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Give us this day our daily bread....

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    Give us this day our daily bread....

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/food/article-
    1298227/Tescos-misleading-claims-bread-just-tip-
    iceberg.html

    Always good to stay abreast of views that affect
    wheat markets. Right? Pars

    #2
    "BY LARRY KUSCH, WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
    JANUARY 17, 2012
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba Court of Queen's
    Bench justice on Tuesday questioned why eight
    former Canadian Wheat Board directors were
    appearing before him — and not a federal court
    judge — in their bid for an injunction against the
    implementation of a new federal law.

    "You want me to take steps to enforce another
    judge's order," Justice Shane Perlmutter
    commented to lawyer Colin MacArthur, who is
    representing the farmers.

    The former directors are asking Perlmutter to halt
    the implementation of Ottawa's Marketing
    Freedom for Grain Farmers Act (Bill C-18)
    pending a ruling on the legality of the Harper
    government bill, passed late last year. Perlmutter
    denied the farmers an emergency application for
    an injunction Dec. 16.

    Tuesday morning, MacArthur began presenting
    his arguments in one of the tiniest courtrooms in
    the old Law Courts Building. More than a dozen
    spectators were forced to stand while a few
    others sat on the floor near the judge. Perlmutter
    apologized for the tiny space, adding it was
    apparently the only room available. Arguments
    were to continue Tuesday afternoon and it's
    possible they will conclude by end of day."

    Comment


      #3
      Parsley.... The concerns about highly refined and new age wheats seem
      to be more appearing frequently.

      With the CWB issue is still being played out in courtrooms, your two posts are
      futuristically linked...IMHO.

      The opportunity to directly contract and deliver specific types of cereals in
      various quantities may well change the current predominance of bulk varieties.

      The current buy back injustice has practically isolated farmers and consumers.

      Hopefully this will change.

      Cheers... Bill

      Comment

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