Gates Unhinged: Dystopian Vision for the Future of Food

Guest Post by Colin Todhunter

Why Bill Gates is now the US' biggest farmland owner

We are currently seeing an acceleration of the corporate consolidation of the entire global agrifood chain. The high-tech/data conglomerates, including Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and Google, have joined traditional agribusiness giants, such as Corteva, Bayer, Cargill and Syngenta, in a quest to impose a certain type of agriculture and food production on the world.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is also involved (documented in the recent report ‘Gates to a Global Empire‘ by Navdanya International), whether through buying up huge tracts of farmland, promoting a much-heralded (but failed) ‘green revolution’ for Africa, pushing biosynthetic food and new genetic engineering technologies or more generally facilitating the aims of the mega agrifood corporations.

Of course, those involved in this portray what they are doing as some kind of humanitarian endeavour – saving the planet with ‘climate-friendly solutions’, helping farmers or feeding the world. This is how many of them probably do genuinely regard their role inside their corporate echo chamber. But what they are really doing is repackaging the dispossessive strategies of imperialism as ‘feeding the world’.

Failed Green Revolution

Since the Green Revolution, US agribusiness and financial institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have sought to hook farmers and nation states on corporate seeds and proprietary inputs as well as loans to construct the type of agri infrastructure that chemical-intensive farming requires.

Monsanto-Bayer and other agribusiness concerns have since the 1990s been attempting to further consolidate their grip on global agriculture and farmers’ corporate dependency with the rollout of genetically engineered seeds, commonly known as GMOs (genetically modified organisms).

In her latest report, ‘Reclaim the Seed’, Vandana Shiva says:

In the 1980s, the chemical corporations started to look at genetic engineering and patenting of seed as new sources of super profits. They took farmers varieties from the public gene banks, tinkered with the seed through conventional breeding or genetic engineering, and took patents.”

Shiva talks about the Green Revolution and seed colonialism and the pirating of farmers seeds and knowledge. She says that 768,576 accessions of seeds were taken from farmers in Mexico alone:

…taking the farmers seeds that embodies their creativity and knowledge of breeding. The ‘civilising mission’ of Seed Colonisation is the declaration that farmers are ‘primitive’ and the varieties they have bred are ‘primitive’, ‘inferior’, ‘low yielding’ and have to be ‘substituted’ and ‘replaced’ with superior seeds from a superior race of breeders, so called ‘modern varieties’ and ‘improved varieties’ bred for chemicals.”

It is now clear that the Green Revolution has been a failure in terms of its devastating environmental impacts, the undermining of highly productive traditional low-input agriculture and its sound ecological footing, the displacement of rural populations and the adverse impacts on village communities, nutrition, health and regional food security.

Aside from various studies that have reported on the health impacts of chemical-dependent crops (Dr Rosemary Mason’s many reports on this can be accessed on the academia.edu website), ‘New Histories of the Green Revolution’ (2019) debunks the claim that the Green Revolution boosted productivity; ‘The Violence of the Green Revolution’ (1991) details (among other things) the impact on rural communities; Bhaskar Save’s open letter to Indian officials in 2006 discusses the ecological devastation of the Green Revolution and in a 2019 paper in the Journal of Experimental Biology and Agricultural Sciences, Parvez et al note that native wheat varieties in India have higher nutrition content than the Green Revolution varieties (many such crop varieties were side-lined in favour of corporate seeds that were of lower nutritional value).

These are just a brief selection of peer-reviewed and ‘grey’ literature which detail the adverse impacts of the Green Revolution.

GMO value capture

As for GM crops, often described as Green Revolution 2.0, these too have failed to deliver on the promises made and, like the 1.0 version, have often had devastating consequences.

The arguments for and against GMOs are well documented, but one paper worth noting appeared in the journal Current Science in 2018. Along with PC Kesavan, MS Swaminathan – regarded as the father of the Green Revolution in India – argued against introducing GM crops to India and cited various studies about the failings of the GMO project.

Regardless, the industry and its well-funded lobbyists and bought career scientists continue to spin the line that GM crops are a marvellous success and that the world needs even more of them to avoid a global food shortage. GM crops are required to feed the world is a well-worn industry slogan trotted out at every available opportunity. Just like the claim of GM crops being a tremendous success, this too is based on a myth.

There is no global shortage of food. Even under any plausible future population scenario, there will be no shortage as evidenced by scientist Dr Jonathan Latham in his recent paper ‘The Myth of a Food Crisis’.

