-Caveat Lector-

wonder how much insider trading was going on throughout the continuing
debacle of Monsanto's attempt to own the agriculture business with
Terminator Seeds, FrankenFoods(tm), Bt-poisonous crops,
rBGH human active hormone in milk, mutagenic organophosphate Roundup,
crops genetically manipulated to be poison-resistant (to mutagenic
Roundup)...

Quick- put a stake thru it's heart before it kills again!
This corp deserves to be a CORPSE.
Corporate DEATH for Monsanto- Charter revocation, and
criminal prosecution of the masterminds behind this reign of terror!

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com/dave


http://www.motherjones.com/mother_jones/JF97/biotech_jump.html

from Part 2 of 'A Growing Concern'

The Farmer and The Professor

In October 1996, Monsanto reported at a stock analysts' meeting in New
York that preliminary results showed some of the farmers using Bt cotton
had experienced 15 to 17 percent increases in yields; farmers using
Monsanto's transgenic soybean seed had high yields as well.

Due to its well-publicized foray into biotechnology, Monsanto's stock rose
71 percent in 1996. The company claims that the Brazos River Valley crop
and other Bt cotton failures scattered throughout the South are anomalies,
brought on by unusually high bollworm counts. "The dynamics of a
biological system like this are very complex," says Randy Deaton, the
product development manager for cotton at Monsanto. "We can put some
explanations on why some farmers had to spray, but to be quite honest,
there's no hard data one way or the other." Thirteen of Conn's fellow
cotton growers don't buy that excuse and have filed a class-action suit
against Monsanto, Delta Pine, and other companies, alleging they rushed Bt
cotton to market and used a slick promotional campaign to cover up its
flaws. The plaintiffs also claim the companies have misrepresented the
success of last summer's Bt cotton harvest in public statements.  "I've
met farmers in Louisiana, farmers in central Mississippi who won't be
planting this stuff again," says Philip K. Maxwell, the plaintiffs'
attorney. "I was in one field where the Bt cotton had grown 9 feet high,
straight up like a bean stalk with no fruit. It was crazy-looking. Freak
cotton."

Deaton denies that Monsanto misled farmers: "It would be very silly for us
to do that. You might convince a farmer to buy Bt cotton once, but if it
doesn't work in the field like you said, he's not going to come back next
year. And we need return buyers."

But Texas A&M entomologist John Benedict, who helped Monsanto research Bt
cotton, says he and other scientists told the company in advance that
there were -problems with Bt cotton. "They should have done a few more
years of research before taking the product public," Benedict says.
"There was a little too much hype and not enough caution."

Monsanto had come to Texas A&M in 1990 with several different cotton seeds
the company wanted to test in the field, each seed inserted with a
different DNA sequence. It was Benedict's job to determine which clone
performed the best in a series of trials -- plant growth, fruit
production, insect control.

Starting in 1991, Benedict reported his annual findings back to the
company, speaking mostly of Bt cotton's great promise. But he says he also
pointed out that Bt cotton wasn't providing an airtight defense against
the bollworm. "We got pretty high levels of damage in the test plots," he
says.

"I believed there were problems controlling bollworms with Bt cotton,"
says Benedict.

"That information never got passed on to the farmers, at least not
sufficiently."

In a Delta Pine-Monsanto brochure distributed to farmers, Bt cotton was
touted as the nearest thing to fail-safe. Another promotional brochure
contained a picture of the worms, with the caption: "You'll see these in
your cotton and that's okay. Don't spray."

from http://motherjones.com/mother_jones/JF97/biotech_jump2.html

A Growing Concern (Part 3)

Benedict blames the system. "The universities are cheering us on, telling
us to get closer to industry, encouraging us to consult with big business.
The bottom line is to improve the corporate bottom line. It's the way we
move up, get strokes.... We can't help but be influenced from time to time
by our desire to see certain results happen in the lab."

Private industry contributes 10 percent of Texas A&M's whopping $41
million annual agricultural research budget, and Benedict says he knew
Monsanto was contributing money to his research. "All of these companies
have a piece of me," Benedict says. "I'm getting checks waved at me from
Monsanto and American Cyanamid and Dow, and it's hard to balance the
public interest with the private interest. It's a very difficult juggling
act, and sometimes I don't know how to juggle it all."

Science for Sale?

