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The Rural Voice, 2002-01, Page 10"Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 102 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED Now Available WOOL ADVANCE PAYMENTS Skirted Fleeces Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact: WINGHAM WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 2, Wingham, Ontario Phone/Fax 519-357-1058 6 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston When ideas become unfashionable shift toward the position that supply Though I'm hardly a fashion - plate, I've generally got perfectly good clothes sitting at the back of the closet that I don't wear anymore • because they're just too out of date. Ideas seem to be like that, too. The basis behind an idea may be as sound as ever but fashionable thinkers have moved on to some other trends and an idea is cast aside like plaid, bell-bottom pants. I got thinking about that recently while listening to former federal agriculture minister Eugene Whelan speak to the annual meeting of the Bruce Country Feder- ation of Agriculture. I guess I'm showing my age to recall a similar meeting in Huron County when Whelan was still minister. It was the hottest ticket in town back then as people crowded in to hear this passionate, controversial and often funny man. Despite now being in his late 70s, Whelan is still passionate, still funny and still controversial. He stands for the same beliefs he did at the height of his power: farmers having the power to control their destinies; farmers working together; govern- ment working to help farmers withstand the bad times so they could prosper in the good times. Tod"• however, his appearance is a footnote, not a headline. While he's still strong-minded to the point of being controversial, times have moved on to the point that his statements are inconsequential to today's leaders — among farm organizations, in the government agricultural bureaucracy and among the political leadership. It's not that what he's saying isn't as true today as it was 20 years ago, it's just that it's out of fashion. A champion of colective marketing through supply management, he can only sit back now and watch thinking The idea can be as valid as ever, yet be ignored management is out of step with a global marketplace, keeping producers thinking small, content to supply the national market when they could be supplying the world. Whelan stands for a time when government research labs were primarily responsible for creating new breeds that reshaped farming. Now it's taken for granted that government is bad, private industry is good, and research should be done by for-profit, private firms. Whelan reminds people of their less -fortunate brothers and sisters in distant parts of the world who are starving to death while we cut foreign aid because we're worried about government deficits and tax cuts. Many today don't want to know about those suffering elsewhere; they just want to guiltlessly accumulate more possessions. Because his ideas are out of fashion, even Whelan's passion probably doesn't count for much in the big picture. He attacked farm leaders, for instance, for supporting genetic engineering, but these normally vociferous defenders of this wave of agriculture's future probably don't even rise to the bait anymore when it comes from an "old guy". Yet Whelan's message seemed to connect with his audience as strongly as ever. He held his audience through a sometimes -rambling, hour-long speech late into the evening, and people rose to give him a standing ovation at the end then lined up to get his autograph. The truth of many of his opinions seems as valid today as when he was power, but he's not in power and so isn't shaping policy. It must be frustrating to remember how people once listened to your opinions but to not have your opin- ions valued now. It must hurt to see • the things you fought for in your life being dismantled by others. "I just wish I had the resources and I was younger because I'd be doing more," he said near the end of his speech. If so, perhaps he could change what's fashionable in agriculture.0 Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Blyth, ON.