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Environment

Big Ag, Oil and Tobacco Will Kill You For a Profit

By Jane Smiley, Huffington Post. Posted August 23, 2006.


Since Reagan's election, our government has catered to the needs of corporations that refuse to accept the destructive consequences of their actions.
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In the late eighties, I wrote a novel called A Thousand Acres. Everyone thought it was about incest and "King Lear".

To me, those were plot elements that I was using in service to the theme, which concerned the transformation of the midwestern American landscape from a unique, diverse, and rather fragile natural ecosystem that supported methods of European animal and grain farming imported by German, English, and Scandinavian farmers during the nineteenth century to a denuded and lifeless "food" factory in which a few crops (corn, soybeans, hogs, and beef) and the money that could be made from them pushed every other consideration of human endeavor and biodiversity to the margins, or snuffed them out entirely. My book was awarded the Pulitzer Prize and made into a movie. American agriculture got worse.

In the early nineties, I wrote another novel about farming called Moo, a comic novel that took place on the campus of a land grant university. While researching Moo, I discovered BSE, which was only just then (1992) emerging in the UK as a relative of scrapie, a form of brain-wasting disease that occurs in sheep. As far as I know, the references to BSE in Moo were the first to appear in the US.

The characters in Moo discuss the practice of feeding cows, normally vegetarians, the animal byproducts of sheep farming. They are appalled. And it still seems like a no-brainer. If cows eat offal and then people eat cows, a certain proportion of people will become ill with sheep and cow diseases, and, voila, scrapie crossed two species barriers -- to cows and to humans -- because the agriculture corporations either didn't know what they were doing or didn't care. Nevertheless, American agriculture got worse.

After I left Iowa and started writing about other things, the ag companies (according to Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma and the film "The Future of Food"), continued to perpetrate vicious idiocies, and to do so in a more and more aggressive manner, challenging the rights, and the abilities, of people in all parts of the world to have any say in the nature and composition of the food we put into our bodies. They have done so, as far as I can tell, solely for profit. They have exhibited greed that crosses over from mere selfish immoral criminality into actual insanity.

Here's an example. By the time I was writing A Thousand Acres, it had been apparent for some twenty-five or thirty years that insecticides and herbicides were contaminating the landscape and the water supply, killing off wildlife, destroying fertility in males and females of all species, and causing disease in the farmers themselves and their families. The common sense solution to this increasing problem would have been to acknowledge the destructive power of these unnatural chemicals, and to have shifted American agriculture away from their use.

The ag companies, however, preferred to remake the ecosystem so that farmers would use more chemicals rather than fewer; they genetically modified seed to make it resistant to an herbicide, Roundup, that when applied would destroy every living plant around it except the proprietary seed plants also owned by the corporation that formulated Roundup.

This is exactly analogous to an act of war against the natural ecosystem. It produced acts of war against the farmers, too, because Monsanto aggressively pursued royalty payments from anyone and everyone who had those genetically modified plants in their fields, no matter how they got there, and even if the farmer didn't want them there. Let's say vandals invade your house, eat all your food, drink all your liquor, and make a terrible mess. After they burn the house down, they send you a bill, and sue you if you don't pay it. And the judge backs them up. That is what Monsanto has done to the farmer, and what it is doing to the ecosystem.

Still, it's a no-brainer. If chemicals are killing us and our world, we stop manufacturing the chemicals, unless we are insanely greedy and demonically possessed by the idea that every single element of life, every seed and bit of DNA can and must be owned by someone. Here's what the big ag companies want to do -- they want to own and contaminate the entire gene pool of all the world's food resources for their own profit and without the knowledge or input of anyone who will actually be eating the food or living in the world they create. So far, the French and the Japanese and some other nations are standing firm, but the US government, our government, your government, is trying to enforce the will of the big ag companies.

With regard to ag policy, Clinton and Gore were bad, but Bush and Cheney are infinitely worse. Let's call a spade a spade here. By means of corrupting the Congress and the Executive and the Judiciary branches of our government, the ag companies have changed the rules, and deregulated themselves. They have given their crimes against humanity technical legality, but they are still crimes against humanity (and, in fact, against the entire natural world).


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Jane Smiley is the author of numerous books, including Horse Heaven and The Greenlanders.

