Yes!.....Cheerios to go non-GMO......

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Good for them. Doubt it affects sales much. They were already popular.

Love the warnings: may contain GMO and only original Cheerios will be affected.
I think they were getting a lot of customer feedback about loosing sales because of it. I plan to buy a case of non-gmo Cheerios at Costco as soon as I see it offered......just to send the message..........Yes!....
 

joe macclennan

Well-Known Member
there is nothing wrong with a monster like monsanto loosing a bit of it's grip on the stranglehold of food production.

I would think this obvious to more intelligent folk.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
no, youre agains the "big guy".

there's a difference.
what's to be for?

are you one of the stooges they bus in to be part of their astroturf rallies with sean hannity yelling falsehoods that only a retard would believe?

is the measly paycheck worth it?

[video=youtube;KSuR_uIyKtg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KSuR_uIyKtg[/video]
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
there is nothing wrong with a monster like monsanto loosing a bit of it's grip on the stranglehold of food production.

I would think this obvious to more intelligent folk.
be reasonable, joe.

any sane, rational person would be for a total upheaval of the food supply as we know it before all the studies are in.

only a luddite would be against putting all our eggs in one basket that we haven't fully inspected for holes yet.

serious dude.
 

DNAprotection

Well-Known Member
be reasonable, joe.

any sane, rational person would be for a total upheaval of the food supply as we know it before all the studies are in.

only a luddite would be against putting all our eggs in one basket that we haven't fully inspected for holes yet.

serious dude.
same old story lol...

[video=youtube;QaxqUDd4fiw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QaxqUDd4fiw[/video]
 

Canna Sylvan

Well-Known Member
you make such a compelling and well thought out case for the elimination of Genetic Modification.

Fuck Monsanto! said:
It's in fish and chickens and cows. It's in fluorescent light fixtures, envelopes, and forklift trucks. And if you've been drinking the water and breathing the air, it's probably in you. It's one of those versatile synthetic hydrocarbons, like plastic and DDT. This one is called polychlorinated biphenyl, or PCB for short. Because of PCB, you can't buy Coho salmón at the grocery store, and fishermen are advised not to eat it more than once a week. The success of Michigan's effort to restock the lakes with game fish is threatened. And workers in faclories here and elsewhere may be showing signs of Yusho disease-PCB poisoning. We've known PCB was harmful for 40 years, but we're just getting around to banning it. Chester Georgic, a retired operating engineer,usedto take care of a boiler-heater system for melting resins at the. Inmont Paint Corporation plant on Milford (near Livernois and Warren) in Detroit. The heater, like many others in the auto plants around the city, operated much like a home hot-water heating system-except that instead of circulating water, it circulated a clear, smooth-flowing liquid with the consistency of thin oil called Aroclor. Aroclor is the trade name that Monsanto Chemical Corporation gave to PCB, which was first produced in 1929 and found many trial applications during and after the second World War, due to its chemical and thermal stability, non-flammability, and non-conductivity. Georgic worked on the heater from May 1958 until he left work in January 1971, suffering from a back injury, a persistent skin condition, and a feeling of weakness and lethargy. His responsibilities on the job included drawing samples of Aroclor out of the system into a bucket to test the viscosity about once a month. He wore no protective mask and inhaled whatever fumes blew his way. On other occasions, when he would have to add more Aroclor to the theoretically "closed" system.
Continued here:

http://oldnews.aadl.org/node/201014

I like posting images too!

 
Top