Wow -- already over 6,000 of us have donated, and organizers are rushing to Monsanto HQ to support this crucial shareholder vote. If you haven't already, can you chip in now to help us secure ads in the local media so Monsanto knows we're watching?
Monsanto: it's one of the greatest corporate scandals of our time.
This mega-corporation has paid off our politicians, taken over our
regulators, and bullied public opponents into submission while it
silently monopolizes our food system with its genetically-engineered
products.
Now a brave group of Monsanto shareholders are making a stand -- the crucial vote is only one week away,
and they desperately need our support to force Monsanto to face up to
the risks associated with GMOs. Monsanto has been keeping us and its
shareholders in the dark for too long -- this shareholder resolution
tells Monsanto to be open with the risks of GMO.
This is a serious shareholder proposal, and some big, credible investors are already supportive. But many of the biggest investment and retirement funds that invest OUR money are lining up to vote with Monsanto bosses against transparency.
These big institutional investors think that no one's watching them -- and unless we do something now, they'll be right.
Together, we can make sure shareholders know what's up and that we're
watching -- and secure their votes against Monsanto's corporate racket.
Here's just some of what we could do if we all chip in now:
- Secure advertising in Monsanto's home town of St Louis, Missouri, so that shareholders hear our message as they arrive to vote and know we're watching
- Send organizers to St Louis to raise a media storm outside the shareholder meeting with creative tactics, to make sure the public knows what's happening
- Buy a small, strategic stake in Monsanto -- so that we can speak out as shareholders ourselves and demand they act
This shareholder resolution is legitimate, serious
business -- Harrington Investments Inc. is telling Monsanto to come
clean, and they need other big shareholders to back them. If the
resolution gets a high vote, it would send a very clear signal that
Monsanto should disclose the risks associated with GMOs:
including contamination of non-GMO crops, damage to "non-target
organisms" like bees and other pollinators, and soil contamination.
But Monsanto's board is refusing to back the proposal,
despite claiming to be transparent and even though the resolution
doesn't require them to disclose any proprietary information. Meanwhile,
the company has spent more than $15 million is California and
Washington alone to defeat proposals to label GMO food -- a measure that
over 90% of Americans support.
Big institutional shareholders invest the funds of people
like us -- but too often they vote against our own interests and cozy up
to management. It's only when we publicly hold them to account that we
can change this. We're already reaching out to big Monsanto shareholders to call on them to act -- but we need to be able to tell them that we've got the whole SumOfUs community behind us, and we need to be able to show them that we're ready to make a media storm at the shareholders' meeting to hold them to account.
We know what we need to do: get institutional investors to
speak to the expert advisors to win their support, show thse investors
we'll be there to hold them to account, and to keep piling the pressure
on with national and international media coverage -- but we can't do it
unless we all come together to make it happen. If we don't, then
Monsanto's shareholders will know that no one is watching when they vote
down this crucial resolution on GMO transparency.
Thanks for all you do,
Paul, Lisa, Johnny and the rest of us.
SumOfUs is a worldwide movement of people like you, working together to
hold corporations accountable for their actions and forge a new,
sustainable path for our global economy.
Paul, Lisa, Johnny and the rest of us.
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