CLICK HERE FOR THOUSANDS OF FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES »
Showing posts with label farm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farm. Show all posts

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Farm of the Future

Farm of the Future: AI+Blockchain & De-Extincted DNA Library - The Beast System Appears

43,734 views
Premiered Mar 18, 2021
 
 
 
 
 
 
208K subscribers
As new $314M AgTech facility promises Blockchain + AI to track food from seed to shelf, other companies are creating DNA libraries to use CRISPR gene modification to combine kangaroo with "de-extincted" mammoths to produce the "perfect" lab-grown meat. These, according to the technocrats, are the farms of the future -- and understanding the agendas behind them is imperative if you wish to be able to feed your family in the future. 
 
 

Be the first to comment.

 

Blogger's note:  subterrnews.blogspot.com does not send cookies, or collect any information on those using the blog.  However, the blogspot is on google, and google may collect information, and send cookies.  Many of the links that  we connect to do not send out cookies or collect information, but some do.  You are keying in to this blog, and you have agreed to this.

The views expressed in the articles do not necessarily represent the opinions of this blog.  They are the views, and opinions of the author(s) of the article.

 

 
 

 

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Disappearing Family-Owned Farms Make Way For AgTech Dominion

YouTube
Economic pressure has been on family farms for decades as the UN’s Agenda 21/2030 Agenda policies drive young people away from rural communities into cities. Some UN predictions place urban density as high as 70% of total population by 2040.  TN Editor
Small family farms have been slowly disappearing for decades and this will likely be the case of Minor‘s Farm in Bristol. Founded in 1864, the 30-acre parcel on Chippens Hill is operated by Paul C. Minor; his wife, Vicki; and father, Paul J. Minor. Mark Minor, the brother of Paul C., separately harvests the hay.
“It’s kind of the end of an era,” said Paul Minor. “I don’t know if this would necessarily be our last year, but if not, I don’t see it happening much longer. With 48 years with fall stuff, I just know I won’t be physically able to continue to do this and it’s not easy to run a farm or stay in business in Connecticut.”
Minor, who graduated from Virginia Tech in 1970, added that the younger generation of the Minor family went to college and have moved out-of-state as have many others, those of different ages, because the cost of living is much lower and the job market is more plentiful.
“All of our kids, mine and my brother Mark’s, have jobs in areas that are booming,” said Minor. “My son is in North Carolina and my daughter is in Virginia. Mark has two girls, one in Virginia and one in Texas.”
Minor, who retired from Southern New England Telephone at age 52 as the director of external affairs, also adds that when he compares what he has to pay for taxes on his house against what others do with much larger homes in other areas, such relocations make sense.
Once a full-fledged farm in earlier decades, Minor’s Farm has basically downsized to its store being open, holding fall activities for children and scheduling his visits with his pig, Daisy, to libraries across the country to promote reading.
“We only grow hay and our pumpkins and things are purchased outside,” said Minor. “We have had different mission statements through the years and this is “Making family fun and memories is what we do best.”
That’s giving the children of today who visit a chance to see what their older generations of family members had experienced on either a daily or routine basis in growing up and as adults.
The visiting kids ride the Minors’ train, and purchase pumpkins and candy and other items in the farm store. These children appear at the farm on field trips or with family members to also witness the old barns, the large open fields and the overall ambience of old New England past.
 
Source:  technocracy.news

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Glyphosate weed killer

unleashes grotesque chemical deformations in farm animals… two-headed calves, pigs born with no skin, twisted life forms seem spawned from Hell… PHOTOS