Monsanto Returns to the Scene of the Crime

 
by Scott Edwards, co-director of the Justice Project at Food & Water Watch

Whenever I hear the name Monsanto I can’t help but think about one of the greatest environmental crimes in the history of the United States. Back in 1935 Monsanto bought out a small chemical company located in Anniston, Alabama, a struggling town of about 22,000 poor and working class people. Monsanto spent the next 36 years using Anniston as its manufacturing headquarters for PCBs, an industrial coolant. Tragically, the company was also recklessly poisoning the local community, environment and its own workers with hundreds of tons of this highly toxic material.

For decades Monsanto used Snow Creek, a small local waterway that flowed past its plant, to dispose of PCBs. The company claims that they just didn’t know any better – that as soon as they became aware that PCBs were a human and environmental health problem, they took steps to stop the dumping and to protect local residents and workers. But as documents that the company was forced to turn over during a series of lawsuits that began in the late 1990’s show, their claimed ignorance of the harmful impacts of PCBs is just another in a long, ongoing list of Monsanto’s endless lies.

As early as 1938 Monsanto knew from researchers that PCBs caused liver damage in rats. In the 50’s they started to tell their own workers to wear protective clothing and respirators when working around PCBs, while at the same time they continued to dump their poisons out into the West Anniston community. In 1966, Monsanto hired a Mississippi State University biologist to dunk fish into Snow Creek. The study found that “all 25 fish lost equilibrium and turned on their sides in 10 seconds and all were dead in 3 ½ minutes,” their skin broken and bleeding. The fact the Creek was lethal didn’t stop Monsanto. By 1969 the company was pouring 250 pounds of PCBs a day into the creek that feed into the area’s drinking water supply and which many local residents, including children, used for fishing, playing and recreating. That year, Monsanto researchers found fish in the local community fishing spot with PCB levels 7,500 times the legal limit. A company memo concluded, “there is little object in going to expensive extremes in limiting discharges.” Instead, Monsanto executives enlisted state officials to try and “handle the problem quietly without release of the information to the public.”

Monsanto’s toxic legacy continues to date – there’s never been a proper cleanup. Many of the people who live in West Anniston today are told to wear masks when cutting their grass; their children are told not to kick up any dirt when playing in the yards for fear of breathing in carcinogenic dust left by behind by Monsanto after they packed up and moved out.

Unfortunately, Monsanto’s reprehensible conduct in Anniston was simply a precursor for its current diabolical deeds. What the company did, and is still doing, to the people of West Anniston underscores a corporation devoid of any decency and honesty. Throughout the world they have continued to engage in false adverting, bribery, cover-ups, threats, deceit and outright illegal business practices. Sadly, perhaps its worst is yet to come.

Today, Monsanto is busy trying to commandeer the world’s crop supply through the development, patenting and sale of genetically modified plant seeds and food products, or Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). If Monsanto gets its way, virtually every consumable plant on the earth – every soy bean, ear of corn and kernel of wheat -will have the company’s brand of ownership burned into it. And there isn’t any twisted tactic the company won’t employ to obtain its greedy goal of controlling our food sources. They’ve bribed governmental officials, threatened media outlets, intimidated researchers and crushed local farms with frivolous patent lawsuits.

Monsanto’s latest effort in its quest for world food domination is GMO sweet corn. A 2010 study in the International Journal of Biological Sciences links Monsanto’s GMO corn to liver failure in rats. Monsanto, of course, discounts the study in the same way it purposefully ignored the 1938 PCB study that showed liver failure in rats. Seems as if a biotech company like Monsanto should have a little more respect for science, but not when it impacts their massive profits. Despite indicators that GMO corn will have many serious human and environmental health impacts, Monsanto’s lobbyists convinced USDA to approve it for human consumption, so now Monsanto has permission to peddle its contaminated corn to us. It’s in negotiations with Walmart, the largest grocery retailer in the country, to carry the corn throughout its US stores.

The ironic tragedy is that if they’re successful, Monsanto will be returning to Anniston, Alabama to the Walmart Supercenter on McClellan Blvd. to continue the job it started in 1936, poisoning the people of a town that has already suffered enough.

