Red Baron Farms
Philosopher
deleted, double post
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Very unlikely it has anything directly to do with GMOs. Most likely a reaction to glyphosate. So while it is true that lots of GMOs are glyphosate resistant, wheat and other related flours generally contain no GMOs. The do however often contain traces of Glyphosate used to kill weeds before planting, and desiccation at harvest. And yes that has been linked to human diseases. Glyphosate, pathways to modern diseases II: Celiac sprue and gluten intoleranceI don't think I'm allergic to gluten, and I DGAF if the flour I use has GMOs, and I'm vegan.
This is why GMO is and will be a problem, just like non-GMO hybrids are now but worse. The farmer's goal is always to produce more food, with sustainable ecology taking a back seat. More food means higher population, greater obesity, more pollution, greater land use, and less resources available for improving the environment because we are tapped out just trying to satisfy the ever-increasing population. GMO makes this worse because it is more effective.It's looks that are the big thing. When a golden nematode outbreak in parts of the US threatened potato crops, South American varieties that they wouldn't attack were imported. Those potatoes were smaller and "uglier" than conventional potatoes, and nobody would buy them. They had to create hybrids that looked like normal potatoes but had the immunity of the South American varieties.

Very unlikely it has anything directly to do with GMOs. Most likely a reaction to glyphosate. So while it is true that lots of GMOs are glyphosate resistant, wheat and other related flours generally contain no GMOs. The do however often contain traces of Glyphosate used to kill weeds before planting, and desiccation at harvest. And yes that has been linked to human diseases. Glyphosate, pathways to modern diseases II: Celiac sprue and gluten intolerance
Never really understood about Vegans that don't care about the suffering of others. Is that really even Veganism? or simply an Eating disorder? Every Vegan I ever met in real life was very compassionate to all life and maybe even a bit too hypersensitive to the suffering of others. So I would think that knowing how harmful certain uses of GMOs and pesticides can be, you would actually GAF
Insecticide is a bit of a misnomer. There is no GMO that produces chemical "insecticides" or "pesticides" as commonly known to laymen. That was a bit of purposeful misdirection and obfuscation to try and lump all GMOs together as dangerous and the wrong sort of use.I do not mind GMO per se, but I do mind some types of GMO. For instance, GMO that causes plants to generate their own insecticide. I would like to know more about which insecticide, and how much I would ingest if I eat the crop. This information is not available, so I play safe, and avoid GMO, unless I know specifically what kind of GMO I am buying.
I do not mind GMO per se, but I do mind some types of GMO. For instance, GMO that causes plants to generate their own insecticide. I would like to know more about which insecticide, and how much I would ingest if I eat the crop. This information is not available, so I play safe, and avoid GMO, unless I know specifically what kind of GMO I am buying.
I am also concerned about GMOs making crops more expensive for farmers in developing countries, and I am worried about the effects of glyphosate and other herbicides on the environment.
All of this makes organic foods safe for me.
Insecticide is a bit of a misnomer. There is no GMO that produces chemical "insecticides" or "pesticides" as commonly known to laymen. That was a bit of purposeful misdirection and obfuscation to try and lump all GMOs together as dangerous and the wrong sort of use.
I am generally against insecticides in my food. Whenever insecticides are reviewed, safe levels are always lowered, never raised. The accusation of laziness is true: I do think I have more interesting things to do than check for “readily available” scientific articles describing every modification made to every food item that I buy. Especially when there are safe alternatives.This is one of the great myths spread by anti-GMO luddites.
The information is readily available, for a start. More important is the claim that these insecticides are potentially dangerous and untested.
And I am supposed to know this information when deciding to buy corn flour? When searching for information on the toxin, I found this in the Wikipedia article: “2012 European regulatory peer review of five approved strains found, while data exist to support some claims of low toxicity to humans and the environment, the data are insufficient to justify many of these claims.”Organic farmers protect their corn by seeding the ground with Bt bacteria, which produces a toxin that kills a few selective insect pest species. The plants absorb the toxin, and are protected.
Bt corn is simply corn with this substance already in it. In all other respects, it is EXACTLY THE SAME as organic corn. It just takes out the stage of separately sowing the ground with bacteria.
This is what I mean by luddism. There is no difference between organic and GM corn, but somehow the suspicion remains that somehow it must be dangerous. If the claim is that it's untested, then organic corn is also untested.
Interesting article. I wondered if it might be partial, because not a single argument against BT corn was investigated, so searched and found this: Bt Cotton and Farmer Suicides in India: An Evidence-based AssessmentDo you have evidence that GMOs are making food more expensive for farmers? My understanding is that it's the opposite.
