That still will not explain why the legislation stopped at the Manitoba/Ontario border.
Bottlenecking apparently. Petros must be a very lonely farmer to be necking with a bottle....must not have any sheep.
That still will not explain why the legislation stopped at the Manitoba/Ontario border.
Bottlenecking apparently. Petros must be a very lonely farmer to be necking with a bottle....must not have any sheep.
Yup bottlenecking. Low volume means product can be consumed and processed on a small scale. Could one mill who put out a market call handle me and everyone else who showed up with a 70t truck full? How big would the mill have to be or how many mills would it take to process all the prairie wheat?Bottlenecking apparently. Petros must be a very lonely farmer to be necking with a bottle....must not have any sheep.
What are the end uses of ON and PQ grains?
You must hear lots of things rattling inside that empty noggin. If it sounded like seperatist wheat it was merely your imagination.
What is the difference in cost between your wife's bread making equipment and the bread company's. How much does it cost in freight to get your wife's bread to your dinner table. How much do you pay your wife and what are her payroll taxes like (I was thinking specifically about Workers Comp)
BTW, I make the bread in my house. Why don't you get off your ass and help your wife.
Yeah I am. Rail was the road that towns were built upon. Towns are placed a specific distance a part so that a producers didn't have to travel further than six miles hauling grain by horse and wagon. That's what happens when you let private enterprise like the CPR design your province.
If the anti-drought legislation is passed along with the 8 day week we'll be in great shape as food falls from the sky from alien bail-outs during famine.And it seems to have been a very successful design, else you wouldn't be here.
The CWB and the Crow rate were both a result of the forces that destroyed farmers in the dustbowl years. Since we're going to do away with the CWB, I can only assume that farmers will no longer have the safety of being bailed out when times go bad, which is okay with me.
You will note that the same people that wanted to lock you up for refusing to give the government highly personal, detailed information about your family and your home are the same people that back the jailing of farmers when it comes to who they sell their produce to.
What is an Act? Is it law? If the law states the decision of the status of law is to be sent to plebiscite and the Govt loses the vote to kill a law, does the law remain law?
You ae spot on putting CN as your first company to mention. Controling the distribiution system means controlling the entire flow. Who has dibs on the publically owned for profit aluminum grain cars which are the only ones capable of running the Churchill line?That's what they will be going to court over. There could be a compromise, that's what the Conservative Party is known for right? :roll: Not having seen the legislation yet, if the only change was optional marketing to the wheat board, then that might satisfy most farmers, and the ones who choose to go alone could always come crawling back when CN, Cargill, Viterra, etc. fukc them over.