Page added on May 22, 2011
Certainly, many of us know people who say (wrongly) that nowadays everything causes cancer. This view becomes a justification for making no effort to avoid carcinogens, especially in food. It is a case of learned helplessness that becomes a major public relations weapon for creating and maintaining docile populations. Make people feel powerless. Then, even if they disagree with you, they won’t oppose you.
This appears to be the strategy of the genetically modified organism (GMO) crop industry. The mode of attack is the contamination of non-GMO crops through the spread of pollen and the inadvertent mixing of GMO and non-GMO seeds. Large agribusiness giants such as Monsanto claim to recognize “coexistence” with conventional and organic growers as a desirable state. But, the industry acknowledges that contamination is inevitable. In fact, the complete segregation of GMO and non-GMO crops was never on the table. Several high-profile cases of mixing have already demonstrated this. Starlink corn comes to mind as well as the virtual elimination of organic canola growing in Canada because of GMO contamination (with no effective redress in the courts available). And, what we now know about the spread of genes via pollen from GMO to non-GMO plants makes it all but certain no regulatory regime, no matter how comprehensive and severe, could prevent contamination.
This fact has not stopped aggressive enforcement of the GMO industry’s intellectual property rights which involves threats and lawsuits designed to intimidate not just those supposedly in violation of crop patents, but the entire farming community even when the cases involve contamination by adjacent farms and passing vehicles containing GMO seeds. Here’s the message: To avoid lawsuits that threaten to take away your farming livelihood, you might as well sign up to buy our seeds because contamination by us or our farmer customers will be no defense in court.
In fact, Canadian courts found that contamination is not a permissible legal defense! Lest you think that I am making this up, here is the relevant portion of a trial court finding which was upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada in Monsanto Canada Inc. and Monsanto Company vs Percy Schmeiser and Schmeiser Enterprises Ltd.:
Thus a farmer whose field contains seed or plants originating from seed spilled into them, or blown as seed, in swaths from a neighbour’s land or even growing from germination by pollen carried into his field from elsewhere by insects, birds, or by the wind, may own the seed or plants on his land even if he did not set about to plant them. He does not, however, own the right to the use of the patented gene, or of the seed or plant containing the patented gene or cell.
This precedent and the aggressive enforcement behavior by the industry has led organic growers and seed distributors to file a pre-emptive lawsuit to protect themselves from the industry’s legal tactics which are designed to force farmers to pay the company penalties even when the farmer is organic and must avoid all genetic contamination to market his or her crops. (Organic standards prohibit genetically engineered crops.)
I am reminded of King Henry’s conversation with his counterpart King Philip of France in the play Lion in Winter. Philip is insisting that his sister, Alais, be wedded to Henry’s son, as previously agreed by Henry and Philip’s father, the now deceased King Louis. It’s that or the return of the Vexin, a key county north of Paris given to England in exchange for the betrothal.
Philip: It’s their wedding or the Vexin back. Those are the terms you made with Louis.
Henry: True, but academic, lad. The Vexin’s mine.
Philip: By what authority?
Henry: It’s got my troops all over it. That makes it mine.
Just substitute “crops” for “troops,” and you’ll see an age-old strategy at work. I am also reminded of Hitler’s remilitarization of the Rhineland and the Anschluss, his occupation of Austria. Once his troops were on the ground, nobody wanted to challenge him.
The contamination strategy solves two perceived problems for the industry. First, the industry attempted to include GMO plants as acceptable in the original National Organic Program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. But the outcry was so great from activists that GMOs were taken out of the standards. One way, however, to overcome this resistance is through contamination. By forcing food regulators to accept GMO contamination in organic food as inevitable, the GMO industry is paving the way for eventual capitulation by the organic community and conventional growers as well. The industry wants to propagate the attitude that nothing can be done to stop it.
