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by ROBERT COHEN
You will soon be reading a remarkable headline. The genetically engineered
bovine growth hormone is dead.
Posilac, a/k/a rbGH, rbST, cow-fuel, milk-poison, will soon cease to exist.
What did this cost me? Ten years of my life, and it was worth it. The ten
potentially highest earning years of one man's life, from ages 42-52, all
sacrificed for a principle. Like a pit bull, I grabbed onto Monsanto's leg and
would not leg go.
A tough decision awaits executives at the upper echelons of Monsanto. A decision
is being debated in corporate corridors. They cannot afford to take Posilac off
of the market, for that would be the end of their genetic engineering
technology.
On the other hand, they cannot afford to keep Posilac on the market, for the
entire dairy industry has woken up to this fact of economic reality: the
genetically engineered bovine growth hormone was bad for business.
Surplus milk resulting from this hormone kept milk prices low.
Adverse publicity from the bovine growth hormone caused people to question all
milk consumption.
Adverse publicity from the bovine growth horomone caused people to explore milk
alternatives, like soymilk.
Adverse publicity from the bovine growth hormone created the "Notmilkman,"
the dairy industry's worst nightmare.
Before his death, my webmaster, Dave Rietz, often used a favorite expression.
"Every avalanche begins with a snowflake." At first, Dave and I each
represented one snowflake. Then we grew into two large snowballs. We rolled down
a hill, all the while gaining momentum and mass. Some avalanche! Dave will enjoy
today's column.
Four months ago (Sunday, December 21, 2003), I filed a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
One day earlier, I had received a copy of a letter alerting dairy farmers that
Monsanto's genetically engineered bovine growth hormone (rbST) would be in short
supply. Monsanto wrote:
"Supplies of Posilac bovine somatotropin (rbST) are temporarily limited
while necessary corrections and improvements in manufacturing are made by
Monsanto's supplier."
I smelled something rotten in Monsanto-land.
That next day, I called many people at FDA, attempting to get the facts. Nobody
was talking.
In 1999, I had filed a citizen's petition with FDA to take Posilac off the
market. I submitted evidence of how Monsanto defrauded FDA. It took FDA five
years to act. They closed Monsanto's Posilac factory a few months ago.
Monsanto lied to dairy farmers, calling it a "temporary production
problem."
Monsanto had created a potential catastrophe for humankind. I give FDA credit
for finally acting.
I discovered that Monsanto had made a gene transcription error during the
development of their new genetic technology.
Proteins are made up of amino acids.
Each time that Monsanto attempted to re-create their new hormone, one amino
acid, lysine, was incorrectly transcribed as a "freak" amino acid,
epsilon-N-acetyllysine.
For nearly five years, FDA ignored my request.
Then, things became interesting. Monsanto mailed a letter to Posilac-using dairy
farmers on December 19, 2003. Monsanto shocked farmers by alerting them that
Posilac would be in limited supply until:
"Conditions and improvements in manufacturing are made..."
Monsanto accepted no new customers, and anticipated their "shortfall"
to last for "several months."
Monsanto attempted to fix the errors. They have not been successful. FDA now
knows of those mistakes because my whistleblowing broke windows.
What became the snowflake to make the snowball to begin the avalanche?
On Wednesday, February 4, 2004, I received the damning evidence that confirmed
Monsanto's crime against humankind.
Thirty hours of non-stop research and confirmation later supported the magnitude
of Monsanto's crime.
In a column written before last Christmas, I predicted:
"Mark down this date, 12/19/03. This may very well be the defining moment
that ends the use of genetically engineered foods in America's food."
On January 30, 2004, I received a warning that represented a threat to my well
being. I wrote a column the next day, responding to that threat:
"I have been threatened, and my enemies can go to hell. They will read
this, and know that there will be many witnesses to any future coincidences.
You, my readers, are an insurance policy that may or may not have matured to its
full term...I will not turn my back on the children. So, I continue my course.
Full speed ahead."
Four days after writing and posting that column, I received an envelope from FDA
confirming my worst fears. My FOIA request. Truth, at last. The entire request
cost me $18.30. This revelation shall cost Monsanto and its stockholders
considerably more.
