Organic Farmers Sues Monsanto Pesticide Company

"Monsanto organic farmers lawsuits"

Today my friends I would like to share and article from the Los Angles Times  and some other information about how organic and other farmers are now fed up with the politician hogwash and are suing Monsanto.  I believe this is long overdue!

History of Monsanto:

The Monsanto Company is a multinational agricultural biotechnology corporation and is the world’s leading producer of the herbicide glyphosate, marketed in the Roundup brand of herbicides, and in other brands. They are the leading producer of genetically engineered (GE) seed; it provides the technology in 90% of the genetically engineered seeds used in the US market.

Monsanto’s development and marketing of genetically engineered seed and bovine growth hormone, as well as its aggressive litigation, political lobbying practices, seed commercialization practices and “strong-arming” of the seed industry have made the company controversial around the world and a primary target of the alter-globalization movement and environmental activists.

Please read the article:

This article was written by Dean Kuipers on February 17, 2012 from the Los Angeles Times.

 

“””””After years of taking farmers to court to assert their patent rights, agri-giant Monsanto Co.is being sued by farmers. Lots of farmers.

Judge Naomi Buchwald heard oral arguments Jan. 31 in federal district court in Manhattan on OSGATA et al. vs. Monsanto, the latest courtroom action on a suit filed almost a year ago. Responding to what they say is a climate of fear created by Monsanto’s long series of patent infringement lawsuits, a group representing as many as 25% of the nation’s organic farmers (as well as other non-organic farmers) have sued the global biotech company to allow them to grow in peace.

Monsanto’s attorneys have asked to have the suit dismissed. Buchwald will respond by the end of March.

The innovative suit is brought under the Declaratory Judgment Act, which allows for a preemptive judgment that would clear farmers of infringement suits before they even grow their plants. The farmers are not seeking any money or injunction. Monsanto, represented by Seth Waxman, former U.S. solicitor general under Bill Clinton, has moved to have the case thrown out, saying it is “hypothetical” and “abstract.”

The problem, say the 83 individuals and groups named as plaintiffs in the case,who claim to represent more than 300,000 farmers including many in California, is that Monsanto’s transgenic plants (sometimes called genetically modified organisms, or GMOs) are contaminating organic crops, introducing the unwanted genetic material into their fields. In an ironic turn, the company has often responded by suing farmers for patent infringement, even if those farmers were desperate to keep that material out of the crops and, in fact, if their crops would lose their value because of the Monsanto genes.

“We’ve been farming organically for 35 years, and we’re very concerned with being able to continue on with our livelihood,” says Jim Gerritsen, an organic seed farmer in Maine and president of the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Assn. “We consider the threat of contamination from GMO crops to be significant, and the reality is that the organic market will not tolerate anything that has GMO content, either by design or by contamination.”

Stepping out of a meeting at a farmer’s conference in Bangor, Maine, on Friday, Gerritsen continued, “One of the crops that we grow is organic seed corn. Should that corn get contaminated by Monsanto, we are not only concerned with the extinguishing of the value of that seed, but we would be subject to a patent infringement lawsuit. A family farmer going up against Monsanto, we could easily go bankrupt just trying to clear our name.”

This scenario seems more likely when considering that Monsanto’s patented Roundup Ready lines of crops, which are genetically designed to tolerate the herbicide glyphosate – sold by Monsanto as Roundup – already represent more than 80% of the soybeans, corn, cotton, sugar beets and canola seeds grown in the U.S. In fact, it is highly likely that organic farmers growing anywhere in the country are surrounded by these transgenic varieties in every direction. St. Louis-based Monsanto’s varieties then mix into the organic fields by cross-pollinating via the wind and mixing in seed bins at distributors. The company claims this is unintentional.

The company, however, has sued more than 100 farmers for infringement, and settled quietly with many more, including several high-profile cases in which the farmers clearly argued they did not want the genetic material and did not intend to use it.

