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  Cow Milk         


Author: Bawl
Date: Jul 30, 2006 14:12

7 Comments
  Climate Shift Requires New FARMING Paradigms         


Author: B1ackwater
Date: Jul 30, 2006 13:35

Climate change happens - Can PEOPLE change quickly enough ?

As everyone is aware, there's yet another significant heat wave
in both the USA and europe. Is this 'global warming' at work or
merely a long-term trend towards more heat, just as the "little
ice age" of the 1600s was a 300 year trend toward colder temps ?
Hard to say - and it hardly matters either because it's HAPPENING
and we have to COPE with it.

While the news concentrates on dehydrated old people and big-
breasted joggers passed-out on the streets, the REAL threat is
not to people directly - but to AGRICULTURE. With about seven
billion people to feed, temperature and rainfall deviations
threaten the agricultural base which sustains them.
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2 Comments
  Genetically Modified Sorghum         


Author: nwachai
Date: Jul 26, 2006 02:22

I have never understood why Africans still harbor xenophobic tendencies
towards genetically modified foods. To most Africans, benefits of
genetically modified foods is exaggerated and not worth any
consideration. What they don't know is that Americans and Europeans,
who apparently they loathe, readily eat these foods. They make billions
of dollars from trade involving them. The elites in Africa,
unfortunately, have not done much to educate the lay people about the
potential benefits of genetically food. So, blind opposition to
genetically modified food continues, to the detriment of the masses.

I am making this post because of some events that are currently
unfolding in South Africa. There, Dr. Florence Wambugu, an icon of
modern agricultural biotechnology, has received a grant of US$400
million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to develop
genetically modified sorghum. As a start, Dr. Wambugu would like to set
up a state-of-the-art laboratory to research on GM sorghum, but the
South African government has told her NO. To justify its actions, the
government has expressed fears that genetically modified sorghum might
contaminate indigenous sorghum varieties.
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