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The Rural Voice, 2005-01, Page 60 0 0 0 Safe & Professional Dismantling of Barns & Wooden Structures • Insured • NOSTALGIC SALVAGE INC. Danny Farrow 519-323-0175 565 Perth St. N., Mount Forest 1-888-643-8410 "Fill your 2005 seed needs with us" At Hill & Hill Farms, we bring more value to your farming operation by offering seeds from the following companies: 01773b Consider these available varieties & genetics: Roundup Ready Corn Roundup Ready Soybeans Liberty Link Hybrids Bt Hybrids Stacked Gene Hybrids Speciality Soybean Contracts Call Pete or Keith for further details 519-233-3218 2 THE RURAL VOICE Feedback We need each other A Toronto resident of the Annex near Bloor and Spadina, I whole- heartedly support Jeffrey Carter's November column "Urban needs rural (and vice versa)" and his criticism of Lawrence Solomon. In fact, though, I would go further to state that Solomon's attitude toward rural life is more than flawed, it is absurd. The Urban Renaissance Institute's Solomon was the editor of the failed magazine The Next City. Allied with those who operate Energy Probe and its spinoffs which operate out of the same venue not far from our house, Solomon yearns for the privatization of just about anything public. The very first article in The Next City called for the privatization of the TTC. Not surprisingly he sees subsidies written all over farm life, but never those given to corporations — a very right-wing American inflicting his views on Canadians. But not only Solomon is off centre in Toronto. In the November Literary Review of Canada Joe Berridge (like Solomon a neighbour, and alas, one of my former students) in his review of John Sewell's new book, A New City Agenda, points out that fishing, forestry and farming contribute only two per cent to Canada's GNP and that these industries are pampered to the detriment of cities. He asserts: "It is hard to overstate how economically unimportant the old (that is resource- based) Canada now is." This is obviously another absurd statement for the obvious reason that we have to eat. Measuring matters only by money, the Gross National Product is obviously another absurdity — a high - paid banker "produces" far more than any farmer. From Mr. Carter's remarks, the Investing in People report likewise seems to miss the point. Now, as an urban activist and teacher of urban matters, I do support the view that large cities need special