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Ralph Pearce Freedom to choose -and lose
There’s an ugly little scenario playing out alongside the Maple Leaf recall fallout.  A recent Globe and Mail story leaked the fact that US authorities were pushing Canadian meat processors to implement stricter guidelines, including more frequent inspections by federal officials.

   What’s good for the US must be good for Canada, right?

   Well, it may be good, but it’s certainly not attainable overnight. And as a recent survey of consumers indicated, Canadians are a not a patient bunch. We’re building on this rather distasteful sense of entitlement in our country.

   The Canadian consumer seems to have a fleeting fascination with the issue of the day. In 2000, it was the Walkerton crisis, sparking calls for an end to factory hog farming. This, despite the fact that hogs have lower levels of E. coli bacteria in their bodies than cows or other ruminants, which were determined to be the cause of the outbreak. In 2003, it was BSE in beef cattle, pushing the processing industry for testing of every animal (at a cost to be endured by the producer, no less). And in 2008, it’s been the spectacle surrounding ‘Hockey Night in Canada’s’ new theme song, with calls to protect what some people refer to as the country’s second ‘national anthem’.

   If I yawn, it’s only in anticipation.

   What this says to me is that we have too many choices for too few people.  If the USDA is pushing for more inspectors and stringent methods to reduce the presence of the listeria bacterium, and if we want to export processed meats to the US, well, guess what?  They have every right to impose their standards on us, regardless of our contention they’re too strict; it’s their country.

   But the sub-plot to these little dramas comes in two forms: money and choice. The US boasts a population of nearly 300 million people from which to draw its taxes and pay for services.

   Compare that to Canada, where we are the second largest country in the world, a tremendous source of pride but also a huge challenge. With just 33 million people spread far and wide, there’s only so far our tax dollars can carry us. I was offering this as an explanation to my younger daughter a few weeks ago when the mainstream media sheep were bleating about our abysmal showing in the first week of the Olympics.
  
   Make a choice! 

   If the government really is an embodiment of the people, aren’t we the ones with all the choices?  For instance, we place so much importance on ‘free health care’ we make it part of our Canadian identity. Then there’s education, police and firefighters, some allotment to roads and infrastructure, and government. After that, the door’s wide open, folks. Where do we apply the residual funds from our list of basics? Do we increase our contributions to the arts and enrich our lives? Do we ensure our Olympic athletes are living and training on more than $18,000 a year?  Or do we push our federal and provincial governments to increase the number of meat inspectors at processing plants?

   What’s your cause celebre for the week, Mr. or Ms. Canada?

   Prime Minister Stephen Harper waded in on the issue, trumpeting that safe food is the right of all Canadians (at least that’s how the newspapers reported it). For me, safe food is not a right any more than safe water is a right.  It’s good to know or assume they’re safe, but that’s all it is: assumed safety. Since the food I buy is adorning the shelf at the grocery store or the picnic table at a market, I’m assuming  -and trusting someone -that it’s safe.  But the fact remains, we all live under the proviso, ‘caveat emptor’ -buyer beware. And it’s a sign of the times that more people want guarantees in life, where none can logically be expected.

   Sorry if that’s a shot to your comfort zone, but the truth is, you really can’t have it all. If you want a job with big bucks, count on losing some of your free time with your family. Doctors earn substantial salaries, but they also have to watch people die. Lawyers make a very comfortable earning but they must endure cheap shots, public loathing and contempt. Dentists, teachers, sales representatives, politicians -every vocation has its give and takes.

   Make up your mind!

   Do you want free health care and well-educated young people?  Then accept that roads and bridges may collapse, if only because they have surpassed their originally mandated 30 year histories.  If you want culture and refined living, then hopefully your health will hold out, allowing you to avoid any of those nasty US-like health care fees. If you want more meat inspectors, then maybe we can’t hire as many customs agents to patrol our border crossings.

   There are only so many people to perform these tasks, and more importantly, only so many tax dollars to go around.

   It’s called choice -and it does have its drawbacks.

COMMENTS

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Written by Vern Schaab on 2008-10-10 10:11:58
How could more inspectors have prevented this bacterial outbreak? I'm sure Maple Leaf followed necessary procedures for maintaining a sanitary plant.This bacteria is not visible to the naked eye. It some how got missed in the equipment.Reality is these things can and will happen regardless of all pre cautions. Its times like this we learn to add or change methods of the way we do things
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Written by Marlene Britton on 2008-09-18 00:01:57
We are all very guilty of what you are saying and have gotten all too ready to yell about what are our rights. The old saying about having your cake and eating it too ,still holds true and priorities must be chosen and then we live with it. Our pioneers and those who came to this country ,working so hard and being so proud of this wonderful place ,must be very disgusted with the whining and lack of pride in our own abilities that are being displayed.

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