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New GM debate in UK

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    #16
    Lies about what oneoff? You don't even want to talk about the lie that caused the world to turn to chem farming in the first place.

    Are you calling me a liar for saying that my cattle became healthier after I stopped using feed that did not have the micronutrient balance due to chem enhancement. Tested by veterinary science. Somehting you would think you could understand. Nature is perfect and whenever humans screw with it for profit and greed, or the ultimate bull shit lie that you seem to support, it just does not work. I am not calling you a liar oneoff, just a lost little man who is trying his best to justify the money spent on his education.

    Believe what you like oneoff, and enjoy yourself. Your tactics will never stop Kaisers or Hubers or the viral growing number of people in the world who have caught on to the big lie and the main reason you "believe" in modern farming practices.

    Use your science oneoff. Use it to create something postitive so that you don't have to eat different foods than you grow for the masses. Food that you have admitted will have collateral damage. For an overall bullshit cause.

    Comment


      #17
      What is this lie you speak of Mr.
      Kaiser?

      Comment


        #18
        Simply that we need to use chem based "modern farming methods" to feed the people on this planet.

        I see the merit in no til ado. And the merit in increased production from fertiliser and monoculture ag techniques.

        Does that make me a hypocrite and a liar? Shit man -

        Find ways to deal with the raising of food that you would feel comfortable eating yourself.

        Do you grow a garden ado?

        Comment


          #19
          I do grow a garden.

          Comment


            #20
            Ianben

            A weird question but I note lots of Canadian farmers are concerned about extra costs of buying seed. How does the UK pay for developing new varieties? End use levies (pay a share of revenue)? Requirements to use certified seed?

            I could be wrong but I don't think any farmer pays for seed, herbicides, etc to keep the big companies profitable. I assume they do it because they meet the agronomic needs of their crops and contribute to their businesses profitability.

            Comment


              #21
              We pay a royalty on all seed more info here at
              www.bspb.co.uk as yet no link to herbicides or
              fungicides but it has been tried with hybrid
              barley and we are about to get clearfield canola
              this fall but do not know the deal.

              We do make a margin above SFP which in
              practice just go on higher rents or land prices, I
              actually think your crop insurance is a better way
              to manage risk.

              Thalidomide was tragic for those affected but can
              you imagine half your children dying before they
              are 20 like my great grandfather.
              The progress has been astounding and the
              mistakes tiny by comparison.

              Comment


                #22
                Thanks ianben

                Here is the link.

                [URL="http://www.bspb.co.uk/about.html"]bspb[/URL]

                I think this is far greater challenge in western Canada than what technology we choose to improve crops. We need some way of improving our crop genetics and looking after agronomic needs down the road. An example is fusarium graminearium. Don't know what the model will be but has to be a priority. You can see from the conversation here progress will not be easy.

                So for taking off topic. Just hate being a one trick pony without looking at the big picture.

                Comment


                  #23
                  I think we see a dichotomy in plant
                  breeding between the seed companies
                  focus on input traits and publicly
                  funded / academic research focusing on
                  output traits. The trouble with that is
                  that bio tech companies aren't going to
                  breed their products out of use and the
                  GMO debate is far too volatile for most
                  universities and publicly funded
                  breeders to go near. I find it
                  astonishing that with our level of
                  understanding in the fields of genetics
                  and breeding that we still struggle so
                  such with things like maturity, drought,
                  tolerance and disease pressure, while
                  having good things like multiple
                  herbicide tolerance. This becomes even
                  more perplexing when we live in aworld
                  where food security are part of the
                  everyday vernacular.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Fusarium was very bad here last year but down to
                    weather at flowering, no chemical treatments
                    worked.There was a slight varietal difference but
                    most of our varieties are very closely related
                    anyway and more related to time of flowering
                    than resistance I think.
                    As I have mentioned before I think we bred BSE
                    susceptible dairy cows with AI, and I think we are
                    doing the same with wheat and fusarium putting
                    yield as king.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      ado089

                      Don't disagree but I note that who spends determines
                      where the money goes. To further, the new model is
                      the public sector spends on development but
                      commercialization is being handed to the private
                      sector. The private sector does spend on disease
                      resistance as witnessed by rapid responses to both
                      club root and improving black leg resistance in
                      canola. Someone commented that farmers take the
                      private sectors ability to respond to new new more
                      virulent diseases by not changing behaviour and one
                      of this days, this will bite in the industry in the butt -
                      i.e. a disease for which there isn't a
                      breeding/chemical solution for a long period of time.
                      But that comes to ianben and my comments on real
                      risk and the understanding there of.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Charlie, I understands new funding
                        arrangement but the very fact that club
                        root was a non issue shows that when the
                        motivation is there genes get isolated
                        and commercialized real fast. Developing
                        technology and how it gets implemented
                        are different things. The wonderful
                        thing about sustainability is that there
                        is a long term component to it. The
                        question is whether or not those willing
                        to trade short term gain for long term
                        sustainability bring the rest of us down
                        with them. Continuing on that thought
                        pests have been adopting to our
                        countermeasures even back to adapting
                        different morphology to resist hand
                        weeding.

                        Comment


                          #27
                          http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-
                          1082559/The-GM-genocide-Thousands-Indian-
                          farmers-committing-suicide-using-genetically-
                          modified-crops.html

                          Comment


                            #28
                            So all the evils of the world can be dumped on one
                            small piece of technology and one company. Your
                            discussion is with your neighbours who use the
                            technology. Companies go where the financial
                            rewards are.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              In the natural weeds aren't necessarily a bad thing.
                              They cover the ground and prevent erosion, etc. It is
                              man who tries to pick winners and losers. Diseases
                              knock off the weak plants and allow the stronger
                              plants to survive. We can move back to that world
                              again but I am not sure whether that will feed a world
                              of 7 billion people today or support North American
                              farmers in the life to which they have become
                              accustomed. Perhaps Africa is the best example of
                              what would happen noting another thread here.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                I'm a fan of using all the tools
                                available as part of an integrated pest
                                management system, it would just be nice
                                to see multiple sources for new tech
                                again. It's not always that my financial
                                and agronomic needs align with the
                                economic goal of the bio tech industry.

                                Comment

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