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-
Bill
Engdahl
is a
leading
researcher,
economist
and
analyst
of
the
New
World
Order
who's
written
on
issues
of
energy,
politics
and
economics
for
over
30
years.
He
contributes
regularly
to
publications
like
Japan's
Nihon
Keizai
Shimbun,
Foresight
magazine,
Grant's
Investor.com,
European
Banker
and
Business
Banker
International.
He's
also
a
frequent
speaker
at
geopolitical,
economic
and
energy
related
international
conferences
and
is a
distinguished
Research
Associate
of
the
Centre
for
Research
on
Globalization
where
he's
a
regular
contributor.
-
-
Engdahl
also
wrote
two
important
books
- "A
Century
of
War:
Anglo-American
Oil
Politics
and
the
New
World
Order"
in
2004.
It's
an
essential
history
of
geopolitics
and
the
importance
of
oil.
Engdahl
explains
that
America's
post-WW
II
dominance
rests
on
two
pillars
and
one
commodity
-
unchallengeable
military
power
and
the
dollar
as
the
world's
reserve
currency
combined
with
the
quest
to
control
global
oil
and
other
energy
resources.
-
-
Engdahl's
newest
book
is
just
out
from
the
Centre
for
Research
on
Globalization.
It's
a
sequel
to
his
first
one
called
"Seeds
of
Destruction:
The
Hidden
Agenda
of
Genetic
Manipulation"
and
subject
of
this
review.
It's
the
diabolical
story
of
how
Washington
and
four
Anglo-American
agribusiness
giants
plan
world
domination
by
patenting
life
forms
to
gain
worldwide
control
of
our
food
supply
and
why
that
prospect
is
chilling.
The
book's
compelling
contents
are
reviewed
below
in-depth
so
readers
will
know
the
type
future
Henry
Kissinger
had
in
mind
in
1970
when
he
said:
"Control
oil
and
you
control
nations;
control
food
and
you
control
the
people."
-
-
Remember
also,
this
cabal
is
one
of
many
interconnected
ones
with
fearsome
power
and
ruthless
intent
to
use
it -
Big
Banks
controlling
the
Federal
Reserve
and
our
money,
Big
Oil
our
world
energy
resources,
Big
Media
our
information,
Big
Pharma
our
health,
Big
Technology
our
state-of-the-art
everything
and
watching
us,
Big
Defense
our
wars,
Big
Pentagon
waging
them,
and
other
corporate
predators
exploiting
our
lives
for
profit.
Engdahl's
book
focuses
brilliantly
on
one
of
them.
To
fully
cover
its
vital
contents,
this
review
will
be
in
three
parts
for
more
detail
and
to
make
it
easily
digestible.
-
-
Part
I of
"Seeds
of
Destruction"
-
-
In
2003,
Jeffrey
Smith's
"Seeds
of
Deception"
was
published.
It
exposed
the
dangers
of
untested
and
unregulated
genetically
engineered
foods
most
people
eat
every
day
with
no
knowledge
of
the
potential
health
risks.
Efforts
to
inform
the
public
have
been
quashed,
reliable
science
has
been
buried,
and
consider
what
happened
to
two
distinguished
scientists.
-
-
One
was
Ignatio
Chapela,
a
microbial
ecologist
at
the
University
of
California,
Berkeley.
In
September,
2001,
he
was
invited
to a
carefully
staged
meeting
with
Fernando
Ortiz
Monasterio,
Mexico's
Director
of
the
Commission
of
Biosafety
in
Mexico
City.
The
experience
left
Chapela
shaken
and
angry
as
he
explained.
Monasterio
attacked
him
for
over
an
hour.
"First
he
trashed
me.
He
let
me
know
how
damaging
to
the
country
and
how
problematic
my
information
was
to
be."
-
-
Chapela
referred
to
what
he
and
a UC
Berkeley
graduate
student,
David
Quist,
discovered
in
2000
about
genetically
engineered
contamination
of
Mexican
corn
in
violation
of a
government
ban
on
these
crops
in
1998.
Corn
is
sacred
in
Mexico,
the
country
is
home
to
hundreds
of
indigenous
varieties
that
crossbreed
naturally,
and
GM
contamination
is
permanent
and
unthinkable
-
but
it
happened
by
design.
-
-
Chapela
and
Quist
tested
corn
varieties
in
more
than
a
dozen
state
of
Oaxaca
communities
and
discovered
6%
of
the
plants
contaminated
with
GM
corn.
Oaxaca
is
in
the
country's
far
South
so
Chapela
knew
if
contamination
spread
there,
it
was
widespread
throughout
Mexico.
It's
unavoidable
because
NAFTA
allows
imported
US
corn
with
30%
of
it
at
the
time
genetically
modified.
Now
it's
heading
for
nearly
double
that
amount,
and
if
not
contained,
it
soon
could
be
all
of
it.
-
-
The
prestigious
journal
Nature
agreed
to
publish
Chapela's
findings,
Monasterio
wanted
them
quashed,
but
Chapela
refused
to
comply.
As a
result,
he
was
intimidated
not
to
do
it
and
threatened
with
being
held
responsible
for
all
damages
to
Mexican
agriculture
and
its
economy.
-
-
He
went
ahead,
nonetheless,
and
when
his
article
appeared
in
the
publication
on
November
29,
2001
the
smear
campaign
against
him
began
and
intensified.
It
was
later
learned
that
Monsanto
was
behind
it,
and
the
Washington-based
Bivings
Group
PR
firm
was
hired
to
discredit
his
findings
and
get
them
retracted.
-
-
It
worked
because
the
campaign
didn't
focus
on
Chapela's
contamination
discovery,
but
on a
second
research
conclusion
even
more
serious.
He
learned
the
contaminated
GM
corn
had
as
many
as
eight
fragments
of
the
CaMV
promoter
that
creates
an
unstable
"hotspot."
It
can
cause
plant
genes
to
fragment,
scatter
throughout
the
plant's
genome,
and,
if
proved
conclusively,
would
wreck
efforts
to
introduce
GM
crops
in
the
country.
Without
further
evidence,
there
was
still
room
for
doubt
if
the
second
finding
was
valid,
however,
and
the
anti-Chapela
campaign
hammered
him
on
it.
-
-
Because
of
the
pressure,
Nature
took
an
unprecedented
action
in
its
133
year
history.
It
upheld
Chapela's
central
finding
but
retracted
the
other
one.
That
was
all
it
took,
and
the
major
media
pounced
on
it.
They
denounced
Chapela's
incompetence
and
tried
to
discredit
everything
he
learned
including
his
verified
findings.
They
weren't
reported,
his
vilification
was
highlighted,
and
Monsanto
and
the
Mexican
government
scored
a
big
victory.
-
-
Ironically,
on
April
18,
2002,
two
weeks
after
Nature's
partial
retraction,
the
Mexican
government
announced
there
was
massive
genetic
contamination
of
traditional
corn
varieties
in
Oaxaca
and
the
neighboring
state
of
Puebla.
It
was
horrifying
as
up
to
95%
of
tested
crops
were
genetically
polluted
and
"at
a
speed
never
before
predicted."
The
news
made
headlines
in
Europe
and
Mexico.
It
was
ignored
in
the
US
and
Canada.
-
-
The
fallout
for
Chapela
was
UC
Berkeley
denied
him
tenure
in
2003
because
of
his
article
and
for
criticizing
university
ties
to
the
biotech
industry.
He
then
filed
suit
in
April,
2004
asking
remuneration
for
lost
wages,
earnings
and
benefits,
compensatory
damages
for
humiliation,
mental
anguish,
emotional
distress
and
coverage
of
attorney
fees
and
costs
for
his
action.
He
won
in
May,
2005
but
not
in
court
when
the
university
reversed
its
decision,
granted
him
tenure
and
agreed
to
include
retroactive
pay
back
to
2003.
The
damage,
however,
was
done
and
is
an
example
of
what's
at
stake
when
anyone
dares
challenge
a
powerful
company
like
Monsanto.
-
-
The
other
man
attacked
was
the
world's
leading
lectins
and
plant
genetic
modification
expert,
UK-based
Arpad
Pusztai.
He
was
vilified
and
fired
from
his
research
position
at
Scotland's
Rowett
Research
Institute
for
publishing
industry-unfriendly
data
he
was
commissioned
to
produce
on
the
safety
of
GMO
foods.
-
-
His
Rowett
Research
study
was
the
first
ever
independent
one
conducted
on
them
anywhere.
He
undertook
it
believing
in
their
promise
but
became
alarmed
by
his
findings.
The
Clinton
and
Blair
governments
were
determined
to
suppress
them
because
Washington
was
spending
billions
promoting
GMO
crops
and
a
future
biotech
revolution.
It
wasn't
about
to
let
even
the
world's
foremost
expert
in
the
field
derail
the
effort.
His
results
were
startling
and
consider
the
implications
for
humans
eating
genetically
engineered
foods.
-
-
Rats
fed
GMO
potatoes
had
smaller
livers,
hearts,
testicles
and
brains,
damaged
immune
systems,
and
showed
structural
changes
in
their
white
blood
cells
making
them
more
vulnerable
to
infection
and
disease
compared
to
other
rats
fed
non-GMO
potatoes.
It
got
worse.
Thymus
and
spleen
damage
showed
up;
enlarged
tissues,
including
the
pancreas
and
intestines;
and
there
were
cases
of
liver
atrophy
as
well
as
significant
proliferation
of
stomach
and
intestines
cells
that
could
be a
sign
of
greater
future
risk
of
cancer.
Equally
alarming
-
this
all
happened
after
10
days
of
testing,
and
the
changes
persisted
after
110
days
that's
the
human
equivalent
of
10
years.
-
-
GM
foods
today
saturate
our
diet.
Over
80%
of
all
supermarket
processed
foods
contain
them.
Others
include
grains
like
rice,
corn
and
wheat;
legumes
like
soybeans
and
soy
products;
vegetable
oils;
soft
drinks;
salad
dressings;
vegetables
and
fruits;
dairy
products
including
eggs;
meat
and
other
animal
products;
and
even
infant
formula
plus
a
vast
array
of
hidden
additives
and
ingredients
in
processed
foods
(like
in
tomato
sauce,
ice
cream
and
peanut
butter).
They're
unrevealed
to
consumers
because
labeling
is
prohibited
yet
the
more
of
them
we
eat,
the
greater
the
potential
threat
to
our
health.
-
-
Today,
we're
all
lab
rats
in
an
uncontrolled,
unregulated
mass
human
experiment
the
results
of
which
are
unknown.
The
risks
from
it
are
beyond
measure,
it
will
take
many
years
to
learn
them,
and
when
they're
finally
revealed
it
will
be
too
late
to
reverse
the
damage
if
it's
proved
GM
products
harm
human
health
as
independent
experts
strongly
believe.
Once
GM
seeds
are
introduced
to
an
area,
the
genie
is
out
of
the
bottle
for
keeps.
-
-
Despite
the
enormous
risks,
however,
Washington
and
growing
numbers
of
governments
around
the
world
in
parts
of
Europe,
Asia,
Latin
America
and
Africa
now
allow
these
products
to
be
grown
in
their
soil
or
imported.
They're
produced
and
sold
to
consumers
because
agribusiness
giants
like
Monsanto,
DuPont,
Dow
AgriSciences
and
Cargill
have
enormous
clout
to
demand
it
and
a
potent
partner
supporting
them
-
the
US
government
and
its
agencies,
including
the
Departments
of
Agriculture
and
State,
FDA,
EPA
and
even
the
defense
establishment.
World
Trade
Organization
(WTO)
Trade-Related
Aspects
of
Intellectual
Property
Rights
(TRIPS)
patent
rules
also
back
them
along
with
industry-friendly
WTO
rulings
like
the
February
7,
2006
one.
-
-
It
favored
a US
challenge
against
European
GMO
regulatory
policies
in
spite
of
strong
consumer
sentiment
against
these
foods
and
ingredients
on
the
continent.
It
also
violated
the
Biosafety
Protocol
that
should
let
nations
regulate
these
products
in
the
public
interest,
but
it
doesn't
because
WTO
trade
rules
sabotaged
it.
Nonetheless,
anti-GMO
activism
persists,
consumers
still
have
a
say,
and
there
are
hundreds
of
GMO-free
zones
around
the
world,
including
in
the
US.
That
and
more
is
needed
to
take
on
the
agribusiness
giants
that
so
far
have
everything
going
their
way.
-
-
In
"Seeds
of
Deception,"
Jeffrey
Smith
did
a
masterful
job
explaining
the
dangers
of
GM
foods
and
ingredients.
Engdahl
explains
them
as
well
but
goes
much
further
brilliantly
in
his
blockbuster
book
on
this
topic.
