Let's forget government regulation. The organic industry need to take it upon themselves to label their food packages "non-GMO," and we'll buy them. Simple solution.
agreed. And I've gladly chosen to buy cheap, organic, GMO or not.
Let's forget government regulation. The organic industry need to take it upon themselves to label their food packages "non-GMO," and we'll buy them. Simple solution.
GMOs are a threat to the balance of nature, PERIOD.
It's not that easy. Though a lot of companies have been winning, it was like climbing a mountain just being able to package milk as non-hmo. Some companies still put a disclaimer that it hasn't been proven the hormones they put in some milk affects health negatively, thanks to corporations.Let's forget government regulation. The organic industry need to take it upon themselves to label their food packages "non-GMO," and we'll buy them. Simple solution.
It's not that easy. Though a lot of companies have been winning, it was like climbing a mountain just being able to package milk as non-hmo. Some companies still put a disclaimer that it hasn't been proven the hormones they put in some milk affects health negatively, thanks to corporations.
You can't fight if you're starving to death. Take away the ability of a state to get seeds (after everything has terminator gene) and they won't be able to grow food. How long will ground hogs and squirrels last?
edit: BTW, the same corp.s that control the seed are in bed with the empire at the moment.
Yes, I'm quite sure it is the state sanctioned dictionaries fault that the definition of the word disagrees with you.
Anarchy (from the ancient Greek ἀναρχία, anarchia, meaning "absence of a leader"), has more than one definition. In the United States, the term "anarchy" typically is used to refer to a society without a publicly enforced government or violently enforced political authority.[1][2]
Outside of the US, and by most individuals that self-identify as anarchists, it implies a system of governance, mostly theoretical at a nation state level although there are a few successful historical examples,[5] that goes to lengths to avoid the use of coercion, violence, force and authority, while still producing a productive and desirable society.[6]
Anarchism is generally defined as the political philosophy which holds the state to be immoral,[7][8] or alternatively as opposing authority in the conduct of human relations.[9][10][11][12][13][14] Proponents of anarchism (known as "anarchists") advocate stateless societies based on non-hierarchical[9][15][16] voluntary associations.[17][18]
Libertarianism refers to political philosophies that emphasize freedom, liberty, and voluntary association. There is no general consensus among scholars on the precise definition. Libertarians generally advocate a society with a government of small scope relative to most present day societies or no government whatsoever.
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy defines libertarianism as the moral view that agents initially fully own themselves and have certain moral powers to acquire property rights in external things.[1] Libertarian historian George Woodcock defines libertarianism as the philosophy that fundamentally doubts authority and advocates transforming society by reform or revolution.[2] Libertarian philosopher Roderick Long defines libertarianism as "any political position that advocates a radical redistribution of power from the coercive state to voluntary associations of free individuals", whether "voluntary association" takes the form of the free market or of communal co-operatives.[3] According to the U.S. Libertarian Party, libertarianism is the advocacy of a government that is funded voluntarily and limited to protecting individuals from coercion and violence.[4]
Government should this, government should that blah, blah, blah.
My wife is a vegetarian. She wants that all of our house hold cleaners, soaps, etc are not animal tested. Every time I go shopping for these items I have to do some research if a brand I have previously validated is not available. Sometimes I cannot tell on a certain brand, but have never not succeeded in finding that item in another brand that fits.
Some personal responsibility would go a long way on this rather than watching that dip shit Bill Maher and friends talk nonsense.
But the word is a philsophy...anarchy is just a society organized according to anarchism. Anarchism is a philosophy about an enlightened transition to stateless society.
They just keep on lying to see if you will believe their bullshit."You guys have been lying to your recruits for years. Rothbard advocates for minimal government..." - Travlyr
I think you're missing the point. Government exists to preserve the righs of men against all who would wish to violate them. If GMOs are a legitimate threat to our liberties, it is the duty of government to enforce laws that protect consumers from false advertising.
they are a legitimate threat to our health thereby also a threat to our liberty.
If the GMOs caused dead zones, and eventually would threaten us all, then that would threaten their business...so it wouldn't be worth it to create a finite business out of an infitinte demand like food. It's like saying unregulated loggiing leads to deforrestization...when in reality only public lands face the tragedy of the commons. Private lands (like 99% of logging lands are private) have no such issue, because the loggers don't want to log themselves out of an industry. They maintain it via property rights...they replant forrests and regrow them, and cut down less than than grow, and slower than they grow. Forrest that get logged have usually been logged numerous times, once or twice each, every generation.
I'd bet dollars to donuts these "dead zones" are public land, not private.
That's the problem: the dead zones don't effect corn growers in Iowa; they kill wildlife in the gulf. If GMs destroyed the crop land, they'd be gone tomorrow; unfortunately, the problem is way down the Mississippi (and various other places around the world.)
Threats to our health:
Bad air and water (so we need the EPA to protect our liberties).
Terrorists (so we need the CIA, NSA, TSA, etc).
Unsafe items coming on board planes (so we need the TSA).
Lack of exercise (so we really should have a DOMYA - Department of Moving Your Ass).
Genetics (we should probably start looking to restrict the breeding of people with bad cells).
Sadly, the "it's a threat to health so it's a threat to liberty" argument leads to precisely that road.
That's the problem: the dead zones don't effect corn growers in Iowa; they kill wildlife in the gulf. If GMs destroyed the crop land, they'd be gone tomorrow; unfortunately, the problem is way down the Mississippi (and various other places around the world.)
On the other hand, dismissing out of hand any kind of threat is not correct either, as then you dismiss murder, rape, arson, robbery, and so on. Anarchism only works if everyone is civilized to begin with, and humans do not take to civilization all that easily.
While I do not like the idea of spraying herbicide and insecticide on food, I do not have enough information to determine if GMO is bad or good. Evolution is GMO. GMO has been around for centuries. Has anyone studied this? If so, please share.
Conspiracy theorists certainly have "studied it". While you are correct evolution is genetic modification, but I think there's a point to be made that human modification and human selection may differ from natural selection. This isn't saying its bad, and I think its unfair that conspiracy theorists and fearmongers blow that out of proportion, always assuming humans must fail if they mess with nature.