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    #31
    If anyone is there today, if there is a decision could you let us know. Can't find an online source.

    Comment


      #32
      Two social factors have changed, as well.

      The courts traditionally treated farmers as cap-in-
      handers, "shut up ans put up" but the likes of
      manillchanged that image,and the younger
      farmers' formal educational qualifications are
      often equal to or higher than that of the court.

      As well, agricultural representation in Ottawa has
      strength.

      As well, many lawyers are vying for
      appointments, and their pro-liberal
      voices at bar association soiree will be
      dampened and so will their endorsement of
      stupid decisions. Courts do notice.

      As well there will be hell to pay from legal peers
      once the court realizes once the government has
      succumbs to farmer-power, the WarMeasures
      Act can no longer be invoked to protect them
      from angry farmers lol. Pars.

      Comment


        #33
        Not a personal attack; goodnesss, you don't
        even sign your name. But I really don't consider
        you an enemy. Just slow But we all learn
        multiplication tables at our own rate; and
        eventually learn that socialism does not serve us
        well in the long haul. You'll part with your blankie
        some day. Pars.

        Comment


          #34
          Oberg's Dilemma:
          The Band of Eight have probably concluded they
          can alter DA boundaries by passing a motion,
          voting in-camera, and then declaring Ontario and
          Quebec part of the DA.

          And then the Band of Eight will order the
          Government to pass their motion on the Rick
          Mercer show .

          Will the government obey? That's the Oberg
          Dilemma. Pars

          Comment


            #35
            Canadian Press and Reuters are in the Courthouse...

            Comment


              #36
              Larry,can you tell if there`s an overweight lady there?????

              Comment


                #37
                From: Larry Weber [mailto:larry@webercommodities.com]
                Sent: December 6, 2011 10:27 AM
                To: @thomsonreuters.com'
                Subject: RE: are you in Court house today?

                After 1993 and 2007…I’m going to wait til the fat lady sings three times before I kiss the CWB goodbye…lol

                Comment


                  #38
                  In the early 1990's, I attended a CWB district
                  farmer-meeting in Glenavon and like a bolt out
                  od the blue, stood up and trashed them for their
                  licensing policy. I had dressed up, wore high
                  heels, was polite, smiled, brushed my teeth but
                  trashed them, nonetheless.

                  There was stunned silence. Farmers who had not
                  finished their dessert stopped chewing.

                  Harvey Brooks and his band of manipulators
                  swarmed me. To explain: 1. I was misinformed.
                  2. I didn't understand. 3. They had not explained
                  it well enough for farmers like me. 4. They
                  needed to study my concerns and would i
                  provide input.

                  I didn't buy it. And there was one sentence in the
                  press. Recent press reports have trashed the
                  Board worse than I initially did.

                  It's grown and matured. And although it's not
                  over until it's over, the bottom line is this:

                  In Canada, the Canadian Wheat Board no longer
                  has the MORAL authority to arrest and jail
                  farmers for selling what they grow.

                  They no longer have a big stick.

                  And the media know it and one by one, they too,
                  are abandoning the Canadian Wheat Board just
                  as farmers have abandoned them.

                  Am I daunted by this courtcase? No. Ita a long
                  haul to stick an institution with a pitchfork

                  I'll get dressed up, wear high heels, be polite,
                  smile, brush my teeth and enjoy the moment
                  when this ordeal ends, though

                  It will end. Pars

                  Comment


                    #39
                    The government of Comedia does not have a
                    very good track record in Comedian Courts!
                    Their usual tactic is to try and drag
                    things out as much as possible, and
                    attempt to regulate change. Learned that
                    from Ralph here in Albertie. In the mean
                    time, lottsa name callin and swearin....

                    Comment


                      #40
                      WINNIPEG SUN - 23 minutes ago

                      A court challenge over the future of the Canadian Wheat Board is not an attack on Parliament or the government's right to make laws, but a specific challenge to Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz's "behaviour," a court was told Tuesday morning.

                      A landmark case involving the CWB, its support group called the Friends of CWB, and the federal government began in a federal courtroom in downtown Winnipeg Tuesday.

                      The CWB and its supporters, which include the Council of Canadians and other interveners, are challenging the government's power to end the Wheat Board's marketing monopoly on wheat and barley in the Prairies.

                      The government proposed to do so in a bill introduced in Parliament in October. If passed, the change would take effect next August.

                      However, the CWB argues that Sec 47.1 of the existing Canadian Wheat Board Act mandates that the government must hold a vote among farmers first.

                      "This application is directed not at Parliament, not at the government, but is directed at the minister's failure to meet the preconditions of Sec 47.1. It was the minister's decision not to consult and not to hold the vote. When he made that decision Sec 47.1 was the law and it remains the law today," CWB lawyer John McDougall told court. "This is all about fairness and the minister's behaviour was unfair and contrary to law."

                      The government will present its case Tuesday afternoon.

                      No decision is expected Tuesday.

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