag commissioners are traditionally responsible for test plots and to make sure test plot designs protect people and the environment.” But Kirk got nowhere. “Once again, even at the Ag commissioner level, they were dealing with a new technology that was beyond their comprehension. They did not really grasp what untoward effects might be created by the genetic engineering process itself.”
Kirk continued to try to blow the whistle on what he thought could be devastating to the health of consumers. “I spoke to many Ag commissioners. I spoke to people at the University of California. I found no one who would even get it, or even get the connection that proteins might be pathogenic, or that there might be untoward effects associated with these foreign proteins that we knew we were producing. They didn’t even want to talk about it really. You’d kind of see a blank stare when speaking to them on this level. That led me to say I am not going to be part of this company anymore. I’m not going to be part of this disaster, from a moral perspective.”
Kirk gave his two-week notice. In early January 1998, he finished his last day of work in the morning and in the afternoon started his first day at chiropractic college. He was still determined to make a positive difference for the world, but with a radically changed approach.
While in school, he continued to research prion disease and its possible connection with GM crops. What he read then and what is known now about prions has not alleviated his concerns. He says, “The protein that manifests as mad cow disease takes about five years. With humans, however, that time line is anywhere from 10-30 years. We were talking about 1997 and today is 2006. We still don’t know if there is anything going to happen to us from our being used as test subjects.”
Update
It turns out that the damage done to DNA due to the process of creating a genetically modified organism is far more extensive than previously thought.[1] GM crops routinely create unintended proteins, alter existing protein levels or even change the components and shape of the protein that is created by the inserted gene. Kirk’s concerns about a GM crop producing a harmful misfolded protein remain well-founded, and have been echoed by scientists as one of the many possible dangers that are not being evaluated by the biotech industry’s superficial safety assessments.
GM cotton has provided ample reports of unpredicted side-effects. In April 2006, more than 70 Indian shepherds reported that 25% of their herds died within 5-7 days of continuous grazing on Bt cotton plants.[2] Hundreds of Indian agricultural laborers reported allergic reactions from Bt cotton. Some cotton harvesters have been hospitalized and many laborers in cotton gin factories take antihistamines each day before work.[3]
The cotton’s agronomic performance is also erratic. When Monsanto’s GM cotton varieties were first introduced in the US, tens of thousands of acres suffered deformed roots and other unexpected problems. Monsanto paid out millions in settlements.[4] When Bt cotton was tested in Indonesia, widespread pest infestation and drought damage forced withdrawal of the crop, despite the fact that Monsanto had been bribing at least 140 individuals for years, trying to gain approval.[5] In India, inconsistent performance has resulted in more than $80 million dollars in losses in each of two states.[6] Thousands of indebted Bt cotton farmers have committed suicide. In Vidarbha, in north east Maharashtra, from June through August 2006, farmers committed suicide at a rate of about one every eight hours.[7] (The list of adverse reactions reported from other GM crops, in lab animals, livestock and humans, is considerably longer.)
Kirk’s concern about GM crop test plots also continues to remain valid. The industry has been consistently inept at controlling the spread of unapproved varieties. On August 18, 2006, for example, the USDA announced that unapproved GM long grain rice, which was last field tested by Bayer CropScience in 2001, had contaminated the US rice crop[8] (probably for the past 5 years). Japan responded by suspending long grain rice imports and the EU will now only accept shipments that are tested and certified GM-free. Similarly, in March 2005, the US government admitted that an unapproved corn variety had escaped from Syngenta’s field trials four years earlier and had contaminated US corn.[9] By year’s end, Japan had rejected at least 14 shipments containing the illegal corn. Other field trialed crops have been mixed with commercial varieties, consumed by farmers, stolen, even given away by government agencies and universities who had accidentally mixed seed varieties.
Some contamination from field trials may last for centuries. That may be the fate of a variety of unapproved Roundup Ready grass which, according to reports made public in August 2006, had escaped into the wild from an Oregon test plot years earlier. Pollen had crossed with other varieties and wind had dispersed seeds. Scientists believe that the variety will cross pollinate with other grass varieties and may contaminate the commercial grass seed supply—70 percent of which is grown in Oregon.