It's
the
story
of a
powerful
family
and
a
"small
socio-political
American
elite
(that)
seeks
to
establish
control
over
the
very
basis
of
human
survival"
-
future
life
through
the
food
we
eat.
The
book's
introduction
says
it
"reads
(like)
a
crime
story."
It's
also
a
nightmare
but
one
that's
very
real
and
threatening.
-
-
This
review
covers
the
book
in-depth
because
of
its
importance.
It's
an
extraordinary
work
that
"reveals
a
diabolical
World
of
profit-driven
political
intrigue
(and)
government
corruption
and
coercion"
that's
part
of a
decades-long
global
scheme
for
total
world
dominance.
The
book
deserves
vast
exposure
and
must
be
read
in
full
for
the
whole
disturbing
story.
It's
hoped
the
material
below
will
encourage
readers
to
do
it
in
their
own
self-interest
and
to
marshal
mass
consumer
actions
to
place
food
safety
above
corporate
profits.
-
-
Engdahl's
book
supplies
the
ammunition
to
do
it
and
is
also
a
sequel
to
his
earlier
one
on
war,
oil
politics
and
The
New
World
Order
and
follows
naturally
from
it.
It
covers
the
roots
of
the
strategy
to
control
"global
food
security"
that
goes
back
to
the
1930s
and
the
plans
of a
handful
of
American
families
to
preserve
their
wealth
and
power.
But
it
centers
on
one
in
particular
that
above
the
others
"came
to
symbolize
the
hubris
and
arrogance
of
the
emerging
American
century"
that
blossomed
post-WW
II.
Its
patriarch
began
in
oil
and
then
dominated
it
in
his
powerful
Oil
Trust.
It
was
only
the
beginning
as
the
family
expanded
into
"education
of
youth,
medicine
and
psychology,"
US
foreign
policy,
and
"the
very
science
of
life
itself,
biology,
and
its
applications"
in
plants
and
agriculture.
-
-
The
family's
name
is
Rockefeller.
The
patriarch
was
John
D.,
and
four
powerful
later-generation
brothers
followed
him
-
David,
Nelson,
Laurance,
and
John
D.
III.
Engdahl
says
the
GMO
story
covers
"the
evolution
of
power
in
the
hands
of
an
elite
(led
by
this
family),
determined
(above
all)
to
bring
the
entire
world
under
their
sway."
They
and
other
elites
already
control
most
of
it,
including
the
nation's
energy,
the
US
Federal
Reserve,
and
other
key
world
central
banks.
Today,
three
brothers
are
gone,
David
alone
remains,
and
he's
still
a
force
at
age
92
although
he
no
longer
runs
the
family
bank,
JP
Morgan
Chase.
He's
active
in
family
enterprises,
however,
including
the
Rockefeller
Foundation
to
be
discussed
in
Part
II
of
this
review.
-
-
__________________
-
-
Washington
Launches
the
GMO
Revolution
-
-
The
roots
of
the
story
go
back
decades,
but
Engdahl
explains
the
science
of
"biological
and
genetic-modification
of
plants
and
other
life
forms
first"
came
out
of
US
research
labs
in
the
1970s
when
no
one
noticed.
They
soon
would
because
the
Reagan
administration
was
determined
to
make
America
dominant
in
this
emerging
field.
The
biotech
agribusiness
industry
was
especially
favored,
and
companies
in
the
early
1980s
raced
to
develop
GMO
plants,
livestock
and
GMO-based
animal
drugs.
Washington
made
it
easy
for
them
with
an
unregulated,
business-friendly
climate
that
persisted
ever
since
under
Republicans
and
Democrats
alike.
-
-
Food
safety
and
public
health
issues
aren't
considered
vital
if
they
conflict
with
profits.
So
the
entire
population
is
being
used
as
lab
rats
for
these
completely
new,
untested
and
potentially
hazardous
products.
And
leading
the
effort
to
develop
them
is a
company
with
a
"long
record
of
fraud,
cover-up,
bribery,"
deceit
and
disdain
for
the
public
interest
-
Monsanto.
-
-
Its
first
product
was
saccharin
that
was
later
proved
to
be a
carcinogen.
It
then
got
into
chemicals,
plastics
and
became
notorious
for
Agent
Orange
that
was
used
to
defoliate
Vietnam
jungles
in
the
1960s
and
1970s
and
exposed
hundreds
of
thousands
of
civilians
and
US
troops
to
deadly
dioxin,
one
of
the
most
toxic
of
all
known
compounds.
-
-
Along
with
others
in
the
industry,
Monsanto
is
also
a
shameless
polluter.
It
has
a
history
of
secretly
dumping
some
of
the
most
lethal
substances
known
in
water
and
soil
and
getting
away
with
it.
Today
on
its
web
site,
however,
the
company
ignores
its
record
and
calls
itself
"an
agricultural
company
(applying)
innovation
and
technology
to
help
farmers
around
the
world
be
successful,
produce
healthier
foods,
better
animal
feeds
and
more
fiber,
while
also
reducing
agriculture's
impact
on
our
environment."
Engdahl
proves
otherwise
in
his
thorough
research
that's
covered
below
in
detail.
-
-
In
spite
of
its
past,
Monsanto
and
other
GMO
giants
got
unregulated
free
rein
in
the
1980s
and
especially
after
George
HW
Bush
became
president
in
1989.
His
administration
opened
"Pandora's
Box"
so
no
"unnecessary
regulations
would
hamper
them.
Thereafter,
"not
one
single
new
regulatory
law
governing
biotech
or
GMO
products
was
passed
then
or
later
(despite
all
the)
unknown
risks
and
possible
health
dangers."
-
-
In a
totally
unfettered
marketplace,
foxes
now
guard
the
henhouse
because
the
system
was
made
self-regulatory.
An
elder
Bush
Executive
Order
assured
it.
It
ruled
GMO
plants
and
foods
were
"substantially
equivalent"
to
ordinary
ones
of
the
same
variety
like
corn,
wheat
or
rice.
This
established
the
principle
of
"substantial
equivalence"
as
the
"lynchpin
of
the
whole
GMO
revolution."
It
was
pseudo-scientific
mumbo
jumbo,
but
was
now
law,
and
Engdahl
equated
it
to a
potential
biologically
catastrophic
"Andromeda
Strain,"
no
longer
the
world
of
science
fiction.
-
-
Monsanto
chose
milk
as
its
first
GMO
product,
genetically
manipulated
it
with
recombinant
Bovine
Growth
Hormone
(rBGH),
and
marketed
it
under
the
trade
name,
Posilac.
In
1993,
the
Clinton
FDA
declared
it
safe
and
approved
it
for
sale
before
any
consumer
use
information
was
available.
It's
now
sold
in
every
state
and
promoted
as a
way
cows
can
produce
up
to
30%
more
milk.
Problems,
however,
soon
appeared.
Farmers
reported
their
stock
burned
out
up
to
two
years
sooner
than
usual,
serious
infections
developed,
and
some
animals
couldn't
walk.
Other
problems
included
the
udder
inflammation
mastitis
as
well
as
deformed
calves
being
born.
-
-
The
information
was
suppressed,
and
rBGH
milk
is
unlabeled
so
there's
no
way
consumers
can
know.
They
also
weren't
told
this
hormone
causes
leukemia
and
tumors
in
rats,
and
a
European
Commission
committee
concluded
humans
drinking
rBGH
milk
risk
breast
and
prostate
cancer.
The
EU
thus
banned
the
product,
but
not
the
US.
Despite
clear
safety
issues,
the
FDA
failed
to
act
and
allows
hazardous
milk
to
be
sold
below
the
radar.
It
was
just
the
beginning.
-
-
The
Fox
Guards
the
Henhouse
-
-
Engdahl
reviewed
the
Pusztai
affair,
the
toll
it
took
on
his
health,
and
the
modest
vindication
he
finally
got.
Already
out
of a
job,
the
300-year
old
British
Royal
Society
attacked
him
in
1999
and
claimed
his
research
was
"flawed
in
many
aspects
of
design,
execution
and
analysis
and
that
no
conclusions
should
be
drawn
from
it."
It
was
another
blow
to a
distinguished
man
who
deserved
better
than
what
Engdahl
called
a
"recognizable
political
smear"
that
also
tarnished
the
Royal
Society's
credibility
for
making
it.
It
had
no
basis
in
fact
and
was
done
because
Pusztai's
bombshell
threatened
to
derail
Britain's
hugely
profitable
GMO
industry
and
do
the
same
thing
to
its
US
counterpart.
-
-
As
for
Pusztai,
after
five
years,
several
heart
attacks,
and
a
ruined
career,
he
finally
learned
what
happened
after
he
announced
his
findings.
Monsanto
was
the
culprit.
The
company
complained
to
Clinton
who,
in
turn,
alerted
Tony
Blair.
Pusztai's
findings
had
to
be
quashed
and
he
discredited
for
making
them.
He
was
nonetheless
able
to
reply
with
the
help
of
the
highly
respected
British
scientific
journal,
The
Lancet.
In
spite
of
Royal
Society
threats
against
him,
it's
editor
published
his
article,
but
at a
cost.
After
publication,
the
Society
and
biotech
industry
attacked
The
Lancet
for
its
action.
It
was
a
further
shameless
act.
-
-
As a
footnote,
Pusztai
now
lectures
around
the
world
on
his
GMO
research
and
is a
consultant
to
start-up
groups
researching
the
health
effects
of
these
foods.
Along
with
him
and
his
wife,
his
co-author,
Professor
Stanley
Ewen,
also
suffered.
He
lost
his
position
at
the
University
of
Aberdeen,
and
Engdahl
notes
that
the
practice
of
suppressing
unwanted
truths
and
punishing
whistleblowers
is
the
rule,
not
the
exception.
Industry
demands
are
powerful,
especially
when
they
affect
the
bottom
line.
-
-
The
Blair
government
went
even
further.
It
commissioned
the
private
firm,
Grainseed,
to
conduct
a
three-year
study
to
prove
GMO
food
safety.
London's
Observer
newspaper
later
got
UK
Ministry
of
Agriculture
documents
on
it
that
showed
tests
were
rigged
and
produced
"some
strange
science."
At
least
one
Grainseed
researcher
manipulated
the
data
to
"make
certain
seeds
in
the
trials
appear
to
perform
better
than
they
really
did."
-
-
Nonetheless,
the
Ministry
recommended
a
GMO
corn
variety
be
certified,
and
the
Blair
government
issued
a
new
code
of
conduct
under
which
"any
employee
of a
state-funded
research
institute
who
dared
to
speak
out
on
(the)
findings
into
GMO
plants
could
face
dismissal,
be
sued
for
breach
of
contract
or
face
a
court
injunction."
In
other
words,
whisleblowing
was
now
illegal
even
if
public
health
was
at
stake.
Nothing
would
be
allowed
to
stop
the
agribusiness
juggernaut
from
proceeding
unimpeded.
-
-
The
Rockefeller
Plan
-
"Tricky"
Dick
Nixon
and
Trickier
Rockefellers
-
-
Richard
Nixon
took
office
at a
time
of
national
crisis.
Along
with
the
Vietnam
morass,
the
economy
was
in
trouble
after
the
"golden
age
of
capitalism"
peaked
in
1965
and
corporate
profits
were
declining.
The
globalization
phenomenon
began
at
this
time
when
American
companies
and
the
nation's
wealthiest
families
found
investing
abroad
more
profitable
than
at
home
because
more
opportunities
were
available
outside
the
country.
-
-
Food
was
one
of
them
and
was
about
to
be
renamed
"agribusiness."
Engdahl
called
it
"a
paradigm
shift"
with
one
man
having
the
most
decisive
role
-
former
New
York
governor
Nelson
Rockefeller
"who
deeply
wanted
to
be
President"
but
had
to
settle
for
number
two
under
Gerald
Ford.
-
-
He
and
his
brothers
ran
the
family's
Rockefeller
Foundation
and
various
other
tax-exempt
entities
like
the
Rockefeller
Brothers
Trust.
Nelson
and
David
were
the
most
influential
figures,
and
their
power
center
was
the
exclusive
New
York
Council
on
Foreign
Relations.
Engdahl
states:
"In
the
1960s
the
Rockefellers
were
at
the
power
center
of
the
US
establishment
(and)
Secretary
of
State
Henry
Kissinger
(was)
their
hand-picked
protege."
It
was
a
marriage
made
in
hell.
-
-
Enter
the
"crisis
of
democracy"
or
as
right
wing
Harvard
professor,
Samuel
Huntington,
called
it,
an
"excess
of
democracy"
at a
time
masses
of
ordinary
citizens
protested
their
government's
policies.
It
captured
media
attention,
posed
a
threat
to
the
country's
establishment,
and
had
to
be
addressed.
In
1973
it
was
at a
meeting
of
300
influential,
hand-picked
Rockefeller
friends
from
North
America,
Europe
and
Japan.
