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trudeau defends farmers right to protest

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    trudeau defends farmers right to protest

    trudeau has come out in strong support for farmers and their right o peaceful protests!!!

    oh wait...nevermind

    https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/farmers-protest-in-india-is-concerning-says-canadian-pm-justin-trudeau/story-t7FUtuEoLD7vzpmzBEGwdK.html https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/farmers-protest-in-india-is-concerning-says-canadian-pm-justin-trudeau/story-t7FUtuEoLD7vzpmzBEGwdK.html

    #2
    Well he hasn’t pissed off one of our customers or govt of India for a while now

    Comment


      #3
      That should lighten lentils by 3 or 4 cents.
      Engage brain before mouth, the man struggles, order matters.

      Comment


        #4
        They never learned where virtue signalling got them all the other times.

        Comment


          #5
          For the love of all things holy, why can’t our sock boy stick a sock in his yap. Among the last things we need is him meddling in internal affairs of another country, and when there was some hope of improving trade relations.
          On the anniversary of a Sikh leader, why? (Because he supports the Sikh separatists)
          His earlier visit has caused pain for pulse farmers ever since.
          It is not his place, or any other ‘leader’ to try and tell India how their domestic policy should look.

          “When you are too stupid to know you are stupid”

          Comment


            #6
            Unfortunately it is a common ailment

            Comment


              #7
              Who died and made these bozos king of the planet?

              Comment


                #8


                Insert practically everything out of his mouth in the above.

                But its about the 1.6M Canadians of East Asian descent. Even O'toole chimed in.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by blackpowder View Post


                  Insert practically everything out of his mouth in the above.

                  But its about the 1.6M Canadians of East Asian descent. Even O'toole chimed in.
                  Yup, a few thousand farmers vs 1.6 million voters, pretty easy.
                  Somebody must have found the only liberal calculator in Freeland's garbage can and did the math.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Brace yourselves..

                    https://www.ctvnews.ca/mobile/politics/indian-politicians-slam-trudeau-for-unwelcome-remarks-on-farmers-protest-1.5212559

                    Comment


                      #11
                      India accuses Trudeau of encouraging 'extremist activities' with his remarks on farmers' protests

                      https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/india-government-trudeau-ambassador-protests-1.5828113 https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/india-government-trudeau-ambassador-protests-1.5828113

                      yep, the Turd at it again, phucking up the pulse and oilseed markets

                      Money for everything else, including foreign countries,,, but nothing for you(even though I phucked up your markets)

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I guess we’ve been given the green light to protest, this should be interesting. If Western Canadians don’t protest after the second bashing, when will they?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Looks somewhat like Canadian NFU that have/are protesting reforms to CWB... to allow the market based system in Canada we now have...

                          https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/india-farmers-protest-delhi-reforms/2020/12/04/98db8634-3414-11eb-9699-00d311f13d2d_story.html
                          The Washington Post
                          Why India’s farmers are in revolt in the middle of a pandemic
                          By
                          Joanna Slater
                          Dec. 4, 2020 at 2:32 p.m. EST
                          NEW DELHI – The blockade stretches as far as the eye can see, hundreds of bulky tractors and trailers parked on a highway leading into India's capital carrying a distinct message for the nation's government.

                          For more than a week, thousands of farmers have cut off major entrances into Delhi in massive protests against[B] new laws that deregulate the buying and selling of agricultural goods.
                          While the government says the sweeping changes will spur investment, the farmers camped out in Delhi consider them an existential threat.
                          The laws will “ruin our children’s futures,” said Kalwan Singh, 72, a farmer from the village of Durana in the state of Haryana who traveled a hundred miles in a tractor-pulled trailer with his son, grandson and a dozen others.
                          They brought flour, lentils, potatoes, wood for cooking and thin mattresses for sleeping. Singh said he’s ready to stay until the government repeals the new laws. “Even if it takes one month, two months, six months, we will win,” Singh said.

                          The farmers — who were met with barricades, water cannons and tear gas when they neared the city — represent a potent challenge for the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Agriculture employs more than 200 million Indians – about 44 percent of the workforce.

                          Modi is already facing a difficult juncture. India has more than 9.5 million coronavirus cases — the second-largest outbreak in the world — and experts fear infections could accelerate in the coming months.
                          Meanwhile, the pandemic has had a devastating impact on India’s economy. The country is expected to experience the worst recession since independence in the current financial year, according to projections by the central bank.

                          Policemen stand guard at the Haryana-New Delhi border to block protesting farmers from marching to the capital on Nov. 26.

                          Policemen stand guard at the Haryana-New Delhi border to block protesting farmers from marching to the capital on Nov. 26. (Manish Swarup/AP)

                          Protesting farmers remove a concrete barricade as they attempt to move toward New Delhi on Nov. 27.

                          Despite several rounds of talks between the government and the protesting farmers, neither side appears inclined to blink. On Friday, the farmers called for a new nationwide strike next week and pledged to block all roads leading to the capital. The demonstrations have already snarled traffic and disrupted some truck deliveries to local markets.

