I am farmer i am growing pomogrenate fruits now using 80 percentage organic products but I did not used colour agent for that reason my pomogrenate fruits sold at less than 35 percentage costs. People's also should eat not just by looking outside they should observe inside.
@sanjaybhatikar3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful, what you are doing. I used to buy these ugly looking pomegranates in Southern India that had large colorless grains. Nobody wanted these but they were simply divine to taste. The vendor referred to them as “nati” pomegranates which is local lingo for wild. Those perfect-looking pomegranates taste like cardboard, cost twice as much and don't last long. Thank you!
@dnyaneshwarhirgude42673 жыл бұрын
u should advertise your fruits with harms that artificial coloring agent do.. And one day u ll sale your fruit with cost u want.. People ll take time to understand wt u giving them but eventually they ll realize
@diljitparmar82963 жыл бұрын
Promote your products, people are paying more for organic produce.
@ButterflyLullabyLtd3 жыл бұрын
Agree. Where are you based? I'm in Wales UK. Tell me more about the colouring agent used. What does a real organic fruit look like?
@sm36753 жыл бұрын
Sell them to Canada!!!! I love healthy pomegranate, but the cold weather makes buying them hard.
@RandyRandersonthefamous3 жыл бұрын
You skipped the part where the anti-sparrow campaign led to a pandemic of crop-destroying insects leading to famines
@KootFloris3 жыл бұрын
@@lightdark00 This disaster helped humanity to see the interconnectedness of it all. And now capitalist corporations may kill billions if we don't change course. Just one of the benefits from capitalist ravanging the planet for profit. So,this is NOT about political systems, but about interconnectedness and a healthy whole.
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
@@KootFloris : Hotter and hotter every year because 87% is from cattle and pigs and chicken !!! Scientific fact !!! Planes ✈️ 10%. Go vegan everybody. And 10 plants 🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾, One steak 🐮💩🦠🥩😲 !!! Scientific fact !!! Dr. Sailesh Rao Author of Study Published In Journal of Ecological Society 87%: Animal Agriculture Really Is A Killer... Methene is animals 🐄💨💩🔴🦠🍖😩🤯. KZbin him !!!! Very important for everybody !!! Only got the Earth you know !!!!......
@KootFloris3 жыл бұрын
@@VeganV5912 Heard of Shiva Vandana? She too has great views.
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
@@KootFloris ... you hurt innocent animaIs ? BIudgeoned to death ? For a 5 minute hamburger ??? CuIt foIIowing !!!! You don’t do with your cute little dog. You love your dog🤗🐶, or parrot 🤗🦜 . You can have vegan burgers and vegan chicken and vegan pizza and vegan curry and vegan burritos and vegan tacos..... without any murder !!!! KZbin delicious vegan food. ✅🤷🏼♂️
@KootFloris3 жыл бұрын
@@VeganV5912 I don't even have a dog, as that would be cruel given my life style.
@sms77823 жыл бұрын
The less healthy the environment, the more difficult it gets to go without chemicals which when used further destroy the environment…
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
Hotter and hotter every year because 87% is from cattle and pigs and chicken !!! Scientific fact !!! Planes ✈️ 10%. Go vegan everybody. And 10 plants 🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾, One steak 🐮💩🦠🥩😲 !!! Scientific fact !!! Dr. Sailesh Rao Author of Study Published In Journal of Ecological Society 87%: Animal Agriculture Really Is A Killer... Methene is animals 🐄💨💩🔴🦠🍖😩🤯. KZbin him !!!! Very important for everybody !!! Only got the Earth you know !!!!
@ikka4893 жыл бұрын
@@VeganV5912 vegan is proven to be bad for health, humans need meat and it's nutrients, plants can't do that for us. Unless you want half the world to die, then going vegan is the way.
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
@@ikka489 . Actually the opposite. No stink if you eat plants and fruit and nuts and berries and tubers. Scientific fact.
@dodiewallace412 жыл бұрын
All matter is chemicals.
@MrTekkiters3 жыл бұрын
Can I just say… I’m a farm sun the UK and we have been using pesticides that target specific pests… such as flea beetle in oilseed rape. So there are alternatives out there in which makes pesticides a more sustainable way of producing food. To further support this, people should be against the governments, not the farmers. We are doing our job to produce food the way people and the government subsidises us. Therefore farming is very governmental run at the moment.
@dodgro83422 жыл бұрын
pesticides ultimately destroy microorganisms in the soil, without which the plant can´t absorb nutrients properly. The interconnection between the microoganisms and the crops, the symbiosis, must be preserved. Otherwise you´re ultimately creating more pests and more diseases. Why not try biological methods of combating pests? Like chickens and other birds, distraction crops, multiculture, rotation of crops, etc. Although probably that´s not possible under the current state of affairs. Both the govt and farming are run by huge corporations, which are in turn run by private individuals (shareholders) only looking for profit. That´s the real problem.
@MichelBrPrGu3 жыл бұрын
There are a lot information lacking in that video, as example if you search about pesticide commonly used in organic farms allowed in most contries you will find Copper or Sufur derivates, that compounds caused in many parts of Europe soil sterility, both are large spectrum "pesticide" affecting not only the target, but all microbial and insect community (when I found out I was also scared, i didn't knew that), There are some EU documents about that. . About the food loss, most of the post haversts losses is caused by fungi contamination, and without using chemical that is will be higher. The fungi toxins are more toxic compared with chemical pesticide, and even harden to remove (search for Mycotoxin and Aflatoxin). . Cows, Pigs and Chicken, besides high nutrition value (in protein and essential vitamins) produce fertilizer and if used properly complete a essential cycle of food production. In fact mines of potassium nitrate (essential fertilizer in agriculture), as a gigant site of poop from birds (search for Chile Salitre). And you can use that chicken residue as a high value fertilizer . . There are many people in the world working in alternatives for the current problem of Chemical pesticed, nowadays we have Bacillus (bacteria) that have succefully used to control fungi and some insects in field, Trichogramma galloi(Microwasp) Insects that parasites other insects. Trichoderma a fungi that compete in the field against phytopathogenic fungis.
@joeferreira6572 жыл бұрын
Good knowledge, thanks
@CHMichael2 жыл бұрын
Over specialized farming communities loose out on many cost savings. Cows on the field - no need to buy feed and fertilizer
@kats.72683 жыл бұрын
Yess! Regenerative farming ist productive, creates more fertile soil, brings healthy food and stores carbon. We don't need carbon capture technology, we need to stop destroying our farmland with monoculture, gmo and pesticides.