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Talk about playing God. Who owns our food?
Posted by: YogiBear on Aug 23, 2006 3:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Monsanto aggressively pursued royalty payments from anyone and everyone who had those genetically modified plants in their fields, no matter how they got there, and even if the farmer didn't want them there... we are insanely greedy and demonically possessed by the idea that every single element of life, every seed and bit of DNA can and must be owned by someone. Here's what the big ag companies want to do -- they want to own and contaminate the entire gene pool of all the world's food resources for their own profit and without the knowledge or input of anyone who will actually be eating the food or living in the world they create

Thank you for bringing up the elephant in the room on GM foods. Companies like Monsanto have been using the WTO and other international means to try to pressure third world countries to accepting their GM seeds at reduced prices or free for a time. If these measures go through, it will wreck any local agriculture economy those countries have and furthermore will ensure that at some future point, their entire nations will have their food sources owned by these multi-national companies.

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excellent
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 23, 2006 3:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is excellent, righteous stuff. It hits all the major causes of disintegration, decay, immorality, environmental degredation, warmongering and corporate criminality. The truths of health, decency, morality, environmentalism and happiness have been buried in a polluted sea of propaganda, greed and falsification of the real causes of terrorism (the Cheneyites themselves). Boot the criminals out and save civilization from certain doom.

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» RE: excellent Posted by: willymack
America: The Bright Shining Lie
Posted by: marklar on Aug 23, 2006 4:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everything about America is a lie. Even the lies are lies covering up lies. Half of the American people love being lied to. Most love believing in the fantasies of lies called freedom, equality and democracy when in truth America has been the purveyor of destruction, misery and death around the globe since the Puritians landed.
Our president, George W. Bush killer of hope, destroyer of dreams. What a country!

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We can't vote them out
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Aug 23, 2006 5:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A visit to the web site Open Secrets will show that these mammoth industries invest in the campaigns of both parties. It doesn't matter which party loses the election, the corporations win and the voters lose. We can't vote them out. Having a vote is useless iif all it decides is which party carries out the agenda of the corporatocracy. Our most important battle is for the control of our government. We must face the bitter truth our enemies are the corporate establishment and the two political parties that they've bought.

I believe that there are enough people in this country who are aware of the dangers of runaway capitalism to change our system before the next election. The people who aren't aware are almost evenly divided fighting over issues such as the separation of church and state, pro-life and pro-choice and other cultural issues. These issues are important but they aren't as important as the basic issue of who controls our government. These divisive issues present an opportunity for a relatively small grassroots movement to take control of both parties and our government.

I urge you to join The Lincoln Initiative. This is not an organization but a strategy to take over the platforms of both parties before the election. Contributions aren't solicited nor accepted. There are no leaders, no meetings, no marches, no agenda, every member works independently to further his/her own issue using the same strategy. It is only an idea to make "government of the people, by the people, and for the people" a reality.

Every member writes a letter to the campaign headquarters of the National and their state's cmapaign headquarters of both parties stating their most important issue and telling both parties that if they don't support his/her issue he/she won't vote for them and that if neither party supports his/her issue he/she will cast a write-in vote for "Honest Abe" as a protest. If we can get a million people to demand campaign finance reform, an end to the war, better public education or whatever is your favorite issue it would be on the platforms of both parties before the election. It is still possible if you join today and get busy with your e-mails to recruit your friends. We have a web page that provides sample letters and the addresses to send them to.

I know that it sounds too easy to be effective but just compare the impact of a million man march with the impact of a million letters in the mailroom and you'll see that we can impress them. Act today the election is close at hand.

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BIG EVIL
Posted by: shangrilalad on Aug 23, 2006 5:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No decent, rational or sane person could argue with or dispute your arguments, but corporations are not people, they are soulless nonentities invented to maximize profits, eliminate responsibility and immunize those who own them from prosecution. They don’t have to dispute your arguments, they will simply ignore them, while at the same time making sure that none of what you say is reported by the media.

An interlocking cabal of massive corporations own the Media, the Military Industrial Complex, Big Ag, Big Oil, Big Banking, Power Companies, Water Companies, the President, the Congress, the Supreme Court, State Governors, the State Legislatures and very likely your local Police Department.

Five percent of our population owns ninety-five per cent of everything. They make the laws, being careful to insure that they are above the law.

Sociopaths have defiled and corrupted our country from top to bottom.

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» www.CounterCorp.org Posted by: CounterCorp
The corporate-government partnership
Posted by: rac on Aug 23, 2006 5:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“I’ve got to do for me and mine.”
~ Wash Hogwallop
O Brother, Where Art Thou?

