.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/05/business/05monsanto.html?_r=2&partner=rss&emc=rssAfter Growth, Fortunes Turn for MonsantoANDREW POLLACKOctober 4, 2010 As recently as late December, Monsanto  was named “company of the year” by Forbes magazine. Last week, the  company earned a different accolade from Jim Cramer, the television  stock market commentator.  “This may be the worst stock of 2010,” he  proclaimed.        
 
 Monsanto, the giant of agricultural biotechnology, has been buffeted by  setbacks this year that have prompted analysts to question whether its  winning streak of creating ever more expensive genetically engineered crops is coming to an end.        
 
 The company’s stock, which rose steadily over several years to peak at  around $140 a share in mid-2008, closed Monday at $47.77, having fallen  about 42 percent since the beginning of the year. Its earnings for the  fiscal year that ended in August, which will be announced Wednesday, are  expected to be well below projections made at the beginning of the  year, and the company has abandoned its profit goal for 2012 as well.         
 
 The latest blow came last week, when early returns from this year’s  harvest showed that Monsanto’s newest product, SmartStax corn, which  contains  eight inserted genes, was providing yields no higher than the  company’s less expensive corn, which contains only three foreign genes. Monsanto has already been forced to sharply cut prices on SmartStax and  on its newest soybean seeds, called Roundup Ready 2 Yield, as sales fell  below projections.        
 
 But there is more. Sales of Monsanto’s Roundup, the widely used  herbicide, has collapsed this year under an onslaught of low-priced  generics made in China. Weeds are growing resistant to Roundup, dimming  the future of the entire Roundup Ready crop franchise. And the Justice  Department is investigating Monsanto for possible antitrust violations.         
 
 Until now, Monsanto’s main challenge has come from opponents of  genetically modified crops, who have slowed their adoption in Europe and  some other regions. Now, however, the skeptics also include farmers and  investors who were once in Monsanto’s camp.        
 
 “My personal view is that they overplayed their hand,” William R. Young,  managing director of ChemSpeak, a consultant to investors in the  chemical industry, said of Monsanto. “They are going to have to  demonstrate to the farmer the advantage of their products.” Brett D. Begemann, Monsanto’s executive vice president for seeds and  traits, said the setbacks were not reflective of systemic management  problems and that the company was moving to deal with them. “Farmers clearly gave us some feedback that we have made adjustments from,” he said in an interview Monday.        
 
 Mr. Begemann said that Monsanto used to introduce new seeds at a price  that gave farmers two-thirds and Monsanto one-third of the extra profits  that would come from higher yields or lower pest-control costs. But  with SmartStax corn and Roundup Ready 2 soybeans, the company’s pricing  aimed for a 50-50 split.        
 
 That backfired as American farmers grew only six million acres of  Roundup Ready 2 soybeans this year, below the company’s goal of eight  million to 10 million acres, and only three million acres of SmartStax  corn, below the goal of four million.        
 
 So now Monsanto is moving back to the older arrangement. SmartStax seed  for planting next year will be priced about $8 an acre more than other  seeds, down from about a $24 premium for this year’s seeds, Mr. Begemann  said. The company will also offer credits for free seed to farmers who  planted SmartStax this year and were disappointed.        
 
 Monsanto has also moved to offer farmers more varieties with fewer  inserted genes. Some farmers have said they often have to buy traits  they do not need —  such as protection from the corn rootworm in regions  where that pest is not a problem — to get the best varieties. This  issue has surfaced in the antitrust investigation.        
 
 Monsanto’s arch rival, DuPont’s Pioneer Hi-Bred, has also capitalized on the lack of options under a campaign called “right product, right acre.” “If they don’t have a need for rootworm then we won’t have that trait in  that product,” Paul E. Schickler, the president of Pioneer, said in an  interview.        
 
 After years of rapidly losing market share in corn seeds to Monsanto,  Pioneer says it has gained back four percentage points in the last two  years, to 34 percent. Monsanto puts its market share at 36 percent in  2009 and says it has remained flat this year. In soybeans, Pioneer puts  its share at 31 percent, up seven percentage points over the last two  years; Monsanto puts its share at 28 percent last year and said it had  dropped some this year.        
 