However, new gene drive and gene editing techniques have now been developed and the industry is seeking the unregulated commercial release of products that are based on these methods.

It does not want plants, animals and micro-organisms created with gene-editing to be subject to safety checks, monitoring or consumer labelling. This is concerning given the real dangers that these techniques pose.

Many peer-reviewed research papers now call into question industry claims about the ‘precision’, safety and benefits of gene-edited organisms and can be accessed on the GMWatch.org website.

It really is a case of old wine in new bottles.

And this is not lost on a coalition of 162 civil society, farmers and business organisations which has called on Vice-President of the European Commission Frans Timmermans to ensure that new genetic engineering techniques continue to be regulated in accordance with existing EU GMO standards.

The coalition argues that these new techniques can cause a range of unwanted genetic modifications that can result in the production of novel toxins or allergens or in the transfer of antibiotic resistance genes. The open letter adds that even intended modifications can result in traits which could raise food safety, environmental or animal welfare concerns.

The European Court of Justice ruled in 2018 that organisms obtained with new genetic modification techniques must be regulated under the EU’s existing GMO laws. However, there has been intense lobbying from the agriculture biotech industry to weaken the legislation, aided by the Gates Foundation.

The coalition states that various scientific publications show that new techniques of genetic modification allow developers to make significant genetic changes, which can be very different from those that happen in nature.

In addition to these concerns, a new paper from Chinese scientists, ‘Herbicide Resistance: Another Hot Agronomic Trait for Plant Genome Editing’, says that, in spite of claims from GMO promoters that gene editing will be climate-friendly and reduce pesticide use, what we can expect is just more of the same – GM herbicide-tolerant crops and increased herbicide use.

The industry wants its new techniques to be unregulated, thereby making gene-edited GMOs faster to develop, more profitable and hidden from consumers when purchasing items in stores. At the same time, the costly herbicide treadmill will be reinforced for farmers.

None of this is meant to imply that new technology is bad in itself. The issue is who owns and controls the technology and what are the underlying intentions. By dodging regulation as well as avoiding economic, social, environmental and health impact assessments, it is clear that the industry is first and foremost motivated by value capture and profit and contempt for democratic accountability.

This is patently clear if we look at the rollout of Bt cotton in India which served the bottom line of Monsanto but brought dependency, distress and no durable agronomic benefits for many of India’s small and marginal farmers. Prof A P Gutierrez argues that Bt cotton has effectively placed these farmers in a corporate noose.

Monsanto sucked hundreds of millions of dollars in profit from these cotton farmers, while industry-funded scientists are always keen to push the mantra that rolling out Bt cotton in India uplifted their conditions.

Those who promote this narrative remain wilfully ignorant of the challenges (documented in the 2019 book by Andrew Flachs – ‘Cultivating Knowledge: Biotechnology, Sustainability and the Human Cost of Cotton Capitalism in India‘) these farmers face in terms of financial distress, increasing pest resistance, dependency on unregulated seed markets, the eradication of environmental learning, the loss of control over their productive means and the biotech-chemical treadmill they are trapped on (this last point is precisely what the industry intended).

When assessing the possible impacts of GMO agriculture, it was with good reason that, in their 2018 paper, Swaminathan and Kesavan called for:

able economists who are familiar with and will prioritise rural livelihoods and the interests of resource-poor small and marginal farmers rather than serve corporate interests and their profits”.

What can be done?

Whether through all aspects of data control (soil quality, consumer preferences, weather, etc), e-commerce monopolies, corporate land ownership, seed biopiracy and patenting, synthetic food or the eradication of the public sector’s role in ensuring food security and national food sovereignty (as we could see in India with new farm legislation), Bill Gates and his corporate cronies seek to gain full control over the global food system.

Smallholder peasant farming is to be eradicated as the big-tech giants and agribusiness impose lab-grown food, GM seeds, genetically engineered soil microbes, data harvesting tools and drones and other ‘disruptive’ technologies.

We could see farmerless industrial-scale farms being manned by driverless machines, monitored by drones and doused with chemicals to produce commodity crops from patented GM seeds for industrial ‘biomatter’ to be processed and constituted into something resembling food.

The displacement of a food-producing peasantry (and the subsequent destruction of rural communities and local food security) was something the Gates Foundation once called for and cynically termed “land mobility”.

Technocratic meddling has already destroyed or undermined agrarian ecosystems that draw on centuries of traditional knowledge and are increasingly recognised as valid approaches to secure food security, as outlined in Food Security and Traditional Knowledge in India in the Journal of South Asian Studies, for instance.

But is all of this inevitable?

