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WileyCoyote
12-04-2007, 12:26 PM
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7529

Global Research, December 4, 2007


One thing Microsoft founder Bill Gates can’t be accused of is sloth. He was already programming at 14, founded Microsoft at age 20 while still a student at Harvard. By 1995 he had been listed by Forbes as the world’s richest man from being the largest shareholder in his Microsoft, a company which his relentless drive built into a de facto monopoly in software systems for personal computers.

In 2006 when most people in such a situation might think of retiring to a quiet Pacific island, Bill Gates decided to devote his energies to his Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the world’s largest ‘transparent’ private foundation as it says, with a whopping $34.6 billion endowment and a legal necessity to spend $1.5 billion a year on charitable projects around the world to maintain its tax free charitable status. A gift from friend and business associate, mega-investor Warren Buffett in 2006, of some $30 billion worth of shares in Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway put the Gates’ foundation into the league where it spends almost the amount of the entire annual budget of the United Nations’ World Health Organization.

So when Bill Gates decides through the Gates Foundation to invest some $30 million of their hard earned money in a project, it is worth looking at.

No project is more interesting at the moment than a curious project in one of the world’s most remote spots, Svalbard. Bill Gates is investing millions in a seed bank on the Barents Sea near the Arctic Ocean, some 1,100 kilometers from the North Pole. Svalbard is a barren piece of rock claimed by Norway and ceded in 1925 by international treaty.

On this God-forsaken island Bill Gates is investing tens of his millions along with the Rockefeller Foundation, Monsanto Corporation, Syngenta Foundation and the Government of Norway, among others, in what is called the ‘doomsday seed bank.’ Officially the project is named the Svalbard Global Seed Vault on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, part of the Svalbard island group.


Doomsday Seed Vault

The seed bank is being built inside a mountain on Spitsbergen Island near the small village of Longyearbyen. It’s almost ready for ‘business’ according to their releases. The bank will have dual blast-proof doors with motion sensors, two airlocks, and walls of steel-reinforced concrete one meter thick. It will contain up to three million different varieties of seeds from the entire world, ‘so that crop diversity can be conserved for the future,’ according to the Norwegian government. Seeds will be specially wrapped to exclude moisture. There will be no full-time staff, but the vault's relative inaccessibility will facilitate monitoring any possible human activity.

Did we miss something here? Their press release stated, ‘so that crop diversity can be conserved for the future.’ What future do the seed bank’s sponsors foresee, that would threaten the global availability of current seeds, almost all of which are already well protected in designated seed banks around the world?

Anytime Bill Gates, the Rockefeller Foundation, Monsanto and Syngenta get together on a common project, it’s worth digging a bit deeper behind the rocks on Spitsbergen. When we do we find some fascinating things.

The first notable point is who is sponsoring the doomsday seed vault. Here joining the Norwegians are, as noted, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; the US agribusiness giant DuPont/Pioneer Hi-Bred, one of the world’s largest owners of patented genetically-modified (GMO) plant seeds and related agrichemicals; Syngenta, the Swiss-based major GMO seed and agrichemicals company through its Syngenta Foundation; the Rockefeller Foundation, the private group who created the “gene revolution with over $100 million of seed money since the 1970’s; CGIAR, the global network created by the Rockefeller Foundation to promote its ideal of genetic purity through agriculture change.

AlchemyAcres
12-04-2007, 12:46 PM
Don't get me started!!!

I'm trying to recover from the very recent (Monsanto inspired) milk labeling fiasco here in PA!!!

My Mom tells me to calm down 'cause I'm gonna have a stroke!!!! LOL :-X

Bend over America!!!!

~Martin :-/

annabella1
12-04-2007, 02:30 PM
Well when all the genetically modified seeds fail, or they discover that they have made all our foods poison. We will have to go back to the open pollinated ones in storage. hopefully they will be able to grow without problems at that time.
I am especially concerned about the genes they are taking from tomatoes and tobacco and putting into other foods to kill bugs. Since these are nightshade plants and I am sensitive to them (causes inflammation and arthritis) I hope they don't put it in everything I eat.

WileyCoyote
12-04-2007, 07:58 PM
Not to mention the animal genomes they are putting into the seeds - that causes them to not pollinate and who knows what sort of future diseases, etc they may put into fruits and vegetables from animal sources.

That whole thing bugs me.

Southern_Gent
12-04-2007, 11:56 PM
I recall reading a story related to those not too long ago. It involved the number of tubars (potatoes) that exist, I think some 5,000 varieties, and which ones would go into the seed bank. There was also the concern of how to store such specimens due to their nature.

AccuCast
12-20-2007, 05:49 AM
You can be assured that these people have a reason for spending this kind of money. There are a number of groups seeking to reduce the world population from 6.5 Billion to approximately 500 Million. This looks to me like the preparations have begun.

hillsidedigger
03-12-2008, 05:32 AM
You can be assured that these people have a reason for spending this kind of money. There are a number of groups seeking to reduce the world population from 6.5 Billion to approximately 500 Million. This looks to me like the preparations have begun.


The essential and long overdue reduction in the world's number of people will not occur due to choice or design, so, no conspiracy,

but rather will be a consequence of blind market and natural forces.

lunghd
03-18-2008, 02:55 PM
I dunno... terminator seeds... lawsuits against adjacent farmers to prevent viable seed from cross polination... insufficient unmodified seed, or seed limited to only 'approved' factory farms... ???

macgeoghagen
03-27-2008, 10:03 PM
This is only one tiny ingredient in a world domination scheme. it may be only a fail safe that is kept just in case the real plan doesnt work out properly.

MooseToo
03-28-2008, 10:36 AM
i think the basic concept of insuring a supply of seed regardless of what disaster/s required such a supply to exist in order to augment basic survival would be a much more acceptable scenario for john q. if only they had not included brussel sprouts -

flatwater
03-28-2008, 05:22 PM
I hear ya on the brussel sprouts MooseToo. There is something evil tasting about them and they give you mush mouth. I think it may be liberal food. ;D ;D :o.
Flatwater

rAcErRicK
03-31-2008, 02:19 PM
I can't quote specific publications, but I read some time ago that All tomato seeds had been genetically altered. Not many years ago, a truck driver picking up a load of tomatoes in S Fla. could not let his shirttail touch his a** until he got that load up north to be be distributed out onto the market before they ruined. If memory serves, they took a gene from some fish that lives under the polar ice cap, and injected it into tomatoe seeds to make them last longer. I became curious and put a couple bought from a chain grocery, up on the window sill to see just how long they would last. In the past, I remember a few days is about all you could hope for, but would you believe two weeks later they were still firm and red ? I cut one open and found a very strange sight. The seeds had sprouted and started to grow upward inside the tomatoe and it was still firm. The other one lasted about 3 weeks before it got soft and had started to go bad. I cut it open and I believe that within a few more days the sprouts would have come through the skin and I would have had a seed bed right there on my window sill. Does anyone else have an experience, or know more about this ? Another strange thing, (power of suggestion ?) I don't know, but occaisionally I would swear I taste a hint of fish in a tomatoe. SCARY ? What's that gonna cause years down the road ?

rAcErRicK
03-31-2008, 02:29 PM
I also read that all the corn seed has been altered with a gene from some weed, and that now has cross polinated into some super weed that cannot be controlled. Anyone know of this ?? What is next, and how much of these man made veggies is going to kill us down the road with some new disease. I do remember that the huge company mentioned was one of the leaders in this way of thinking. Worst part of it all was that the article said that they have eliminated all of the old, pure seeds, and that their frankinstein seeds are all that we have now ??

hillsidedigger
04-05-2008, 01:56 PM
Learn to acquire and propagate your own heir-loom varieties of as many essential plants as you can. Thats what I do.

Does it make me an anti-social, radical terrorist?

oldnndway
04-13-2008, 09:42 AM
The bank will have dual blast-proof doors with motion sensors, two airlocks, and walls of steel-reinforced concrete one meter thick.

I wonder how any survivors that do make their way to this seed bank are supposed to be able to get in and access the seeds.

flatwater
04-13-2008, 05:11 PM
I made a donation to a seed bank once , I have always wondered how those kids turned out :o :o :o ::).
Flatwater

MotherCharlotte
04-14-2008, 05:58 PM
Oh, crap. I had heard about that seed bank in Norway and I thought it sounded like a cool idea. All the news stories I read "forgot" to mention the corporate funding, they made it sounds like it was all the gov't of Norway's idea.

