Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

I am writing this as my goodbye to Canada. I have been swindled out of my farm by your immigration department who are only out to extort money from the very people who wish to start a new life and better it.  I paid for an extention for my visa and now they wish to extort money from me with the threat of deportation, on the grounds that an Australian passport is no Austrlian passport. I have been forced to sell. What else can you do, when a government acts like filth. We fight the wars, we grow the food, we provide the money and wealth, and all you get is your property taken from you, on the grounds, some other sucker will come along. For the rest of you who believe, that  your taxes go to better government, that limits your freedom and rights to priviages, and use that very money against you, in the form of acts and statues not laws, that benefit multinations. Keep living your fantasy, your nexted. 

 

I am beyond the crying, the hate and anger stage.  Having to fight a government all the way, but getting nowhere, because the filth just crawl back under their rocks to wait. Sending their psycopaths out to do their dirty work for them, who are easy replaced. As for me, I go back to Australia with a bitter taste, because the filth are doing in Australia. To live as a slave on social secruty, having to justify getting it, as the filth called a government give the resources away to the Chinese.

 

I am now waiting, for a immigration officer and a cop to come to collect me. As for my possessions, animals, tractor and anything of value, the buzzards in town will come for that. What the filth called the government doesn't take.  Welcome to Canada.

Views: 52

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I am sorry for how things have turned out for you.

Many share your frustration with how government acts. Or fails to act at times.
Thank you John, I even called the bastards three times, all you get is a recorded message and cut off, beause they wont even answer phones. The politian's office where I filled out the application wont ring back, its a scam. A government scam, they hide behind, the rules and regulation, with no redress. They claim I came here without a passport and a stamp in it. Want $200 to resumbit the application or depotation by force. Considing one I had 5 of their jackboots check my passport at the airport, two writing the date of the stamp and passport number on the application, three the staffer a using my passport to write it on the application. As I said once before the best scams are done with your complance. They are setting the system up for lawyers, so you have to use them to get any business done or approves you have to use a lawyer. When codex alimentarious and nutrition comes in the same.
Hi Bristow:
Sorry to hear about the poor treatment.
Have you talked to an immigration lawyer?
It seems like a missing stamp is a pretty trival issue.
Best wishes,
Joe
Talked to the local member's staff rep today, she is inquiring.

Reply to Discussion

RSS

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

Canola industry welcomes significant progress on Chinese tariffs

The Canola Council of Canada (CCC) and Canadian Canola Growers Association (CCGA) welcome the announcement made today in Beijing to provide significant tariff relief for Canadian canola seed and meal. Under the agreement reached between Canada and China, tariffs on Canadian canola seed imports are expected to be reduced to 15% as of March 1, 2026, and the current 100% tariffs on canola meal are expected to be removed as of March 1, 2026, until at least the end of the calendar year. “The agreement reached on canola seed and meal is an important milestone in Canada’s trading relationship with China,” says Chris Davison, CCC President & CEO. “The Canadian canola industry has been clear since the outset that these tariffs are a political issue requiring a political solution. We are pleased to see significant progress in restoring market access for seed and meal and will continue to build on this development by working to achieve permanent and complete tariff relief, including for canola o

Prime Minister Carney forges new strategic partnership with the People's Republic of China focused on energy, agri-food, and trade

In a more divided and uncertain world, Canada is building a stronger, more independent, and more resilient economy. To that end, Canada's new government is working with urgency and determination to diversify our trade partnerships and catalyse massive new levels of investment. As the world's second-largest economy, China presents enormous opportunities for Canada in this mission. To forge a new Canada-China partnership, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, visited Beijing, the People's Republic of China, this week. This marked the first visit to China by a Canadian Prime Minister since 2017. In Beijing, Prime Minister Carney met with the President of China, Xi Jinping, the Premier of China, Li Qiang, and the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress of China, Zhao Leji. After their meeting, Prime Minister Carney and President Xi released a joint statement outlining the pillars of Canada and China's new strategic partnership. Central to this new partnership is a

TELUS completes redemption of 3.75% Notes, Series CV due March 10, 2026

TELUS Corporation ("TELUS" or the "Company") today confirmed the successful completion of the full redemption of its outstanding C$600 million 3.75% Notes, Series CV due March 10, 2026 (CUSIP No. 87971MBC6), as initially announced on December 16, 2025. The redemption was funded through proceeds from TELUS' December 2025 offering of Fixed-to-Fixed Rate Junior Subordinated Notes ("Hybrid Notes"), which raised the equivalent of C$2.9 billion with proceeds designated toward debt repayment. "This successful redemption demonstrates our disciplined approach to balance sheet management and our commitment to strengthening our financial foundation," said Doug French, Executive Vice-President and CFO. "By proactively managing our debt maturity profile through strategic refinancing, we're creating greater financial flexibility to support our capital allocation priorities and drive long-term shareholder value." This redemption is part of TELUS' broader balance sheet management and deleveraging in

Christina Franc appointed CEO of 4-H Canada

4-H Canada has announced the appointment of Christina Franc as its new Chief Executive Officer, effective later this month. Franc joins 4-H Canada after more than 15 years in senior leadership roles with national nonprofit organizations, most recently at United Way Centraide Canada (UWCC). During her time at UWCC, she worked closely with community partners across the country and gained extensive experience in governance, strategic planning, partnership development, and rural community engagement. In a statement shared on social media, Franc says joining 4-H Canada represents a role that has been calling to her for many years. She first encountered the organization more than a decade ago and said its mission and values left a lasting impression. “I’m deeply honoured to be joining 4-H Canada as CEO,” says Franc, adding that she is excited to support and champion the next generation of community-minded young leaders. 4-H Canada welcomed Franc and highlighted her leadership experience

Cracking the Heritability Code — Choosing Traits That Pay Off

Improving the genetics of your beef herd starts with knowing which traits you can change through genetics and which traits respond better to management practices. Because cattle have a long generation interval, every bull or replacement heifer you choose affects your herd for years. That’s why understanding heritability — and how traits interact with each other — helps ensure your breeding decisions move your herd toward your production goals. What Heritability Really Means  Heritability tells us how much of a trait is controlled by genetics versus the environment and/or management. It’s expressed as a number between zero and one:1,3 High heritability (over 0.40): Traits are strongly influenced by genetics, meaning you can make changes more quickly by selecting the right replacements and bulls. Examples: ribeye area, marbling, weight and growth traits. Moderate heritability (0.15 to 0.40): Traits that can be improved through both genetics and management. Examples: milk production a

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service