Originally posted by: fitzov
Prove that pesticides put in food are bad for us.
http://www.pan-uk.org/gifs/pegpost.GIF
Pesticide poisoning does not equal eating foods with LOW concentrations of pesticides.
Originally posted by: fitzov
Prove that pesticides put in food are bad for us.
http://www.pan-uk.org/gifs/pegpost.GIF
Originally posted by: SLCentral
Originally posted by: fitzov
Prove that pesticides put in food are bad for us.
http://www.pan-uk.org/gifs/pegpost.GIF
Pesticide poisoning does not equal eating foods with LOW concentrations of pesticides.
Some fruits and vegetables have residual pesticide levels too high for young children to consume safely, according to study findings announced Thursday.
The study by Consumers Union, which publishes Consumer Reports magazine, is one of the largest ever to examine pesticide residues on produce.
Researchers looked at data gathered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture on how much pesticide residue exists on 27,000 samples of domestic and imported fruits and vegetables.
Originally posted by: SLCentral
Originally posted by: fitzov
Prove that pesticides put in food are bad for us.
http://www.pan-uk.org/gifs/pegpost.GIF
Pesticide poisoning does not equal eating foods with LOW concentrations of pesticides.
Originally posted by: Ronstang
No, it usually means "has more color" and "has more flavor" but utlimately means it also costs more.
Originally posted by: SLCentral
Either way, this was not a discussion about organic products and if they were worth it, but rather the name "Organic," which just is dumb.
Not only is it a marketing gimmick, but why the fvck is it called organic, when all organic means is that it has hydrocarbons?
Whatever, let stupid people spend 2x the price for the same food.
Originally posted by: Praxis1452
SLcentral are you trying to troll? Or maybe you just need to calm the fvck down. Get over yourself. "omg I've come to the conclusion that organic doesn't really mean anything. I must make sure everyone else knows I'm right." Get over your ego trip.
Originally posted by: SophalotJack
I have this device that makes all my fruits and veggies organic.
It's called a sink and it excretes this magical syrum called "water" (some sort of sorcerer word) that washes the food.
I know I know... it's witchcraft, but I save a buttload of money by going through this "cleansing" process on my non-organic fruits and veggies.
Originally posted by: LanceM
A very large number of "organic" methods are actually more harmful to our environment than "inorganic" approaches. Don't, however, expect to easily find much information on it.
And no, I don't work for some rich grower trying to get rid of the organic trend. Rather, my wife is an environmental chemist.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Ahhhh, nothing like smearing e-coli laden cow feces all over your field as fertilizer, rather than sterilized factory processed fertilizers containing the same active chemicals...![]()
Add me to the "I prefer better tasting food" and around here, that simply means purchasing my fruits and vegetables in season. I have all the organic apples I could ever want, and all the organically produced brown eggs from non-caged chickens that I could ever want. Next year (hopefully), I'll put in about a 10,000 square foot garden and grow plenty more "organically" grown vegetables - which means, I'll have chickens and guinea hens running around, crapping all over my vegetables while they're eating bugs.
Eggs from chickens that are not force-fed antibiotics, even though they may be disease free, may be a problem. It's the usual story you hear - antibiotic residue may make it into the food, or improper use of antibiotics can lead to resistant bacteria.Originally posted by: mugs
OK, there are people who actually think brown eggs and cage-free/free-range eggs are better for you... now THAT is a marketing gimmick.
Originally posted by: mugs
OK, there are people who actually think brown eggs and cage-free/free-range eggs are better for you... now THAT is a marketing gimmick.
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: mugs
OK, there are people who actually think brown eggs and cage-free/free-range eggs are better for you... now THAT is a marketing gimmick.
Free range vs caged is a humane treatment of animals issue.
Originally posted by: LanceM
A very large number of "organic" methods are actually more harmful to our environment than "inorganic" approaches. Don't, however, expect to easily find much information on it.
And no, I don't work for some rich grower trying to get rid of the organic trend. Rather, my wife is an environmental chemist.
