Something Very Bad Has Happened To
Milk
By Robert Cohen
notmilk@earthlink.net
Something Very Bad Has Happened and
we may never learn the truth from FDA.
I often see the clues, hear the rumors,
and examine the facts long before newspapers get the first inkling of a story. My advice for you today is sell Monsanto stock
short.
Good news for consumers is bad news
for Monsanto.
Very shortly, perhaps in just a few
weeks, cows sent to slaughter will have to be separated into two lines--those treated with the genetically engineered bovine
growth hormone and those not receiving injections of Posilac.
USDA will mandate this because of some
very serious news.
The first rumors came out of the state
of Kentucky
on Monday. Representatives of dairy co-ops have been telling dairy farmers that cows treated with Posilac have been developing
bone cancers. I have received this news from a very good authority, although I am not at liberty to reveal my source. Let's
call him Mr. W.M.
What could be worse? I have a copy
of a letter that Monsanto mailed to its dairy farmer customers on December 19, 2003. On that date, Monsanto shocked farmers
by alerting them to the fact that Posilac would be in limited supply until:
"Conditions and improvements in manufacturing
are made..."
Monsanto is accepting no new customers,
and anticipated their "shortfall" to last for "several months."
I have just learned (another rumor)
that Florida farmers are being warned that Monsanto will
cut back Posilac distribution to 50% or less on or about March 1, 2004.
All of genetic engineering and biotechnology
was based upon the safety of Posilac. We naive Americans have been part of an experiment, and are learning that Posilac may
have compromised the safety of rbST-treated cows and humans who consume hormone-rich body fluids from these cows.
Ex-Surgeon General C. Everett Koop
was hired by Monsanto to tell Americans on February 6, 1994:
"Milk from cows given supplemental
bovine somatotropin is the same as any other milk...Unfortunately, a few fringe groups are using misleading statements and
blatant falsehoods as part of a long-running campaign to scare consumers about a perfectly safe food."
The following day, Monsanto scientist
Bernard Violand submitted a paper to the Journal of Protein Science admitting that Posilac contained many different "freak
amino acids." That paper was stamped "received" by the journal on Thursday, February 10, 1994, and published on July 6, 1994.
Monsanto fixed the errors. FDA now
knows of those mistakes because my whistle broke windows. During the process of developing a new technology to filter out
those freak amino acids, Monsanto never alerted FDA as to the nature of their error. Had they done so, such honesty would
have cost Monsanto over $500 million. Monsanto should have repeated the research because every scientific paper submitted
to FDA was performed on animals with a different formula than the one currently on the market.
Monsanto's actions are criminal. So
are FDA's. We know the perps. Look at your kids. Look at your friends and relatives. They are the victims.
Robert Cohen http://www.notmilk.com > >