They
founded
a
powerful
new
organization
called
the
Trilateral
Commission
with
easily
recognizable
member
names.
-
-
Zbigniew
Brzezinski
was
its
first
Executive
Director,
and
other
charter
members
included
Jimmy
Carter
(who
became
David
Rockefeller's
favored
1976
presidential
candidate
over
Gerald
Ford),
George
HW
Bush,
Paul
Volker
(Carter's
Fed
Chairman)
and
Alan
Greenspan
who
was
then
a
Wall
Street
investment
banker.
-
-
The
new
organization
"laid
the
basis
for
a
new
global
strategy
for
a
network
of
interlinked
international
elites,"
many
of
whom
were
Rockefeller
business
partners.
Combined,
their
financial,
economic
and
political
clout
was
unmatched.
So
was
their
ambition
that
George
HW
Bush
later
called
a
"new
world
order."
Trilateralists
laid
the
foundation
for
today's
globalization.
They
also
followed
Huntington's
advice
about
democracy's
unreliability
that
had
to
be
checked
by
"some
measure
of
(public)
apathy
and
non-involvement
(combined
with)
secrecy
and
deception."
-
-
The
Commission
further
advocated
privatizing
public
enterprises
along
with
deregulating
industry.
Trilateralist
Jimmy
Carter
embraced
the
dogma
enthusiastically
as
President.
He
began
the
process
that
Ronald
Reagan
continued
in
the
1980s
almost
without
noticing
its
originator
or
placing
blame
where
it's
due.
-
-
In
1973,
Nixon
was
in
office
with
Kissinger
his
Svengali.
One
observer
described
him
at
the
time
as
"like
sludge
out
of a
swamp
without
a
spark
of
life....no
soul,
a
slip
of
life,
a
kind
of
ghoul
(and)
a
sort
of
lubricant
(to
keep
the
ship
of
state
running)."
So
he
did
by
"tak(ing)
complete
control
(of)
US
foreign
policy"
as
both
Secretary
of
State
and
National
Security
Advisor.
Further,
he
"was
to
make
food
a
centerpiece
of
his
diplomacy
along
with
oil
geopolitics."
-
-
In
the
Cold
War
era,
food
became
a
strategic
weapon
by
masquerading
as
"Food
for
Peace."
It
was
cover
for
US
agriculture
to
engineer
the
transformation
of
family
farming
into
global
agribusiness
with
food
the
tool
and
small
farmers
eliminated
so
it
could
be
used
most
effectively.
World
agriculture
domination
was
to
be
"one
of
the
central
pillars
of
post-war
Washington
policy,
along
with
(controlling)
world
oil
markets
and
non-communist
world
defense
sales."
The
defining
1973
event
was
a
world
food
crisis.
-
-
The
shortage
of
grain
staples
along
with
the
first
of
two
1970s
oil
shocks
advanced
a
"significant
new
Washington
policy
turn."
Oil
and
grains
were
rising
three
to
fourfold
in
price
when
the
US
was
the
world's
largest
food
surplus
producer
with
the
most
power
over
prices
and
supply.
It
was
an
ideal
time
for
a
new
alliance
between
US-based
grain
trading
companies
and
the
government.
It
"laid
the
groundwork
for
the
later
gene
revolution."
-
-
Enter
what
Engdahl
called
the
"great
train
robbery"
with
Kissinger
the
culprit.
He
decided
US
agriculture
policy
was
"too
important
to
be
left
in
the
hands
of
the
Agriculture
Department"
so
he
took
control
of
it
himself.
The
world
desperately
needed
grain,
America
had
the
greatest
supply,
and
the
scheme
was
to
use
this
power
to
"radically
change
world
food
markets
and
food
trade."
The
big
winners
were
grain
traders
like
Cargill,
Archer
Daniels
Midland
(ADM)
and
Continental
Grain
that
were
helped
by
Kissinger's
"new
food
diplomacy
(to
create)
a
global
agriculture
market
for
the
first
time."
Food
would
"reward
friends
and
punish
enemies,"
and
ties
between
Washington
and
business
lay
at
the
heart
of
the
strategy.
-
-
The
global
food
market
was
being
reorganized,
corporate
interests
were
favored,
political
advantage
was
exploited,
and
the
1990s
"gene
revolution"
groundwork
was
laid.
Rockefeller
interests
and
its
Foundation
were
to
play
the
decisive
role
as
events
unfolded
over
the
next
two
decades.
It
began
under
Nixon
as
the
cornerstone
of
his
farm
policy,
free
trade
was
the
mantra,
corporate
grain
traders
were
the
beneficiaries,
and
family
farms
had
to
go
so
agribusiness
giants
could
take
over.
-
-
Bankrupting
them
was
the
plan
to
remove
an
"excess
(of)
human
resources."
Engdahl
called
it a
"thinly
veiled
form
of
food
imperialism"
as
part
of a
scheme
for
the
US
to
become
"the
world
granary."
The
family
farm
was
to
become
the
"factory
farm,"
and
agriculture
was
to
be
"agribusiness"
to
be
dominated
by a
few
corporate
giants
with
incestuous
ties
to
Washington.
-
-
Dollar
devaluation
was
also
part
of
the
scheme
under
Nixon's
New
Economic
Plan
(NEP)
that
included
closing
the
gold
window
in
1971
to
let
the
currency
float
freely.
Developing
nations
were
targeted
as
well
with
the
idea
that
they
forget
about
being
food-sufficient
in
grains
and
beef,
rely
on
America
for
key
commodities,
and
concentrate
instead
on
small
fruits,
sugar
and
vegetables
for
export.
Earned
foreign
exchange
could
then
buy
US
imports
and
repay
IMF
and
World
Bank
loans
that
create
a
never-ending
cycle
of
debt
slavery.
GATT
was
also
used
and
later
the
WTO
with
corporate-written
rules
for
their
own
bottom
line
interests.
-
-
A
Secret
National
Security
Memo
-
-
In
the
midst
of a
worldwide
drought
and
stock
market
collapse,
consider
Henry
Kissinger's
classified
memo
in
April,
1974.
It
was
on a
secret
project
called
National
Security
Study
Memorandum
200
(NSSM
200)
that
was
shaped
by
Rockefeller
interests
and
aimed
to
adopt
a
"world
population
plan
of
action"
for
drastic
global
population
control
-
meaning
to
reduce
it.
The
US
led
the
effort,
and
it
worked
like
this
- it
made
birth
control
in
developing
countries
a
prerequisite
for
US
aid.
Engdahl
summed
it
up
in
blunt
terms:
"if
these
inferior
races
get
in
the
way
of
our
securing
ample,
cheap
raw
materials,
then
we
must
find
ways
to
get
rid
of
them."
-
-
Kissinger's
scheme
was
"simpler
contraceptive
methods
through
bio-medical
research"
that
almost
sounds
like
DuPont's
old
slogan,
"Better
things
for
better
living
through
chemistry."
Later
on,
DuPont
dropped
"through
chemistry"
as
evidence
mounted
on
their
toxic
effects
and
a
changing
company
in
1999
began
using
"The
Miracles
of
Science"
in
their
advertising.
The
Nazis
also
aimed
big
and
sought
control.
Population
culling
was
part
of
it
that
for
them
was
called
"eugenics"
and
their
scheme
was
to
target
"inferior"
races
to
preserve
the
"superior"
one.
-
-
NSSM
200
was
along
the
same
idea
and
was
tied
to
the
agribusiness
agenda
that
began
with
the
1950s
and
1960s
"Green
Revolution"
to
control
food
production
in
targeted
Latin
American,
Asian
and
African
countries.
Kissinger's
plan
had
two
aims
-
securing
new
US
grain
markets
and
population
control
with
13
"unlucky"
countries
chosen.
Among
them
were
India,
Brazil,
Nigeria,
Mexico
and
Indonesia,
and
exploiting
their
resources
depended
on
drastic
population
reductions
to
reduce
homegrown
demand.
-
-
The
scheme
was
ugly
and
pure
Kissinger.
It
recommended
forced
population
control
and
other
measures
to
ensure
strategic
US
aims.
Kissinger
wanted
global
numbers
reduced
by
500
million
by
the
year
2000
and
argued
for
doubling
the
10
million
annual
death
rate
to
20
million
going
forward.
Engdahl
called
it
"genocide"
according
to
the
strict
definition
of
the
1948
UN
Convention
on
the
Prevention
and
Punishment
of
the
Crime
of
Genocide
statute
that
defines
this
crime
legally.
Kissinger
was
guilty
under
it
for
wanting
to
withhold
food
aid
to
"people
who
can't
or
won't
control
their
population
growth."
In
other
words,
if
they
won't
do
it,
we'll
do
it
for
them.
-
-
The
strategy
included
fertility
control
called
"family
planning"
that
was
linked
to
the
availability
of
key
resources.
The
Rockefeller
family
backed
it,
Kissinger
was
their
"hired
hand,"
and
he
was
well-rewarded
for
his
efforts.
It
included
keeping
him
from
being
prosecuted
where
he's
wanted
as a
war
criminal
and
could
be
arrested
overseas
like
Pinochet
was
in
the
UK
when
he
was
placed
under
house
arrest
in
2006.
-
-
Besides
his
better-known
crimes,
consider
what
he
did
to
poor
Brazilian
women
through
a
policy
of
mass
sterilization
under
NSSM
200.
After
14
years
of
the
program,
the
Brazilian
Health
Ministry
discovered
shocking
reports
of
an
estimated
44%
of
all
Brazilian
women
between
ages
14
and
55
permanently
sterilized.
Organizations
like
the
International
Planned
Parenthood
Federation
and
Family
Health
International
were
involved,
and
USAID
directed
the
program.
It
has
a
long
disturbing
history
backing
US
imperialism
while
claiming
on
its
web
site
it
extends
"a
helping
hand
to
those
people
overseas
struggling
to
make
a
better
life,
recover
from
a
disaster
or
striving
to
live
in a
free
and
democratic
country."
-
-
Even
more
disturbing
was
an
estimated
90%
of
Brazilian
women
of
African
descent
sterilized
in a
nation
with
a
black
population
second
only
to
Nigeria's.
Powerful
figures
backed
the
scheme
but
none
more
influential
than
the
Rockefellers
with
John
D.
III
having
the
most
clout
on
population
policy.
Nixon
appointed
him
head
of
the
Commission
on
Population
Growth
and
the
American
Future
in
1969.
Its
earlier
work
laid
the
ground
for
Kissinger's
NSSM
200
and
its
policy
of
extermination
through
subterfuge
that
was
based
on a
"decades
old
effort
to
breed
human
traits"
by
the
Nazi
"Eugenics"
process.
-
-
The
Brotherhood
of
Death
-
-
Long
before
Kissinger
(and
his
assistant
Brent
Scowcroft)
made
population
reduction
official
US
foreign
policy,
the
Rockefellers
were
experimenting
on
humans.
JD
III
led
the
effort.
In
the
1950s,
while
Nelson
exploited
cheap
Puerto
Rican
labor
in
New
York
and
on
the
island,
brother
JD
III
conducted
mass
sterilization
experiments
on
their
women.
By
the
mid-1960s,
Puerto
Rico's
Public
Health
Department
estimated
the
toll
-
one-third
or
more
of
them
of
child-bearing
age
(unsuspecting
poor
women)
were
permanently
sterilized.
-
-
JD
III
expressed
his
views
in a
1961
UN
Food
and
Agriculture
Organization
lecture:
"To
my
mind,
population
growth
(and
its
reduction)
is
second
only
to
control
of
atomic
weapons
as
the
paramount
problem
of
the
day."
He
meant,
of
course,
its
unwanted
parts
to
preserve
valuable
resources
for
the
privileged.
He
was
also
influenced
by
eugenicists,
race
theorists
and
Malthusians
at
the
Rockefeller
Foundation
who
believed
they
had
the
right
to
decide
who
lives
or
dies.
-
-
Powerful
figures
were
behind
the
effort
as
well
as
leading
American
business
families.
So
were
notables
in
the
UK
then
and
earlier
like
Winston
Churchill,
John
Maynard
Keynes
and
others.
Alan
Gregg
was
as
well
as
Rockefeller
Foundation
Medical
Division
chief
for
34
years.
Consider
his
views.
He
said
"people
pollute,
so
eliminate
pollution
by
eliminating
(undesirable)
people."
He
compared
city
slums
to
cancerous
tumors
and
called
them
"offensive
to
decency
and
beauty."
Better
to
remove
them
and
cleanse
the
landscape.
-
-
This
was
policy,
and
it
was
"key
to
understanding
(the
Foundation's
later
efforts)
in
the
revolution
in
biotechnology
and
plant
genetics."
Its
mission
from
inception
was
to
"(cull)
the
herd,
or
systematically
(reduce)
populations
of
'inferior
breeds.'
