These crops are not grown in soil. Essentially, we are farming hydroponically in the dirt, using a toxic chemical soup to substitute for what nature intended. The soil (a living ecosystem) does not exist in these giant monoculture systems, which provide the grains upon which the world depends.
The original soil has long since been compromised and can only be replaced by regenerative agriculture. The powers that be lose control under such circumstances and are thus motivated to keep the wolf at bay as long as possible.
It's a fragile, unsustainable system that threatens catastrophic failure with the breakage of any link in the chain.
Listen to Graham handcock who talks about how the soil in the Amazon rain forests is black and wonderfully fertile..and even a little mixed with poor soil will turn poor soil good. Analysis say its not natural and has been made
Here is my issue with this premise:
These crops are not grown in soil. Essentially, we are farming hydroponically in the dirt, using a toxic chemical soup to substitute for what nature intended. The soil (a living ecosystem) does not exist in these giant monoculture systems, which provide the grains upon which the world depends.
The original soil has long since been compromised and can only be replaced by regenerative agriculture. The powers that be lose control under such circumstances and are thus motivated to keep the wolf at bay as long as possible.
It's a fragile, unsustainable system that threatens catastrophic failure with the breakage of any link in the chain.
Listen to Graham handcock who talks about how the soil in the Amazon rain forests is black and wonderfully fertile..and even a little mixed with poor soil will turn poor soil good. Analysis say its not natural and has been made
Will do. It makes sense, to some degree, if you consider that the microflora and microfauna would serve as an innoculation.
I still can't imagine how it would have any sort of long-term effect under current farming practices, though.
I put it up on Ashlanddog. Graham Hancock is great! Long vid. Vi think the bit about the soil is near the end
Thank you!