757
Member
Not at all. Canada thinks our milk is cheap. They just have a whole lot less cows and this thing call snowdrifts that blanket their country for much of the year. This obviously annoys WIsconsin Dairy producers quite a bit.Friend posted this. I thought the last trade agreement eliminated tariffs, but his graphic says they still exist.
Our dairy industry is heavily controlled and subsidized. We have a quota system and protectionist tariffs.Not at all. Canada thinks our milk is cheap. They just have a whole lot less cows and this thing call snowdrifts that blanket their country for much of the year. This obviously annoys WIsconsin Dairy producers quite a bit.
Canada routinely violates the agreement on how much they can tariff our milk. Not only have they had Tariffs on our dairy products but they routinely stop shipments.
USMCA Panel Releases Canada Dairy Report
So we sue them routinely. haha.
In Canada, milk production is controlled through a "supply management" system, where the Canadian Dairy Commission (CDC) sets national production quotas based on provincial demand, and then provincial marketing boards allocate those quotas to individual farmers, ensuring they produce only within their allotted quota, effectively preventing overproduction and stabilizing prices; this system also regulates dairy imports through tariff rate quotas to protect domestic producers.
Key points about Canadian milk production control:
Quota system:
Each farmer is assigned a specific production quota, which limits the amount of milk they can produce.
Provincial boards:
Provincial marketing boards distribute the national quota among farmers within their province.
Price regulation:
The CDC sets the farm-gate price for milk, which is the price processors pay to farmers.
Import controls:
Strict import controls are in place through tariff rate quotas, allowing only a limited amount of dairy products to be imported at lower tariffs, while higher tariffs apply to imports exceeding the quota.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/02/03/us/trump-tariffsEveryone talks about the tariffs, but no one is talking about how the threat of tariffs could be a form of a stick-and-carrot play.
Everyone talks about the tariffs, but no one is talking about how the threat of tariffs could be a form of a stick-and-carrot play.
Exactly. A lot of the panic is people freaking out over what they think is carved in stone. No such thing with this POTUS. It's all about the art of the deal.In an unusually neutral piece, this morning NPR had a thing about this, the guy said that often what Trump latches onto, seemingly bizarre to most people, is a sound negotiating tactic for him and often gets concessions he would not otherwise get.
Let's see. I am very skeptical of tariffs.
Edited to add, I just saw this: Mexico agrees to deploy 10,000 troops to US border in exchange for tariff pause
Good example.
Trump pauses tariffs on Mexico goods after talk with country's President SheinbaumEveryone talks about the tariffs, but no one is talking about how the threat of tariffs could be a form of a stick-and-carrot play.
“1. Mexico will immediately reinforce the northern border with 10,000 members of the National Guard to prevent drug trafficking from Mexico to the United States, particularly fentanyl,” Sheinbaum wrote, explaining the agreements.
“2. The United States is committed to working to prevent the trafficking of high-powered weapons to Mexico. 3. Our teams will begin working today on two fronts: security and trade,” she continued.
Something I haven't seen from too many news orgs yet.
It's a double border security deal.
U.S. will work to prevent weapons to Mexico.
Trump gets shit done. What's not to like.
OSD guidance is everyone returns to the office by this Friday, 7 Feb...
We started that a while ago, people had to "book" a desk and bring their own laptop from their own remote location. Of course all unused network connections are locked down. So they spend most of their first mornings dealing with the help desk to get the jack unlocked. LOL Thankfully my wife is still fully remote for now but there's plans to set up an office for her "somewhere".OSD guidance is everyone returns to the office by this Friday, 7 Feb. Even situational telework is cancelled. Obviously, there are some exceptions.
Where's the funding coming from to lease additional space, purchase IT hardware, desks, chairs, etc.? This is about to get real expensive and does anyone think the salaries of those who take the buyout will go back to their old departments? Yeah, nah.
Federal Government is about 18 months behind Silicon Valley on this. If they're hiring for more seats than they have, they needed to not hire. This isn't the private sector. Just my opinion of course.OSD guidance is everyone returns to the office by this Friday, 7 Feb. Even situational telework is cancelled. Obviously, there are some exceptions.
Where's the funding coming from to lease additional space, purchase IT hardware, desks, chairs, etc.? This is about to get real expensive and does anyone think the salaries of those who take the buyout will go back to their old departments? Yeah, nah.