"
The
problem
for
supremacists
is
too
many
of a
lesser
element
spells
trouble
when
they
demand
more
of
what
the
privileged
want
for
themselves.
Solution
-
remove
them
with
lots
of
ways
to
do
it
from
birth
control
to
sterilization
to
starvation
to
wars
of
extermination.
-
-
These
ideas
were
American,
they
took
root
100
years
ago,
noted
names
backed
it
like
Rockefeller,
Carnegie
and
Harriman,
and
they
later
influenced
the
Nazis.
Hitler
praised
the
practice
in
his
1924
book,
"Mein
Kampf,"
then
used
it
as
Fuhrer
to
breed
a
"master
race."
Supreme
Court
Justice
Oliver
Wendell
Holmes
also
supported
it,
and
consider
his
1927
decision
in
Buck
v.
Bell.
He
ruled
Virginia's
forced
sterilization
program
was
constitutional
and
wrote:
"It
is
better
for
all
the
world,
if
instead
of
waiting
to
execute
degenerate
offspring
for
crime....society
can
prevent
those
who
are
manifestly
unfit
from
continuing
their
kind....Three
generations
of
imbeciles
are
enough."
This
from
a
noted
Supreme
Court
Justice
that
would
have
horrific
consequences
still
in
play.
It
"opened
the
floodgates"
for
sterilizing
many
thousands
of
women
considered
"subhuman"
detritus
and
in
the
way.
-
-
JD
III
was
right
in
step
with
this
thinking.
He
was
nurtured
on
Malthusian
pseudo-science
and
embraced
the
dogma.
He
joined
the
family
Foundation
in
1931
where
he
was
influenced
by
eugenicists
like
Raymond
Fosdick
and
Frederick
Osborn.
Both
were
founding
members
of
the
American
Eugenics
Society.
In
1952,
he
used
his
own
funds
to
found
the
New
York-based
Population
Council
in
which
he
promoted
studies
on
over-population
dangers
that
were
openly
racist.
For
the
next
25
years,
the
Council
spent
$173
million
on
global
population
reduction
and
became
the
world's
most
influential
organization
promoting
these
supremacist
ideas.
-
-
But
it
avoided
the
term
"eugenics"
because
of
its
Nazi
association
and
instead
used
language
like
birth
control,
family
planning
and
free
choice.
It
was
all
the
same,
and
before
the
war
Rockefeller
associate
and
family
Foundation
board
member,
Frederick
Osborn,
enthusiastically
supported
Nazi
eugenics
experiments
that
led
to
mass
exterminations
now
vilified.
Back
then,
he
believed
this
was
the
"most
important
experiment
that
has
ever
been
tried"
and
later
wrote
a
book.
It
was
called
"The
Future
of
Human
Heredity"
with
"eugenics"
in
the
subtitle.
It
stated
women
could
be
convinced
to
reduce
their
births
voluntarily
and
began
substituting
the
term
"genetics"
for
the
one
now
out
of
favor.
-
-
During
the
Cold
War,
culling
the
population
drew
supporters
that
included
the
cream
of
corporate
America.
They
backed
private
population
reduction
initiatives
like
Margaret
Sanger's
International
Planned
Parenthood
Federation
(IPPF).
The
major
media
also
spread
the
notion
that
"over-population
in
developing
countries
leads
to
hunger
and
more
poverty
(which,
in
turn,
becomes)
the
fertile
breeding
ground
for"
international
communism.
American
agribusiness
would
later
get
involved
through
a
policy
of
global
food
control.
Food
is
power.
When
used
to
cull
the
population,
it's
a
weapon
of
mass
destruction.
-
-
Consider
the
current
situation
with
the
UN
Food
and
Agriculture
Organization
(FAO)
reporting
sharply
higher
food
prices
along
with
severe
shortages,
and
warned
this
condition
is
extreme,
unprecendented
and
threatens
billions
with
hunger
and
starvation.
Prices
are
up
40%
this
year
after
a 9%
rise
in
2006,
and
it
forced
developing
states
to
pay
25%
more
for
imported
food
and
be
unable
to
afford
enough
of
it.
-
-
Various
explanations
for
the
problem
are
cited
that
include
growing
demand,
higher
fuel
and
transportation
costs,
commodity
speculation,
the
use
of
corn
for
ethanol
production
(taking
one-third
of
the
harvest
that's
more
than
what's
exported
for
food)
and
extreme
weather
while
ignoring
the
above
implications
-
the
power
of
agribusiness
to
manipulate
supply
for
greater
profits
and
"cull
the
herd"
in
targeted
Third
World
countries.
Affected
ones
are
poor,
and
FAO
cites
20
in
Africa,
nine
in
Asia,
six
in
Latin
America
and
two
in
Eastern
Europe
that
in
total
represent
850
million
endangered
people
now
suffering
from
chronic
hunger
and
related
poverty.
They
depend
on
imports,
and
their
diets
rely
heavily
on
the
type
grains
agribusiness
controls
-
wheat,
corn
and
rice
plus
soybeans.
If
current
prices
stay
high
and
shortages
persist,
millions
will
die
-
maybe
by
design.
-
-
Fateful
War
and
Peace
Studies
-
-
Engdahl
reviewed
how
American
elites
in
the
late
1930s
began
planning
an
American
century
in
the
post-war
world
- a
"Pax
Americana"
to
succeed
the
fading
British
Empire.
The
New
York
Council
of
Foreign
Relations
War
and
Peace
Studies
Group
led
the
effort,
and
Rockefeller
Foundation
money
financed
it.
As
Engdahl
put
it:
they'd
be
paid
back
later
"thousands-fold."
First
though,
America
had
to
achieve
world
dominance
militarily
and
economically.
-
-
The
US
business
establishment
envisioned
a
"Grand
Area"
to
encompass
most
of
the
world
outside
the
communist
bloc.
To
exploit
it,
they
hid
their
imperial
designs
beneath
a
"liberal
and
benevolent
garb"
by
defining
themselves
as
"selfless
advocates
of
freedom
for
colonial
peoples
(and)
the
enemy
of
imperialism."
They
would
also
"champion
world
peace
through
multinational
control."
Sound
familiar?
-
-
Like
today,
it
was
just
subterfuge
for
their
real
aims
that
were
pursued
under
the
banner
of
the
United
Nations,
the
new
Bretton
Woods
framework,
the
IMF,
World
Bank
and
the
GATT.
They
were
established
for
one
purpose
- to
integrate
the
developing
world
into
the
US-dominated
Global
North
so
its
wealth
could
be
transfered
to
powerful
business
interests,
mostly
in
the
US.
The
Rockefeller
family
led
the
effort,
the
four
brothers
were
involved,
and
Nelson
and
David
were
the
prime
movers.
-
-
While
JD
III
was
plotting
depopulation
and
racial
purity
schemes,
Nelson
worked
"the
other
side
of
the
fence....as
a
forward-looking
international
businessman"
in
the
1950s
and
1960s.
While
preaching
greater
efficiency
and
production
in
targeted
countries,
he
schemed,
in
fact,
to
open
world
markets
for
unrestricted
US
grain
imports.
It
became
the
"Green
Revolution."
-
-
Nelson
concentrated
on
Latin
America.
During
WW
II,
he
coordinated
US
intelligence
and
covert
operations
there,
and
those
efforts
laid
the
groundwork
for
family
interests
post-war.
They
were
tied
to
the
region's
military
because
friendly
strongmen
are
the
type
leaders
we
prefer
to
guarantee
a
favorable
business
climate.
-
-
From
the
1930s,
Nelson
Rockefeller
had
significant
Latin
American
interests,
especially
in
areas
of
oil
and
banking.
In
the
early
1940s,
he
sought
new
opportunities
and
along
with
Laurance
bought
vast
amounts
of
cheap,
high-quality
farmland
so
the
family
could
get
into
agriculture.
It
wasn't
for
family
farming,
however.
The
Rockefellers
wants
global
monopolies,
and
their
scheme
was
to
do
in
agriculture
what
the
family
patriarch
did
in
oil
along
with
using
food
and
agricultural
technology
as
Cold
War
weapons.
-
-
By
1954,
PL
480,
or
"Food
for
Peace,"
established
surplus
food
as a
US
foreign
policy
tool,
and
Nelson
used
his
considerable
influence
on
the
State
Department
because
every
post-war
Department
Secretary,
from
1952
through
1979,
had
ties
to
the
family
through
its
Foundation:
namely,
John
Foster
Dulles,
Dean
Rusk,
Henry
Kissinger
and
Cyrus
Vance.
-
-
These
men
supported
Rockefeller
views
on
private
business
and
knew
the
family
saw
agriculture
the
way
it
sees
oil
-
commodities
to
be
"traded,
controlled,
(and)
made
scarce
or
plentiful"
to
suit
the
foreign
policy
goals
of
dominant
corporations
controlling
their
trade.
-
-
The
family
got
into
agriculture
in
1947
when
Nelson
founded
the
International
Basic
Economy
Corporation
(IBEC).
Through
it,
he
introduced
"mass-scale
agribusiness
in
countries
where
US
dollars
could
buy
huge
influence
in
the
1950s
and
1960s."
Nelson
then
allied
with
grain-trading
giant
Cargill
in
Brazil
where
they
began
developing
hybrid
corn
seed
varieties
with
big
plans
for
them.
They
would
make
the
country
"the
world's
third
largest
producer
of
(these)
crop(s)
after
the
US
and
China."
It
was
part
of
Rockefeller's
"Green
Revolution"
that
by
the
late
1950s
"was
rapidly
becoming
a
strategic
US
economic
strategy
alongside
oil
and
military
hardware."
-
-
Latin
America
was
the
beginning
of a
food
production
revolution
with
big
aims
- to
control
the
"basic
necessities
of
the
majority
of
the
world's
population."
As
agribusiness
in
the
1990s,
it
was
"the
perfect
partner
for
the
introduction....of
genetically
engineered
food
crops
or
GMO
plants."
This
marriage
masqueraded
as
"free
market
efficiency,
modernization
(and)
feeding
a
malnourished
world."
In
fact,
it
was
nothing
of
the
sort.
It
cleverly
hid
"the
boldest
coup
over
the
destiny
of
entire
nations
ever
attempted."
-
-
Creating
Agribusiness
-
Rockefeller
and
Harvard
Invent
USA
"Agribusiness"
-
-
The
"Green
Revolution
began
in
Mexico
and
spread
across
Latin
America
during
the
1950s
and
1960s."
It
was
then
introduced
in
Asia,
especially
in
India.
It
was
at a
time
we
claimed
our
aim
was
to
help
the
world
through
free
market
efficiency.
It
was
all
one
way,
from
them
to
us
so
corporate
investors
could
profit.
It
gave
US
chemical
giants
and
major
grain
traders
new
markets
for
their
products.
Agribusiness
was
going
global,
and
Rockefeller
interests
were
in
the
vanguard
helping
industry
globalization
take
shape.
-
-
Nelson
worked
with
his
brother,
JD
III,
who
set
up
his
own
Agriculture
Development
Council
in
1953.
They
shared
a
common
goal
-
"cartelization
of
world
agriculture
and
food
supplies
under
their
corporate
hegemony."
At
its
heart,
it
aimed
to
introduce
modern
agriculture
techniques
to
increase
crop
yields
under
the
false
claim
of
wanting
to
reduce
hunger.
The
same
seduction
was
later
used
to
promote
the
Gene
Revolution
with
Rockefeller
interests
and
the
same
agribusiness
giants
backing
it.
-
-
In
the
1960s,
Lyndon
Johnson
also
used
food
as a
weapon.
He
wanted
recipient
nations
to
agree
to
administration
and
Rockfeller
preconditions
that
population
control
and
opening
their
markets
to
US
industry
was
part
of
the
deal.
It
also
involved
training
developing
world
agriculture
scientists
and
agronomists
in
the
latest
production
concepts
so
they
could
apply
them
at
home.
This
"carefully
constructed
network
later
proved
crucial"
to
the
Rockefeller
strategy
to
"spread
the
use
of
genetically-engineered
crops
around
the
world,"
helped
along
with
USAID
funding
and
CIA
mischief.
-
-
"Green
Revolution"
tactics
were
painful
and
took
a
devastating
toll
on
peasant
farmers.
They
destroyed
their
livelihoods
and
forced
them
into
shantytown
slums
that
now
surround
large
Third
World
cities.
There
they
provide
cheap
exploitable
labor
from
people
desperate
to
survive
and
easy
prey
for
any
way
to
do
it.
-
-
The
"Revolution"
also
harmed
the
land.
Monoculture
displaces
diversity,
soil
fertility
and
crop
yields
decrease
over
time,
and
indiscriminate
use
of
chemical
pesticides
causes
serious
later
health
problems.
Engdahl
quoted
an
analyst
calling
the
"Green
Revolution"
a
"chemical
revolution"
developing
states
couldn't
afford.
