Agriculture needs a sound ideological basis to build upon.
Agriculture can be built upon a capitalist basis or a socialist/communist basis.
Not both.
I see many farmers and politicos and commentators and analysts commenting on tinkering.
Tinkering with how to tweak the Wheat Board. How to tweak quota for supply management. Tweak constitutional issues such how to reconcile private farm ownership with racial communes that do not allow private ownership.
It's a waste of time.
We cannot build a solid industry without 1) knowing where we are going, 2) without trust, both of which depend upon an ideological compass.
Family farms have always relied upon private ownership.
Yet many of the same land owning farmers argue that although we should own the land, we should not own the grain.
It is folly to alot time to argue about tinkering; about whether the contingency fund is ferreting unrightful money away from a barley pool account.
The real problem is whether or not a farmer should be forced to participate.
We must decide if we are to be communists or to be capitalists.
We have to decide what ideological direction agriculture must build upon.
The future holds the threaten of policy divison which cannot be reconciled, and which will destroy and eliminate the trusting unprepared.
Surely, as adults, we can forge one ideological direction. Pars
Agriculture can be built upon a capitalist basis or a socialist/communist basis.
Not both.
I see many farmers and politicos and commentators and analysts commenting on tinkering.
Tinkering with how to tweak the Wheat Board. How to tweak quota for supply management. Tweak constitutional issues such how to reconcile private farm ownership with racial communes that do not allow private ownership.
It's a waste of time.
We cannot build a solid industry without 1) knowing where we are going, 2) without trust, both of which depend upon an ideological compass.
Family farms have always relied upon private ownership.
Yet many of the same land owning farmers argue that although we should own the land, we should not own the grain.
It is folly to alot time to argue about tinkering; about whether the contingency fund is ferreting unrightful money away from a barley pool account.
The real problem is whether or not a farmer should be forced to participate.
We must decide if we are to be communists or to be capitalists.
We have to decide what ideological direction agriculture must build upon.
The future holds the threaten of policy divison which cannot be reconciled, and which will destroy and eliminate the trusting unprepared.
Surely, as adults, we can forge one ideological direction. Pars
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