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Dominion Law Reports [ (1945) 2 D.I.R

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    Dominion Law Reports [ (1945) 2 D.I.R

    One time when others were presenting, I
    accidentally, lol, meandered into the CWB library
    where I spent two hours photocopying court
    cases they had archived. Here is an excerpt fom
    one law report:

    Quote

    The purpose of the Canadian Wheat Board Act
    were many, but two of them were: (1) to create a
    corporation for the purpose of liquidating an
    obligation of the Dominion of Canada amounting
    to more than $100,000,000 which arose from a
    guarantee by the government to thebanks of the
    huge indebtedness of the Wheat Pools to the
    banks since 1931, and, for that purpose, to
    dispose of approximately 200,000,000 bushels of
    wheat which were held by the banks as security
    for the indebtedness.
    Unquote. Pars

    #2
    Good points Parsley. The Prairie Pools were
    handling much of the wheat in the late Twenties.

    When their initial price of $1 per bushel was
    unattainable, wheat that was security with the
    banks became the bank's wheat.

    As a result of the overpayment the Pools made on
    their 1929 initial advances, The Manitoba Pool owed
    $3,491,000, the Sask Pool $13,752,000 and Alberta
    Pool $5,649,000.

    The Federal Gov't was pressured to underpin initial
    prices in 1930. .They did.

    Prices kept falling.

    The result was the Canadian Wheat Board act in
    1935.

    Follow the money.

    Cheers... Bill

    Comment


      #3
      Could those Sask Wheat Pool Directors who ran
      the corporation into bankruptcy back then
      possibly be related to the Band of Eight on a
      spending spree in 2011? Pars

      Comment


        #4
        Bill & Pars, interesting thread. Was the fact that the Pools philosophically opposed the Grain Exchange and wouldn`t use it to hedge transactions a factor in their financial collapse?

        So Oberg and his clown troup still embody the same principles as the early Pool directors. That brand of Socialism costs the whole country so much money.

        Comment


          #5
          I found the debt amount fascinating.

          Neither had I ever heard a Poolie once
          mention theyd originally lost their collective
          asses, have you?

          They are the elephants in your field, braveh.
          Pars

          Comment


            #6
            Braveheart the Pools were offering better prices and
            if my memory is somewhat accurate... yes I am that
            old LOL... by 1929 they were handling about %70
            of Prairies grains.

            Price too good to be true were... not much has
            changed.

            Yes, it seems the philosophy of Pool leaders like
            McPhail were similar to today's NFU.

            Cheers... Bill

            Comment


              #7
              I`ve never heard a poolie acknowledge that unbelieveable debt. Was this the issue where the credit unions were holding the debt?

              Yes, I knew I had an elephant in the field. One that smelled like a rat. It`s just so sickening to think that this whole mess was created by the socialist thinking farmers weaving through the intestines of western Canada like tapeworms, demanding more and more from the host.

              Comment


                #8
                bduke, I know how old you are, and I think you learned your history well. Just not firsthand. lol

                Comment


                  #9
                  Braveheart... I don't recall Credit Unions per se. I
                  think the numbers Parsley and I have mentioning
                  were shared by Canada's largest banks.

                  The war effort and Canada's kindness of supplying
                  cheap wheat to Great Britain further entrenched the
                  control of the CWB.

                  BTW great Britain had agreed to compensate
                  Canada if they should ever supplant our market
                  share of milling wheat.

                  GB joined the EEC and agreed to its Common Ag
                  Policy thereby substituting our markets with large
                  price supports and Euro favoured trade.

                  To my knowledge Canada has never been
                  compensated.

                  I brought this issue to a GATT table in Geneva in
                  1988 and was dissed by the CAP members.

                  They said that was history and they wouldn't
                  acknowledge these agreements.

                  Cheers... Bill

                  Comment

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