Act now to tell Walmart, “Reject Monsanto GE Corn!”

Scott Edwards is co-director of the Food & Water Justice project. He came to Food & Water Watch after spending eleven years with Waterkeeper Alliance, most recently as Director of Advocacy. Scott’s work at Waterkeeper involved designing and implementing strategies for a whole host of campaigns on issues such as industrial agriculture, mercury contamination, coal and military wastes. 

12 Responses to Monsanto Returns to the Scene of the Crime

  1. And, iirc, it was Monsanto that attacked Rachel Carson after the publication of her 1962 book, Silent Spring. I recall reading something about that in my research for an essay about ecofeminism a few years ago.

  2. Pingback: Blog Balance | a good life

  3. THIS is one of the most terrifying things I’ve ever read.

    I’m praying that Monsanto doesn’t do with corn what it did with soybeans. I’m praying our government won’t let that happen.

  4. Monsanto also developed and patented Roundup herbicide — another product with insidious effects on wildlife, people and the environment. It kills on the molecular level utilizing a noxious combination of “active” ingredient (glyphosate) as well as “inert” ingredients, especially POEA (polyethoxylated tallow amine), a surfactant that increases membrane permeability to permit more effective transport of the herbicide into the plants. It not only swiftly kills blades of grass and weeds but also the animals that depend upon foliage for protection as well as sustenance. In ponds it kills tadpoles and fully grown frogs. The Roundup formulation has proven to be harmful to wildlife, the environment and people. Vitamins C and E help reverse the product’s damaging effect on human skin. Further and ethical research needs to be done and the findings made available to the public whose lives are impacted by this “safe enough” weed killer.

  5. How can we ever know what’s in our food whenever greedy companies don’t care about human life. All their loved ones ought to be required to eat it for 5 years before putting on the shelves for others to consume.

  6. The sweet corn is the last straw. They already have regular corn that’s gmo with huge kernels with a medicinal pasty taste to it. They obviously will not stop, until they are stopped.
    http://writersoftheriogrande.com

  7. Thank you for this sanquin article. Monsanto must be stopped asap.

  8. Sadly until there is an incrediblt huge revolt in Washington by the people of this country nothing is going to change. Pockets and campaigns are being lined by the likes of Monsanto and others. The likes of the average citizen unfortunately does not figure into the equation. Only with a massive amount of exposure to these crimes against humanity and nature, and a huge outpouring of from the citizens that politicians are sworn to serve will there ever be a change.

  9. We need these facts to be put into the general news media, front page, and articles in every popular magazine! Why aid in the coverup for these monsters? And a massive outcry should go against Obama placing a Monsanto executive as head of the FDA! This is corruption to the utmost degree and it needs to be in the spotlight. Please do this Rodale!

  10. Deborah Marchant'

    U.S Congressman Dennis Kucinich is reintroducing three bills that will help control genetically modified foods. Support his efforts to better regulate GMOs. Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/031048_GMOs_Dennis_Kucinich.html#ixzz1lobEXl5Y

  11. bridget o'connor

    Here in southern africa we are under great renewed pressure to open our doors to GMO’s and very quickly. 80% of the people being on the land in sub saharan Africa is seemingly just too good a market for the Biotech companies to resist. Monsanto has recently moved in to Zambia very visibly, the country that loudly said NO to GMO’s in 2002.
    Why did the US wait until 80% of their food is now contaminated with GMO before deciding they needed it to be labeled? And why when we all waited to hear about the millions march against Monsanto on World Food Day 16 October 2011, we only heard about an occupation of Wall Street? Your voices need to be heard loudly across the globe and now!
    Bridget

  12. I grew up on a farm here in the Midwest and we used Roundup (as well as a few other herbicides) on it. Both of my parents died of multiple myeloma – the same form of blood / bone cancer. Farmers seem to be at somewhat increased risk for the disease. If Monsanto or other farm chemical manufacturers know about this, they should be held criminally accountable. Unfortunately this country seems more willing to throw petty crooks in jail for passing bad checks than they are to throw executives who know their products can cause death in jail for mass murder . . . And that’s a crime.

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