Spilling the Beans, September 2008
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Spilling the Beans
The World According to Monsanto

The long awaited, blockbuster film
The World According to Monsanto is now
available
in the United States. It is a powerful tool to motivate anyone to take
up the cause against genetically modified foods. We urge you to hold
house parties and sponsor free public showings of the film. Use our
Film Showing
Kit to help publicize the film and mobilize inspired audiences to take effective action to stop GMOs.
This month’s Spilling the Beans is a review of the film. We also offer a
shorter version of the review for websites and publications that are limited in space.
Update on bovine growth hormone (rBGH)
But first, great news!
Monsanto just sold off their bovine growth hormone (rBGH/rBST) business
to Ely Lilly’s animal division, Elanco. Monsanto dumped this
genetically engineered drug because snowballing consumer rejection of
dairy products from cows treated with rBGH has already driven it out of
Wal-Mart, Starbucks, Kroger, and 40 of the top 100 dairies.
Our Institute
for Responsible Technology was one of many groups that helped bring
about this victory by educating consumers about the potential health
dangers (increased risks of cancer, higher fraternal twin rate,
antibiotic resistant diseases, etc.). Informed people don’t want
anything to do with the drug. When the numbers of concerned, discerning
shoppers hit the critical mass, a tipping point in the dairy industry
ensued. For the inside scoop, view our new film on rBGH,
Your Milk on Drugs—Just Say No!, at
www.YourMilkonDrugs.com
. Better yet, watch it as part of the bonus material on
The World According to Monsanto DVD.
GMO Tipping Point Needs Your Help
Our Institute is now pursuing
the same tipping point strategy to end the genetic engineering of the
food supply. Our Campaign for Healthier Eating in America will inform
receptive demographic groups in the US about GMO risks, and provide
them with Non-GMO Shopping Guides. We expect to achieve the US tipping
point before the end of 2009, which will leave companies scrambling to
replace their suddenly unpopular
GM ingredients.
To achieve our goals, we need
to add some key staff positions immediately. Now would be a great
time—actually a critical time—for you to
donate to our Institute and invest in the health of our food supply and ecosystem. Please find an excuse to make a contribution today.
Film Review: The World According to Monsanto
Directed by Marie-Monique Robin
Reviewed by Jeffrey M. Smith
Distributed by Yes! Books,
www.MonsantoFilm.com
, $19.95
Includes bonus film and audio CD.
How much outrage can a single multinational corporation inspire? How much damage can they inflict? The breathtaking new film,
The World According to Monsanto,
features a company that sets the new standard. From Iowa to Paraguay,
from England to India, Monsanto is uprooting our food supply and
replacing it with their patented genetically engineered creations. And
along the way, farmers, communities, and nature become collateral
damage.
The
Gazette says the movie “will freeze the blood in your veins.” The
Hour says it’s a “horrifying enough picture” to warrant “fury.” But most importantly, this critical film opens our eyes
just in time.
The film is the work of
celebrated award-winning French filmmaker Marie-Monique Robin, whose
three years of work on four continents exposes why Monsanto has become
the world’s poster child for malignant corporate influence in
government and technology. Combining secret documents with accounts by
victims, scientists and policy makers, she guides us through a web of
misleading reports, pressure tactics, collusion, and attempted corruption. And we learn how the company systematically tricked governments into allowing dangerous genetically modified (
GM) foods into our diet—
with
Monsanto in charge of determining if they’re safe.
Deception, Deception, Deception
The company’s history with
some of the most toxic chemicals ever produced, illustrates why they
can’t be trusted. Ask the folks of Anniston, Alabama, where Monsanto’s
PCB factory secretly poisoned the neighborhood for decades. PCBs are
Monsanto’s toxic oils used as coolants and lubricants for over 50 years
and are now virtually omnipresent in the blood and tissues of humans
and wildlife around the globe. But Anniston residents have levels
hundreds or thousands of times the average. They all know their levels,
which they carry as death sentences. David Baker, who lost his little
brother and most of his friends to PCB-related diseases such as cancer,
says Anniston kids used to run up to him, report their PCB level and
ask, “How long you think I got?”
Ken Cook of the Environmental
Working Group says that based on Monsanto documents made public during
a trial, the company “knew the truth from the very beginning. They lied
about it. They hid the truth from their neighbors.” One Monsanto memo
explains their justification: “We can’t afford to lose one dollar of
business.”
Monsanto also produced the
infamous Agent Orange, the cancer and birth-defect causing defoliant
sprayed over Vietnam. It contaminated more than 3 million civilians and
servicemen. But according to William Sanjour, who led the Toxic Waste
Division of the Environmental Protection Agency, “thousands of veterans
were disallowed benefits” because “Monsanto studies showed that dioxin
[the main ingredient in Agent Orange] was not a human carcinogen.” But
his EPA colleague discovered that Monsanto had allegedly falsified the
data in their studies. Sanjour says, “If they were done correctly, [the
studies] would have reached just the opposite result.”
