Thursday GMO Celebration Comments

Norman Borlaug with Wheat Farmers in Mexico, Early 1960s

Norman Borlaug would have celebrated his 104th birthday last Sunday, March 25th.  He was a poor Iowa farmboy who went on to save billions of lives and win the Nobel Peace Prize when it still meant something.  Few people know who he was, but Norman Borlaug deserves, more than most, the honor of remembrance. 

Norman E. Borlaug, the plant scientist who did more than anyone else in the 20th century to teach the world to feed itself and whose work was credited with saving hundreds of millions of lives, died Saturday night. He was 95 and lived in Dallas.

The cause was complications from cancer, said Kathleen Phillips, a spokeswoman for Texas A&M University, where Dr. Borlaug had served on the faculty since 1984.

Dr. Borlaug’s advances in plant breeding led to spectacular success in increasing food production in Latin America and Asia and brought him international acclaim. In 1970, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

He was widely described as the father of the broad agricultural movement called the Green Revolution, though decidedly reluctant to accept the title. “A miserable term,” he said, characteristically shrugging off any air of self-importance.

He spent countless hours hunched over in the blazing Mexican sun as he manipulated tiny wheat blossoms to cross different strains. To speed the work, he set up winter and summer operations in far-flung parts of Mexico, logging thousands of miles over poor roads. He battled illness, forded rivers in flood, dodged mudslides and sometimes slept in tents.

He was by then a trained scientist holding a doctoral degree in plant diseases. But as he sought to coax better performance from the wheats of Mexico, he relied on a farm boy’s instinctive feel for the plants and the soil in which they grew.

and here lies the seminal idea of Borlaug’s astonishing success,

Dr. Borlaug and his team transferred the gene into tropical wheats. When high fertilizer levels were applied to these new “semidwarf” plants, the results were nothing short of astonishing.

The plants would produce enormous heads of grain, yet their stiff, short bodies could support the weight without falling over. On the same amount of land, wheat output could be tripled or quadrupled. Later, the idea was applied to rice, the staple crop for nearly half the world’s population, with yields jumping several-fold compared with some traditional varieties.

This strange principle of increasing yields by shrinking plants was the central insight of the Green Revolution, and its impact was enormous.

It is customary for Jews to add the phrase, “May his (or her) memory be a blessing”, after mentioning someone who has died.  Norman Borlaug’s memory has indeed blessed all of mankind.


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53 responses to “Thursday GMO Celebration Comments”

  1. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    It’s Thursday! It’s raining down here in Clear Lake, started about dark last night and we had a pretty good light show around midnight.
    Mornin’ Gang

  2. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    I’m not now, nor have I ever been a fan of Roseanne, but I do find this humorous;
    “Roseanne’ Revival’s Huge Debut Stuns Hollywood, Prompts Soul-Searching”

    Roseanne made a triumphant return Tuesday night, blowing past projections with a 5.2 adults 18-49 rating and 18.2 million total viewers for the debut of its revival, which drew 10% more viewers than the original series finale 21 years ago.

  3. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    Good morning Hamsters. The storms passed over the moors of the Brazos around 2 this morning, full of sound and fury and lotsa lightning flashes. Can’t get close enough to the rain gauge without boots yet to see what’s there, but in the light from the garage it looks to be about 1.5″. Sure came down hard enough to flush lots of oak blossoms out of the gutters.

    Neighbors behind us just had gutters put on their house and chose the 6″ rather than 4″ ones on the supposition that the larger ones could much better handle the kinds of deluges we get around here. Must ask them how those handled the deluge from last night.

  4. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    RIP Norman Borlaug.

  5. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    It appears that there is a cat fight between a wimminzes what work for the Houston Comical and the Chitcago Tribune. The subject is who has the better “bean” sculpture. As trivial as the subject matter is, the catfight is amusing.

  6. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    HEADLINE: Devin Nunes: Trump’s foes getting boomeranged, could face impeachment
    I’ll believe it when I see the indictments, guilty verdicts and pleas, and long prison sentences.

  7. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    I think we here on the couch all knew this to be the case, the following article makes it clear: NOAA has been fudging the data to fit the model.

