Meg wrote:
In case anyone was wondering - on Wednesday, European Commissioners overturned the European Food Safety Authority's (EFSA) "safe to eat" verdict for three new GM crops -- two varieties of GM maize and one variety of GM potato.
This means the agro-chemical companies can't commercialize these crops in Europe for now. BASF's GM potato was only one European Union vote away from being released commercially.
BASF"s Official website giving the history of the company:
www.corporate.basf.com/en/?id=bTGhHCGcGbcp-eE
You'll notice in their "historical milestones, 1925 - 1944" they mention their merger into IG Farben:
"In 1925, the merger of BASF with five other companies (including Hoechst and Bayer) to form IG Farben is finalized. In late 1925, BASF is absorbed into IG Farben. The new companys headquarters are moved to Frankfurt. The Ludwigshafen and Oppau sites form the main part of the "Upper Rhine works group," one of the four original IG Farben operating units."
So what was I.G. Farben and where did they go?
Farben was Hitler and Hitler was Farben. (Senator Homer T. Bone to Senate Committee on Military Affairs, June 4, 1943.)
"The Farben cartel dated from 1925, when organizing genius Hermann Schmitz (with Wall Street financial assistance) created the super-giant chemical enterprise out of six already giant German chemical companies Badische Anilin, Bayer, Agfa, Hoechst, Weiler-ter-Meer, and Griesheim-Elektron. These companies were merged to become Inter-nationale Gesellschaft Farbenindustrie A.G. or I.G. Farben for short. Twenty years later the same Hermann Schmitz was put on trial at Nuremburg for war crimes committed by the I. G. cartel. Other I. G. Farben directors were placed on trial but the American affiliates of I. G. Farben and the American directors of I. G. itself were quietly forgotten; the truth was buried in the archives."
reformed-theology.org/html/books/wall_street/chapter_02.htm
And what was the most infamous of I.G. Farben products? Zyclone-B:
the gas used in the extermination chambers of the Nazi empire.
"Zyklon-B was a commercial rodenticide and pesticide in common use before World War II. The active lethal ingredient in the product is hydrogen cyanide, which is deadly to warm-blooded animals in very low concentrations, and to insects in considerably higher concentrations. DEGESCH (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Schädlingsbekämpfung mbH / German Vermin Controlling Company), a subsidiary of IG Farben, licensed two German companies for the manufacture and distribution of Zyklon-B: Tesch und Stabenow (Testa) and Heerdt-Lingler (Heli). Zyklon-B was also manufactured in one of its forms in the United States by the American Cyanamid Company under license from the patent holders, I.G. Farben."
Leopards never change their spots.