Secret documents stolen from
the FDA also reveal serious health effects from Monsanto’s genetically
engineered bovine growth hormone, called rBGH or rBST. In particular,
the amount of a powerful hormone called IGF-1 is substantially
increased in milk from treated cows. Samuel Epstein, Chairman of the
Cancer Prevention Coalition, says that approximately 60 studies link
IGF-1 to “breast, colon, and prostate cancers.”
Cancer is also implicated in
Monsanto’s showcase herbicide, Roundup. According Professor Robert
Bellé’s research showing disrupted cell division, “Roundup provokes the
first stages that lead to cancer.” Bellé, who is with the National
Center for Scientific Research and the Pierre and Marie Curie Institute
in France, says, “The tested doses were well below those which people
normally use.”
Monsanto has promoted Roundup
as harmless to both humans and the environment. But their advertised
environmental claims, such as “biodegradable,” “leaves the soil clean,”
and “respects the environment,” were declared false and illegal by
judges in both the US and France. In fact, Monsanto’s own studies
showed that 28 days after application, only 2% of the product had
broken down. They were forced to remove “biodegradable” from the label.
Above the law
When Monsanto’s transgressions are reported to authorities, somehow the company is magically let off the hook.
When Monsanto finally did
share information on PCBs with the government, for example, Ken Cook
says “instead of siding with the people who were being poisoned, [the
government] sided with the company. . . . It was outrageous!” When
William Sanjour’s EPA colleague, Cate Jenkins, asked the agency to
review Monsanto’s flawed Agent Orange studies, Sanjour says, “there was
no investigation of Monsanto. . . . What they investigated was Cate
Jenkins, the whistleblower! They made her life a hell.”
When Richard Burroughs of the
FDA held up approval of rBGH by demanding more rigorous and relevant
testing, he was fired. He says, “They figured: ‘Well, if you’re in the
way, we’ll get you out of the way.’. . . One day, I was escorted to the
door and told that was it; I was done.” Senior government scientists at
Health Canada testified that their superiors were pressuring them to
approve rBGH and that Monsanto had offered them an alleged bribe of
$1-2 million. The scientists were later reprimanded, punished, and
eventually “dismissed for disobedience.” rBGH was never approved in
Canada, Europe, and most industrialized nations.
When Professor Bellé went to
his administration “to let the public know about the dangers” of
Roundup herbicide, he was “ordered” not to communicate his findings
“due to the GMO question lurking in the background.” That question
about genetically modified organisms was in relation to Monsanto’s
“Roundup Ready” crops. Monsanto has the patent for 90% of the GMOs
grown on the planet, and most of them are genetically modified
specifically to tolerate applications of Roundup.
Corporate Coup d’état
Monsanto’s past manipulations were mere warm ups compared to the virtual government takeover used to approve
GM
foods. Author Jeremy Rifkin, President of the Foundation for Economic
Trends, says, “I have never seen a situation where one company could
have so much overwhelming influence at the highest levels of regulatory
decision making.”
The problem Monsanto faced
was that GMOs are inherently unsafe. They can create dangerous side
effects. That was the overwhelming consensus by FDA scientists,
according to 44,000 agency documents made public from a lawsuit. But
the most important document, FDA’s official policy, claimed that GMOs
were
not substantially different. They were granted the status
“Generally Recognized as Safe,” even though they failed to meet the
normal criteria. Thus,
no safety testing is necessary. If Monsanto declares their
GM products safe, the FDA has no further questions.
Former FDA biotech
coordinator James Maryanski admits on camera that the GMO policy “was a
political decision,” not scientific. In fact, FDA political appointee
Michael Taylor was in charge of the policy. Taylor was formerly
Monsanto’s attorney and later their vice president.
Monsanto’s people regularly
infiltrate upper echelons of government, and the company offers
prominent positions to officials when they leave public service. This
revolving door has included key people in the White House, regulatory
agencies, even the Supreme Court. Monsanto also had George Bush Senior
on their side, as evidenced by footage of Vice President Bush at
Monsanto’s facility offering help to get their products through
government bureaucracy. He says, “Call me. We’re in the ‘de-reg’
business. Maybe we can help.”
Monsanto’s influence
continued into the Clinton administration. Dan Glickman, then Secretary
of Agriculture, says, “there was a general feeling in agro-business and
inside our government in the US that if you weren’t marching lock-step
forward in favor of rapid approvals of biotech products, rapid
approvals of GMO crops, then somehow, you were anti-science and
anti-progress.” He admits, “when I opened my mouth in the Clinton
Administration [about the lax regulations on GMOs], I got slapped
around a little bit.”