That
began
the
process
of
debt
enslavement
from
IMF,
World
Bank
and
private
bank
loans.
Large
landowners
can
afford
the
latter.
Small
farmers
can't
and
often,
as a
result,
are
bankrupted.
That,
of
course,
is
the
whole
idea.
-
-
The
"Green
Revolution"
was
based
on
the
"proliferation
of
new
hybrid
seeds
in
developing
markets"
that
characteristically
lack
reproductive
capacity.
Declining
yields
meant
farmers
had
to
buy
seeds
every
year
from
large
multinational
producers
that
control
their
parental
seed
lines
in
house.
A
handful
of
company
giants
held
patents
on
them
and
used
them
to
lay
the
groundwork
for
the
later
GMO
revolution.
Their
scheme
was
soon
evident.
Tradition
farming
had
to
give
way
to
High
Yield
Varieties
(HYV)
of
hybrid
wheat,
corn
and
rice
with
major
chemical
inputs.
-
-
Initially,
growth
rates
were
impressive
but
not
for
long.
In
countries
like
India,
agricultural
output
slowed
and
fell.
They
were
losers
so
agribusiness
giants
could
exploit
large
new
markets
for
their
chemicals,
machinery
and
other
product
inputs.
It
was
the
beginning
of
"agribusiness,"
and
it
went
hand-in-hand
with
the
"Green
Revolution"
strategy
that
would
later
embrace
plant
genetic
alterations.
-
-
Two
Harvard
Business
School
professors
were
involved
early
on -
John
Davis
and
Ray
Goldberg.
They
teamed
with
Russian
economist,
Wassily
Leontief,
got
Rockefeller
and
Ford
Foundation
funding,
and
initiated
a
four-decade
revolution
to
dominate
the
food
industry.
It
was
based
on
"vertical
integration"
of
the
kind
Congress
outlawed
when
giant
conglomerates
or
trusts
like
Standard
Oil
used
them
to
monopolize
entire
sectors
of
key
industries
and
crush
competition.
-
-
It
was
revived
under
Trilateralist
President
Jimmy
Carter
disguised
as
"deregulation"
to
dismantle
"decades
of
carefully
constructed....health,
food
safety
and
consumer
protection
laws."
They
would
now
give
way
under
a
new
wave
of
industry-friendly
vertical
integration.
Supported
by a
public
campaign,
it
claimed
that
government
was
the
problem,
it
encroached
too
much
on
our
lives,
and
it
had
to
be
rolled
back
for
greater
personal
"freedom."
-
-
Early
in
the
1970s,
agribusiness
producers
controlled
US
food
supplies.
They'd
now
go
global
on a
scale
without
precedent.
The
goal
-
"staggering
profits"
by
"restructur(ing)
the
way
Americans
grew
food
to
feed
themselves
and
the
world."
Ronald
Reagan
continued
Carter's
policy
and
let
the
top
four
or
five
monopoly
players
control
it.
It
led
to
an
unprecedented
"concentration
and
transformation
of
American
agriculture"
with
independent
family
farmers
driven
off
their
land
through
forced
sales
and
bankruptcies
so
"more
efficient"
agribusiness
giants
could
move
in
with
"Factory
Farms."
Remaining
small
producers
became
virtual
serfs
as
"contract
farmers."
America's
landscape
was
changing
with
people
trampled
on
for
profits.
-
-
Engdahl
explained
a
gradual
process
of
"wholesale
merger(s)
and
consolidation....of
American
food
production....into
giant
corporate
global
concentrations"
with
familiar
names
-
Cargill,
Archer
Daniels
Midland
(ADM),
Smithfield
Foods
and
ConAgra.
As
they
grew
bigger,
so
did
their
bottom
lines
with
annual
equity
returns
rising
from
13%
in
1993
to
23%
in
1999.
Hundreds
of
thousands
of
small
farmers
lost
out
for
it
as
their
numbers
dropped
by
300,000
from
1979
to
1998
alone.
It
was
even
worse
for
hog
farmers
with
a
drop
from
600,000
to
157,000
so
3%
of
producers
could
control
50%
of
the
market.
-
-
The
social
costs
were
staggering
and
continue
to
be
as
"entire
rural
communities
collapsed
and
rural
towns
became
ghost
towns."
Consider
the
consequences:
-
-
--
by
2004,
the
four
largest
beef
packers
controlled
84%
of
steer
and
heifer
slaughter
-
Tyson,
Cargill,
Swift
and
National
Beef
Packing;
-
-
--
four
giants
controlled
64%
of
hog
production
-
Smithfield
Foods,
Tyson,
Swift
and
Hormel;
-
-
--
three
companies
controlled
71%
of
soybean
crushing
-
Cargill,
ADM
and
Bunge;
-
-
--
three
giants
controlled
63%
of
all
flour
milling,
and
five
companies
controlled
90%
of
global
grain
trade;
-
-
--
four
other
companies
controlled
89%
of
the
breakfast
cereal
market
-
Kellogg,
General
Mills,
Kraft
Foods
and
Quaker
Oats;
-
-
--
in
1998,
Cargill
acquired
Continental
Grain
to
control
40%
of
national
grain
elevator
capacity;
-
-
--
four
large
agro-chemical/seed
giants
controlled
over
75%
of
the
nation's
seed
corn
sales
and
60%
of
it
for
soybeans
while
also
having
the
largest
share
of
the
agricultural
chemical
market
-
Monsanto,
Novartis,
Dow
Chemical
and
DuPont;
six
companies
controlled
three-fourths
of
the
global
pesticides
market;
-
-
--
Monsanto
and
DuPont
controlled
60%
of
the
US
corn
and
soybean
seed
market
-
all
of
it
patented
GMO
seeds;
and
-
-
--
10
large
food
retailers
controlled
$649
billion
in
global
sales
in
2002,
and
the
top
30
food
retailers
account
for
one-third
of
global
grocery
sales.
-
-
At
the
dawn
of a
new
century,
family
farming
was
decimated
by
corporate
agribusiness'
vertically
integrated
powers
that
surpassed
their
earlier
1920s
heyday
dominance.
The
industry
was
now
the
second
most
profitable
national
one
after
pharmaceuticals
with
domestic
annual
sales
exceeding
$400
billion.
The
next
aim
was
merging
Big
Pharma
with
Big
food
producing
giants,
and
the
Pentagon's
National
Defense
University
took
note
in a
2003-issued
paper
-
"Agribusiness
(now)
is
to
the
United
States
what
oil
is
to
the
Middle
East."
It's
now
considered
a
"strategic
weapon
in
the
arsenal
of
the
world's
only
superpower,"
but
at a
huge
cost
to
consumers
everywhere.
-
-
Engdahl
reviewed
the
"revolution"
in
animal
factory
production
that
EarthSave
International
founder
and
Baskin-Robbins
heir,
John
Robbins,
covered
honestly,
thoroughly
and
compassionately
in
two
explosive
books
on
the
subject
-
"Diet
for
A
New
America"
in
1987
and
"The
Food
Revolution"
in
2001.
They
were
both
stinging
indictments
of
corporate-produced
foods
-
horrifying
animal
cruelty,
unsafe
foods,
unsanitary
conditions,
rampant
use
of
anti-biotics
humans
then
ingest,
massive
environmental
pollution,
and
new
unknown
dangers
from
genetic
engineering
-
all
allowed
by
supposed
government
watchdog
regulatory
agencies
that
ignore
public
health
concerns.
-
-
Agribusiness
was
on a
roll,
government
supports
it
with
tens
of
billions
in
annual
subsidies,
and
the
1996
Farm
Bill
suspended
the
Secretary
of
Agriculture's
power
to
balance
supply
and
demand
so
henceforth
unrestricted
production
is
allowed.
Food
producing
giants
took
full
advantage
to
control
market
forces.
They
crushed
family
farmers
by
over-producing
and
forcing
down
prices.
They
also
pressured
land
values
as
small
operators
failed.
It
created
opportunities
for
land
acquisition
on
the
cheap
for
greater
concentration
and
dominance.
-
-
Next
came
integrating
the
Gene
Revolution
into
agribusiness
the
way
Harvard's
Ray
Goldberg
saw
it
coming.
Entire
new
sectors
were
to
be
created
from
genetic
engineering.
It
would
include
GMO
drugs
from
GMO
plants
in a
new
"argi-ceutical
system."
Goldberg
predicted
a
"genetic
revolution
(through)
an
industrial
convergence
of
food,
health,
medicine,
fiber
and
energy
businesses"
- in
a
totally
unregulated
marketplace.
Unmentioned
was
a
threatening
consumer
nightmare
hidden
from
view.
-
-
______________________
-
-
Food
is
Power
-
-
Rockefeller
Foundation
funding
was
the
Gene
Revolution's
catalyst
in
1985
with
big
aims
- to
learn
if
GMO
plants
were
commercially
feasible
and
if
so
spread
them
everywhere.
It
was
the
"new
eugenics"
and
the
culmination
of
earlier
research
from
the
1930s.
It
was
also
based
on
the
idea
that
human
problems
can
be
"solved
by
genetic
and
chemical
manipulations....as
the
ultimate
means
of
social
control
and
social
engineering."
Foundation
scientists
sought
ways
to
do
it
by
reducing
infinite
life
complexities
to
"simple,
deterministic
and
predictive
models"
under
their
diabolical
scheme
-
mapping
gene
structures
to
"correct
social
and
moral
problems
including
crime,
poverty,
hunger
and
political
instability."
With
the
development
of
essential
genetic
engineering
techniques
in
1973,
they
were
on
their
way.
-
-
They're
based
on
what's
called
recombitant
DNA
(rDNA),
and
it
works
by
genetically
introducing
foreign
DNA
into
plants
to
create
genetically
modified
organisms,
but
not
without
risks.
London
Institute
of
Science
in
Society
chief
biologist,
Dr.
Mae-Wan
Ho,
explained
the
dangers
because
the
process
is
imprecise.
"It
is
uncontrollable
and
unreliable,
and
typically
ends
up
damaging
and
scrambling
the
host
genome,
with
entirely
unpredictable
consequences"
that
might
unleash
a
deadly
unrecallable
"Andromeda
Strain."
Research
continued
anyway
amidst
lies
that
risks
were
minimal
and
a
promised
future
lay
ahead.
All
that
mattered
were
huge
potential
profits
and
geopolitical
gain
so
let
the
good
times
roll
and
the
chips
fall
where
they
may.
-
-
One
project
was
to
map
the
rice
genome.
It
launched
a 17
year
effort
to
spread
GMO
rice
around
the
world
with
Rockefeller
Foundation
money
behind
it.
It
spent
millions
funding
46
worldwide
science
labs.
It
also
financed
the
training
of
hundreds
of
graduate
students
and
developed
an
"elite
fraternity"
of
top
scientific
researchers
at
Foundation-backed
research
institutes.
It
was
a
diabolical
scheme
aiming
big
- to
control
the
staple
food
for
2.4
billion
people
and
in
the
process
destroy
the
biological
diversity
of
over
140,000
developed
varieties
that
can
withstand
droughts,
pests
and
grow
in
every
imaginable
climate.
-
-
Asia
was
the
prime
target,
and
Engdahl
explained
the
sinister
tale
of a
Philippines-based
Foundation-funded
institute
(IRRI).
It
had
a
gene
bank
with
"every
significant
rice
variety
known"
that
comprised
one-fifth
of
them
all.
IRRI
let
agribusiness
giants
illegally
use
the
seeds
for
exclusive
patented
genetic
modification
so
they
could
introduce
them
in
markets
and
dominate
them
by
requiring
farmers
be
licensed
and
forced
to
pay
annual
royalty
fees.
-
-
By
2000,
a
successful
"Golden
Rice"
was
developed
that
was
beta-carotene
(Vitamin
A)
enriched.
It
was
marketed
on
the
fraudulent
claim
that
a
daily
bowl
could
prevent
blindness
and
other
Vitamin
A
deficiencies.
It
was
a
scam
as
other
products
are
far
better
sources
of
this
nutrient
and
to
get
enough
of
it
from
any
type
rice
requires
eating
an
impossible
nine
kilograms
daily
(about
20
pounds).
Nonetheless,
gene
revolution
backers
were
ready
for
their
next
move:
"the
consolidation
of
global
control
over
humankind's
food
supply"
with
a
new
tool
to
do
it -
the
WTO.
Corporate
giants
wrote
its
rules
favoring
them
at
the
expense
of
developing
nations
shut
out.
-
-
Unleashing
GMO
Seeds
- A
Revolution
in
World
Food
Production
Begins
-
-
Argentina
became
the
first
"guinea
pig"
nation
in a
reckless
experiment
with
untested
and
potentially
hazardous
new
foods.
No
matter,
potential
profits
are
enormous
so
concerns
for
public
safety
and
human
health
are
ignored.