Second, although Europe has long had labeling requirements for GMO foods, in the United States the industry has so far been able to prevent enactment of any such requirement. The response from food activists has been to launch a campaign for voluntary labeling of non-GMO foods and that now has the GMO industry on the defensive. But, what better way to undermine such an effort than to contaminate conventional and organic crops?
What would change the calculus of the GMO industry? Perhaps it would change if some of the contamination suits (mostly outside the United States) were to result in huge verdicts, ones large enough to be financially ruinous to the industry. Nothing like that, however, is on the horizon. In the meantime, we can all look forward to the involuntary consumption of genetically modified food ingredients against our will. The GMO industry tells us that they want consumers to have a choice, that GMO foods should “coexist” with conventional and organic foods. Yet, they oppose labeling.
Meanwhile, the equivalent of the GMO industry’s panzer corps is moving into our farm fields and from there into our kitchens. We may soon regret this creeping annexation of our dinner tables. Once the invasion of GMO genes around the world is complete, we may find it harder to roll back than Hitler’s armies.
2 Comments on "Contamination: The totalitarian strategy of the GMO crop industry"
DC on Mon, 23rd May 2011 1:04 am
This is just another way of gameing the system. When corporations own governments, and the US one is a 100% wholly owned subsidiary of Mega-Corps Inc, you pretty much own the courts too. Its sadly trivial to get courts to rule in this manner. Small wonder when people look at courts ruleings on various matters, be it crime or corporate corruption, that the very institutions themselves are comeing to be viewed as no longer credible.
We seem to have one of two choices, fight corporations directly, since the courts and governments are in bed with them anyhow OR, wait for the system to finally collapse. But both choices are problematic. With Option #1, most people are apathetic, ill-informed, lazy or just plain dont care. Most people LIKE being poisoned to death by industrial civilization, and no longer have any concept of where there interest lies.
Option 2 sucks too, for obvious reasons. Even if everything went to hell tommorow, to use the above example, Monantos pesticides and terminator seeds would continue to wreck havoc on the enviroment for generations. Even if Monsanto were just a faded memory on an insane ago.
Econ Democracy on Tue, 24th May 2011 10:12 am
DC,
There is another problem with option 2: if you wait until the sytem collapses, by then you have much less time than you’d like, to build a viable set of new institutions to replace.
And another problem related to that: if you wait until collapse, something WORSE (e.g. a more direct and worse form of fascism) than we have now can repalce the old system.
Conclusion: the seeds and roots of the new institutions must be built starting today, including grassroots democratic economic institutions of all kinds including local/regional manufacture of food, and energy, and housing.
Also jobs must be something We control, not the Corporatocracy, so networks of cooperations of individuals with skills/crafts, and democratic workpalces, coops, and workers Guilds, and so on.
Plus we need a replacement retirement system (based in part on the other institutions listed above which we start building) because if we don’t, then guess what happens when the system starts to collapse? Middle class sees what little it still has in retirement security go down when the Dow goes down, and then “by any means necessary” (including feeding more babies to the monster to eat) they will do Anything to keep the system going a little bit longer. As soon as we start winning, Wall street starts collapsing,a nd peole panic about their retirement. We have to break this chain. So that people do NOT panic when Wall Street starts to collapse, and sorry, keeping gold under your bed isn’t the answer, but rather grassroots from-the-bottom-up economcis of mutual support and mutual security(see link in our name) of a wide variety (we do not claim our proposal is the only way, but can be one approach and a broad paradigm for building it). Our email is at the link too, if interested.
Or you can wash your hands of it and say “too ambitious” and “will never happen” and just sit dejected which will do nothing but guarantee that Corproate Feudalism (our current system) will stay in place and only mutate into worse fascistic variant, instead of building the replacement pieces of a new grassroots economic people-centered de-centralized system, starting today. Even if we fail 99% of the way and succeed in 1% of that goal, we will have in that 1% something increditly useful and both pragmatic and in tune with our values instead of Their values (“profits uber ales; human beings are mere commodities” etc)