Congress has helped pave the way for corporate biotech programs, passing a
series of laws in the 1980s that pushed federally funded research at
universities into the eager hands of agrochemical companies. Congressional
specialty grants, which are designed to let Congress respond to pressing
agricultural concerns, are generally awarded to researchers who already
have industry sponsors in place. "[Universities] don't necessarily say who
their other funders are, but they will tell us if the project is leveraged
4-to-1 by private dollars," says Tim Sanders, a staff member of the House
Appropriations Agriculture Subcommittee. Industry support is important, he
says, because committee members "want to see everyone participate."

Under a banner of global competitiveness, this new relationship between
academia, business, and government encourages universities to waste no
time converting their science into patent rights. Previously, such
research had been considered public property. Any patents that emerged
typically were held by government. Indeed, so ingrained was this public
ethos that when Jonas Salk was asked who owned the patent to his polio
vaccine, he responded incredulously, "The people, I would say. Could you
patent the sun?"

Today, however, universities are quick to license patent rights to
companies for profit-making. These same companies, meanwhile, award grants
to university entomologists and geneticists to conduct research on future
products.

Often, critics say, it doesn't take a great deal of money to entice a
university department or scientist over to the corporate side,
particularly in this time of state and federal funding cuts. "Universities
are more than ever hunting for corporate money, and while that money may
be a small percentage of the overall budget, it's often enough to
influence the direction of public science,'' explains Kathleen Merrigan of
the Henry A.  Wallace Institute for Alternative Agriculture, a nonprofit
research and education organization based in Washington, D.C. "Corporate
money can be the tail that wags the dog." For example:

In 1985, Cornell University agreed to do research on bovine growth hormone
(BGH) for Monsanto. Tess Hooks, a sociologist at the University of Western
Ontario whose graduate work at Cornell dealt with scientific ethics,
reviewed the agreement between Cornell and Monsanto.

According to Hooks, the university would test BGH on dairy cows and report
the findings to Monsanto, which would present its case to the FDA. The
government agency would then decide if the hormone -- which increases a
cow's milk production -- created any health risks to cows or milk
consumers.  But before Cornell received the $557,000 grant from Monsanto,
Hooks says, it essentially had to agree to hand over control of its
research to the biotech company.

Computers in the university's dairy barn sent the raw data directly to
Monsanto in St. Louis. According to Hooks, the company, rather than the
university's principal research scientist, controlled and interpreted the
data. "I couldn't believe that a university would agree to such
restrictions," says Hooks.

Monsanto's efforts to get BGH approved in the United States were dogged by
controversy. Current and former FDA employees accused the agency of
overlooking important safety concerns in its review of the product and of
committing ethics violations because several recently hired FDA officials
had worked on BGH for Monsanto. In the end, the FDA was cleared of
misdoing.  But questions about the hormone persisted. In 1994, several
British scientists charged that Monsanto had suppressed their independent
analysis of the company's data because it showed a higher rate of
infection for cows treated with BGH than Monsanto had acknowledged.

At North Carolina State University, a miniscandal erupted three years ago
when several professors were found to be moonlighting as paid consultants
to Rhone-Poulenc, Monsanto, and American Cyanamid -- at the same time the
professors were evaluating the companies' biotech products for the
university. One distinguished weed science professor, Harold Coble,
appeared in a Rhone-Poulenc marketing brochure singing the virtues of the
company's genetically engineered cotton plant and its companion herbicide,
bromoxynil.  "There isn't a downside to the BXN," he says in the brochure.
As a result of the controversy, the university instituted a policy
requiring faculty to report on a yearly basis any potential conflicts of
interest, such as consulting for a chemical company.

Other scientists who have done research for biotech companies dismiss
these examples as anomalies. "Practically all of my money for research
comes from industry, but I've never done anything to help a company
promote its product," says Daniel Colvin, a University of Florida
agronomist. "If you manipulate the truth, it takes only one season on the
farm to find out that the product doesn't work like you said it would.
After one bad season, your credibility with the farmer is shot."

But in some cases it is difficult to tell where public research ends and
the company's marketing begins.

Take, for example, the August 25, 1996, letter from Ron H. Smith, an
entomologist at Auburn University, that Monsanto faxed to Mother Jones in
support of its Bt cotton. "Weeks from now," Smith wrote, "when the last
bale of the 1996 cotton crop is harvested...producers finally will have
time to pause and reflect on the revolution that has gripped their
profession. The results, so far, have been astonishing.... The proof, as
they say, is in the pudding -- or, in this case, the [farmer's]
pocketbook."

