TimeEffect
Member
I was commenting on the typical "millenials are the worst" shtick.
But I agree, we are shit at that.
We should be able to text and tweet our votes IMO
I was commenting on the typical "millenials are the worst" shtick.
But I agree, we are shit at that.
Society is a clinical trial. The Amish are the control group.
but youtube has a bunch of really great educational channels too.....
Damnit I thought the GMO debate has moved on to the next phase
are we literally back to square one on every topic until people catch up?
This is kinda' irrelevant considering the world is losing the soil needed to grow anything in. Were treating soil like dirt. Its a fatal mistake, as our lives depend on it You can read the report here
Basically there may be only 60 to 100 years of harvests. This is something I have never seen covered in the media and never brought up by politicians. But it may be the single greatest threat out there. If the soil fails we have no food. Not hard to work out the consequences.
I'm not opposed to organic farming as with regards to livestock animals are treated much better. And I believe there is room for both. However companies like Monsanto must be open to rigorous scientific evaluation at all times and not act as a closed business protecting its assets.
But regardless, the idea that we can do what we want with the soil and just keep destroying it is a very stupid direction to go in. But that's where we are heading.
"It takes approximately 500 years to replace 25 millimeters (1 inch) of topsoil lost to erosion. The minimal soil depth for agricultural production is 150 millimeters. From this perspective, productive fertile soil is a nonrenewable, endangered ecosystem."
Source: David Pimental, "Population Growth and the Environment: Planetary Stewardship," December 98.
"During the past 40 years nearly one-third of the world's cropland (1.5 billion hectares) has been abandoned because of soil erosion and degradation."
Source: David Pimentel and Mario Giampietro, Food, Land, Population and the U.S. Economy, Nov. 1994
Africans will starve if you don't eat your GMOs! The guilt tripping dimension of GMO marketing is really weird.
Another way we controlled pests was to plant something they found tastier next to the stuff we actually wanted to harvest, like a decoy. It's a proven technique people have been using for thousands of years. These are the kind of things that factory farms cannot utilize.
Buying from smaller, local farms is what is important.
For people in parts of the world where they don't have access to farmers markets and local food, GMO is the future.
There is not even a federal organic designation, I worked in Hawaii and we got our certification from California.
surely you see that there's a reason the green revolution and scaling up of farm production happened in the first place? because not everyone has access to natural-pesticide Hawaiian farmer's market crops.
Of course, but we have not gone about it in a responsible way. We need to stop practices which deplete the nutrition of both our food and soil, and we need to reduce our consumption habits.
I don't really care about GMO's, I care about the manner in which they are being produced which destroys our irreplaceable natural resources. The same goes for organic.
all sounds great, except I feel you are maybe under-representing the challenges of scale. and distribution.
What does the scale look like when the soil is so degraded in our bread basket that nothing can grow there for another few hundred years?
Not to mention the billions of tons of carbon released into the atmosphere also due to degradation.
There's plenty of areas in Europe that could be used for farming if EU wasn't imposing production quotas and paying for those field to lie dormant.
I don't understand your reasoning here. How does this relate to westerners eating GMOs being the supposed solution to world hunger?
To me, it's all about the global farming industry serving wealthy interests in the first place. Things like biofuel farming in the developing world and western insistence on eating meat all the time.
To quote FDR, "A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself."
Top soil also acts as a carbon sink, taking in CO2 from the atmosphere. This process has slowed considerably since we have destroyed so much of it.
This is kinda' irrelevant considering the world is losing the soil needed to grow anything in. We’re treating soil like dirt. It’s a fatal mistake, as our lives depend on it You can read the report here
Basically there may be only 60 to 100 years of harvests. This is something I have never seen covered in the media and never brought up by politicians. But it may be the single greatest threat out there. If the soil fails we have no food. Not hard to work out the consequences.
To quote FDR, "A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself."
Brian Cox presents Science matters - Feeding the future
But people will continue to ignore scientific consensus and come up with ridiculous nonsense about how "organic" which is a bullshit term is better.
As the global population grows, consumption patterns change and the impacts of climate change and growing scarcity of water and land put pressure on our ability to grow enough food. What steps can we take with modifying crops and species to secure the future of our food?
Panelists will include:
Sir David Baulcombe FRS FMedSci, Regius Professor of Botany at the University of Cambridge
Professor Ottoline Leyser CBE FRS, plant developmental biologist at the University of Cambridge and director of the Sainsbury Laboratory
Professor Philip Stevenson FRES, Senior Research Leader in Chemical Ecology
Here is a panel of scientists on GM Foods presented by Brian Cox.
But people will continue to ignore scientific consensus and come up with ridiculous nonsense about how "organic" which is a bullshit term is better.
But I doubt Trokil or any other anti-GMO poster will watch it because it's at odds with their ideology and bias.
Yeah it seems silly to get hung up on inefficiencies of organic farming as if that's really what's preventing the end of world hunger.
Look at post-harvest food waste and all the energy and resources spent to raise meat if world hunger is what you're worrying about.
We think organic food is healthier, Boomers get Trump elected.
I think we're doing okay.
