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the politics of regional communities (Read 5546 times)
freediver
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the politics of regional communities
Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:59am
 
Andrei.Hicks wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:50am:
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:48am:
Oh well, looks like there will be more handouts for farmers, whoever wins.



Given the farming community along with the miners, drives Australia.

I am not sure I see that as a bad thing.

I am very much a city person, always have been, but the Nationals win so much support out in places there for a reason.


Farming no longer drives this country. If anything they are becoming parasitic. This country has a strong emotional connection to rural australia, but the reality is quite different. Unfoprtunately in politics we tend to be guided by that emotional connection. Farmers and politicians milk it for all it's worth. They feel no shame in demanding that Australians pay more for our food so that they don't have to change the way they do things, so that they can continue running a business the same way their ancestors did 100 years ago.

The nationals do well out there for one reason - self interest.
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aussiefree2ride
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #1 - Aug 22nd, 2010 at 8:30pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:59am:
Andrei.Hicks wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:50am:
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:48am:
Oh well, looks like there will be more handouts for farmers, whoever wins.



Given the farming community along with the miners, drives Australia.

I am not sure I see that as a bad thing.

I am very much a city person, always have been, but the Nationals win so much support out in places there for a reason.


Farming no longer drives this country. If anything they are becoming parasitic. This country has a strong emotional connection to rural australia, but the reality is quite different. Unfoprtunately in politics we tend to be guided by that emotional connection. Farmers and politicians milk it for all it's worth. They feel no shame in demanding that Australians pay more for our food so that they don't have to change the way they do things, so that they can continue running a business the same way their ancestors did 100 years ago.

The nationals do well out there for one reason - self interest.

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aussiefree2ride
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #2 - Aug 22nd, 2010 at 8:32pm
 
Ooops, my mistake. Meant to say that Australian farmers are highly advanced.
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Senexx
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #3 - Aug 28th, 2010 at 10:29pm
 
Freediver, that's a rather bigoted attitude to have against your fellow Australians
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freediver
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #4 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 8:16am
 
How so?
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gizmo_2655
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #5 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 8:48am
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:59am:
Andrei.Hicks wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:50am:
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:48am:
Oh well, looks like there will be more handouts for farmers, whoever wins.



Given the farming community along with the miners, drives Australia.

I am not sure I see that as a bad thing.

I am very much a city person, always have been, but the Nationals win so much support out in places there for a reason.


Farming no longer drives this country. If anything they are becoming parasitic. This country has a strong emotional connection to rural australia, but the reality is quite different. Unfoprtunately in politics we tend to be guided by that emotional connection. Farmers and politicians milk it for all it's worth. They feel no shame in demanding that Australians pay more for our food so that they don't have to change the way they do things, so that they can continue running a business the same way their ancestors did 100 years ago.

The nationals do well out there for one reason - self interest.


Freediver, it's not the farmers that are 'demanding that Australians pay more for our food'....

For example, since the milk industry was de-regulated, the amount that a dairy farmer receives per litre from the dairy companies hasn't increased at all...and in some cases, the farmer is getting less per litre...

The same with most grain crops.
The increases are all from the middlemen...
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #6 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:14am
 
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:59am:
Andrei.Hicks wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:50am:
freediver wrote on Aug 22nd, 2010 at 11:48am:
Oh well, looks like there will be more handouts for farmers, whoever wins.



Given the farming community along with the miners, drives Australia.

I am not sure I see that as a bad thing.

I am very much a city person, always have been, but the Nationals win so much support out in places there for a reason.


Farming no longer drives this country. If anything they are becoming parasitic. This country has a strong emotional connection to rural australia, but the reality is quite different. Unfoprtunately in politics we tend to be guided by that emotional connection. Farmers and politicians milk it for all it's worth. They feel no shame in demanding that Australians pay more for our food so that they don't have to change the way they do things, so that they can continue running a business the same way their ancestors did 100 years ago.

The nationals do well out there for one reason - self interest.


Freeloaddiver,

Most of the food we eat comes from Australian farmers. Prices are rising primarily because retailers and distributors are increasing their profits. By and large, prices paid at the farm gate are declining. Australian agriculture is recognised as among the most advanced, efficient and innovative in the world.

