Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

We have all heard of Wikyleaks, at the moment the US, UK, and yes Canadian Primister are trying to shut the site down. Why it has nothing to do with a film showing children and reporters been shown shot by helicopter pilots.

It has to do with Bank of Americia.  When I tell you this all those people who know people that have had their farms foreclosed, property taken from the bank. They had no right to, because the Bank sold the loans to a third party, yet foreclosed on the loan and jacked up the interest rate. Under UCC unversal commersal code, you cannot sell something you don't own or with out a proof of debtness if you have sold it to someone else.

So who did they sell the loans to, answer pension funds, overseas countries. Anyone who had the money to buy. I know the Australian Public Service Pension fund was one who bought these loans. So in other words the bank stole of both the home owner and the invester. Then got bailed out, by the tax payer. With fall knowledge of the US regulators. Now here is the bad news if the bank of America was doing it, this means every bank was. So this means they can be sued by anyone that has been foreclosed and the investors that buy the loans. And they will. We can only imagine what bail out mark two will do to the US dollar.

It gets better, this is for home foreclosures, lets look at credit card debt, car loans and any other loans, have they been sold too?  You bet your ass they have.  And why is China and Russian buying gold and silver, the reason the US dollar will be debased. I am no ecommionist, that gets paid to lie. But for those people who have investments, I would think very hard in what to do.

 

Views: 128

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

So Bristow,

I am not as concerned at you are with the demise of the American economy and dollar...I do think they have their challenges.

What do think the USD will trade in terms of the Canadian dollar this year?

That is more relevant to me.

Take care,

 

Joe Dales

 

.

That depends on how much gold Canada has in reserves to base their currency on. Because as you know if no one wants pieces of paper without backing. At the moment world currency is based on the US green back. It has put more debt on that. The Euro the same. You can get plenty of debt to make money German did that after WW1. Its called run away inflation.  Why would you sell to a country when all you get back is IOUs, with the backing of debt. You will get your money if and when the people can work it off, in government jobs that produce nothing. Yet at the same time destroy the industry that creates wealth.

The system the bankers have set up, has been design to fail, for the chip and one world currency based on the work performed, not the worth of product produced.

The process is called make the problem and we will give you the answer and by the way you can't do this and have that.

 Glad to see somebody to day in canada understands that money is today backed by debt obligation and not always gold.

Also ask yourself were is the Canadian  gold reserve held
, Toronto, Montreal, were? Is there enough gold there if there was a run on it  or would you have to wait till it was shipped in from offshore? 
Bristow said:

That depends on how much gold Canada has in reserves to base their currency on. Because as you know if no one wants pieces of paper without backing. At the moment world currency is based on the US green back. It has put more debt on that. The Euro the same. You can get plenty of debt to make money German did that after WW1. Its called run away inflation.  Why would you sell to a country when all you get back is IOUs, with the backing of debt. You will get your money if and when the people can work it off, in government jobs that produce nothing. Yet at the same time destroy the industry that creates wealth.

The system the bankers have set up, has been design to fail, for the chip and one world currency based on the work performed, not the worth of product produced.

The process is called make the problem and we will give you the answer and by the way you can't do this and have that.

You will find their is no gold, UK sold theirs about three years ago, Australia I think 1996 under Howard. The US alot to China which found some of it debased the old lead center. You ask why simple it leaves the government nothing to fall back on.



bert said:

 Glad to see somebody to day in canada understands that money is today backed by debt obligation and not always gold.

Also ask yourself were is the Canadian  gold reserve held
, Toronto, Montreal, were? Is there enough gold there if there was a run on it  or would you have to wait till it was shipped in from offshore? 
Bristow said:

That depends on how much gold Canada has in reserves to base their currency on. Because as you know if no one wants pieces of paper without backing. At the moment world currency is based on the US green back. It has put more debt on that. The Euro the same. You can get plenty of debt to make money German did that after WW1. Its called run away inflation.  Why would you sell to a country when all you get back is IOUs, with the backing of debt. You will get your money if and when the people can work it off, in government jobs that produce nothing. Yet at the same time destroy the industry that creates wealth.