 Monsanto had a similar problem with lower-than-expected yields on  Roundup Ready 2 soybeans last year, when the crop was first planted  commercially, forcing it to slash its premium. But this year, the yield appears to be meeting expectations, said OTR  Global, a research firm that surveys farmers and seed dealers. That  could bode well for SmartStax next year.        
 
 One reason is that the Roundup Ready 2 gene is now offered in more  varieties, making it better suited to more growing conditions. The yield  of a crop is mainly determined by the seed’s intrinsic properties, not  the inserted genes. An insect protection gene will not make a poor  variety a high yielder any more than spiffy shoes will turn a slow  runner into Usain Bolt. In the first year of a new product, few varieties contain the new gene.        
 
 Still, Monsanto is bound at some point to face diminishing returns from  its strategy of putting more and more insect-resistant and  herbicide-resistant genes into the same crop, at ever increasing prices.  Growth might have to eventually come from new traits, such as a  drought-tolerant corn the company hopes to introduce in 2012.        
 
 “Technologically, they are still the market leader,” said Laurence  Alexander, an analyst at Jefferies & Company. “The main issue going  forward is do they get paid for the technology they deliver. The jury is  still out on that one. It’s going to take a year or two of data to  reassure people.”        
A version of this article appeared in print on October 5, 2010, on page B1 of the New York edition.http://www.voltairenet.org/article166785.htmlGMO Crop Catastrophe in USA a lesson for EU by F. William Engdahl22 August 2010As the European Union moves closer to approving the cultivation of GMOs despite stiff widespread opposition, it ought to be paying urgent attention to the agricultural arms race unfolding in the United States. The gospel of high-tech genetically modified (GM) crops is no longer sounding quite so sweet. Roundup-resistant “superweeds” are plaguing Monsanto crops across southern US states, driving farmers to use more herbicides, abandon their farms or return to conventional crops, while an increasing number are switching to organic production.
Recently the unelected potentates of the EU Commission in Brussels  have sought to override what has repeatedly been shown to be the  overwhelming opposition of the European Union population to the spread  of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) in EU agriculture. EU Commission  President now has a Maltese accountant as health and environment  Commissioner to rubber stamp the adoption of GMO. The former EU  Environment Commissioner from Greece was a ferocious GMO opponent. As  well, the Chinese government has indicated it may approve a variety of  GMO rice. Before things get too far along, they would do well to take a  closer look at the world GMO test lab, the USA. There GMO crops are  anything but beneficial. Just the opposite.
  
What is carefully kept out of the Monsanto and other agribusiness  propaganda in promoting genetically manipulated crops as an alternative  to conventional is the fact that in the entire world until the present,  all GMO crops have been manipulated and patented for only two things -  to be resistant or "tolerant" to the patented highly toxic herbicide  glyphosate chemicals that Monsanto and the others force farmers to buy  as condition for buying their patented GMO seeds. The second trait is  GMO seeds that have been engineered genetically to resist specific  insects. Contrary to public relations myths promoted by the agribusiness  giants in their own self-interest, there exists not one single GMO seed  that provides a greater harvest yield than conventional, nor one that  requires less toxic chemical herbicides. That is for the simple reason  there is no profit to be made in such.
  
Giant Super-weeds Plague
  
  
As prominent GMO opponent and biologist, Dr Mae-Wan Ho of the  Institute of Science in London has noted, companies such as Monsanto  build into their seeds herbicide-tolerance (HT) due to  glyphosate-insensitive form of the gene coding for the enzyme targeted  by the herbicide. The enzyme is derived from soil bacterium  Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Insect-resistance is due to one or more toxin  genes derived from the soil bacterium Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis). The  United States began large scale commercial planting of GMO plants,  mainly soybeans and corn and cotton around 1997. By now, GM crops have  taken over between 85 percent to 91 percent of the areas planted with  the three major crops, soybean, corn and cotton in the US, on nearly 171  million acres.
  
The ecological time-bomb that came with the GMO according to Ho, is  about to explode. Over several years of constant application of patented  glyphosate herbicides such as Monsanto’s famous and highly Roundup, new  herbicide-resistant "super-weeds" have evolved, nature’s response to  man-made attempts to violate it. The super-weeds require significantly more not less herbicide to control.
  