Even GM crops with known poisons are being grown outdoors without adequate safeguards for health and the environment. A corn engineered to produce pharmaceutical medicines, for example, contaminated corn and soybean fields in Iowa and Nebraska in 2002.[10] On August 10, 2006, a federal judge ruled that the drug-producing GM crops grown in Hawaii violated both the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act.[11]
A December 29, 2005 report by the USDA office of Inspector General, blasted the agriculture department for its abysmal oversight of GM field trials, particularly for the high risk drug producing crops.[12] And a January 2004 report by the National Research Council also called upon the government to strengthen its oversight, but acknowledged that there is no way to guarantee that field trialed crops will not pollute the environment.[13]
With the US government failing to prevent GM contamination, and with state governments and agriculture commissioners unwilling to challenge the dictates of the biotech industry, some California counties decided to enact regulations of their own. California’s diverse agriculture is particularly vulnerable and thousands of field trials on not-yet-approved GM crops have already taken place there. If contamination were discovered, it could easily devastate an industry. Four counties have enacted moratoria or bans on the planting of GM crops, including both approved and unapproved varieties. This follows the actions of more than 4500 jurisdictions in Europe and dozens of nations, states and regions on all continents, which have sought to restrict planting of GM crops to protect their health, environment and agriculture.
Ironically, California’s assembly, which has done nothing to protect the state from possible losses due to GM crop contamination, passed a bill on August 24, 2006 that prohibits other counties and cities from creating GM free zones. The senate is expected to vote on the issue by the end of their session on August 31st (see http://www.calgefree.org/preemption.shtml). It is yet another example of how the biotech industry has been able to push their agenda onto US consumers, without regard to health and environmental safeguards. No doubt that their lobbyists, anxious to have this bill pass, told legislators that GM crops are needed to stop poverty and feed a hungry world.
[Update 9/1/06: The California Senate session ended without senators voting on the bill to prevent local jurisdictions from creating GM-Free zones. For the time being at least, California counties and cities may still enact GM-Free zones. Click here to read the full press release.]]
Jeffrey Smith’s forthcoming book, Genetic Roulette, documents more than 60 health risks of GM foods in easy-to-read two-page spreads, and demonstrates how current safety assessments are not competent to protect consumers from the dangers. His previous book, Seeds of Deception (www.seedsofdeception.com), is the world’s best-selling book on the subject. He is available for media at info@seedsofdeception.com. Dr. Kirk Azevedo has a chiropractic office in Cambria, California. Press may reach him at (805) 927-1055 or at drkirk(at)charter.net.
(This isn’t mine, but was emailed to me this week, and couldn’t help but think, “It’s both funny and sad but more sad than funny.”)
Japanese company and an American company decided to have a canoe race on the Missouri River. Both teams practiced long and hard to reach their peak performance before the race.On the big day, the Japanese won by a mile. The Americans, very discouraged and depressed, decided to investigate the reason for the crushing defeat.A management team made up of senior management was formed to investigate and recommend appropriate action.Their conclusion was the Japanese had 8 people rowing and 1 person steering, while the American team had 8 people steering and 1 person rowing.So American management hired a consulting company and paid them a large amount of money for a second opinion. They advised that too many people were steering the boat, while not enough people were rowing.To prevent another loss to the Japanese, the rowing team’s management structure was totally reorganized to 4 steering supervisors, 3 area steering superintendents and 1 assistant superintendent steering manager.
They also implemented a new performance system that would give the 1 person rowing the boat greater incentive to work harder.
It was called the “Rowing Team Quality First Program”, with meetings, dinners, and free pens for the rower. There was discussion of getting new paddles, canoes and other equipment, extra vacation days for practices and bonuses.
The next year the Japanese won by two miles.