Let
the
revolution
begin
in
real
time.
-
-
By
the
end
of
the
1980s,
a
global
network
of
genetically-trained
molecular
biologists
were
ready
to
kick
it
off,
Argentina
was
their
first
test
laboratory,
and
it
was
hailed
as a
"Second
Green
Revolution."
Look
what
followed.
From
1996
to
2004,
worldwide
GMO
crop
planting
expanded
to
167
million
acres,
a
40-fold
increase
using
25%
of
total
worldwide
arable
land.
An
astonishing
two-thirds
of
the
acreage
(106
million
acres)
was
in
the
US.
By
2004,
Argentina
was
in
second
place
with
34
million
acres
while
production
is
expanding
in
Brazil,
China,
Canada,
South
Africa,
Indonesia,
India,
the
Philippines,
Colombia,
Honduras,
Spain
and
Eastern
Europe
(Poland,
Romania
and
Bulgaria).
The
revolution
was
on a
roll
and
looks
unstoppable.
-
-
Argentina
was
an
easy
mark
when
Carlos
Menem
became
President.
He's
a
corporatist's
dream,
a
willing
Washington
Consensus
subject,
and
he
even
let
David
Rockefeller's
New
York
and
Washington
friends
draft
his
economic
program
with
Chicago
School
dogma
at
its
heart
-
privatizations,
deregulation,
local
markets
open
to
imports,
and
cuts
in
already
reduced
social
services.
-
-
By
the
mid-1990s,
Menem
was
"revolutioniz(ing)
Argentina's
traditional
productive
agriculture"
to
one
based
on
monoculture
for
global
export.
He
took
office
in
July,
1989.
By
1991,
Argentina
was
already
a
"secret
experimental
laboratory
for
developing
genetically
engineered
crops"
with
its
people
unknowing
human
guinea
pigs.
In
effect,
the
country's
agriculture
was
handed
to
Monsanto,
Dow,
DuPont
and
other
GMO
giants
to
exploit
for
profit
with
untested
and
potentially
hazardous
new
products.
Things
would
never
be
the
same
again.
-
-
In
1995,
Monsanto
introduced
Roundup
Ready
(RR)
soybeans
with
its
special
gene
gun-inserted
bacterium
that
allows
the
plant
to
survive
being
sprayed
by
the
glyphosate
herbicide,
Roundup.
GMO
soybeans
are
thus
protected
from
the
same
product
used
in
Colombia
to
eradicate
drugs
that
also
harms
legal
crops
and
humans
at
the
same
time.
-
-
Foreign
investors
have
large
land
holdings
in
Argentina,
the
late
1990s
-
early
2000s
economic
crisis
made
vast
more
amounts
available,
and
bankrupted
farmers
had
to
give
it
up
for
pennies
on
the
dollar.
Corporate
predators
and
Latifundista
landholders
took
full
advantage,
but
look
what
for.
-
-
After
Monsanto's
Roundup
Ready
soybeans
were
licensed
in
1996,
"a
once-productive
national
family
farm-based
agriculture
system
(was
turned
into)
a
neo-feudal
state
system
dominated
by a
handful
of
powerful,
wealthy"
owners
to
exploit
for
profit.
Menem
went
along.
In
less
than
a
decade,
he
allowed
the
nation's
corn,
wheat
and
cattle
diversity
to
be
replaced
by
corporate-controlled
monoculture.
It
was
a
Faustian
sellout,
and
it
helped
Monsanto's
stock
price
hit
an
all-time
high
near
year
end
2007.
-
-
Earlier
decades
of
diversity
and
crop
rotation
preserved
the
country's
soil
quality.
That
changed
after
soybean
monoculture
moved
in
with
its
heavy
dependence
on
chemical
fertilizers.
Traditional
Argentine
crops
vanished,
and
cattle
were
forced
into
cramped
feedlots
the
way
they
are
in
the
US.
Engdahl
quoted
a
leading
country
agro-ecologist
predicting
these
practices
will
destroy
the
land
in
50
years
if
they
continue.
Nothing
suggests
a
stoppage,
and
by
2004,
nearly
half
the
nation's
crop
land
was
for
soybeans
and
over
90%
of
it
solely
for
Monsanto's
Roundup
Ready
brand.
Engdahl
put
it
this
way:
"Argentina
had
become
the
world's
largest
uncontrolled
experimental
laboratory
for
GMO"
and
its
people
unwitting
lab
rats.
-
-
Mechanized
GMO
soybean
monoculture
took
over,
the
country's
dairy
farms
were
reduced
by
half,
and
"hundreds
of
thousands
of
workers
(were
forced)
off
the
land"
into
poverty.
Monsanto
was
on a
roll
and
used
various
exploitive
schemes.
Included
were
ploys
to
ignore
Argentine
law
against
collecting
royalty
payments.
Smuggling
Roundup
soybean
seeds
illegally
into
Brazil,
Paraguay,
Bolivia
and
Uruguay
also
went
on
sub
rosa.
In
addition,
the
company
got
Menem
to
allow
it
to
collect
"extended
royalties"
in
1999
even
though
Argentine
law
prohibited
the
practice.
-
-
Monsanto
then
pressured
the
government
to
recognize
its
"technology
license
fee."
A
Technology
Compensation
Fund
was
established
and
managed
by
the
Ministry
of
Agriculture.
It
forced
farmers
to
pay
a
near-1%
fee
on
GMO
soybean
sales.
Monsanto
and
other
GMO
seed
suppliers
got
the
funds.
By
2005,
Brazil's
government
relented.
It
legalized
GMO
seeds
for
the
first
time,
and
by
2006,
the
US,
Argentina
and
Brazil
accounted
for
over
81%
of
world
soybean
production.
It
"ensure(s)
that
practically
every
animal
in
the
world
fed
soymeal
(is)
eating
genetically
engineered
soybeans."
It
also
means
everyone
eating
these
animals
does
the
same
thing
unwittingly.
-
-
Argentina
experienced
more
fallout
as
well
that
threatens
to
spread.
Its
soybean
monoculture
affects
the
countryside
hugely.
Traditional
farmers
close
to
soybean
ones
are
seriously
harmed
by
aerial
Roundup
spraying.
Their
crops
are
destroyed
as
that's
how
this
herbicide
works.
It
kills
all
plants
without
gene-modified
resistance.
It
also
kills
animals
with
farmers
reporting
their
chickens
died
and
horses
were
gravely
harmed.
Humans
are
affected
as
well
and
show
violent
symptoms
of
nausea,
diarrhea,
vomiting
and
herbicide-inflicted
skin
lesions.
Other
reports
claimed
further
fallout
-
animals
born
with
severe
organ
deformities,
deformed
bananas
and
sweet
potatoes,
and
lakes
filled
with
dead
fish.
In
addition,
rural
families
said
their
children
developed
"grotesque
blotches
on
their
bodies."
-
-
Forest
lands
were
also
damaged
as
vast
acreage
was
cleared
for
soybean
planting.
Their
loss
"created
an
explosion
of
medical
problems
because
Roundup
is
toxic,
kills
every
non-GMO
plant
that
grows
and,
it
harms
animals
and
humans
as
well
that
come
in
contact
with
it.
-
-
As
for
higher
promised
yields,
results
showed
reduced
harvests
of
between
5%
and
15%
compared
with
traditional
soybean
crops
plus
"vicious
new
weeds"
that
need
up
to
triple
the
amount
of
spraying
to
destroy.
By
the
time
farmers
learn
this,
it's
too
late.
By
2004,
GMO
soybean
plantings
spread
across
the
country,
they
cost
more
to
produce
and
yield
less,
and
Engdahl
summarized
farmers'
plight:
"A
more
perfect
scheme
of
human
bondage
would
be
hard
to
imagine,"
and
it
was
even
worse
than
that.
Argentina
was
the
first
test
case
"in
a
global
plan
that
was
decades
in
the
making
and
absolutely
shocking
and
awesome
in
its
scope."
-
-
Iraq
Gets
American
Seeds
of
Democracy
-
-
Democracy
for
Iraq
meant
erasing
the
"cradle
of
civilization"
for
unfettered
free
market
capitalism.
Iraq
was
conquered
for
its
oil
but
also
to
make
the
country
a
giant
free
trade
paradise.
The
scheme
was
diabolical,
elaborate
and
ugly
-
blitzkrieg
"shock
and
awe,"
elaborate
PsyOps,
fear
as a
weapon,
repressive
occupation,
mass
detention
and
torture,
and
the
fastest,
most
sweeping
country
remake
in
history.
It
happened
in
weeks,
Iraq
no
longer
exists,
the
country
is a
wasteland,
its
people
are
devastated,
and
a
blank
slate
was
created
for
unrestrained
corporate
pillage
on a
near-
unimaginable
scale.
-
-
Part
of
the
scheme
was
for
GMO
agribusiness
giants
to
have
free
reign
over
that
part
of
the
economy
- to
radically
transform
Iraq's
food
production
system
into
a
model
for
GMO
seeds
and
plants.
One
hundred
swiftly
implemented
Bremer
laws
mandated
it,
but
Iraqis
had
no
say
about
them
as
the
country
is
now
governed
out
of
Washington
and
its
branch
office
inside
the
heavily-fortified
Green
Zone
in
the
largest
US
embassy
in
the
world
by
far.
-
-
Bremer
laws
imposed
the
harshest
ever
Chicago
School-style
"shock
therapy"
of
the
kind
that
devastated
countries
around
the
world
since
first
introduced
in
Chile
under
Pinochet
in
1973.
The
formula
was
familiar
-
mass
firings
of
state
employees
in
the
hundreds
of
thousands;
unrestricted
imports
with
no
tariffs,
duties,
inspections
or
taxes;
deregulation;
and
the
largest
state
liquidation
sale
and
privatization
plan
since
the
Soviet
Union
collapsed.
-
-
Corporate
taxes
were
lowered
as
well
from
40%
to a
flat
15%,
and
foreign
investors
could
own
100%
of
Iraqi
assets
other
than
oil.
They
could
also
repatriate
all
their
profits,
had
no
obligation
to
reinvest
in
the
country
and
wouldn't
be
taxed.
They
were
further
given
40
year
leases,
and
the
only
Saddam
era
laws
remaining
were
those
restricting
trade
unions
and
collective
bargaining.
Foreign
transnationals,
mainly
US
ones,
swooped
in
and
devoured
everything.
Iraqis
couldn't
compete,
and
the
occupation
laws
assured
it.
-
-
Consider
Bremer
Order
81.
It
covered
patents,
their
duration
and
stated:
"Farmers
shall
be
prohibited
from
re-using
seeds
of
protected
varieties
or
any
variety"
the
edict
covered.
It
gave
plant
varieties
patent
holders
absolute
rights
over
farmers'
using
their
seeds
for
20
years.
They'd
be
genetically
engineered,
owned
by
transnationals,
and
Iraqi
farmers
using
them
had
to
sign
an
agreement
stipulating
they'll
pay
a
"technology
fee"
as
well
as
an
annual
license
fee.
-
-
Plant
Variety
Protection
(PVP)
was
the
core
of
this
order.
It
made
seed
saving
and
reuse
illegal.
Even
using
"similar"
seeds
could
result
in
severe
fines
and
imprisonment.
GMO
seeds
got
protection
to
displace
10,000
years
of
developed
plant
varieties
being
sacrificed.
-
-
Iraq's
fertile
valley
between
the
Tigris
and
Euphrates
rivers
is
ideal
for
crop
planting.
Since
8000
BC,
farmers
used
it
to
develop
"rich
seeds
of
almost
every
variety
of
wheat
used
in
the
world
today."
They
were
erased
through
a
GMO
modernization
and
industrialization
scheme
so
agribusiness
can
get
a
foothold
in
the
region
and
supply
the
world
market.
While
Iraqis
suffer
and
starve,
GMO
giants
run
the
country's
agriculture
for
export.
Iraqi
farmers
are
now
agribusiness
serfs
and
are
forced
to
grow
products
foreign
to
the
native
diet
like
wheat
designed
for
pasta.
-
-
Bremer
laws
mandated
it
and
are
inviolable
under
Article
26
of
the
US-drafted
constitution.
It
states
that
the
Iraqi
government
is
powerless
to
change
laws
a
foreign
occupier
made.
To
assure
it,
US-sympathizers
are
in
every
ministry
with
those
most
trusted
in
key
ones.
Engdahl
sums
up
the
damage
to
agriculture:
"The
forced
transformation
of
Iraq's
food
production
into
patented
GMO
crops
is
one
of
the
clearest
examples
of
(how)
Monsanto
and
other
GMO
giants
are
forcing
(these)
crops
onto
an
unwilling
or
unknowing
world
population."
They're
infesting
the
planet
with
them
one
country
at a
time
so
it's
futile
trying
to
undo
the
damage
they
cause.
