June 23, 2011 - Issue 432 |
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Monsanto’s
Narrative of Warfare
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It the same story: “occupiers” hallucinate and see intruders everywhere. Intruders are a threat to the existence of the occupiers; intruders must be killed. The narrative legitimizing this practice has proven to be lucrative. Killing is big business. A kill culture makes for a profitable enterprise. Kill, kill, kill…for the good of the invaded species. Kill! While the Monsanto’s “aggressive marketing” and sometimes-illegal maneuvering (Haiti Grassroots Watch, May 2011) includes “creating a potential worldwide monopoly by buying up all competitors, bribes, infiltration of farmers' associations through the use of mercenaries and ‘ruthless legal battles’ including lawsuits against farmers.” But did I mention
how profitable it is to kill in a kill culture? What do peasant farmers,
activists, lawyers, and even independent scientists know? Monsanto,
says Monsanto, is a successful business. As the world’s largest seed
company and one of the largest pesticide companies, Monsanto, “dominates
[the world’s] proprietary seed market, a
market worth almost $32 billion in 2010, up 10 percent from
the previous year” ( Monsanto is a god-sent! Who eradicates species that invade other species
better than Monsanto? Its weed killer targets terrorizing species,
violent species, invaders - in the same way the president
of the Monsanto is powerful! It is Homeland
Security for it SAVES and PROTECTS occupiers from intruders.
This is the narrative it offered the residents of It is the ( Collateral damage! The incidental death of neighboring species, including humans from cancer or other illnesses can’t be avoided! “Research also shows that additives like surfactants in glyphosate in herbicides like Roundup are more toxic than glyphosate itself and can increase the toxicity of glyphosate.” “Every time
you hear the term 'invasive species,' think Monsanto,” biologist David
Theodoropoulos said at an environmentalist conference in But Monsanto cannot become part of the military-industrial-complex by arguing that “change and movement are natural.” Ludwig’s report continues:
But Monsanto wants the world to ignore this non-knowledge and to remember that it is a giver of gifts to living things! Monsanto sent
the Earthquake ravished nation a “gift” of “hybrid maize and vegetable
seeds,” some “505 tons of seed” (Haiti Grassroots Watch) to
help in the reconstruction of that country. But how will Monsanto’s
genetically modified weeds reconstruct (Hush, dissent is not welcomed!). Monsanto democratizes
poverty! Our weed killer or modified seeds will make you rich!
Peasant farmers left with high levels of debt, writes Vandana Shiva,
find themselves “deeper in poverty” (Earth Democracy). “Poverty
is revealing itself in farmer suicides and the emergence of hunger for
the first time in independent But the killing and suffering is all legal because “there will be money, and since there will be money, scientific data, Shiva writes, is given to scientists by Monsanto “and they publish it.” Monsanto does not lie - the caring corporation simply tinkers with the statistics - a little, because “informed citizens make free choices” and making free choices - well - that is too much like that other version of democracy. That is not the Monsanto’s story (operating as it does on the bodies of the poor, displaced, and dead) is that its uncompromising stance ensures “better things for better living.” It can and it will continue its good deeds because it is closely aligned with that privileged narrative - the one that promotes killing. Monsanto’s narrative is a narrative of violence, a narrative, of warfare! When you are a kill culture, warfare is big business! BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has a Doctorate in Modern American Literature/Cultural Theory. Click here to contact Dr. Daniels. |
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