
AceNewsDesk – The Buchenwald Touch: Monsanto was an essential part of the top-secret Manhattan Project and ran the U.S. government’s Mound Laboratory nuclear plant until 1988.

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You’d think Monsanto was in it to defeat the Nazis, but in 1954, it merged with Bayer, a company that had spent the war making money off the Nazi death camps, including Auschwitz and Buchenwald, selling Zyklon B and using people who were not sent straight to the gas chambers as slave labor or human subjects.
Not only did Monsanto merge with Bayer, run by convicted Nazi war criminals, but it offered jobs to Nazi scientists through the CIA’s Operation Paperclip.
Monsanto and Bayer’s work together as Mobay (and ever since) is exactly what one would expect from the merger of a Pentagon contractor and a Nazi collaborator.
During the Mobay years, Monsanto worked with the Pentagon on deadly radiation experiments—without the consent of their human subjects, including prisoners and children–experiments the scientists admitted privately had “a little of the Buchenwald touch.”
Monsanto’s secret military radiation experiments included spraying a low-income, mostly African-American housing project in St. Louis with radiological weapons in 1953 and 1954.
Monsanto supplied radioactive materials for an unknown number of government-sanctioned human radiation experiments, including one from 1945 to 1947 where 829 pregnant women were secretly given radioactive pills, causing at least four children to die from childhood cancers.
Monsanto even sought to profit from these experiments by creating consumer products like their nuclear-powered pacemaker, in use from 1966 to 1988.
All the while, from 1943 to 1988, Monsanto was running a deadly human experiment on its own workers at Mound Laboratory. Monsanto collected thousands of urine samples and maintained laboratories to monitor the health impacts of workplace radiation exposure, but when their employees got cancer, they refused to help or compensate them.
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