@XavierbTM12213 жыл бұрын
We also need carbon capture technology We have already pumped way more CO2 than oceans or forest will be able to naturally consume, or at the rate that is needed to avoid irreparable ecological damage
@Imkerei20243 жыл бұрын
Its all about globalization
@liamfeatherstone9243 жыл бұрын
It's cutting down 30% of all forest's on the planet replacing them with games. Watch david Attenborough on Netflix his new one tells you everything you need to know
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
Hotter and hotter every year because 87% is from cattle and pigs and chicken !!! Scientific fact !!! Planes ✈️ 10%. Go vegan everybody. And 10 plants 🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾, One steak 🐮💩🦠🥩😲 !!! Scientific fact !!! Dr. Sailesh Rao Author of Study Published In Journal of Ecological Society 87%: Animal Agriculture Really Is A Killer... Methene is animals 🐄💨💩🔴🦠🍖😩🤯. KZbin him !!!! Very important for everybody !!! Only got the Earth you know !!!!.....
@thatonedog8193 жыл бұрын
Gmo is fine. It's the patent that's a problem. You can do regenerative ag with gmo just fine if they were allowed to seed save.
@farmertomas3 жыл бұрын
There is not a food shortage. This is a distribution and sharing issue. Even during the Irish Famine food was exported to England under armed guard. When Geldoff went to Ethiopia food was not being distributed due to their horrific dictator. Bovine growth hormone in the USA was not need as there was already a surplus of milk... We need to learn how to share. We don't need pesticides. Also we would be wise to look at the painful reasons within ourselves for overconsumption, greed, hoarding etc..rather than feeling abundant and share.
@clrly75183 жыл бұрын
A lot of these conversations come back to consumers. What consumers purchase drives how farmers farm, how breeders breed, etc. If people understood that an apple with a small blemish on it is still edible, there would be much less food waste. The standards for producing fruit have gotten out of control and given farmers two options; either use harsher chemistries to try and create a perfect piece of fruit, or go organic, spend a fortune on inputs and hope that you have something to show for at the end of the year.
@transcrobesproject36253 жыл бұрын
That is a little narrow in terms of an analysis. A lot of (industry paid?) experts continually talk about the nasty diseases you can get from bad/old fruit and vegetables. "When in doubt, throw it out" is how lots of people are told to behave. By experts. So why would you buy stuff that you are not sure about to start with? That most people could eat very rancid, worm infested fruit and vege with nothing more than an occasional bout of diarrhea is beside the point. One magazine article about how a kid somewhere died of a worm in "ugly" fruit is enough for most to never buy it again. Most people are completely incapable of determining the risk profile of such things, so go for what the ads/advice tell them to.
@m.9353 жыл бұрын
Yeah, like most people have the money for buying fruits, let alone organic one. Poverty is the issue.
@transcrobesproject36253 жыл бұрын
@@m.935 There are inexpensive fruit out there in most countries, they are just not getting to the people that need them. But agreed, fruit with a little pesticide residue is 99.99% better than McD's
@BLAQFiniks3 жыл бұрын
I disagree: commercial farming is heavily subsidized by gov., so it's cheaper to consumer, therefore, they buy it. If organic farming was subsidized the situation would be reversed~
@transcrobesproject36253 жыл бұрын
@@BLAQFiniks it most certainly is, and if the true costs of current industrial practices were included in prices to consumers, it might well be very different. The reality is that prices are often suppressed for political purposes, to ensure a pliable public and healthy campaign contributions.
@ArtemisDaBich3 жыл бұрын
The gulf dead zone is not because of pesticide runoff. It is fertilizer runoff causing algae blooms which use up all the oxygen creating areas with little oxygen content.
@thierrystokkermans54343 жыл бұрын
I have doubts about the quality of this video. I will not explain all of them but highlight one that most people should understand. At 3:19 , the presenting journalist claims that "one intrinsic problem is the way pesticide* works" and follows Yvette Perfecto explaining the concept of "pesticide* treadmills". No critics or question from the journalists on this concept. The viewer is left to believe "pesticide* treadmills" is a thing. At 9:43, the presenting journalist asks "but do we need to get rid of all pesticides*?" and follows John Reganold explaining that we can use synthetic chemicals in a smart way. No critics or question from the journalists on this idea. The viewer is left to believe "smart use of synthetic ag-chemicals" could be a solution. Have you seen it? Only one of this concept/idea can be true. Not both. But the journalists didn't bother to find out which one is true and which is false. *synthetic
@garysquarepants8983 жыл бұрын
The treadmill starts witht the enormous flooding of pesticides indiscriminate on the crops, same goes for deadly bacteria in Living Stock constantly fed with anti-biotics. Of course, if you have a sick plant that can infect others, as well as a sick animal, you shall cure it or intervene on the pests, that's a WHOLE different story than flooding healthy beings with anti-things they don't have
@thierrystokkermans54343 жыл бұрын
@@garysquarepants898 Thanks for your reaction. It is interesting and is more subjective than rational. The phrase "enormous flooding of pesticides" make me conclude this. Some readers may ask "why is it subjective?". In Europe, commercial farmers work with great precision and none does flood a field with pesticides. Here is an example with glyphosate for the reader wanting more information: glyphosate is a well known herbicide. It can be used to terminate a cover crop or a pasture in order to make room for a new crop for example. A common rate of glyphosate is 1 liter per hectare. It means that on 1ha, a farmer will apply once 1l of glyphosate to kill the current plants and make place for a following crop. One hectare is equal to 10000 square meters or 2 soccer fields. Applying 1 liter to 10000 square meter is not exactly flooding. Weeding with glyphosate is precision work. Same precision applies to all pesticides used on European agricultural crops.
@garysquarepants8983 жыл бұрын
@@thierrystokkermans5434 It depends from the nature of the poison sir, also a few micrograms of many substances can kill you. "Flooding" is an image used to understand the nature of the event related to its consequences, not to explain the nature of the event in itself and only itself. Stop isolating concepts like they exist alone, China tried with birds, like they existed alone, and their crops were eaten by insects. Don't be so ideological and a bit communist, try to link events with each other and find the possible solutions, be a human.