Our representatives have abdicated their stewardship of democracy for all. Congressman Hogwallop has betrayed us. We don’t ask more in taxes from the rich simply because they hold most of the wealth. They also hold a greater responsibility to keep our democratic system well oiled and running smoothly. The rich and powerful, be they in government or private enterprise, have their hands on the wheel of America’s wealth and prosperity. When they act irresponsibly and selfishly, they drive the rest of us into a ditch. It is a purposeful and calculated act against the well being of us all. I say to those who are starting to understand this: We can no longer just boo the rascals from the bleachers. The officiating is all corrupt. The players are on steroids, the hotdogs are carcinogenic, and skyboxes overshadow everything. It’s time to get in the game!

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You've got it wrong
Posted by: gmknobl on Aug 23, 2006 5:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but only slightly.

Nixon is the first one to really start the ball rolling on corporate laissez faire abuses. Ford continued this. Carter did some good but then, Reagan began. The government does need to regulate every business to some extent so one of the biggest blunders was the break up of Ma Bell by Nixon. Yes, it was a monopoly of sorts but we are now behing the curve technologically to Europe and Japan because of this blunder. The revolution of the internet would have happened anyway without the break up and we'd have had ADSL sooner and it would likely run faster due to better infrastructure and better technology too. We'd have IPTV. In short, it would have been a better economic boost than it is now!

Saying that - I just realize I haven't read the entire article, so I hope I'm not sticking my foot in my mouth.

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You've got it wrong
Posted by: gmknobl on Aug 23, 2006 5:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but only slightly.

Nixon is the first one to really start the ball rolling on corporate laissez faire abuses. Ford continued this. Carter did some good but then, Reagan began. The government does need to regulate every business to some extent so one of the biggest blunders was the break up of Ma Bell by Nixon. Yes, it was a monopoly of sorts but we are now behing the curve technologically to Europe and Japan because of this blunder. The revolution of the internet would have happened anyway without the break up and we'd have had ADSL sooner and it would likely run faster due to better infrastructure and better technology too. We'd have IPTV. In short, it would have been a better economic boost than it is now!

Saying that - I just realize I haven't read the entire article, so I hope I'm not sticking my foot in my mouth.

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These are the same BIG BAD WOLVES that ILLEGALIZED hemp against the farmers and
Posted by: maxpayne on Aug 23, 2006 6:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the real economy of the working class in America !

http://www.hemp.com

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» Hemp 4 Victory! Posted by: YinRising
» RE: Hemp 4 Victory! Posted by: marklar
Good points made
Posted by: mysticalrae on Aug 23, 2006 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everything is written in this article as historical facts of what has led us to this place, and personally, I see only one way out. Take responsibility!! If you don't agree with the way food is manufactured, grow what you can for yourself. Join a co-op and support those growers who follow the practices you beleive in. And if it offends your sense of morality to see how livestock is treated inhumanely, stop eating meat. Many millions of people around the world do not consume meat on a regular basis (including myself) and are perfectly healthy. Healthcare costs got you down? Find alternative health practitioners and support them, and learn ways in which you can keep yourself healthier and more resistant to disease.
Focus on what you CAN do, not what is out of your hands. If even a fourth of the worlds population would thoughtfully consider what is in their power to change in their own personal worlds, this sense of disempowerment and being victimized would have no power.
Most people have unconsciously handed over their own personal power to those "in charge", and willingly become victims. The media, the government powers that be, our schools and organized religions are designed to encourage us to be powerless. If we could all give up the foolish idea that someone else is in charge of our lives, our food, our water, etc., this victimization would end, only because the belief in ourselves would change.
Do what you can in your own personal space, no matter how small it may seem. Empower others to do the same. Small movements from within will bring lasting change on a grassroots level first. The rest will naturally follow.

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» RE: Good points made Posted by: elahug2
» but that takes SOOOO much effort Posted by: antiapathy
» RE: Good points made Posted by: harris
» RE: Good points made Posted by: mysticalrae
» RE: Good points made Posted by: Sleepingcobra1
ignorance and apathy
Posted by: antiapathy on Aug 23, 2006 7:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm very conflicted about why the American people continue to allow the destruction of their environment and the race to the bottom that corporations promote regarding wages and quality of the foods we consume. My hypothesis was that most people are ignorant or brainwashed by television or advertisements or the print media, that they truly believe that this is the Land of Opportunity and our president can do no wrong. If Dubya says we need to invade Iraq for our safety then that must be the case. Why would he lie to us? Certainly not to further profits for his administration's buddies at haliburton.

But then I realized that people are smarter then I am giving them credit for. The Daily Show would not be such a hit if its viewers did not understand the subtext of their jabs at politicians and corporations. This leads me to a very disheartening conclusion though: they just don't care. Big Ag may be destroying the environment, but I would rather have cheap big macs today than a diverse eco-system tomorrow. And don't make me give up my SUV, it makes me feel like the King of the Road, riding oh so high above the peasants in their tiny cars.

