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BIOJUSTICE! International Call to Action

by Biojustice 2001 (biojustice [at] riseup.net)
CALL TO ACTION
International Days of Action
Against Biotech Industry
June 24th & 25th -- Everywhere!
Join thousands of activists, farmers, scientists, and others from around the world in opposing the biotechnology industry!

On June 24th and 25th, 2001 the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO)convention in San Diego, will open its doors to thousands of executives, lawyers, venture capitalists, and corporate scientists working to further
their agenda of a patented and commodified future.

Outside the convention hall and all over San Diego, thousands of people will be gathering for Beyond Biodevastation 2001/BIOJUSTICE! This multi-day event will feature teach-ins, demonstrations, and direct actions to confront and shed light on the threats to our health, environment, farms and society posed by genetic engineering.

We are calling for people to come to San Diego with ideas for affinity group-based actions, and for simultaneous solidarity actions in communities around the world to stop the commodification of life, the destruction of food systems, the theft of genetic information and the loss of community power.

The possibilities are endless. From teach-ins to voluntary GE food labeling brigades, from demonstrations against the gene giants to organic potlucks, from direct actions to leafleting, we are calling for global grassroots
organizing against the biotechnology industry.

Since 1987, corporate gene giants have been contaminating the world\'s food supply with dangerous and largely untested products of genetic engineering. Many of these same companies are also major players in the global
pharmaceutical industry, which has made health care unaffordable for growing numbers of people around the world, while channeling research funds toward expensive genetic approaches to health and disease at the expense of more fundamental medical and health needs. These companies have also told the world that genetic engineering will reduce pesticide use, as they engineer their crops to tolerate more herbicides.

Despite wide spread opposition to genetically engineered food and demands for affordable health care, the biotechnology industry is continuing along a path of social and environmental destruction. Corporations and governments
are leading the agenda to globalize patent laws that privatize life as
intellectual property rights, encourage greed and sell out science to the profit motive.

To stop the biotechnology industry, to bring power to our communities, to create sustainable food systems, to create universal health care, we call communities, individuals, and organizations to TAKE ACTION!

For more information and updates on the days of action, see:
http://www.biodev.org

The Organizers of Biojustice 2001
The Institute for Social Ecology Biotechnology Project
North East Resistance Against Genetic Engineering - neRAGE.org

-------------------------------------------------------

Background on the Gene Giants:

Monsanto: Today a much smaller company than before, as a result of a merger with Pharmacia, and the subsequent spin-off of only the agriculture, seed and pesticide divisions under the Monsanto name. Still, Monsanto controls
85% of all genetically engineered germplasm, and is using its ownership of many of the world\'s most important commercial seed companies to saturate the commercial seed supply with genetically engineered varieties.

Aventis: Formed two years ago by the merger of the German chemical giant Hoechst and the French Rhone Poulenc, Aventis is best known for the \"Starlink\" variety of pesticidal GE corn. This variety is not approved for
human consumption and is considered likely to cause severe allergic reactions in some people. Still, it has been found in hundreds of brand-name processed foods, and has thoroughly contaminated the US supply of corn seed. Aventis also specializes in crops resistant to glufosinate
herbicides.

Syngenta: Formed within the past year, when Novartis and Astra-Zeneca decided to spin off many of their agricultural divisions to protect the market value of their pharmaceutical divisions, Syngenta describes itself as
\"the world\'s leading agribusiness company.\" Syngenta markets numerous varieties of herbicide-tolerant and pesticidal GE crops.

DuPont: In 1999, DuPont Chemical completed its purchase of Pioneer Hi-Bred, the world\'s largest seed company. Pioneer aggressively markets numerous GE varieties from all of the largest biotechnology companies.

Novartis: Since its founding in 1996, from the merger of Swiss chemical giants Sandoz and Ciba-Geigy, Novartis has been one of the world\'s most aggressive marketers of pesticidal Bt crops, featuring an activated toxin
spliced from Bt bacteria (Bacillus thuringiensis). Novartis has also been heavily involved in xenotransplantation research, seeking to genetically
engineer animals to provide organs for human transplants; this line of research is considered extremely abusive to animals and, if it ever succeeds, it could introduce lethal animal viruses into the human population.

Astra-Zeneca: Parent company Zeneca in the UK was responsible for one of the first field trials of genetically engineered trees; Astra-Zeneca is reportedly continuing to develop Terminator seed technologies, despite a public pledge to discontinue this research.