@massimopecile96663 жыл бұрын
10:40 as a farmer i use already a lot of not so conventional agronomics pratices, but i do conventional, 3-4 crops rotations, cover crops, minimum tillage, but i still use glifosate for example, this is called integrated defense and its mandatory in europe. I have best results than ever using different methods
@tazboy19343 жыл бұрын
Glyphosate 😭🐙🔪
@dodgro83422 жыл бұрын
Mandatory herbicide? My god. The best results I´ve ever got was from mixing organic fertilizer (cow manure) plus a little bit of lime, a little bit of phosphorite flour and a little bit of superphosphate. So basically, mostly organic plus a little bit of mineral fertilizer to get the microorganism activity going.
@jentaff6 ай бұрын
Great not saying it doesn’t work! But at what price…. don’t you care about yourself your family and your consumers . You really believe it does no harm! Oh yes of course that lie comes from the manufacturer of the seeds and the chemicals right and the scientists and farmers they pay off to say it!
@arpadtoth16213 жыл бұрын
OK, talking about how it should or could be in agriculture.....thats nice, but why dont DW mentioned the two of the biggest manufacturer of agro chemistry on the planet....Bayer and BASF? Is it a taboo for German broadcaster, or is it because of their contribution of wellfare of Germany? DW, leave the comfort zone and be more critic!
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
@kid man , Hotter and hotter every year because 87% is from cattle and pigs and chicken !!! Scientific fact !!! Planes ✈️ 10%. Go vegan everybody. And 10 plants 🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾🌾, One steak 🐮💩🦠🥩😲 !!! Scientific fact !!! Dr. Sailesh Rao Author of Study Published In Journal of Ecological Society 87%: Animal Agriculture Really Is A Killer... Methene is animals 🐄💨💩🔴🦠🍖😩🤯. KZbin him !!!! Very important for everybody !!! Only got the Earth you know !!!!..
@thatonedog8193 жыл бұрын
@@VeganV5912 you can't do regenerative ag without animals. You just have to change how you manage your animals and suddenly they are putting as much carbon away as they produce
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
@@thatonedog819 ....👈.. John Wayne Gacy.. Clown 🤡🔴😵😵😵😵😵😵..... over a fricking burger !! 5 minute burger et cetera !!! You don’t do it with your cute little dog 🤗🐶 . Or cat 🤗🐈..... CuIt following !!!! 🙄🤦🏼♂️Over a fricking 5 minute hamburger et cetera🖕!!!!!
@thatonedog8193 жыл бұрын
@@VeganV5912... What....
@VeganV59123 жыл бұрын
@@thatonedog819 🐷🔪⛓🙁/😵🔴🍖🐮.... 👈🤥🤥🤥. Hypooocrite !!! Big time !!!!! You don’t do with your cute little dog 🤗🐶. Or a parakeet 🤗🦜..... For a 5 minute frigging burger !! You can have vegan burgers and vegan pizza and vegan cheese and vegan ice cream and vegan curry and vegan burritos and vegan tacos and vegan sushi..............
@szabomarton80643 жыл бұрын
you dont burn grain as a fuel. You remove starch which converts to ethanol that you burn, but the most valuable part of the grain (the proteins etc.) will be recycled into animal feed. So ethanol from corn is freeish (its not exactly), as corn contains too much starch for animal feed anyways.
@jacewright64282 жыл бұрын
Interesting, I think we shouldn't be breeding animals anyway.
@aven_snow2 жыл бұрын
@@jacewright6428 I agree that we should heavily reduce the amount of animals we breed but we should still keep some as they can convert the non-edible food waste from crops into food we can eat in the form of protein rich meat. Without animals such as cattle and sheep, there wouldn’t be a use for these bye products and lots of it would go to waste.
@jacewright79752 жыл бұрын
Interesting. Can it not be composted? And anything that provides enegery when eaten (like animal feed) can be burned as fuel right?
@IanZainea19903 жыл бұрын
Grew up in the country surrounded by farms and had childhood ashtma. We felt it was due to chemicals, but had no proof, just a suspicion.
@eugenesebastiannidiry22793 жыл бұрын
This is part of chemophobia. In the terminology of 'organic farming', the adjective 'organic' is not used in the sense in which the word is used in science.
@dodgro83422 жыл бұрын
right, it´s not like pesticides cause diseases and ecological catastrophies.
@kolliwanne9643 жыл бұрын
3:30 This is only showing half the truth. We already work around that by using different pesticides at once, which inhibits any kind of resistance development. It is unlikely that even a singular mutation causes a resistance against one pesticide, but it can happen. But two pesticide resistances at once, or even three? Those numbers are practically non existant. This is even working for antibiotics and bacteria, and those are WAY faster than any plant or insect. Also the reaction to humans and other animals are very different depending on the pesticide you use. Some are even completly harmless.
@kolliwanne9643 жыл бұрын
@Lukae Yes they develop resistances one by one, but not all at once. And thats the point.
@kolliwanne9643 жыл бұрын
@Lukae No its not. The point is, if you use the right technique you can prevent the development of resistances.
@dodiewallace412 жыл бұрын
Toxicity is a dose, not a substance. Toxicity has nothing to do with natural or synthetic. Copper sulfate, chlorpyrifos, caffeine, rotenone, nicotine are all natural pesticides that are far more toxic than glyphosate. The planet needs smart management, so it can't be done by philosophy, we need a target: effective, safe, low environmental impact and then take the best routes there. And in many cases those are conventional farming practices. And no farmer is going to argue with you about NOT using a chemical. Those are costs. They spray the least amount possible out of pure economics. For example without Bt, cotton needs to be sprayed 23X more often. That fuel saving, that reduction in compaction, and those chemicals that were never purchased are all gains created by using whichever methods work best. Because a conventional farmer can still use anything an organic one uses. But they also have these other tools, just one of which is responsible for feeding half the planet all by itself. There is simply no way that we could feed the world using only organic.
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
Bravo!!
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
I reposted your comment.
@MySensualWorld2 жыл бұрын
Good healthy soil and produce will naturally stand up to pests in many cases!
@carsonbaird39042 жыл бұрын
Not really. wild berries and veggtables wouldnt be eaten by bugs if that were the case. Not to mention the Irish potato famine those potatoes were in very healthy soil yet the fungus still diseased them. A gmo potato had to be made to stop the potatoes from being infected. But for some foods you are correct as plants can produce there own pestsides.
