Companies can operate in multiple countries and in those who are not in the UN(where anti drug agreements have been made), so if this is true it really isn't surprising...So who permitted them to do the work on this development since 2011? Is it just me or would anyone else be jailed for admitted something like this? {imo they should be jailed on the gmo grounds alone} Money green lights murder. Money money money.
Yeah right. Monsanto will sue you for stealing their patented genetics LMFAOI hope no one supports this, or uses it to breed at all.
Touche.Companies can operate in multiple countries and in those who are not in the UN(where anti drug agreements have been made), so if this is true it really isn't surprising...
IMO, you should counter-sue THEM, for negligently (or intentionally) pollinating your crop with their bogus contaminated mutant freak creation, which NO ONE WANTS.Do you have to sign a contract to buy it?
What if my outdoor grow just happens to get pollinated then I owe them a crop.
And what if I find a seed in my bud, am I allowed to grow it?
And I know I try to grow organic for a reason, I can't imagine GMO buds being very good.
Can you explain what gmo uas to do with organic?Do you have to sign a contract to buy it?
What if my outdoor grow just happens to get pollinated then I owe them a crop.
And what if I find a seed in my bud, am I allowed to grow it?
And I know I try to grow organic for a reason, I can't imagine GMO buds being very good.
If your crop is pollinates it is in turn now monsanto property.Do you have to sign a contract to buy it?
What if my outdoor grow just happens to get pollinated then I owe them a crop.
And what if I find a seed in my bud, am I allowed to grow it?
And I know I try to grow organic for a reason, I can't imagine GMO buds being very good.
I'm not so much anti GMO, as I am anti Monsanto. I will say that the unnatural aspect bothers me slightly, because of the effects it could have on the natural environment. Our industrialization as a species has already changed the scope of our environment, and it would be sad to see science via GMO possibly have similar effects on the food chain.Can someone whos posted here already, who has a firm grasp of the concept of *GMO's* tell me your reasoning for your negative opinion on them?
Im very curious
From a science standpoint, splitting haploids in a plant genus is the same as breeding, only results can be attained faster than doing so in a greenhouse.I don't appreciate them trying to patent living things.
Also, I believe that specific breeding and crossing is healthy for the species and that GMO does not stand for these ideals.
I grow as organically as possible because it is natural and earth-friendly, and the buds are great from it. A GMO strain of pot will have the potency and flavor engineered into it, not bred. I can imagine pest problems etc from the engineering already...
I guess my biggest thing against it is the breeding. I think that the future of cannabis lies in the genetics and I don't want to see the genetics muddled with by a company.
Splitting haploids? What're we talking about? Cannabis is diploid, 2n, the sex cells are haploid, n. Recombination of sex cells creates new individuals. Splitting haploid cells, as far as I know, can only be done in a lab. Its been a while since I've taken genetics though...From a science standpoint, splitting haploids in a plant genus is the same as breeding, only results can be attained faster than doing so in a greenhouse.
The process that occurs is the same except manually with controlled environment.
If anything a gmo should do better against pests. One of the biggest reasons behind current gmo research is pest resistance so a broader spectrum of agriculture csn be produced in various conditions.
...or rather, others have declared themselves entitled to build it for us...Ever get the feeling we're building our own house of cards?