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Monsanto U: Agribusiness's Takeover of Public Schools

By Nancy Scola, AlterNet. Posted February 15, 2008.


Thanks to Bush's new cuts on public funding for land-grant schools, agribusiness is gaining a huge foothold in the future of our food.

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I've startled a bug scientist. "Yeah, now I'm nervous," said Mike Hoffmann, a Cornell University entomologist and crop specialist who spends his days with cucumber beetles and small wasps. But he's also in charge of keeping the research funding flowing at Cornell's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. What have I done to alarm him? I've drawn his attention to the newly released FY 2009 Presidential Budget.

Like more than a hundred public institutions of higher learning, Cornell is what's known as a "land grant." Dotting the United States from Ithaca, N.Y., to Pullman, Wash., such schools were established by a Civil War-era act of Congress to provide universities centered around, "the agriculture and mechanic arts." Congress handed each U.S. state a chunk of federal land to be sold for start-up monies, and for the last 150 years, it has funded ground-breaking research on all things agriculture, from dirt to crops to cattle.

The land-grant system has been, in short, a high-yield investment. The scientific research that has come out of land-grant labs and fields have aided millions of farmers and fed millions of Americans. And the land-grant reach doesn't stop at ocean's edge. Oklahoma State, the Sooner State's land grant, says that the public funding of land-grant research "has benefited every man, woman and child in the United States and much of the world."

That was until America's land-grant system met George W. Bush. Tucked into the appendix of his latest national budget is a nearly one-third cut in the public funding for agriculture research at the land grants. The size of the cut is surprising, but not its existence -- it's part of a multiyear drive by the Bush administration to completely eliminate regular public research funding. In a press briefing last week, a USDA deputy secretary illuminated the Bush administration's rationale for the transition to competitive grant making: "That's how you get the most bang for the buck."

Wallace Huffman, an Iowa State agro-economist, is deeply unimpressed with Bush's "bang" approach to land-grant research. "There's a sense in the president's office that you invest in research like you invest in building cars," Huffman told me last week. Land-grant school officials are similarly skeptical. In a survey, Kansas State argued that the loss of regular funding would upend education. Minnesota complained that cuts would undermine ongoing research projects. North Dakota simply asked, "What is the future of ag research?"

Good question. A reasonable answer? The future of agricultural research at America's land-grant institutions belongs to biotech conglomerates like Monsanto. And it seems likely that it's a future of chemical-dependent, genetically modified, bio-engineered agriculture.

In stark contrast to how the federal government and many states are wallowing in red ink, the St. Louis-based Monsanto boasted more than $7 billion in annual sales in 2007 -- simply the latest in four years of record-smashing profits. And so when our president says that the time has come for public land-grant institutions to get cracking at "leveraging nonfederal resources," you can be sure that Monsanto's ears perk.

But, it doesn't take a presidential invitation to get Monsanto to sink its roots in the land-grant system. Those roots are already planted. Iowa State's campus boasts a Monsanto Auditorium and the school offers students Monsanto-funded graduate fellowships on seed policy with a special focus on "the protection of intellectual property rights." Kansas State has spun off Wildcat Genetics, a side company whose purpose is the selling of soybean seeds genetically engineered to survive the application of Roundup® -- the result of a decades long relationship with Monsanto, the pesticide's maker.

But don't get the wrong idea about Monsanto's land-grant activities. By that, I mean, don't think the company is the only multinational biotech conglomerate firmly rooted in American land-grant soil.

Head on down to Texas A&M. There you'll find the a chair for the "Dow Chemical Professor of Biological and Agricultural Engineering." Similar chairs exist at West Virginia State and Louisiana State. The agricultural college of the University of California at Davis is funded in part by DuPont and Calgene.

The University of California at Berkeley's Plant and Microbiology Department entered into a $25 million/five-year quasi-exclusive research agreement with the Swiss-based Novartis, which then became Syngenta, which now funds the land-grant research group on soybean fungi. In 2005, Purdue, Indiana's land-grant school, developed an application of the so-called Terminator gene pioneered by Delta Pine and Land Co.; school officials and researchers later took to the hustings when the public resisted the idea of self-sterilizing plants.

