Corporate Interests Drive U.S. Imperial Overreach on Mexico’s GM Corn Ban
The U.S. is bullying Mexico into accepting our GM corn on behalf of Big Ag monopolies, paralleling the circumstances that led to American independence.
The U.S. is bullying Mexico into accepting our GM corn on behalf of Big Ag monopolies, paralleling the circumstances that led to American independence.
Hundreds gathered at the Food Not Feed Summit with a shared goal of establishing an agenda to shift federal farm programs toward food for people, not just feed for corporate-controlled livestock.
Egg companies’ profits are skyrocketing as they blame avian flu and inflation for their price hikes. Let’s call this what it is: price gouging.
We’re thrilled about the opportunities that lie ahead to reform our food and farm system to work better for farmers, consumers, and food system workers.
The USDA failed our farmers by forgoing an opportunity to help them transition to non-GM corn production with a strong market in sight. Instead, the USDA propped up agrochemical and seed corporations.
Meatpackers pay a pittance in settlements compared to the record profits they make off these pricing schemes. There must be serious consequences for corporations that get rich by cheating consumers.
Corporations use misleading labels to sell generic products, deceiving customers into paying a premium for products that don’t actually align with their values.
Commodity groups and agrochemical companies deceive farmers into acting against their own best interest by centering the public conversation around yields instead of profits.
The United States is growing less and less of its own food and is becoming increasingly dependent on foreign countries to feed itself as a result.
We’re wary of Walmart’s investment in Sustainable Beef, an independent beef processor. Walmart’s goal is to gain more profit and power at the expense of everyone else.