Humiliated, the American management laid off the rower for poor performance, halted development of a new canoe, sold the paddles, and canceled all capital investments for new equipment.
The money saved was distributed to the Senior Executives as bonuses and the next year’s racing team was outsourced to India.
(The below article is a typical example of what we’re dealing with not only in agriculture but day-to-day survival in America in the Corporation vs. The Commoner. It first appeard in The Daily News.)
(The below article is a typical example of what we’re dealing with not only in agriculture but day-to-day survival in America in the Corporation vs. The Commoner. It first appeard in The Daily News.) Down and Out in Covington
Farmer struggles to re-emerge after $3 million judgment,
prison term in Monsanto case
(The below article is a typical example of what we’re dealing with not only in agriculture but day-to-day survival in America in the Corporation vs. The Commoner. It first appeard in The Daily News.) By ANDY MEEK
(The below article is a typical example of what we’re dealing with not only in agriculture but day-to-day survival in America in the Corporation vs. The Commoner. It first appeard in The Daily News.) By ANDY MEEK
THE FABRIC OF HIS LIFE: Kem Ralph stands with his son Josh in the family’s Tipton County cotton fields. Ralph has been trying to recover from being sued by agrochemical giant Monsanto, being required to pay some $3 million in damages and serving four months in prison for saving genetically modified seed when he was supposed to buy more each year. He claims his actions – which included burning evidence – were justified. – PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDY MEEK
For the typical farmer in America’s heartland, the struggle to get by is met with heroism and little fanfare. For Covington farmer Kem Ralph, getting by has been a little more complicated.
Since the late 1990s, he’s gone to court, been on the receiving end of a nearly $3 million judgment, done a stint in prison and grown accustomed to seeing his name in the newspaper. Those were but a few of the consequences of locking horns with Monsanto, a major agrochemical corporation, in a patent infringement dispute.
And now, away from the intense public glare that has been attached to his case for more than six years, Ralph has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Justice for all
His finances in shambles because of the legal fines, Ralph’s situation after the flap with Monsanto – at one time even attracting the attention of the Australia Broadcasting Corp., which sent a reporter to interview him – quickly became dire. To make ends meet, he rented out property his family owns and now is convinced a rival farmer is trying to buy the property outright.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection allows a business owner to stay in business while a court reorganizes any debts. In some cases, when a business has debts that outweigh its assets, creditors can be given ownership of the entity after the reorganization process is finished.
So Ralph’s bankruptcy filing, then, represents a last-ditch effort to save the nearly 3,000 acres his family farms in Shelby, Haywood and Tipton counties.
“I’m a farmer, and I’m still a farmer today,” said Ralph, choking back tears. “They may take it away from me, but they’re going to have to fight me first. All I want is justice to be served.”
For Ralph and other farmers like him, there is no justice in an arrangement to which Monsanto binds the farmers who buy the company’s genetically enhanced seed. That arrangement is at the crux of Ralph’s current legal and financial predicament.
He Said, He said, She said
- “I’m a farmer, and I’m still a farmer today. They may take it away from me, but they’re going to have to fight me first. All I want is justice to be served.” – Kem Ralph, Covington farmer sued for $3 million by Monsanto for saving genetically modified seed instead of buying more each season
- “It’s gotten to where they’ve got family members spying on each other. And you know what? The thing of it is, we were making a lot more money even before their (enhanced seed) ever came out.” – Ralph’s son Josh
- “It’s always our priority to try to settle things out of court, but we also have to protect our intellectual property. And what the farmers who call in (with tips) are essentially saying to us is, ‘If I’m paying every year, my neighbor better be paying every year.’” – Monsanto spokeswoman Mica DeLong
Monsanto has patents on a variety of genes that can be added to crop seeds. By one estimate, Monsanto’s seed accounts for 80 percent of the cotton and soybeans grown in the United States.
To offset the cost of research and development, Monsanto collects a technology fee on each bag of seed that’s sold at the retail level. Farmers like Ralph are asked to sign an agreement that they will buy seed from one growing season to the next, as opposed to hoarding any unused seed.