But the agricultural industry's relationship with the land-grant system is not an entirely new development. In 1973, former Texas agricultural commissioner and activist Jim Hightower lamented the situation in his landmark report, Hard Tomatoes, Hard Times: The Failure of America's Land Grant College Complex.

But the world of agriculture is today a far, far different place than when Hightower wrote.

For one thing, in the early 1970s Monsanto was still a decade away from genetically modifying its very first plant cell. For another, back then the federal government was still committed to providing steady research funding.

And, importantly, it was neither possible nor profitable for our nation's bastions of higher learning to be players in the global agribusiness. But intervening tectonic shifts in American public policy help us to understand why a public institution like Purdue would fight so darn hard to defend a biotech advance like the Terminator gene: in a manner of speaking, they own the thing.

Jump ahead to 1980, when the U.S. Supreme Court under Warren Burger decided that, as long as they'd been tweaked from their natural state, living organisms from seeds to microbes or Terminator genes could be patented just as if they were a new cotton gin or tractor blade. And in that same year, Congress gave universities a kick towards the marketplace by encouraging institutions to file patent claims on the discoveries and inventions of their faculty researchers -- no matter if their work was funded in whole or in part by taxpayer dollars.

The summed effect was that, suddenly, a public institution like Purdue had a great deal of motivation for working with Delta Pine and Land Co. to see if they might make a buck off their biotech invention in the marketplace. What's more, the policy shift made it so individual lab geeks themselves stood to profit, eligible for a large slice of whatever windfall their discovery generated.

As the biotech industry has since exploded, the impact on the land-grant system is perhaps not unexpected. "Researchers want to be at both the cutting edge of science and the cutting edge of the marketplace," says Andrew Neighbour, until recently the director of UCLA's office on the business applications of faculty research. (The entire University of California system functions as that state's "land-grant institution.") And so the advent of patentable and profitable plants (and animals, for that matter) has meant a shift in research focus away new knowledge and towards the creation of marketable products.

The land-grant institutions find themselves in a pickle. "On the one hand," says Paul Gepts, professor of agronomy and plant genetics at UC Davis, schools pushed into the free market have developed the habit of patenting research and found a taste for private business deals. But on the other hand, "they have a public role where the information they produce should be available to all."

As things stand, "public universities," says Dr. Gepts, "are a contradiction."

This embrace of patents and profits means that land-grant agricultural research centers today are not playgrounds of academic collaboration they once were. "Things have changed enormously," says William Folk, a plant geneticist at the University of Missouri. "When I started in the '70s," he recalls fondly, "meetings were filled with people criticizing each other and sharing ideas." But today, he says "if you have an idea that has any potential commercial value, you're reluctant to share."

Not surprisingly, school administrators argue that a negative reading of the cozy relationship between agricultural researchers and biotech corporations like Monsanto and Syngenta is hogwash. When asked, Neal Van Alfen, dean of the UC Davis College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, acknowledges that about 20 percent of the $165 million annual research budget is contributed by industry. But Dean Van Alfen is quick to add, "It forms just one part of who we work with." Research conducted in conjunction with industry interests, he insists, is simply one chunk of "an awfully large amount of work."

But numbers and percentages don't tell the whole story, because of the way that industry engages in the land-grant system. In short, they skim. Here's how it works: (a) federal and state governments hand over taxpayer money to build and sustain the basic infrastructure, without which research can't hope to take place, then (b) the biotech industry injects some smaller amount of much-needed cash into the system, and then (c) agribusinesses skim off and patent the most promising (and potentially profitable) discoveries that rise to the top.

Still, administrators argue, scientific professionalism keeps industry in check -- a researcher who fudges his or her findings to curry industry favor is in for a short career. But that line of reasoning misses the real concern. What's alarming isn't that global agribusiness conglomerates like Monsanto, Dow Chemical and DuPont are getting the answers they want from our land-grant entomologists, agronomists and plant geneticists.

It's that at public institutions, private interests are the ones asking the questions.