ABC Television, a major US national network, made a recent  documentary about the super-weeds under the rubric, "super weeds that  can’t be killed. [1]
  
They interviewed farmers and scientists across Arkansas who described  fields overrun with giant pigweed plants that can withstand as much  glyphosate as farmers are able to spray. They interviewed one farmer who  spent almost €400 000 in only three months in a failed attempt to kill  the new super-weeds.
  
The new super-weeds are so robust that harvester combines are unable  to harvest the fields and hand tools break trying to cut them down. At  least 400 000 hectares of soybean and cotton in Arkansas alone have  become invested with this new mutant biological plague. Detailed data on  other agricultural regions is not available but believed similar. The  pro-GMO and pro-agribusiness US Department of Agriculture has been  reported lying about the true state of US crop harvest partly to hide  the grim reality and to prevent an explosive revolt against GMO in the  world’s largest GMO market.
  
  
One variety of super-weed, palmer pigweed can grow up to 2.4 meters  high, withstands severe heat and prolonged droughts, and produces  thousands of seeds with a root system that drains nutrients away from  crops. If left unchecked, it takes over an entire field in a year. Some  farmers have been forced to abandon their land. To date palmer pigweed  infestation in GMO crop regions has been identified in addition to  Arkansas, also in Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee,  Kentucky, New Mexico, Mississippi and most recently, Alabama and  Missouri.
  
Weed scientists at the University of Georgia estimate that just two  palmer pigweed plants in every 6 meter length of cotton row can reduce  yield by at least 23 percent. A single weed plant can produce 450 000  seeds. [2]
  
Roundup Toxic Danger Being Covered-up
  
 Glyphosate  is the most widely used herbicide in the US and the world at large.  Patented and sold by Monsanto since the 1970s under the trade name  Roundup, it is a mandatory component of buying GMO seeds from Monsanto.  Just go to your local garden store and ask for it and read the label  carefully.
  
As I detail in my book, Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation,  GMO crops and patented seeds were developed in the 1970’s with  significant financial support from the pro-eugenics Rockefeller  Foundation, by what were essentially chemical companies - Monsanto  Chemicals, DuPont and Dow Chemicals. All three were involved in the  scandal of the highly toxic Agent Orange used in Vietnam, as well as  Dioxin in the 1970’s, and lied to cover up the true damage to its own  employees as well as to civilian and military populations exposed.
  
Their patented GMO seeds were seen as a clever way to force increased  purchase of their agricultural chemicals such as Roundup. Farmers must  sign a legal contract with Monsanto in which it stipulates that only  Monsanto Roundup pesticide may be used. Farmers are thus trapped both in  buying new seeds from Monsanto each harvest and buying the toxic  glyphosate.
  
France’s University of Caen, in a team led by molecular biologist,  Gilles-Eric Seralini, did a study that showed Roundup contained one  specific inert ingredient, polyethoxylated tallowamine, or POEA.  Seralini’s team demonstrated that POEA in Roundup was more deadly to  human embryonic, placental and umbilical cord cells than even the  glyphosate itself. Monsanto refuses to release details of the contents  of its Roundup other than glyphosate, calling it "proprietary."
  
The Seralini study found that Roundup’s inert ingredients amplified  the toxic effect on human cells - even at concentrations much more  diluted than those used on farms and lawns! The French team studied  multiple concentrations of Roundup, from the typical agricultural or  lawn dose down to concentrations 100,000 times more dilute than the  products sold on shelves. The researchers saw cell damage at all  concentrations.
  
Glyphosate and Roundup are advertised as "less toxic to us than table  salt" in a pamphlet from the Biotechnology Institute promoting GMO  crops as ’Weed Warrior.’ Thirteen years of GMO crops in the USA has  increased overall pesticide use by 318 million pounds, not decreased as  promised by the Four Horsemen of the GMO Apocalypse. The extra disease  burden on the nation from that alone is considerable.
  
