So it can be used for fertilizer and the bags were</b? marked correctly Are you serious?
The page you linked to stated this:
" Its coat and waste are fertilizer"
It's coat and waste are fertilizer. Were these the coats and waste? No.
Further the page you linked to also said:
The coat of the seed yields a substance used: - For planting and water proofing clothes and covers.
- For the manufacture of high quality lubricant and oil for motor, asphalt and tiles.
- For rubber uses, manufacture of soap, printing ink, dye for cloths and for strengthening leather.
- Its dried oil is good dehydrant and resembles tung oil which is used in making paint, varnish, plastic, rayon, nylon.
- Its dydrogenated oil, a variety of castor oil, is used in making floor wax and for gloss, carbon paper, crayola and candles.
- As a kind of nylon thread that is widely used in France and Brazil.
- For manufacture of liniments and cosmetics.
- Its coat and waste are fertilizer.
- Stems are used as animal feed, but only after removing its poisonous resin in the stem.
- For the manufacture of paper, wall and fuel
Why weren't they accurately labeled"animal feed" or "cosmetics" or "rubber" or "soap" when they could have been made in to any of those as well.
Your post is one of the most distorted I've ever seen.
Did you deliberately distort things like this or are you just very dumb?
Why weren't they accurately labeled"animal feed" or "cosmetics" or "rubber" or "soap" when they could have been made in to any of those as well. Hmmmmm, perhaps because the only thing they planned to use it for was I don't know, maybe fertilizer? It was still in the bags!!! When they produce castor beans do they send just the coats and waste? Maybe the Iraqis had the capability to produce the fertilizer? Ever think of that? Or are you so blind you believe every word FOX news tells you to believe about the war?