Now that I hear Monsanto and Dupont are involved...well, that's just suspicious to say the least.

I'm not going to post any more, I could go on about this topic...GMOs burn my britches to say the least!

MotherCharlotte
04-14-2008, 07:28 PM
Okay, I am just rereading this thread and I can't believe I used the term "burn my britches..." :-[

sethwyo
01-23-2009, 09:05 AM
There are natural unmessed with vegetables available, I have some so called 'Indian' corn i plant every year, its blue and red and yellow, 40+ year old ears of it wore passed down to me from family who had been planting their own gardens for food into the late 50's.

maineyankee
01-23-2009, 10:41 AM
from the author of "seeds of Destuction";

As I detailled in the book, Seeds of Destruction, in 1960 the Rockefeller Foundation, John D. Rockefeller III’s Agriculture Development Council and the Ford Foundation joined forces to create the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in Los Baños, the Philippines.1 By 1971, the Rockefeller Foundation’s IRRI, along with their Mexico-based International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center and two other Rockefeller and Ford Foundation-created international research centers, the IITA for tropical agriculture, Nigeria, and IRRI for rice, Philippines, combined to form a global Consultative Group on International Agriculture Research (CGIAR).

http://www.thejerusalemgiftshop.com/israelnews/section-blog/60-nwo/596-qdoomsday-seed-vaultq-in-the-arctic.html

crafty2002
01-24-2009, 05:52 AM
Well I have made several friends and family realize what probably lies ahead of us. I am winning the war one at a time, but non the less, I am winning.
Everything we plant this year will be heirloom and our own seed back begins.
I fixed some plumbing for a lady yesterday and when I got home two tillers were running. Jerry and of all people, Pat, a lady across the street.
They both had the same idea at the same time and when I left I was out of gas. Pat gave Jerry $5 and went and got the gas and they were both at it when I got back.
Don't cha know that blew my mind. :D
I think everyone should move on back to heirlooms and save the seeds.
I mean heck, you can get a bucks worth of seeds from one tomato. Probably more than that. I have a friend that has some tomato plants started that came from Russia. He says he grew them several years but he had a heart attack and was layed up for a while and they all died on him. But he finally found the seeds again. $6.95 for 20 seeds. He says they live in 15 degree weather and produce fruit from 40 degrees up. He is going to give me a few of the plants when they get up a bit. :D I got to try them out for sure.
I will have some seeds of just about everything you could wish for next year and will give some away so we can keep them alive and spread out.
All I ask is the next year you pass some out to someone that will do the same thing.
But we can beat them if we try.
I should be able to pass out seeds to 5 people at a very minunum. Probably more like 20-30 people. If they all try as hard as I plan on trying the seeds will get spread pretty fast.
That's the plan anyway.
Dennis

sethwyo
01-24-2009, 10:36 AM
Are you going to tell the rest of us where to get those tomato plants that can live in the cold ?

crafty2002
01-27-2009, 07:51 PM
Man I am sorry sethwyo. I forgot all about this until today. My brain is getting as short as my, uh, little toe. LOL.
This is what Steve gave me today and it says they produce fruit down to 38*. Check out the site if it will work for you. I hope it works.
http:www.reimerseeds.com/siberian.tomato.aspx
Whatever day it was I made the first post, I think was the day after he planted the seeds. 20 seeds and he has 6 that have brike ground so far.
And I was wrong about the cost. It may have been $6.95 counting the shiping but the seeds were only $2.50. Another brain freeze I guess. That happens a lot lately, LOL.
He is looking for some more info on them but that should be enough for anyone that wants them too.
I guess I will post it on the Farming forum too in case sone one else wants to try them that might not have looked at this thread.
Good gardening all.
Dennis *
*
PS: I tried to pull that up and couldn't get anything at that site but I found them at just reimerseeds.com *
Just pull up early tomatos and look for siberian and you can read what it says but Steve says on the package that it says they will survile 15* weather. And he said they are some really good matters too. *

rAcErRicK
03-27-2009, 06:31 AM
Here is one, there are more, I'll try to find.

http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread344578/pg1