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Farm Radio Broadcaster Gets the Boot After Exposing Monsanto's 'Goon Squads'
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If you have heard of Learfield Communications, it is probably from listening to college football and basketball games.
The Jefferson City, Missouri based Learfield is one of the nation’s largest broadcasters of college sports.
But it also produces news programming heard throughout the farm belt.
Learfield was started 35 years ago by Clyde Lear and Derry Brownfield.
Lear went on to be the chairman of the company. He bought out his friend and partner Brownfield in 1985.
Brownfield went on to do market news reports for the Learfield news division until 1997 or so, when he started broadcasting a daily call-in show called The Common Sense Coalition.
Derry Brownfield would broadcast The Common Sense Coalition from the studios of Learfield Communications.
Learfield would subsidize the program and allow Brownfield to use its studios and satellite hook-up.
Monsanto happens to be a big advertiser of the Learfield news division — to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.
Brownfield happens to think that Monsanto is an evil corporation.
Therein lies the rub.
For weeks, Brownfield had been ripping Monsanto on air for its policies of enforcing its seed patents against farmers.
On the April 16 show, Brownfield’s topic was seed industry concentration in America.
His guests were Fred Stokes, president of the Organization for Competitive Markets, and Michael Stumo, general counsel of the group.
Stokes and Stumo were promoting a new project to study corporate concentration in the seed industry.
Monsanto is the dominant player in the global seed industry and has a reputation for playing rough.
On air, Brownfield quoted from a newly published Vanity Fair article titled “Monsanto’s Harvest of Fear” by Donald Barlett and James Steele.
“Monsanto relies on a shadowy army of private investigators and agents in the American heartland to strike fear into farm country,” Barlett and Steele write. “They fan out into fields and farm towns, where they secretly videotape and photograph farmers, store owners, and co-ops, infiltrate community meetings, and gather information from informants about farming activities. Farmers say that some Monsanto agents pretend to be surveyors. Others confront farmers on their land and try to pressure them to sign papers giving Monsanto access to their private records. Farmers call them the 'seed police’ and use words such as 'Gestapo’ and 'Mafia’ to describe their tactics.”
After reading from the Vanity Fair article, Brownfield then begins to riff on the Mafia theme.
“Multinational corporations are doing everything possible to change agriculture — and not for the better,” Brownfield says on the show. “I know a little bit about this — not a lot, just a little bit — but Monsanto literally they have Mafia goons out, do they not? They show up on farmers’ property, they try and harass them, they say if you don’t sign this, we are going to take you to court. They have literally tried to destroy agriculture as we know it. They have a goon squad. Maybe that’s not what they like to be called. But if it was the Mafia, we would call them the goon squad.”
Calling Monsanto’s patent enforcers goons was apparently the straw that broke this camel’s back.
Brownfield’s stint at Learfield was about to end.
Last week, Brownfield was told that he could no longer broadcast out of the Learfield studios. His buddy, Clyde Lear, posted a blog on the Learfield web site saying that Brownfield’s last show will be in mid-May.
“The Common Sense Coalition grinds to a halt on our system,” Lear wrote.
See more stories tagged with: frankenfoods, gmos, intimidation, brownfield, monsanto
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter.
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