What must be kept in mind is that land-grant researchers are generally expected to bring to the table their own research funding, and the situation can already be fairly dire. When UC Davis' Paul Gepts comments on how his institution's support is limited to a base salary, I attempt a lame joke: "They give you a desk too, right?" Yes, he responds, but a phone is another matter.

Faculty researchers are so hungry for funding that, says Missouri's William Folk, "if companies want to entice researchers to work on their projects, all they have to do is wave a bit of money." "The availability of funds, he says, "makes an enormous difference in what we can do."

"We're opportunists," Folk says, with compassion, of himself and his fellow researchers, "we go after money where it might be."

When it comes to how industry-university relations shape academic research, UCLA's Andrew Neighbour is the person to talk to. While an administrator at Washington University in St. Louis, Neighbour managed the school's landmark multiyear and multimillion-dollar relationship with Monsanto. (Note: WashU is a private institution.) "There's no question that industry money comes with strings," Neighbour admits. "It limits what you can do, when you can do it, who it has to be approved by."

And so the issue at hand becomes one of the questions that are being asked at public land-grant schools. While Monsanto, DuPont, Syngenta, et al., are paying the bills, are agricultural researchers going to pursue such lines of scientific inquiry as "How will this new corn variety impact the independent New York farmer?" Or, "Will this new tomato make eaters healthier?"

It seems far more likely that the questions that multinational biotech conglomerates are willing to pay to have answered run along the lines of "How can we keep growing our own bottom lines?"

I put it to Dr. Folk. "The companies are there to make money, no doubt," he responds.

What suffers for falling outside the scope of industry interest? Organic farming, for one. The Organic Farming Research Foundation was founded in the 1980s after, Executive Director Bob Scowcroft tells me, farmers interested in weaning themselves from chemical dependence approached their local land-grant outreach agents for help for pest management. As Scowcroft tells it, their advice was invariably in the spirit of, "Well, sure, I can tell you what to spray."

OFRF began arming land-grant researchers with modest grants but found that academics interested in conducting organic-related research faced obstacles beyond funding.

"Coming out of the organic closet could be the beginning of the end of your career," says Scowcroft. Looking outside biotech agriculture is, he says, "like throwing 30 years of the Green Revolution in your boss's face." Today, says John Reganold, an OFRF grantee and apple researcher at Washington State University, academics interested in organic farming "just don't have the money to do what we need to do."

Also the subject of minimal industry attention: so-called orphan crops, like sorghum and cassava, which feed millions of people in the developing world but aren't considered patentable or profitable. UC Davis' Paul Gepts is working to breed a disease-resistant variety of the East African common bean, an important protein source for AIDS sufferers. He's turned to an English charitable group for funding, and all involved have agreed to resist patenting the plant -- once a useful variety is developed, the science will be left in the public domain.

While it's clear that funding cash is the carrot used by agribusiness to entice researchers into asking the questions industry is most interested in having answered, there is a stick involved: corporately held patents used to block them from asking others.

That's certainly been Paul Gepts's experience, when he thought he might tackle the question of gene transfer in Mexican maize varieties. The question, though, is a sensitive one for Monsanto, as one of the arguments against transgenic crops is the difficulty in containing their spread -- raising the specter of a threat to the world's biodiversity. As the maize he was interested in was patented by Monsanto, Gepts asked the company for some samples. Their response: no way.

When I asked Gepts for his take on Monsanto's motivation for the refusal, I hadn't yet finished the question when he answered: "Avoiding scrutiny," he said. Missouri's Folk seconds the contention that such private claims on science impede research, saying, "Our ability to do science is constrained by the patents held by agribusiness."

All this said, it's not fair to say that there hasn't been resistance against public land-grant schools mutating into institutions of private science. After Novartis had become involved in UC Berkeley's Department of Plant and Microbiology, the school ordered an internal review by the academic senate, which ultimately deemed the relationship "a mistake." Lawrence Busch, a Berkeley faculty member who headed the review said at its conclusion: "I think it is high time for serious discussions of what the devil we want our universities to be."