                          Modi has adopted a conciliatory tone toward the farmers, saying they have been deceived by opposition parties about the impact of the new laws. “The farmers are not to be blamed,” Modi said in a speech earlier this week. He assured his “farmer brothers and sisters” that his government’s intentions were as pure as the water of the Ganges, considered holy in Hinduism.

                          Such statements have not lessened the distrust of the government among the protesters. “They think illiterate people are here,” said Jaskaran Singh, a 23-year-old master’s student whose father farms four acres of wheat and rice. “Aristotle said that if a tyrant wants to rule, he makes the people poor.”
                          Jaskaran Singh said that the government rushed the laws through the legislature in September with little debate and no scrutiny by parliamentary committees. He and other farmers expressed anger at the way government-friendly media outlets have portrayed the protesters as “anti-India,” an epithet now applied regularly to critics of the ruling party.

                          India’s agriculture sector is dominated by small landholdings. Economists say that India’s future development depends in part on making farming more productive while generating well-paying jobs for young people migrating from rural areas to cities.
                          Most of the protesting farmers come from the northern states of Punjab and Haryana. Punjab is often called the nation’s breadbasket for its extensive cultivation of wheat and rice. The state was a prime beneficiary of the “Green Revolution,” a series of innovative farming techniques that transformed India from a country once plagued by famines into one that is self-sufficient in grains.

                          Some economists say that those gains have given way to an outdated system that results in the over-production of rice and wheat and dangerously depleted groundwater. In Punjab especially, the government buys much of the wheat and rice produced by farmers at an officially set price via licensed wholesale markets.
                          In many states, buyers had to transact with sellers at such wholesale markets where the intermediaries charge various fees. Under the new laws, however, anyone with a valid piece of identification can buy agricultural produce, bypassing the wholesale markets altogether.


                          “The real loser will be the commission agent, the middle man, and some revenue of the state government,” said Ashok Gulati, an agricultural economist at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations. “You are freeing up the farmer to sell to anybody. I am amazed — how come farmers are agitating?”

                          Farmers say they fear a free-for-all where they are at the mercy of private players, including large corporations, with little recourse if deals go sour.

                          “How can you allow every Tom, Dick and Harry to dabble with farmer produce?” said Sukhpal Singh, an agricultural economist at the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad. The government is saying the changes will attract investors, but “investment doesn’t come because of deregulation, it comes because of incentives.”

                          Singh predicted that both sides would have to yield somewhat, although the process could be lengthy and difficult.

                          On a recent hazy afternoon, the farmers camped in the middle of a highway outside Delhi spent hours listening to speeches or resting in the back of trailers padded with straw and blankets. Many belong to dozens of different farmer unions and most of them are Sikhs, a religious minority in India.
                          Preparing free, hot meals at community kitchens, known as langar, is a pillar of the Sikh tradition. The farmers have pooled their provisions and are serving staggering numbers of meals throughout the day to all who would like to eat, whether farmers or locals. Every day, fresh supplies arrive from their home villages and well-wishers drop off gifts: a van full of almonds, crates of apples, fresh lassi.

                          Sukwinder Singh Sabhra, a 55-year-old farmer who traveled nearly 300 miles to the protest, said he brought a six-month supply of flour, lentils, onions and clarified butter, together with wood for cooking and tarps for shelter.
                          He was not fazed by the temperatures that plunge each night nor the separation from his family, which is back on the 11 acres of land cultivated by “generations and generations” of his ancestors.
                          “Our mothers give birth to us, but the land gives us life,” Sabhra said. He fears that if the new laws are not repealed, corporations will end up owning his farm. “We will live at their mercy and eat only when they want.”
                          It was never easy being an interfaith couple in India. Now some states are making it harder.
                          Who will make coronavirus vaccines for the developing world? India holds the key.
                          India’s capital is battling a surge in coronavirus cases just as pollution levels spike.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            If skippy wanted glory for ever and ever he should personally take charge and control of vaccines and distribution.
                            .
                            .
                            .
                            .
                            .
                            But he cannot and won’t. No experience, know how, or common sense. This qualifies him for Primeminister ( u fortunately he did win a election)
                            .
                            He will focus on other matters of National and Global significance instead, he will learn that he has to be careful with what he wishes for.
                            Last edited by Rareearth; Dec 5, 2020, 09:19.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Rareearth View Post
                              If skippy wanted glory for ever and ever he should personally take charge and control of vaccines and distribution.
                              .
                              .
                              .
                              .
                              .
                              But he cannot and won’t. No experience, know how, or common sense.
                              .
                              He will focus on other matters of National and Global significance instead, he will learn that he has to be careful with what he wishes for.
                              PM Blackface won't be involved with the vaccine roll out because while everyone will be distracted talking about who should get it, or how much each province is getting, and how many more people are dying while waiting for it,,, The Turd will be off conniving with globalists on their next attack of the citizenry.

                              Comment

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