Are there better pesticide alternatives, both economically and environmentally? If anyone actually knows, and doesn't just take the Obama Admin EPA's word for it, enlighten me, I'm genuinely curious.Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:19 pmJust to be clear, the Obama Administration only banned Neonicotinoid use in "Wildlife Refuges"
They didn't ban it for agricultural use, so this change doesn't make much of a difference to the bees.
The Neonicotinoids leech into everything from the farmer's fields, it's not coming from "Wildlife Refuges"
Earth matters
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Re: Earth matters
Last edited by StCapps on Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Earth matters
There is a bill right now waiting in Congress to ban the chemicals in the US as they are in Europe and elsewhere. We just have to wait for that to come through. These kinds of chemicals are really bad news for agriculture. They help a few farmers who grow things like soy beans and maize, but have the potential to devastate many billions of dollars worth of other crops, including almonds, tomatoes, etc.
We should definitely not use pesticides that kill off pollinators.
The other aspect of this type of problem is that the burden of proof is too often reversed. The pesticide companies should have to prove beyond any reasonable doubt that these chemicals are not dangerous to the environment and to humans, not the other way around.
We should definitely not use pesticides that kill off pollinators.
The other aspect of this type of problem is that the burden of proof is too often reversed. The pesticide companies should have to prove beyond any reasonable doubt that these chemicals are not dangerous to the environment and to humans, not the other way around.
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Re: Earth matters
Nope. I air on the side of the free market, not government regulation. Show me the better alternatives, or shut the fuck up with your knee-jerk banning. Show your government bans actually help the bees and don't damage the rest of the food supply, and I'm on board, if you can't even do that, fuck off.Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:23 pmThere is a bill right now waiting in Congress to ban the chemicals in the US as they are in Europe and elsewhere. We just have to wait for that to come through. These kinds of chemicals are really bad news for agriculture. They help a few farmers who grow things like soy beans and maize, but have the potential to devastate many billions of dollars worth of other crops, including almonds, tomatoes, etc.
We should definitely not use pesticides that kill off pollinators.
The other aspect of this type of problem is that the burden of proof is too often reversed. The pesticide companies should have to prove beyond any reasonable doubt that these chemicals are not dangerous to the environment and to humans, not the other way around.
Last edited by StCapps on Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:28 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Earth matters
Economic Externalities ARE Property Rights issues! This battle has been fought every which way, and Capitalists are always fighting against anyone trying to stop them from making their problem someone else's, since you can make more money that way. Remember acid rain? That was a property rights issue, the acid was destroying lakes and forests that belonged to other people or the public. The coal power industry fought tooth and nail saying it would cost too much to stop, till the cap and trade was implemented, and lo and behold far sooner than predicted SO2 emissions plummeted and the world did not end.Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 5:45 pmInstead of being sniveling about it, one way you can approach this with the typical conservative/libertarian is the fact that these pesticides harm other people outside the property they are being used. We need pollinating insects to produce a third of our food supply. I just had to clear out a collapsed hive last week. This shit is no joke. There are a lot of reasons for it, and pesticides are one of the really big reasons (maybe second to the varoa mites).brewster wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 5:42 pmBut, but, but... Government and regulation is ALWAYS THE PROBLEM! Fox & the GOP says so. Environment loving Democrats hate America.Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 3:04 pmWhat a fucking idiot. We hire the guy to deal with the corruption and the immigration problems. He proceeds to do almost nothing but neocuckery from day one.
I like eating. Try not to wipe out the pollinating bees in North America you fucking morons.
The idea that your freedom to swing your fist extends to the length of my nose applies here. They won't see this in terms of economic externalities, being ideologically blind to such things, but if you see it in terms of property rights.. maybe.
Yesterday I was driving with my kid and we see a car ahead of us open their door and toss trash into the street. It's always easy to make your problem someone else's problem if there's no one interested in stopping you.
Holy shit you're sounding like a Lefty big Govt Democrat now!The other aspect of this type of problem is that the burden of proof is too often reversed. The pesticide companies should have to prove beyond any reasonable doubt that these chemicals are not dangerous to the environment and to humans, not the other way around.
