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The Rural Voice, 1987-12, Page 10SEE OUR MINIATURE LIVE WORKING STEAM ENGINES, TRACTORS AND LUMBER WAGONS CALL OR VISIT HAUGHOLM BOOKS (Janice and Allan Haugh) 1 mile east of Brucefueld on Huron Co. Rd. 3 519.527.0248 Big Bear SERVICES INC. WET BREWERS GRAIN or WET CORN DISTILLERS can help your feeding program by: • providing a protein supplement • extending roughage supplies, protein and palatability to stover diets • an excellent rumen stimulant • available in full and split load lots BOOK NOW for your fall and winter supply of distillers corn At this season of celebration, we extend warm wishes for a Happy Christmas and a successful New Year BIG BEAR SERVICES INC. FEED DIVISION 50 Westmount Rd., Waterloo, Ontario N2L 2R5 (519) 886-4400 8 THE RURAL VOICE "PUNDITS": LOOKING BACK AT THE NEW YEAR Christmas is coming, and the sea- son is here for the so-called experts to tell us what's in store for the new year. Agriculture, of course, has always had its pundits, but this year they appear to be more in evidence. It must have something to do with the depression in agriculture, which for some is entering its ninth year. The added spectre of free trade with the U.S. now also looms over some farm sectors. While free trade detractors such as the grape growers have pulled no punches in their objections, the free trade salesmen were out in force at two farm outlook meetings, the late October Ontario Agri -Food confer- ence and the early November Can- adian Bankers' Association "farming in transition" conference. Like a Yankee carpetbagger of old, Canada's ambassador to the U.S., Allan Gotlieb, flew into Toronto from Washington to open his bag of free - trade remedies. When I asked Gotlieb in an inter- view prior to his speech at the Agri - Food conference if he didn't find it ludicrous that he, a Canadian diplomat to a foreign country, found himself selling the free trade package to far- mers in his own land. Gotlieb got quite chippy, insisting he wasn't "selling" free trade, but rather talking about "Canada -U.S. relations." Of course when he got into his speech, he sold the deal hard as Canada's salvation against the rising tide of U.S. protectionism. With little humility, Gotlieb said: "I've been talking about this for six years ... about U.S. protectionism ... a great danger to Canada ... I think I was the first to say it in the whole country. I've been right and I'm still right." Thanks Al, but Canadian agriculture has been well aware of the Yankee trader's big stick for decades. A week later at the banking con- ference, the boys from Bay Street came out baying barrier -free trade and along with it calling for the elim- ination of farm subsidies both on the bilateral and multi -lateral levels. Tom Cowan, Putnam farmer and vice-president of Cold Springs Agri - Services Ltd., seemed the lone voice urging caution in farm subsidy elim- ination that first day of the conference. "We don't want our farmers to lose by default," he said. But it was Robert McIntosh, president of the bankers' association, who led the charge for elimination on a world-wide basis. "In the past year, many world govemments have recognized that farm subsidy policies make no sense and must be reformed ... Must Canada spend more money than it can afford, knowing that, whatever the amount, it will be attacked as not enough?" he asked in his prepared speech. "Practically no agricultural com- modity of any importance is free from the effects of government interven- tion," he complained, "The pervasive- ness of this assistance is due to the fact that once a government assists some commodity sectors, pressures emerge which lead to assistance in other sectors." It wasn't mentioned that the bailout of Dome Petroleum was in effect what many consider a bailout of Canadian banks. Nor were the bail- outs of Third World debtor nations, which many consider bailouts of Canadian and U.S. banks, mentioned. In the controversy surrounding the Canada -U.S. pact, some bankers have complained that they got the short end of the stick with American bankers. But on general principle, folks, free trade is good for us. At least that seems to be the message from the same boys who helped bring us bankruptcy in Brazil who played their part in Black Monday on the Bay Street stock market in October.0 GORD WAINMAN HAS BEEN AN URBAN -BASED AGRICULTURE REPORTER FOR 12 YEARS.