@CarolynandAlexiashow Жыл бұрын
That's because the irish were only growing one type of potato, when you lack genetic diversity in your crops that's exactly what happens, a disease will cause devastation. That's why organic farming is the best.@@carsonbaird3904
@malikjackson93378 ай бұрын
@@carsonbaird3904The Irish Potato's demise was caused by late potato blight. However, this is a poor example of a healthy farming system. Irish Potatoes lacked genetic diversity because they were grown in monocultures. At the time it made sense to mass plant the Lumper Potato variety to feed Ireland's growing population. They didn't know any better but the lack of genetic diversity made their potatoes more susceptible to diseases. Plants grown in ideal circumstances are far more resilient to disease. That isn't controversial and the scientific literature strongly supports that the healthier an organism is the more resilient it is to disease. Wild varieties can also be insanely prolific. I have half the property I live on consumed by wild thorny blackberries.
@kokigephart1113 жыл бұрын
When you talk vegan you basically give up the use of the oceans which produce massive amounts of food. Raising grain for cars is insurance , if there are massive crop failures we can just stop feeding cars. I raised cows for forty years and could go years without pesticides but I could never grow a cabbage without sprays.
@checkma8s2 жыл бұрын
I dont use pesticide... i plant herbs. Just like in lettuce i plant onions to counter caterpillars
@willy41703 жыл бұрын
There are already crops that can sinthesize natural chemicals that keeps pest and insect without the need to add synthetic pesticides, but thanks to years of fearmongering, people freaks out as soon as they hear the word “ogm” ignoring that most of our food comes from crossbreeding, like wheat, apples, bananas, corn… It is the same thing happened with nuclear energy, sometimes there are great discoveries that could solve a lot of problems, but aren’t adopted because someone convinced people that are bad.
@joaco33922 жыл бұрын
Totally agree with this. Genetic modification of current species using CRISPR is the future, but we have a long way to go before wide adoption
@criss36192 жыл бұрын
@@joaco3392 best of course of action would be to continue research while minimizing how much of our current food contains GMO
@danieldiaz53422 жыл бұрын
The problem with GMOs is not so much the GMOs themselves, rather the very aggressive and harmful businesses practices of the corporations that developed GMOs.
@criss36192 жыл бұрын
@@danieldiaz5342 do you know the name of these corporations? I would like to investigate them.
@philipm31732 жыл бұрын
@@criss3619 I mean Bill Gates has thrown tons of money into it. But Bayer is one of the biggest. Nobody has any clue but our varieties of foods are going extinct faster than the creatures we're wiping out of existence. Crops were specialized over many generations to be perfectly adapted to the local area they're grown: well adjusted to the peculiar weather conditions, nutrition profile, and pests & diseases. Now, seeds are bought from just a few companies making hybrids from the same stock. We've eradicated the genetic diversity of our food making it susceptible to disease and pests and it's homogeneity itself being a liability. Without diversity in our crops, we gamble everything being wiped out by the same fate and any farmer will be quick to tell you that when disaster strikes, it strikes with a vengeance.
@KrisHesselmark3 жыл бұрын
Aditi Rajagopal is amazing :D
@aditirajagopal3 жыл бұрын
Gee, thanks!
@fruitcc3 жыл бұрын
The professor in the video dodged a question it asked: will organic farming require us to cut down a lot more forests (10~20x) to feed the population? How would people choose between using pesticides vs cutdown 20x forests?
@shawnsg3 жыл бұрын
@@alexanderdvanbalderen9803 this isn't a fair critique because I haven't looked at all the things you've mentioned. However, I've seen the small permaculture things mentioned in KZbin and I can't see how that can conceivably be scaled up to feed the population.
@krism62603 жыл бұрын
@@shawnsg Easy peasy lemon squeezy. Take labour, subsidies and fertile soil away from the meat industrie, and put all of it in food for humans.
@dodgro83422 жыл бұрын
why cut down forests? organic fertilizer comes from cows and other cattle. Plus a bit of minerals, like phosphorite and lime. And that´s all you need.
@dodgro83422 жыл бұрын
@@shawnsg smaller farms, interconnected, with a combination of growing crops and agricultural animals, strategically placed in fertile areas, with channels and reservoirs and shelterbelts built around them. Farms that use crop rotation, multiculture, cover crops, distraction crops, biological methods of combating pests. Those can feed the global population.
@Beyonder83352 жыл бұрын
Coming from a farmer here, idk about 10-20x but organic on average does yield SIGNIFICANTLY less. Hence why organic goods are so much more expensive. So yeah we’d likely need to clear a whole load more land, or we’d just have a whole swath of the population starve.
@IanZainea19903 жыл бұрын
0:50 Oh man,, the slap! Too funny! 🤣🤣🤣
@massimopecile96663 жыл бұрын
Looks easy, but when you farm the land you may undestand some problems. Agricolture is easy when your plow is a pencil thounsands km away from a field
@emiliea.45393 жыл бұрын
Pas tout à fait. Quand chaque agriculteur aura compris qu'il est le maillon terminal d'un système qui l'asphyxie lui-même, il décidera de faire autrement. D'autres solutions existent pour co-construire la résilience alimentaire de chaque territoire. 🙏
@jefersilver3 жыл бұрын
Great answer
@t4ntr4203 жыл бұрын
Not quite. When each farmer understands that he is the final link in a system that suffocates himself, he will decide to do otherwise. Other solutions exist to co-build the food resilience of each territory. 🙏
@Suburp2123 жыл бұрын
Bull.
@t4ntr4203 жыл бұрын
@@Suburp212 lol its a translation of emilies comment
@alphonsobutlakiv7892 жыл бұрын
Have a small farm, and tenants, usually they'll farm a bit. Had one use liquid fertilizer and heavily water, no one else ever did that. Everyone else planted and covered the ground in fine hey, like from a lawn mower, and only watered if needed. Never have I seen the crops so late, or tomatoes so hard, as the one time someone tried the unnatural way, it was the only real difference I can see.
@jamesowchar85573 жыл бұрын
Forgot to mention when the chinese killed all the sparrows and such their crops were DECIMATED and many more died
@jacobcuntington25403 жыл бұрын
It's called regenerative farming. We can.
@TheHonestPeanut3 жыл бұрын
It was just called "farming" before the tractor.
@r.guerreiro1403 жыл бұрын
You cannot without chemistry and agrochemicals. By the way, I'm talking from a farm house surrounded by regenerated fields. Regeneration done through no tillage which is not possible without glyphosate.
@jacobcuntington25403 жыл бұрын
@@r.guerreiro140 it is possible without glyphosate
@TheHonestPeanut3 жыл бұрын
@@r.guerreiro140 I'm in the process of regenerating 25 acres of what used to be a new England sheep farm. We don't use glyphosate. So no you do not need herbicides.
