Toyman01 said:bigdaddylee82 said:In reply to Toyman01 :
I can't speak for everyone, but take a look into the recent Dicamba drift in Arkansas news articles, over the past couple of years. We 100% went against Monsanto, and backed our scientists who's actual research showed Monsanto's claims were erroneous.
Oh but look! It's still a approved product and the company that make it will happily sell you a Dicamba resistant soybean plant. So what are the farmers going to do, other than buy the resistant plant...from the company that makes the poison. Never you mind all the other plants that are killed off in the process. Anyone like peaches, tomato gardens, or cypress trees?
You will also notice that when BASF bought Monsanto, they killed the name. The name that did occasionally get the bad press.
I don't have a problem with industrial scale farming. It is going to be a bigger and bigger necessity to feed all the people on this planet. I also know how frequently the big dog (Industrial Agriculture) uses their big stick to beat the small farmers into submission. I also understand what their driving force is. It's not feeding people. It's making money.
Call it a trust but verify relationship, but it's hard to verify when they own many of the voices that we hear from.
Dr. Chen was at the UofA when I was in school, super smart fella, world renowned soybean geneticist. I didn't have any of his classes, but had school mates that worked for, and studied under him. I haven't payed as much attention to what's going on in MO, but in AR our Plant Board listened to our scientists, and have limited the timeframe in which Dicamba can be applied. It's not a perfect solution, but the herbicide can be applied to benefit the farmers growing Dicamba resistant crops before the more vulnerable other crops are at risk of being drifted on. They increased the fine from a paultry $1K that most less scrupulous farmers would be willing to gamble, to a much more costly $20K.
Trust but verify is a wise stance for just about everything in life. Especially for things you consume, or you give to your kids. That's why the land grant system exists, every state has one, all of the Southern states have two. Applied research for public education and consumption. Sure we're usually grant funded, and some of those funds may come from Evilcorp, but the data is the data. I can't say it's never shown bias, never been influenced, never been doctored, but if it is, that is in direct opposition of everything the Smith-Lever Act was created for.