    HEADLINE: The Stunning Statistical Fraud Behind The Global Warming Scare

  8. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    From last night.
    Texpat says:
    #84 March 28, 2018 at 8:54 pm

    78 Hamous

    Interestingly, I’ve never been to either baseball stadium in Florida. That’s because I’ve lived in Texas so long they didn’t exist when I lived in Florida.

    Just thought that should be repeated. (< ;

    I got to thinking that I've lived in Texas longer than anywhere else.
    Alabama 19 years.
    Florida 1 year.
    Georgia 5 years.
    Kansas 3 years.
    And Texas 36 years.

  9. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    Morning, Hamsterville!™

    Me: Texas: 74 years and counting.

  10. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    Spouse made it out to the rain gauge and reports there’s 2.3″ in it, not my guess of 1.5 early in the dark this morning. Puddles all around in the yards and pastures certainly back up that higher amount. It can stop for a while now.

    Spouse and I have lived longer in Texas (49 years) than anywhere else by a long shot. Thus being naturalized citizens and proud of it. 😉

  11. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    At Legal Insurrection:

    Let’s face it. The omnibus bill sucks and proves once against the Republican Party is not the party of fiscal responsibility and small government.

    But they did include the Taylor Force Act, named after the American vet killed two years ago, which will stop payments to the Palestinian Authority until it stops rewarding terrorists for killing Jews and Americans.

    The day after Taylor Force was murdered in Israel, I posted this heading on Hambone.

    Taylor Force of Lubbock, Texas

    May He Rest in Peace and His Memory Be a Blessing

    Link

    28 years old, Husband, Graduate of West Point, Officer of the U.S. Army, Veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, Graduate Student at Vanderbilt in Business Management

    Murdered in Haifa, Israel on March 8, 2016 by a filthy, evil, barbaric Islamic Terrorist identified as 22-year-old Bashar Massalha from the West Bank Palestinian refugee camp in Qalqiliya.

    Force’s wife was also stabbed and was reported in critical condition. Pray for her.

  12. El Gordo Avatar

    CAVU out here this morning, but grass is still too wet to mow. It may dry enough by this afternoon, or it may not. Bluebonnets are starting to pop their flowers open, but it’s still early. It’s opening day for baseball around the country(ies, since I now have to be a Toronto fan). You all have a great day.

  13. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    #6 bonecrusher

    Devin’s bodyguard contingent needs to be doubled after this announcement. Yea for Devin. Perhaps he’s in line to be a Special Counsel? Or Trey Gowdy? Except of course what both are doing where they are is outstanding and desperately needed.

  14. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    #7 bonecrusher

    Great editorial from IBD. Nice to see a large circulation and respected org throw this fraud out for public awareness education. Hope the average bears on the street finally see this and get behind Donald Trump’s moves to lift the veil on the frauds in and out of the deep state who push this garbage so harmful to our economy and our very successful traditional way of life.

  15. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    A Texas county has been hit with a lawsuit for concealing records in relation to noncitizens on voter rolls.

    The Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF), an election integrity group, filed a complaint on Thursday against the Office of the Harris County Voter Registrar in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas for its refusal to disclose documents or allow the inspection of its voter rolls in relation to registrants who were removed after it was discovered that they were noncitizens.

    “The Foundation seeks a declaration that all of Defendant’s records related to list maintenance, including but not limited to those explicitly requested by the Foundation, are subject to public inspection without encumbrance by any state public disclosure laws and must be preserved for such inspection purposes,” the complaint reads. “The Foundation seeks an injunction to compel Defendant Bennett to comply with Subsection 20507(i) through an order commanding her to permit inspection and duplication of all records concerning the maintenance of registration lists.”

  16. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    It’s hell when you gotta take a cut in pay, but when your value goes down, it can go way down.

    Rutgers said that Clinton will be paid $25,000 from an endowment and that none of the money from tuition or state aid will be used to pay for her speech.

    This speaking fee is significantly less than what Clinton earned in 2014 for paid speeches at other public and private universities. Clinton traveled to at least eight universities, including four public institutions, where she made six-figure speeches, taking in at least $1.8 million if she received her standard fee of $200,000, according to the Washington Post.

