on 21-04-2015 07:44 AM
Bt, or bacillus thuringiensis, is a type of soil-dwelling bacteria that produces a protein toxic to many insects. Bt crops are engineered to produce the Bt toxin within the plant itself, acting as a built-in insecticide. Bt toxin kills crop pests by dissolving the insect’s gut lining.
Roundup Ready crops are engineered to be resistant to Roundup, a Monsanto brand of herbicide. The active ingredient in Roundup herbicide is glyphosate, a commonly used weed-killer.
I know very little about this topic. I'm Interested to hear what ya'll know or think about GMO foods.
06-10-2020 07:48 PM - edited 06-10-2020 07:53 PM
I find the topic interesting and I'm tired of your constant off-topic combative interjections.
As to whether you're a liar or not, I don't care.
on 06-10-2020 08:08 PM
06-10-2020 08:51 PM - edited 06-10-2020 08:53 PM
Anyway, the GMO issue is a main stream discussion. It shouldn't be one to shy away from.
Re: GMO'sin reply to 4channel3 hours ago
@icyfroth wrote:
Plus, it's still relevant. Even if this thread is 5 years old, the GMO debate hasn't gone away. If anything, the concern is becoming more acute.
With you icyfroth and others who care, you have not sacrificed your will and allowed yourself to be spoon fed with info that masks what is really going on. I just hope that you can inspire others to get back the will to think for themselves. With so many the passion is gone! I'm not sure where the OP is at on the issue but kudos to them for starting this thread. If we don't discuss these things then what do we learn.
Oh yeah, you're so right, the concern is definitely becoming more acute. It seems that we've lost our power. In Neil Young's brave and excellent patriotic to the human race song, " A Rock Star Bucks a Coffee Shop " the's a section that goes .....
on 07-10-2020 12:04 PM
@chameleon54 wrote:I have one very simple answer to over population, at least in westernised countries, but it will not be popular. Western governments have adopted positions and policies which actually encourage over-population. They do this to ensure ever increasing expansion of the economy and to balance government budgets. Its all about the money and nothing else.
At the stroke of a pen, governments could scrap the economic support they provide for families with children. The result would be a dramatic decline in people having large families. Scrap the child care allowances, scrap family tax benefit A & B, Scrap the extra payments given to people on welfare who choose to have large families. Scrap free education and charge parents some of the cost of providing the service etc. etc
If we want to be more moderate, we could just cut the child subsidies out after the first two kids in the family. ie. You still get all the benefits for the first two children, but after that, you are on your own. This would be a lot more politically palatable.
Yes its harsh, but it would work. The governments that are brave enough to remove subsidies to families may save the planet, but they would not get elected again.
Solve over population and you solve the pressure we are placing on our natural resources and environment.
I think you are coming at this from the wrong direction. Before scrapping the benefits that encourage people to have more children, we need to scrap the economic policy that depends on people having more children. Commonsense dictates that a planet of finite resources cannot sustain an infinitely expanding economy.
on 07-10-2020 01:06 PM
@lalbo-81 wrote:I won't call you anything. But I will tell you to come here and talk to farmers in both North and South America instead of posting BS. But you won't , I'm sure. Tighten up the tinfoil hat, you're in for a ride!
And I am curious, exactly what do political figures in my country have to do with what farmers do in yours? Probably as much as they do here, I imagine.
Tinfoil hat
The concept behind the tinfoil hat was to create a Faraday Cage, the design of a tinfoil hat fails to accomplish this
as anyone with the slightest understanding of the principle would know.
on 07-10-2020 03:15 PM
The comments are interesting. Just wonderoing if this song would have been a major hit if the radio stations had some guts. I guess sponsorship can be a big leverage tool.
Interesting fact about the back up band. The leader is Lukas Nelson who is the son of singer, actor, martial artist Willie Nelson.
5:16 Now playing
502K views 5 years ago
CommentsPinned by neilyoungchannelneilyoungchannelHi, this is Neil. Link to the NYA info-card for this song with press, documents, manuscripts, photos, videos. Look around NYA for fun and listening! ALL my music in high resolution at https://neilyoungarchives.com/info-card?track=t2015_0211_021Aussie farmers accusing Monsanto pesticides of giving them cancer: https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/aussie-farmer-claims-roundup-gave-him-cancer/ar-AAIEdcc?oci...遺伝子組み換えって怖いね Japanese musicians can't confront powerful companies. Because it is attacked from the media.He is free and nice.
on 07-10-2020 05:33 PM
@jetho1680 wrote:
@lalbo-81 wrote:I won't call you anything. But I will tell you to come here and talk to farmers in both North and South America instead of posting BS. But you won't , I'm sure. Tighten up the tinfoil hat, you're in for a ride!