So even though we recognize the threat, we are apathetic toward it. We are powerless to change it, so why bother? If we vote for Dems or Republicans they will only continue the scheme of legalized bribery that is our current political system. And we certainly cannot vote in a new party like the Greens, they might actually institute meaningful regulations, but they would also institute crazy immoral things like gay marriage and national health care. So why bother voting at all? After all, wal-mart has a sale on remote-control Hummer toys, so we gotta scoot our butts down there and buy buy buy...

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No New Surprises Here
Posted by: mrsmagoo on Aug 23, 2006 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article tells us nothing new. Our political system has been corrupted by big corporations and individuals with the financial means to corrupt it since before the 1900's.

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» RE: No New Surprises Here Posted by: Lincoln fan
The journey, as usual, begins with a single step
Posted by: pzzp on Aug 23, 2006 9:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some simple things we can all do to get started. I do them, many others can.

1. Do not shop at Walmart.
2. Never buy a NEW car
3. When buying a used car, buy economy.
4. Avoid fast food chains.
5. Grow a small garden, buy local produce.
6. Bank with local co-ops and credit unions.
7. Read a foreign newspaper or news source(at least once in a while)
8. Tune out any media that makes you more stupid.
9. Dump the cel phone
10. Turn out the light in the empty room.
11. Email your concerns to your Congressman once a week, every week, persistently.
12. Never buy bottled water.
13. Do not buy anything that's persistently advertised, and email the advertiser to let them know this.

There are many others. It's surprising how easy these things can become to do.

In general, just get mad that they all want your money, and avoid doing business with faceless conglomerates. 50 cents for a ATM transaction doesn't sound like much, but if a miillion peole do it, the bank rolls in dough. 15 cents for texting is peanuts, but if a million do it, the phone company rolls in dough. Why support this? Get mad. Get grim and determined. WHY GIVE THEM YOUR MONEY? If 1 million people refused to buy gas tomorrow, you think big oil would get the message?

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» www.organicconsumers.org Posted by: pzzp
Who gives who a bad name?
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Aug 23, 2006 10:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To answer that question, one only needs to think of the people who run the corporations. If they are obsessed with profit, they're going to focus only on that. In a society that prizes money above all else, there is a sort of darwinian natural selection process that breeds the greediest sorriest most pathetic parasites, and they quickly rise to the top. Ultimately it is US culture that could be responsible for everything. Corporations aren't necessarily inherently evil... but when they are run by monsters they're going to project an image of evil. Oh well, that's what the PR industry is for.

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The Corporate Parent
Posted by: NonnyO on Aug 23, 2006 11:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The further away from the land we get, the more we are dependent on corporations for our food, clothing, and shelter. And, for the sake of convenience, corporations get by with murder and monstrous profits because we're too apathetic and lazy to stop it....

Most people haven't a clue how to raise a garden and then preserve the veggies and fruits to have over the winter. In the past, even in large cities, people used to have a little garden to raise veggies or berries or other things to preserve every fall to have food for the winter, and maybe even keep a few chickens for eggs. Not so now; there are zoning laws to keep people from raising their own food within city limits. Most people don't know how and couldn't raise chickens or a pig over the spring and summer, feed them well, and then in the fall humanely kill them, butcher them, and put their meat in a basement freezer to feed themselves over the winter. The list goes on an on of the things most people (younger generations not raised on farms or in small towns, at least) no longer know how to do. There is a radical disconnect with life cycles in nature, and corporations have helped foster that disconnect.

We have made ourselves dependent children who couldn't even keep ourselves alive because we no longer have the knowledge our ancestors had about raising our own food to keep ourselves alive for any length of time. Thanks to brilliant advertising, corporations have made it easy for us to think of buying everything at a store... and we've bought into the "convenience" of purchasing all our food and the fact that we don't have to do any of the work to provide for ourselves is supposed to free our time for other things... which now means going to a mall to buy our clothing (designer labels only, of course - snob element comes into play here, and labels blazon our chests or our butts as free advertising for corporations who provide our clothing), or otherwise entertain ourselves through meaningless movies or other nonsense; all at a price, of course.

We don't even know how to entertain ourselves any longer, but complain of boredom and want someone around who keeps our every waking hour occupied with some form of "entertainment" - we're entertaining our boredom to death, starving for intellectual stimulation. And heaven forbid we teach our kids how to pick up a book to keep their minds occupied, or that we do the same and lead by example. No, we wait for the movie-based-on-the-book to be released and pay for the privilege of seeing the story as interpreted by a director or a producer, not what the author wrote in her/his book that could make our imaginations work and keep our minds occupied. Ditto any of the artistic pursuits, from painting to scupture to music to dance to designing and making our own clothing to... you name it.

