From: Skeeter <skeeterweed@photonmail.com>
Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking,alt.idiots,soc.culture.australian,can.politics
Subject: Re: Malt Vinegar
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2024 16:24:45 -0700
Organization: UTB
In article <vjfpme$2vq6p$6@dont-email.me>, cc@invalid.cc says...
>
> 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!
>
> ???
My mushrooms are medicine.