Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1993-12, Page 12WE WANT YOUR GRAIN! Corn Soybeans Feed Grains Quality Oats Damaged Grains CASH & FORWARD CONTRACTS Call us today for Quotes Dave Gordon Elizabeth Armstrong Richard Smibert Ian Carter london agricultural commodities, inc. 1112 HYDE PARK ROAD HYDE PARK, ONTARIO NOM 1Z0 519-473-9333 Toll -Free (519) 1-800-265-1885 (416-705) 1-800-265-1874 Meet BACON I the l PP- ERS fy Constant feed supply means SELF FEEDERS Self feeders mean PRAIRIE PRIDE to hog producers. With over 15 years experience, Prairie Pride has been meeting the rugged requirements of hog raising conditions with feeders that are. • Corrosion resistant • Chew -proof • Competitively priced I! There is a Bacon Maker Model for your Application' TWO YEAR WARRANTY All— PRAIRIE PRIDE ENTERPRISES Ipii Muses Furnl Systems (1992) Ltd. R.R. 3, Mitchell, Ont Hwy. 8, 3 mi East of Mitchell 519.348.8483 "When you buy from Moses'92, you buy quality and service." 8 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Perspective from technology? It's Christmas time and we all dream of getting toys for Christmas: little kids of dolls and video games, older kids of wide-screen TVs and CD players. There's a rev- olution coming in technological toys. There is, for instance, "virtual reality". You strap on this visor that lets you see see a computer image as if you were there. There are sensors in the outfit you wear so that when you move to react to what you see, the computer responds, and you can affect what you will see. You could, for instance, fight a sword fight with a pirate, or fence with Darth Vader. There's a lot of concern over these "toys", and with good reason. The fact is that these "as if you were there" toys will be exploited for realistic violence, blurring further the line between reality and imagination for disturbed individuals. If I could control these toys, I'd program them to let people experience something of a life they will never face. Imagine, for instance, you could put one of these suits on a bully or rapist and suddenly make him experience some of the terror of being the victim for a change. But most of all, I'd like to be able to let people experience other times and other places. If we could let people have a better sense of what it's like to live in a barrio in South America, or a peasant village in southeast Asia, perhaps we'd have a better sense of how the world operates. Heck, even if we could make people living in Canada today see what it was like in this country 100 years ago, even 50 years ago, they might have some perspective to realize that even with all our problems today, we're the most privileged humans ever to live on the face of the earth. Humans seem to be able to remember a grudge or slight for years (even centuries in some cultures), yet we very quickly forget hardships we used to face when we move on to greater comfort. I'm not as old as I feel some days, but the Christmas season brings memories of how different things are from when I was a child. Conrad Black and I may not go to the same club, but I live in luxury compared to my parents' life 40 years ago. The expense of Christmas is now an inconvenience. For my parents it must have been daunting to think about Santa coming at the same time of the year they were struggling just to pay the property taxes on the farm. We probably pay as much for a Christmas tree today as they budgeted for presents. The gulf between life then and now is evident in nearly every aspect of life. We played hockey, for instance, in barn -like arenas with barely -heated dressing rooms. We started the season late and ended it early because we had natural ice. The fundraising to install artificial ice seemed a huge task. A couple of decades later it seemed easier to find the money for entire new arenas that were palace -like by comparison. I was bussed into town to go to school because our one -room school house was beyond repair. We had no gymnasium, no specialists to help students who had problems, no shop or home economics classes. A new car, any new car, was so unusual it would draw a crowd. Few farms had trucks, most just a second- hand (or third or fourth) car. Trips to town were made a couple of times a week. Young couples getting married did it cheaply and started with little. They needed that envelope of money they got at the neighbourhood reception. Our short memories give us a lack of perspective to judge our current life. If I could just program some of those virtual reality computers maybe those memories could be more rea1.0 Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice as well as being a playwright. He lives near Blyth, ON. 1