also reported as Custer logicShould we start labeling greenhouse grown vegtables and farm grown vegtables as well?
If I may reposition "fear" as "distaste" ...Doer, Trousers, Canabineer. Let me ask you a question:
What is your fear here? Let's assume that the feds acquiesce to the demands of people, and force companies to label GMO products. Let's further assume that due to this labeling mandate, people refuse to buy these products and companies like Monsanto go out of business. What is the downside? Will farming cease to exist? Will we no longer have soy, corn, wheat, etc?
spots where we agree...would of given a rep star but was deniedIf I may reposition "fear" as "distaste" ...
the idea that the majority is always right. I view that with profound distaste.
GM crops/stock are not synonymous with Monsanto, despite that firm's deep involvement with them. To me it's a baby/bathwater problem.
And I salute you for disagreeing politely.
There in lays my concern. This technology is in it's infancy.Addendum to the question "what would be the consequence"
At this time, not much that could be discerned or demonstrated.
If i may indulge in an extended metaphor however ... GM is an enabling technology in its infancy imo.
Like the jet engine in 1943, or the four-stroke internal combustion engine in 1895.
From each historical perspective, there could be no way to really show the effect of stifling either technology.
But imagine a world without cars or airplanes, both of which needed the four-stroke engune.
And imagine a world served by slow prop aircraft, killing the tourism and air transport boom of the last half century.
These things could not be imagined in a world where a steam-driven Zeppelin is the cutting-edge hawtness.
So we really need time to develop GM into the enabling technology i have faith it will become. We have the power to kill it dead now with the labeling requirement, world opinion being what it is. But I suggest we may be killing the next Green Revolution. Greedy companies like Monsanto don't last; they get soft or are otherwise rendered obsolete. But the enabling tech remains and might just free up enough human potential for the next act of glory, be it real access to space or an unprecedented bid for world harmony. To me, THESE are the stakes of the game, and Luddism is invariably the loser's gambit. Jmo.
"Increased pesticide and herbicide use."Increased pesticide and herbicide use. Less food. More expensive food. More deaths due to hunger in other countries.
You can't feed everyone growing organically."Increased pesticide and herbicide use."
How so? I think it's just the opposite. Sustainable farming practices encourages the use of organic fertilizers and pesticides. GMO seeds are "Round-Up ready", meaning that farmers can spray the shit out of the plant with pesticides and the plants are the only thing that survive. Insects, both detrimental and beneficial are nuked, along with every other type of plant/weed and the trillions of beneficial microorganisms in the soil.
" Less food. More expensive food."
Maybe, maybe not. You don't know that to be true.
"More deaths due to hunger in other countries."
Again, you don't know that to be true. Are there less deaths due to hunger right now with the use of GMO crops? I would argue that there are many other more relevant factors to why certain countries have a shortage of food.
I like and agree with what you are saying with one caveat:Addendum to the question "what would be the consequence"
At this time, not much that could be discerned or demonstrated.
If i may indulge in an extended metaphor however ... GM is an enabling technology in its infancy imo.
Like the jet engine in 1943, or the four-stroke internal combustion engine in 1895.
From each historical perspective, there could be no way to really show the effect of stifling either technology.
But imagine a world without cars or airplanes, both of which needed the four-stroke engune.
And imagine a world served by slow prop aircraft, killing the tourism and air transport boom of the last half century.
These things could not be imagined in a world where a steam-driven Zeppelin is the cutting-edge hawtness.
So we really need time to develop GM into the enabling technology i have faith it will become. We have the power to kill it dead now with the labeling requirement, world opinion being what it is. But I suggest we may be killing the next Green Revolution. Greedy companies like Monsanto don't last; they get soft or are otherwise rendered obsolete. But the enabling tech remains and might just free up enough human potential for the next act of glory, be it real access to space or an unprecedented bid for world harmony. To me, THESE are the stakes of the game, and Luddism is invariably the loser's gambit. Jmo.
Since we both love the word play and you will usually do me the favor.....Addendum to the question "what would be the consequence"
At this time, not much that could be discerned or demonstrated.
If i may indulge in an extended metaphor however ... GM is an enabling technology in its infancy imo.
Like the jet engine in 1943, or the four-stroke internal combustion engine in 1895.
From each historical perspective, there could be no way to really show the effect of stifling either technology.
But imagine a world without cars or airplanes, both of which needed the four-stroke engine.
