I posted on another thread the great comment by Stewart Wells that what we need is a separation of corporation and state. To put some figures to that might highlight the scale of difficulty we face as producers in changing the status quo.
In the US presidential election of 2004 agribusiness companies gave $53 million to the candidates. Between 1998 and 2005 big agribusiness companies spent $800 million on direct lobbying efforts in Washington!In 2006 alone Syngenta spent $4.2 million and Monsanto $3.6 million.
This is in the US but obviously it happens in similar fashion in Canada too. Brian Mulroney is on the board of directors of ADM (Archer Daniels Midland)and this highlights the other part of the corporate equation. Apart from the direct corporate sponsorship of politicians through election donations there is the revolving door effect that sees retiring politicians becoming directors of the large corporations as pay off for their "good service" over their years in politics.
I think this issue is the largest threat to global food security, and to ag producers ability to sc**** a living. When you understand this it is easy to see why the decisions always appear to come down on the side of big business.
In the US presidential election of 2004 agribusiness companies gave $53 million to the candidates. Between 1998 and 2005 big agribusiness companies spent $800 million on direct lobbying efforts in Washington!In 2006 alone Syngenta spent $4.2 million and Monsanto $3.6 million.
This is in the US but obviously it happens in similar fashion in Canada too. Brian Mulroney is on the board of directors of ADM (Archer Daniels Midland)and this highlights the other part of the corporate equation. Apart from the direct corporate sponsorship of politicians through election donations there is the revolving door effect that sees retiring politicians becoming directors of the large corporations as pay off for their "good service" over their years in politics.
I think this issue is the largest threat to global food security, and to ag producers ability to sc**** a living. When you understand this it is easy to see why the decisions always appear to come down on the side of big business.
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