WAR ON FOOD! Trump Administration Traitors Lobbying for Bayer to Poison our Food with Glyphosate

The Trump Administration's efforts to protect the German company Bayer, which sells the popular herbicide Roundup with toxic, cancer-causing glyphosate, is causing the MAHA (Make America Healthy Again) movement to crumble. Not only did Trump issue an executive order to INCREASE the production of glyphosate, the current U.S. Farm bill is also seeking to give legal immunity to Bayer for harm caused by glyphosate. Many of the members of the MAHA movement are traditionally Democrat mothers, who crossed over and voted for Trump in the last elections based solely on his promise to eliminate this kind of chemical-intensive farming. The head of the MAHA movement, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is also a former liberal Democrat, who was actually one of the attorneys that won a multi-million dollar settlement against Bayer/Monsanto by a California man. One of the leaders of the MAHA movement is Zen Honeycutt, the founder of Moms Across America. She was recently interviewed by Jimmy Dore, where she reported on how most of the glyphosate is currently manufactured in China, and that 80% of American genetically-modified crops that are sprayed with glyphosate are actually exported to Asia as animal feed. Lawmakers in D.C. have stepped forward in the past few days to try to combat Trump's executive order on mandating the U.S. production and use of glyphosate. Congresswoman Chellie Pingree from Maine is targeting the Farm Bill and their attempt to grant Bayer immunity from damages caused by glyphosate. Republican Congressman Thomas Massie also delivered a speech on the floor of the House yesterday, where he first reminded members of Congress that no investigations or prosecutions of those mentioned in the Epstein files have begun yet, even naming names, before addressing the massive amount of lobbying that Bayer does in D.C., including White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi.

US Supreme Court Declines Bayer/Monsanto Bid to Challenge Glyphosate Cancer Rulings

The US Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to hear a bid from Bayer-owned Monsanto that aimed to challenge thousands of lawsuits claiming its weedkiller Roundup causes cancer – a potentially costly ruling, AFP reported Tuesday. The high court did not explain its decision, which left intact a $25 million ruling in favor of a California man who alleged he developed cancer after using the chemical for years. The decision marks a major blow to the German conglomerate’s legal fight against Roundup-related cases, and Bayer has set aside more than $15 billion to deal with a wave of US lawsuits linked to the weedkiller.

Will Supreme Court Let Bayer-Monsanto Off the Hook for Cancer-Causing Glyphosate Herbicide Roundup?

In June of 2020 it was announced that Bayer-Monsanto had reached the "largest settlement in pharma history" by agreeing to pay $10 Billion to settle about 125,000 lawsuits by people who died or came down with cancer from glyphosate poisoning, the main ingredient in Roundup, the world's most heavily used herbicide (weed killer) that is found in most food today. But there is one lawsuit that Bayer has contested, where plaintiff Edwin Hardeman was awarded $80 million in damages due to having non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), a known side effect to too much exposure with glyphosate. The trial court judge reduced his settlement award to $25 million, and Bayer appealed the decision, which was upheld by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. It is now before the U.S. Supreme Court, and U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar has recommended that the Supreme Court deny Bayer's appeal. The stakes are high, as the Supreme Court's ruling could affect all future lawsuits against Bayer-Monsanto, and possibly even past lawsuits. What will the Supreme Court do, and just what are the Wall Street Billionaires and Bankers who largely control the Supreme Court planning behind the scenes in all of this? To rule in favor of Bayer could save investors $billions, and allow the EPA to continue to authorize the use of the world's most deadly herbicide to continue to be sold and used to poison our food supply. If they allow the decision of the Ninth Circuit to stand, how will that affect what the EPA does next regarding approving Roundup for agricultural use? While many people and groups have been calling on a ban of glyphosate-based herbicides, the fact is that if it is banned outright immediately, a very significant percentage of agriculture will no longer be able to produce food, as certain crops, such as corn, are over 90% genetically modified and could not grow without the herbicide Roundup. It would take many years to transition to something else. Whatever the reasons are behind the scenes for what the Supreme Court does, the stakes are high, and the results could be disastrous no matter which way the High Court rules. The best case scenario would be to allow all these lawsuits from people killed or injured by glyphosate to receive their settlements, and to put pressure on the EPA to start phasing out the use of Roundup giving farmers enough time to make the transition, so as to not bring major disruptions to the already fragile food supplies. But in that scenario the people would win, and Wall Street would lose, and that is just not something I see happening much, if at all, in today's judicial system.