Monsanto is a biotech giant that produces 'genetically modified organisms' aka GMO's that are practically poisoning us on the long run. Monsanto is a powerfull company that has its ties within the american government as you can see in the image.I don't understand!!
Would you care to provide evidence of this?Monsanto is a biotech giant that produces 'genetically modified organisms' aka GMO's that are practically poisoning us on the long run.
Any large company is.Monsanto is a powerfull company that has its ties within the american government as you can see in the image.
But GMOs in general are killing the diversity of seeds
... No. That's not GMO at all.and honey bees,
Monsato is an eventuality of the farming market. They represent a centralized seed recovery and packaging service for farmers that would, otherwise, have to take on such expenses themselves. Rather - they simply buy the seed from a specialized service.to name a few things. Monsanto definitely doesn't help, that's for damn sure. :erm:
They have?Monsanto and co has been found illegally killing off honey bees and remaining queens in what was it..Virginiam perhaps? Not sure.
What large company doesn't?Because Monsanto has good ties with government officials, they managed to get a law accepted that protects them grom proscecution and such.
Reliable, accurate, and complete are three different things.I'm subscribed to several reliable news sources concerning Monsanto. Sadly, I'm not at my home this week so I can't share the sources atm.
Your loyalty is inspiring. You were just saying, in another thread, how governments are malevolent and our leaders are puppets. Now they are looking out for us and expressing differing opinions?Other than needing proof, ask yourself: If GMO's aren't harmfull and elevate yhe productiveness of agriculture, then why is it that so many countries already banned GMO's,
So, now the masses are reliable?the people fiercely protesting against the gmo crop distribution in their country
This comments specifically on that study:and why do animal test subjects develop tumors after consuming gmo's?
Yes. I am. And I'm lumping you in with them.So, you're telling me all those thousands of protestors, all the scientists proving gmo's to be harmfull, are misinformed fools?
Son, to you - I may as well be God.If only you were as half as intelligent as you think you are.![]()
You think that is the most critical of your behaviors for me to excuse?Scuse my engrish (touch screen phone)
This is not much different than the way Farmer's Unions essentially force small farms into their membership.I could say a lot about this but ill just give ya this:
Monsanto requires farmers to sign multi-year contracts with them before they will even let them sample the seeds. If you don't sign the contract and buy non-trademarked seeds they will sue you if even one of those seeds cross pollinated with their trademarked crop, forcing you to burn your entire crop. You cannot grow your own crops with seeds from the last harvest due to Monsanto and their attack lawyers trademarked a genetic line and if those genetics appear in your crop then they can force you to burn your entire crop, as if farmers could politely tell pollinators not to cross contaminate.
Most of the food you eat on a daily basis is untested.They also manipulate genes without enough testing and have made some nasty mistakes due to that.
*rolls eyes*Hahahaha unbelievable.. so much effort to prove his right, quoting every little thing.
I'm a sheeple?1: The masses I'm talking about this time are the ones that are aware of the fact govts. Do not have a interest in the wellbeing if the people. It's a secundary priority to companies. I'm not talking about the sheeple like you.
If you put as much effort into learning as you did to talking...2. About the rats: that experiment dates back to the late 70's, I see. The lab results presented by some of my sources were held recently.
I did.3. About: countries banning gmo's. Quit the misplaced arrogance in your counter question and just answer mine.
This is why you come off as retarded. You speak before you listen.This insolence xD..
Btw, I don't have time to read the articles. Will do so when Iget back home in two days. I just have wifi now for a little while gtg to work now.
You seem to have quite a good understanding of how the world works but irregardless it is still a problem when a food organization can do practically whatever they want to the food you eat without consequence or at least nothing immediate.I say this as im struggling to figure out what your stance on them are rather then reading your skeptical albeit seemingly true view on the world.*rolls eyes*
I'm a sheeple?
Really?
Because I refuse to join a mass of people all mindlessly walking against Monsanto? I refuse to 'march?'
