The Center for Biological Diversity and allies recently scored our second straight court win banning the use of the dangerous herbicide dicamba on genetically modified cotton and soybeans. We celebrated for monarch butterflies, whooping cranes and rusty patched bumblebees, all imperiled species harmed by dicamba.
But Bayer (aka Monsanto) won’t stop pushing this poison. The company recently asked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reapprove the uses of dicamba that a court just struck down, which could see the toxic pesticide sprayed on 100 million acres of farmland. Milkweed, other flowering plants, and anything else in dicamba’s path — where it’s sprayed or where it drifts — won’t stand a chance.
It’s high time for this airborne poison to meet the same end as everything it touches.
Let’s stand up to Bayer. Tell the EPA to deny its dangerous new scheme and protect the health of rural residents, monarch butterflies, and all the other wonderful creatures who call these lands home
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