Corporations have become our surrogate parents who provide our food, shelter, clothing, and feed our empty minds with their form of 'entertainment' because we no longer keep ourselves occupied with providing any of those things for ourselves. We might be physical adults, but we are mental children who rely on corporations to provide everything we need or want... for a price, because we've been brainwashed to believe we need the convenience the corporations provide.

Only if we break the bonds of dependence on corporations and once again learn to provide our own food, clothing, and shelter for ourselves will we once again become adults fully responsible for ourselves and our offspring.

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» Diabolical Genius Posted by: YinRising
Top notch writing
Posted by: Rod from Canada on Aug 23, 2006 12:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and analysis, and I won't hold my breath waiting for it to appear in the MSM. But I have wondered if the executives at Monsanto and other biotech companies actually eat (with no concerns for their own health) their own genetically modified products/crops.

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The Only True People Power
Posted by: jende on Aug 23, 2006 1:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Want regulation for the benefit of everyone? We must deprive ourselves. Not of water and food but of wasteful things like big cars, extra clothes, and mass entertainment. Boycott. Stop buying the products of big business, let them know we're not buying, and then tell them what we want for the good of every living thing on Earth. Until we do this in our daily lives, following in Gandhi's footsteps, we will suffer increasing oppression.

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200 miles to the gallon
Posted by: frenchcanadienne on Aug 23, 2006 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe that most auto mechanics know about Charles Pragg who developed an auto engine in the 80s that virtually atomized gasoline, thus getting about 200 miles to the gallon. Needless to say, his patent was "lost" by the US Patent Office and Pragg himself mysteriously disappeared forever. Could BIG OIL be responsible or am I just a "conspiracy nut"?

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» RE: 200 miles to the gallon Posted by: Universe.in.Flux
» RE: 200 miles to the gallon Posted by: marklar
new corp. ag slogan
Posted by: moenbailey on Aug 23, 2006 3:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excellent article!!!!! Just brilliant!

I came up with the following slogan a couple years ago. I was thinking about how to run a "open your eyes ad campaign" on big ag. Sadly, it just keeps getting more true.

"Monsanto, Cargill, Adm, working to make you and nature our Bitch."

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Monsanto, Bayer and International Intellectual Property Agreements
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Aug 23, 2006 7:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The intellectual property issues are at the heart of much of corporate multinational profitability and interests; that's why Bill Gates Foundation is involved in AIDS - to make sure that intellectual property rights (IPRs) are respected by all countries (look at what happened to the Sudanese pharmaceutical program in 1998 under Clinton - missles!). He doesn't want to lose control over Microsoft source code, and the pharma companies, facing a massive patent expiration crisis, don't want to see generics wipe out their industry - and the Monsanto's and Bayers want to patent all agricultural plants so they can control the world's food supply and keep all farmers as captive serfs on the corporate feudal farm.

This is what Bush Sr does in his spare time, by the way - he travels the world pressuring governments to accept US intellectual property right restrictions on drug production. Better to have dead children then upset pharma investors, in his opinion.
Nice article, by the way. If you haven't seen "The Corporation", go buy it!

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Number one issue - control corporations.
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Aug 23, 2006 7:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The main effort of "we the people" should be to take control of our government and force it to regulate corporations. It is the most urgent issue. The interests of corporations are directly opposed to all people rich, poor, black, white, old young, however they're classified. Take for instance clean air and clean water; vital to all peopke yet corporations spend millions to fight environmental laws. Pure foods and drugs; vital to all people yet corporations fight controls.

Corporations can't be controlled by people they can only bre controlled by another large organization, the government.

It is imperative that we take control of our government and force it to control corporations.

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The return of Rollerball
Posted by: JLPearson on Aug 24, 2006 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone remember that old science fiction movie, Rollerball? In it, nations no longer governed the world's people or controlled the world's resources. Corporations did. Corporations ran everything. Science fiction has become political and economic fact.

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pharms and alcohol companies...
Posted by: anechoic on Aug 24, 2006 4:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...also want to keep you sick

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Alternet should either post articles and encourage more people to fight for legalizing hemp or
Posted by: NDnative on Aug 24, 2006 4:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
they should just SHUT THE FUCK UP and stop posting more BIG GOVERNMENT BULLSHIT talk articles !

http://www.hemp.com

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