Unlike Glickman, FDA’s
Maryanski tries in vain to convince filmmaker Robin that GMOs are safe
and that US regulation is adequate. But Robin had conducted four months
of intensive internet research examining declassified documents, leaked
internal files, scientific studies, trial transcripts, articles, and
first hand accounts of whistleblowers. She was prepared.
In a priceless sequence, the
film alternates between Maryanski’s assurances and public interest
attorney Steven Druker reading formerly secret memos by agency
scientists, describing the serious health damage that GMOs may cause.
When Robin repeats these same quotes to Maryanski, he resorts to
uncomfortable stuttering, stammering, and backtracking. When he
ultimately tries to dismiss genetic engineering as completely safe,
Robin nails him. She reads to Maryanski his own words from a 1991 memo
in which he acknowledged that genetic engineering of a food supplement
called L-tryptophan in the 1980s may have been responsible for a deadly
epidemic that killed dozens and caused thousands to fall sick or become
disabled.
Suppressing evidence of harm, attacking GMO scientists
When Monsanto’s
GM crops hit American farm fields in 1996, virtually no safety studies had been published. The pro-
GM
UK government decided to commission Dr. Arpad Pusztai, the world’s
leading scientist in his field, to design rigorous safety testing
protocols that would convince a skeptical public to embrace
GM foods. When Pusztai fed
GM
potatoes to rats, however, they developed potentially pre-cancerous
cell growth, a damaged immune system, and inhibited growth of major
organs. Moreover, Pusztai’s work implicated the generic process of
genetic engineering itself as the cause. That is,
any
GM food already on the market might create the same problems in humans.
When Pusztai went public with
his concerns, he was praised for his “wonderful work” by his director
at the prestigious Rowett Institute. But according to a colleague, “two
phone calls from Downing Street [the home of UK Prime Minister Tony
Blair] to the director” resulted in Pusztai’s sudden dismissal after 35
years. His protocols were shelved and he was the target of a relentless
smear campaign, designed to destroy his reputation while promoting that
of GMOs.
UC Berkeley Professor Ignacio Chapela was also targeted after he published evidence that
GM
corn had cross-pollinated with indigenous Mexican varieties, forever
contaminating “the world’s genetic reservoir of corn.” Just after his
research was published in
Nature, Mary Murphy and Andura
Smetacek began posting false accusations on a biotech forum website,
recruiting scientists to inundate the publication with demands to
retract the study. When anti-GMO campaigner Jonathan Matthews analyzed
the technical headers on the two’s emails, he traced Smetacek to a
Monsanto computer, and Murphy to their PR firm. The two were apparently
fictitious characters created to stir things up. Matthews says,
“There’s no ethics at all in what’s going on here. It shows an
organization that is determined to push its products into countries
around the world and it’s determined to destroy the reputation of
anybody who stands in their way.”
Monster corn and contamination by design
The film explores an ominous
new development in Mexico that has yet to be reported in the scientific
literature. Mutated and bizarrely shaped corn plants have been found
“along the roadside or in people’s yards” or fields. Community
organizer Aldo Gonzales says, “They are really monsters!” And whenever
analyzed, the monsters turn out to be genetically engineered. Local
scientists believe that when
GM corn cross-pollinates with traditional varieties, some genetic effect disturbs the offspring.
One Mexican farmer realized
the implications. “If we don’t manage to stop their spread in our
fields, soon we’ll be forced to buy our corn seed because our own won’t
work anymore?” Gonzales wonders if the contamination was intentional.
He says, “Contamination only benefits multinationals like Monsanto.”
Intentional contamination of
another sort appears to have happened in Paraguay, as illegal Roundup
Ready seeds were smuggled in before GMOs were approved. Roberto Franco,
Paraguay’s Deputy Agriculture Ministry, tactfully admits, “It is
possible that [Monsanto], let’s say, promoted its varieties and its
seeds” before they were approved. “We had to authorize GMO seeds
because they had already entered our country in an, let’s say,
unorthodox way.”
Once approved, large
agribusinesses bought huge tracts and cut down the rainforest to plant
vast Roundup Ready soybean fields. The GMOs allow them to spray by
plane or mechanical spreader; to farm without farmers. Peasants who had
worked the land for generations are forced out—100,000 each year leave
rural areas to live in the shanty towns of the cities. In one small
farm community that is holding out next to a soy field, sprayed Roundup
kills their livestock and crops, and sickens their children.