@r.guerreiro1403 жыл бұрын
@@TheHonestPeanut Your reality is absolutely different from what we have to endure on tropical weather Maybe you can attain a feasible soil management without deeper concerns about saving organic matter and vegetable cover to avoid desertification
@deepsearch75663 жыл бұрын
I am directly related to pesticides. I am a consultant for commercial agriculture in California. The lady is absolutely wrong, we don’t apply more than what’s regulated. We rotate chemistry’s (FRAC GROUPS) to prevent resistant biological adaptions. Pesticides help feed large populations and with large regulations in California prevent us from over using and polluting, we try our best to use natural predators, but invasive species brought over from foreign entities cause us to use alternatives to prevent crop disaster. At the end of the day we are trying our best to evolve agriculture to be cleaner. And that being said, we are feeding the world and crop disasters from pests can cause a major rift in our world supply of food. One or few pest can devastate a whole agricultural region that can cause a repeat in history of previous crop disasters that can lead to famine. I am constantly learning in agriculture that almost every single company is making a turn to greener and safer AG. Please support agriculture.
@mikaeldefays92353 жыл бұрын
Same you didn't compare the carbon footprint of conventional and organic food, this point is very important...
@pokrpork3 жыл бұрын
1:35 and then the locusts came in and ate all their crops and created a famine in which 18 million died .
@TheBugkillah3 жыл бұрын
If you think your “organic” fruits and vegetables at the supermarket didn’t use pesticides…
@reforest4fertility3 жыл бұрын
Organic was a step in the right direction, but Regenerative Agriculture will take us the rest of the way to clean nutrient dense & abundant food -- believe it or not?
@reforest4fertility3 жыл бұрын
@@inharmonywithearth9982 This sounds about ... very right. Don't forget for all to push for full switch the Regenerative Agriculture, cuz it puts itself, the growing of food, in direct relationship with forests, afforestation, reforestation & rebuilding topsoil lost since 1945 with monoculture & tilling, going way beyond mere organic into an abundance of nutrient dense foods, all for me mere picking. Tho that is work many will still want done for them, or not in the place of stable fertility.
@reforest4fertility3 жыл бұрын
@@inharmonywithearth9982 Great gratitude for being in harmony with the Earth. I'm trying to prax Regenerative Agriculture. I did lose some perennials in the process, but where it's successful the results are WOW! Just keep diversely feeding the soil & the soil life (worms, most visibly) come to near the surface, just where we want them & where they want to be to catch the soil exudates.
@Goblin4WD3 жыл бұрын
First of all people really don't want the real thing coz they go by how a fruit or food looks like, so if a fruit has to look good chemicals have to be used.
@venugopalmadhav49182 жыл бұрын
organic farming can be done far better than conventional method and it is inexpensive. that is what i teach in my farm activities in kerala, india. this gives more quantity, rich in nutrition, better size, shape and colors. finally food as medicine
@aditisk992 жыл бұрын
If it gives more quantity then why are we still using chemical pesticides???
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
You teach lies in your farm activities class.
@Ismalith3 жыл бұрын
I have a simple rule, if a company would not give a pesticide to drink directly for a year, I do not want it on my food.
@jefersilver3 жыл бұрын
Short answer: definately No. Long answer: yes, but everybody should be vegetarian, don't have kids and pay 3 times the price. Even though... the complexity of the issue is not addressed.. where (in a large scale) all the nutrients will come from? Is there enough supplier of organic fertilizers? (No)... Even in an organic farm the output of nutrients by its products need to be inserted back. And the list goes on.
@KootFloris3 жыл бұрын
Haha, who do you work for? The interests of the 'industries' are killing the planet.
@sketchimation_shorts2 жыл бұрын
My dream is to own property and turn it into an insect sanctuary by providing natural flowers and plants for them. I also hope to have enough space to grow my own food that I can eat and also donate to the community.
@aditisk992 жыл бұрын
Same
@CHMichael2 жыл бұрын
Without - 100% organic. There is so much we can do to prevent pest infections and cut down on chemical fertilizer but there are times when they are the right tools in a farmers tool bag. Farming is at least a bachelor degree education. Or as the Germans call it - agrarwirt - Modern automation already makes farming much more productive.
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
100% organic would be a world wide disaster killing billions.
@timreeves62963 жыл бұрын
Not if Monsanto has anything to do with it
@hmsdemolition85883 жыл бұрын
I worked 28 years in the wholesale/ retail agricultural industry , the people demand perfect fruits & vegetables and that only happens with pesticides.
@wesmurphy97253 жыл бұрын
Exactly.
@loneforest65413 жыл бұрын
Regenerating agriculture of permaculture is the future, now or later u need to come to natural way.
@bluerobe13 жыл бұрын
im a farmer 👩🌾 i will come back when i have enough time to explain a bit from my little knowledge. i do organic and conventional farming. this is wast topic, needed more time and research to touch all the pros and cons. theory and practice doesn’t relate even 10 percent in farming tbh. the topic u chose should be appreciated.
@massimopecile96663 жыл бұрын
As a organic farmer, i use wastes of conventional farming to fertilize the organic part of my farm,i cant do organic without that we need nitrogen for planta
@timmythompson21863 жыл бұрын
These people don't care. I have tried to explain the knowledge I have and the fact that we aren't starving to death because of advances and chemicals in farming. We don't have constant famines, food is cheap, farmers lose their entire harvest much less often, etc. Everything that we do that would be organic if we were to have it certified is in such small scale that pumpkins, cucumbers, sweet corn, and tomatoes are really all that we sell. Its all such a pain in the rear to do that I feel the people talking about their "studies " should be forced to farm and put their house and land on the line if they fail. Either that or they can come out and set the live traps, radios, electric fence, and build and maintain greenhouses.