Which is painfully ironic, given that homeopathy has Nazi roots (also, it's disgustingly vile quackery that doesn't work).One of the demands is exclusive use of homeopathic medicine .. I dont even..
Abit on the side, but here in Norway there are guidelines for what qualifies as an organic farmed salmon.
One of the demands is exclusive use of homeopathic medicine .. I dont even..
There are only thousands of studies about organic what organic is. So even you can not even accept a term, nobody in science is really questioning, how can I take anything you write even as scientific or somehow relevant if you ignore something completely and even question it's existence?
Talking about ideology and bias eh?
http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/05/us-panel-releases-consensus-genetically-engineered-cropsLike several National Academies reviews before it, the new study condemned regulatory approaches that classify products based on the technology used to create them. “The National Academy has been saying since 1987 that it should be the product, not the process,” says Fred Gould, an applied evolutionary biologist at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, and chair of the new report. “But the problem up until now is … how do you decide which products need more examination than others?”
We think organic food is healthier, Boomers get Trump elected.
I think we're doing okay.
Gmo bananas ftw!
Being anti science isn't okay just because other people are even more ignorant.
Well, that's a thing because banana plight.
And also, vitamin A enriched bananas.
New GM banana could help tackle Uganda’s nutrition challenges
So buying healthier food with less pesticide from local markets reducing the impact of climate change and helping small farmers creating an income is anti science.
If the pro GMO people would not act like religious zealots the discussion would be way more balanced.
Which is painfully ironic, given that homeopathy has Nazi roots (also, it's disgustingly vile quackery that doesn't work).
So buying healthier food with less pesticide from local markets reducing the impact of climate change and helping small farmers creating an income is anti science.
If the pro GMO people would not act like religious zealots the discussion would be way more balanced.
So buying healthier food with less pesticide from local markets reducing the impact of climate change and helping small farmers creating an income is anti science.
Supporting by choice all those things doesn't make you anti science, denying the pros of GMOs and preaching ignorance and false information to demonize GMOs (which the article mentions there is a demographic of) is anti science.
Excusing the last bit of behavior because "boomers voted trump" is not really an argument.
But if was allowed to have a choice, why a pro GMO people fighting against labeling GMO food?
Read part 2: The Papaya Triumph.I hate how Neogaf turns every argument into two sides.
I'm fine with GMO, BUT, the way it's used right now is not helping anybody. Food production decreased, it didn't help, it's mostly used for animal feed, it caused the death of many farmers in 3rd world countries.
The main reason for GMO right now is to use pestesides by the same company that made the GMO seeds, these pestesides are harming the soil.
I like some Organic food and hate some, if I like Organic it doesn't mean I hate GMO.
Hard to restore the reputation after US researchers confirm rural Chinese children used in GM golden rice trial.
Misguided attempt to lessen the scare mongering from people going Anti GMO.
Not saying i support that, just saying i understand where they're coming from.
If scare mongering against GMOs didn't exist, no one would have a problem with them being labeled.
But if was allowed to have a choice, why a pro GMO people fighting against labeling GMO food?
It's all marketing. You see that label on things that have no GM equivalent.
It's not about being anti science or anything.
What they actually boils down to is risk.
Science can be wrong. It's how science works.
If they're wrong about, say, how far away the nearest star is, it has little effect on us. They adjust their hypotheses and theories and keep going.
However, if they're wrong about our food, then it's our health and personal wellbeing that we are risking. Our Children.
For a lot of people, personal health is the most important thing. but blanket percentages of not trusting scientists is not the full story. In certain areas of science it's actually reasonable to expect higher certainty.
So it comes from the same place making filming in cattle, pig or chicken farms illegal because seeing how you food is produced and knowing, is a bad thing; so better not having the choice.
It's not about being anti science or anything.
What they actually boils down to is risk.
Science can be wrong. It's how science works.
If they're wrong about, say, how far away the nearest star is, it has little effect on us. They adjust their hypotheses and theories and keep going.
However, if they're wrong about our food, then it's our health and personal wellbeing that we are risking. Our Children.
For a lot of people, personal health is the most important thing. but blanket percentages of not trusting scientists is not the full story. In certain areas of science it's actually reasonable to expect higher certainty.
But if was allowed to have a choice, why a pro GMO people fighting against labeling GMO food?
QUIET YOU
Gizmodo needs dem clicks too. Don't forget to smash that share button!
That's easy. It instantly gives perception that something is bad. I don't know too much about random food things because I don't gain weight and in general don't eat much junk food so I don't care. However if there was some yogurt that said "Doesn't include lymagomatomabroma" (made up term) I may not think much about it but it is possible that in the back of my head without looking it up and learning what that thing is (and I won't because of my food habits) my mind will subconsciosly think "that lymagoma thingy might be bad I guess. I don't know."
Same thing with labeling GMO in such a way. Hell if it wasn't for my internet browsing habits I wouldn't even know what GMO meant for that matter. I would have thought it was some chemical.
What health risks exactly do you fear?
Also, science is simply a process of weeding out misconceptions.
Crossing a hybrid is crossing thousands and even tens of thousands of genes per cross.
A GM crop is using maybe a handful.
If the precautionary principle were to apply, then GM crops are inherently more safe than traditional breeding methods.