The grapes of wrath
Ralph insists, however, he never signed any agreement, despite the fact that one was produced in court with what purported to be his signature. He claims it was forged, with a passionate denial that includes clenched fists and a voice quivering in anger.
Some of his anger also is directed at U.S. Dist. Court Judge Rodney Sippel, the Missouri judge who ruled Ralph was liable to Monsanto for damages. Ralph says he shouldn’t have been involved in the case because Sippel once worked for Husch & Eppenberger LLC, one of the law firms that handles Monsanto’s investigative work.
Through a tip placed to the company, Monsanto discovered Ralph was saving seed – which he admits he’s always done – and took him to court. The company has an all-purpose 800-number that generates some 500 calls a year, an undetermined percentage of which are tips from farmers who say they know of people saving seed.
“It’s gotten to where they’ve got family members spying on each other,” said Ralph’s son, Josh. “And you know what? The thing of it is, we were making a lot more money even before their (enhanced seed) ever came out.”
Tall price to pay
Ralph, who burned Monsanto’s seed that would have been used as evidence at his trial, was sentenced by a federal judge in 2003 to four months in prison and had a roughly $3 million judgment filed against him.
Monsanto says the tips – and technology fee – are justified.
“It’s always our priority to try to settle things out of court, but we also have to protect our intellectual property,” said Monsanto spokeswoman Mica DeLong. “And what the farmers who call in (with tips) are essentially saying to us is, ‘If I’m paying every year, my neighbor better be paying every year.’”
She said Monsanto spends more than $700 million a year on research, more than any of its competitors in the market today. Monsanto spends eight to 10 years working to bring its products to the market.
The company also invests pre-trial settlement money back into local community causes.
Other farmers like Ralph are in court now fighting the same legal battle. But Tupelo, Miss., attorney Jim Waide said Monsanto has won every case that’s been heard at the district court level.
“The problem Mr. Ralph had is that he couldn’t present any legal defense, because he went out and destroyed the evidence,” Waide said. “His case didn’t turn out very well, and he got a ruinous judgment against him, such as he’d never be able to pay.”
Righteous indignation?
Now, Ralph is convinced a local farmer with a large number of property holdings is conspiring with Monsanto to take his farm, too. He filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy when his debts became so large that he didn’t know if he’d be able to keep his property and prevent anyone from buying it.
Ralph maintains his actions all along have been justified, and that one of the reasons he burned the seed was to help a friend who also was being targeted by Monsanto for saving seed – it wasn’t just in his
own self-interest. For him, the bankruptcy filing represents the latest in a string of setbacks that have roiled his family.
“How do you live and deal with this every day, knowing people are trying to rob you blind?” said Josh. “I don’t know if there’s any light at the end of the tunnel for us or not.”
_______________________________________________________________
It’s their way or the highway. But they own the highway too, so we’re screwed, right? This marriage of corporation and state (also known as facism) falsely marketed as Democracy continues to not only bind and gag the little man and woman in America but persists in driving us across the bridge to throw our carcasses in the mirky waters below.
What are you going to do to stop them?
In agriculture, we deal with Goliaths like Monsanto, Bayer, Delta Pine, Case, Caterpillar, and John Deere who’s products are so greatly over priced, they are squandering much of the farmer’s profits…if there are any at the end of the year. We’ll look at these companies, their profits, their marketing, their alternative plans, and what they’re doing to benefit themselves not only in business but in legislation at our expense. Some companies, particularly seed companies such as Monsanto and Bayer are pharmaceutical companies looking to corner the seed market in respective crops. Scary people running a frighteningly large operation. I’d tell you more now, but I’ll let you sleep easy a few more nights.
[...] “A vice president pulled me aside,” recalled Kirk. “He told me something like, ‘Wait a second. What Robert Shapiro says is one thing. But what we do is something else. We are here to make money. He is the front man who tells a story. We don’t even understand what he is saying.’” (Read More) [...]
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