USDA Admits Exterminating Birds, Crops, and Bees
The
USDA has been under fire recently for its admitted assault against
nature, after multiple investigations have uncovered its deliberate
tampering with both plants and animals alike. One such investigation has
put an end to the mystery surrounding the death of millions of birds,
with USDA documents revealing the organization’s role in the massive
slaughter. In addition to the mass bird killings, it turns out the USDA
was fully aware that a highly-popular herbicide chemical was a known
bee-killer, which may have aided the bee decline. The USDA has also
threatened the genetic integrity of the nation’s crops. Information has
surfaced regarding the USDA’s illegal approval of Monsanto’s biotech
crop, sugar beets. These crimes are simply an excerpt from the long list
of USDA crimes that are continually being exposed.
In
December of 2010, mystery struck the world. Reports of mass fish and
bird die-offs were coming in from Texas to Sweden. The first occurrence
in the series of strange events started in Arkansas, where 3,000 birds
fell from the sky. In the following days and weeks, similar incidents
were reported with no solid explanation. The reason has now been found,
thanks to documents found on the USDA’s website.
Claiming to be protecting farmers from predators, the birds were
victims of a little-known government program. Like millions of other
animals since the Bye Bye Blackbird program was created in the 1960?s,
the birds were poisoned and killed for being considered a nuisance to
farmers. It is important to take note that many of these animals don’t
pose any immediate threat to farmers.
In the 1960?s the USDA established a program referred to as the Bye Bye Blackbird program.
This program is solely responsible for the mass killings of what could
ultimately be millions of birds across the nation. In 2009 alone the
USDA poisoned and killed over 4 million birds. The documents state
whether or not the deaths were intentional or unintentional on the
government website. You can find extremely large numbers, such as 22,276
blackbirds marked as intentionally euthanized. Here is some data from
the USDA itself:
Brown-headed cowbirds: 1,046,109
European Starlings: 1,259,714
Red-winged blackbirds: 965,889
Canadian Geese : 24,519
Pigeons: 96,297
Grackles: 93,210
Starlings European: 1,259,714
These
numbers are simply the top for 2009. Let us not forget about all the
other years animals have been killed since the 1960?s when the program
was first created.
According to Natural News :
A
Nebraska farmer was apparently complaining that the starlings were
defecating in his feed meal. The answer to this conundrum apparently
isn’t to cover your feed meal but rather call the USDA and ask them to poison thousands of birds. The
USDA complied, apparently agreeing this was a brilliant idea. So they
put out a poison called DRC-1339 and allowed thousands of birds to feed
on that poison.
“Cows
are supposed to eat grass. If you are running a cow operation where the
birds are eating your grain and you think the birds are the problem,
the real problem is that you’re feeding cows the wrong food! If you
raise your cows on grass, the birds don’t get into the grain and you
don’t have to poison the birds.
“You
see, when one ecological element gets out of balance (feeding grain to
cows, for example), it then causes another problem that must be dealt
with in some other destructive way (such as poisoning the birds). This
cycle of disharmony continues and escalates until entire ecosystems are
out of whack. Then the USDA shows up with a pickup truck full of poison
bait and goes to work poisoning animals. The solution isn’t to keep
poisoning animals and trying to control populations through toxic
chemicals but rather to return to holistic web-of-life farming methods that work in harmony with nature rather than treating nature as the enemy."
The
government is committing what many people would call a crime. Killing
mass amounts of animals via poison is a flagrant act of violence against
nature that should not be tolerated or encouraged. People aren’t
allowed to hunt in certain regions of the United States, but the
government is allowed to kill off animals by the millions. Something is
terribly wrong with this picture.
In
recent years the world honey bee population has plummeted in North
America. This is important because bee pollination is crucial for the
fertilization of many crops. Just as many potential explanations arose
over the mysterious bird deaths, many different theories have been
proposed to explain the bee decline. Electromagnetic radiation,
malnutrition, and climate have all taken the heat of critics looking for
answers. Recently, however, a document was leaked revealing that a
bee-killing pesticide put in use by the EPA may be to blame. Adding to
the controversy, more records have emerged showing that the USDA was
fully aware of the pesticide's threat to not only bees, but humans. The
two-month-old report released by the USDA itself unveiled that the toxic
insecticide used on plants are not only a threat to insects’ central
nervous systems, but are also a threat to the internal systems of
humans.