The most damning evidence was found in observation number 1, filed by an FDA
investigator after inspecting Monsanto's rebombinant bovine somatotropin (rbST
or Posilac) production facility at Biochemisetrasse 10, Kundl, Austria.
OBSERVATION 1
"There is a failure to thoroughly review the failure of a batch or any of
its components to meet any of its specifications whether or not the batch has
been thoroughly distributed."
"Specifically, the corrective actions implemented after the investigation
of nine sterility failures reported since 2001 (3 for 2001, 3 for 2002, and 3
for 2003) for Posilac injection or for the lyophilized active ingredient (Sometribove
zinc) have not been effective in preventing reoccurrence.
"In five instances (2 for 2001, 1 for 2002, and 2 for 2003) the organism
was identified as Propionibacterium acnes; Staphylococcus species have been
identified in three instances and in one instance (in 2002) Bacillus pumilus was
found. Propionibacterium was found in environmental samples of the manufacturing
areas. Batches manufactured around the same period of time and under the same
conditions of the affected lots have been released to the market."
OBSERVATION 2
"Equipment for adequate control over micro-organisms is not provided when
appropriate for the manufacture, processing, packing or holding of a drug
product."
As Jeff Goldbloom said to Geena Davis in the classic horror film, The Fly
(1986): "Be scared, be very scared." The first attempt to produce a
new food by pretending to understand God's genetic code resulted in a new kind
of milk, supersaturated with powerful growth hormones. FDA lied to America,
claiming that milk had not changed. That was the beginning.
With this last FOIA request, we learned the answer to the query, "What hath
God wrought?"
Humankind will now be asking, "What hath man wrought?"
It has been well reported that a new emerging species of bacteria has developed,
immune to antibiotic treatment.
Staphylococcus aureus plagues many American hospitals in this new outbreak.
Could the etiology of the mother of all deadly staph infections be traced to a
new genetically engineered version of staph, a superbug inadvertently produced
by Monsanto and then introduced into the food supply?
In 1989, such staphyloccus infections were unknown to hospitals. By 2002, nearly
two-thirds of all hospital infections could be attributed to
antibiotic-resistant staphlococcus infections.
A second bacterium on FDA's (once) secret report reveals that Posilac samples
were found to contain bacillus pumilus. This bacterium degrades cellulose.
What would be the result of genetically engineering something that breaks down
the heartiest of plant cells with a cow hormone? As my dear departed Grandma
Ruth used to say, "God only knows."
A third bacterium found was identified as propionibacterium acnes (P-acnes).
What the heck is P-acnes? An Internet search revealed:
"P. acnes is the causative agent of acne vulgaris (pimples)... Other
infections for which P. acnes has been implicated include corneal ulcers, heart
valves and prosthetic devices, and central nervous system shunts. A rare heart
disease known as Propionibacterium acnes endocarditis has been discovered in a
prosthetic valve infected with P. acnes. The valve was also complicated by
multiple mycotic aneurysms."
The world works in funny ways, but there is always balance. Monsanto's hormone
will soon be off the market. FDA will allow Monsanto to withdraw their drug with
corporate dignity. Posilac will soon take its own life and cease to exist.
Farmers will produce less milk. The price of milk and dairy commodities will
soar, as they have been doing since the first Posilac shortage began.
Cows will be less stressed as their udders shrink because they are no longer
injected with high octane hormone fuel. The pus cell rates will mysteriously
decrease.
Farmers will be given credit for producing safer and cleaner milk.
And I? I'll be pointing my finger (guess which one) at the dairy industry,
shouting: "It's hormones, stupid!"
All milk naturally contains powerful growth hormones. Even the healthiest
organic milk from the healthiest cow.
Thank you, Monsanto, for teaching me the basics.
Ellen White warned about the evils of Monsanto, long before the company existed:
"So long as we are in the world, we shall meet with adverse influences. Day
by day and year by year we shall conquer self, and grow into a noble heroism.
(Ministry of Healing, p. 487)
Robert Cohen Website: http://www.notmilk.com
Robert Cohen Email (notmilk@earthlink.net)
http://www.conspiracyplanet.com/channel.cfm?channelid=123&contentid=1254