Monarchs pushed to the brink of extinction. Links to cancer. These are the devastating effects from the toxic pesticide glyphosate -- aka Monsanto’s Roundup®.
In the last 20 years, monarch populations have declined by 90% -- largely thanks to Roundup®, which kills off the only food source for young monarchs. It’s a simple formula: More Roundup® = less milkweed = fewer monarchs.
The EPA could revoke Monsanto’s license to poison our environment and communities. It’s accepting public input on whether to ban Roundup®. But if we want the agency to act, we need you to speak up, Jessie.
Glyphosate is linked to monarch decline and it is harmful to bees, but it’s also terrible for people. In fact, the World Health Organization has listed the herbicide as a probable carcinogen, which means it’s linked to cancer.
More than 13,000 people are suing Monsanto because they believe their exposure to Roundup® caused their cancer. Monsanto has already been held legally responsible to the tune of billions of dollars in damages for the three cases so far.
The court decisions are a great first step in holding Monsanto accountable for harming people. But they’re not a permanent solution. Now, Monsanto is trying to get these verdicts reversed, meaning we need to stay one step ahead by demanding the EPA ban glyphosate.
It’s time the EPA steps up and does its job to protect butterflies, our environment, and our well-being from this toxin. You have the power to make the EPA act by signing your name today.
Roundup® is making Monsanto $5 billion richer every year. So you can be sure the company will do everything it can to protect its profits.
And Monsanto has a captive audience for its lobbying with Trump in the White House. An administration official even said “we have Monsanto’s back.”
It’s time the EPA stop Monsanto from putting profits over people and the environment. But it won’t act unless you speak up. Together, we can save monarch butterflies from extinction and protect communities from this toxic pesticide. Can we count on your support?
Standing with you,
Tiffany Finck-Haynes
Pesticides and pollinators program manager,
Friends of the Earth Action
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