Apropos of nothing. The Monsanto campus is sprawling and quite beautiful actually, comprising 100's of well manicured acres in St. Louis County. At one point the CEO of Monsanto was initiated, and the home of one of the founding TM families here directly abutted their campus.
I had occasion to do business with them before they outsourced the handling of items I supplied to them. ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote : I think all the active yogic flyers, Purusha and Mother Divine should find places surrounding the corporate headquarters of Monsanto and do program all around 'em - whatcha think? -------------------------------------------- On Sun, 3/9/14, dhamiltony2k5@... <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote: Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: GMOs threaten to end all life on Earth To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Date: Sunday, March 9, 2014, 3:21 AM Yep, and at .01 percent it's like the evil opposite of the Meissner effect of coherent consciousness. Ecocide. e.g., 0.1 percent -- of causing the breakdown of the ecosystem that all life depends on, also called ecocide. mjackson74 writes: GMOs threaten to end all life on Earth, risk engineering professor and investment expert warns http://www.fool.com)Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) threaten to cause "an irreversible termination of life at some scale, which could be the planet," according to Nassim Taleb, an author and distinguished professor of risk engineering at New York University who made a fortune after disasters like September 11 and the Great Recession. Taleb recently made his feelings on GMOs known in a paper that is available to the public, though still in draft form. Taleb expresses concern not for the potential health effects of GMOs but for the risk they carry of ending all life on Earth. A single GM seed type has a miniscule chance -- e.g., 0.1 percent -- of causing the breakdown of the ecosystem that all life depends on, also called ecocide. With this one type of seed, it is highly unlikely that total ecocide would ever occur; however, with increasing amounts of GM seed varieties comes cumulative risk. For example, if 100 new GM seed types are produced, then that 0.1 percent chance suddenly becomes a 10 percent chance of global life-ending catastrophe. The associated risks vary for different seeds, and a huge number of factors are involved, but what Taleb's paper stresses is that these small odds add up over time so that "something bound to hit the [ecocide] barrier is about guaranteed to hit it." Click here to read a report by The Motley Fool's Brian Stoffel explaining Taleb's paper in greater detail. The draft form of the paper, "The Precautionary Principle," is available to download as a PDF document here..