Indian diplomacy is like an elephant’s foot — slow but unshakeable. Take the current example — July 9 has passed, and despite repeated threats, India has refused to agree to a trade deal with the US on their terms.
Now, the US is calling it a “mini trade deal”. Mini? Like some starter pack for kids? What comes next — Max Deal? Pro Max Deal?
Even Mumbai’s black-market ticket brokers probably negotiate better than this. But behind America’s shiny diplomacy lies a dark, dangerous plan — so dangerous that India wouldn’t touch it even with tongs.
To put it bluntly: America is trying to save its collapsing empire by turning the world’s largest population into a marketplace of corpses.
The Dream America Is Selling
America is dangling a golden promise: $500 billion in trade with India by 2030. Sounds like a jackpot — jobs, growth, prosperity. But there's a catch — a venomous one — that could devour both Indian agriculture and its future.
At the centre of the deal lies a key US demand: India must allow genetically modified (GM) crop seeds from US labs.
America is stubborn. India is standing strong. Why? Because this isn’t just trade. It’s about thousands of years of agricultural heritage, sovereignty, and the soul of our soil.
GM seeds aren’t just seeds — they’re like patented software. Once you plant them, you’re trapped forever.
Here’s the kicker: farmers don’t even fully own the crops they grow from these seeds — the company does. Farmers become tenants on their own land. They have to pay royalties every year if they use these seeds.
And who’s behind these seeds? Monsanto — now rebranded as Bayer. Yes, the same Monsanto that supplied Agent Orange, a chemical weapon, in the Vietnam War. Changing the name doesn’t wash away the sins.
America’s been playing this game for decades. In the 1960s, it sold wheat to the world. Now it sells GM corn, soy, canola, and cotton. These crops are designed to withstand toxic herbicides like Roundup — made by Monsanto itself. Sure, yields rise, but the soil gets weaker. And the cycle of dependence on American companies begins.
Today, 95% of U.S. corn and soy is genetically modified. These show up in everything — baby food, bread, even hospital meals. And since these crops were introduced? Obesity has doubled. Teen diabetes is exploding. PCOS, infertility, depression, cancer, heart failure, liver disease — all are rising.
Coincidence? Or something more?
It’s a Disease-Driven Business Model
The plan is simple: Big Food grows GM crops that make you sick. Big Pharma sells the drugs—not to cure you, but to keep you dependent. It’s not treatment — it’s a subscription.
And who pays? You do. Through insurance plans that lock you into this system.
These giants are everywhere — Big Food, Big Pharma, Big Agriculture, Big Insurance. They grow your food, make you sick, sell the medicine, and profit off your medical bills.
And who funds it all? Vanguard. BlackRock. State Street.
Why India Said No
India is waking up to the game. Signing this deal wouldn’t just cost us our seeds — we’d lose everything. Our farms, our soil, our health, our future — all would fall into the hands of US corporations. These companies would turn India into a diseased marketplace within years. Processed food. Sick, obese people. Lives run on pills.
And how did the US react to India’s refusal? Pressure. Trump’s tweets. Cozying up to Pakistan. Western media headlines: “Modi Fails!” Opposition parroting the usual lines.
But no one tells the real story. Because this isn’t about trade — it’s about survival.
The Villains Behind the Curtain
Big Agriculture: Bayer, ADM, Cargill — pushing GM seeds and chemicals.
Big Food: Nestlé, PepsiCo, Kraft — flooding markets with processed junk.
Big Pharma: Pfizer, J&J, Merck — selling drugs for the diseases this system causes.
Big Insurance: UnitedHealth — profiting off your lifetime of medical bills.
These same players fund the media narratives that shout: “India has bowed.”
But India hasn’t bowed. It’s standing tall.
Next time someone asks, “Why isn’t India signing the deal?” — Ask them: Would you rather feed your family or become a market for American corporations?
Piyush Goyal’s name isn’t just being whispered in Washington — it’s thundering. It’s the voice of India saying loud and clear: We will not bow. Not on our soil, and not on our terms. And if that truth stings some eyes, good.
Because some truths aren’t just spoken — they echo across the world.
Article by
Younginker