Farm Broadcaster Ousted after Ripping Monsanto’s Goon  Squads
 
I wonder why there has been so little news about  this ? 
 
We are facing both faux and real food shortages,  and obscene food price 
hikes, and food riots and hoarding  ... yet  questioning the practices of a 
multinational who has stated it wants to control  the "seed" world and who does 
enforce seed contracts and spends billions on  developing 'one time only seeds' 
to 
prevent farmers - or nature  - from saving, storing, or propagating  crop 
seeds between  harvests and which threatens the free access of food grains and 
nature's own  seed natural wild fertility  -- questioning those and more 
scurrilous  practices gets you removed from the radio airwaves ???...crg  - 
 
More proof that so much in America is ruled by  marketers, lobbyists, and big 
business and its purse-strings...
 
Peace,  Hugs, and Purrs  
Carolyn Rose Goyda
Saint  Louis, Missouri USA
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
 
_monsanto043008_ (http://corporatecrimereporter.com/monsanto043008.htm)  
 
Farm Broadcaster  Ousted after Ripping Monsanto’s Goon Squads
22  Corporate Crime Reporter 18, April 30, 2008

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_ 
(http://www.brownfieldnetwork.com/resource_other/20080416/f97ed749-ae81-5c55-2b37828c1c4c3db6/111412/dbs041608.MP3)
 , 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_ 
(http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/05/monsanto200805)   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_ 
(http://learfield.typepad.com/growlearfield/2008/04/derry-leaves-us.html)   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. 
“Most of his listeners loved him as did his  affiliates,” Lear wrote about 
his buddy. “He didn't mind controversy or taking  on giants like the Monsanto 
Corporation. He thought they were bad for farmers,  too big for their britches 
and generally bad for America. Increasingly he's been  saying so, without 
seeking balance, in my opinion.” 
And then later, in response to listeners who  were upset that Brownfield was 
being let go, Lear wrote:  
“Some seem to think the reason Derry is  leaving is because Monsanto 
threatened to stop advertising if we didn’t put a  gag on him. If that were the 
only 
reason Derry was asked to leave, then I can  see why they think we are selling 
out. We've parted ways because accusations  being made about not only 
advertisers, but individuals, corporations,  government, (fill in the blank) 
were 
based on fear and lies with absolutely no  truth to back them up. I abhor radio 
talk shows like Rush Limbaugh...and Derry  Brownfield where half-truths are 
articulated. I won't be a part of them. And,  that's my right.” 
But in an interview with Corporate Crime  Reporter, Lear admits that the 
Monsanto issue is what drove his buddy  Brownfield out. 
“If the Monsanto issue had not come up, we  would not be here today,” Lear 
said. 
Lear said that the President of Learfield  Communications, Roger Gardner, 
talked recently with John Raines, Monsanto’s  director of public affairs. 
“John Raines talked to Roger Gardner about the  difficulties they felt 
Brownfield is giving them,” Lear said. “(Gardner) told me  he talked to John 
Raines 
about the Vanity Fair article.” 
“The pressure I got came from the president of  the news division, Stan 
Koenigsfeld,” Lear said. “Stan is the guy that has  responsibility for selling 
and 
maintaining the financial viability of our news  division. Stan is a no 
nonsense guy. So, Stan comes in and says – why are we  doing this? Why do we 
continue to do this? We give him all of these things and  he spits in our face 
by 
lambasting our good advertisers, without giving them an  opportunity for fair 
and balanced reporting. And it is not reporting – it’s just  entertainment. Why 
do we continue to do this?” 
Lear says that the complaints have been  mounting over the past five years 
about Brownfield. 
“And I’ve been saying to Stan, settle down, it  will all be alright,” Lear 
said. “But I imagine Stan is getting a lot of  pressure from his sales 
executives. We have three that call on Monsanto for  different products. And I 
would 
assume that he is getting pressure from those  sales executives. When those 
sales executives call on Monsanto, Monsanto is  complaining to the sales 
executives. That is where the connection happens. But  you would have to talk 
