Monstanto's sue's hides GMO deadly label
Monsanto Threatens to Sue, Requiring GMO Food to Be Labeled:
 
- Monsanto
 
The
 world’s most hated corporation is at it again, this time in Vermont.  
Despite overwhelming public support and the support of a clear majority 
of Vermont’s Agriculture Committee, Vermont legislators are dragging 
their feet on a proposed GMO labeling bill. Why? Because Monsanto has 
threatened to sue the state if the bill passes.  The popular legislative
 bill requiring mandatory labels on genetically engineered food (H-722) 
is languishing in the Vermont House Agriculture Committee, with only 
four weeks left until the legislature adjourns for the year. Despite 
thousands of emails and calls from constituents who overwhelmingly 
support mandatory labeling, despite the fact that a majority (6 to 5) of
 Agriculture Committee members supports passage of the measure, Vermont 
legislators are holding up the labeling bill and refusing to take a 
vote.  Instead, they’re calling for more public hearings on April 12, in
 the apparent hope that they can run out the clock until the legislative
 session ends in early May.  What happened to the formerly staunch 
legislative champions of Vermont’s “right to know” bill? They lost their
 nerve and abandoned their principles after Monsanto representative 
recently threatened a public official that the Biotech giant would sue 
Vermont if they dared to pass the bill. Several legislators have rather 
unconvincingly argued that the Vermont public has a “low appetite” for 
any bills, even very popular bills like this one, that might end up in 
court. Others expressed concern about Vermont being the first state to 
pass a mandatory GMO labeling bill and then having to “go it alone” 
against Monsanto in court.  What it really comes down to this: Elected 
officials are abandoning the public interest and public will in the face
 of corporate intimidation.  Monsanto has used lawsuits or threats of 
lawsuits for 20 years to force unlabeled genetically engineered foods on
 the public, and to intimidate farmers into buying their genetically 
engineered seeds and hormones. When Vermont became the first state in 
the nation in 1994 to require mandatory labels on milk and dairy 
products derived from cows injected with the controversial genetically 
engineered Bovine Growth Hormone, Monsanto’s minions sued in Federal 
Court and won on a judge’s decision that dairy corporations have the 
first amendment “right” to remain silent on whether or not they are 
injecting their cows with rBGH - even though rBGH has been linked to 
severe health damage in cows and increased cancer risk for humans, and 
is banned in much of the industrialized world, including Europe and 
Canada.  Monsanto wields tremendous influence in Washington, DC and most
 state capitals. The company’s stranglehold over politicians and 
regulatory officials is what has prompted activists in California to 
bypass the legislature and collect 850,000 signatures to place a 
citizens’ Initiative on the ballot in November 2012. The 2012 California
 Right to Know Act will force mandatory labeling of GMOs and to ban the 
routine practice of labeling GMO-tainted food as “natural.”  All of 
Monsanto’s fear mongering and intimidation tactics were blatantly on 
display in the House Agriculture Committee hearings March 15-16.  During
 the hearings the Vermont legislature was deluged with calls, letters, 
and e-mails urging passage of a GMO labeling bill - more than on any 
other bill since the fight over Civil Unions in 1999-2000. The 
legislature heard from pro-labeling witnesses such as Dr. Michael 
Hansen, an expert on genetic engineering from the Consumers Union, who 
shredded industry claims that GMO’s are safe and that consumers don’t 
need to know if their food is contaminated with them.
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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