> From: Richard S. Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> A couple of paragraphs that stood out to me from this article:
> 
> "But Monsanto's uncertain legacy is as embedded in west Anniston's
psyche 
> as it is in the town's dirt. The EPA and the World Health Organization 
> classify PCBs as "probable carcinogens," and while no one has
determined 
> whether the people in Anniston are sicker than average, Solutia has
opposed 
> proposals for comprehensive health studies as unnecessary. And it has
not 
> apologized for any of its contamination or deception.
> "In the absence of data, local residents seem to believe the worst. The

> stories linger: The cancer cluster up the hill. The guy who burned the 
> soles off his boots while walking on Monsanto's landfill. The dog that
died 
> after a sip from Snow Creek, the long-abused drainage ditch that runs
from 
> the Monsanto plant through the heart of west Anniston's cinder-block 
> cottages and shotgun houses. Sylvester Harris, 63, an undertaker who
lived 
> across the street from the plant, said he always thought he was burying
too 
> many young children."
> 
> In other words, there is no evidence that the PCB's released by
Monsanto 
> caused any harm to the residents of Anniston.  Going through the
archives, 
> I see that there has already been an extensive thread about Bjorn
Lomborg 
> and _The Skeptical Environmentalist_ on this list, so I'll pass on 
> mentioning anything from that book. ;-)
> 
> Regardless of whether PCB's are deadly to humans in the levels released
by 
> Monsanto or not, Monsanto willfully dumped pollutants known the be 
> persistent and potentially very harmful into a local community and did
very 
> stem their activities; more money was spent on media relations over the

> issue than on actual cleanup.  In my mind, Monsanto acted deplorably; 
> ethics and principles still matter (indeed, they matter now more than 
> ever).  Do we really want a company with a mindset like this involved
in 
> our food production?

Do we really want a system that produces these corporate enties that are
acountable to no one except their stock price?

If you want to know about the evils of Monsanto, look up Nutrasweet, or
the 'Terminator' seed technology.

> At 07:40 AM 1/3/2002, you wrote:
> >http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A46648-2001Dec31.html
> 

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