And imagine a world served by slow prop aircraft, killing the tourism and air transport boom of the last half century.
These things could not be imagined in a world where a steam-driven Zeppelin is the cutting-edge hawtness.
So we really need time to develop GM into the enabling technology i have faith it will become. We have the power to kill it dead now with the labeling requirement, world opinion being what it is. But I suggest we may be killing the next Green Revolution. Greedy companies like Monsanto don't last; they get soft or are otherwise rendered obsolete. But the enabling tech remains and might just free up enough human potential for the next act of glory, be it real access to space or an unprecedented bid for world harmony. To me, THESE are the stakes of the game, and Luddism is invariably the loser's gambit. Jmo.
Seriously?yall can keep mis using all teh words you like . .and try to dis credit without substance all you like
i have no doubt GMO will be a label i could care less if they stop GMing food . . . .just like i quit eating at fast food places a long time ago . . i dont boycott them and i dont tell you to . . . .but if they tried to package Mc D's in my local deli as ready made deli food . . .id def have something to say about it . .so cry all you want my moral objective is sound . . yall got nothing when it comes to reasons . . just excuses baseless personal attacks . . .as usual ...if you cant come up with a idea or point attack those who oppose you with slang and deceptive wording . . . like sophistry that keeps being tossed around by mini me and the parrot
to funny you dont even have a grasp of English language you use . . .
I'm rubber you're glue?got nothing to say with substance so you ad hominen . . . . .
You keep saying that but you haven't argued anything.got nothing to say with substance so you ad hominen . . . . .
my argument stands . .you got nothing as usual
According to the rules the FDA has set, mandatory labeling for GMO would not work. It is not rational or reasonable.labeling so consumers know what they are purchasing . . .. pretty basic . . . .
Learn how to spell and use ellipses properly, escpecially when you accuse someone of not knowing english very well, lol.go back to your validation thread and bitch about labels being anti-con . . .thats was funny
lolbut tbh i love to see you post, your ironic and dubious command of the English language is quite amusing, and then to see parrot magee doing the same was priceless
sophistry . . lol . .whats the saying cant see the forest for the trees. . . . .
lolmy personal opinion of lack of evidence is not evidence(also a fallacy) is absent to the fact that labeling has no intention other then to inform
go ahead an back peddle all you want now . . .and source and cite all the opinion pieces and post i made.
my opinion that labeling for consumers is so WE are able to make a informed decision on what exactly WE are purchasing
your attempt to connect one argument that cannot be proven to another argument that is sound is a fallacy as well
you should change your name to Doer of facades
No it isn't. Genetic engineering has been going on since before the dawn of written history.There in lays my concern. This technology is in it's infancy.
You feel that?Despite the studies that have suggested no harmful side effects, I feel that it's too new to really know.
Just as it's too new for me to write it off, it's too new to assume that there won't be any unforeseen (by some) negative consequences to this technology.
With that in mind, I feel that it's reasonable to label products as having genetically modified ingredients.
It has been going on for millions of years without our help. Now we direct these same virus instead of only depending on other GM techniques, like making Mules.I like and agree with what you are saying with one caveat:
GMO has been going on for 30 years now. Not much of an infant anymore.
You can't feed everyone growing organically.
More people + no GMO crops = less food. Less food means higher prices. Means some people will starve.
We can only feed all we do now because of GMO.
http://www.agbioworld.org/biotech-info/articles/biotech-art/need-GMOs.html
Check out that study. It's fairly decent and explains it better than I.
I concede that point. However i have the somewhat unformed and subjective feeling that since genetic engineering is much more complex in concept and execution than those other enabling technologies i mentioned, I consider it justifiable to ascribe to it ... a longer development/milestone timeline than is appropriate to the previous examples of heavy-industry techs.I like and agree with what you are saying with one caveat:
GMO has been going on for 30 years now. Not much of an infant anymore.
Did I run afoul of this? Could I ask you to elaborate?dont argue here without a strong fallacy . . . .
modern or neo influences on technology has nothing on what is or was considered known . . .. . . . world is flat . .. . .and so on
science never changes . . .
lack of evidence is evidence . .. . say the fallacious due . . .
read back on trout and long DOnE's quest to discredit at any cost even to their own argument . . all on the cuffs of the word sophistryDid I run afoul of this? Could I ask you to elaborate?