Nonetheless after introduction of Monsanto GMO seeds commercially in  the USA, use of glyphosate has risen more than 1500% between 1994 and  2005. In the USA some 100 million pounds of glyphosate are used on lawns  and farms every year, and over the last 13 years, it has been applied  to more than a billion acres. When questioned, Monsanto’s technical  development manager, Rick Cole, reportedly said the problems were  "manageable." He advised farmers to alternate crops and use different  makes of herbicides produced by Monsanto. Monsanto is encouraging  farmers to mix glyphosate with its older herbicides such as 2,4-D,  banned in Sweden, Denmark and Norway for links to cancer and  reproductive and neurological damage. 2,4-D is a component of Agent  Orange, produced by Monsanto for use in Vietnam in the 1960s.
  
US Farmers Turn to Organics
  
Farmers across the United States are reported to be going back to  conventional non-GMO crops instead. According to a new report from the  US Department of Agriculture, retail sales of organic food went up to  $21.1 billion in 2008 from $3.6 billion in 1997. [3]  The market is so active that organic farms have struggled at times to  produce sufficient supply to keep up with the rapid growth in consumer  demand, leading to periodic shortages of organic products.
  
The new UK Conservative-Liberal coalition government is strongly  backing lifting a de facto ban on GMO in that country. UK Chief  Scientific Adviser, Prof. John Beddington, recently wrote an article in  which he misleadingly claimed " The next decade will see the development of combinations of desirable  traits and the introduction of new traits such as drought tolerance. By  mid-century much more radical options involving highly polygenic traits  may be feasible." He went on to promise "cloned animals with engineered innate immunity to  diseases" and more. I think we can pass that one up, thank you.
  
A recent study by Iowa State University and the US Department of  Agriculture assessing the performance of farms during the three-year  transition it takes to switch from conventional to certified organic  production showed notable advantages of organic farming over GMO or even  conventional non-GMO crops. In an experiment lasting four years - three  years transition and first year organic - the study showed that  although yields dropped initially, they equalized in the third year, and  by the fourth year, the organic yields were ahead of the conventional  for both soybean and corn.
  
As well, the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge,  Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) has recently been  published, the result of three-year deliberation by 400 participating  scientists and non-government representatives from 110 countries around  the world. It came to the conclusion that small scale organic  agriculture is the way ahead for coping with hunger, social inequities  and environmental disasters. [4]  As Dr Ho argues, a fundamental shift in farming practice is needed  urgently, before the agricultural catastrophe spreads further across  Germany and the EU to the rest of the world. [5]
F. William Engdahl  Author of Gods of Money: Wall Street and the Death of the American Century and Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order. His other books include Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation. and A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order.
[1] "Super weed can’t be killed", ABC News, 6 October 2009. See also, Jeff Hampton,  N.C. farmers battle herbicide-resistant weeds, The Virginian-Pilot, 19 July 2009.
  
[2] Clea Caulcutt, ‘Superweed’ explosion threatens Monsanto heartlands, Clea Caulcutt, 19 April 2009.
  
[3] Carolyn Dimitri and Lydia Oberholtzer, Marketing U.S. organic foods: recent trends from farms to consumers, USDA Economic Research Service, September 2009.
  
[4] International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development, IAASTD, 2008.
  
[5] Ho MW UK Food Standards Agency study proves organic food is better. Science in Society 44, 32-33, 2009.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=21251Study Shows Monsanto Roundup Herbicide Link to Birth Defects  F. William Engdahl
A major new scientific study has  confirmed growing conviction that the world’s most widely used chemical  herbicide, Monsanto Corporation’s Roundup is toxic and a danger to  human as well as animal organisms. The latest scientific research  carried out by a multinational scientific team headed by Professor  Andrés Carrasco, head of the Laboratory of Molecular Embryology at the  University of Buenos Aires Medical School and member of Argentina’s  National Council of Scientific and Technical Research, presents alarming  demonstration that Monsanto and the GMO agribusiness industry have  systematically lied about the safety of their Roundup. Roundup in far  lower concentrations than used in agriculture is linked to birth  defects. The health implications are huge. All major GMO crops on the  market today are genetically manipulated to “tolerate” the herbicide  Roundup. 
Glyphosate was patented by  Monsanto in the 1970’s well before GMO was commercialized, as a  so-called broad-spectrum weed killer. It is typically sprayed and  absorbed through the leaves, or used as a forestry herbicide. It was  initially patented and sold by Monsanto under the trade name Roundup,  which also contains non-disclosed added chemicals the company refuses to  divulge for “trade secret” reasons. As of 2005, 87% of all US soybean  fields were planted with glyphosate-resistant varieties of GMO soybeans  and sprayed with Roundup. 
 