The system the bankers have set up, has been design to fail, for the chip and one world currency based on the work performed, not the worth of product produced.

The process is called make the problem and we will give you the answer and by the way you can't do this and have that.

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

Climate change worries Canadian farmers: poll

A poll released Dec. 11 suggests that Canadian farmers worry more about the impacts of climate change than they do about input costs and market prices for canola, corn, wheat and cattle. The poll of 858 producers from coast to coast determined that farmers rank climate change as their No. 1 concern. “When farmers and ranchers were asked an open-ended question—at the very beginning of the poll—about the top challenge for the agricultural sector for the next decade, climate change was the number one answer,” says Farmers for Climate Solutions, a group, that as its name suggests, is focused on climate change mitigation and adaptation within Canadian agriculture. The organization hired Leger, a market research firm, to conduct the survey. It was done by phone from Aug. 8 to Sept. 8. The headline question from the poll asked farmers to identify the top challenge for the agriculture sector over the next 10 years. The results? 17.9 per cent said climate change. Input costs were 17.2 pe

Livestock producers are warned to watch for a larval disease

A disease that lives off the flesh of living mammals has been confirmed in Chiapas, Mexico. New World screwworm (NWS) is a parasitic larval disease of warm-blooded animals where the female fly will lay eggs near an open wound and the larvae can infest the wound and cause significant infections. NWS can infest livestock, pets, wildlife, occasionally birds, and in rare cases, people. Swine Health Information Center (SHIC) Associate Director Dr. Lisa Becton said the confirmation comes on the heels of a report in October from Guatemala where the first case was identified. “This larva and the fly were identified at the Mexican border in cattle that were coming through in Guatemala and so this is a very significant concern of especially grazing animals but really of any warm-blooded animal,” she said. “It does cause destruction when a wound gets infected.” Animals can exhibit very painful draining wounds that don’t heal. It has a negative impact on production and can include mortality o

Durum Ending Stocks Tighter from November

Agriculture Canada has whittled down its 2024-25 durum ending stocks estimate from last month, although it remains up from a year earlier. Monthly government supply-demand estimates released Thursday showed durum ending stocks at 650,000 tonnes, down 150,000 from the November forecast but still well up from the previous year’s 407,000. The reduction reflects Statistics Canada’s Dec. 5 crop production report which put this year’s Canadian durum crop to 5.87 million tonnes, down from the federal agency’s previous estimate in September of just over 6 million. However, this year’s durum crop is still 44% larger than the 2023 harvest, 20% above average and the sixth largest on record. Ag Canada trimmed its domestic use estimate slightly to reflect this month’s downward revision in the durum crop, but left its export forecast unchanged from last month at 4.9 million tonnes, up from 3.558 million in 2023-24 but still below over 5 million in 2022-23. At $325/tonne, the average expecte

Alberta Canola Seeks Grower Support for First Service Charge Increase in 20 Years

Alberta Canola is urging canola growers to approve its first service charge increase in over two decades. The proposed change—from $1 per tonne to $1.75 per tonne—will be put to a vote at the organization’s Annual General Meeting on Jan. 22, 2025. The increase is critical to addressing financial challenges and ensuring Alberta Canola can continue supporting farmers amid rising operating costs, declining production, and evolving industry pressures. A Challenging Landscape “Alberta Canola was built by farmers, for farmers, and that hasn’t changed in our 35 years,” says Karla Bergstrom, Executive Director of Alberta Canola. “What?has?changed is the world we operate within.” Bergstrom highlights the dual challenges of reduced public research funding and increased regulatory demands. Meanwhile, consumers, increasingly removed from farming, are demanding greater transparency in food production. With over 90% of its operating revenue coming from its service charge, Alberta Canola has face

BMO underscores trends affecting Canadian agriculture

The Bank of Montreal has published an in-depth analysis of nine key trends. Here’s a topline of several economic indicators and what to expect in 2025. ???????

© 2024   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service