.

NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Dept. of Agriculture Shuts Down Seed Library



"Thou Shalt Not Grow Food."
  • The "small government" GOP run Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture cracks down on seed libraries.  Formerly free men and women are now banned from loaning vegetable seeds to each other.


EDITOR  -  Corrupt and insane Governments at all levels refuse to enforce the laws governing immigration and the border.  But the fascist stormtroopers are cracking down on the distribution of vegetable seeds.


(Cumberlink Sentinel)   -  . . . the library system received a letter from the state Department of Agriculture telling them they were in violation of the Seed Act of 2004.

“We did talk to the county extension office before establishing the seed library,” Darr told Cumberland County commissioners at their meeting Thursday morning. “We were never apprised of the Seed Act.”

The commissioners were equally flabbergasted by the change of events, as well as with how the agriculture department handled the investigation — sending a high-ranking official and lawyers to a meeting with the library.

Freedom is Gone
The All-Powerful State says you are no longer free. Loaning
seeds to your neighbors is declared illegal by Big Brother.

Darr explained that the Seed Act primarily focuses on the selling of seeds — which the library was not doing — but there is also a concern about seeds that may be mislabeled (purposefully or accidentally), the growth of invasive plant species, cross-pollination and poisonous plants.

The department told the library it could not have the seed library unless its staff tested each seed packet for germination and other information. Darr said that was clearly not something staff could handle.

“This is not our core mission,” she said. “We thought we were doing a good thing in helping the Cumberland County Commission for Women (who requested the idea and the library’s participation).”

Darr said she believes the library system’s proximity to Harrisburg, as well as media coverage of the seed library, prompted the Department of Agriculture to act in this case.

She said the department indicated to her that it would continue to crack down on seed libraries that have established themselves in the state.


No comments: