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Nature strikes back!

Glyphosate: US farmers lose battle


against superfruit - Glyphosate: US Farmers Lose
Superweeds Fight
Weed resistance and insect resistance in response to the poison cocktails! More and more farmers are turning their backs on
Monsanto in the US. As the following article shows, farmers from the Midwest are increasingly skeptical about the
genetically manipulated glyphosate-resistant cattle plants that have been formally imposed on them by biotech giants such as
Monsanto over the last 20 years.

We had reportedly reported that Syngenta reported in June 2016 by Twitter that 84 million acres (about 34 million hectares)
suffer from glyphosate resistant weeds in the US. By 2012, glyphosate resistant weeds had already contaminated 25 million
hectares of arable land. They also appeared in other countries, including Australia, Brazil and Argentina - countries that had
readily accepted glyphosate resistant cultures. Year after year, the cultures with the same herbicide to suffocate is the perfect
way to promote the development of resistant weeds.

Unexpectedly, the problem does not occur. Just as pathogens can become resistant to antibiotics, pests develop sooner or later
insensitivity to frequently occurring poisons. The problems are the same, which also plague antibiotics: the changed plants
are used too often, not only when it is necessary. Already in April 2013 we made the most of the insect invasion. In
November 2013, the Ministry of Agriculture even declared a state of emergency for two states in Brazil. The pests have now
adapted to the high exposure to pesticides - the poison remains ineffective.

If the weed really could have been destroyed with Roundup, why is Nature then able to expose the Monsanto lie? The
Monsanto story, the world's need for GMOs to produce more food, is not only a proven fairy tale, but above all a big
lie ...!

More and more countries do not want to be slaved by Monsanto and co. Also in South America farmers refuse the seed. See:
After Mexico and Guatemala now Costa Rica - New setback for Monsanto and also in Africa does what: TOPP- Gambia will
never accept Monsanto and Co. - Gambia will never accept GM food

If pesticides are finally banned after years of use, no one wonders why these highly toxic pesticides have come into the
market at all. So it is with all products, which are at any time taken by the FDA or EFSA from the market. Are there not
institutions that ensure that substances introduced into the environment are safe? Such scientific institutions are even
financed by taxpayers. Does not a chemical need to be put through many instances, so that it comes on the market at all?
What happens when a high-ranking scientist finds out that the application of pesticides is a threat to humans and animals?
Read on. Jonathan Lundgren - a scientist who could destroy Bayer Monsanto and change the world - Jonathan Lundgren,
WHO Could Destroy Bayer Monsanto And Change The World ...

To date, thousands of aircraft spray tons of pesticides in these fields . Monsanto's Roundup is used for this purpose . The
poison is just as controversial as the group itself. 182 million hectares of GM crops - 18 million GM crops, of which 16.5
million small farmers in developing countries - just a few figures - so you can get an insight into how much already Farmers
of this world are contaminated.

US farmers are losing battle against superfruit because the resistance to glyphosate is over 75%

The numbers from 2016 from the University of Illinois are frightening, so also the farmers see.

The Herbicidal Resistance Report of the Plant Clinic of the University of Illinois of 2016 shows that the resistance to
glyphosate and PPO inhibitors has reached enormous proportions in the Midwest of the USA.

The above plant clinic received 2000 copies of real waterdogs and Palmer-Fuchsschwanz, both weeds, from 10 countries of
the Midwest.

Surprisingly, 456 of the total fields show a glyphosate resistance - a total of 76.8% of the 593 fields.
62.5% of the weed specimens show resistance to PPO inhibitors.

Furthermore, 49% of the weeds in all fields exhibit resistance to both.

In Illinois, from which most of the sample plants originated, examples of 52 counties had at least one field on which both
plants (see above) showed resistance to both herbicide species. Up to the growth season 2016, the Palmer fox tail had not yet
been resistant to PPO inhibitors. Some examples from Southwest Illinois were definitely resistant to PPO inhibitors (3 from
the County of Madison and 1 from the County of St. Clair).

The above report from the Plant Clinic has reportedly caused many farmers in the Middle West to doubt the genetically
modified glyphosate-resistant arable crops they had formally imposed on biotech giants such as Monsanto over the last 20
years.

Bill Giles, a farmer from Illinois who has been cultivating genetically modified plants since 2009, Sustainable Pulse reports
that many farmers in his region are considering returning to non-genetically manipulated arable crops to overcome the weed
crisis. Giles says: "Genetically manipulated arable crops are on the brink of failure in the US, not least because the farmers
are asked to invest more and more money in herbicides to bring the super weeds under control. We simply can not afford it!
We are close to the end of the flagstaff, as far as these plants are concerned. Many of my friends in the Midwest are about to
return to conventional building methods. "

Weed resistance in Germany - The area with weed resistance has increased in recent years. Mainly there
are resistances in the grasses of the tuftscotch and windhead.

"Weed resistances in weed species such as chamomile, avarice, white goosefoot, or reporting species have so far only
occurred on a selective basis and play a subordinate role. Nevertheless, it should also be ensured that resistance does not
spread further, "says Chemieriese Bayer on his platform. As in the following report from the USA, Bayer and its customers,
the farmers, are also struggling with increased weed resistance. Mainly there are resistances in the grasses of the
tuftscotch and windhead.

US Farmers Lots Superweeds Fight as Glyphosate Resistance Tops 75%

The 2016 University of Illinois Plant Clinic herbicide resistance report has shown that glyphosate herbicide resistance and
PPO inhibitor herbicide resistance have both reached epic proportions across the Midwest of the United States.

2,000 waterhemp or palmer amaranth weed samples were received by the University of Illinois Plant Clinic from 10 states
across the Midwest, amazingly 456 of the wholefield sites visited Glyphosate Resistance - a total of 76.8% of the 593 sites.

Meanwhile, 62.5% of the weed samples on the whole field sites had the same resistance to PPO inhibitor herbicides. Thus,
49% of weeds on the wholefield sites had the resistance to both PPO inhibitor herbicides and glyphosate herbicides.
In Illinois, where the majority of the samples were from, samples from 52 counties had at least one sampled field that had
waterlogged or palmer amaranth plants that were resistant to both glyphosate and PPO inhibitors.

Until the 2016 season, palmer amaranth in Illinois was not known to be resistant to PPO inhibitors. However, several
samples from southwestern Illinois were confirmed to be PPO inhibitor resistant (3 from Madison, and 1 from St. Clair
counties) in the testing.

The University of Illinois Plant Clinic report has alliedly led many Midwest farmers to question the glyphosate resistant
(Roundup Ready) GMO crops that have been on the last 20 years by Biotech giants such as Monsanto.

Bill Giles, a farmer from Illinois, who has been growing GM crops since 2009, told Sustainable Pulse.

Gilesstated; "GM crops are on the edge of failure in the US as farmers are asked to fork out. We simply can not afford it! It is
near the end of the road for these crops and many of my friends in the Midwest are on the edge of turning back to
conventional farming methods. "

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