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I’m really cool and not a nerd
You stole my answerAny book with superglue on the cover.

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You stole my answerAny book with superglue on the cover.
How bad were they in terms of ease of use compared to today's server hardware?I can tell you with certainty that vaxes were still widely deployed in the 90's. I was herding one in 96 at NAU
You posted at the same time.You stole my answer![]()
They are finding that a lot of people suspected of being gluten intolerant are actually reacting to the glyphosate residue.It is not harmful to human health though, herbicides specifically target plant metabolic pathways (not animal ones) and the toxins found in Bt corn are only toxic to specific insect species.
Corn has been selectively bred for a long time.He isn't the first person to make stuff up and get away with it because of his credentials.
The corn we grew back before GMO was every bit as big as the corn on the market now.
That is selective breeding and not GMO. The improvements over hundreds of years they refer to were long before I was growing corn and long before GMO existed.Corn has been selectively bred for a long time.
"However, one of the most dramatic and prevalent alterations in plant genetics has occurred through artificial selection of corn. Corn, or maize, began as a wild grass called teosinte that had tiny ears with very few kernels [4]. Over the hundreds of years, teosinte was selectively bred to have larger and larger ears with more and more kernels, resulting in what we now know as corn. "
https://sitn.hms.harvard.edu/flash/...f-look-at-the-long-history-of-gmo-technology/
I wonderWhy haven't the Google Sheets nerds been asked anything?
TAKE THE FULL QUIZ HERE the post your score anatomy nerds.
https://www.britannica.com/quiz/the-human-body