Not according to the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems, which has just released a report in collaboration with the ETC Group: ‘A Long Food Movement: Transforming Food Systems by 2045‘.

The report outlines two different futures. If Gates and the global mega-corporations have their way, we will see the entire food system being controlled by data platforms, private equity firms and e-commerce giants, putting the food security (and livelihoods) of billions at the mercy of AI-controlled farming systems.

The other scenario involves civil society and social movements – grassroots organisations, international NGOs, farmers’ and fishers’ groups, cooperatives and unions – collaborating more closely to transform financial flows, governance structures and food systems from the ground up.

The report’s lead author, Pat Mooney, says that agribusiness has a very simple message: the cascading environmental crisis can be resolved by powerful new genomic and information technologies that can only be developed if governments unleash the entrepreneurial genius, deep pockets and risk-taking spirit of the most powerful corporations.

Mooney notes that we have had similar messages based on emerging technology for decades but the technologies either did not show up or fell flat and the only thing that grew were the corporations.

He says:

In return for trillions of dollars in direct and indirect subsidies, the agribusiness model would centralise food production around a handful of untested technologies that would lead to the forced exodus of at least a billion people from hundreds of millions of farms. Agribusiness is gambling on other people’s food security.”

Although Mooney argues that new genuinely successful alternatives like agroecology are frequently suppressed by the industries they imperil, he states that civil society has a remarkable track record in fighting back, not least in developing healthy and equitable agroecological production systems, building short (community-based) supply chains and restructuring and democratising governance systems.

As stated in the report, the thrust of any ’Long Food Movement’ strategy is that short-termism is not an option: civil society groups need to place multiple objectives and actions on a 25-year roadmap and not make trade-offs along the way – especially when faced with the neoliberal-totalitarianism of Gates et al who will seek to derail anything or anyone regarded as a threat to their aims.

The report ‘A Long Food Movement: Transforming Food Systems by 2045’ can be accessed at here.
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39 Comments
rhs jr
rhs jr
April 24, 2021 7:30 am

The Insouciant Americans will soon be on their knees begging for something to eat because they ignored the Agricultural Government Complex. They ignored the Bible’s warning about building houses Chock-a-Block (Is 5:8) and have no gardens or livestock (UN Agenda 21); they are at the mercy of the Evil Oligarchs (TPTB) who want them dead.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  rhs jr
April 24, 2021 4:32 pm

Gates is a megalomaniac with a messianic complex, married to an ugly man with a similar mental illness. Those two and their ilk believe themselves to be Olympian gods, looking down from their lofty perch while disturbing and destroying the ecological balance in order to fulfil some idealistic notion of how things ‘should’ be.
Arrogant fools like these make things far worse with their meddling and the tragedy is that they have enough wealth available to commit their crimes against humanity and the planet.

ReluctantWarrior
ReluctantWarrior
  Mygirl....maybe
April 25, 2021 11:46 am

Gates is a serial narcissist with a god complex.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  rhs jr
April 25, 2021 1:59 pm

Real jewish farming —

Joshua 24:13 “I have given you a land for which you did not labor, and cities which you did not build, and you dwell in them; you eat of the vineyards and olive groves which you did not plant.

Deut 6:10-11 “So it shall be, when the LORD your God brings you into the land of which He swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to give you large and beautiful cities which you did not build, houses full of all good things, which you did not fill, hewn-out wells which you did not dig, vineyards and olive trees which you did not plant…

TheAssegai
TheAssegai
April 24, 2021 7:49 am

The Ice Age Farmer’s most recent is timely.

Ghost
Ghost
  TheAssegai
April 24, 2021 8:21 am

Our embarassing president wore a mask during the virtual conference. He was the only world leader wearing a mask.

Didn’t Jed Clampett come up with the idea of vacuuming all the polution off of Los Angelas first?

And Spaceballs had MegaMaid to suck all the Oxygen from Planet Druidia!

Don’t plants use CO2?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TheAssegai
April 25, 2021 5:22 pm

I eat way more red meat than that. Way more.

Just Sayin'
Just Sayin'
April 24, 2021 9:36 am

Governments get overthrown when people get hungry. Always.

