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How much is fair mark up on crop inputs

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    #31
    I found the same thing.

    Vader used to skidaddle like a rabbit with a coyote after it.

    Parsley

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      #32
      I have an idea. Give farmers the power of negotiation. Allow farmers to offer to the CWB their grain for a certain price. If the CWB cannot buy it and the the farmer can find another buyer of his preference then that farmer should be able to sell to whom ever he chooses. Of course if a farmer wants to put his grain into a pool or sell in a fixed price that should also be OK, forward pricing should still work. In this scenario the CWB will find their true place and all the farmers will be happy. End users should also be satisfied. One of the CWBs biggest arguments is that many sellers will undercut one another but that should not happen on the producer level we will sell to the highest bidder. Many sellers should seek out more buyers with different and various values of needs. More disappearance will amount to better prices for all producers.

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        #33
        OF course this comes down to the 3 question ballot that us farmers supposedly cannot comprehend. You know when I look around at my neighbors I see a lot of very intelligent people.

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          #34
          That is a keen observation.

          The farm community is composed of folks who are extremely hard working, extremely skilled, plus have an unbelievably wide array of skills, co-operate in their communities, just look at the rinks, volunteer both time and money, raise good kids, (how maany farm kids do you find in jail), are good neighbors, and contribute billions to the Canadian economy.


          Celebrate who/what you are.


          Parsley

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            #35
            parsley: As opposed to the slothful CWB supporter no doubt...as he/she sits in front of the TV all day and eats TV dinners.

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              #36
              silverback, utopia? no I don't think that's it,,, is your utopia one farmer by the name of cargterra admausea tyson?

              I do think we would be better off with more farmers on the land than we have now, from a sustainability perspective each farm has it's own optimums and limiting factors. Overall criteria will include availability of fuel and water in the context of climate changes.

              The closer a farm manager is to the peculiarities of the land he or she is responsible for, the better chance we have of being self sufficient.

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                #37
                highwayman, The quota was a percentage of deliverables, whether high producer or low producer. I don't see an advantage to the low producer in that. That may have been the excuse used to give preference however.

                It probably wasn't the cwb doing it but perhaps there was a message in it for those of us who were trying to out produce ourselves and our neighbours in that overproduction wasn't helping us.

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                  #38
                  Tower. You're up. Great. I've been answering your questions but you seem to have missed mine. So I'll ask it again.

                  What is so bloody sacred about the CWB that you can't even see its shortcomings?

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                    #39
                    adam smith. you put down the director elections as being political campaign type,,,, I'm curious about how the elections could be run without such a twisted system.

                    I've been to a few all candidate forums and was pleased when issues of relevance to marketing and returns to grain producers dominated the discussions.

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                      #40
                      tom4cwb, you said that the multinationals can often make more money with the board in place,, is this compared to what they could and would do without the board in place? and how would you prove something like that.

                      what are the foundation problems in the wheat board that you speak of?

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