  17. Tedtam Avatar

    Just came back from the post office. I’ve spent all morning dealing with copies of legal docs so we could get property deeds transferred into our new ownership. Some needed copies of 3 documents, others 1, there were return envelopes which I could not close since they were going inside larger envelopes, and there were four certified large envelopes going out…

    For once the post office lady was a real grump. She wanted me to close everything, which I couldn’t because I needed postage for the return envelopes, then postage for the complete outgoing package. That seemed to wiss her off. It took a while and a lot of patience, but we finally got finished with everything. When we were done, I said “I hope your weekend goes better.” That seemed to help; she finally gave me a small smile and returned the sentiment.

    I’m just glad to have that paper storm off my desk…now for the next one…

  18. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    I totally forgot to mention that I saw my first bluebonnets inside city limits yesterday. On T.C. Jester just north of 34th St, where TCJ crosses White Oak Bayou. I think it may be the Harris Co. Flood Control District that maintains the banks there, and plants or encourages bluebonnets at that location. Very nice, dense, planned!

  19. phil Avatar
    phil

    I just read the Pope said there is no Hell.

    The Hell?

  20. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    Oh and we got 2.8″ from the rain yesterday and last night. I might mow tomorrow if it seems to have dried out enough.

  21. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    19

    The new, improved Catholic doctrine – Purgatory for all!!!’

  22. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    This Pope should be sent back to South America and let the Catholic Church try again to get a Pope who will be up to the job.

  23. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Maybe they can drag Benedict XVI out of retirement and just re-release some of his writings once a month.

  24. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    #17 Tedtam

    Can appreciate your spinning head in dealing with the mailings and the woman behind the counter at the Post Office. Several years ago I gave up using USPS to send important things in favor of FedEx overnight service. Worth every penny it cost for guaranteed service and delivery feedback.

    USPS service slips a bit every year lately. Several weeks ago our mail included someone’s mortgage statement or info in our stack. Seemed to have been tax related. Eeek. We put it back in our mailbox and put the flag up. It got taken the next day. One big advantage with rural route delivery and mailboxes.

    Financial institutions we do business with always send important stuff by UPS or FedEx these days.

  25. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    #22 & 23 mharper 42 and Shannon

    Good comments from good folks observing from outside the RCC. Have not come across mention of Benedict 16 in the general news in a long time. Wonder if he’s in a cloister.

  26. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Hammie should be having fun. Astros up 3-0, top of the 5th.

  27. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    So I’m reading this guy’s description of Zuckerberg squirming in front of the media…

    Carefully reading and re-reading Zuckerberg’s words puts me ill at ease. Of course, simply complaining that Facebook’s CEO sounds well-rehearsed won’t do. He’s a pro at managing a major crisis. Persphinctery statements are part of the fare (from the NYT interview):

    “Privacy issues have always been incredibly important to people. One of our biggest responsibilities is to protect data.”

    But we quickly get to the misrepresentations.

    (*My bold emphasis)

    Persphinctery

    And then I wonder what this means, this word I’ve never seen that isn’t recognized by any dictionary.

    Ah, but then I found this by the author back in 2016.

    Jean-Louis Gassée, writing for Monday Note, takes on the Internet of Things: the good (industrial, smart cities) and the (mostly) bad (consumer electronics). A witty, insightful piece that manages to use the made-up-by-the-internet word persphinctery.

    UPDATE: I asked Jean-Louis about the origins of the word, his comment:

    Glad you like the latest Internet of … Monday Note – and the word I made up, a couple of years ago actually, used in previous Notes: persphinctery, perfunctory acts by a$$holes…

    Quite good, actually.

  28. GJT Avatar
    GJT

    #28

    Wow, I always have signed off on DNR, but only because I don’t want my family to go through that. Not to give license to kill me though! Never thought of it in that way.

  29. Tedtam Avatar

    I saw the headline about “no hell” and immediately became angry.

    Leave your bleeding heart liberalism at the curb, don’t take away the faith instituted by Jesus himself. There is a Hell, and a Purgatory, and a Heaven. I keep hoping there are few that make the bottom most level, but just wishing that no one would end up there doesn’t make it so. I get more and more angry with this pope the longer he’s in office.

    I’ve heard of prophecies – unsanctioned – that indicated an “anti-pope” was coming. Perhaps this is the one.