As the price of fossil fuels increases and availability declines, biofuels will become increasingly important. As the source of such fuels, the significance of agriculture can only be enhanced. Unfortunately, suitable land is limited. Land used for biofuels cannot be used for food. Biofuels also cost more than the fossil fuels currently used and fuel is a necessary part of food distribution. If you think the cost of food is something to whinge about, you aint seen nothin' yet.

If anything, it's cities that are parasitic. I was born and raised in Sydney, but these days it just gets in the way when I want to get somewhere else.
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freediver
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #7 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:18am
 
Quote:
Freediver, it's not the farmers that are 'demanding that Australians pay more for our food'....

For example, since the milk industry was de-regulated, the amount that a dairy farmer receives per litre from the dairy companies hasn't increased at all...and in some cases, the farmer is getting less per litre...


That's because the farmers aren't getting their way. They opposed deregulation, not supported it.

Quote:
The same with most grain crops.


Actually many of them have started going up in price.

Quote:
Australian agriculture is recognised as among the most advanced, efficient and innovative in the world.


More advanced than say, African farmers?

Quote:
I was born and raised in Sydney, but these days it just gets in the way when I want to get somewhere else.


So move.
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gizmo_2655
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #8 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:27am
 
freediver wrote on Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:18am:
Quote:
Freediver, it's not the farmers that are 'demanding that Australians pay more for our food'....

For example, since the milk industry was de-regulated, the amount that a dairy farmer receives per litre from the dairy companies hasn't increased at all...and in some cases, the farmer is getting less per litre...


That's because the farmers aren't getting their way. They opposed deregulation, not supported it.

Quote:
The same with most grain crops.


Actually many of them have started going up in price.

Quote:
Australian agriculture is recognised as among the most advanced, efficient and innovative in the world.


More advanced than say, African farmers?

Quote:
I was born and raised in Sydney, but these days it just gets in the way when I want to get somewhere else.


So move.



Yes, most dairy farmers did oppose deregulation....for just this reason.
The old 'milk board' (or whatever it was called) set a minimum price for buying FROM the farm, and a maximum price for selling to the public....Once deregulation hit, the manufacturers(dairy companies like Dairy Farmers Cooperative) lowered the amount the farmer was paid, and raised the amount we pay.

The only people happy about that are the maunfacturers...

The same with grain....the big grain handling companies (GrainCorp etc) are the one increasing the prices...the grower is getting the same or less per bushel......even though the 'price' for grain keeps going up....
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #9 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:37am
 
I think you'll find they are getting paid more per bushel now.
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #10 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:52am
 
I don't think Australian Farmers are the most ADVANCED, unless you base your advancement upon the inclusion of Technology (Toys).
Technology isn't everything and it the long run it just costs more to run and maintain so I wouldn't quite call that 'smart'.
The majority of these so-called Technologically advanced Farmers hold on to out-dated methods and environmental philosphies. The fact that Australia holds onto Sheep as the pride of its Farming culture sums up the archaic way of life.
Not only this, it seems the Environmentalists are far more advanced in the treatment and living quality of the land.
Some Farmers still suck up to the City culture as the dominant culture and thus consider 'the Land' as something of a downtrodden tragedy ...with their corrugated tin shacks (zzzzz) and John Williamson songs, etc.
Well those Farmers can exist in the negative if they want.

There are Farmers who are progressive and aren't afraid to take advice or work with the Environmentalists and Conservationists. Some have even transformed their properties into absolute Farming wonders without the reliance upon big Chemical and Technology Companies.
Just Common Sense and the ability to see the Australian Land for what it is and not what it isn't in comparison to 'old England' and other parts of the world.
One Farmer in SA copped Australia's biggest Environmental Fine from the Govt/CSIRO because he changed his parched land into a wetland oasis.
The control-freak Govts/CSIRO don't like it when people upstage them and know better than 'their' so-called Environmentalists.

I personally would breed Kangaroos and even stud em up back to the prehistoric 12ft size ...might even get to ride one. How good would that be! Kangaroo meat is top quality, better than beef and even if piously patriotic Aussies can't come to terms with eating something on their national Coat of Arms (For a nation of so-called 'Poor', makes you wonder why the Roo & Emu were put there in the first place, eh), I'm sure the International Market would readily consume. I know that Deer Venison in New Zealand is beating Lamb hands down. Deer are cheaper to maintain, earn better dollar$, Hunters pay to shoot them and they don't ruin the land as much as sheep. More NZ Farmers are converting to Deer.