Because the seeds of Monsanto  Roundup Ready GMO soybeans or other crops have been manipulated solely  to be “resistant” to Roundup herbicide, while all other plant life in  the field is killed by Roundup, farmers using Roundup Ready seeds must  also purchase Roundup herbicide, making a captive market for both seed  and chemicals. 
 
The problem with this cozy  arrangement, aside from the fact that Roundup-resistant “super-weeds”  are emerging as a new biological catastrophe (see Katastrophale Folgen  von GVO-Pflanzen in den USA – eine Lektion für die EU), is that  Glyphosate has now been demonstrated to be linked to birth defects as  one of the most highly toxic substances in agriculture. The US  Government’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), nonetheless  continues to regard Roundup as “relatively low in toxicity, and without  carcinogenic or teratogenic effects.” In the United States the US  Government notoriously relies on test data from Monsanto and the  agribusiness industry to make safety rulings, under the 1992 doctrine of  Substantial Equivalence which asserts that GMO seeds are “substantially  equivalent” to ordinary seeds and thereby need no independent health or  safety tests. While herbicides are treated slightly different, the fact  that the agribusiness industry influences much of US Government policy  has insured the most benign regulatory treatment of Roundup to date. 
 
Alarming results 
Now a new international  scientific team headed by Prof. Andres Carrasco and including  researchers from the UK, Brazil, USA, and Argentina have demonstrated  that Glyphosate, the main active ingredient in Roundup causes  malformations in frog and chicken embryos at doses far lower than those  used in agricultural spraying and well below maximum residue levels in  products presently approved in the European Union.[1] The Carrasco group  was led to research the embryonic effects of glyphosate by reports of  high rates of birth defects in rural areas of Argentina where Monsanto’s  genetically modified “Roundup Ready” (RR) soybeans are grown in large  monocultures sprayed from airplanes regularly. RR soy is engineered to  tolerate Roundup, allowing farmers to spray the herbicide liberally to  kill weeds while the crop is growing.
Carrasco presented his group’s  findings at a press conference during the 6th European Conference of GMO  Free Regions in the European Parliament in Brussels. He stated, “The  findings in the lab are compatible with malformations observed in humans  exposed to glyphosate during pregnancy.” 
Widespread reports of human  malformations began to be reported in Argentina beginning 2002, two  years after widespread aerial spraying of Roundup and planting of RR  Soybeans was begun. The test animals used by Carrasco’s group share  similar developmental mechanisms with humans. The authors concluded that  the results “raise concerns about the clinical findings from human  offspring in populations exposed to Roundup in agricultural fields.”  Carrasco added, “The toxicity classification of glyphosate is too low.  In some cases this can be a powerful poison.”
The maximum residue level (MRL)  allowed for glyphosate in soy in the EU was raised 200-fold from 0.1  mg/kg to 20 mg/kg in 1997 after genetically manipulated Roundup Ready  soy was commercialized in Europe. Carrasco found malformations in  embryos injected with 2.03 mg/kg glyphosate. Soybeans can typically  contain glyphosate residues of up to 17mg/kg. 
In August 2010 an organized mob  violently attacked people who gathered to hear Carrasco talk about his  research in the town of La Leonesa, Chaco province. Witnesses implicated  local agro-industry figures in the attack. Viviana Peralta, a housewife  from San Jorge, Santa Fe, Argentina was hospitalized together with her  baby after Roundup spraying from planes flying near her home. Peralta  and other residents launched a lawsuit that resulted in a regional court  ban on the spraying of Roundup and other agrochemicals near houses.
Note
1. Paganelli, A.,  Gnazzo, V., Acosta, H., López, S.L., Carrasco, A.E. 2010.  Glyphosate-based herbicides produce terato-genic effects on vertebrates  by impairing retinoic acid signaling. Chem. Res. Toxicol., August 9. http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/tx1001749  
http://www.rense.com/general92/avoid.htmAnimals Avoid GM Soy And Corn 9-4-10- The GE-corn and GE-soy mentioned in this article are     Monsanto's.  The "food safety" bill in the Senate, S 510,     is also Monsanto's.   Monsanto's idea of "food safety" includes     genetically engineered food, pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, or slaughterhouse     waste, all toxic.
 