We are only accustomed to dealing with like twenty online personas at a time so when we only have about ten people some people have to be strawmanned in order to advance our same relative go nowhere nonsense positions. -TheReal_ND
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Re: Earth matters
StCapps wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:22 pmAre there better pesticide alternatives, both economically and environmentally? If anyone actually knows, and doesn't just take the Obama Admin EPA's word for it, enlighten me, I'm genuinely curious.Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:19 pmJust to be clear, the Obama Administration only banned Neonicotinoid use in "Wildlife Refuges"
They didn't ban it for agricultural use, so this change doesn't make much of a difference to the bees.
The Neonicotinoids leech into everything from the farmer's fields, it's not coming from "Wildlife Refuges"
Like most science, it's not definitive, the bees don't go after the crops, the pesticides spread to wild flowers on the edge of the fields, so that could be killing some bees, but there are other bee killers, like Varroa Mites, those are suspected of inciting colony collapses as well.
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Re: Earth matters
Indeed.brewster wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:27 pmHoly shit you're sounding like a Lefty big Govt Democrat now!The other aspect of this type of problem is that the burden of proof is too often reversed. The pesticide companies should have to prove beyond any reasonable doubt that these chemicals are not dangerous to the environment and to humans, not the other way around.
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Re: Earth matters
If it isn't definitive, as I suspected, then fuck the ban. StA can come back and talk to me when it is definitive.Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:28 pmStCapps wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:22 pmAre there better pesticide alternatives, both economically and environmentally? If anyone actually knows, and doesn't just take the Obama Admin EPA's word for it, enlighten me, I'm genuinely curious.Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:19 pmJust to be clear, the Obama Administration only banned Neonicotinoid use in "Wildlife Refuges"
They didn't ban it for agricultural use, so this change doesn't make much of a difference to the bees.
The Neonicotinoids leech into everything from the farmer's fields, it's not coming from "Wildlife Refuges"
Like most science, it's not definitive, the bees don't go after the crops, the pesticides spread to wild flowers on the edge of the fields, so that could be killing some bees, but there are other bee killers, like Varroa Mites, those are suspected of inciting colony collapses as well.
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Re: Earth matters
I have a ton of bees in my back yard every year, same this year, I detect no mass die off at my location.StCapps wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:30 pmIf it isn't definitive, as I suspected, then fuck the ban. StA can come back and talk to me when it is definitive.Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:28 pm
Like most science, it's not definitive, the bees don't go after the crops, the pesticides spread to wild flowers on the edge of the fields, so that could be killing some bees, but there are other bee killers, like Varroa Mites, those are suspected of inciting colony collapses as well.
Also bear in mind, the "all natural" pesticides that "organic" farmers use, also kill bees, so Neonics are not necessarily more deadly to bees than any other pesticides.
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Re: Earth matters
StA is full of shit, as usual, who knew?Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:35 pmI have a ton of bees in my back yard every year, same this year, I detect no mass die off at my location.StCapps wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:30 pmIf it isn't definitive, as I suspected, then fuck the ban. StA can come back and talk to me when it is definitive.Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:28 pm
Like most science, it's not definitive, the bees don't go after the crops, the pesticides spread to wild flowers on the edge of the fields, so that could be killing some bees, but there are other bee killers, like Varroa Mites, those are suspected of inciting colony collapses as well.
Also bear in mind, the "all natural" pesticides that "organic" farmers use, also kill bees, so Neonics are not necessarily more deadly to bees than any other pesticides.
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Re: Earth matters
I am protective of "my" bees. I love them. I observe them closely.StCapps wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:45 pmStA is full of shit, as usual, who knew?Smitty-48 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2019 6:35 pmI have a ton of bees in my back yard every year, same this year, I detect no mass die off at my location.
Also bear in mind, the "all natural" pesticides that "organic" farmers use, also kill bees, so Neonics are not necessarily more deadly to bees than any other pesticides.
I got the flowers they love right here too, this is a bee mecca for sure, in my yard,
I get three types of bees here, they all seem pretty healthy, no signs of illness.
And the neonicotinoids are in wide use here, there's a farmers field less than a klick away.
If it's having effects, it's not catastrophic that I can see.
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