Biotech Fuels Superweeds, Yet Still Creates ‘Better - TopicsExpress



          

Biotech Fuels Superweeds, Yet Still Creates ‘Better Formulated’ 2,4-D Chemicals b4in.org/h5Hf The hubris of the biotech industry is unprecedented. While mother nature and the system of plant evolution has taken thousands of years to perfect in a symbiotic, subtle and intricate dance between ‘pests’ and ‘plants,’ the industry supporting Monsanto, Syngenta, and Bayer have wiped this development out in 30 years. Biotech created superweeds with their ‘scientific’ self-confidence, and they want to ‘solve’ a problem they still haven’t admitted creating with even more chemicals. Science magazine exposed the biotech industry with their article, “What Happens When Weed Killers Stop Killing,” outlining just what farmers have to look forward to if we allow biotech to continue on this path they have us all complicity consenting to. Over fifteen years ago, experts warned what would happen to the soil, and to weeds themselves if we allowed herbicide-tolerant GE crops to be planted, but for some reason (thanks to propaganda), no one listened. The most prevalent superweeds growing on farms now are due specifically to Monsanto’s RoundUp chemicals. US farmers are now literally flooding their fields with poison in order to get rid of the superweeds created with – can you believe it – the same biotech poisons which caused the problem in the first place. Read: Pesticide Use Soars: 100 to 400 Million Pounds Annually “Tom Philpot, writing in Mother Jones (Feb.6), reports the alarming stats on the superweed takeover of US farmland. As of 2012, almost 50% of US farms had superweeds. In 2011, it was 34%. In Georgia, it’s now 92%. The total acreage of US farmland with resistant superweeds jumped by 51% in 2012. In 2011, it was a 25% increase. That upward- percentage escalation is called a nightmare.” As Neil D. Hamilton, Dwight Opperman Distinguished Professor of Law and director of the Agricultural Law Center at Drake University points out: “But not to fear, industry has a new solution — if you call it that: Take an older, harsher weed killer, 2,4-D, and breed resistance to it into seeds so more can be applied, enough to kill those pesky Superweeds. Meaning we are going to start over with the same approach, asking farmers to pay more for the privilege.” More b4in.org/h5Hf
Posted on: Tue, 01 Jul 2014 07:49:43 +0000

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