When Mike Hoffmann -- the Cornell entomologist I startled by sharing Bush's proposed budget cuts -- recovers from his shock, he offers his take on "what the devil" our universities should be. The principle that should guide Cornell, Berkeley, Missouri and our other land-grant institutions is simple, he says: public funding for the public good. The mission of America's centers of agricultural learning is, he concludes, "to produce new knowledge for the public benefit. That's why we have the land-grant system, and I think it's pretty important."

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See more stories tagged with: agribusiness, monsanto, crops, land grant

Nancy Scola is a Brooklyn-based writer who has in the past served as the chief blogger at Air America, an aide to former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, as he explored a run for the presidency, and a congressional staffer on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

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Consumerism
Posted by: g50 on Feb 15, 2008 1:41 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Consumer awareness, consumer activism, what-ever. Education those who don't know about farming practices, buy organic and encourage others to - this will lower the price. In relatively little time organic and local concepts have become widely spread. It's a pretty big political issue that we can make happen with our consumer choices. Best of luck ya'll.

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» Commodified America Posted by: Cathyc
» Trapped? Posted by: Cathyc
Bayh-Dole and Chakrabarty need to be overturned.
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Feb 15, 2008 3:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article. Legally, there are two roots to the rise of corporate corruption in academia. The first was the Chakrabarty decision of 1980 in which the U.S. Supreme Court (5-4) ruled that a living organism or a gene could be patented. This led to the current patent situation. Things were not always like this:

"Most of us know the reply of Jonas Salk, who discovered the first polio vaccine, when Edward R. Murrow asked him why he didn't seek a patent. “Could you patent the sun?”"

The second issue was the Congressional passage of the Bayh-Dole Act in , detailed in Jennifer Washburn's excellent University Inc.: the Corporate Corruption of Higher Education".

Bayh-Dole granted universities new intellectual property rights, such as the right to grant exclusive licenses of their patented inventions to private corporate conglomerates.

This extends far past pharmaceuticals and into microelectronics, agriculture, and even environmental studies. University administrators with interests in private industry are big backers of the current corporate restructuring, and they have also been working to dump "non-performing areas" of their schools, such as language, art and journalism programs.

The way to fix the problem is to repeal Bayh-Dole, and make all university-owned patents available to all via non-exclusive licenses. That means placing all the taxpayer-generated intellectual property back in the public domain, where it belongs. Nothing is stopping private industry from setting up their own applied R&D centers, is there? It's just cheaper to externalize R&D costs onto the public than it is to fund your own research park.

There are other reasons to worry about the corporate ideology that dominates U.S. public universities today. Ideology also dominated the universities of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia - in one case, all Jews were fired and "Aryan genetics" and even "Aryan physics" was preached, and in the other Stalin's agiculture expert, Lysenko, rose to power by persecuting anyone who questioned "communist genetics".

The new ideology ruling U.S. academic institutions is the same one ruling the media - it's not communist or fascist, but rather corporate. Corporate profits are now more important than scientific integrity or the open exchange of information.

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Cool the Cows
Posted by: Kafwood on Feb 15, 2008 3:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I went to a well attended lecture on farming and climate change at Cornell last fall and the speaker gave us a sobering and informative picture of how warming will effect livestock and vegetable farming in our neck of the woods. It was free, open to the public, and a good example of how the commons benefits all of us.

But then, the speaker delved into his current research project, funded by a grant, on milk production. Apparently, Holsteins can lose as much as 20% of their milk supply in the heat. Bad news for Bessie & Nellie in a warming planet. The solution? New fangled air conditioned barns. Seriously.

Where the energy will come from to cool the confined milk herd (and the irony of sending extra carbon to the atmosphere to provide it) wasn't addressed. This wrinkle in the plan didn't come up in the all too brief Q&A after the event. And I'm sure I wasn't the only one with red flares going off in their head. You could feel the machinery of collapse crunching in the background behind the PowerPoint prez.

