Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2001-06, Page 14LESLIE HAWKEN & SON Custom Manufacturing LIVESTOCK & FARM EQUIPMENT • Bale Thrower Racks • Big Bale Wagons • Headgates & Chutes • Donut Round Bale Feeders • Gate -Mounted Grain Feeders Flat Rack Calf Creep For the best quality and service - Call Jim Hawken Rural Route Three Markdale 519-986-2507 FARM d, MUNICIPAL DRAINAGE Specializing in: • Farm & Municipal Drainage • Clay & Plastic Tile Installations • Backhoe & Dozer Service • Septic System Installations For Quality, Experience, & Service ca//. - Wayne Cook (519) 236-7390 R.R2 Zurich, Ont. NOM 2T0 PARXER PARKER LITAIIES www.hay.neti-drainage 10 -r HE RURAL VOICE Jeffrey Carter Pigs and corporations have the vote "I tras recently 00 a tour of Latin America. and the only regret I hare was that I didn't study Latin harder in school so I could converse with those people." — Former U.S. Vice - President Dan Quayle. The leaders of the Western Hem- isphere promi'e much. There's a brighter future. they say. Free trade and demo- cracy are the means to that end "We have a clause on dem- ocracy. We have discussed all the elements that are needed to help the 800 million people living in the Americas to prosper in the future," Prime Minister Jean Chretien told Canadians at the close of Summit of the Americas in Quebec City on April 22. "We've discussed environment, we have discussed education, we have discussed health. And all the leaders were very, very, happy with what happened." Not everyone is pleased, though. The people of the Americas who massed in the streets of Quebec City are not. While the leaders of North America's democracies may be riding the free trade breeze, they were tacking against it. They cite examples of the here and now: the rise of corporate power over democratic rights; worsening conditions for Mexico's workers; negative environmental repercussions such as the Canadian government' s decision not to ban MMT from gasoline for fear of a lawsuit by Ethyl ' Corporation. North America's fanners find themselves in a quandary over this. Many are dependent on trade. There's too much grain, oilseed and meat in Canada to consume domestically. Canada is a trading nation. Trade has brought benefit. The question that needs to be asked is, "Who benefits?" Farmers as a community have not. Their numbers dwindle and they have Democracy comes first. Trade follows found they must fit to the mould that's been cast for them. There's nothing democratic about it. Consider Ontario's pork marketing board. The organization has a mandate to represent producers but now holds no clout, thanks to the gradual erosion of producer powers. The same kind of scenario holds sway in Manitoba. where the marketing board was stripped of its single -desk powers by the provincial government. In the United States, a coalition of pork producers success- fully won a vote calling for an end to the check -off for the National Pork Producers Council. The coalition maintained that the NPPC represents the interests of the factory farmers and big meat packers — not family farmers. USDA Secretary of Agri- culture Ann Veneman has so far rejected the February 28 vote and has refused to meet with members of the coalition. There are other examples of how farmers have been "marginalized". In Ontario, a once -thriving asparagus processing industry is all but gone. As of this year, the biggest processor left will likely be John Jaques who runs a tiny on-farm asparagus pickling line. The last big player in Ontario, Nabisco Brands, now buys canned asparagus from Peru where the daily wages for workers are measured in cents, not dollars. In Saskatchewan, canola grower Percy Schmeiser was found guilty of illegally using Monsanto Corporation's Roundup Ready® technology. Judge W. Andrew MacKay, working within the confines of the law, ruled that Schmeiser "knew or ought to have known" that he was sowing glyphosate -tolerant seed in 1998. There was no ruling on how the seed came to Schmeiser's farm. The interests of Schmeiser, who views the Roundup Ready gene as contamination, were not addressed. The rights of corporations, asparagus, pigs and profit it seems, take precedence over people. Is this the democracy of which the leaders of the Western Hemisphere speak? Many of our democratic leaders, whether elected or financed to their positions, still hold in their hearts the