Post by downunder on Nov 26, 2008 5:26:08 GMT -5
Quite honestly there is so much of it i.e. genetically modified plants, genetically modified nematodes, weevils and much more that it would be very difficult to find a beginning.
I am sure that agrobacterium is very much involved with Morgellons and having worked down and dirty in a production nursery for 3years, I know of the constant trials with plants and bugs i.e endeavouring to find a bug resistant plant or use genetically modified bio control methods to protect same.
It is in our environment now - no doubt. Have you ever been anywhere near a nursery or agriculture when spraying has been in process? No need to say more.
Below are just a few examples of bio control and agrobacterium efforts. You can pretty much google any bug, nematode, fly or other insect and find they are genetically modified for different purposes and sprayed everywhere. AND these genetically modified "whatevers" do EVOLVE.
First release was 1997
www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/dec97/mela1297.htm
"Psyllid nymphs, says Balciunas, typically form a communal shelter of delicate white threads. These house dozens of nymphs, making it easy for scientists to find and collect the insects for lab tests there or in Florida."
"A swelling called a gall makes a cozy home for another kind of melaleuca herbivore. Immature gall-forming flies, members of the genus Fergusonina, share space inside the gall with wriggly microscopic worms called nematodes. The organisms may work together to form the typically conical galls on the tips of melaleuca branches."
aquat1.ifas.ufl.edu/guide/biocons.html
I bet they didn’t test the possibility of any of these genetically modified bugs infesting humans.
www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/biotech-crop-resistance-47020803
The bollworm evolves resistence
Predatory mites
www.eduwebs.org/bugs/predatory_mites.htm
BT Cotton – genetically modified to express BT Toxin
www.utextension.utk.edu/publications/wfiles/W128.pdf
I am sure that agrobacterium is very much involved with Morgellons and having worked down and dirty in a production nursery for 3years, I know of the constant trials with plants and bugs i.e endeavouring to find a bug resistant plant or use genetically modified bio control methods to protect same.
It is in our environment now - no doubt. Have you ever been anywhere near a nursery or agriculture when spraying has been in process? No need to say more.
Below are just a few examples of bio control and agrobacterium efforts. You can pretty much google any bug, nematode, fly or other insect and find they are genetically modified for different purposes and sprayed everywhere. AND these genetically modified "whatevers" do EVOLVE.
First release was 1997
www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/dec97/mela1297.htm
"Psyllid nymphs, says Balciunas, typically form a communal shelter of delicate white threads. These house dozens of nymphs, making it easy for scientists to find and collect the insects for lab tests there or in Florida."
"A swelling called a gall makes a cozy home for another kind of melaleuca herbivore. Immature gall-forming flies, members of the genus Fergusonina, share space inside the gall with wriggly microscopic worms called nematodes. The organisms may work together to form the typically conical galls on the tips of melaleuca branches."
aquat1.ifas.ufl.edu/guide/biocons.html
I bet they didn’t test the possibility of any of these genetically modified bugs infesting humans.
www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/biotech-crop-resistance-47020803
The bollworm evolves resistence
Predatory mites
www.eduwebs.org/bugs/predatory_mites.htm
BT Cotton – genetically modified to express BT Toxin
www.utextension.utk.edu/publications/wfiles/W128.pdf