We used to have it decades ago, but we no longer have it. Countries like the United States, Germany and the U.K. do have domestic pharmaceutical facilities, which is why they're obviously going to prioritize helping their citizens first."
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We used to have it decades ago, but we no longer have it. Countries like the United States, Germany and the U.K. do have domestic pharmaceutical facilities, which is why they're obviously going to prioritize helping their citizens first."
It's also our approach to food, gasoline, clothing, pretty much everything else.rdsrds2120 wrote:*opens article
*CTRL+F "Trump"
* no results
On the serious side though, this could be interpreted as a bit of a finger wag towards lax development of emergency public goods in other developed countries (i.e., facilities maintained to be ready to respond to a pandemic). Most countries have more/less committed to a market solution for pharmaceuticals, importing them from the countries mentioned and not really manufacturing them themselves. This isn't inherently bad for day-to-day stuff (there are other reasons it might be bad, thought), but it does mean that in situations of abrupt scarcity when American, U.K., German etc exports aren't an option for something extremely time sensitive, seemingly arbitrary parts of the world suffer for some otherwise preventable amount of time.
The thing is that we have never made good cheese in Canada. It's not an industry that exists in this country.2dimes wrote:This has been happening since Defenbaker told them to cut up the Arrows. I keep lecturing people not to let our dairy industry suffer for the sake of cheap cheese but get told, "You can't tell me not to shop at Walmart." No, I guess I can't.
No you can't do that on many levels. First you have to start as an associate. Then, if the capo likes you - you can become a made man after a few years. Then you can buy some cows.2dimes wrote:So, anyone can buy some cows, make cheese and mark it up 200% but then they get killed?
killed by taxes?2dimes wrote:So, anyone can buy some cows, make cheese and mark it up 200% but then they get killed?
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:as far as dukasaur goes, i had no idea you were so goofy. i mean, you hate your parents so much you'd wish they'd been shot? just move out bro.
I asked that because of this.mookiemcgee wrote:killed by taxes?2dimes wrote:So, anyone can buy some cows, make cheese and mark it up 200% but then they get killed?
DY claims you can't even get dairy cows.millionaire milk mafiosa
Maybe Trump and his tarrifs should run for Canadian prime minister, seems like that is all the rage up north.2dimes wrote:I asked that because of this.mookiemcgee wrote:killed by taxes?2dimes wrote:So, anyone can buy some cows, make cheese and mark it up 200% but then they get killed?
DY claims you can't even get dairy cows.millionaire milk mafiosa
I have read some similar complaints elsewhere on the Internet. What they call "Canada" seems different from where I live. Though there does seem to be laws against raw cheese sales here and some imported cheese can be pretty expensive.
I feel like I watched a show where some guys told Anthony Bourdain about eating illegal raw cheese.
I don't think I understand.
I had pretty good cheese in France but nothing that made me angry or even very upset because I couldn't get it here.
Maybe I need to go to a specific place to try a particular cheese I have never experienced. Then again I am probably much better off enjoying common melted Canadian cheese.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:as far as dukasaur goes, i had no idea you were so goofy. i mean, you hate your parents so much you'd wish they'd been shot? just move out bro.
Just a Point of Information, it's not the eating that's illegal, it's the selling.DoomYoshi wrote:Also, in the United States and Canada, eating raw cheese (a.k.a. unpasteurized cheese) is illegal.
2dimes wrote:Doom, you know there are reasons for pasteurization, yeah?
I understand you might wish to get a certain flavour in unpasteurized cheese, but stores can't even provide clean lettuce anymore.
You expect them to sell unpasteurized cheese that won't be loaded with harmful bacteria?
People still need to be told over and over again it's a good idea to wash your hands.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:as far as dukasaur goes, i had no idea you were so goofy. i mean, you hate your parents so much you'd wish they'd been shot? just move out bro.
As in North America...mookiemcgee wrote:I thought you were canadian? (here in america???)
Gotcha, so this is all trump's fault because of this USMCA trade deal he spearheaded.DoomYoshi wrote:As in North America...mookiemcgee wrote:I thought you were canadian? (here in america???)
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:as far as dukasaur goes, i had no idea you were so goofy. i mean, you hate your parents so much you'd wish they'd been shot? just move out bro.
Not really. The CUSMA, like NAFTA before it does not include cheese or dairy products.mookiemcgee wrote:Gotcha, so this is all trump's fault because of this USMCA trade deal he spearheaded.DoomYoshi wrote:As in North America...mookiemcgee wrote:I thought you were canadian? (here in america???)
First of all, if you call it CUSMA instead of USMCA one more time Saxi's head might explode.DoomYoshi wrote:Not really. The CUSMA, like NAFTA before it does not include cheese or dairy products.mookiemcgee wrote:Gotcha, so this is all trump's fault because of this USMCA trade deal he spearheaded.DoomYoshi wrote:As in North America...mookiemcgee wrote:I thought you were canadian? (here in america???)
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:as far as dukasaur goes, i had no idea you were so goofy. i mean, you hate your parents so much you'd wish they'd been shot? just move out bro.
There are a lot of differences. But not on cheese. It's the one thing that is true of all Canadian trade agreements.mookiemcgee wrote:First of all, if you call it CUSMA instead of USMCA one more time Saxi's head might explode.DoomYoshi wrote:Not really. The CUSMA, like NAFTA before it does not include cheese or dairy products.mookiemcgee wrote:Gotcha, so this is all trump's fault because of this USMCA trade deal he spearheaded.DoomYoshi wrote:As in North America...mookiemcgee wrote:I thought you were canadian? (here in america???)
I've been hearing for 4 years how CUSMA is NOTHING like NAFTA and that's why we had to re-name it and pretend it was different... are you saying my government lied to me?
Well you would need to buy the milk from the governmental approved milk producers. If you had your own cows, and then decided to make your own cheese factory, somebody would shut you down. Probably Agriculture Canada.Why do you guys agree to these things? https://www.international.gc.ca/trade-c ... x?lang=eng
I mean after reading that I totally see where you are coming from, you guys have agreed to basically f*ck over any cheese producer that isn't extremely large if they want access to international sales.
If you made cheese and sold it locally only at like a farmers market direct to consumer... totally illegal? Who would enforce that, tax dept?
It almost never matters if even a fair number of people disagree with things. The process to reverse anything really bad is overwhelming.Why do you guys agree to these things?