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From: clams casino <cc@invalid.cc>
Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking,alt.idiots,soc.culture.australian,can.politics
Subject: Re: Malt Vinegar
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2024 15:56:17 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider

On 12/12/2024 3:47 PM, Skeeter wrote:
> In article <vjfmed$2v5g2$4@dont-email.me>, cc@invalid.cc says...
>>
>> On 12/12/2024 2:09 PM, Tony wrote:
>>> % wrote:
>>>> clams casino wrote:
>>>>> On 12/11/2024 9:25 PM, Bruce wrote:
>>>>>> On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 03:08:51 +0000, ItsJoanNotJoAnn@webtv.net
>>>>>> (ItsJoanNotJoAnn) wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 1:12:12 +0000, Jill McQuown wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Any brands anyone can recommend?  I like malt vinegar on fish & chips
>>>>>>>> but the only brands I can find in local stores don't taste like
>>>>>>>> much of
>>>>>>>> anything.  The last one I bought was Heinz.  Very bland.
>>>>>>>> Suggestions?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Jill
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Is this something that Asian markets stock?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Isn't malt vinegar what Anglos prefer to put on their fries?
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Tell us then, what do Abos put on theirs?
>>>>>
>>>>> ...green ants?
>>>>>
>>>>> https://youtu.be/mJw5_sazvuI
>>>>
>>>
>>> In those Chink stores everything is cash with no records of anything. No
>>> Chink has paid even one red cent to Revenue Canada but every business
>>> magically loses a fortune on paper for tax write-offs.
>>
>> Now about all those Sikhs...mushroom taxes still strong?
> 
> I do mushrooms and I don't pay any taxes on them.

Well yer not in Canuckistan then, yeah?

https://farmersforum.com/carbon-tax-crush-mushroom-farm-paid-100000-in-carbon-tax-in-one-year/

OTTAWA — An Eastern Ontario mushroom farm that pays about $100,000 
annually in federal carbon tax — a cost slated to quadruple to $400,000 
by 2030 — got little sympathy from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during 
a heated exchange in the House of Commons.

In one month alone the natural gas bill at the Medeiros family mushroom 
operation for Nov. 9 to Dec. 6 was $72,050 for 129,500 cubic meters of 
natural gas. The bill included $16,000 in carbon taxes. The farm 
operates in the riding of the leader of the official opposition Pierre 
Poilievre (CON – Carleton) who, in a December 13 back-and-forth, asked 
the prime minister to explain the high carbon tax costs. Prime Minister 
Trudeau blamed Carleton Mushrooms for being too successful and using too 
much natural gas, instead of using alternative energy.

Trudeau argued that the farm’s higher-than-average carbon-tax charge 
only proved that it must change its ways.

Polievre pounced: “I will ask the same question I have asked the Prime 
Minister now about a half a dozen times: When he finally gets around to 
talking to Carleton Mushroom Farms’ owner, how will he advise them to 
pay their forthcoming $400,000 carbon tax bill? Will it be by raising 
prices on Canadians or by cutting back and bringing in more dirty 
foreign food?”

Replied Trudeau: “Mr. Speaker, 97% of farm fuel emissions are exempt 
from the price on pollution. The average farm across this country pays a 
little less than $1,000 on natural gas emissions through the price on 
pollution. Therefore, one can only imagine how much natural gas this 
successful mushroom farm must be using for their cost of the price on 
pollution to be that large. We will happily work with the farmer to 
switch toward a lower-emitting approach to doing their business well and 
protecting future generations.”


Official Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre (left) and Prime Minister 
Justin Trudeau spar in the House of Commons on Dec. 13.

Poilievre, however, pointed out that the farm had no option but to use 
natural gas and must compete with American producers who are not charged 
a carbon tax.

While Trudeau called the farm a “multi-million-dollar” operation, the 
average Canadian farm is, in fact, a multi-million-dollar operation with 
a projected net worth of $3.8 million in 2022, according to Statistics 
Canada.

Poilievre also brought up the plight of well-known tomato-growing 
operation SunTech Greenhouses, of Manotick. The carbon-tax paid by the 
firm “means that its produce is more expensive in the village of 
Manotick than a Mexican tomato is in the village of Manotick, sending a 
price signal for consumers to buy the tomato that had to be transported 
by truck and train, burning fossil fuels, right across the continent,” 
the Conservative leader said. “Why does the Prime Minister not axe the 
tax so we can bring down the cost of farm production and bring home more 
clean, green Canadian produce?”

But the prime minister didn’t budge from his position that the tax “is a 
key part of actually making things more affordable for the long term for 
Canadians by pushing and encouraging innovation.”


Turdeau is a despicable statist asswipe, period!

🟥🍁🟥