Destroying farmers
US family farmers also feel
the heat. Troy Roush is one of hundreds accused by Monsanto of
illegally saving their seeds. The company requires farmers to sign a
contract that they will not save and replant
GM seeds from their harvest. That way Monsanto can sell its seeds—at a premium—each season.
Although Roush maintains his
innocence, he was forced to settle with Monsanto after two and a half
years of court battles. He says his “family was just destroyed [from]
the stress involved.” Many farmers are afraid, according to Roush,
because Monsanto has “created a little industry that serves no other
purpose than to wreck farmers’ lives.”
Massive farmer suicides
In many countries where Monsanto monopolizes the seeds of certain crops, they eliminate non-GMO choices to force farmers to buy
GM
varieties. In India, for example, where Monsanto pushes their
pesticide-producing Bt cotton, “there was no non-BT hybrid seed
available in the market,” says agronomist Kiran Sakhari.
Farmers had to borrow heavily to pay four times the price for the
GM
varieties, along with the chemicals needed to grow them. In spite of
glowing promises of higher yields by Monsanto’s ads, Bt cotton often
performs poorly. Tragically, tens of thousands of indebted desperate
farmers have resorted to suicide, often drinking unused pesticides. In
one region, more than three Bt cotton farmers take their own lives each
day.
Replacing Nature: “Nothing Shall Be Eaten That We Don’t Own”
Monsanto is the world’s
largest seed company and many are concerned. Troy Roush says, “They are
in the process of owning food, all food.” Paraguayan farmer Jorge
Galeano says, “Its objective is to control all of the world’s food
production.” Renowned Indian physicist and community organizer Vandana
Shiva says, “If they control seed, they control food; they know it,
it’s strategic. It’s more powerful than bombs; it’s more powerful than
guns. This is the best way to control the populations of the world.”
The World According to Monsanto is
aptly named. It is about Monsanto seeking to recreate the world in its
own image, for its own benefit. They intend to replace (and patent) the
entire food supply. And since their genetic pollution
self-propagates in the environment, it will outlast the effects of
global warming and nuclear waste.
Such widespread permanent influence may not be safe with
any individual or company. With Monsanto’s record, the results can only be catastrophic.
This powerful documentary
might just inspire a global rejection of Monsanto’s plans for our
world. If so, it will be the most important film in history.
___________________
Jeffrey M. Smith is the
international bestselling author of Seeds of Deception and Genetic
Roulette, the executive director of the Institute for Responsible
Technology, and director of The Campaign for Healthier Eating in
America.
The World According to Monsanto is co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada, ARTE France, Image & Compagnie, WDR, and Les Productions Thalie.
___________________
Individuals, businesses, and organizations are encouraged to host house parties and free public showings of
The World According to Monsanto, which
has
generated intense concern in every audience that has seen it around the
world. We have prepared a companion guide that can be downloaded at,
www.MonsantoFilm.com
,
This guide includes press tools, facts and proven outreach strategies
to help channel the heightened audience motivation into effective
action.
Bonus material packaged with the DVD includes
What We Can Do,
a brief introduction to the Campaign for Healthier Eating in America—a
practical plan to end the genetic engineering of the food supply by
achieving the tipping point of consumer rejection.
The package also features a brochure, a free-to-copy audio CD on GMO health risks, and the new film,
Your Milk on Drugs—Just Say No!,
a short documentary by Jeffrey Smith about Monsanto’s genetically
engineered bovine growth hormone. It exposes fired whistleblowers,
manipulated research, and a corporate takeover at the FDA, and includes
footage prepared for a Fox TV station—canceled after a letter from
Monsanto’s attorney threatened “dire consequences.”
© copyright Institute For Responsible Technology 2008
Jeffrey M. Smith is the author of publication
Genetic Roulette: The Documented Health Risks of Genetically Engineered Foods, which presents 65 risks in easy-to-read two-page spreads. His first book,
Seeds of Deception, is the top rated and #1 selling book on
GM foods in the world. He is the Executive Director of the Institute for Responsible Technology.
www.responsibletechnology.org, which is spearheading the Campaign for Healthier Eating in America. Go to
www.seedsofdeception.com to learn more about how to avoid
GM foods.
Spilling the Beans
is a monthly column available at
www.responsibletechnology.
org
.
The website also offers eater-friendly tips for avoiding GMOs at home and in restaurants.
Permission is granted to publishers and
webmasters to reproduce issues of Spilling the Beans in whole or in
part. Just email us at
column@seedsofdeception.com
to let us know who you are and what your circulation is, so we can keep track.
The Institute for Responsible Technology
is working to end the genetic engineering of our food supply and the
outdoor release of
GM crops. We warmly welcome your donations and support.
Go to
www.responsibletechnology.
org
or click
here
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