@timmythompson21863 жыл бұрын
@@massimopecile9666 I remember watching a video about the approved fertilizers and pesticides for organic farming have caused a bunch of health problems for the farmers that use them according to European union. These ppl that demand everything organic often don't seem to realize that it doesn't mean no chemicals were ever used. Past that, all of the things that I hear them talking about conventional farming causing just seem to be exaggerated claims. We have more people on earth, less famine, better yields for farmers than a century ago, longer life expectancy, cheaper food. The only thing I'm not a huge fan of is the hormones and stuff that is used for livestock, however I don't know enough about it to say that I thinking wrong. I just try to eat meat that comes from people that we know so I know it isn't in there. However, I still eat store bought often
@autoredox3 жыл бұрын
Everyone: *talking about the environment* Me, looking at the thumbnail: NAGARETEKU
@andrewshepard63163 жыл бұрын
Farmers need to take the regenerative route of farming. Organic farming is good but it needs to be regenerative because organic farmers are still legally allowed to till. And tilling kills the soul food web which is how plants get their nutrients and build their defense systems from pest naturally. They say organic usually produces less yield but organic regenerative farmers who followed Elaine inghams soil food web studies have actually experienced 200% more yield than conventional farming. So actually we could produce more food with less land. Cows need to be grass fed and poultry needs to be pasture raised. Tilling should be illegal (unless there’s an invasive plant that’s impossible to get rid of except by tilling) plus there are more nutrients in the soil than plants know what to do with. We just need bacteria and fungi to put it in plant available form so they can absorb it. Tilling kills those organism We need to spread the word to end world hunger. The more nutrients there is in food the less we actually eat. Energy is useless if we don’t have the nutrients to go with it.
@Beyonder83352 жыл бұрын
I’d love to see a source on that “organic regenerative raising 200% the yield of conventional” bit. Also the impact of tillage varies completely by area, tillage has its own set of pros and cons, just like no till or any other system, it’s about what works in each situation.
@darkranger1163 жыл бұрын
"what would we use besides pesti-" the bug food circle : "oh well gee idk.. not me or anything.." *blushes*
@puravidadew70313 жыл бұрын
What are you talking about?
@spiderpickle32553 жыл бұрын
@@puravidadew7031 maybe they are a spider
@agrojader3 жыл бұрын
This video contains many half-truths, misleading and biased information. It hits one side of the story, only. For example, it is assuming that all chemical pesticides are exactly the same, which is false. Like in pharmaceuticals, the technology evolves. Pesticide chemistry too. Today, you don’t take the same drug for headaches as 30 years ago, because new and better ones were discovered. Pesticides follow the same logic - nowadays they are by far less harmful to the environment and for the consumer.
@NecromanSir3 жыл бұрын
When you say less harmful to the environment; what do u mean by that exactly? killing insects will lead to birds without food, and less birds means less things that depend on birds; say for seed spreading, fertilize, food and so on. So about biased information? hum.
@agrojader3 жыл бұрын
@@NecromanSir you are confirming my assumption. Pesticides are not all the same. Did you know that most of yield loss in many crops are made by fungus? What is the effect of a Fungicide on insects? I mean don't get me wrong, mate. This topic requires less emotions and more information.
@NecromanSir3 жыл бұрын
@@agrojader Do not use how aboutism with me, I hate it. You have confirmation bias yourself, I did not confirm anything. I pointed out the ecological chain and how it is broken by certain practise. Using pesticide, herbicide fungicide and chemical fertilizers is a practice not in equilibrium. Those are some information for you.
@agrojader3 жыл бұрын
@@NecromanSir I understand your point, and I offer you a different perspective: would you say any sick human being taking a medicine against some deadly disease goes against the natural equilibrium or environmental chain?
@NecromanSir3 жыл бұрын
@@agrojader You are welcome!
@sketchimation_shorts2 жыл бұрын
Better question: Can we afford to continue spraying forever chemicals into our world? We have the resources (water, fertilizer, green houses) to maintain individually owned farms and garden. We wouldn't be starting from sticks and stones if we went without them.
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
Humans have strove for thousands of years to escape the bondage of subsistence agriculture, we're not going back to it.
@osterlaich63953 жыл бұрын
If we would produce food properly and distribute it fairly noone would have to go hungry. Having cats and dogs isn't the same as poisoning the lands on an industrial level.
@arthurarrobas3 жыл бұрын
Wrong informations. Pesticides do not create resistant they select. We should stoping using antibiótics from her perspective ? The problem is the wrong use in both case.
@stannowak50862 жыл бұрын
I was taught to use pesticides as 'salt on an egg'
@emiliea.45393 жыл бұрын
Bonjour 🇷🇪 merci pour cette vidéo. Les connaisances des anciens, la permaculture et l'agroforesterie peuvent nourrir l'humanité. 🙏
@M_Julian_TSP2 жыл бұрын
Non clairement pas, toutes les études sur le sujet montrent que s'il fallait retourner aux anciennes méthodes ou généraliser la permaculture, il faudrait plus de 90% de la population qui travaille dans les champs, la sécurité alimentaire en empatirait et il faudrait raser les derniers hectares de forêts qui ne le sont pas déjà sur Terre
@juangranados74583 жыл бұрын
Im a farmer and i don't live in the "global north" reg ag souns utopic here. As consumers will hate any imperfection and chemical pesticides are the only way to avoid it. GMOs are powerful tools that have been known for bad things but have potential for great benefits. Food wastage is terrible and we should follow on France footsteps (tax the food trhown away if it isn't donated to food shelters) , all governments should tax carbon footprint including transport. And all producing countries should have a co-op every 100 000- 400 000 people in which price minimums and maximum are set by the government and producer unions based on 1,15 times production cost to 2,5. (Similar to what india farmers were striking to protect) So you place a non loss option for crops but food never sores too high to endanger the plates of your population. This would hace the infrastructure to extend the life of the produce, dryers, freezers etc. Buy non perfet produce, buy local. In Spanish its "manejo integrado" im trying to reduce chemical pesticides but almost got broke due to complications over my change. Organic certifications are extremely expensive, takes two "clean years" in which you lose yield with no improvement in price. Local markets cant move enough organic produce from my farm to make it profitable close. An export permit is very expensive and will make food availability and cost worse for my country. Making a high carbon footprint produce due to transport. (Winter might have a lot of cons but its a bio reset i really would like to have) Tl;dr: It isn't easy. And consumers need to change first.
@Azeem_013 жыл бұрын
Video is informative,interesting and very good. What are the pros and cons of organic farming to the farmers? How can we get rid of pest,while we are doing organic farming? Which is cost effective to the farmers organic or non-organic farming?
@matthewdancz91523 жыл бұрын
The pest problem of modern farming mostly stems from monocultures of a single crop. Diversify the crops grown to reduce the prevalence of pests that eat any particular crop or crop type. Although many pests can also be eaten, so you could just harvest them too with the appropriate. Also the introduction of natural pest predators can dramatically reduce the numbers of breeding adult pests. Essentially just reproduce what happens naturally in forests but in a controlled and managed manner. There is a whole bunch of free information on youtube about these kinds of setups, but it could take some work to get everything working properly on any particular body of land. Desert reclamation is even possible with these sustainable techniques. An organic food forest is far more cost effective than modern non-organic farming practices, but it takes quite a lot of time to set up properly, as well as a lot of knowledge on crop rotations, plant scheduling, etc... Non-organic farming is significantly easier, because you just need to know about a few plants, and can amend the soil according to what that plant needs, which allows the production of a single high value crop rather than only a handful of high value crops. These are the reasons we tend to grow food the way we do today, because sometimes easier significantly more desirable than profit.
