Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5
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Not one western MP or MLA standing up for farmers and the failed farm programs
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Originally posted by the big wheel View Post
Youre trying to tell me that the oil companies are investing billions in carbon capture for fun???? no they are investing in order to sell. They above all of us dont like the carbon thing but they are the highest level of proof that you have to play the game.
Meanwhile our competitors will continue to sell into our former largest markets at a lower cost without that burden.
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Originally posted by bucket View PostAs an exporting nation of food , I don't think those that are hungry care about a false narrative of a carbon tax.
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You know if you look at the way grain was transported 40 years ago compared to now , while it was a pain in the ass for railways, ultimately it was probably more environmentally friendly.
Given that production and different crops have grown now, that system, if still in place, would provide a better environmental footprint that running semis 2 hours to get to a pit.
It may cost more to have more pits or elevators, but if the concern is the environment, then it should be accounted for.
There should be a balance found.
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Originally posted by wrongway View Post
IN What other industry is payroll (family Income) something other than a fixed cost?
we need to pay ourselves first...then of course taxes( like it or not), what is left is for the company to prioritize and distribute as required to meet both short term and long term goals. if you don't value your own labor(pay wages) no one else will either.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
Virtually every mom and pop business in the country works that way. Go ask the proprietors of your local family owned restaurant, retailer, gas station, etc. if they pay themselves a fixed wage, or make due with whatever is left over, if anything?
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Originally posted by wrongway View Post
yes...the examples you site are exactly why big business is taking over everything...giant corporations decimating small businesses of every kind. ag is no different. foreign workers and immigration to provide very cheap labour while profits consolidated into a handful of entities like blackrock, vangaurd and statestreet.
So Mom and Pop businesses with margins so tight that they only sc r a p e by if family members do all the work themselves and work long hours as jack of all trades. I watched a local motel owner out grading the gravel parking lot by hand with a rake recently for example.
And big businesses want to take over such small margin businesses, to hire staff and add layers of management, and pay third parties to do all the other work that the mom and pop owners do on their own time, because they want to consolidate the profits.
What profits? If the mom and pop are barely scr aping by doing it all themselves, what profits are the big businesses going to consolidate?
Same with the idea that mega farms are going to take over family farms that run on a shoestring and somehow make mega profits.Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Sep 20, 2024, 15:05.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
How loud will you be cheering for CO2 credits when agriculture has to invest billions in Nitrous oxide capture, or methane capture, or fertilizer/ pesticide compliance, because that is the price we have to pay to play the game?
Meanwhile our competitors will continue to sell into our former largest markets at a lower cost without that burden.
Why did Harper initiate carbon pricing tax?
Why is the Alberta and Sk gov spending billions on carbon capture?
Think about oil sales is the hint!!!
Do you know what a carbon credit is? Its money that would be directed to us farmers for doing what we re already doing or for so called improvements to what we re doing. So please explain how recieving money for doing what we re doing makes us less competitive?
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Who does the money from the carbon credits come from?
Or do you believe in the carbon fairy?
As to your list of politicians who initiated various carbon pricing schemes, much of that was either under coercion from the federal level or under the mistaken believe that social license is an actual thing.
The one good thing that came out of the notley government in Alberta is that they very effectively proved that social license is a fairy tale.
Which of the countries we export agricultural products to is demanding that we have carbon pricing? And what percentage of our experts does that include?
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
I'm not sure I follow your logic.
So Mom and Pop businesses with margins so tight that they only sc r a p e by if family members do all the work themselves and work long hours as jack of all trades. I watched a local motel owner out grading the gravel parking lot by hand with a rake recently for example.
And big businesses want to take over such small margin businesses, to hire staff and add layers of management, and pay third parties to do all the other work that the mom and pop owners do on their own time, because they want to consolidate the profits.
What profits? If the mom and pop are barely scr aping by doing it all themselves, what profits are the big businesses going to consolidate?
Same with the idea that mega farms are going to take over family farms that run on a shoestring and somehow make mega profits.
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Originally posted by wrongway View Post
Go to the inputs and machinery thread and read about the bto with the chore tractors that only run augers and stone picker s probably around $2M on that alone and explain to me.like I'm 5(not a stretch) how that works.
The supposed economies of scale break down at a certain point.
That is why I don't think the model of outside investors creating mega farms that replace family farms is viable. When margins are razor thin, which is normal in bulk commodities, there is no room left for the waste of a big corporate model where no employees are invested in the outcome.
I look at the BTO who rents out here who fungicided a droughted wheat crop this year that I doubt yielded enough to cover the cost of the fungicide in many areas. Hadn't come out to look at it all season, just sent the sprayer because that is the business plan I guess.
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