Just Sayin’

Jay
Jay
  Just Sayin'
April 24, 2021 11:06 am

And typically there are some ropes involved in there somewhere. But the current crop of tyrants are very likely aware of that and have taken precautions accordingly. They plan to make certain that they are hidden from the public at the critical time and that the public is euthanized in order to stop any retribution. The vaccines are a large part of this plan.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Jay
April 24, 2021 12:10 pm

Those that survive must “thank” these tyrants personally when they re-emerge from their safe spaces.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Jay
April 25, 2021 12:23 pm

Bill Gates Pie Face

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Just Sayin'
April 24, 2021 12:08 pm

Not always. Remember the Holodomor ? It was decades after , and they just faded away. No one was executed for their part in starving tens of millions.

Thersites
Thersites
  Anonymous
April 24, 2021 4:50 pm

Mao’s “Great Leap Forward”, also tens of millions starved.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
April 25, 2021 5:23 pm

potato famine was another one.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Just Sayin'
April 24, 2021 1:38 pm

I upvoted you but couldn’t stop thinking about Venezuela; still waiting for the uprising and not holding my breath.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Just Sayin'
April 24, 2021 9:23 pm

Could that be the real reason for the fencing & concertina at Ft. Pelousy?

brian
brian
April 24, 2021 10:41 am

I have relatives who still farm in Saskatchewan.

A few years ago the daughter of the cousin, sitting in the cab of a tractor texting her pappy to pick up a coffee and ham croissant for breakfast. Also texting because shes bored, why?? Because the tractor follows a gps guided track plotted for that field. The computer controls the seed drill, the amount of ammonia squirted into the hole and the speed of the tractor, all for optimal performance for seeding and seed growth. She just sits there monitoring the operation and is the emergency shut off in case something goes awry. Bored.

Why the push for 5G?? To have the bandwidth and range to control all this agri equipment for one, creating and developing the “Internet of all Things”. If big tech controls the food production they can weed out the real farmers and simply hire some smuck to dump seed into a bin, or hook up a tractor to a seeder, drive a combine to a field and push the start program button. Eliminating real farmers with knowledge means no pesky people providing actual nutritious food stuffs and you can keep the populace anemic and dependent on other lucrative industries like say…. pharma.

The other big problems with the GMO is not only the chemical dependencies treadmill is that these gmo crops become invasive. This is one method Monsanto uses to go after farmers and bankrupt them or get them to start buying monsanto seed. They ‘test’ farmers fields for their seed and any gmo plants found is cause for a lawsuit against the farmer.

The other thing is this gmo seed literally infests the travel corridors. Infests because its resistant to roundup and cannot be killed with weed sprays. Then winds carry seed and pollens further into the surrounding farmland conveniently providing monsantos with new customers. rinse and repeat.

https://www.weforum.org/whitepapers/shaping-the-future-of-global-food-systems-a-scenarios-analysis

An interesting site that touches on much of this…

An Open Letter on The Great Reset

Ghost
Ghost
  brian
April 24, 2021 11:03 am

I haven’t been to the farm country in over a year, brian. When I visited the croplands of my youth last year at the onset of the pandemic to visit my mother, I noticed the absence of many of the old homes and the hedgerows which once marked the boundaries of different small farms.

My father’s farm, now my mother’s farm… maybe soon the collective farm is about the only little farm left in the middle of vast fields of beans and corn and a bit of miloh for cattle feed, perhaps. Oh, and a bit further south, toward Sikeston?

Rice fields which are flooded year round. Lovely mosquito country.

brian
brian
  Ghost
April 24, 2021 11:35 am

I hear you. The last time we went out all the fences were gone, as were most of the land marks we once used to navigate by. Family farms replaced by corporate farms. A farm under 10,000 acres is small now, it used to be a couple sections was considered a family farm. Today a couple sections is their back yard.

The family farm used to grow wheat, oats, barley, cattle, hogs etc… today they grow mostly birdseed and lentils every couple years to help replace nitrogen, naturally. The ONLY animals they have now… horses of course, couple dogs and a few barnyard cats. No livestock, they buy all their meats, etc, at Costco in N Battleford.

Ghost
Ghost
  brian
April 24, 2021 12:02 pm

and, did you notice? NO GARDENS.

brian
brian
  Ghost
April 24, 2021 12:19 pm

yes… they buy ALL their ‘food’ from Costco. My aunt had a huge garden and lots of flowers too… all gone now….

Yahsure
Yahsure
  Ghost
April 24, 2021 12:04 pm

There used to be many farms owned by many people. now one megacorp owns millions of acres and it’s one farm.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  brian
April 25, 2021 5:27 pm

Operating a tractor was never the greatest part of farming in any sense.

Yahsure
Yahsure
April 24, 2021 11:59 am

Another way in which people continue the theme of trying to control people. I don’t think it will end well for people who try and enforce this kind of limiting seed availability and people growing their own food.

