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    #16
    Bucket, you are arguing with closet-socialiists
    who claim to be free marketers. Note the CWB's
    defense-argument vvalk threw at you.

    What they don't understand is that REAL
    marketers are willing monetary contributors.
    Freedom requires personal responsibility. Not
    force. It's a concept socialized are unable to
    grasp, because it's a foreign action to distribute
    your own money as opposed to other people's
    money.

    Show me the millions collected and you'll find the
    well-fed inbred self-interests scheming. Triffid
    was a shining responsibility; my research lent
    itself to compiling a viable list of people who's
    ethics earned them a "****off" app named
    In their dishonor. Pars

    They'll soon be buying ships. In secret. Pars

    Comment


      #17
      Farm ranger

      I can gladly post a bunch of emails sent
      to ministers and farm groups that turned
      into futile attempts to rethink farm
      policy.

      The most recent was apas asking for Rrsp
      to buy farmland. I sent that suggestion
      to both them and the government in 2007.

      I don't need to claim the idea, I just
      wanted someone with the power to act on
      it to actually do something.

      Think how agriculture would look if they
      would have acted on it 6 years ago.

      And that's just one idea.

      Pretty soon a person loses interest in
      suggesting ideas because it doesn't suit
      the boards personal agenda or gain.

      I like to think of the bigger picture.
      When I sat on the rm, I found it hard to
      put in expense accounts because my
      responsibilties rarely were out of my
      way. Most times extra meetings never did
      get expensed because I enjoyed knowing
      what was going on and felt honoured that
      my opinion mattered.

      Comment


        #18
        Farm ranger

        If it is just a little paperwork then
        make the so called majority fill out the
        paperwork for the check off.

        Leave those that don't want it alone.

        I think you might be surprised how much
        "majority" support you think this
        commission has.

        Comment


          #19
          Farmers cannot afford to fund all the research
          being deducted. Cannot afford. Don't have the
          money. Lack funds. Are short of cash. Are up to
          their yingynag in operating loans. Are Living year
          to year. Owe money. Financed to the hilt. Are
          struggling. Will have reduced capital.

          Get the meaning?

          AND ALL GOVERNMENTS ARE WILLING AND
          EAGER TO DOWNLOAD HALF OF THE
          EXPENSE OF THE PUBLIC FUNDING OF
          AGRICULTURE ON......yup, FARMERS. Pars

          Comment


            #20
            Parsley

            Some farmers don't understand what you
            just said because they have never had
            anyone but daddy to explain stuff to.

            Its a totally different dynamic and
            leads to their holier than thou
            atttitude.

            Comment


              #21
              I discovered what real farmers would do during
              the Wheat Board fight. They crossed customs,
              gave cash, phoned, networked, went to jail, and
              stood up for something Publicly Too many pretty
              boys hid in their Boardrooms.

              The main reason we have free marketing today is
              because the group of farmers who stood their
              ground and went to jail, completely turned public
              opinion, and broke governments' gall. Not
              intimidated. But upfront. And standing up for
              sound sound principal.

              The pretty boys have benefitted from the boys
              who paid the real dues.

              I won't call the pretty boys cherry pickers; rather
              I'll leave that as the name-calling card for the
              Monopoly Crowd.

              Each farmer can define himself. Pars

              Comment


                #22
                Let's be fair and present a bucket or two of
                contrary view, a fair and balanced mime, strictly
                in the interest of social science, of course. 


                vvalk.  I've met your type many times. Want all
                my money by force so your pals can pay for all
                the  research and advancements I may not
                approve of. It wouldnt   
                make any difference if you just ask me for my
                money  will it? Why not get benefits with good
                will? 

                Some of  these organizations   
                overlap and waste my money. Are scarce
                research  dollars  now instead being targeted for
                lobbying?  Such as : working  on trade issues,
                safety nets, tariff barriers like  china closing
                imports down over blackleg or the  
                triffid in flax issues, low level presence  or
                chemical residues that may shut down exports  
                to different countries making sure new GMO
                traits that i dont condone,are acccepted in
                countries that buy all the canola I am no longer
                able to grow. 

                More new traits in cereals that will help battles
                new  diseases etc. could effect organic farms,  
                but not necessarily in a positive way

                I could go on and on to the reasons why the
                principle of forced participation and mandatory
                checkoffs  is contrary to a democratic country,
                and  to privatley owned family farms, but why  
                bother, since you probably favor a mandatory 
                circle jerk in softly lit board rooms, with scripted
                music. 

