Hayduke
Well-Known Member
Actually, it happened the other way around. First the poisons were designed to kill humans...we had a lot left over, seems like kind of a waste...maybe we could sell this to farmers...or even whole communities.Chemicals designed to kill Rats and other Pests - Chemicals designed to kill Humans.
The alternative to using those chemicals would be letting our crops rot or get eaten by pests and watching as billions starve. I personally can not condone an action or inaction that would lead to so much death.
Before we started systematically poisoning nearly every life form, there was balance. Pest insects kept in check by predator insects, natural native plantings kept weeds in check.
Pesticides do not kill just the pest, but the predator and pollinator...and others. Now the crops are not only poisoned, but vulnerable to the pest, which, by nature...in order to feed the predator in numbers that will ensure the survival of the whole chain...must come back first. Without the now dead predators the pests flourish at the expense of the crop (and the farmer...where is his wealth? read on). Now more chemical has to be applied (purchased) and as the pests attempt to survive by acquiring limited resistance...MORE poison purchased (here's your wealth)
The lily white (as opposed to red) suburbs of the 50's planted fast growing shade producers like Elms...as opposed to native species. This opened up a smorgasbord for swarming pests...and swarming chemical tycoons. Rachel Carson's Silent Spring tells the true horror tale of the use of these pesticides on entire communities...people sometimes told to stay indoors...and the yards, literally, strewn with dead and dying birds
This whole debacle led to the farmer needing to farm more land (and buy more pesticide, herbicide, NPK [only], and the seed that will thrive in frankensoil) to make a profit...now there is too much grain...the price drops...farm subsides are invented in time for the farm to be foreclosed; corporate factory farms took, and are taking the subsides. This stuff is not some anarchist fantasy this is real, and it is a good example of why we are even having this...discussion.
Yes. And if they have any left they (animals) should share it with the humans that will respect their home...be good house guests. They should eat the rest.Should animals have any space?
I wish.Everyone just wants to be left alone