
Yes folks it seems that according to Bayer, God hasn’t been dealing with the big issues lately. Instead of answering millions of prayers, stopping wars or ending famines, God has left all the important things to gather dust in the heavenly inbox whilst ensuring Bayer’s unapproved variety of genetically engineered (GE) rice goes forth and multiplies around the world instead.
According to documents submitted to the court by Bayer, last year’s massive contamination of US rice with an unapproved, experimental variety of rice called LL601 was due to ‘acts of God’ or the rice farmers themselves.
Pushing the blame onto the rice farmers is no surprise as the farmers are the ones suing Bayer for millions of dollars of lost income. The price of US rice plummeted last year, immediately following the discovery of the GE contamination in rice exported to Europe and Japan, where consumer resistance to Bayer’s less-than-divine intervention in their food is strong.
The LL601 rice was originally grown as an experimental field trial all the way back in 1999-2001. The trial ended with no approval for growing the strain commercially.
That should have been the end of LL601 for good. But five years later, testing of US rice imports across Europe and Japan showed the experimental LL601 very much alive and contaminating.
“Bayer is aggressively pursuing commercial approvals for its GE rice globally, including in Europe and Brazil, yet refuses to accept responsibility for the major financial damage its unauthorised GE rice has caused in the US and elsewhere.”
“Indeed, Bayer is blaming hardworking farmers or ‘acts of God’ for these problems when all signs point to Bayer being at fault,” said Adam Levitt, a partner in the law firm of Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz – one of the law firms leading the prosecution of these cases against Bayer.
Shifting the blame isn’t new for big business trying to avoid responsibility for their mistakes. But God as scapegoat? That’s probably a new low in the GE industry’s pursuit of the almighty dollar.
Source: Greenpeace
Isn’t it amazing what money allows one to do. I’m sorry but right,ethical, compassionate, etc. is irrelevant in this world. Might and money are power, and only power decides.
Is this where genetic modification is heading?
This is a highly typical response of large profitable companies in the sense of it’s audacity. It is amazing that such a large proportion of the international society allows genetic modification biotechnology to be pursued. I don’t see the sensibility in experimenting with a commodity as valuable as food. Why try to fix something that isn’t broken in the first place and then break it in the process of doing so.
Kev
Good blog too!, interesting!
I’m Rodrigo Serrate, thanks for your comment!….
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latevelision.blogspot.com
What arrogance to blame the farmers and God for Bayer’s deliberate misdeeds!
GREAT POST!
Bayer is the company that produced Zyklon B during the second world war. Wonder if they blamed the 6 million deaths on god that time as well?
As Alex said, if you’ve got the money, a bit of genocide and genetic pollution are absolutely fine.
looking for bayer for 20 kggold dust