Imidacloprid,
one of the neonicotinoid family of pesticides introduced over the past
15 years, is likely to be responsible for Colony Collapse Disorder
(CCD), the recently observed phenomenon in which bees abandon their
hives en masse, according to the study by scientists from the Harvard
School of Public Health in the United States.
The
study, to appear in the June issue of The Bulletin of Insectology,
provides "convincing evidence" of the link between imidacloprid and CCD,
claim the authors, led by Alex Lu, associate professor of environmental
exposure biology in the school's Department of Environmental Health. It
follows two other widely publicised studies, from Britain and France,
published last week in the journal Science, which strongly suggested
that neonicotinoids were linked to the declines in bees and other
pollinating insects seen in Europe and the US.
Neonicotinoids,
which attack the central nervous system of insects, are considered by
some scientists as dangerous to species which are not the compounds'
principal targets, because they are "systemic" – meaning they do not
just sit on the surface of a plant but are taken up into every part of
it, including the pollen and nectar, where they can be ingested
repeatedly by bees and other pollinating insects.
Twice
in the past three years, the Government has been asked, on the basis of
compelling evidence, to suspend the use of the new generation of
neonicotinoid pesticides, until the increasingly worrying evidence that
they are extremely harmful to bees and other pollinating insects has
been shown to be unfounded.
The
first occasion was in 2009, by a coalition of environmental groups led
by Buglife, the invertebrate conservation charity; the second was in
2011 by the Labour MP Martin Caton, after paper's disclosure that
America's leading bee scientist had found a harmful link. On each
occasion the request was ignored by the Department for Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs.
Sugar
Beets created by corporate giant Monsanto Company, who is leading the
genetically modified food market, make up for about half of the nation's
sugar supply. The approval of these beets was initially made in 2005,
granting Monsanto the right to plant genetically modified sugar beets
that could withstand sprayings of the herbicide marketed as Roundup.
The entity responsible for the approval? The USDA. Unfortunately, the
USDA hadn’t conducted a thorough review of the biotech crop, making the
approval flagrantly illegal. To make matters more complicated, the USDA
issued permits which allowed companies to plant seedlings that would
later produce seed for future sugar beet crops. Judge White, the federal
judge who deemed the approval illegal, issued that the seedlings be
removed immediately. The immunity that the sugar beets possess against
the herbicide being used on them is not exhibited by any other plant, or
even humans. With excessive herbicide use comes more poisoned organisms
consuming the sugar beets and thus becoming sickly. Additionally,
conventional and organic crops are subject to contamination from an
overflow of pesticides.
If
you thought Monsanto’s lack of testing on their current GMO crops was
bad before, prepare to now be blown away by the latest statement by the
USDA. Despite links to organ damage and mutated insects, the USDA says
that it is changing the rules so that genetically modified seed
companies like Monsanto will get ‘speedier regulatory reviews. With the
faster reviews, there will be even less time spent on evaluating the potential dangers. Why? Because Monsanto is losing sales with longer approval terms.
The changes were expected to take full effect in March when they’re published in the Federal Register. The USDA’s goal is to cut the approval time for GMO crops in half in order to speedily implement them into the global food supply. The current USDA process takes longer than they would like due to ‘public interest, legal challenges, and the challenges associated with the advent of national organic food standards‘ says USDA deputy administrator Michael Gregoire.
This
is just a small fragment taken from a list of . The USDA seems to be
recklessly endangering life on this planet with its disregard for what
it was created to protect. The reports and documents revealed in this
article may very well be the tip of the iceberg. The recently-released document unveiling the bee decline is two years old, and is most likely not the
last to be uncovered. It is only a matter of time before more secretive
documents come out highlighting the USDA’s shameless lack of respect
for life. The USDA has not been forced to openly admit to these claims
due to a lack of mainstream media attention. It took investigative
journalism to discover these documents and it will take future
investigation to oust even more of the USDA’s corruption.
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