I believe the Middle-Man is ripping both Farmer and Consumer off though, but they are also being priced up from all that is incorporated into packaging, production, postage, etc. Welcome to the Great Inflation.

In NZ, if you live in the Cities, you are likely to be served the Overseas non-fresh crap stuff - sometimes very over-priced.
If you live in rural NZ, you just go next door or down the road and buy direct for fresher and higher quality food compared to imported.

I would also like to say that it is a SHAME that Scam Shitney ...er, I mean Sydney has turned into a sprawl of cement and tar and smog.
It would have made an amazing Farming region much like the Nile Delta ...being a Basin and all. Pity.


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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #11 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 9:56am
 
Yeah, it's not like a $2.7bn train line to support those parasites in a Sydney marginal seat is it.

The other poster was correct. You are bigotted and self serving.
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #12 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 10:16am
 
One of the most fundamental ways in which Australian farming is stuck in the past is farm size. You can actually get maps from the DPI showing which farming areas have farms that are too small to be competitive.

While most Australians businesses have had to compete on a level playing field and scale up to remain competitive, most Australian farmers are running the same sized business as their grandparents, yet expecting to be able to afford all the mod cons and run their farms with modern equipment.

If you run a factory in the city and you go belly up, you don't expect the country to mourn the loss. But you get a documentary made about if if you have to bulldoze a couple of fruit trees.

Quote:
Yeah, it's not like a $2.7bn train line to support those parasites in a Sydney marginal seat is it.


For the population, it is justified. After all, most Australians live in coastal cities. It is people in rural areas who get subsidised transport. All those roads are not cheap, and it's not like the people living out there pay enough tax to cover the cost.
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #13 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 12:45pm
 
I think it was once said that only 5% of Farmers make a profit.
Possibly Landline.
Also said was that it was either the Farmers with huge expanses of land or the small 'kit' Farmer that only made 'profit'.

Being a Farmer is tough, especially when you are up against primitive 'old shool' Farmers and technologically burdened 'new school' Farmers.
I don't agree with 'Relief Packages', especially constant Relief Packages that seem to come around every drought and flood period.
Obviously the Farmers expect us TaxPayers to dig them out of the dirt again and again. But is this entirely the fault of Farmers themselves or the Govts (The Australian Govts are the most legislated in the world and there is more paperwork here than any other nation) who only place Farming as a sub-office of importance.
Its not about pumping more and more money into the Farming Industry - its about achieve results from progressive and positive policies and techniques.
4 top Medics said the same about the Aust Medical System by the way.
But at up to $100 an hour, do you think Nurses give a poo about positive results instead?

If it floods in Nyngan then Canal Channel it down to drought affected Gippsland. By providing large and small Canal systems all over the continent, you are providing a constant run of moisture in the air. By providing a constant run of moisture in the air, you are making it more habitable for Trees to grow. By more Trees growing, you create a cooler climate zone between soil and canopy. By creating a cooler climate zone, you attract more rain. By attracting more rain...
By Canal Channels (The Canals of Mars by Angleire Scotwelsh <private publication>) you bring water to become available to more farmers and communities. You not only have a 'controlled' segregation of land to help control vermin, but you also can control 'mass' fires to a better degree. Building huge Pipes doesn't work due to the friction of large amounts of water running creating heat and rupture.
Open Canals can turn Australia back into an Oasis. Why travel on a hot tar road when you can boat it along.

anyway... Cool
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Re: the politics of regional communities
Reply #14 - Aug 29th, 2010 at 1:00pm
 
Quote:
If it floods in Nyngan then Canal Channel it down to drought affected Gippsland. By providing large and small Canal systems all over the continent, you are providing a constant run of moisture in the air. By providing a constant run of moisture in the air, you are making it more habitable for Trees to grow. By more Trees growing, you create a cooler climate zone between soil and canopy. By creating a cooler climate zone, you attract more rain. By attracting more rain...


Sounds like a policy the greens supposedly used to have, until they came to their senses.

Quote:
Building huge Pipes doesn't work due to the friction of large amounts of water running creating heat and rupture.
Open Canals can turn Australia back into an Oasis. Why travel on a hot tar road when you can boat it along.


If pipes have too much friction what makes you think canals will work? How do they go getting uphill? Can you explain why there are so many projects to get rid of these open canals in order to increase crop production per litre of water? Are these farmers making a mistake?
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