@DWPlanetA3 жыл бұрын
Exactly, these and many more questions are answered in the video. Thanks @10J Azeem Uddin 🙏
@Beyonder83352 жыл бұрын
@@matthewdancz9152the problem with food forests is that they aren’t scaleable. In order to run one you have to manually harvest plant, and maintain everything, due to the inability for machinery to navigate a forest and harvest multiple different crops at the same time.
@shanebassen59633 жыл бұрын
Livestock is not the enemy. They are the scavengers that make use of land that is no good for farming. They also are great at eating food waste. If you think it takes a lot of water to make beef look into what it takes to make almonds or avocados in the dessert.
@krism62603 жыл бұрын
You mean the Rainforest? Or more recently the forests in Ukraine? These are being cut down to grow soy for an ag. Not exactly "places where only animal foods can grow"...
@cephalonbob153 жыл бұрын
Short answer: yes Long answer: yes, but we have to do it in a certain way
@cephalonbob153 жыл бұрын
@@tjmarx hydroponics
@cephalonbob153 жыл бұрын
@@tjmarx farm bugs for protein and tech advancement will make vertical farms cheaper. Plus you can also make food distribution better so farmers no longer have to dump their crops cause they could not find a buyer
@carollynne59433 жыл бұрын
Hydroponics is not organic..Soil is life giver..we r soil we go back to soil.
@mrcsrkcrz Жыл бұрын
You can just feel the German influence all over this video. I’m all for a better world but to say that it’s good to be organic as it’s more profitable because farmers can charge a premium just shows where the problem lays. How do you want to sell ecologically grown, cheap and in masses? It’s not about how much farmers earn it’s about what people can afford. Sure in Germany for most no problem. What if you charge this premium all over India? Sadly heavily biased and one sided so hard to truly understand the good opinions we have. You need to lay down the entire process and how to make organic food scalable, profitable and affordable for everyone if you really want to prove a point.
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
The problem is organic is not scalable due to substantially lower overall yield.
@mrmachiavelli83803 жыл бұрын
I have a juju berry tree in my home when we use pesticides the crop is 60% more than when we don't use pesticides.
@utkarshraval293 жыл бұрын
Are we all going to ignore the fact that to explain food wastage, my man just busted an entire apple.
@hhwippedcream2 жыл бұрын
The organic side of pesticides is just as scary. You'd be surprised what is acceptable.
@thecrippledpancake94553 жыл бұрын
I’m trying to get into the field as fast as possible before the money runs out.
@hwtodoit25673 жыл бұрын
The hope to reversing to organic farming is in Africa
@matthewfunk49693 жыл бұрын
Sure we can. But we’ll need half the consumers to die and the other half will need to accept lower quality produce pre-seasoned with starvation at substantially higher costs.
@anubizz33 жыл бұрын
Of cause the disadvantage is from poor country , if its out if sight its out of mind. this people from first wold country dont care.
@pwrofmusic3 жыл бұрын
I saw something fall off the table in the video. In it just boils down to money. Rice of organic products to consumers and right price to farmers. The rest is irrelevant.
@kolendamp33603 жыл бұрын
Hunger is not a lack of food, but a lack of salary. If organic farming is more expensive, less people can buy food. Another problem is the appearance of food. A tomato with a spot consumer won´t buy, so organic produce has huge food waste.
@troyt65323 жыл бұрын
Without pesticides, every farm would be organic. Organic farming involves a lot of tillage similar to farming 100 years ago. That lead to the dust bowl in the 30s.
@keithbachand22513 жыл бұрын
Yes it’s possible. As long as we truly focus on bio fungicides and insecticides and get the price point lower for these products so farmers will swap to them. I own a peach orchard and use bio fungicides and insecticides with good results. I am not completely organic as I need fertilizer that has a higher nitrogen content than organic solutions provide. But other than that I do what I can to limit the use of any chemicals.
@roselillyushewokunze114011 ай бұрын
This is a very contentious topic
@joseeduardotschen91862 жыл бұрын
Impossible! Ask Sri Lanka who banned synthetic pesticides and it was a disaster!
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
That's right!!
@ARcher_98o2 Жыл бұрын
as a guy doing Ph.D in agricultural chemicals i would say...modern commercial agriculture without chemical pesticides is like a bicycle without pedals...u can ride it but can't go far
@jawadmalmusawi74783 жыл бұрын
finding a technology or a way to store a food for long time may be the key to reduce the food waste. then, we can reduce the demand and the price of the organic food
@matthewdancz91523 жыл бұрын
We have that technology. It is called freeze drying.
@iUnicornTv3 жыл бұрын
Dried foods, fermentation, and preservation with correct storage methods is key
@MySensualWorld2 жыл бұрын
People have grown food for thousands of years without pesticides!
@melissajon20112 жыл бұрын
I love the content! Thanks!🧡
@user-eh2hj8bx6O5 ай бұрын
Could you cover herbicides also?? herbicides vs pesticides? round up/glycophosphate?
@toni4729 Жыл бұрын
The one area that people absolutely refuse to see is, animals. Eating animals instead of all the toxic rice, wheat, corn, soy, sugar, and seeds that are grown for oils that take up such a massive amount of land when, for the most part meat and fish is only eaten once a day. That's all. People talk about eating vegan, but people who only eat vegetables, never stop eating.
@bintobinoy67283 жыл бұрын
Οrganic food is a mith. Conventional farming has more than ten times productivity than organic farming. 1. In farming either the plant produces the chemical that kille or reppel the insects or we spray on them , what do you think which one is more safe ? 2. Why the people got so much the chrmophobia? 3. You are spreading the phobia.
@tombrenemanMt3 жыл бұрын
Reduce yeild of grain crops and the entire worlld will starve.
@Nikhil_singh........000 Жыл бұрын
I am also a farmer having 10 acre area and if we started growing crops organically we haven't any but problem is not getting best price for that hard work we done in field you people giving education on sitting chair go and ask farmers at ground level how they survive at that low prices if all farmers increases the price you guys more than half salry went in buying basic food ❤
@southernpride4942 жыл бұрын
Farmers wouldn't use pesticides if we didn't need them, they are not cheap, food became cheaper and widely available with the introduction of pesticides. People want perfect looking fruit on the supermarket shelves, if they were okay with blemishes and ugly fruit/veggies then there would be less pesticide usage. Resistance is only a problem if we don't rotate our mode of actions (MOA). If you want organic produce world wide it would require more individuals growing their own produce, and probably GMOs(which has its own negative spin). Very easy to complain about problems versus fix them.