Monsanto claims all this flap is unnecessary.

Tom Helscher, director of Corporate Affairs at Monsanto, stated in an email to The Times: “As we have stated clearly, Monsanto never has and has committed it never will sue a farmer if our patented seed or traits are found in his field as a result of inadvertent means.  Shortly after OSGTA filed their lawsuit last year, Monsanto communicated directly to counsel for OSGTA that ‘Monsanto is unaware of any circumstances that would give rise to any claim for patent infringement or any lawsuit against your clients. Monsanto therefore does not assert and has no intention of asserting patent-infringement claims against your clients.’ It is our view that there is no real controversy between parties and the case should be dismissed. Our motion to dismiss the case was the subject of the hearing on January 31. The court will decide the issue on its merits and we are confident about our legal and practical stance.”

Dan Ravicher, executive director of the Public Patent Foundation at Cardozo Law School, who is the lead attorney on the suit, says this is a misrepresentation. “This is the exact phrase they’ve said to every single person who’s ever asked them about it, including the judge. One problem is the words ‘inadvertent means.’ Well, they imply in their papers that they submitted to the courts, and they haven’t denied it, that they believe it’s the burden of the organic farmer to use their own property to set up buffer zones, and if an organic farmer isn’t forgoing using their full property to create a buffer zone with their neighbors who are Monsanto customers, well then, any resulting contamination is their own fault and not inadvertent.”

In other words, it’s the responsibility of the non-GMO farmer to keep the GMO off his farm. Patent law is very powerful and gives the holder – usually a large corporation – a fistful of rights. Farmers claim this is not fair.

Ravicher calls the company a “patent troll” and argues in the filed complaint that Monsanto’s use of patents in this way is invalid.

“The patents are invalid for a couple different reasons, including that law requires patented things to have social utility, and GM seed, we will prove, has no social utility. It is not good for society. It is harmful for society, and therefore it cannot be patented,” Ravicher says.

“Second, the patents are not infringed because our clients have no intent to use, or make, or grow the GM plants. So without intent there can be no infringement. That hasn’t been declared by any case yet, so that will be a novel issue.”

The suit presents four such arguments. First, however, Judge Buchwald must find by the end of March that the concerns of these farmers, many of whom are currently not growing key money crops like corn because of the threat of infringement suits, is not a hypothetical or abstract.

“What I think it gets down to is a basic human right that organic farmers have the right to grow on our farms crops that are free from GMO content. And I think that Monsanto needs to keep their pollution on their side of the fence,” says Gerritsen.“”””

More News:   

In what is being viewed as a major victory for public health advocates, a French court last week declared Monsanto guilty in the chemical poisoning of a French farmer, a ruling that could – and should – lead to additional health claims against the use of pesticides.

I say thumbs up to the farmers!   I believe that we live a country where we have the right to grow safe organic products. We have let big corporations rule and pollute our planet. It’s not only time stop it but it’s way overdue. We just need to take a look at the soaring health problems we have in our country such as drastic increase of cancer, severe allergies and sensitivities, asthma, and many other health conditions that are all linked to the toxic world we live in.

I ask you why in the U.S., a country that has the best health care in the world,  and yet are we the sickness nation of the first world countries? We need to stand up and stop this contamination and take back our right to our freedoms– to live a healthy live– to have a choice in what our food contains! We can no longer sit back and wait for the government to protect us. We have seen where that has us!

We need to voice our opinion and fight for our rights before it’s too late! Sign every petition you can against Monsanto or any other company who is polluting and contaminating our planet! Write to your senators – let them know that we will no longer allow this. I have! Have You?

 

                                                                                                        http://www.naturalnews.com/035036_Monsanto_farmers_France.html

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Hi! Thanks for visiting my blog! I believe in living green, organically, and natural in every aspect of our lives. My mission is to help educate you on how to live green, help save our environment and to help you and your family live a happier, healthier life!

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