Coppertop: I am willing to give honest Ed a chance like I believe most Albertans are.
Grassfarmer: Your post re 16% or a small group of people influencing the government is most interesting. I am thinking of R-Calf as an example. I would put it to you that at least on occasion government will use a group such as R-Calf or possibly using your example the anti-war protestors to justify what the government wanted to do anyway.
It has always been my impression that the U.S. government’s blockade of the Canada-U.S. border to beef in 2003 had more to do with U.S. disappointment over the lack of Canadian participation in the Iraq war than it had anything to do with concerns over food safety. The U.S. administration was under pressure to justify its trade position from the Canadian government but as well from other trading partners who saw the U.S. putting the squeeze on what was the world’s number one trading relationship for crass political reasons. Along comes R-Calf...
The U.S could have chosen to ignore R-Calf but instead gives the protectionist lobby group a profile so it can increase its membership. Perhaps I am way out in left field with this but the U.S. could have handled any concerns over reopening the border to Canadian beef very differently than it did, for instance hearing any complaints from groups like R-Calf in the U.S. trade courts instead of Montana district court with Judge Cebull. Did a small group like R-Calf influence government or did the government use R-Calf as a scapegoat to justify its own policy goals.
Or using your example of the anti-war protestors, did they influence government or did they happen to be an excuse for Europe to distance themselves militarily from a rogue United States that was acting like the bully of the free world.
Grassfarmer: Your post re 16% or a small group of people influencing the government is most interesting. I am thinking of R-Calf as an example. I would put it to you that at least on occasion government will use a group such as R-Calf or possibly using your example the anti-war protestors to justify what the government wanted to do anyway.
It has always been my impression that the U.S. government’s blockade of the Canada-U.S. border to beef in 2003 had more to do with U.S. disappointment over the lack of Canadian participation in the Iraq war than it had anything to do with concerns over food safety. The U.S. administration was under pressure to justify its trade position from the Canadian government but as well from other trading partners who saw the U.S. putting the squeeze on what was the world’s number one trading relationship for crass political reasons. Along comes R-Calf...
The U.S could have chosen to ignore R-Calf but instead gives the protectionist lobby group a profile so it can increase its membership. Perhaps I am way out in left field with this but the U.S. could have handled any concerns over reopening the border to Canadian beef very differently than it did, for instance hearing any complaints from groups like R-Calf in the U.S. trade courts instead of Montana district court with Judge Cebull. Did a small group like R-Calf influence government or did the government use R-Calf as a scapegoat to justify its own policy goals.
Or using your example of the anti-war protestors, did they influence government or did they happen to be an excuse for Europe to distance themselves militarily from a rogue United States that was acting like the bully of the free world.
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