What coupling of gov't dollars and corporate business plans is being forged this time? Who's gonna make these fancy barns? Which set of big ag cronies benefits? What federal agency will fund this research? Has anyone in the Ag Dept heard of peak oil? In the midst of an environmental crisis of epic proportions, are we going to continue to consume our planet and poison our atmosphere to the bitter end?

The marriage between big ag and higher ed was forged long ago. No wonder BushCo doesn't see any problem with doing its part to strengthen the relationship.

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» RE: Methane Posted by: Sushi
» Yes, we are! Posted by: Cathyc
one side of the food system....
Posted by: Farmertim on Feb 15, 2008 4:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is discribed here in plain form and all too true.
However there is a growing movement of farmers who have had to deal with the new inventions of food production on a daily basis who are opting out of the system and going biological biodynamic or organic given what was sold them didn't work or is no longer affordable nor sustainable.
Land grant colleges have always been 8 years behind the research farmers have been doing themselves out of pure will to survive in their calling and paying attention to "their" soils(not dirt)and what their animals were telling them.
Certain science based research has begun to understand how soil works, but rest assured that information will not come from a land grant College.
Knowone except the farmer can make money on enhancing the soil system and working with the individual farms biological system which is different from the farm next door.
People are also relating the fact "that food like edible products"(Micheal Pollen) are not food and we are only shifting our once food dollars over to health care and still not saving enough to bury our children, or our spouses at an increasingly earlier age.
As much as there is a movement for Corporate Ag & Pharma to subsidise our Land grant colleges there is an equal movement to know your farmer and where your food comes from and keep our traditional seed & land base alive.
Farmertim
go to www.ftcldf.org
www.westonaprice.org
www.newfarm.org
www.sustainabletable.org
for more info

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» Exactly! Posted by: Cathyc
News Item:Monsanto making donation to Food Prize Foundation
Posted by: sausage on Feb 15, 2008 6:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By JERRY PERKINS • REGISTER FARM EDITOR • February 15, 2008

Monsanto Co. will announce today a $5 million gift to the World Food Prize Foundation to help transform the former Des Moines main library into the Norman E. Borlaug Hall of Laureates

Hugh Grant, chairman, president and chief executive officer of St. Louis-based Monsanto, is scheduled to present the $5 million donation to the foundation at a 10:30 a.m. ceremony in the rotunda of the 104-year-old riverfront building at 100 Locust St.

"This is not a business investment," Grant said. "Monsanto, as a company, is grounded in global agricultural science. It's a responsibility we have."

http://www.desmoinesregister.com

"...[N]ot a business investment", Mr. Grant? ROFLMAO

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woo hoo! bring on the learning disabilities...
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Feb 15, 2008 7:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
woo hoo! bring on the learning disabilities...

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ccornett
Posted by: ccornett on Feb 15, 2008 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you think this is alarming look into NAIS,(the National Animal Identification Act). Backed by some of the same players. Big AG is trying to eliminate the independent farmer. If you can control a peoples food source you are in control of that population.

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Seems like the land grants are doing their job
Posted by: kungfoofighterx on Feb 15, 2008 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read this article and thought. This is the whole reason land grants exist in the first place. Most have assisting industry as part of their charter. Its best for everyone when scientific discoveries bubble up and get scooped off for profit. Its a good sign that land grants are being successful and producing bodies of work that can be utilized. It takes a lot of money and time to train people in the ways of modern Ag. If these large corporations dont get good Ag scientists, business folks, lawyers, engineers, etc they will lose. They have no choice but to fund the places their employees come from if the government isnt going to do it. No choice. Nobody likes to beg, but if a department is missing a few critical intellectual positions and the companies which desperately need them to train future employees can work something out. Good. Tuition doesnt go up either. As a tax payer I am pleased. Everybody is doing there job.

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» No choice? Posted by: Cathyc
» Read again. Posted by: Coleman
Synthetic oprganic farming...! WTF..?
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Feb 15, 2008 12:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can't make this shit up..!

It reminds me of Milo Mindbender when he cornered the cotton market and wanted to serve it to the troops covered in chocolate..!