Just because I don't hop aboard the pro-disestablishment bandwagon every time I turn around doesn't mean I'm beating the drum for the establishment. Choose what bandwagons you jump on very, very carefully. Most people don't even realize they are aboard until the damned thing crashes.
People out there will twist your mind and use you to their ends.
Let me ask you... do you buy into global warming?
Many governments support carbon taxes. Government pannels have been set up to review the risk it causes and to devise strategies against it. They deliberately talk-up the issue to make it sound like the world is going to come to an end - and it is only through accepting government regulations and policies that we can be saved from ourselves.
There's no real money to be made in oil. The market is mature and investment relatively saturated. The main area of making money is for investors to sponsor new ways of keeping their production competitive with other producers and hunting for new territory. They've kept their trade secrets relatively close - and you're not going to win the lottery and find yourself striking out to make your own oil company.
But there's money in striking out to create electric cars. There's money in striking out to make different home power solutions. Money is made in changing markets and creating new ones. At least - new money is made there. To be the first Microsoft, or the first Walmart, McDonald's, Intel, Google, or IBM - that's where the real money is.
Invest in these new energy groups - back the idea that the end of our planet is nigh unless people buy what your invested company manufactures. Set up a small business that is awarded a very good ratio of carbon credits for the investment... trade them on the open market for huge profits while backing legislation for cap-and-trade.
It's no different here. Set up a small farm that can use organic labeling - back legislation that forces Genetically engineered crops to have drawings of Resident Evil zombies supporting "GMO FOOD" on it and garner all the media flare you can about how men will be rendered impotent with early-onset erectile dysfunction and women will develop breast and ovarian cancer if they eat genetically engineered food.
If you can't create a completely new market - change how an existing one is played.
It doesn't really matter what the facts are. What matters is what gets people to buy your product. Bonus points if you get free advertising in the form of activist groups who think you represent their salvation.
Monsanto is no saint. Genetic Engineering is not the solution to everything in agriculture. But why settle down and listen to reason when, at this very moment, the green beans you ate could be shriveling your testicles and forever banning you to the same humiliation circumcised males face from women every day?
Don't you love how I work all of these inflationary topics into each other? Same mentality. Same rythm. Slightly different words.
If you put as much effort into learning as you did to talking...
The experiment you talk about is the same one that is being cited as having far too small of a control group.
The particular line of rats used in testing have been shown since tests in the 70s to spontaneously develop tumors at a rate of about 78% in the population after 2 years of life. Which is exactly the length of time that the "GMO causes tumors" study was. Thus, the results were not, at all, anomalous for the rats. Not to mention that a population size of ten rats for male and female test groups is ridiculous... and that the experimental setup would not have yielded data that could have been used to form any kind of meaningful conclusion.
I did.
Environmental scientists, food scientists/researchers, and genetecists who do not work in the field of genetically engineered crops all agree that the social response is due to misinformation and distortion of the facts. At best - half-truths are used to rally people behind these causes.
If you bothered to actually look - you would find that many of the anti-GMO groups are funded by "organic" farmers unions and other groups that stand to make a monetary gain. You'll notice that most of the studies that conclude 'GMOs pose a statistically significant risk to the human population' are under contract from the Anti-GMO groups (who are, in turn, funded by businesses that are seeing record profit margins due to social response).
There is never much money to be made in sustaining an empire. There is always money to be made when overthrowing one.
This is why you come off as retarded. You speak before you listen.
I believe you would have chosen your words differently had you first read the articles.
Monsanto's crops are actually a very small portion of the overall food market:You seem to have quite a good understanding of how the world works but irregardless it is still a problem when a food organization can do practically whatever they want to the food you eat without consequence or at least nothing immediate.I say this as im struggling to figure out what your stance on them are rather then reading your skeptical albeit seemingly true view on the world.
