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A Fake Group Fights for Monsanto's Right to Deceive You

the American Farmers for the Advancement and Conservation of Technology, or Afact, calls itself a "grass-roots organization" that came together to defend their right to use the artificial growth hormone recombinant bovine somatotropin, also known as rBST or rBGH, in their milk production.

What they do not tell you is that Afact is not only an organization of dairy farmers. The group actually has close ties to Monsanto, the makers of rBGH, which is marketed under the brand name Posilac.

Monsanto and a Colorado consultant that lists Monsanto as a client helped to organize Afact. The group has also worked with marketing firm Osborn & Barr, whose founders include a former Monsanto executive.

As a growing number of consumers are choosing to buy milk that does not contain artificial growth hormones, Afact has started a counteroffensive to stop milk labels from being allowed to say they contain "no artificial growth hormone."

Cows treated with Posilac produce about one gallon more per day than untreated cows. Certain farmers want to keep using the hormone to boost their profits, while many consumers wonder about the potential health risks to humans and cows.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has declared that Posilac is safe, but many other countries have refused to approve it.

Sources: New York Times March 9, 2008

Read Dr. Mercola's comments at: http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2008/03/29/a-fake-group-fights-for-monsanto-s-right-to-deceive-you.aspx

Comments

dairydiva
post Apr 9 2008, 09:49 PM



AFACT was not formed by Monsanto and is not a fake grouup. Actual dairy farmers put the group together. Later, when the group got off to a start, Monsanto put some money behind the group. The group initially started because of rbST-free milk labeling issues but has since become a larger organization having many sponsors with Monsanto being one of them. Keep in mind that the group was formed by dairy farmers for dairy farmers, not Monsanto as this article (and others) imply.

lindacollins
post Today, 09:34 PM


Um, hello?!? This paragraph says it all "Cows treated with Posilac produce about one gallon more per day than untreated cows.
Certain farmers want to keep using the hormone to boost their profits, while many consumers wonder about the potential health risks to humans and cows."

Whoever formed the group, not only were they in it for profit, they took money from Monsanto. There are no 'labeling issues'. Either cows were treated with rBGH or not. Just like the pharmaceutical industry, these chemical companies care only for profit, not for the health of their fellow man.

Do you get it?!! What goes in cows goes in us! Prepubescent girls, hormonally imbalanced women, to name but two issues that plague us today, are caused by - in part - the junk that is put in the food we eat, including rBGH. The only reason that Monsanto is divesting itself of it is that they see the writing on the wall.

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