For example:
https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...panel-models/5CA93DBEDB984616D777279709AC825B
"Bt cotton is accused of being responsible for an increase of farmer suicides in India. In this article, we provide a comprehensive review of evidence on Bt cotton and farmer suicides. Available data show no evidence of a 'resurgence' of farmer suicides. Moreover, Bt cotton technology has been very effective overall in India. Nevertheless, in specific districts and years, Bt cotton may have indirectly contributed to farmer indebtedness, leading to suicides, but its failure was mainly the result of the context or environment in which it was planted."
Farmers’ lack of information on growing conditions, pesticide use, the importance of planting proper seeds and the earnings to be expected from using this technology seem to be behind the controversy shrouding Bt cotton’s performance."
Seems to suggest that it isn't the GMO that is the issue but more ignorance and mishandling.
Quite true, I did say that the paper was positive about Bt cotton, but it is not the only possible quote you could find. They also concede that in some areas there could be a connection to indebtedness and suicides, even if the studies are not robust.
Not weird at all actually. A packet of 15 seeds costs $7.50. I have never seen any bulk offering for Garden Gem. No commercial growing is going to spend that sort of money on seeds. A gardener might. But even the most expensive heirlooms I grow don't usually cost that much, and after the first year I can save my own seed for basically free. (a little labor in saving seeds but not much.) Garden Gem I would need to buy every year!, either that or make my own hybrids, a two year process that DOES take a lot of skill and labor.
An example for context, I can purchase a pound of Rutgers, an old heirloom commercial variety that also tastes great because it was developed before "big ag" even existed and flavor still mattered, for about 80 dollars +/-. That's ~152 THOUSAND seeds. So Garden Gem is roughly 1000 times more expensive for seeds and I can't just save the seeds from this years crops and plant next year.
Very unlikely it has anything directly to do with GMOs. Most likely a reaction to glyphosate. So while it is true that lots of GMOs are glyphosate resistant, wheat and other related flours generally contain no GMOs. The do however often contain traces of Glyphosate used to kill weeds before planting, and desiccation at harvest. And yes that has been linked to human diseases. Glyphosate, pathways to modern diseases II: Celiac sprue and gluten intolerance
[qimg]https://science.sciencemag.org/content/sci/309/5734/570/F3.large.jpg[/qimg]
This graphic is backed by this science: Global Consequences of Land Use
Now if this was just a little land, it probably wouldn't matter much.
Farming Claims Almost Half Earth's Land, New Maps Show Oops not just a little land. LOTS of land.
Glyphosate in particular is really bad because it not only kills plants, but a whole lot of other things relying on the shikimate pathway.(mostly microorganisms) It is also a chelating substance. (bonds to minerals in the soil making them unavailable to the plants) This causes a ecological collapse in the soil food web that effects even many organisms that don't use the shikimate pathway. End result is a 90%+ loss of soil ecosystem services.
I do not mind GMO per se, but I do mind some types of GMO. For instance, GMO that causes plants to generate their own insecticide. I would like to know more about which insecticide, and how much I would ingest if I eat the crop. This information is not available, so I play safe, and avoid GMO, unless I know specifically what kind of GMO I am buying.
I hope that you weren't sitting around drinking coffee when you wrote that (I'll take it for granted that you weren't smoking a cigarette too).
Oh so rural people are not allowed meaningful work any longer? Unfit for anything higher than service clerks and staffers at the Big Box Stores? Have you even ever seen the economic destruction present in rural areas? When in America did hard work suddenly become a negative thing, to be avoided at all costs, even to the point of destroying the very land that supports civilization?Right, and the obvious solution is to switch everyone to labor intensive, and unproductive agricultural models that require even more land area. Oh wait!![]()
You talk about individual parts of a destructive system, while I talk about the system as a whole. Sure Gyphosate is a poor chelator, but even you admit it is a chelator, binding up nutrients that would otherwise be bioavailable to plants. By that characteristic alone it couldn't make much of a difference. That certainly is not the only characteristic important to the system however. Reducing the ability of the soil food web to make minerals bioavailable to the crops, combined with the effect of making minerals that would otherwise already be bioavailable unavailable makes a huge difference though.Utter nonsense. Your comments about chelation are way off target. Even if the part about chelation were correct, the stoichiometry is all wrong. Namely, there's way more stuff to chelate in the environment than there is glyphosate in an agricultural application setting. However, you are not even correct about that. It's not a particularly good chelator.
The sort of "benefits" of no till you are talking about can only be seen as a benefit when compared to the even worse systems of both tillage and excessive agrochemical usage. It's like arguing less bad is actually good, because it could be worse. Don't settle for less bad, when we actually can restore ecosystem function and ecosystem services to the land, without reducing our capacity to provide food and fiber to the cities.As for soil health, one of the worst things you can do for soil is till it. Glyphosate helps address that issue by making no or low till easier and can actually help improve the soil as a result.