Oops! Thanks Alex. I forgot to zap the html code before hitting Send, 
sorry. I hope it works this time, FWIW. - Keith

------0------

Hi Peter

Scary indeed.

Here's the link, by the way:

<http://www.naturalnews.com/029325_Monsanto_deception.html>

More from Jeffrey Smith in the list archives (40 posts):
<http://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=sustainablelorgbiofuel%40sustainablelists.org&q=Jeffrey+Smith>

Website:

Seeds of Deception
Jeffrey M. Smith
<http://www.seedsofdeception.com/Public/Home/index.cfm>

... On the other hand, what was it again that happened to Ozymandias?

>The executives described a world with 100
>percent of all commercial seeds genetically modified and patented.
>Anderson consultants then worked backwards from that goal, and developed
>the strategy and tactics to achieve it. They presented Monsanto with
>the steps and procedures needed to obtain a place of industry dominance
>in a world in which natural seeds were virtually extinct.

I wonder if that included the Bivings group's strategy and tactics, 
so to speak.

The fake persuaders
Corporations are inventing people to rubbish their opponents on the internet
George Monbiot, The Guardian, Tuesday 14 May 2002
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2002/may/14/greenpolitics.digitalmedia>

Would they have to stoop to such slimy tactics if they really thought 
they had a valid case to argue? Or maybe it was just force of habit.

I also wonder if it included Terminator seeds.
<http://www.mail-archive.com/search?q=Terminator&l=sustainablelorgbiofuel%40sustainablelists.org>

Seeing as corporations are just virtual entities anyway, if somebody, 
say a friendly consortium of altruistic Wall Street banksters or 
someone like them, would be kind enough to buy us a Cray 
supercomputer, we could perhaps persuade the world of geeks to 
develop a suitably convincing Virtual Reality game and install it in 
the Cray, then we could pipe Monsanto's digital essence or whatever 
and all the other psychoticorps' digital essences into it, cut off 
all real-world access, and leave them to it, they'd be quite happy 
and never notice the difference, while we all got on with life back 
here on Planet Earth.

Or maybe once they were all piped in we could just pull the plug.

Just a thought.

Then there's this below, sigh...

(New verb, "monsantosize", ulp...)

Joy to the world

Keith


http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/08/06

When Agrochemical Corporations Invented Nature

by Julio Godoy

BERLIN  - A civil society protest against a British agrochemical 
company that claims it has invented a particular sort of broccoli has 
again focused attention on the question who owns natural 
biodiversity, especially vegetables, seeds, and many forms of meat 
and animal food products.

Delegates from some 300 environmental and consumer organizations from 
all over the world gathered last month in Bavarian capital Munich, 
some 500 kilometers south of Berlin, to demonstrate outside the 
headquarters of the European Patent Office (EPO) against the patent 
the agency accorded on broccoli seeds, plants and breeding methods to 
the British agrochemical company Plant Bioscience.

EPO granted the patent in 2002, on a method claimed by Plant 
Bioscience for increasing a specific compound in broccoli through 
conventional breeding methods. The patent, which also faces 
opposition by two other agrochemical multinationals, includes the 
breeding methods, and the broccoli seeds and edible broccoli plants 
obtained through these procedures.

The demonstration in Munich took place as the EPO opened its 
litigation procedure on the legitimacy of its own patent agreement. A 
decision on the issue is expected in October.

Plant Bioscience claims that its breeding methods increase the anti- 
carcinogenic glucosinolates in the species. This is one of hundreds 
of similar claims presented by numerous agrochemical multinational 
companies, such as Monsanto and Syngenta.

For environmental and consumer activists and independent farmers, 
such patents amount to an attempt to expropriate natural biodiversity 
for the benefit of a handful of corporations, which would rule as a 
cartel upon agriculture, especially in developing countries.

Christoph Then, expert on intellectual property rights for the 
environmental organization Greenpeace, told IPS that what a handful 
of biochemical multinational companies are doing is to 
"misappropriate biodiversity."

Then is co-author of a study on the 'The Future of Seeds and Food', 
in which he warns of the "monsantosizing of biodiversity." Earlier 
this year he led a successful European campaign against a patent 
filed by Monsanto, in which the company claimed it had invented a 
particular sort of ham.

