Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5
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Sask. 'moving forward' with $1.15B Lake Diefenbaker Irrigation Project
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So it’s ok to wind and solar farms , in which those landlords get paid very well , but this is taboo??
not saying I agree with the irrigation project but what is so different ??
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Originally posted by furrowtickler View PostSo it’s ok to wind and solar farms , in which those landlords get paid very well , but this is taboo??
not saying I agree with the irrigation project but what is so different ??
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
The difference is that one will increase productivity and GDP and tax revenues for generations to come. One will decrease all of the above.
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Originally posted by newguy View Post
One subsidizes energy one subsidizes food production.This is farm forum.Why would any farmer want other farmers subsidized at that level ?
But if government bureaucracy , red tape, and regulations are going to make it impossible for the private sector to build anything on the scale of an irrigation project, then the only way we're ever going to have economic growth again is if government also contributes to these projects.
At least at the end, there is a productive asset.
???????Contrast that with government subsidies for green energy which only result in higher energy costs for all of society and a bunch of red herring wind and solar installations which the taxpayer will inevitably be on the hook for.
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Originally posted by newguy View Post
One subsidizes energy one subsidizes food production.This is farm forum.Why would any farmer want other farmers subsidized at that level ?
Please explain why you wouldn't want anyone in your industry getting more than you...
Sounds like the old argument for centralized rail car allocation.
Then explain the "fairness" to all including consumers, of supply management.
You see?
Pure socialism as a dogma runs into contradictory predicaments.
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Originally posted by blackpowder View Post
That last sentence very interesting.
Please explain why you wouldn't want anyone in your industry getting more than you...
Sounds like the old argument for centralized rail car allocation.
Then explain the "fairness" to all including consumers, of supply management.
You see?
Pure socialism as a dogma runs into contradictory predicaments.
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Originally posted by blackpowder View PostAnd my Nigerian friend tells me groceries are higher here than elsewhere he's been.
It's worldwide politics as well.
Who would you have grow less?
My Nigerian friend just told me that the check is in the mail (again, it got lost the last 12 times he told me that), but that he needs more of my banking information and another credit card to make sure the late Nigerian Prince's Fortune is all transferred to my account.
He also taught me a good lesson about gullibility. Anyone who was gullible enough to believe the Nigerian prince scam would also be naive enough to think that Canada sets the world price for grains and that a few thousand more acres of irrigated grain will affect the world price that we all sell our grain for. Meanwhile South America and FSU keep adding millions of acres per year.
I Started out to type an intelligent rebuttal to newguys socialist pie in the sky economics, but quickly accepted that it would be futile to argue with someone who believes such nonsense.Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Sep 6, 2024, 19:50.
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