Sunday, March 24, 2013

Senate Passes Monsanto Protection Act

WTF?!

I don't know what to say other than people in Washington have either completely lost their minds or are intentionally trying to screw the American public by allowing big corporations to produce "food" that's even more toxic than what we currently find on our shelves.

One thing that does come to mind is the fact that Tom Vilsack, current Secretary of Agriculture, obviously doesn't give a damn about all the people in Iowa he "governed" from 1999 - 2007; guess we know where his loyalty's lie...  Here's a short blurb from Organic Consumers Association (link: http://www.organicconsumers.org/usda_watch.cfm).  One question for Mr. Vilsack - Is your salary and whatever Monsanto and related companies pay you for your conscience worth the health of every single person in this country?

If anyone reading this seriously still believes that our "government" has your best interests at heart, please email me because we need to have a serious conversation.

From Organic Consumers Association:
Who's in the Obama Administration?
Tom Vilsack, USDA Secretary
As Iowa Governor, Tom Vilsack was a leading advocate for Monsanto, genetic engineering, and factory farming. President Obama proudly lauded his new Agriculture Secretary for "promoting biotech."

Vilsack has, in fact, promoted the most controversial and dangerous forms of agricultural biotechnology, including pharma crops, plants genetically engineered to produce pharmaceuticals. When grown outdoors on farmland, where most pharma crop trials have occurred, pharma crops can easily contaminate conventional and organic varieties.

In one chilling example from 2002, a corn crop engineered by ProdiGene to produce a vaccine for pigs contaminated 500,000 bushels of soybeans that were grown in the Nebraska field the next season. Before this incident, a similar thing had happened in Iowa where the USDA ordered ProdiGene to pay for the burning of 155 acres of conventional corn that may have been contaminated by the firm's biotech plants.

ProdiGene eventually went out of business, but not before it received a $6 million investment from the Governors Biotechnology Partnership, chaired by Iowa Governor Vilsack. Vilsack didn't want any restrictions placed on experimental pharma crops. In reaction to suggestions that pharma crops should be kept away from food crops, Vilsack argued that "we should not overreact and hamstring this industry."




From Natural Society:

Senate Passes Monsanto Protection Act Granting Monsanto Power Over US Govt


Anthony Gucciardi
by
March 24th, 2013
Updated 03/24/2013 at 5:33 am

 

monsantoprotectionactpassessenate 258x161 Senate Passes Monsanto Protection Act Granting Monsanto Power Over US GovtIn the typical slippery nature of Monsanto’s legislation-based actions, the biotech giant is now virtually guaranteed the ability to recklessly plant experimental GM crops without having to worry about the United States government and its subsequent courts. The Monsanto Protection Act buried deep within the budget resolution has passed the Senate, and now nothing short of a presidential veto will put an end to the ruling.
In case you’re not familiar, the Monsanto Protection Act is the name given to what’s known as a legislative rider that was inserted into the Senate Continuing Resolution spending bill. Using the deceptive title of Farmer Assurance Provision, Sec. 735 of this bill actually grants Monsanto the immunity from federal courts pending the review of any GM crop that is thought to be dangerous. Under the section, courts would be helpless to stop Monsanto from continuing to plant GM crops that are thought even by the US government to be a danger to health or the environment.

Senate Passes Monsanto Protection Act Despite Outcry

It is a lobbyist-created recurring nuisance that has been squashed in previous legislation thanks to outcry from not only grassroots but major organizations. Last time we saw The Center for Food Safety, the National Family Farm Coalition, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the Sierra Club, and the Union of Concerned Scientists all come out against the Monsanto Protection Act from the 2012 Farm Bill.
This time, there was a swift resistance I thought might be enough, however sadly the Senate acted so quickly on this and almost entirely ignored the issue that it has now passed despite thousands of fans signing the old petition I linked to in my previous articles on the subject. The old petition by Food Democracy Now detailed the effects of the bill:
“If approved, the Monsanto Protection Act would force the USDA to allow continued planting of any GMO crop under court review, essentially giving backdoor approval for any new genetically engineered crops that could be potentially harmful to human health or the environment.”


Read more: http://naturalsociety.com/senate-passes-monsanto-protection-act/#ixzz2OVfpdY3p
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