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View Full Version : Should Monsanto, or any corporation, have rights to a self-replicating natural product?




sailingaway
04-08-2013, 10:34 PM
(written on February 19)


On Tuesday, attorneys for the largest agrochemical corporation in the world, Monsanto, will present arguments before the Supreme Court asserting the company's rights to the generations of seeds that naturally reproduce from its genetically modified strains. Bowman vs. Monsanto Co. will be decided based on the court's interpretation of a complex web of seed and plant patent law, but the case also reflects something much more basic: Should anyone, or any corporation, control a product of life?

The journey of a 75-year-old Indiana farmer to the highest court in the country began rather uneventfully. Vernon Hugh Bowman purchased an undifferentiated mix of soybean seeds from a grain elevator, planted the seeds and then saved seed from the resulting harvest to replant another crop. Finding that Bowman's crops were largely the progeny of its genetically engineered proprietary soybean seed, Monsanto sued the farmer for patent infringement.

The case is a remarkable reflection on recent fundamental changes in farming. In the 200-plus years since the founding of this country, and for millenniums before that, seeds have been part of the public domain — available for farmers to exchange, save, modify through plant breeding and replant. Through this process, farmers developed a diverse array of plants that could thrive in various geographies, soils, climates and ecosystems. But today this history of seeds is seemingly forgotten in light of a patent system that, since the mid-1980s, has allowed corporations to own products of life.

One of Monsanto's arguments is that when farmers save seed from a crop grown from patented seed and then use that seed for another crop, they are illegally replicating, or "making," Monsanto's proprietary seeds instead of legally "using" the seeds by planting them only one time and purchasing more seeds for each subsequent planting.

This logic is troubling to many who point out that it is the nature of seeds and all living things, whether patented or not, to replicate. Monsanto's claim that it has rights over a self-replicating natural product should raise concern. Seeds, unlike computer chips, for example, are essential to life. If people are denied a computer chip, they don't go hungry. If people are denied seeds, the potential consequences are much more threatening.

Although Monsanto and other agrochemical companies assert that they need the current patent system to invent better seeds, the counterargument is that splicing an already existing gene or other DNA into a plant and thereby transferring a new trait to that plant is not a novel invention. A soybean, for example, has more than 46,000 genes. Properties of these genes are the product of centuries of plant breeding and should not, many argue, become the product of a corporation. Instead, these genes should remain in the public domain.

The seed industry also claims that if patents are made narrower in scope, innovation, such as devising environmentally sustainable ways to farm, would be stifled. However, evidence casts doubt on the prevalent assumption that positive environmental impacts have resulted from their seed technologies.

Take the example of the genetically engineered soybean in question. Its innovative trait is that it is resistant to the herbicide Roundup, whose primary ingredient is glyphosate. However, weeds are developing a rapid resistance to glyphosate.

more: http://articles.latimes.com/2013/feb/19/opinion/la-oe-kimbrell-monsanto-supreme-court-seed-20130219

shane77m
04-09-2013, 06:28 AM
Monsanto should be shut down.
There should be no patents on plants.

GOP
04-09-2013, 06:29 AM
I don't know, but I got a job offer to work at Monsanto in their legal department...

ghengis86
04-09-2013, 06:39 AM
Monsanto is pure evil. Fuck them and their ilk.

Christian Liberty
04-09-2013, 06:44 AM
I don't really believe in patents. I believe in copyright, but not patents.

tod evans
04-09-2013, 07:07 AM
Well shit!

I suppose the black angus cattle I raised back in the 70's should be genetically protected too..

Maybe some kangaroo court will award me billions if I can just trace the DNA of my ol' 4-H bull..

I mean why stop with plants? Let's patent everything with DNA and then sue for royalties...

Acala
04-09-2013, 09:09 AM
So much to not like here.

I think the corporate business form is a mistake.

I think soybeans on their best day are a mistake.

I think GMO food needs to be examined closely, espceially when they have the chance of spreading beyond the control of the owner.

I think any innovation that promotes more use of chemical pesticides and unsustainable monoculture is a mistake.

And I'm still on the fence about intellectual property.

But the good thing about patents, as opposed to copyright, is the much more limited duration. Patents only last twenty years from the date of filing. Copyright lasts a long, LONG time.

Brian4Liberty
04-09-2013, 12:08 PM
When Monsanto finds that an "unauthorized" crop of their GMO plants are growing somewhere, they should be required to purchase the harvest, and give (as a free replacement) to the farmer the best available non-GMO seeds for the next crop. ;)

Christian Liberty
04-09-2013, 12:34 PM
I don't think a "Corporation" should really be a legal entity. If a group of people want to voluntarily contract to pool their resources and they voluntarily contract with a bank or whatever to have their liability limited than I have no problem with that, but matters of criminality and lawsuits should only be recognized as occurring between individuals. This also means that any income taxes that do exist (Not saying I'm in favor of income taxes, although I don't really care exactly what the tax system is as long as nobody is paying more than five or so percent of their income to the government) should only tax individuals directly, corporations should not be taxed and any money pooling that occurs should occur after the (Hopefully limited, if we do tax income and not sales, as I said not sure it really matters) income tax is paid.

Acala
04-09-2013, 12:35 PM
When Monsanto finds that an "unauthorized" crop of their GMO plants are growing somewhere, they should be required to purchase the harvest, and give (as a free replacement) to the farmer the best available non-GMO seeds for the next crop. ;)

If it was caused by rogue GMO pollen, I agree totally. It is a form of contaminating air pollution.

Christian Liberty
04-09-2013, 12:35 PM
This also means no limited liability for tort. Oh, and genetically modifying someone else's crop without paying them for their permission to do so should be outlawed.