Category: War On Agriculture

Higher Learning?

The Food Professor sat down to talk to some University of Montreal grad students the other day. The feedback he got confirms the suspicions of many that most universities have never altered their mission to graduate as many Marxists as possible.

Spoke with a group of graduate students and faculty today. The consensus in the room was clear: they believe food companies shouldn’t be allowed to make a profit, and meat consumption should be banned or at least heavily discouraged.

Thread reader here.

 

Our Chinese-Installed Governor In Ottawa

The more things stay the same, the more things stay the same.

Why Are We Trading Our Breadbasket for a Battery Pack?

In protecting a shaky electric vehicle dream, Ottawa is putting a $43-billion canola reality at risk — sacrificing a cornerstone of our agricultural economy for a battery pack that may never deliver. […]

The backdrop to all of this is Ottawa’s high-stakes bet on the EV sector. Despite nearly $50 billion in combined federal and provincial investments, Canada’s EV industry is faltering. Sales are dropping, mandates are clashing with market realities, and major projects are delayed or shelved. Without a significant acceleration in charging infrastructure, policy recalibration, and restored investor confidence, the sector risks collapse.

Ottawa’s trade stance is effectively protecting a fragile EV industry at the expense of a robust and profitable canola sector. One is speculative and policy-driven; the other is market-proven and globally competitive. The policy choice here should be obvious: Canada must either adjust its EV tariff position toward China or carve out exemptions to protect agricultural exports. Beijing has made its expectations clear.

Related: Built in 1960, the Second Narrows Bridge was not designed for the volume and weight of modern freight trains, which have grown substantially in size and frequency to meet rising global demand.

Amish Families Chased out of Canada

An SDA regular referenced an important story that is not getting much press coverage. It a tad difficult to access but do this: Click on this link and then navigate via the bottom ribbon to “5A News Practical Farming. Here’s a snippet to help guide you:

Screenshot

Well worth a read! Here’s a key part:

Rural America respects freedom, therefore, Canadians are brainwashed to loathe and fear it.

The shameful and poignant fact is that Canadian churches were controlled by government. Hence, we’ve proven to our neighbours that we crave submitting to government control; whether it’s worshipping God, milking cows or maintaining a rural graveyard.

I Want A New Country

Have they pulled Chinese booze off the shelves yet?

China fucked western CANADA late Friday with a 100% tariff on canola oil and peas.

Don’t think it’s serious Richardson last night late sent out a statement that they were pulling all bids for Canola effective immediately.

Cargill and all others will follow today.

All this to save a few electric car jobs that don’t even exist in eastern CANADA.

Were fucked and not a peep from any news outlet of the damage or liberal NDP politician.

@KenKluzSo much seed and chem is in our sheds, so we are stuck seeding canola, regardless what do you switch to as of rotation and other commodity prices. Far worse than 1970 or 1986

Don’t Put That In Your Mouth

You don’t know where it’s been: $346,654 to help “genderqueer farmers to overcome barriers to participation in the agriculture sector

And it’s just the drippy tip of the iceberg.

$333,865 to “decolonize the food system.”

Half a million dollars to achieve gender diversity in agricultural bodies.

Creating inclusive signposts by “compiling a collection of texts by sexually diverse immigrant women.” – $258,505.00

$319,491 to address colonial barriers of the gender binary and heteropatriarchy in Yellowknife.

$542,487 to address persistent, harmful gender norms in Canada’s electricity industry.

$200,000 of your money to “advance equity and decolonization in large, urban parks.”

Half a million dollars to support gender diverse musicians in Winnipeg.

$341,052 to provide outdoor-based rite of passage programming for non-binary youths in Burnaby.

$53,800 to “ensure the growth of 2SLGBTQI+ French-speaking minority communities in the Acadian Peninsula

Three-quarters of a million dollars to support the arts and culture industry for non-binary Francophones in New Brunswick.

$200,000 in tax dollars over the years to Rubies Apparel to craft trans and non-binary inclusive swimwear by “creating a bra designed for trans and non-binary tweens and teens that have not developed up top.”

These and more, compiled by the unmatchable Andy Lee.

h/t to PhilM: Canada Public Accounts (CSV format)

We Need A Famine

See South Africa. Katie Hopkins gets it.

More on the Westminster farmer protest on X

Keir Starmer’s Britain

Where the foxes caper unmolested, the government packs your school lunch and what’s theirs is theirs and what’s yours is theirs.

Y2Kyoto: Damned If They Do

Western Producer;

Companies that have paid to source agricultural produce that complies with the European Union’s anti-deforestation law would lose out if the EU decides to delay implementing the legislation by a year, industry groups and traders said.

Deforestation is the second largest source of the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change after the burning of fossil fuels, according to the European Commission. The EU had planned to ban the import of commodities from suppliers unable to prove their goods were not linked to deforestation.

The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) would have impacted imports of cocoa, coffee, cattle, soy, oil palm, timber, rubber and related products such as chocolate and leather.

It was scheduled to come into effect Dec. 30, but the EU Commission recently proposed a 12-month delay, under pressure from industries and governments who said it would cause supply chain disruptions, exclude poor, small-scale farmers from the EU market and drive up the cost of basic foodstuffs because many farmers and suppliers were not ready to comply.

The EU’s vegoil and oilmeal group Fediol said its members, which include trading giants such as Cargill and food processors such as AAK, will suffer losses from a delay after paying premiums to secure raw materials that comply with the law.

“It’s a financial loss they are making by having been ready on time,” Fediol director general Nathalie Lecocq said.

Cocoa processors and chocolate makers face the same scenario with traders saying they had sold deforestation free beans to them at a premium of up to six per cent.

The premium will now likely fall to zero because consumers won’t be willing to pay more for cocoa that complies with a law that has been pushed back.

Related: Trudeau’s Anti-Growth Agenda Chokes the Life Out of Local Economies

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