                Your obviously so closed minded why bother  
                wasting the time with a cheap ass lookin for other
                people's money to spend. Pars
                    

                Comment


                  #23
                  Of all people on AV , farmranger, I least
                  expected you to try and sell the cherry picking
                  argument to defend monopoly funding. #FAIL
                  #BOARDROOMKOOLAID? Pars

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Parsley, I’m not sure I’m understanding you. I thought you were the Queen of farmers doing things themselves and keeping government out? Here you are advocating for total government public research funding with no input from farmers because we can’t afford it?? My understanding is if farmers are paying a <b>portion </b> of research then we get more say in what that money gets spent on too. The reason I bolded portion is that right now the money farmers spend is multiplied many times by public matching…how is that a bad thing?

                    Parsley, it’s not socialist to want to work with others in your industry with the same interests as you. The checkoffs are used to fund activities which benefit all the growers of that crop. Refundability ensures accountability from those charged with directing those funds to their best use for the benefit of the farmers who paid them in the first place.

                    Bucket, did you ever think that perhaps your RRSP land idea might have a few flaws and that was why it was rejected. I’m not sure what you had in mind, but I would assume that it would have something to do with allowing principle payments on land to be deductible as an RRSP contribution? This would have the effect of an immediate jump in land prices as you could buy land with pre-tax dollars, rather than after-tax dollars. This is great if you’re about to retire, but would increase costs within our industry, in effect capitalizing a tax deferral into the price of land. I apologize if that isn’t what you had meant.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      The piece was a parody of vvalk's shotgun blast.
                      Note I said a "fair and balanced MIME." a mime
                      copies.

                      I'd like your hear your philosophical defense of
                      monopoly deductions, though. Would be a first?
                      Pars

                      Comment


                        #26
                        http://www.pembinavalleyonline.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31401&It emid=427

                        for those of you intrested cut and copy this link into your browser and have a read, this article does a good job of explaining why were talking about this issue.

                        i dont think the issue is refundable checkoff or non refundable checkoff

                        the issue is lets spend checkoff dollars in a more collective manner

                        fyi theres another article in the last mb cooperator on page 2 that also does a great job of explaining the thoughts behind the commisions and associations post.

                        Comment


                          #27
                          this is a little long but heres the MB cooperator article that does a real good job of explaining the letter that was sent to associations commisions and government


