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Post by skytroll on Jun 2, 2005 0:42:07 GMT -5
Hello there people, Well, I am still looking for anything and everything that could be giving us this most morphing morgellon mugmump. Here is a sight that might offer some clues as to what might be happening to us. ishgooda.org/nuclear/gen6.htm I do not think George Washington Carver had this in mind when he laid the ground work for the good old peanut and it's many uses. I do not think he ever would have imagined that soybeans, corn, cotton and maybe soon peanuts, if we don't stop them. Monsanto, Syngenta, etc. Maybe I'll get a list of all these companies. Cliff Michelson might be so right here. Not just cotton, but many products. GO ORGANIC AS MUCH AS YOU CAN. PRODUCTS ARE LABELED THAT. SEE IF THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE IN YOUR SYMPTOMS. BUY AMISH FOOD. It is so wholesome. skytroll
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Post by Faith on Jun 2, 2005 0:52:51 GMT -5
I agree with you.....
I still cant get over GMO. I always try never ever ever to buy anything with GMO's.
If I have any doubt how I got this stuff, I become enlightend just thinking about the past when I would buy products and not read the lable.
For a time I believed this was some GMO gone wrong...Now....I still dont know.
GMO- genetic modified organism
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Post by beware on Jun 2, 2005 4:09:18 GMT -5
Beware of buying those Amish products. A community lives about 12 miles from me and they shop at the same grocery store as me, and they buy products with additives just like everyone else. Also they use manure for fertilizer. People from Chicago were paying big bucks for Amish drinking water that was came from their wells.
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Post by guest on Jun 2, 2005 9:22:24 GMT -5
My God, after reading that article, all I can say is, what the hell has gone wrong in this world? I firmly believe our condition is due to the evil scientists and greed driven corporate pigs...their experimentation and creations having run amuck...will there ever be a way to stop this?
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Post by spiderlegs on Jun 2, 2005 19:36:49 GMT -5
One of the articles I've read (subscribing to the nematode theory) infers that the particular nematode in question was genetically modified to be virtually invincible and nearly undetectable: the cotton fiber worm. Now, I'm going to stand back and say that seems a little too "X Files" to me, but they DO genetically modify existing nematodes to be more resilient and efficient for pest control. That's nearly the same damn thing. There's an old saying, if I've said it already, please forgive me, I've experienced a touch of the brain fog, as you know, but it goes:
"There were snakes in the garden. So the man released a mongoose into the garden. Soon, all the snakes were gone, but the mongoose hungered. And when it hungered for too long, it found a hole in the awning of the man's house, and in the nursery, it began its hunt for food."
I think it was Rudyard Kipling who wrote that. I'm sorry, it's a very bastardized version, but the point is clear: science exists in a delicate balance with nature--it is the study of nature--but when it presumes to and then alters nature, it creates a whole new set of problems tenfold worse than the ones it sought to eliminate. I'm not talking about taking aspirin for a headache, or even transplanting an organ, but altering the genetic building blocks of an organism--changing its very structure. There are demons down that pathway we are not equipped to encounter. It's like CO2 is normally harmless, the breath we exhale. But remove one oxygen atom, and it becomes a lethal poison. When you gentically alter something, you may enhance its resistance to bacteria or whatever, but that balance I mentioned earlier takes precidence which means if you take bricks from one wall to fortify another, you still have a wall vulnerable to attack. The organisms on the planet Earth are all programmed for: birth, feeding, maturing, multiplying and dying. And if you believe in evolution, then organisms will evolve as their environment dictates, when the need arises. Disrupt the balance, and you set off a chain reaction with end results that can't be predicted.
I'm not Cassandra. I'm not a reactionary weirdo or armageddon whacko. I am a person who makes an effort--if I can't learn how something works--to at least observe how something works. An that balance in nature is evident in so many ways from the way geese flock, to the way herds thin or grow and the health of the animals and their predators, to the way the earth's magnetic field flows to the poles and the way the moon affects tides the way all those things have been happening for millions of years until the arrogance of man sought to change its environment. We lit a fuse. And it is now our role to wait and see what that fuse ignites. We're resilient; hopefully, we'll adapt to these new problems that arose from our need to play god. If not, the earth will do fine without us. The earth has plenty of time to heal after we're gone. I suspect that if the earth truly does have a "spirit," she feels about us the same way we feel about our bugs.
And that's the end of my Yoda impression for this evening. Sleep well tonight.
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