…
China’s ambassador to Canada, Wang Di, says the solution is simple: if Canada drops the EV tariff, China will remove its agricultural tariffs. But Canada may not need to go that far.
China cannot easily replace millions of tonnes of high-quality Canadian seed. Imports from India and Australia don’t match the volume or quality, and Chinese futures markets are already showing strain. If farmers can weather the chill, Canada may have more leverage than expected.
…
Canadians can’t ignore China’s human rights abuses, from the treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang to the crackdown in Hong Kong. And trading dependence on Washington for reliance on Beijing is hardly a cure-all. Any deal must be negotiated from a position of strength, with safeguards to protect Canadian workers and sovereignty.
Which brings us back to canola. China needs it. We’re willing to sell it. But we don’t have to—nor should we—give away the farm.


Lol, “spamming around with propaganda” from an account with 141 posts in two months to servers of numerous countries on different continents with posts just driving the same consistent narrative everywhere you can.
I barely have as many comments in six months as you have posts in two, but I’m pushing propaganda? Sure, Scotty.
Don’t engage further. Fine by me. I see you as a sock puppet account and little else.
Ah I see you came to the same conclusion as me. 🤭