@dudinrudeboy79122 жыл бұрын
Nah, u cant change our entire diet to plant based that impossible
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
That's right!
@seekanddestroy91113 жыл бұрын
What about grass fed cattle?
@id_emotion2 жыл бұрын
Everyone should grow their own produce. I've already started sowing seeds indoors (UK) You can easily grow most vegetables and some fruits, even grain like corn (wheat may be tricky in small gardens) Even chickens, you can grow for eggs or meat (if you are okay with it)
@mrcsrkcrz Жыл бұрын
You think we have enough space for everyone to own their own garden? People just see solutions from their own point of view just like the perspective of this video, ignoring that a massive amount of population can’t afford the premium in price needed to make organic profitable enough and we can’t afford the extra space too. The actual solution would be less people. Any other idea is not as simple as people want it to be.
@innate-videos3 жыл бұрын
This is an excellent vid, thank you
@jon_s3 жыл бұрын
This is exactly why YT doesn't recommend it. It exposes the truth against the big GMO players like Bayer and Cargill who scheme to eliminate subsistence farming, eliminate all natural seeds and force the world to depend on everything they produce in labs. That's what the "Green Revolution" was all about, artificializing and commercializing our most basic needs for survival
@marshalepage53302 жыл бұрын
Wheat: I wonder if you can increase productions: by harvesting just the seed prematurely and growing the top seed portion in a smaller hydroponic pot until they become mature it may be possible to multiply the crop output and grow the majority in a high rise farm with a lot less space. Growing just the seed portion after cutting it off the top of the plant may make the plant attempt to regrow the seeds more often since it thinks it's seeds never reached maturity. It may be necessary to use root growth methods to get this to work but it would increase crop yield per acre possible multiple times larger than current yield.
@marshalepage53302 жыл бұрын
The root growth would only be needed on the seeds you are attempting to grow without the parent plant.
@aditisk992 жыл бұрын
Would the second batch of grains be as nutritious as the first or will it lessen over the course??
@robertkat3 жыл бұрын
Can I use Arsenic, it is organic.
@vaughnspight6813 жыл бұрын
No I think we always gonna need them
@yuliazni40063 жыл бұрын
Where the subtitel list?
@loveworksnoevil3 жыл бұрын
Dawn soap kills most small pests, the little insects. Just mix with water and spray plant leaves under and over(biodegradable to), just don't drnch the soil. Maybe we can lighten up on meat, but I don't think I'll make it on leaves.
@Simon-19653 жыл бұрын
Question: what is worse than finding a maggot in an apple? Answer: finding half a maggot in an apple! 😁
@sabujoseph60723 жыл бұрын
Yes, it is disgusting.. unfortunate that you won't find that if the fruit or vegetable is drenched in pesticides
@woopsserg3 жыл бұрын
Plot twist. Maggots don't eat apples. They are flesh eating larvae of some fly spices. So it should came from some dead body.
@Simon-19653 жыл бұрын
@@woopsserg the larva of fruit flies, maggots, feed on the flesh of apples. Some flies are vegetarian.
@aditisk992 жыл бұрын
Just cut apples before eating.
@marb7463 Жыл бұрын
It can be done and must be done the leaders of countries should demand it be done sooner rather than later or it won’t be worth living . Nature should not be messed around with everything man made is poisonous to us and animals .
@madhumitaroy11343 жыл бұрын
Herbolic is easy but roughly pesticides used mujhe companies ko harbolic ho toh thik sabhi jakar health ko effect karenga laboratory mein kaam karna hai for agriculture
@vthilton3 жыл бұрын
Save Our Planet
@CrazyShores3 жыл бұрын
NOT ONLY WE CAN … WE MUST !!! ❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏🌼🌼🌼
@thanasisstromatias38403 жыл бұрын
It's a simple question...or we feed the polulation and we used hybrids, herbicides, pesticides, chemical fertilizers or we drive a big part of the people to death, and i mean what i said. I am European, but working as agronomist in Nigeria, the population is up to 200 million and more than half down of 18 years old...the whether conditions here allow to insects to give multiple generations every season. And yes, we use pesticides to control it, no to save the crop, but to feed the people. As European i show both sides of this issue....but you have to know that the toxicity of the modern chemicals have nothing to do with what happened before 30 years.
@MYOFFICIAL913 ай бұрын
Thanks ❤
@DWPlanetA3 ай бұрын
Hey there! Glad you like our video. We post videos like this one every week. We would love to see you subscribe and hear what you think ✨
@dodiewallace412 жыл бұрын
Natural vs. synthetic tells us nothing about safety. The goal should be safe, sustainable, and low environmental impact, not if it's natural or synthetic.
@aditisk992 жыл бұрын
Well synthetic leads to bad environmental impacts.
@dodiewallace412 жыл бұрын
@@aditisk99 Natural or synthetic has nothing to do with it. Toxicity is a dose, not a substance. Everything is toxic and everything is not toxic depending on the dose regardless of being natural or synthetic. Mercury, arsenic, cyanide,botulism, etc are natural and highly toxic.
@inotaarto87193 жыл бұрын
Also it is a question of what the masses are willing to pay for food.
@jamesrichey2 жыл бұрын
The answer is, yes.
@DukeGMOLOL Жыл бұрын
The answer is no.
@prisbb11 ай бұрын
So we can have all organic farming as long as we're all vegan? Great, it's not like anyone needs animal protein for anything 🤦
@TheEsseboy7 ай бұрын
It's not like we used to eat 90% less meat a hundred years ago 😅
@sanjaybhatikar3 жыл бұрын
Chemical companies profess their goal is "health for all and hunger for none" but indiscriminate use of chemicals and aggressive bioengineering are taking the world in the direction of "hunger for all and health for none". Any wonder that pharma and agriculture companies often have the same owners? Support sustainable alternatives such as permaculture for earth-friendly agriculture and reduce consumption. Let's all have a big aim for the world and a small aim for ourselves.
@tutacat Жыл бұрын
We already grow too much food because supermarkets are too picky
@TheEsseboy7 ай бұрын
No, we grow too much because there is too much animals being feed with it.