farmlad wrote:For anyone seriously wanting to learn more about Roundup. I can recommend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j42Iyh-MOXA
Bio: Dr. Don M. Huber
Dr. Huber is Professor Emeritus of Plant Pathology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Idaho (1957, 1959), a Ph-D from Michigan State University (1963), and is a graduate of the US Army Command & General Staff College and Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He was Cereal Pathologist at the University of Idaho for 8 years before joining the Department of Botany & Plant Pathology at Purdue University in 1971....
PrestonSturges wrote:farmlad wrote:For anyone seriously wanting to learn more about Roundup. I can recommend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j42Iyh-MOXA
Bio: Dr. Don M. Huber
Dr. Huber is Professor Emeritus of Plant Pathology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Idaho (1957, 1959), a Ph-D from Michigan State University (1963), and is a graduate of the US Army Command & General Staff College and Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He was Cereal Pathologist at the University of Idaho for 8 years before joining the Department of Botany & Plant Pathology at Purdue University in 1971....
Huber has been claiming to have discovered a new super pathogen that is somehow caused by RoundUp and capable of infecting anything, but he is also claiming this global threat is his personal property and will not share info. This nice man seems to be in his 80s and gone totally batshit, like the others.
http://youtu.be/9luJnDfThQM
I think the pattern is that if someone is batshit crazy, all they have to do is start yelling about "RoundUp!!!!" and the money just rolls in.
PrestonSturges wrote:Sorry, nobody gets to claim they have discovered an apocalyptic pathogen and then shrug off further questions. People that would fall for that are what's called a "patsy," or a "mark," or "rube," or "sap," or "stooge," or "pigeon".... well you get the idea.
When an argument degenerates into a debate about who is "nicer," the argument was lost years ago.careinke wrote:So far your argument is based on name calling. I expected better of you.
farmlad wrote:For anyone seriously wanting to learn more about Roundup. I can recommend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j42Iyh-MOXA
Bio: Dr. Don M. Huber
Dr. Huber is Professor Emeritus of Plant Pathology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Idaho (1957, 1959), a Ph-D from Michigan State University (1963), and is a graduate of the US Army Command & General Staff College and Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He was Cereal Pathologist at the University of Idaho for 8 years before joining the Department of Botany & Plant Pathology at Purdue University in 1971.
His agricultural research the past 50 years has focused on the epidemiology and control of soilborne plant pathogens with emphasis on microbial ecology, cultural and biological controls, and physiology of hostparasite relationships. Research also includes nitrogen metabolism, micronutrient physiology, inhibition of nitrification, and nutrient-disease interactions.
In addition to his academic positions and research, Dr. Huber has had several concurrent careers including 14 years as a professional labor-relations mediator with 7 years service on the Indiana Education Employment Relations Board as a Mediatory/Fact Finder/Conciliator, and served 12 years on two school boards with recognition as a Master Board Member from the Indiana School Board Association and Honesty in Public Service Award from Taxpayers United For Fairness. He retired in 1995 as Associate Director of the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center (Colonel) after 41+ years of active and reserve military service.
He has received various awards for his scientific accomplishments and contributions to government. Dr. Huber is an active scientific reviewer; international research cooperator with projects in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Denmark, Germany, Japan, Mexico, and Russia; and a consultant to academia, industry, and government. He is author or co-author of over 300 journal articles, Experiment Station Bulletins, research presentations, book chapters and review articles; 3 books, and 84 special invited publications. He is internationally recognized for his expertise in the development of nitrification inhibitors to improve the efficiency of N fertilizers, interactions of the form of nitrogen, manganese and other nutrients in disease, herbicide-nutrient-disease interactions, techniques for rapid microbial identification, and cultural control of plant diseases.
His greatest accomplishment has been his marriage to Paula Huber and their 11 children and 35 grandchildren. Dr. Huber currently serves as APS coordinator of the USDA National Plant Disease Recovery System (NPDRS)
So is EDTA, which is used in foods and also for "chelation therapy," which is another form of woodissident wrote:Very nice presentation. Glyphosate is a strong chelator and antibiotic.
Serious Soution to a Serious Problem - Our Liquid Oral Chelation
EDTA is the primary component used in a process called Chelation. EDTA Chelation Therapy has been in practice for over 60 years and has been proven to eliminate heavy metals (lead, mercury, iron, etc.) from the body. The issue with heavy metals is that they accumulate causing many health problems that can impact literally every major organ in your body.
In addition to eliminating heavy metals, EDTA Chelation has also been shown to remove mineral deposits, particularly calcium. Over time when these calcium deposits remain in the body, they build up and harden, resulting in decreased circulation. Blood supplies nutrients and oxygen to all critical body areas (organs, nerves, muscles and tissues), so there is no doubt how important it is to have proper blood flow.
Great News from the Completed NIH Study
Chelation therapy, an unproven alternative medicine in the treatment for heart disease, modestly reduced cardiovascular events for adults aged 50 and older who had suffered a prior heart attack, according to new National Institutes of Health-supported research.
Results from the chelation arm of the Trial to Assess Chelation Therapy (TACT), which will be published in the March 27 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, showed that infusions of a form of chelation therapy using disodium ethylene diamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) reduced cardiovascular events by 18 percent compared to a placebo treatment. Investigators stated that more research is needed before considering routine use of chelation therapy for all heart attack patients. The EDTA-based chelation solution also contained high doses of vitamin C, B-vitamins, and other components.
PrestonSturges wrote:And just look at these shocking pictures from Japan! Clearly Roundup is to blame!
Ooops, no it's from the 1950s in the small fishing town of Minamata on Kyushu island where chemical company Chisso Corp had for years dumped mercury into a bay, poisoning fish and unsuspecting residents.
But still, RoundUp!!!, right?
careinke wrote:I would really like Pops to watch this, and give his opinion, since he advocated that RR crops might be good for humanity.
Ibon wrote:I had to just remain quiet as I thought of the pastures here at Mount Totumas we didn't reforest where we maintain a few head of cattle and how after 5 years of trying to control a few noxious weeds we applied glyphosate this past rainy season to bring them under control. Just a little squirt surgically applied on each weed, not broadcasted on the whole pasture.
pstarr wrote:Monsanto is now the latest monster to torment our minds as we try to reduce this immensely complex story of human overshoot down to blaming a few evil players.
Ibon you and me have long memories. Is it a curse?
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