    If I’ve misinterpreted the headline (I’ve been too wissing busy to read or do much of anything internet related today), then I take it all back. Otherwise, I’m really concerned about how many people this guy is leading astray. Where’s that millstone????

  30. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    Dang, what a long day/week this has been, one more day to go,…these 5 day weeks are the pits. I finally got around to checking the rain gauge and we got 1 1/4″ overnight. That’s about right.

  31. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    #25 Adee

    Good comments from good folks observing from outside the RCC.

    Ya know, I was puzzled, wondered for a moment how Berry’s Redneck Country Club figured in on a discussion about the Pope…

  32. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    #28 Katfish

    This is must reading. The article correctly points out the DNR is not the same as a Living Will in which the person him/herself dictates the condition(s) under which he/she no longer wants to continue living. DNRs are obviously exposed as abused by hospital personnel these days, and ignorant patients stumble into signing them with no clue as to what permission that gives perfect strangers to do.

  33. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    #30 Tedtam

    Well, what we had been told while growing up and taking catechism lessons, when the College of Cardinals meets to elect a new Pope, their decisions are overseen or influenced by the Holy Spirit. That is supposed to mean the right man is chosen for the job.

    I threw that one out shortly after adulthood and gave serious thought about it. It essentially means the Third Person of the Trinity can subvert the First and Second Persons by allowing or worse not stopping the Cardinals from making a bad choice.

    Backup for that conclusion were the Bad Popes, headlined by Alexander 6 (Rodrigo Borgia), a Mafia Don if there ever was one, father of illegitimate children while supposedly celibate, divider of the world between Portugal and Spain….

    And of course Francis 1 is no match for Alexander by any means, but he is a divider, a socialist oblivious to Pius 9’s declaration that socialism is anathema to the Church, and frankly does not seem to be all the bright.

  34. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Springer hit a lead off homer. Did the same on opening day last year. Never been done 2 years in a row before.

  35. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Just another day at the office for the World Series MVP.

  36. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    From the sports report on the 6 pm news it looks like the stadium was not close to full for the Rangers/Astros game. Could hazard a guess that there were more Astros fans than Rangers fans there. Too bad that it was not full on Opening Day in such nice weather.

    Sports guy said the person who caught Springer’s home run ball gave it back to him.

    Good sportsmanship shown.

  37. El Gordo Avatar

    Got my yard mowed in between innings on MLB TV. Yankees blasted the Blue Jays and have lined up a list of HR hitters back to back to back. They are going to be hard to stop this year.

  38. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    38
    Yes, but as the old saying goes, good pitching beats good hitting nearly every time.

    And we got the hosses.

  39. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Maundy Thursday services are always special…the readings, the Gospel, the music.
    The stripping of the altar at the end is always so moving.

  40. Tedtam Avatar

    The stripping of the altar at the end is always so moving

    Let’s be sure the non-Cats here understand: we’re not stripping AT the altar! The altar linens are removed in preparation for the next few days of the Triduum (3 holy days) which ends with Easter. Tonight, the consecrated Hosts are moved from the usual church worship area to a separate area. We do not celebrate mass again until the Easter Vigil, which starts Saturday night into Sunday morning.

    On Good Friday, there is Veneration of the Cross, the rosary and/or the Chaplet of Mercy are prayed around 3:00 pm. Some churches reenact the carrying of the cross and/or the crucifixion (no real spikes are used, of course). Communion is distributed, but no hosts are consecrated (so it’s not considered mass). ALL of the Hosts must be distributed and consumed.

    Holy Saturday, Jesus is ‘in the tomb’ and nothing much happens. Altar crews and liturgical teams work frantically to decorate the church and prepare for the fire which is part of the Vigil. There is no worship, though.

    The Easter Vigil has a lot of readings, and starts outside with the fire that lights the Paschal Candle. There are processions and baptisms for the new members of the Church. It can be very moving. I was lucky to be close enough to Hubby when he was baptized to get a bit of his baptismal splash, and when he went up to receive his first Communion with his sponsor, I just happened to be going up the aisle at the same time. We walked up to receive the Eucharist together for the first time, hand in hand.

    That was pretty darn cool.

  41. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Y’all have some extracurricular activity going on there that we don’t do.
    But it’s parallel.
    The same, just different.

