Is there a whole thought there?peaceful_life wrote:Diversity in those numbers.
flood watch
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- biffvernon
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Are the Indian farmers the ones who are committing suicide in droves or are they just the ones who have been conned into using Monsatan's gear, finding that it doesn't work and that they can't afford it, going broke and doing themselves in with the shame of it?
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
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Getting back on piste, so to speak!biffvernon wrote:I see it's Flood Watch time in York again.
They're predicting flooding in the south as well tomorrow to go with the gales.
Our grandchildren's trampoline did a somersault in the gales a few nights ago and has bent the poles holding the safety net. If we don't get any more damage than that we will be happy.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
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Or are they the ones that are standing there with a shovel watching their neighbor drive by on his new tractor with the prettiest girl in the village riding on the fender seat with a big smile on her face.kenneal - lagger wrote:Are the Indian farmers the ones who are committing suicide in droves or are they just the ones who have been conned into using Monsatan's gear, finding that it doesn't work and that they can't afford it, going broke and doing themselves in with the shame of it?
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Sounds almost idyllic.vtsnowedin wrote:Or are they the ones that are standing there with a shovel watching their neighbor drive by on his new tractor with the prettiest girl in the village riding on the fender seat with a big smile on her face.kenneal - lagger wrote:Are the Indian farmers the ones who are committing suicide in droves or are they just the ones who have been conned into using Monsatan's gear, finding that it doesn't work and that they can't afford it, going broke and doing themselves in with the shame of it?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2OJPFSZ4OE
The fact remains though, we don't need industrial agriculture.
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It's a common tactic to 'spike the dynamic' of conversation within interviews to encourage spontaneous reaction, but on this, yes, she went beyond the pale, failed miserably and merely ascended Vandana's superiority whilst leaving herself with the egg of ad hominem, repetition and ignorance, on her face.woodburner wrote:A good video spoilt by the belligerent behaviour of the interviewer. Does she post on PS
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Vandana's position is one I support wholeheartedly. Monocultures can give the delusion of an increased yield which can be claimed to be due to some irrelevant factor (BT) while ignoring the fact that monocultures are unsustainable in the long term, and no good for health, even in the short term. Look at the obesity rates in the west for evidence.
Vandana said bigger yields are all very well, but when the result isn't nutrition, where's the benefit? I've pointed out previously that currently 40% of the UK rape crop is used for bio-diesel, and an area the size of Yorkshire is used to grow wheat used to produce bio-ethanol. All grown with fossil fuel derived fertilisers, and rape is a very hungry crop.
Vandana said bigger yields are all very well, but when the result isn't nutrition, where's the benefit? I've pointed out previously that currently 40% of the UK rape crop is used for bio-diesel, and an area the size of Yorkshire is used to grow wheat used to produce bio-ethanol. All grown with fossil fuel derived fertilisers, and rape is a very hungry crop.
To become an extremist, hang around with people you agree with. Cass Sunstein
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I was impartial to the whole agricultural issue, but then...once we take everything into account, it's a complete no brainer, modern practice is nothing but destruction.woodburner wrote:Vandana's position is one I support wholeheartedly. Monocultures can give the delusion of an increased yield which can be claimed to be due to some irrelevant factor (BT) while ignoring the fact that monocultures are unsustainable in the long term, and no good for health, even in the short term. Look at the obesity rates in the west for evidence.
Vandana said bigger yields are all very well, but when the result isn't nutrition, where's the benefit? I've pointed out previously that currently 40% of the UK rape crop is used for bio-diesel, and an area the size of Yorkshire is used to grow wheat used to produce bio-ethanol. All grown with fossil fuel derived fertilisers, and rape is a very hungry crop.
The monoculture method replicates nothing in nature, it needs constantly fed and subsidised with both energy and economic (ok one and the same) inputs, strips the integrity and destabalizes the soil, which exacerbates erosion and flooding etc etc etc, has no diversity or resilience and is the cause of untold 'externalities' that aren't accounted for in the illusion of bogof. In short, it simply doesn't work.
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One of the worst things is also courtesy of Monsanto and that's glyphosate. It damages soil bacteria and chelates nutrients in the soil making them unavailable to plants. These nutrients are boron, magnesium, copper, selenium, manganese etc. Not being available to plants means they are not available in food, and leads to malnutrition. It is possible to see fields having been sprayed with glyphosate, they are the ones that are going yellow now.
To become an extremist, hang around with people you agree with. Cass Sunstein
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That's just one thing to add to the endless list, as I'm sure you're aware.woodburner wrote:One of the worst things is also courtesy of Monsanto and that's glyphosate. It damages soil bacteria and chelates nutrients in the soil making them unavailable to plants. These nutrients are boron, magnesium, copper, selenium, manganese etc. Not being available to plants means they are not available in food, and leads to malnutrition. It is possible to see fields having been sprayed with glyphosate, they are the ones that are going yellow now.
If you wana know what's going on in there, this is a cracking little book, but get the revised edition.
http://teamingwithmicrobes.com/home/