Sunday, May 31, 2009

Our Demands for FAU

1) If FAU wants truly to be a place of academic integrity then it must support a vetting process of Scripps with its students, faculty, staff, and the surrounding community. We have a right to know exactly what is happening on our campus.

2) We want FAU to host a series of publicized debates on animal experimentation, biotechnology, and the ethical history of the Scripps corporation. We welcome a lively debate which can explore all sides of the issues.

3) We want an oversight and ethical board comprised of FAU students chosen from and by the FAU student body, to carry out routine inspections of Scripps research facilities and to have access to information and oversight rights to potential research projects including animal vivisection.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

What is wrong with Scripps Biotech?

Scripps Florida is a biotech corporation funded by State tax dollars, the department of defence, and other government and private sectors. Though it is headquartered in La Jolla, California, Scripps Florida is located on the Jupiter Campus of Florida Atlantic University. Three new Scripps facilities opened on campus in February of this year. The ribbion cutting ceremony included the usual suspects, Gov. Christ, Scripps CEO and longtime tobacco industry goon, Richard Lerner, and the bought and paid commissioners of several nearby municipalities.

Scripps has a long history of animal experimentation, including the vivisection of primates, cats, dogs, and rodents. Though public scrutiny of animal vivisection is all but absent at the facilities on at the Jupiter Campus of FAU, a recent study by a Scripps scientist attests to the deliberate infection of over one hundred macaque primates with Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (also known as "mad cow disease.")

Worst of all, Scripps Florida is attempting to expand across the street from FAU to the beautiful pine flatwoods ecosystem of the Briger Tract. At 900 acres, the Briger Tract is one of the few remaining forests of any measure left in the area. It is home to endangered species such as the gopher tortoise, the gopher frog, indigo snakes, nesting bald eagles, osprey, and many types of endangered flora. It is also lush with saw palmettos, the berries of which provide medicine for several ailments. It is telling that Scripps is attempting to clear cut and replace a medicinal forest with bio-pharmacueticals that will be patented and corporatly owned in a process some call 'bio-colonization.'

As students of Florida Atlantic University, regardless of what campus we attend, we must speak out against the torturous and environmentally unsound projects that are carried out on, and supported by, Florida Atlantic University, which is supported by our tuition.