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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:42:24 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: I last heard one a couple of decades back, and there's nothing much wrong with my memory, either. I can't say the same about my hearing :-) There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) But did it cure the ear infection? (I understand they know quite a lot about nuts in Brazil) -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 01:08:07 GMT, Jaques d'Alltrades wrote: The message from Sacha contains these words: When did you last hear a cuckoo? Last spring and summer. There's nothing wrong with your memory then :-) Next question .... Perhaps, but not necessarily. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:50:59 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article , martin writes: | | There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into | hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find | he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) That wouldn't worry me unduly :-) They are still looking for his other organs. I feel quite secure with my Mammoth Gavioli Fairground Organ innit. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:42:24 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: I last heard one a couple of decades back, and there's nothing much wrong with my memory, either. I can't say the same about my hearing :-) There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) But did it cure the ear infection? (I understand they know quite a lot about nuts in Brazil) -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:50:59 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article , martin writes: | | There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into | hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find | he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) That wouldn't worry me unduly :-) They are still looking for his other organs. I feel quite secure with my Mammoth Gavioli Fairground Organ innit. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:50:59 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article , martin writes: | | There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into | hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find | he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) That wouldn't worry me unduly :-) They are still looking for his other organs. I feel quite secure with my Mammoth Gavioli Fairground Organ innit. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 01:08:07 GMT, Jaques d'Alltrades wrote: The message from Sacha contains these words: When did you last hear a cuckoo? Last spring and summer. There's nothing wrong with your memory then :-) Next question .... Perhaps, but not necessarily. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:42:24 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: I last heard one a couple of decades back, and there's nothing much wrong with my memory, either. I can't say the same about my hearing :-) There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) But did it cure the ear infection? (I understand they know quite a lot about nuts in Brazil) -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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Steve Harris8/3/04 1:00
In article , (Sacha) wrote: A Philippine politician who is also a farmer A reliable, honest chap without an axe to grind, then :-) ;-)) That was pretty much the tenor of the article. He's blown it in vote-catching terms so he's going back to growing pineapples. There is also suspicion that one of his neighbours knew he was using GM seed but was bribed not to talk about it. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
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Steve Harris8/3/04 1:00
In article , (Sacha) wrote: A Philippine politician who is also a farmer A reliable, honest chap without an axe to grind, then :-) ;-)) That was pretty much the tenor of the article. He's blown it in vote-catching terms so he's going back to growing pineapples. There is also suspicion that one of his neighbours knew he was using GM seed but was bribed not to talk about it. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
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Steve Harris8/3/04 1:00
In article , (Sacha) wrote: A Philippine politician who is also a farmer A reliable, honest chap without an axe to grind, then :-) ;-)) That was pretty much the tenor of the article. He's blown it in vote-catching terms so he's going back to growing pineapples. There is also suspicion that one of his neighbours knew he was using GM seed but was bribed not to talk about it. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
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Sacha wrote in
o.uk: We've so over used pesticides, ripped out hedges, cleared ground cover that we have lost vast numbers of birds, butterflies, wild flowers - think DDT, alone banned, I think in 1947? When did you last hear a cuckoo? The last time for me was in Tresco two years ago and that was the first time for as long as I can remember. I'm with you. I have no idea if GM crops are good or bad in the longterm, nor am I qualified to pronounce on that (I am not sure anyone is yet.) But I can see no good argument for testing them further in the UK - a tiny, over-populated area where the potential benefits are small, and the risk relatively high. I don't object to Monsanto for being a multinational corporation. I object to it because businesses that don't listen, don't explain, don't care, and won't change, of any size, tend to screw up. When they do, they can make a hell of a mess. Victoria |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:50:59 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article , martin writes: | | There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into | hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find | he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) That wouldn't worry me unduly :-) They are still looking for his other organs. I feel quite secure with my Mammoth Gavioli Fairground Organ innit. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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Sacha wrote in