And I am curious, exactly what do political figures in my country have to do with what farmers do in yours? Probably as much as they do here, I imagine.
Tinfoil hat
The concept behind the tinfoil hat was to create a Faraday Cage, the design of a tinfoil hat fails to accomplish this
as anyone with the slightest understanding of the principle would know.
I'd use my granddaughter's phrase if I thought i wouldn't be reported again, but I'll be polite, more or less. Yes, dear, I know. That's the point.
on 08-10-2020 10:02 AM
@jetho1680 wrote:
Tinfoil hat
The concept behind the tinfoil hat was to create a Faraday Cage, the design of a tinfoil hat fails to accomplish this
as anyone with the slightest understanding of the principle would know.
I remember some time back I was in the buying forum discussing people's choices being limited. I gave an analogy using "fluoride" as an example as with fluoride, we have someone else making the decision for us. One of the regulars threw the tinfoil hat thing in. I just used the word and that was all. The Fluoride, GMO, Mobile Phone Tower issues are all main stream debates and have scientific findings on both sides. Nothing conspiracy theory about them. Those issues are not even remotely similar to "Fringe belief" discussions like the moon landing dispute etc..
So why do people use the term in discussions? Well, it's obvious the person throwing that term in has no platform to stand on or it's very flimsy. So it''s just an ad hominem attack. Some might say a cowardly character asassaination attempt. It's also a sign of dislike of the person discussing the issue or dislike of the person's desire to challenge a decision a government or local authority has made.
The GMO debate has some of the most presitgous and scientifically high profile people in opposition.
on 08-10-2020 07:35 PM
@the_great_she_elephant wrote:
@chameleon54 wrote:I have one very simple answer to over population, at least in westernised countries, but it will not be popular. Western governments have adopted positions and policies which actually encourage over-population. They do this to ensure ever increasing expansion of the economy and to balance government budgets. Its all about the money and nothing else.
At the stroke of a pen, governments could scrap the economic support they provide for families with children. The result would be a dramatic decline in people having large families. Scrap the child care allowances, scrap family tax benefit A & B, Scrap the extra payments given to people on welfare who choose to have large families. Scrap free education and charge parents some of the cost of providing the service etc. etc
If we want to be more moderate, we could just cut the child subsidies out after the first two kids in the family. ie. You still get all the benefits for the first two children, but after that, you are on your own. This would be a lot more politically palatable.
Yes its harsh, but it would work. The governments that are brave enough to remove subsidies to families may save the planet, but they would not get elected again.
Solve over population and you solve the pressure we are placing on our natural resources and environment.
I think you are coming at this from the wrong direction. Before scrapping the benefits that encourage people to have more children, we need to scrap the economic policy that depends on people having more children. Commonsense dictates that a planet of finite resources cannot sustain an infinitely expanding economy.
We agree ( for once ) If you read my posts on this thread you will see that is exactly the point I am making. The economic policy we are both referring to is ever continuing economic growth through ever expanding population growth. In Australia's case this is being achieved through immigration.
Theoretically Australia could lead the world in reducing our population, simply by cancelling our immigration policy, but on a global scale it would not make any difference because the people would still be on the planet somewhere. As you say, " Commonsense dictates that a planet of finite resources cannot sustain an infinitely expanding economy. " That is why we need to encourage people to have smaller families. And the best way to do that is to stop paying them to have kids.....Simples.
on 09-10-2020 05:44 PM
@4channel wrote:
I remember some time back I was in the buying forum discussing people's choices being limited. I gave an analogy using "fluoride" as an example as with fluoride, we have someone else making the decision for us. One of the regulars threw the tinfoil hat thing in. I just used the word and that was all. The Fluoride, GMO, Mobile Phone Tower issues are all main stream debates and have scientific findings on both sides. Nothing conspiracy theory about them. Those issues are not even remotely similar to "Fringe belief" discussions like the moon landing dispute etc..
So why do people use the term in discussions? Well, it's obvious the person throwing that term in has no platform to stand on or it's very flimsy. So it''s just an ad hominem attack. Some might say a cowardly character asassaination attempt. It's also a sign of dislike of the person discussing the issue or dislike of the person's desire to challenge a decision a government or local authority has made.
The GMO debate has some of the most presitgous and scientifically high profile people in opposition.
Agree, I believe some people are unable to comprehend why another has a different opinion to them, often resulting in the actions you described or similar.