Although the letter bore Smith's signature, an Auburn public relations
official actually wrote it for him. When asked if he received any funding
from Monsanto for his research, Smith replied, "No, not directly."
However, Mother Jones found university records indicating that Monsanto
gave $500,000 to Auburn University between 1991 and 1996; $26,000 was
earmarked for projects listing Smith's name. When asked again, Smith
confirmed the information, saying he had misunderstood the original
question.

The Bt Danger

Last spring, farmers in 11 states tried Monsanto's Bt cotton, planting a
total of 2 million acres. Its failure in Texas, and the pest problems that
resulted, have heightened fears among environmental and consumer watchdog
groups that some insects will quickly develop resistance to the new gene.
Organizations such as the Union of Concerned Scientists are criticizing
the EPA for caving in to pressure from Monsanto. "There was direct
pressure on the EPA by Monsanto to move quickly," says UCS senior staff
scientist Jane Rissler. "[This] incident shows that Monsanto's strategy as
approved by the EPA is a failure."

The EPA maintains it made a safe bet with Bt cotton but admits it is still
an unknown. "It's out there for commercial use," says Elizabeth Milewski,
a spokeswoman for the EPA. "But at this time, we don't know what the real
story is." Milewski points out that further evaluation of the crop is
entirely dependent on Monsanto's own reporting. According to Lynn Goldman,
the EPA official in charge of approving genetically engineered crops, a
possible danger of an insufficiently tested Bt cotton seed is that it
won't produce a strong enough dose of the toxin to deliver a fatal blow to
the worms. This could rapidly lead to increased resistance, ending the
usefulness of Bt.

"Our scientists feel that you could possibly see insect resistance in
three to five years unless some careful steps are taken to prevent it,"
says Goldman. In July, she requested that Monsanto submit further testing
on the bollworms that survived on last summer's Bt cotton crop. As of
press time, the results had not yet been reviewed.

The EPA has taken some steps to try to inhibit the development of pest
resistance to Bt. For example, the agency required farmers to plant a
small plot of non-Bt cotton within their Bt fields. In theory, such
"refuges"  ensure that some of the mating bugs do not feast on Bt cotton,
thereby watering down the resistance potential of the bug population.
Farmers are expected to comply because when they buy the seed, they grant
Monsanto the right to inspect their farms.

But another EPA staffer candidly admits the refuge theory was untried --
and the EPA's evaluation of its success, like the bollworm report, is
dependent on information supplied by Monsanto. "The problem is that, based
on science and the theories, this is untested," says the staffer. "So
what's our guarantee of enforceability? Do we wait until we're absolutely
sure, or do we take our best professional judgment with all its bells and
whistles and see what happens? Monsanto put [refuge requirements] in the
contracts with the farmers, but the EPA can't regulate what the farmers do
in the fields."

Growing Questions

Insect resistance to pesticides isn't the only possible danger of biotech
crops. Scientists also warn about the unknown health implications to
humans.  A study of transgenic crops published in the New England Journal
of Medicine last March looked at soybeans inserted with Brazil nut genes
and proved that allergens can be transferred from one crop to another
through genetic engineering. An editorial in the same issue called on the
FDA for better research, noting that current requirements for transgenic
crops "would appear to favor industry over consumer protection."

In fields across the country, genetically pumped-up crops from a
virus-resistant yellow crookneck squash to transgenic wheat are being
groomed for market. And hundreds more are in the pipeline, some implanted
with the genes of animalsósuch as new varieties of corn, soybeans, oats,
rice, apples, broccoli, cucumbers, lettuce, melons, raspberries,
strawberries, papayas, and plums. There's even transgenic seafood in the
works, including genetically altered salmon, prawns, catfish, and abalone.

Even biotech supporters concede that there is no way to predict the health
and environmental consequences of this transgenic stampede. "It's scary.
We're so caught up in the pyrotechnics that we tend to forget that what we
are doing here is altering the genetic codes of living things," says
Sharad Phatak, a plant researcher at the University of Georgia.

"When you insert a foreign gene, you are changing the whole metabolic
process," he adds. "You just don't change one thing. Each change is going
to have an effect on other pathways. Will that one gene kick off a whole
slew of changes? We don't know for sure."

***
Susan Benson is a San Francisco freelance writer and former editor of Farmer
to Farmer. Mark Arax is a reporter for the Los Angeles Times. Rachel
Burstein is an investigative reporter for Mother Jones. Staff reporter
Jeanne Brokaw contributed additional research for this story.

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