o.uk: We've so over used pesticides, ripped out hedges, cleared ground cover that we have lost vast numbers of birds, butterflies, wild flowers - think DDT, alone banned, I think in 1947? When did you last hear a cuckoo? The last time for me was in Tresco two years ago and that was the first time for as long as I can remember. I'm with you. I have no idea if GM crops are good or bad in the longterm, nor am I qualified to pronounce on that (I am not sure anyone is yet.) But I can see no good argument for testing them further in the UK - a tiny, over-populated area where the potential benefits are small, and the risk relatively high. I don't object to Monsanto for being a multinational corporation. I object to it because businesses that don't listen, don't explain, don't care, and won't change, of any size, tend to screw up. When they do, they can make a hell of a mess. Victoria |
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Sacha wrote in
o.uk: We've so over used pesticides, ripped out hedges, cleared ground cover that we have lost vast numbers of birds, butterflies, wild flowers - think DDT, alone banned, I think in 1947? When did you last hear a cuckoo? The last time for me was in Tresco two years ago and that was the first time for as long as I can remember. I'm with you. I have no idea if GM crops are good or bad in the longterm, nor am I qualified to pronounce on that (I am not sure anyone is yet.) But I can see no good argument for testing them further in the UK - a tiny, over-populated area where the potential benefits are small, and the risk relatively high. I don't object to Monsanto for being a multinational corporation. I object to it because businesses that don't listen, don't explain, don't care, and won't change, of any size, tend to screw up. When they do, they can make a hell of a mess. Victoria |
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The message
from Sacha contains these words: Jaques d'Alltrades8/3/04 1:08 The message from Sacha contains these words: When did you last hear a cuckoo? Last spring and summer. Then you're very lucky. They are increasingly rare, as are skylarks. We're in the depths of the countryside and never hear either. Thrushes are rare with us, although there's plenty of food and cover. Plenty of skylarks too. It's not so much luck as certain local landowners' policies of encouraging wildlife and providing cover and broad grassed headlands. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from Sacha contains these words: Jaques d'Alltrades8/3/04 1:08 The message from Sacha contains these words: When did you last hear a cuckoo? Last spring and summer. Then you're very lucky. They are increasingly rare, as are skylarks. We're in the depths of the countryside and never hear either. Thrushes are rare with us, although there's plenty of food and cover. Plenty of skylarks too. It's not so much luck as certain local landowners' policies of encouraging wildlife and providing cover and broad grassed headlands. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from Sacha contains these words: Jaques d'Alltrades8/3/04 1:08 The message from Sacha contains these words: When did you last hear a cuckoo? Last spring and summer. Then you're very lucky. They are increasingly rare, as are skylarks. We're in the depths of the countryside and never hear either. Thrushes are rare with us, although there's plenty of food and cover. Plenty of skylarks too. It's not so much luck as certain local landowners' policies of encouraging wildlife and providing cover and broad grassed headlands. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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Steve Harris8/3/04 1:00
In article , (Sacha) wrote: A Philippine politician who is also a farmer A reliable, honest chap without an axe to grind, then :-) ;-)) That was pretty much the tenor of the article. He's blown it in vote-catching terms so he's going back to growing pineapples. There is also suspicion that one of his neighbours knew he was using GM seed but was bribed not to talk about it. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
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Sacha wrote in
o.uk: We've so over used pesticides, ripped out hedges, cleared ground cover that we have lost vast numbers of birds, butterflies, wild flowers - think DDT, alone banned, I think in 1947? When did you last hear a cuckoo? The last time for me was in Tresco two years ago and that was the first time for as long as I can remember. I'm with you. I have no idea if GM crops are good or bad in the longterm, nor am I qualified to pronounce on that (I am not sure anyone is yet.) But I can see no good argument for testing them further in the UK - a tiny, over-populated area where the potential benefits are small, and the risk relatively high. I don't object to Monsanto for being a multinational corporation. I object to it because businesses that don't listen, don't explain, don't care, and won't change, of any size, tend to screw up. When they do, they can make a hell of a mess. Victoria |
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The message
from Sacha contains these words: Jaques d'Alltrades8/3/04 1:08 The message from Sacha contains these words: When did you last hear a cuckoo? Last spring and summer. Then you're very lucky. They are increasingly rare, as are skylarks. We're in the depths of the countryside and never hear either. Thrushes are rare with us, although there's plenty of food and cover. Plenty of skylarks too. It's not so much luck as certain local landowners' policies of encouraging wildlife and providing cover and broad grassed headlands. -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 11:24:28 GMT, Jaques d'Alltrades
wrote: I count my lucky stars my hearing is still good, having been into rifle and pistol shooting for about fifty years. In the early days ear-protection was all-but unknown. The early days of Elvis ... -- Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit; Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad |
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On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 11:26:25 GMT, Jaques d'Alltrades
