Thepiratebay man, fight the system! Yea I know Diablo III just came out yesterday, but the price is ridiculous man! I'm doing civil disobedience by downloading a crack. How dare Blizzard, how dare they!

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Thepiratebay man, fight the system! Yea I know Diablo III just came out yesterday, but the price is ridiculous man! I'm doing civil disobedience by downloading a crack. How dare Blizzard, how dare they!
Yeah, that's precisely the issue I have with it. That the profit motive overrides the ability to replant seed.anything not under patent and licensed for one year.
Ensuring a harvest next year is on the same level as copying entertainment files. I'd say you need to work on your rhetorical technique.Thepiratebay man, fight the system! Yea I know Diablo III just came out yesterday, but the price is ridiculous man! I'm doing civil disobedience by downloading a crack. How dare Blizzard, how dare they!
Do you think it costs nothing to develop those seeds? You don't think the companies that do so should have any way to recoup the cost of doing so plus make some profit? They should just be doing it for poops and giggles?Yeah, that's precisely the issue I have with it. That the profit motive overrides the ability to replant seed.
So they choose the best option out of the ones currently available to them, of which replanting isn't one. Nothing new to learn for me there.That doesn't make any sense SS. Farmers have been planting one year products for over half a century because they're better products. They plant the new stuff now because it is also a better product. Farmers also contract to propagate that seed corn for seed companies, delivering patented seeds off their ground at a premium price which the seed companies will then sell to other farmers the next year so they can grow commercial corn. Just because you haven't been in the loop on the division of labor and specialization doesn't mean something new is going on just because you decided to pay attention!
You don't think the companies that do so should have any way to recoup the cost of doing so plus make some profit?
Do you think it costs nothing to develop those seeds? You don't think the companies that do so should have any way to recoup the cost of doing so plus make some profit? They should just be doing it for poops and giggles?
So they choose the best option out of the ones currently available to them, of which replanting isn't one. Nothing new to learn for me there.
I am wondering if for-profit companies should be the ones at the forefront of developing biotechnology products. I like the characterization of billions of dollars as "some". Nice touch.
Oh hose this for now. Not only do you not understand what is going on, you don't want to understand what's going on. And I don't think I'm good enough to give a good crack at explaining it.
From what I think I'm getting is that people have a simplistic view of farming. Put seeds in ground, get more seeds in fall, keep some seeds for ground. Then they get kinda offended when they realize modern farming is highly specialized involving chemistry, soil conservation, tax management, real estate management, mechanics, futures speculation, and contracting.
If you want to back to varieties from the era where you 'just held the big 'ol seeds fer next year,' those plants suck. I want better plant genetics to stake my livelihood on. And I am not confused and offended that it takes a division of labor between seed companies, seed corn propagation contracts, seed corn sales, and commercial corn production, commercial corn delivery contracts and sales to do it.
If more and more are turning to organic, ecological, sustainable, non-ab, "animal-friendly", etc food, then I suppose it's reasonable to oppose an increased paced toward GMO. For political reasons if nothing else.If you're not already eating organically and sustainably grown, preservative free, primal or paleo, cruelty-free, free-trade food, you've got more important things to worry about than GMOs.
To use an example everyone can relate to, it's like worrying about the long-term effects of the filler your nosecandy dealer claims he's using.
No risk that these uberplants outcompete the regular ones and then spread uncontrollably, forcing farmers to pay subsidies to Monsanto?Reducing biodiversity? You insert genetic modifications into a wide variety of crop strains. Just because over ninety percent of corn planted is 'GMO' doesn't mean it's all the same plant. There is short season, long season, medium season, short medium, stuff good on wet, stuff good in dry, etc, etc, etc. Same with beans. I would guess the same with cotton.
There is also nothing forcing you to plant licensed GMO seed from Monsanto or Pioneer or Cargill or anyone, though people have been for seventy plus years. Like people who plant organic for the legitimate market of selling to food mystics.
I think what you are concerned about is monoculture farming? I mean, that's an ok thing to worry about if you take the time to learn about natural growing bands, but it's not actually a GMO issue.
I can't believe I was actually asked what is the benefit of not having to pay for something every year when it can be grown from previous stock. And I never did get an answer on what happens when seeds blow into another farmer's crops.What, exactly, do you think we're getting out of replanting, other than it sounds nice and historic and safe and in opposition to Monsanto?
But people aren't going to want to pay for it.
It is way too hipster cool right now to bemoan GMOs as the ultimate devil that is ruining everything and will make your body melt like its seen the ark of the covenant. Now I can see legitimate beefs with the way some of the companies conduct themselves business wise, but the actual visceral fear of the production itself is just bizarre. Unless the scientists really really screw up and somehow make the plant produce something toxic and somehow that screw up made it through all the testing it just doesnt make scientific sense to have this deep fear.
You don't trust your doctor with your health?and on the other hand a pretty low level of 'trust the companies/scientists!', when the obvious reply to that would be GTFO, cause no one is to be asked to trust someone on issues of life and health.
You don't trust your doctor with your health?
Even without GMOs you already accept a food company having control over your health. Contamination either of a biological or chemical nature is always a risk. Most country regulate to reduce that, but at the end of the day unless you grow all your own food there is an inherent trust you are putting in the producer to not accidentally poison you or give you a heaping pile of salmonella.