Here is an Invidious link: https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=6I-fCf2Jskc
Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, board director at the China Strategic Risk Institute and former senior Canadian government official, discusses Prime Minister Carney’s upcoming meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the APEC Summit. She examines the risks of Canada pursuing closer trade ties with China, while warning that such moves could undermine Canada and invite Chinese leverage over Canadian policy on Taiwan, Uyghur human rights, and critical infrastructure.
She also addresses the striking shift in Canadian public opinion, with more Canadians now viewing the U.S. as an enemy than China, and critiques the lack of progress on addressing Chinese foreign interference in Canada.


Contracts do? Crop production is by contract, there some commitment for the next few years for co-operatives and pools to carry out production forecasts.
Not to mention, farms can’t just pivot from one crop type to the next year over year.
Farms absolutely can pivot from one crop to another and most should. Growing different crops in the field each year promotes long term soil health more than monoculture farming does.
Not really. The flip between something like corn and nitrogen-fixing legumes can’t be done in one season. Equipment is crop-specific and the guy with a V double-rake who does the custom cutting and swathing of alfalfa isn’t going to just drop $750k for a soybean machine.
There is a long production chain even for crops now, this isn’t the 1800s or subsistence farming.