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- Foods You're Eating
 
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- http://www.dirtdoctor.com/organic/garden/view_question/id/366
 
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- Different species of wildlife and farm animals are trying     to tell us something by clearly preferring not to eat Genetically Engineered     foods when they have a choice of naturally grown corn, soybeans and other     crops as the following wisdom of nature anecdotes confirms. They are smarter     than people when it comes to the right choices for eating.
 
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- Neil Carman, Ph.D. Sierra Club Genetic Engineering Committee     http://www.SierraClub.org/biotech
 
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- Excerpts from the new book Seeds of Deception: Exposing     Industry and Government Lies About the Safety of the Genetically Engineered     
- Foods You're Eating      
- By Jeffrey M. Smith
 
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- http://www.SeedsofDeception.org
 
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- WISDOM OF THE GEESE  - p. 45 excerpt
 
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- There's a farmer in Illinois who's been planting     soybeans on his 50-acre field for years. Unfortunately, he also had a flock     of soybean-eating geese that took up residence in a pond nearby.     
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- Geese, being creatures of habit, returned to the same     spot the next year to again feast on his soybeans. But this time, the geese     ate only from a specific part of this field. There, as a result of their     feasting, the beans grew only ankle high. The geese, it seemed, were boycotting     the other part of the same field where the beans were able to grow waist-high.     
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- The reason: this year, the farmer had tried the new,     genetically engineered soybeans. And you can see exactly where they were     planted, for there is a line right down the middle of his field with the     natural beans on one side, and the genetically engineered soybeans, untouched     by the geese, on the other.     
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- Visiting that Illinois farm, veteran agricultural     writer C.F. Marley said, "I've never seen anything like it. What's     amazing is that the field with Roundup Ready [genetically engineered] beans     had been planted to conventional beans the previous year, and the geese     ate them. This year, they won't go near that field." 1     
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- WISDOM OF THE COWS - p. 76 excerpt
 
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- In 1998, Howard Vlieger harvested both natural corn and     a genetically modified Bt variety on his farm in Maurice, Iowa.     Curious about how his cows would react to the pesticide- producing Bt corn,     he filled one side of his sixteen-foot trough with the Bt and dumped natural     corn on the other side. Normally, his cows would eat as much corn as was     available, never leaving leftovers. But when he let twenty-five of them     into the pen, they all congregated on the side of the trough with the natural     corn. When it was gone, they nibbled a bit on the Bt, but quickly changed     their minds and walked away.     
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- A couple of years later, Vlieger joined a room full of     farmers in Ames, Iowa to hear presidential candidate Al Gore.     Troubled by Gore's unquestioning acceptance of GM foods, Vlieger asked     Gore to support a recently introduced bill in Congress requiring that GM     foods be labeled. Gore replied that scientists said there is no difference     between GM and non-GM foods. Vlieger said he respectfully disagreed and     described how his cows refused to eat the GM corn. He added, "My cows     are smarter than those scientists were."  The room erupted in applause.     Gore asked if any other farmers noticed a difference in the way their animals     responded to GM food. About twelve to fifteen hands went up. 1     
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-        "If a     field contained GM and non-GM maize, cattle would always eat the non-GM     first." -Gale Lush, Nebraska     
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- "A neighbor had been growing Pioneer Bt corn. When     the cattle were turned out onto the stalks they just wouldn't eat them."     2                -Gary     Smith, Montana     
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       "While     my cows show a preference for open-pollinated corn over the hybrid varieties,     they both beat Bt-corn hands down."                -Tim     Eisenbeis, South Dakota
According to a 1999 Acres USA article, cattle even broke     through a fence and walked through a field of Roundup Ready corn to get     to a non-GM variety that they ate. The cows left the GM corn untouched.    
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- WISDOM OF THE COWS AND HOGS - p. 106 excerpt     
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- Bill Lashmett watched as two or three cows were let into     a feeding area at a time. The first trough they came to contained fifty     pounds of shelled Bt corn. The cows sniffed it, withdrew, and walked over     to the next trough, which contained fifty pounds of natural shelled corn.     The cows finished it off. When they were gone and released from the pen,     the next group came in and did the same thing.  Lashmett said the same     experiment was conducted on about six or seven farms in Northwest     Iowa, in 1998 and again in 1999. Identical trials with hogs yielded the     same results, also for two years in a row.     
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- WISDOM OF SQUIRRELS, ELK, DEER, RACCOONS, AND MICE -     p. 126 excerpt
 
