It might help if you would begin by defining "underlying ecology".
I don't know what I mean. Biosphere, maybe? I'll drop the whole thing as an untenable argument, largely based on me not knowing what I'm talking about.
It might help if you would begin by defining "underlying ecology".
...I'll drop the whole thing as an untenable argument, largely based on me not knowing what I'm talking about.

Wow. I've been dreaming of reading these words. Considering the threads I usually lurk in, I doubt I'll ever see them again.
Correct that's why Golden Rice is a joke.
Just get people to eat some green vegetable such as whole coriander plants growing in the ditch at the side of the Indian road and Vit A deficiency solved.
Such questions would seem to have suddenly taken on a new significance, with Japan -- the second-largest buyer of U.S. wheat -- having announced that it is suspending imports of Western White wheat from the U.S. after USDA disclosure that an unapproved genetically modified strain of wheat has been found on an Oregon farm.Not only that, how exactly are they going to verify that the 'pure, non-GMO food' wasn't somehow contaminated with GM varieties during growing?
Are farmers going to have to keep the crops a minimum of 100 yards apart to ensure that no GM seeds landed in the 'organic' field? What about cross-pollination? (Maybe farmers will have to hire hunters to sit on the border with guns to shoot any bees that happen to cross the boundary.)
I think its central premise has merit: It is naive to expect to be able to maintain perfect containment of frankenorganisms 100% of the time.
To put it mildly...a better phrase would be "hubris of the highest order".
By the way, Monsanto is now using the services of the infamous Blackwater Security firm to conduct intelligence and infiltration operations on protest groups, and has been since 2010.
http://digitaljournal.com/article/297701
http://wakeup-world.com/2013/05/31/...ackwater-to-track-activists-around-the-world/

The original source is a story in The Nation by investigative reporter Jeremy Scahill, and is purported to be based on internal company documents from two companies (Total Intelligence Solutions and the Terrorism Research Center) owned by Blackwater's owner and founder, Erik Prince. As far as I can see, The Claim is that "Total Intelligence sought to become the 'intel arm' of Monsanto, offering to provide operatives to infiltrate activist groups organizing against the multinational biotech firm." Whether or not that offer was accepted is not clear. Given Monsanto's record of aggressive action in enforcing its patent rights as well as (quite successfully) seeking to influence government policy in ways that favor its interests, the proposition does not seem to require a great stretch of the imagination -- but that's probably rather subjective. Pending the actual release of those internal documents, it boils down to the extent to which one is willing to take Scahill's word for it (and the extent to which one is willing to accept The Nation as a "legitimate source").Folks, if a website called "Wake Up World" says it, you can pretty much take it to the bank.
I'm wondering if there is a legitimate news source for this "story"?
Folks, if a website called "Wake Up World" says it, you can pretty much take it to the bank.
I'm wondering if there is a legitimate news source for this "story"?
Is there ANY topic where you will actually address facts as opposed to arguing "source"?
Is there ANY topic where you will actually address facts as opposed to arguing "source"?
I have to say that I also think Scrut's objection is not without some merit. If, for example, the informational train wreck known as "Mercola" happens to get its hands on something that does have a strong factual basis -- and you choose freaking Mercola as the portal to that -- you're going to damage the very cause you want to promote, because many people (especially around here) will dismiss it unexamined, solely on the basis of source.^ Old lawyer trick. Can't refute the testimony, then attempt to impeach the source. Ad hom is the last refuge of scoundrels when cornered by evidence.
I have to say that I also think Scrut's objection is not without some merit. If, for example, the informational train wreck known as "Mercola" happens to get its hands on something that does have a strong factual basis -- and you choose freaking Mercola as the portal to that -- you're going to damage the very cause you want to promote, because many people (especially around here) will dismiss it unexamined, solely on the basis of source.
^More argument ad hom. Which tells me none of you want to address "inconvenient truths".
If the TRUTH is that a company affiliated with Blackwater was hired by Monsanto to infiltrate anti-Monsanto activist groups, then I'd say that is very inconvenient indeed -- for Monsanto, as well as for its ideological supporters here. I would have to count myself as among those ideologically opposed to Monsanto (though not necessarily to the idea of genetic engineering altogether), and because of that, I feel obligated to be especially on guard against my own biases. It really doesn't take an enormous introspective effort for me to recognize how eagerly I would sieze upon firm evidence supporting Scahill's claims; I would particularly like to have an opportunity to peruse the "internal documents" he cites.^More argument ad hom. Which tells me none of you want to address "inconvenient truths".
The thing is, I'm not finding those documents. You accurately describe the nature of the evidence as "testimony" -- and the credibility of the witness is very relevant -- so the whole thing rests on Scahill's credibility, and, by association, on that of The Nation. What it doesn't rest on is the credibility of a website called "Wake Up World", or any of the other myriad "sources" (some clearly quite dubious) who happen to have passed the story on.