Don't forget it's all about freedom,not profits or making a fair living or willing to work co-operatively with fellow producers. It's all about confrontation and headlines and critizing people who are trying to do there best and getting nothing but scorn. Just keep throwing stones but remember you live in a glass house.
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Ggeessh and that coming from somebody that lives in a quonset?????????? Had the tractor running too long lately????? You gotta get better ventilation there Aggie !!
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It looks like there are irreconsilable differences between the extremes on both sides of this "debate". The good news is that these two minorities won't likely have much influence on how farming history evolves; and the special good news is that both extremes are minorities.
The deep sarcasm; and lack of respect for offered solutions or opinions I see from the strong CWB side bothers me just as much as the extreme anti-CWB attitude that whatever it takes must be done to get rid of the CWB institution.
My thoughts are that the CWB is fixated on single desk marketing; and since they alone know what marketing scheme they have determined is best for agriculture; I guess thet feel they just wouldn't be successful in any other environment. The CWB seems to be willing to cut any special deal (if forced to) eg.organic buy backs, pedigeed seed exemptions; feed manufacturers exemptions, contemplated cash market for feed barley; preferential delivery opportunities for all sorts of contracts; pricing options galore etc. etc. Practically none of these programs would be recognizable in past decades of CWB monopolies. Maybe the solution lies in an alternative cash market for those so inclined.
Still the real problem centers around the lack of adequate farm financing and farmers control of their destiny. Breaking even or getting the average isn't good enough unless you rely on other taxpayer money handouts. Losing money in livestock is equally devastating. As such the CWB continues to fail to improve the overall wheat and barley contribution to healthy profits. Outside the few who have picked a few CWB programs that returned them above pooled prices; there have been others that picked the wrong options and cost themselves money. In every case they probably locked themselves out of any extraordinary returns that have been possible this last year. Thankfully all crops are not under the CWB.
I'm not advocating denying the CWB to those who feel it suits their needs; and conversely it would seems pretty hypocritical to force the CWB on those who do not wish to use it.
I'm expecting that agriculture will continue with its same underlying problems; with or without the CWB. What we should be debating is those basic problems that aren't being addressed by the present system. In the mean time we'll divide ourselves in just as many ways as we always have.
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Well said "checking" and for you "parsley" quit babbabling on, first you are one one side then the other then you dont make any sense. First of all I didnt say your final plan was somthing illigal, I just said when you started talking about doing somthing radical some people didn't sign up for that part. But that doesn't mean they arn't helping the cause of throwing the CWB out on their ____s, you can fill in the blanks. I also voted with those few 13% to get rid of the board. How did you vote?
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Checking,you are right about extremist views , but the difference is execution . Changes have come, not fast enough for some and too fast for others. But lasting changes will only come by consensus, not by brute force the way Mr. Ritz is going. H e just serves to devide the ag community further.
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Agstar77, the problem is that I have no use for the CWB's fixed price, basis contract or their cash plus pricing. I just want to be free of the CWB! You can see the problem Mr. Ritz is having because of people like myself and since the CWB will not relinquish control of any of their grains, we are at a stalemate. I've been very tolerent of my fellow farmers who support your system, however my tolerance has worn thin. Mr. Ritz take whatever neccesary actions you must to rid us of the CWB!!
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A document I will find very interesting is the annual producer survey. My understanding it has been done with the results presented to the B of D. In past surveys, it has answered many of the questions on the pace of change and level of satisfaction - particularly on barley.
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checking,et al,
If farmers waited for the sitting-on-the hands crowd to act, you would still have a permit book that continued to perscribe to you how many bushels of your own grain the CWB would allow you to have gristed into flour for your family in 2008.
The CWB perscribed for years.
.....because no farmer dared complain.
In the West, that is!
Breadwinner,
I voted for no Wheat Board at all.
... And for the record,
I am an extremist.
Extremist Parsley want to sell what I grow.
Greedy Parsley wants the same as Ontario enjoys.
Greedy Extremist six feet four mean
Parsley wants to push forward and not be quivering afraid of an institution that jails people for selling what they grow.
Parsley dislikes bullies.
And is proud of it.
Parsley
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ab,
I cannot believe how you want to get rid off an antiquated organisation with the antiquated ways that you prescribe:
Fights, street demos, bothering the public, are the likes of the old medieval battles in a GPS guided missile age.
If we are smart enough to market our own grain, we sure would not display our mental skills with what you prescribe.
Some are fond of public demonstrations to bother the public like the French farmers etc. (Jim Chatenay being one)
These times are gone. When we are less than 5 percent of the population you do not get very far putting the public against yourself.
Diplomatic pressure where it is needed is the way to succeed in a constructive manner.
I sure would like to see the list of speeding and parking tickets you got maybe you assaulted somebody on the way to Weyburn. I am sure you deserve a medal for all this.
I wanted to get to the meeting but I understand all I missed was the entertainment.
Extremism is rarely the way to make a better world
Francksaskfarmer
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Read this from the NFU website. Maybe these groups, like the OFA, are ones you look to for that spohisticated diplomatic leadership:
http://www.nfu.ca/on/misc_files/History.htm#Part3
The largest demonstration of them all...
This initiative was followed up in 1966 by a campaign to force the Ontario government to provide assistance for farmers with emphasis on a subsidy program for industrial milk.
The Ontario government as usual attempted to ignore the OFU and the Minister of Agriculture stated that he would never recommend a subsidy to milk producers.
This resulted in a meeting of about 1,000 farmers on April 5, 1966 , at Ryerson Institute in Toronto When the government refused to send representatives, the farmers marched to Queen’s Park, but still achieved no results.
By June an Oxford County dairy farmer, Wayne Smith, became so disgruntled at the deplorable situation that he took to the highway with his tractor depicting the plight of the dairy industry.
Within the day his neighbours had joined him. This first tractor demonstration was spontaneously organized by local farmers and the provincial government heard about it before OFU central office.
Soon OFU supporters were organizing tractor demonstrations throughout the province, culminating in one at Queen’s Park on July 27, 1966. The pressure was on and it was kept on until the Ontario government agreed to pay a small subsidy to milk producers.
Later they also agreed to a capital grant program for farmers. The farmer had proved that militant action could achieve some results and this acted as a spur to more action in the future and helped to build the OFU into the recognized representative of the true interests of Ontario farmers.
The largest demonstration of them all, and perhaps the largest protest march to ever assemble on Parliament Hill, was the mass march on Ottawa by 20,000 mainly Ontario and Quebec farmers on May 24, 1967.
This was an exceptionally well organized demonstration by the Ottawa March Committee which was composed of representatives from the OFU, the OFA and the UCC of Quebec. Farmers gathered from every area of Ontario and Quebec and were joined by a few from the Maritimes and the West.
“Hundreds of busses criss-crossed rural Ontario and Quebec early on the morning of May 24, collecting farmers for the massive demonstration, while many times that number of cars moved towards Ottawa from innumerable points in both provinces. Even a few planes were brought into play.” (Ontario Union Farmer, June, 1967)
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