-
-
Planting
the
"Garden
of
Earthly
Delights"
-
-
On
January
1,
1995,
the
WTO
was
officially
established
with
powers
to
enforce
its
corporate-written
laws
on
member
states.
US
agribusiness
was
already
dominant,
but
it
now
had
a
new
unelected
supranational
body
to
advance
its
private
agenda
on a
global
scale.
WTO
is a
"policeman"
for
global
free
trade
and
"a
(predatory)
battering
ram
for
the
trillion
dollar
annual
world
agribusiness"
part
of
it
for
its
giants.
Its
rules
are
written
with
teeth
for
"punitive
leverage"
to
levy
heavy
financial
and
other
penalties
on
rule
violators.
Under
them,
agriculture
is a
priority
because
American
companies
are
dominant.
-
-
Cargill
wrote
the
rules
that
Engdahl
calls
the
"Cargill
Plan."
They:
-
-
--
ban
all
government
farm
programs
and
price
supports
worldwide
(but
wink
and
nod
at
massive
US
subsidies);
-
-
--
prohibit
countries
from
imposing
import
controls
to
defend
their
own
agricultural
production;
-
-
--
ban
agricultural
export
controls
even
in
times
of
famine
so
Cargill
can
dominate
world
export
grain
trade;
and
-
-
--
forbid
countries
from
restricting
trade
through
food
safety
laws
called
trade
barriers;
this
demand
also
opens
world
markets
to
unrestricted
GMO
food
imports
with
no
need
to
prove
their
safety.
-
-
The
International
Food
and
Agricultural
Trade
Policy
Council
lobby
(IPC)
worked
with
Cargill
and
US
agribusiness
to
advance
this
agenda.
Four
so-called
Group
of
Four
QUAD
countries
took
the
lead
-
the
US,
Canada,
Japan
and
EU.
Meeting
in
secret,
they
set
policy
for
all
134
WTO
members
that
for
agriculture
was
drafted
by
US
agribusiness
giants
like
Cargill,
Monsanto,
ADM
and
DuPont
along
with
EU
giants,
Nestle
and
Unilever.
They
were
designed
to
erase
national
laws
and
safeguards
in
favor
of
unrestricted
free
markets
favoring
Global
North
countries.
-
-
Through
patents,
GMO
giants
control
staple
crop
seeds
and
need
WTO
leverage
to
force
them
on a
skeptical
world.
It's
done
through
WTO's
Agreement
on
Agriculture
(AoA)
along
with
its
Trade
Related
Intellectual
Property
Rights
(TRIPS).
Until
the
advent
of
agribusiness,
food
production
and
its
markets
were
local.
That's
now
changed
with
corporate
giants
in
control
and
able
to
set
prices
by
manipulating
supply.
-
-
AoA
rules
were
established
to
help.
They
also
enforce
agribusiness'
highest
priority
- "a
free
and
integrated
global
market
for
its
products."
Included
are
GMO
ones
the
senior
Bush
administration
ruled
are
"substantially
equivalent"
to
ordinary
seeds
and
crops
and
need
no
government
regulation.
-
-
That
provision
is
written
into
WTO
rules
under
its
"Sanitary
and
Phytosanitary
Agreement
(SPS).
It
states
that
national
laws
banning
GMO
products
are
"unfair
trade
practices"
even
when
they
endanger
human
health.
Other
WTO
rules
(called
"Technical
Barriers
to
Trade")
are
in
place
as
well.
They
prohibit
GMO
labeling
so
consumers
don't
know
what
they're
eating
and
can't
avoid
these
potentially
hazardous
foods.
-
-
The
1996
Biosafety
Protocol
was
drafted
to
solve
this
problem,
and
it
should
be
in
place
for
that
purpose.
Developing
country
demands,
however,
were
"ambushed
by
the
powerful
organized
government
and
agribusiness
lobby."
It
sabotaged
talks
and
insisted
biosafety
measures
be
subordinate
to
WTO
trade
rules
favoring
developed
states.
As a
result,
talks
collapsed,
safety
concerns
are
ignored,
and
the
path
was
cleared
for
the
unrestricted
spread
of
GMO
seeds
worldwide.
-
-
Under
WTO's
TRIPS
rules,
all
member
states
must
pass
patent-protecting
intellectual
property
laws
that
make
knowledge
property.
That,
in
turn,
"open(s)
the
floodgates"
nearly
everywhere
for
the
proliferation
of
GMO
seeds
and
foods,
even
in
violation
of
national
food
safety
laws.
-
-
GMO
giants
have
powerful
friends
in
government
backing
their
agenda.
George
Bush
is
one
of
them,
and
in
2003
he
made
the
proliferation
of
GMO
seeds
his
top
priority
after
the
Iraq
war.
With
that
support,
GMO
companies
are
pushing
things
to
the
limit
with
a
brazen
example
Engdahl
gave
involving
the
Texas
biotech
company,
RiceTec.
-
-
It
schemed
to
patent
Basmati
rice,
the
dietary
staple
across
Asia
for
thousands
of
years.
With
IRRI
collusion,
the
company
stole
the
seeds,
patented
them
under
Rockefeller
Foundation-crafted
rules,
and
the
2001
Supreme
Court
decision
in
Ag
Supply
v.
Pioneer
Hi-Bred
made
it
possible.
It
"enshrined
the
principle
of
allowing
patents
on
plant
forms
and
other
forms
of
life
in
(this)
groundbreaking
case."
Under
the
ruling,
GMO
plant
breeds
can
be
patented,
and
US
government
agencies
are
complicit
in
helping
agribusiness
giants
ensure
nothing
stops
them
from
doing
it.
-
-
As a
result,
the
GMO
monoculture
onslaught
threatens
plant
species
diversity
everywhere.
With
full
Washington
and
WTO
backing,
major
biotech
companies
are
patenting
every
plant
imaginable
in
GMO
form.
By
the
beginning
of
the
new
millennium,
Engdahl
referred
to a
"Gene
Revolution
(as
a)
monsoon
force
in
world
agriculture"
with
four
dominant
companies
controlling
GMOs
and
related
agrichemical
markets"
-
Monsanto,
DuPont,
Dow
Agrisciences
and
Syngenta
in
Switzerland
from
the
merger
of
the
agriculture
divisions
of
Novartis
and
AstraZeneca.
-
-
The
"world's
number
one"
is
Monsanto.
The
company
was
discussed
in
Part
I of
this
review,
and
Engdahl
quoted
its
chairman
saying
his
goal
is a
global
fusion
of
"three
of
the
largest
industries
in
the
world
-
agriculture,
food
and
health
-
that
now
operate
(separately,
but)
changes....will
lead
to
their
integration."
That
was
over
seven
years
ago.
Now
it's
happening.
-
-
Engdahl
covered
pertinent
information
on
the
industry
that
might
otherwise
have
gone
unnoticed
-
that
the
three
US
GMO
giants
have
a
long
sordid
association
with
the
Pentagon
supplying
massively
destructive
chemicals
like
Agent
Orange,
napalm
and
others.
They
now
want
to
be
trusted
with
the
most
important
things
we
ingest
-
our
food
and
drugs
in
the
face
of
strong
evidence
their
GMO
varieties
harm
human
health
and
their
history
of
public
safety
concern
is
atrocious.
-
-
Like
it
or
not,
they're
advancing
their
agenda,
and
a
2004
Rockefeller
Foundation
report
shows
it.
GM
crop
production
achieved
nine
consecutive
double
digit
year
increases
since
1996.
More
than
eight
million
farmers
in
17
countries
now
plant
them,
over
90%
in
developing
nations.
Far
and
away,
the
US
is
the
world's
leader
"with
aggressive
Government
promotion,
absence
of
labeling,
and
the
domination
of
US
farm
production."
Here,
"genetically
engineered
crops
(have)
essentially
taken
over
the
American
food
chain."
In
2004,
over
85%
of
soybeans
were
genetically
modified,
45%
of
corn,
and
since
animal
feed
is
mainly
from
these
crops
"the
entire
meat
production
of
the
nation
(and
exports)
has
been
fed
on
genetically
modified
animal
feed."
What
animals
eat,
so
do
humans.
-
-
It
gets
even
worse.
Wind
and
air
proliferate
GM
seeds
to
adjacent
fields,
including
organic
ones
that
are
now
to
some
degree
contaminated.
Engdahl
explained
that
"after
just
six
years,
an
estimated
67%
of
all
US
farm
acreage
has
been
(irremedially)
contaminated
with
genetically
engineered
seeds.
The
genie
was
out
of
the
bottle"
as
nothing
known
to
science
can
reverse
this
condition.
-
-
It
renders
the
notion
of
pure
organic
impossible
except
from
perhaps
very
isolated
farms
that
comprise
a
small
percent
of
the
industry.
Even
so,
organic
crops
are
safer
than
chemically-treated
ones
and
hugely
preferable
to
any
that
are
genetically
modified.
That
said,
as
the
Gene
Revolution
advances
worldwide,
the
future
of
organic
farming
is
imperiled
to
the
horror
of
people
like
this
writer
dependent
on
them.
-
-
Consider
further
the
way
GMO
giants
gain
market
share
with
government
and
WTO
backing.
It's
also
helped
by
imposing
rigid
licensing
and
technology
agreements
on
farmers
who
must
pay
annual
fees.
They're
binding
and
enforced
through
Technology
Use
Agreements
farmers
have
to
sign,
and
by
so
doing,
entrap
themselves
in a
"new
form
of
serfdom."
Each
year,
they
must
buy
new
seeds,
and
they're
forbidden
to
reuse
any
from
previous
years
as
was
customary
before
GMO
introductions.
Failure
to
observe
the
agreements
can
result
in
severe
legal
damages
or
even
imprisonment
and
possible
loss
of
their
land.
-
-
Complicit
government
agencies
and
clever
marketing
schemes
aid
the
"Gene
Revolution"
through
"lies
and
damn
lies"
that
GMO
crops
have
higher
yields
and
can
solve
world
hunger
problems.
The
evidence
proves
otherwise.
In
addition,
resistant
"superweeds"
develop
over
time,
crop
yields
drop,
farmers
must
use
greater
amounts
of
herbicides,
they're
locked
into
high
user
fees,
and
they
end
up
losing
money.
Bottom
line
-
the
case
for
"genetically
engineered
seeds
for
agriculture
had
been
based
on a
citadel
of
scientific
fraud
and
corporate
lies."
This
information
is
hidden
from
the
public,
and
it's
too
late
once
unwary
farmers
learn
they've
been
had.
-
-
Besides
that,
Russian
science
showed
GMOs
harm
unborn
babies
as
over
half
the
rat
offsring
fed
a
genetically
modified
soybean
diet
died
in
their
first
three
weeks
of
life
-
six
times
the
normal
rate.
Evidence
was
growing
on
GMO
dangers,
and
the
industry
was
alarmed.
In
1999,
it
"required
an
extraordinary
intervention
by
its
patron
saint,
the
Rockefeller
Foundation,"
to
pull
its
fat
out
of
the
fire.
-
-
Population
Control
-
Terminators,
Traitors,
Spermicidal
Corn
-
-
Crucial
to
its
strategy,
GMO
giants
needed
a
"new
technology
which
would
allow
them
to
sell
seed
that
would
not
reproduce."
They
developed
one
called
GURTs
(Genetic
Use
Restriction
Technologies)
that
became
known
as
"Terminator"
seeds.
The
process
is
patented,
it
applies
to
all
plant
and
seed
species,
and
replanting
them
doesn't
work.
They
won't
grow.
It's
the
industry's
solution
to
controlling
world
food
production
and
assuring
themselves
big
profits
as a
result.
What
a
discovery.
Terminator
corn,
soybean
and
other
seeds
have
been
"genetically
modified
to
'commit
suicide'
after
one
harvest
season"
by a
toxin-producing
inbuilt
gene.
-
-
A
closely
related
technology
is
called
T-GURT
seeds,
or
second
generation
Terminators,
nicknamed
"Traitor."
The
technology
relies
on
controlling
both
plant
fertility
and
its
genetic
characteristics
with
"an
inducible
gene
promoter"
called
a
"gene
switch."
GMO
pest
and
disease-resistant
crops
only
work
by
using
a
specific
chemical
compound
companies
like
Monsanto
make.
Farmers
buying
seeds
illegally
won't
get
the
compound
to
"turn
on"
the
resistant
gene.
Traitor
technology
thus
creates
a
captive
new
market
for
the
GMO
giants,
and
Traitor
is
cheaper
to
produce
than
Terminator
seeds.
-
-
Combined,
these
two
technologies
give
agribusiness
giants
unprecedented
powers.
"For
the
first
time
in
history,
it
(lets)
three
or
four
private
multinational
seed
companies....dictate
terms
to
world
farmers
for
their
seed."