Dow Chemical: Dow\'s involvement in biotechnology includes its ownership of the San Diego-based Mycogen, which recently absorbed Cargill\'s seed division. Dow is collaborating with San Diego-based EPICyte to produce
human antibodies in genetically engineered plants.

Cargill: The world\'s largest and most vertically integrated wholesale grain trader. Its joint venture with Monsanto specializes in genetically engineered animal feeds. \"Cargill has used its extreme market power to
ensure that the market is GM, against consumer opinion,\" states the UK\'s Corporate Watch.

by Amy
Why feed the world with an enhanced food, the product of science, when you can shout self-righteous hatred and vandalize private property from the comfort of your own suburb. I mean, you got yours, there's plenty to eat here after Europeans brought over ideas of irrigation and genetics. Why should other people benefit yet despoil the pristine DNA that comprises their paltry rice crop?

Am I the only one here who understands the sickening premise behind the opposition to use nature for human benefit? Are you still hunting and living in a cave, crapping in the woods? No, I expect you enjoy what control you took over nature.

Do not deny that to others, it is their right to live that is at stake.
by Alias Salem
Dear Amy,
You are interestingly misguided on a couple issues. A. we want the world to benefit from nature and for nature to benefit from humanity. Biotech is a well constructed marketing ploy to convince you that they are doing that when in fact they are not. It is clever marketing. For real solutions to world hunger please check out agroecology.

http://www.cnr.berkeley.edu/~agroeco3/index.html
by Alias Salem
Dear Amy,
You are interestingly misguided on a couple issues. A. we want the world to benefit from nature and for nature to benefit from humanity. Biotech is a well constructed marketing ploy to convince you that they are doing that when in fact they are not. It is clever marketing. For real solutions to world hunger please check out agroecology.

http://www.cnr.berkeley.edu/~agroeco3/index.html
by 000
Amy,
The problem is not that there is not enough food.
The problem is that the huge oversupply of food that is already produced is not distributed to those who need it.

Why?
It's simple really it's called greed.

Large agrobusinesses would rather sit on large oversupplies whilst recieving subsidies from the federal government rather than distruibute the abundance of food to the starving people of the world. The another advantage of sitting on surplusses is that it drives up the market price of the commodity being hoarded.
Additionally, lets take a very small look at Monsanto( The company that said DDT is good for you! in the 1940's) one of the main players in the Biotech industry.
What is one of their main products?
Roundup aka Glysophate
What is one example of it's use?
Well Spraying coca plants in Columbia by God.
What is the result of this spraying?
Well not only does glysophate kill coca plants but it kills food producing plants and it makes the land incapable of producing food for years.
What is the result?
1)Well if you kill the food of the farmers of Columbia they can no longer work the land and feed themselves so
a) This causes refugees
b) Starving and desperate people
2) Or you can buy Genetically modified Roundup resistant
seeds From Guess who? Monsanto!

The ultimate result of this is?
Control of the worlds food supply by handful of greedy and avaricous Biotech companies. Plus huge profits in the pockets of the CEO's and the large stockholders of the BIOTECH's.
Amy.
Is this the world you want?
Why not just distribute the overabundance of food we ALREADY HAVE!
Or allow farmers that do small scale farming to produce the crops that feed them rather than for western markets.


Some useful links:
http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/shiva.html
http://www.zmag.org/CrisesCurEvts/Colombia/colombiatop.htm

http://www.cannabisnews.com/news/thread7837.shtml
http://home.intekom.com/tm_info/rw00525.htm


by Amy
To the comment:
"Why not just distribute the overabundance of food we ALREADY HAVE!
Or allow farmers that do small scale farming to produce the crops that feed them rather than for western markets."

It sounds like an endorsment of eliminating trade barriers. If I can sell soybeans to Africa, instead of the USDA, both of us do well. But, if I can sell my GM soybeans, which give me more beans at a lower cost, more Africans can eat. Even better, if the Africans can plant the drought-resistant soybeans, they won't have to rely on my beans.

Then we agree on free trade.
by 000
Before you go off and assume what I want before you even know me.
Please define what you mean by "free trade".
If it is what the WTO/IMF/World BAnk is promoting and what recent trade agreements like NAFTA have outlined. I am against this type of "free trade" because it is free in word only.
Now that being said.
What does "free trade" mean to you Amy?
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