wrote: The message from martin contains these words: On 8 Mar 2004 09:42:24 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: I last heard one a couple of decades back, and there's nothing much wrong with my memory, either. I can't say the same about my hearing :-) There's a report in a newspaper that a man in Brazil went into hospital with an ear problem and woke up after the operation to find he had had a vasectomy. Be very careful! :-) But did it cure the ear infection? (I understand they know quite a lot about nuts in Brazil) Apparently not the guy was quoted as saying would rather die than continue much longer with ear ache, I suspect he will soon be an organ donor. -- Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit; Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 11:24:28 GMT, Jaques d'Alltrades wrote: I count my lucky stars my hearing is still good, having been into rifle and pistol shooting for about fifty years. In the early days ear-protection was all-but unknown. The early days of Elvis ... During the early days of Elvis I was listening to classical music and (for instance) taking part in Handel's Messiah under Sir Malcolm Sargent. (Of whom Beecham is reputed to have said, on being informed of his knighthood: "Knighted? I knew he'd been doctored!) -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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The message
from martin contains these words: On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 11:24:28 GMT, Jaques d'Alltrades wrote: I count my lucky stars my hearing is still good, having been into rifle and pistol shooting for about fifty years. In the early days ear-protection was all-but unknown. The early days of Elvis ... During the early days of Elvis I was listening to classical music and (for instance) taking part in Handel's Messiah under Sir Malcolm Sargent. (Of whom Beecham is reputed to have said, on being informed of his knighthood: "Knighted? I knew he'd been doctored!) -- Rusty Open the creaking gate to make a horrid.squeak, then lower the foobar. http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
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On 9 Mar 2004 09:02:33 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote:
In article , pete writes: | On 8 Mar 2004 09:55:16 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: | In article , | Bob Scratchit writes: | | | | I last heard one a couple of decades back, | | | | That explains an awful lot. You really should get out more! | | Hiya, Pete! You DO have a short attention span, don't you? | Yet another way that you are like an immature 5-year old. Come | to think of it, it must be days since you threw a tantrum. | | I am afraid someone thinks you are referring to me. As I don't know | you I can't think that this is the case so could you please say if you | were indeed referring to me? God alone knows! It all depends if you are yet another avatar of Pete the Troll again. If you are, yes, if you are not, no. If you are an avatar of Pete the Troll, you are probably so confused that you don't know who you are, so this won't help much :-) I am posting in my real name and until a few days ago I had never read this ng. I live at 12 Beatty Road Ipswich and I am in the 'phone book in my wife name of J. Turtill. I do not know of Pete the Troll. pete |
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On 9 Mar 2004 09:02:33 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote:
In article , pete writes: | On 8 Mar 2004 09:55:16 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: | In article , | Bob Scratchit writes: | | | | I last heard one a couple of decades back, | | | | That explains an awful lot. You really should get out more! | | Hiya, Pete! You DO have a short attention span, don't you? | Yet another way that you are like an immature 5-year old. Come | to think of it, it must be days since you threw a tantrum. | | I am afraid someone thinks you are referring to me. As I don't know | you I can't think that this is the case so could you please say if you | were indeed referring to me? God alone knows! It all depends if you are yet another avatar of Pete the Troll again. If you are, yes, if you are not, no. If you are an avatar of Pete the Troll, you are probably so confused that you don't know who you are, so this won't help much :-) I am posting in my real name and until a few days ago I had never read this ng. I live at 12 Beatty Road Ipswich and I am in the 'phone book in my wife name of J. Turtill. I do not know of Pete the Troll. pete |
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On Tue, 09 Mar 2004 14:51:37 +0000, pete
wrote: On 9 Mar 2004 09:02:33 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article , pete writes: | On 8 Mar 2004 09:55:16 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: | In article , | Bob Scratchit writes: | | | | I last heard one a couple of decades back, | | | | That explains an awful lot. You really should get out more! | | Hiya, Pete! You DO have a short attention span, don't you? | Yet another way that you are like an immature 5-year old. Come | to think of it, it must be days since you threw a tantrum. | | I am afraid someone thinks you are referring to me. As I don't know | you I can't think that this is the case so could you please say if you | were indeed referring to me? God alone knows! It all depends if you are yet another avatar of Pete the Troll again. If you are, yes, if you are not, no. If you are an avatar of Pete the Troll, you are probably so confused that you don't know who you are, so this won't help much :-) I am posting in my real name and until a few days ago I had never read this ng. I live at 12 Beatty Road Ipswich and I am in the 'phone book in my wife name of J. Turtill. I do not know of Pete the Troll. pete Don't play into the trolls hands pete, it's what they want. Sue them. ********************************************** 'You can't win 'em all.' Lord Haw Haw. Since I stopped donating money to CONservation hooligan charities Like the RSPB, Woodland Trust and all the other fat cat charities I am in the top 0.217% richest people in the world. There are 5,986,950,449 people poorer than me If you're really interested I am the 13,049,551 richest person in the world. And I'm keeping the bloody lot. So sue me. http://www.globalrichlist.com/ Newsgroup ettiquette 1) Tell everyone the Trolls don't bother you. 2) Say you've killfiled them, yet continue to respond. 