It's
a
biological
warfare
tool
almost
"too
good
to
believe"
in
the
face
of
open
citizen
opposition
the
industry
and
US
Department
of
Agriculture
(USDA)
aim
to
quash.
-
-
Engdahl
quoted
USDA
spokesman
Willard
Phelps
from
a
June,
1998
interview
saying
the
agency
wanted
Terminator
technology
to
be
"widely
licensed
and
made
expeditiously
available
to
many
seed
companies."
Hidden
was
the
reason
why
- to
introduce
these
seeds
to
the
developing
world
as
the
prime
Rockefeller
Foundation
strategy.
Engdahl
called
it a
"Trojan
Horse
for
Western
GMO
seed
giants
to
get
control
over
Third
World
food
supplies
in
areas
with
weak
or
non-existent
patent
laws."
It
became
an
urgent
Foundation
priority
to
spread
the
seeds
worldwide
to
irreversibly
capture
world
markets.
USDA
fully
backed
the
scheme.
-
-
That
kind
of
muscle
(along
with
WTO
rules)
is
overwhelming.
It's
the
tactic
used
when
the
US
departments
of
state
and
agriculture
coordinate
famine
relief
using
genetically
engineered
US
surplus
commodities.
Farmers
getting
GMO
seeds
aren't
told
what
they
are,
they
plant
them
unwittingly
for
the
next
harvest,
get
hooked,
and
the
proliferation
isn't
restricted
to
Africa.
Through
coercion,
bribery
and
other
illegal
tactics,
the
industry's
goal
is
to
introduce
them
everywhere
but
especially
in
highly
indebted
developing
states.
In
the
case
of
Poland,
it
was
in a
country
with
some
of
the
richest
European
soil
that's
now
spoiled
by
genetic
contamination.
-
-
Consider
how
the
scheme
ties
in
with
Rockefeller
Foundation
population
control
strategy.
In
2001,
it
was
aided
when
the
privately-owned
biotech
company,
Epicyte,
announced
it
successfully
developed
the
"ultimate
GMO
crop"
-
contraceptive
corn.
It
was
called
a
solution
to
world
"over-population,"
but
news
about
it
vanished
after
Biolex
acquired
the
company.
-
-
One
way
or
other,
the
Rockefeller
Foundation
aims
to
reduce
population
through
human
reproduction
by
spreading
GMO
seeds.
It's
doing
it
cooperatively
with
the
UN
World
Health
Organization
(WHO)
by
quietly
funding
its
"reproductive
health"
program
through
the
use
of
an
innovative
tetanus
vaccine.
Combined
with
hCG
natural
hormones,
it's
an
abortion
agent
preventing
pregnancies,
but
women
getting
it
aren't
told.
Neither
is
anything
said
about
the
Pentagon
viewing
population
reduction
as a
sophisticated
form
of
"biological
warfare"
(to)
solve
world
hunger."
-
-
Avian
Flu
Panic
and
GMO
Chickens
-
-
In
2005,
George
Bush
duped
the
public
into
believing
a
so-called
Avian
(bird
flu)
epidemic
threatened
a
pandemic
if
not
addressed.
The
solution
as
always
is
turn
to
the
private
sector
and
reward
his
friends.
In
this
case,
he
asked
Congress
to
appropriate
an
emergency
$1
billion
taxpayer
dollars
for
a
drug
Tamiflu.
Unmentioned
was
a
key
fact.
It
was
developed
and
patented
by
Gilead
Science
and,
that
prior
to
becoming
Defense
Secretary,
Donald
Rumsfeld
was
its
chairman
and
still
a
major
stockholder.
-
-
The
scare
combined
with
government
funding
and
a
rising
stock
price
stood
to
make
him
a
fortune
just
as
Dick
Cheney
profited
as
Vice-President
from
his
Halliburton
ties.
Engdahl
asked:
"Was
the
avian
flu
scare
another
Pentagon
hoax"
with
an
unknown
aim?
Based
on
known
and
suppressed
past
government
actions,
"a
supposedly
deadly"
new
flu
strain
"had
to
be
treated
with
more
than
a
little
suspicion."
-
-
It
was
being
used
to
advance
global
agribusiness
and
poultry
factory
farm
interests
"along
the
model
of
Arkansas-based
Tyson
Foods."
Consider
the
facts.
Factory
farms
are
breeding
grounds
for
potential
disease
proliferation
because
of
their
cramped,
overcrowded
conditions,
but
this
was
never
mentioned
as a
threat.
Instead,
small
family-run
free-ranging
chicken
farmers
were
cited
as
culprits,
especially
in
Asia,
when,
in
fact,
that
notion
is
at
least
very
unlikely.
-
-
Small
farms
like
these
are
the
safest,
but
an
industry-government
propaganda
campaign
claimed
otherwise.
The
scheme
is
clear.
Five
multinational
giants
dominate
US
chicken
meat
production
and
processing
-
Tyson
(the
largest),
Gold
Kist,
Pilgrim's
Pride,
ConAgra
Poultry
and
Perdue
Farms.
They
produce
chicken
meat
under
"atrocious
health
and
safety
conditions."
According
to
the
GAO,
these
plants
had
"one
of
the
highest
rates
of
injury
and
illness
of
any
industry."
-
-
Cited
was
exposure
to
"dangerous
chemicals,
blood,
fecal
matter,
exacerbated
by
poor
ventilation
and
often
extreme
temperatures....(In
addition,
chickens
are
tightly
cramped
and)
prevented
from
moving
or
getting
any
exercise
on
factory
farms
(so
they
can)
grow....much
larger
(and
faster)
than
ever
before."
Growth
boosters
are
also
used,
they
create
health
problems,
and
growing
numbers
of
animal
experts
believe
these
farms,
not
small
Asian
ones,
are
the
real
source
of
dangerous
new
diseases
like
avian
flu.
That
information
is
suppressed
in
the
mainstream
so
the
public
is
duped.
-
-
It's
so
chicken
processing
giants
can
globalize
world
production
with
the
avian
flu
scare
"gift
from
heaven"
to
help
them.
If
small
Asian
chicken
farmers
can
be
squeezed
out,
Tyson
and
the
others
can
access
the
huge
Asian
poultry
market.
That's
their
aim
and
removing
competition
their
method
with
help
from
friends
in
high
places.
-
-
Creating
the
first
GMO
animal
population
is
also
part
of
the
scheme
with
the
prospect
of
transforming
world
chickens
into
GMO
birds.
Engdahl
put
it
this
way:
"By
2006,
riding
the
fear
of
an
avian
flu
human
epidemic,
the
GMO
or
Gene
Revolution
players
were
clearly
aiming
to
conquer
the
world's
most
important
source
of
meat
protein,
poultry."
But
another
scheme
to
dominate
world
food
production
also
lay
ahead.
"Terminator
was
about
to
come
into
the
control
of
the
world's
largest
GMO
agribusiness
seed
giant."
-
-
Genetic
Armageddon:
Terminator
and
Patents
on
Pigs
-
-
In
2007,
Monsanto
acquired
Delta
&
Pine
Land
(D&PL)to
complete
its
aborted
1999
takeover
attempt.
D&PL
had
global
Terminator
patent
rights
and
successfully
extended
them
on
GURTs.
The
deal
made
Monsanto
"the
overwhelming
monopolist
of
agricultural
seeds
of
nearly
every
variety"
that
includes
fruits
and
vegetables
from
the
company's
acquisition
of
Seminis
a
year
earlier.
With
that
company,
Monsanto
is
now
first
in
vegetables
and
fruits,
second
in
agronomic
crops,
and
the
world's
third
largest
agrochemical
company.
With
D&PL,
the
company
has
absolute
control
over
the
majority
of
plant
agricultural
seeds
as
well.
In
addition,
they're
getting
into
the
genetic
engineering
and
patenting
of
animal
seeds.
-
-
In
2005,
Monsanto
applied
to
the
WTO
for
international
patent
rights
for
its
claimed
genetic
engineering
of a
means
to
identify
pig
genes
derived
from
patented
male
swine
semen.
The
company
also
wants
patents
and
the
right
to
collect
license
fees
for
particular
farm
animals
and
livestock
herds.
If
granted,
"Any
pigs
that
would
be
produced
using
this
reproductive
technique
would
be
covered
by
these
patents."
Several
techniques
are
being
used
and
patented
as
fast
as
GMO
lawyers
can
submit
applications
to
lock
up
animal
life
as
intellectual
property.
-
-
Companies
like
Monsanto
and
Cargill
have
invested
huge
amounts
to
genetically
modify
animals
for
profit.
They
thus
want
patent
and
licensing
rights
to
the
results
even
though
this
represents
a
controversial
goal
to
patent
life
itself.
A
1980
Supreme
Court
decision
in
Diamond
v.
Chakrabarty,
however,
gave
them
an
opening
by
ruling
"anything
under
the
sun
that
is
made
by
man"
is
patentable.
It
paved
the
way
for
a
landmark
patent
of
the
"Harvard
mouse"
that
was
genetically
engineered
to
be
susceptible
to
cancer.
-
-
Engdahl
explained
how
four
agribusiness
giants
used
"stealth,
system,
and
a
well-supported
campaign
of
lies
and
distortion"
to
progress
toward
Henry
Kissinger's
ultimate
goal
-
controlling
oil
to
control
nations
and
food
to
control
people.
The
pursuit
of
both
are
ongoing
with
little
public
knowledge
of
how
far
advanced
things
are
and
how
reckless
the
scheme
is -
to
genetically
engineer
all
plants
and
life
forms
and
to
control
world
population
by
culling
its
"unwanted"
parts.
-
-
Afterward
-
-
A
September,
2006
WTO
tribunal
ruled
for
the
US
and
against
the
EU.
In
so
doing,
it
threatens
to
open
this
important
agricultural
region
to
the
"forced
introduction
(of)
genetically-manipulated
plants
and
food
products."
It
recommended
the
WTO
Dispute
Settlement
Body
(DSB)
require
the
EU
to
conform
with
its
obligations
under
WTO's
SPS
Agreement
that
lets
agribusiness
ignore
national
laws
and
rights
to
protect
public
health
and
safety.
Failure
to
comply
can
cost
EU
countries
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars
in
annual
fines,
so
this
issue
is
crucial
to
both
sides.
-
-
At
the
time
of
Engdahl's
writing,
it
was
unclear
if
the
"GMO
juggernaut
would
be
stopped
globally."
It's
still
uncertain,
but
as
of
December,
only
nine
biotech
products
are
authorized
for
sale
in
the
EU.
So
far,
most
US
corn
exports
are
blocked
and
trade
in
other
products
is
hindered
in
spite
of
dozens
of
applications
pending
in
the
pipeline
with
their
fate
undecided.
-
-
Several
EU
countries,
including
France,
Germany,
Austria
and
Denmark,
even
ban
some
EU-approved
biotech
products
to
further
cloud
the
outlook.
Polls
show
why
with
European
public
opinion
strongly
opposed
to
GMO
foods
and
ingredients
with
hostility
levels
in
France
as
high
as
89%
and
79%
wanting
governments
to
ban
them.
This
shows
European
consumers
are
far
ahead
of
Americans
and
much
better
protected
(so
far)
by
their
overall
exclusion
as
well
as
having
labeling
requirements
for
those
allowed
to
be
sold.
That
provision
is
crucial
as
it
empowers
consumers
to
use
or
avoid
eating
these
foods.
If
enough
people
abstain,
food
outlets
won't
carry
them.
-
-
Engdahl
ends
on a
high
note
by
observing
how
vulnerable
GMO
giants
are
to
criticism.
Thrusting
untested
products
down
consumer
throats
is
"grounds
for
organizing
a
global
ban
or
moratorium
on
them"
if
enough
vocal
opposition
can
be
marshaled.
Throughout
his
book,
he
sounds
the
alarm
with
reams
of
carefully
documented
facts
on
the
industry,
its
products
and
goals.
Converting
world
agriculture
to
GMOs,
allowing
agribusiness
free
reign
over
them,
and
combining
that
scheme
with
a
diabolical
population
culling
agenda
adds
up
to
solving
world
hunger
through
genocide
and
endangering
the
rest
of
us
in
the
process.
-
-
So
far,
Washington
and
the
industry
are
on a
roll
toward
controlling
oil
and
food.
Hundreds
of
millions
around
the
world
stand
opposed,
but
it's
unclear
if
that's
enough.
Engdahl's
book
is a
wake-up
call
for
every
friend
of
the
earth
to
understand
issues
this
crucial
can't
be
left
in
the
hands
of
unscrupulous
business
giants
and
their
supportive
friends
in
high
places
everywhere.
The
book
has
reams
of
ammunition
against
them.
It
needs
to
be
thoroughly
read
and
used.
The
stakes
are
much
too
high
-
human
health
and
safety
must
never
be
compromised
for
profit.
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