"It's in the contract Yossarian, it's all for the good of the Syndicate Yossarian..try another chocolate covered cotton ball..!"

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What kind of company is Monsanto?
Posted by: willymack on Feb 15, 2008 12:34 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Other than its efforts to destroy diversity in plant species used in agriculture worldwide, particularly in the US and India just for the sake of profits, its artificial sweetener, aspartame is algergenic to many people in varying degrees, ranging from constriction of the throat(mine and my daughter's), to blinding headaches (my son), to convulsions in some people. This product was rammed into the market without the usual rigorous testing required by law. Don't believe this? Google it; there are currently no less than 129,000 entries on the subject. The bottom line on Monsanto is that they're just another heartless money-grubbing gang of criminals, as so many other large corporations in this country are.

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» RE: What kind of company is Monsanto? Posted by: TJ-stars4peace
It gets worse, Monsanto is manipulating research publications
Posted by: LenaM on Feb 15, 2008 12:56 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
UC Berkeley scientists Chapela and Quist discovered that GMO corn pollen had indeed contaminated the local Teosinte maize races and published their results in the journal Nature. Their results was refuted by a group of scientists with biotech funding, and "for the first time in Nature's 133-year history, the journal [withdrew] support for an article without first calling for a retraction."

Biotech not only controls what is studied, they alter what is published.

More here: Chapela & Quist: Kernels of Truth

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RE: agri-criminals
Posted by: Cathyc on Feb 15, 2008 1:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They can't stop individuals growing their own food, either in their garden (if they are lucky to have one) on in a flower-pot on your windowsill. But, so many people can't be bothered to make that effort... so, the evil Monsanto steps into the vacuum...

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Pigs for Patent
Posted by: fmajor7 on Feb 15, 2008 1:24 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Monsanto wants to control the world's food production. They have applied for patents to specific genetic material of Pig breeding and if granted every farmer in the world will have to pay Monsanto royalty for the pigs they breed.
Please watch the film "Pigs for the Patent". Just do a Google search. Also check Greenpeace site for details on what Monsanto is upto.

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» RE: Countries have their own patent laws Posted by: kungfoofighterx
I'm all out of outrage.
Posted by: wireup on Feb 15, 2008 3:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't know about anyone else, but personally I am TIRED. I'm all out of outrage. NOTHING surprises me anymore. Every single day, when I look at the news, I see countless examples of more outrages and horrors committed by this gang of criminals, crooks, liars, thieves, multiple murderers, frontmen for corporate America, and so on and so forth.

I feel as though a tidal wave has rushed over me. It doesn't matter HOW many demonstrations I attend, how many emails I send to Congress, how many 'phone calls I make to my Congressman, how many petitions I sign - I and millions of others like me - NOTHING MAKES A DENT.

I just can't do it anymore. It's completely POINTLESS. So, keep writing your articles of outrage. Keep demonstrating. Keep sending emails. Keep making 'phone calls. It won't make any difference!!!! But if it makes you feel better, makes you feel like you're actually accomplishing something - by all means go right ahead.

For myself, I'm throwing in the towel. They can have it all! And as they're accumulating all the wealth of the world, they might as well remind themselves that it won't last because without jobs, money, homes, no one will be left to buy their god-damned products. And in the long run they will only wind up cutting their own throats.

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» RE: I'm all out of outrage. Posted by: macdon1
slavery is freeom
Posted by: HANGTRAITORS on Feb 16, 2008 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if we had a real government these evil people would be hunted and killed... like the vermin they are

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Elites want to eliminate 80% of the world's population
Posted by: macdon1 on Feb 16, 2008 4:29 PM   
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Lately I have studied a great deal about the possibilty of global control by a small group of elites. Many now think that group is the low profile organization called the Bildeburg group.(Hillary Clinton was invited to and attended one of their annual secret meetings)
Up until now, technology was not advanced enough to allow world control by these truly evil people, although throughout history they managed to cause suffering and death on a grand scale. Today such control is not only possible, but highly probable. Control and manipulation of agricultural education and research and a stranglehold on the world's food supply by global corporate monopolies is a huge step towards this end.

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