Last April, EPO revoked this patent given to Monsanto in 2005. Then 
told IPS that the "revocation of the patent is a major success for 
consumers and farmers in Europe. The EPO's decision shows that even 
the most powerful transnational companies must give in to public 
pressure."

According to Greenpeace and other environmental organizations 
researching patent claims by agrochemical corporations, the EPO has 
to decide on more than 1,000 other property rights filed on 
vegetables, seeds and animal products presented by the firms 
Monsanto, Syngenta, DuPont-Pioneer, Bayer Cropscience, BASF and Dow 
Agrosciences, and others.

The broccoli case is typical of this battle among multinationals over 
conventional breeding methods. The agrochemical companies Limagrain 
and Syngenta, which have filed opposition against the Plant 
Bioscience patent, argue that the patent has to be revoked as its 
claims refer to an essentially biological process, and so to 
conventional methods.

According to the European Patent Convention, essentially biological 
processes are not patentable.

Despite this, most patents filed today by agrochemical multinationals 
concern conventional breeding methods. In a study for the Gen-Ethical 
Foundation, German biologist Ruth Tippe showed that the number of 
patents filed by agrochemical multinationals on conventional breeding 
methods has grown more than 20 percent since 2000.

"Nowadays, 30 percent of all patent applications on plant breeding 
filed by Monsanto involve conventional breeding methods," Tippe told 
IPS. "Before 2005, such patent applications did not reach five 
percent of the total."

"The patent on broccoli has become a test case for the patentability 
of conventional seeds and breeding methods," Franz Schaettle, 
director of the international campaign No Patent on Seeds, told IPS.

No Patent on Seeds represents hundreds of environmental, consumer, 
and farmer organizations across the world, to fight the 
"monsantosizing of biodiversity", and has formulated a global appeal 
against patents on conventional seeds and farm animals addressed to 
the Enlarged Board of Appeal of the European Patent Office, 
governments, and the executive boards of agro-business companies.

"The continuing patenting of seeds, conventional plant varieties and 
animal species leads to far reaching expropriations of farmers and 
breeders," Schaettle told IPS. "Farmers, especially in developing 
countries, are deprived of their rights to save their harvested 
seeds, and breeders are under strong limitations to use the patented 
seeds freely for further breeding."

Numerous examples of patent applications by agrochemicals confirm the 
warnings of Tippe, Schaettle, and Then. In Monsanto's patent 
application WO2008021413 on maize and soy, methods are claimed that 
are widely used in conventional breeding.

"On more than 1,000 pages and in 175 claims Monsanto apply for 
patents on various gene sequences and genetic variations, especially 
in soy and maize," Schaettle said. "Monsanto even goes as far as 
explicitly claiming all relevant maize and soy plants, inheriting 
those genetic elements. Furthermore, all uses in food, feed and 
biomass are listed."

By filing specific regional applications Monsanto shows especial 
interest in applying for this patent in Europe, Argentina and Canada.

By the same token, in patent application WO 2009011847, on meat and 
milk, Monsanto broadly claims methods for cattle breeding, the 
animals, as well as "milk, cheese, butter and meat." Other companies 
have also filed patents on genetic resources needed for feed and food 
production.

"All these patents are the backbone of a strategy for taking over 
global control on all levels of food production, "Schaettle said. 
"The patents do not stifle research and innovation; they are simply 
meant to block access to genetic resources and technology and to 
establish new dependencies for farmers, breeders and food producers."

This is particularly the case in developing countries, especially in 
Africa and Latin America. In such regions, in contrast to Europe, 
small farmers and consumer organizations do not have legal or 
financial resources to fight unfair patents. Under such 
circumstances, the likes of Monsanto can claim they have actually 
invented natural diversity.

© 2010 Inter Press Service


>Hi Keith and All ;
>
>Cross post from another list.  Sobering expose on Monsanto's tactics 
>to control the world's food supply.  Trouble is coming in food 
>security.  Learn how to save seeds!  Start a small garden!  Do it 
>while you still can.
>
>BR
>Peter G.
>Thailand
>www.gac-seeds.com
>
>Monsanto: Poster Child for Manipulation, Deceit
>     Posted by:
>"Desert Sky" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>desertskynm
>     Date: Sun Aug 1, 2010 11:28 am ((PDT))
>
>Monsanto:
>The world's poster child for corporate manipulation and deceit
>(NaturalNews)
>  www.myhealthytown.com


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