GMAN
GMAN
April 24, 2021 12:01 pm

Buy non-GMO seeds if you can still get them.
And someone close to Gates needs to bury a knife in his neck for the sake of humanity.

brian
brian
  GMAN
April 24, 2021 12:21 pm

In places its against the ‘law’ to save seed. There used to be farmers who had cleaners and would clean their seed and hold some back for the next planting… monsanto is actively scouring the farmers and taking them to court when they save their own seed.

Ghost
Ghost
  GMAN
April 24, 2021 12:38 pm
ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Ghost
August 22, 2021 10:45 pm
Montefrío
Montefrío
April 24, 2021 1:52 pm

Another terrific post, very educational for me.

Argentina has had some go-rounds with Monsanto and will likely have more. Legal cases against them have been won and upheld.

I’m an advocate of subsidiarity pretty much across the borad: poltically, economically, socially. Growing food on small family farms is in a way an answer to automation-displaced persons. My son’s business–water well drilling–was largely inspired by this vision. Argentina is the eight-largest country in the world landmass-wise, while outside of the three largest cities and their surrounding suburbs is one of the world’s least densely populated nations, falling between Mongolia and Libya the last time I checked. The country is almost entirely within the temperate zone, has aquifers and relatively easily restorable soil in dry areas. It is for all practical purposes self-sufficient with respect to food production and could be far more so if emphasis were placed on doing so. Circumstances could arise that will force that emphasis in the not-too-distant future.

If I were to decide to involve myself in “agitating” for something, it would be the above, but I’m old now and enjoy my serene life, so…

Kate
Kate
  Montefrío
April 24, 2021 2:25 pm

Why not shut your pie hole about it? Some of us want to survive in that area.

brian
brian
  Kate
April 24, 2021 3:26 pm

Not sure why you’d say shut your pie hole… I don’t see anything that would lead to losing survivability there. In fact if its the least populated and in the temperate zone that makes it even more survivable… for everyone.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 24, 2021 2:17 pm

Everything is jobbed out now. One crew does nothing but operate combines from mega estate to mega estate.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  Anonymous
April 24, 2021 4:37 pm

One crew does nothing but operate combines from mega estate to mega estate.<

That's been the case for decades now. Why bother with a combine and trucks when you can pay someone to do the harvest? No matter, around here prime farmland is being covered in shitty subdivisions and strip malls.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Anonymous
April 24, 2021 9:33 pm

In the 60’s many of my friends would get on a harvesting crew and follow the harvest from N TX to the Canadian border before catching the bus home. I was signed up and ready to leave when I got a cushy job mowing rights of way for the county. At the end of the summer, I had saved at least twice as much as the guys who worked 18 hr days on the wheat harvest.

Arizona
Arizona
April 24, 2021 3:12 pm

EVEN AS BIG AS SEATTLE IS,surely some one knows where BILL GATES LIVES and owns a snipper rifle,IF THESE DEVILS are NOT taken down,THEY will destroy america as anyone can see they are doing,ARE YOU CHICKENS planning to eat your children for dinner when the foods gone,because you will be….

Cathbad
Cathbad
April 24, 2021 4:17 pm

Bill Gates is not an expert on anything except eugenics. Like Big Pharma, Big Agriculture is about making you ill. Big Agriculture makes you ill by their applications of poisons called pesticides, herbicides, and un-natural fertilizers to overworked, monocultured soils to grow crops that have very little nutritional value. That’s why this nation has an obesity problem. (GMO foods and McDonald’s for instance.)

But America is in for a rude awakening if we don’t turn this thing around. Bill Gates in now the biggest farmland owner in the US. Do you thing he cares about your health? (Assuming he intends to grow anything or take that farmland out of production FOREVER.)

ReluctantWarrior
ReluctantWarrior
April 25, 2021 11:45 am

What we really need is decentralized food production not more centralization. We need to return to local self-reliance as a way for people to supply nutritious food for themselves. Big Agra-business has failed in that what they seem to be assisting with the most production of is highly processed and toxic foods. Reject this paradigm forthwith and plant your own garden. Local food to table farmers are the wave of the future.

brian
brian
  ReluctantWarrior
April 25, 2021 11:53 am

Local food to table farmers are the wave of the future.

Not so sure I agree with you. People will go for the cheap faux foods, most won’t spend the extra money on real food. Fewer will grow their own gardens and much of the gardening skills have been lost, let alone the preservation of food.

Antidote
Antidote
April 25, 2021 4:42 pm

Gates needs to be terminated.