3) Tell other people off who repsond despite doing so yourself. 4) Continually talk about Trolls while maintaining they're having no effect. 5) Publicly post killfile rules so the Trolls know how to avoid them. 6) Make lame legal threats and other barrel scraping manoeuvres when your abuse reports are ignored. 7) Eat vast quantities of pies. 8) Forget to brush your teeth for several decades. 9) Help a demon.local poster with their email while secretly reading it. 10) Pretend you're a hard ******* when in fact you're as bent as a roundabout. 11) Become the laughing stock of Usenet like Mabbet 12) Die of old age 13) Keep paying Dr Chartham his fees and hope one day you will have a penis the girls can see. --------------------------------------- "If you would'nt talk to them in a bar, don't *uckin' vote for them" "Australia was not *discovered* it was invaded" The Big Yin. Need a fake diploma for fun? contact my collegues Malcolm Ogilvie or Michael Saunby who both bought one and got one free, only $15 each, have as many as you like www.fakediplomas.com |
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On Tue, 09 Mar 2004 14:51:37 +0000, pete
wrote: On 9 Mar 2004 09:02:33 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: In article , pete writes: | On 8 Mar 2004 09:55:16 GMT, (Nick Maclaren) wrote: | In article , | Bob Scratchit writes: | | | | I last heard one a couple of decades back, | | | | That explains an awful lot. You really should get out more! | | Hiya, Pete! You DO have a short attention span, don't you? | Yet another way that you are like an immature 5-year old. Come | to think of it, it must be days since you threw a tantrum. | | I am afraid someone thinks you are referring to me. As I don't know | you I can't think that this is the case so could you please say if you | were indeed referring to me? God alone knows! It all depends if you are yet another avatar of Pete the Troll again. If you are, yes, if you are not, no. If you are an avatar of Pete the Troll, you are probably so confused that you don't know who you are, so this won't help much :-) I am posting in my real name and until a few days ago I had never read this ng. I live at 12 Beatty Road Ipswich and I am in the 'phone book in my wife name of J. Turtill. I do not know of Pete the Troll. pete Don't play into the trolls hands pete, it's what they want. Sue them. ********************************************** 'You can't win 'em all.' Lord Haw Haw. Since I stopped donating money to CONservation hooligan charities Like the RSPB, Woodland Trust and all the other fat cat charities I am in the top 0.217% richest people in the world. There are 5,986,950,449 people poorer than me If you're really interested I am the 13,049,551 richest person in the world. And I'm keeping the bloody lot. So sue me. http://www.globalrichlist.com/ Newsgroup ettiquette 1) Tell everyone the Trolls don't bother you. 2) Say you've killfiled them, yet continue to respond. 3) Tell other people off who repsond despite doing so yourself. 4) Continually talk about Trolls while maintaining they're having no effect. 5) Publicly post killfile rules so the Trolls know how to avoid them. 6) Make lame legal threats and other barrel scraping manoeuvres when your abuse reports are ignored. 7) Eat vast quantities of pies. 8) Forget to brush your teeth for several decades. 9) Help a demon.local poster with their email while secretly reading it. 10) Pretend you're a hard ******* when in fact you're as bent as a roundabout. 11) Become the laughing stock of Usenet like Mabbet 12) Die of old age 13) Keep paying Dr Chartham his fees and hope one day you will have a penis the girls can see. --------------------------------------- "If you would'nt talk to them in a bar, don't *uckin' vote for them" "Australia was not *discovered* it was invaded" The Big Yin. Need a fake diploma for fun? contact my collegues Malcolm Ogilvie or Michael Saunby who both bought one and got one free, only $15 each, have as many as you like www.fakediplomas.com |
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Gill Hall wrote or quoted:
There is extensive coverage in the Independent this morning about the degree of contamination in the US - quote: two-thirds of conventional crops in the US are now contaminated with GM material, dooming organic agriculture and posing a severe future risk to health - unquote. [...] Probably because GM is here at last - albeit tied up in expensive red tape: ``UK gives cautious greenlight to GM maize'' Britain gave the thumbs up this week for commercial planting of genetically modified (GM) maize, risking a backlash from environmentalists and a sceptical public despite setting strict conditions. [...]'' - http://www.fingaz.co.zw/fingaz/2004/...h11/4959.shtml -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
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Gill Hall wrote or quoted:
There is extensive coverage in the Independent this morning about the degree of contamination in the US - quote: two-thirds of conventional crops in the US are now contaminated with GM material, dooming organic agriculture and posing a severe future risk to health - unquote. [...] Probably because GM is here at last - albeit tied up in expensive red tape: ``UK gives cautious greenlight to GM maize'' Britain gave the thumbs up this week for commercial planting of genetically modified (GM) maize, risking a backlash from environmentalists and a sceptical public despite setting strict conditions. [...]'' - http://www.fingaz.co.zw/fingaz/2004/...h11/4959.shtml -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
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In article , Nick Maclaren
writes It is a pretty minor issue here, as maize is a fairly minor crop and it has no close wild relatives in the UK. I think it is on the increase, Nick. Round here we had acres of the stuff grown last year, for the first time that I can remember, and we have been here since 1971. -- Jane Ransom in Lancaster. I won't respond to private emails that are on topic for urg but if you need to email me for any other reason, put ransoms at jandg dot demon dot co dot uk where you see |
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