Ah, you are too scared to go out there and sell what you grow!!:
"when the cwb disappears marketing will not be the easy exercise"
That's the problem. You're worrying before you start. Monopolists are scared to go it on their own?
Ikea sells furniture to Canadians. Are they terrified? Nope.
The USA is not the sole alternate grain market in the world. (Hint-Other countries buy grain)
Japan waltzed into the USA's production-line back yards and simply out-sold the Americans because the Japanese LISTENED TO THEIR CUSTOMERS, and wrote it down, and made cars that don't rattle so badly. Did it work? Yes.
In the cattle business, jensend, I watched the decline of the monopolist-protectionists who autiomatically bred in-bulls the size of large dogs, year after year, and sold these dwarfs to farmers, by way of forced monopoly legislation, into commercial cattle herds.The commercial man bore the cost of the poor weights of calves and the unthrifty calves, and the overwhelming stupidity fof forced legislation.
Finally, the commercial cattleman plain bloody revolted, hired a plane, went to Europe and imported what he wanted and needed.
The monopoly legislation fell by the wayside, past the blind politicians, too gutless to make changes and too stupid to figure out how to make changes.
But the monopolist, to the bitter end, tried to keep his monopoly on selling registered bulls.
It takes a size larger than marbles to decide to rent the plane.
That's a key point.
Parsley
"when the cwb disappears marketing will not be the easy exercise"
That's the problem. You're worrying before you start. Monopolists are scared to go it on their own?
Ikea sells furniture to Canadians. Are they terrified? Nope.
The USA is not the sole alternate grain market in the world. (Hint-Other countries buy grain)
Japan waltzed into the USA's production-line back yards and simply out-sold the Americans because the Japanese LISTENED TO THEIR CUSTOMERS, and wrote it down, and made cars that don't rattle so badly. Did it work? Yes.
In the cattle business, jensend, I watched the decline of the monopolist-protectionists who autiomatically bred in-bulls the size of large dogs, year after year, and sold these dwarfs to farmers, by way of forced monopoly legislation, into commercial cattle herds.The commercial man bore the cost of the poor weights of calves and the unthrifty calves, and the overwhelming stupidity fof forced legislation.
Finally, the commercial cattleman plain bloody revolted, hired a plane, went to Europe and imported what he wanted and needed.
The monopoly legislation fell by the wayside, past the blind politicians, too gutless to make changes and too stupid to figure out how to make changes.
But the monopolist, to the bitter end, tried to keep his monopoly on selling registered bulls.
It takes a size larger than marbles to decide to rent the plane.
That's a key point.
Parsley
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