  42. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    And we fired the expensive live strippers and just use video.

  43. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    The significance of 3 pm in Tedtam’s #41 is that Jesus hung on the cross for three hours, traditionally thought of being noon to 3 pm when He died.
    Admid the wild storms at the time of His death that alarmed the Roman guards who crucified Him, and the words from above, “This is My beloved Son in Whom I am well pleased. Hear Him.” (or something similar depending upon which version of the Bible is read.)

  44. Tedtam Avatar

    My Agape Bible Study has taught me quite a bit about the parallels between Jesus’ last days/acts and the traditional Jewish tradition. (Hoping I don’t mix things up here…it’s late, I’m tired, and there’s been a LOT of water under my mental bridge today.) A few of the items:

    During the Passover meal, there are four cups, which the host shares with his fellows at the meal. The last cup, the Cup of Acceptance (or is it Blessing? anyway..) is shared, and the host proclaims “It is finished” or “It is fulfilled”. This would seal the covenant with God for another year. Jesus broke the traditional cycle of the meal when he instituted the Eucharist, breaking bread and then sharing the cup. He didn’t drink, saying he wouldn’t drink wine again until he entered His kingdom.

    One of his last acts was to accept some wine and pronounce “It is finished” on the cross – sealing the new covenant, this time forever.

    At nine a.m., the first of two Tamid (“continual”) sacrifices, a lamb, was brought before the Temple priests, pronounced without fault/blemish, given a drink from a golden cup, and then sacrificed at the altar. Jesus was brought before Pilate around 9 a.m., who found him without guilt (or fault), and then scourged.

    At noon, the second Tamid lamb was brought before the Temple priests in the second worship of the day, pronounced without fault, and sacrificed. Tradition holds that Jesus was also sacrificed on the cross at noon.

    The two lambs together were considered one sacrifice to atone for sins. Jesus, being both Man and God, is also considered a two-in-one sacrifice.

    There’s a lot more. The more I read, the more amazed I was at how perfectly Jesus’ death fits into the whole sacrifice/atonement system that was set up by God with His people.

    Agape Bible Study – Lenten and Easter cycle

  45. Tedtam Avatar

    Oh, and the darkness that covered the land? It was called an “eclipse” in one Gospel, but an eclipse (1) is not possible during the lunar cycle in which Passover was celebrated and (2) does not last for hours.

    The darkness was recorded in other, non-Biblical sources as well, so it wasn’t just a literary device by the Christians illustrating the Divine event.

  46. phil Avatar
    phil

    Has the memo been released yet?

    Heads will roll.
    People will go to jail.
    It will be the end of the Mayo Stained party.

  47. El Gordo Avatar

    No, I have it on good authority that the Inspector General report now must come out before the memo is released. But it’s going to be a doozie. hiliary will be toast and the FBI will fold and everyone will be fired. Of course, the IG report is actually finalized, but the timing of it’s release is just not right yet. Or something.

    And for gosh sakes, if you see one of these spy ducks, tell someone about it.
    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/171489

  48. phil Avatar
    phil

    I see.

    The 33&1/3D chess strategy.

    Dang those MOPs aren’t the stupid party after all.

    Well fry me up some catfish, a little tempered back bacon and put on some Lynyrd Skynyrd.

    I haven’t been this excited since I first seen Daisy Duke in her cut off jeans.

  49. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    Perhaps the IG report and then the memo are delayed because of the Easter break everybody in DC takes, except maybe the lowest class of staff members who keep the seats warm. Also to prevent torrents of cuss words from the inner sanctums when the public gets hold of both reports from disrespecting the solemnity of Easter. And Passover.

  50. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    What memo?
    We’re waiting on another memo?
    I must have fallen out of the loop.
    I thought we were waiting on the IG report which I too heard has been finalized but has to go through a couple more hands before going public.

  51. phil Avatar
    phil

    What memo?

    The Memo.:)

  52. Tedtam Avatar

    The Vatican is denying the “no hell” statement.

    The reporter is an atheist, and has misquoted the Pope before.

    I’m hoping like hell this report is correct. I can’t imagine a Pope denying the existence of Hell. Kinda why Jesus died for us, y’know?

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