                          By Allan Dawson
                          co-operator staff
                          AManitoba farmer mounting
                          an effort to create one
                          big commodity association
                          says a splintered voice is not only
                          expensive, it could cost farmers
                          control of their industry.
                          As the number of commodity
                          organizations collecting checkoffs
                          continues to grow, a 5,000-
                          acre Manitoban farmer can be
                          paying around $20,000 a year in
                          checkoffs, said Danny Penner, a
                          Halbstadt-area farmer and former
                          president the Manitoba Pulse
                          Growers Association. He says
                          checkoff dollars would be better
                          spent on a larger, more efficient
                          national commodity association.
                          “If we continue on the road
                          we’re on, people are going to see
                          themselves putting too much
                          money into small-picture thinking
                          and they’re going to vote with
                          their dollars and they’re going to
                          take more and more money out,”
                          said Penner.
                          “If we are moving forward
                          and the people spending a lot of
                          money see there is a vision and
                          there is a movement and something
                          is going to come of this, and
                          the dollars they spend are going
                          to have a national or international
                          focus, I think they’ll more likely
                          leave their money in.”
                          Penner, whose father Jack was
                          the first president elected to lead
                          Keystone Agricultural Producers,
                          crafted his proposals after consulting
                          some like-minded farmers,
                          and then emailed them last
                          week to western Canadian commodity
                          groups, the federal and
                          Prairie agriculture ministers, and
                          several reporters.
                          “We are writing to request your
                          support for the creation of a new
                          producer-driven national farm
                          organization that would work to
                          solidify marketing systems for
                          grains, oilseeds, pulses and special
                          crops,” the document states.
                          No matter where farmers
                          stood on the Canadian Wheat
                          Board, its mandate change “left
                          a void” the document says. To fill
                          it, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and
                          Alberta are creating wheat and
                          barley associations. And there are
                          already winter cereal, oat, pulse
                          and canola associations in those
                          provinces.
                          Farmers would be better served
                          by a single national, or at least to
                          start with, western farmer-run,
                          commodity associations, Penner
                          said. Each would send representatives
                          to sit on the board of a single,
                          national farm association, which
                          would also elect farmers, he said.
                          “Then the minister of agriculture
                          could say, ‘I’m going to
                          Winnipeg and I’m going to meet
                          with these guys and I can cover
                          everything in two days rather than
                          travelling all across Canada trying
                          to get fragmented views from
                          each individual organization,’”
                          Penner said.
                          Subcommittees could work on
                          local issues, but the focus would
                          be on the big picture and using
                          economies of scale to deliver
                          more bang for the buck, Penner
                          said.
                          Several national commodity
                          groups already exist, including
                          the Canada Grains Council
                          and Canola Council of Canada.
                          Meanwhile, work is underway
                          to set up the Cereals Council of
                          Canada. But these groups are
                          dominated by “industry” representatives,
                          Penner said.
                          “We’re looking at something
                          that’s going to be farmer run,” he
                          said. “Industry has a place, but
                          if we allow the life science companies
                          to lead us... ultimately
                          I don’t think that’s in the best
                          interests of farmers and consumers
                          alike.”
                          The Grain Growers of Canada,
                          an umbrella organization for grain
                          commodity groups, could play
                          a role in setting up a new single,
                          national association because it is
                          farmer run, Penner said.
                          “But they would have to take a
                          really large step forward in how
                          they are managed and how they
                          would see themselves growing
                          into this,” he said.
                          Penner said the Canadian Grain
                          Commission could also play
                          a role in getting the association
                          going. Having a national farmerrun
                          association could also take
                          ownership of crop varieties developed
                          by Agriculture and Agri-
                          Food Canada after it pulls out of
                          research, Penner said. If farmers
                          don’t organize, those crops will
                          end up owned by private firms,
                          he said.
                          “I’m not calling that the end of
                          the world, but it doesn’t give us
                          any control over what we’re going
                          to be dealing with in 10, 15 or 20
                          years,” Penner said.
                          Penner’s document doesn’t
                          spell everything out and that’s
                          deliberate, he said. It’s meant
                          to be thought provoking, not
                          prescriptive.
                          So far feedback has been positive,
                          Penner said.
                          “The responses I’d say are 90
                          per cent on side and 10 per cent
                          skepticism,” he said.
                          “It may not happen from this
                          initiative, but it will happen,”
                          Penner predicted during an interview
                          March 7. “It has to happen
                          and if it doesn’t happen we’re
                          going to be in trouble because
                          we’re going to lose control of our
                          own industry.”
                          See Page 5 for the full text of
                          Penner’s pitch to fellow farmers.
                          allan@fbcpublishing.com
                          Farmers urged to

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Bird's view:
                            Gov'ts borrow/spend
                            Govts ended 100%-funding for research
                            Farmers filling in funding hole.

                            Banks are getting antsy.
                            Farmers don't have the investment money
                            Amazon has.

                            No refundable programs should be mandatory.
                            They will become non-refundable or what is the
                            purpose. pars

                            Comment


                              #29
                              My idea was the equivalent of a first
                              time homebuyer.

                              Was meant as an idea to get land buyers
                              a shot at buying land and investing in
                              themselves.

                              Instead it is now used as a way to
                              compete against the very people we need
                              to keep our farms turning over to real
                              farmers.

                              Now we will have investor money making
                              farmers peasants.

                              I am beginning to understand why it took
                              so long to eliminate the board through
                              the discussions on this thread.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                My apologies Dan, I was a part of the derailing your thread.
                                While I agree that there may be some duplication, that can be kept to a minimum by each provincial commission concentrating on provincial issues and working together on the “big picture” national issues. I fear having a large superboard because it concentrates decision making in one spot with the decision makers being too far removed from the people who elected them.
                                I wouldn’t want my MP making decisions on where the water lines in our rural water co-op are allowed to run. On the other hand, I don’t want my county councillor negotiating tariffs with the Europeans. Some things are better handled at a local level, and some are better handled by people with a national focus.
                                I’m not sure where the 4-5 dollars per tonne is coming from, I’m pretty sure there aren’t any checkoffs anywhere near that right now? Going back to your analogy with pulses; having all pulses under one commission instead of separate pea, lentil, chickpea, etc. This is more like an all-wheat commission rather than having hard red spring, durum, winter wheat, soft wheat, etc. so I’m not sure there is a huge difference in what you’re asking and what is being planned? Maybe that could be expanded to include all cereals, but that is something that will have to evolve in the future (maybe with your input?).

                                Comment

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