to them 
about the kind of leverage Monsanto is putting on  them. They have never to my 
knowledge threatened to pull any  advertising.” 
Lear finally confronted Brownfield. 
“I went to him and said – Derry, look, lay off  of this,” Lear said. “Lay 
off of this Monsanto thing. I am getting a lot of  complaints.” 
Lear said he was the only one in the company  who could approach Brownfield.  
“I’m the only one who can talk to him,” Lear  said. “No one else in the 
company will go to him. He is kind of persona non  grata. He is one of the guys 
who helped start the company years ago. He was my  partner for years until 1985 
when I bought him out. He is a dear friend of mine.  So, there is no one else 
– all of the rest of the guys are half my age. They  won’t go to him. They 
are afraid of him. They just won’t go and talk to  him.” 
“They all came to me and said – go talk to  Derry,” Lear said. “We’ve got 
to quit doing this. Plus, it came at a bad time.  It came during the same week 
that the National Association of Farm Broadcasters  national convention was 
being held in Kansas City. And at that convention, of  course, Monsanto was 
omnipresent. They are there trying to woo farm  broadcasters, because they want 
them to say nice things about them, right? So,  here are all of the Monsanto 
people at this convention. And their advertising  agencies – Osborne & Barr out 
of St. Louis – among others. They were all  there. And it was embarrassing, 
because all of that week, Derry is lambasting  Monsanto.” 
“We have explained to Monsanto, in any way we  can, that the Brownfield 
Network has nothing to do with Derry’s show,” Lear  says. “This is a completely 
independent show that he puts on. Well, Monsanto  says – he’s doing it from 
your studios, isn’t he? And we say yes, we give him  space because of the 
history.
” 
“And they ask – how else do you help him? If  he weren’t doing the show, 
would this problem disappear?” 
“So my guys came to me and said – we’ve got to  do something about this.” 
“So, I went in to Derry and I sat down with  him,” Lear said. “It was very 
good natured. I wasn’t angry. I wasn’t planning on  doing anything. I said – 
let this Monsanto thing go for awhile. Just let it go.”  
“He said – ‘Clyde – Monsanto is an evil  empire,’” Lear recalled. “‘This 
is evil. He said – every farmer hates Monsanto.  You know what they have done –
 and then he would lambast Monsanto and lay out  this litany of stuff that 
they do. It included milk. Apparently there is a human  growth hormone that 
they 
put in the milk. I don’t know a thing about it, but  apparently they won a 
court case that prohibited milk retailers from putting on  the milk carton the 
label – hormone free. I didn’t know anything about this, but  Brownfield was 
complaining about how the liberal judges of America are siding  with the evil 
empire. And Monsanto pays them off. All kinds of allegations which  I’m sure 
are not true. But Derry believes them.” 
“So, I said – will you let Monsanto be on the  air? And he said – I’m not 
going to give them a forum. But then he changed his  mind and said – yeah, 
bring them on. I'll let them on the show.” 
Lear then went to hole up with his executives.  And his execs told him – “It’
s bigger than this now. We just don’t need to be  associated with him.” 
“So, I just walked back there and said to  Derry – you say you are not going 
to lighten up. And he said no, I’m staying the  course. And I said – not 
with us you are not. You are going to have to find some  other way to 
distribute 
your program, and you are going to have to find some  other office to do it 
out of.” 
Given that he was willing put Monsanto on his  show, why not keep him on? 
“Maybe we should have,” Lear said. 
Would you reconsider your decision? 
“I don’t think so,” Lear says. “It is just not  a business I want to be in 
anymore.” 
Lear says he feels sad about parting with his  old buddy, but he wants to 
help set up an internet radio studio for Derry out of  Derry’s home office. 
“We are helping him build a new facility in  his home,” Lear says. “But we 
won’t have a connection to him. Then we can easily  say to Monsanto – we don’t 
have a thing to do with Derry. We don’t have a thing  to do with him. He’s 
not on our property. We can’t control him.” 
Brownfield said he couldn’t comment on the  situation until after May 30.  


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