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- For years, a retired Iowa farmer fed squirrels     on his farm through the winter months by placing corncobs on feeders. One     year, just for the heck of it, he decided to see if the squirrels had a     preference for Bt corn or natural corn. He put natural corn in one feeder     and Bt corn in another about twenty feet away. The squirrels ate all the     corn off the natural cobs but didn't touch the Bt. The farmer dutifully     refilled the feeder with more natural corn and sure enough, it was soon     gone. The Bt, however, remained untouched.     
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- The retired farmer got curious.  What if the Bt variety     was the squirrels' only choice? To find out, he didn't refill the natural     corn. At the time, Iowa was plunged into the coldest days of     the winter. But day after day, the Bt cob remained intact. The squirrels     went elsewhere for their food. After about ten days, the squirrels ate     about an inch off the tip of an ear, but that's all. The farmer felt sorry     for the squirrels and put natural corn back into the feeders, which the     squirrels once again consumed. 1     
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-        "A captive     elk escape and took up residence in our crops of organic corn and soy.     It had total access to the neighboring fields of GM crops, but never went     into them." 2                -Susan     and Mark Fitzgerald, Minnesota     
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- Writer Steve Sprinkel described a herd of about forty     deer that ate from the field of organic soybeans, but not the Roundup Ready     variety across the road. Likewise, raccoons devoured organic corn, but     didn't touch an ear of Bt corn growing down the road. "Even the mice     will move on down the line if given an alternative to these 'crops.' "     3     
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- A farmer in Holland verified the food preference     of mice when he left two piles of corn in his mice-infested barn. One pile     was genetically modified; the other was natural. The GM pile was untouched     while the non-GM pile was completely eaten up. Lashmett, who has a background     in biochemistry and agriculture, says that animals have a natural sense     to eat what is good for them, and avoid what isn't He witnessed this firsthand     in another experiment conducted by a feed store in Walnut Grove, Iowa.     
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- They put twenty-three separate vitamins and minerals,     each in their own bin, out where cows could eat them. The cows would alternate     their choice of bins in such a way, according to Lashmett, that they received     a balanced, healthy diet. Moreover, their preference changed with the seasons     and climate, demonstrating a natural inclination to follow the dictates     of their bodies' needs. 1
 
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- WISDOM OF THE MICE - p. 157 excerpt     
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- The Washington Post reported that mice, usually     happy to munch on tomatoes, turned their noses up at the genetically modified     FlavSavr tomato scientists were so anxious to test on them. Scientist Roger     Salquist said of his tomato, "I gotta tell you, you can be Chef Boyardee     and mice are still not going to like them."1     
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- The mice were eventually force fed the tomato through     gastric tubes and stomach washes. Several developed stomach lesions; seven     of forty died within two weeks. The tomato was approved without further     tests [for human consumption].     
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- MISSING CHICKENS - p. 182 excerpt
 
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- According to BBC News, April 27, 2002:     
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- "Safety tests on genetically modified maize currently     growing in Britain were flawed, it has emerged. The crop, T-25     GM maize [corn], was tested in laboratory experiments on chickens. During     the tests, twice as many chickens died when fed on T-25 GM maize, compared     with those fed on conventional maize.  This research was apparently overlooked     when the crop was given marketing approval in 1996." 1