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Prince Charles Warns GM Crops Risk Causing the Biggest-Ever Environmental Disaster
In his most outspoken intervention on the issue of GM food, the Prince said that multi-national companies were conducting
an experiment with nature which had gone "seriously wrong".
Workshop To Address Global Food Traceability And Safety Issues
Workshop attendees will learn about new tools and technologies for food supply chain optimization and authentication including
specific information about RFID tag and reader systems, data management solutions and implementation services.
Holocaust by Hunger: The Truth Behind Stalin's Great Famine
Millions starved as Soviet troops and secret policemen raided their villages, stole the harvest and all the food in villagers'
homes.
They dropped dead in the streets, lay dying and rotting in their houses, and some women became so desperate for food that
they ate their own children.
If they managed to fend off starvation, they were deported and shot in their hundreds of thousands.
IBM to Track Norwegian Meat, Poultry
IBM has announced an agreement with Matiq to use RFID solutions to track and trace poultry and meat products from the farm,
through the supply chain, to supermarket shelves. The system will be the first of its kind in the Scandinavian countries.
FDA Must Require Tracking of Produce
As more Americans get sick while health officials look for the cause of a salmonella outbreak sweeping the country, consumer
groups said on Thursday the Food and Drug Administration must put emergency rules in place to track the movement of produce.
Making Food Easier to Track
"A retailer will have to say, 'If you want me to sell your meat or your produce, then you have to use this system,' "
he said.
The ability to track food is needed in order to control who gets food and who doesn't. The control of food distribution will
be the ultimate weapon which will be used to force the masses into submission. See "Steps Toward the Mark of the Beast",
chapter 9. -
Pastor Guest
Suggestion to RFID Tomatoes
It's been seven weeks since people started getting sick from tomatoes and the FDA still doesn't know who is producing them.
The tomato industry has lost tens of millions of dollars, and my craving for a thickly sliced tomato sandwich on sprouted
wheat with mayo and Swiss goes unsatisfied. Too bad there's an unused technology, called RFID, that may have tracked those
tainted tomatoes back to the grower by now.
The U.S. Has No Remaining Grain Reserves
There is no cheese, no butter, no dry milk powder, no grains or anything else left in reserve. The only thing left in the
entire CCC inventory will be 2.7 million bushels of wheat which is about enough wheat to make ˝ of a loaf of bread for each
of the 300 million people in America.
New Zealand Hopes to Track All Cattle, Deer by 2011
The New Zealand government has pledged $23.3 million (New Zealand dollars) to create a system of mandatory RFID-tagging for
all of the country's farm-raised cattle and deer by 2011.
Surplus U.S. Food Supplies Dry Up
While the previous surpluses were costly and sharply criticized, much of the food found its way to the poor, here and abroad.
Today, says USDA Undersecretary Mark Keenum, "Our cupboard is bare."
Farmers Fear a Barnyard Big Brother
And despite the administration's insistence that the program is voluntary, farmers and families, such as the Calderwoods,
chafe at the heavy-handed and often mandatory way states have implemented it, sometimes with the help of sheriff's deputies.
RFID Tracks Produce From Field to Fork
A U.S. fruit and vegetable supplier is employing EPC tags and interrogators to track its products as they are harvested, processed
and transported to retailers, and to trace them back to the source in the event of a recall.
NAIS ALERT!
Michigan AG issues warrant to have cattle TB tested and tagged.
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