1 article
Monsanto Found Guilty of Chemical Poisoning in Landmark Case
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A French farmer who can no longer perform his routine farming duties because of permanent pesticide injuries has had his day in court, literally, and the perpetrator of his injuries found guilty of chemical poisoning. The French court in Lyon ruled that Monsanto’s Lasso weedkiller formula, which contains the active ingredient alachlor, caused Paul Francois to develop lifelong neurological damage that manifests as persistent memory loss, headaches, and stuttering during speech.
Reports indicate that the 47-year-old farmer sued Monsanto back in 2004 after inhaling the Lasso product while cleaning his sprayer tank equipment. Not long after, Francois began experiencing lasting symptoms that prevented him from working, which he says were directly linked to exposure to the chemical. Since Lasso’s packaging did not bear adequate warnings about the dangers of exposure, Francois alleged at the time that Monsanto was essentially negligent in providing adequate protection for its customers.
To the surprise of many, the French court agreed with the claims and evidence presented before it, declaring earlier this year that “Monsanto is responsible for Paul Francois’ suffering after he inhaled the Lasso product … and must entirely compensate him.” The court is said to be seeking expert opinion on how to gauge Francois’ losses in order to determine precisely how much Monsanto will be required to compensate him in the case.
“It is a historic decision in so far as it is the first time that a (pesticide) maker is found guilty of such a poisoning,” said Francois Lafforgue, Paul Francois’ lawyer, to Reuters earlier in the year.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), exposure to alachlor can cause damage to the liver, kidneys, spleen, and eyes, and may lead to the development of anemia and even cancer. The EPA apparently views alachlor as so dangerous, in fact, that the agency has set the maximum contaminant level goals (MCLG) for alachlor to zero in order to “prevent potential health problems.” (You must be registered for see links)
In 2007, France officially banned Lasso from use in the country in accordance with a European Union (EU) directive enacted in 2006 prohibiting the chemical from further use on crops in any member countries. But despite all the evidence proving that alachlor can disrupt hormonal balance, induce reproductive or developmental problems, and cause cancer, the chemical is still being used on conventional crops throughout the U.S. to this very day. (You must be registered for see links)
“I am alive today, but part of the farming population is going to be sacrificed and is going to die because of (alachlor),” added Francois to Reuters.
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This isn't one of my sources. I merely saw this article being related to this topic so I posted it for the heck of it.Monsanto's crops are actually a very small portion of the overall food market:
"As of 2012, the agricultural seed lineup included Roundup Ready alfalfa; Roundup Ready canola; cotton with Bt, Roundup Ready, or both traits; sorghum hybrids; soybeans with various oil profiles, most with the Roundup Ready trait; Roundup Ready sugarbeet; and a wide range of wheat products, many of which incorporate the nontransgenic "clearfield" imazamox-tolerant[80] trait from BASF.[81]
Two patents have been especially important to Monsanto's GM soybean business; one expired in 2011 and another reissued patent expires in 2014.[82] The expiration of the second patent will mean that glyphosate resistant soybeans will be "generic", which has generated a great deal of discussion in the soybean industry.[83][84][85][86]"
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Most of their crops are various utility crops and not really marketed for human consumption. The Maize and Soybeans are largely used in cattle feed and agricultural byproducts.
Their main source of income is actually the sale of various pest and herbicides.
Monsanto isn't nearly as big of a player or the type of monopoly that a lot of the alarmists like to make it out to be. They gained considerable market traction in certain sections with the "Roundup Ready" seed lineup. When you have a brand name crop to go with your brand name product in a complementary setup - it tends to catch on fairly well.
*rolls eyes*
How inflationist can your news sources get?
Monsanto wasn't found guilty of poisoning. They were found liable (somehow) for the damage to this man's life because he didn't follow proper handling procedures. He blatantly stated he was inhaling fumes while cleaning his spraying equipment.
He was applying a chemical, didn't take the industry standard precautions, and this circus court decided to favor him for being stupid.