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<blockquote data-quote="Goweresque" data-source="post: 7384115" data-attributes="member: 818"><p>Its hardly a new phenomenon, the 'buying off' of critics via a nice little sinecure here and there..............</p><p></p><p>Anyway Guy Smith manages to spectacularly miss the point - the issue is not that the grain processors mix RT grain with imported grain, its that they refuse to accept non-RT grain from UK producers while perfectly happy to accept it from abroad. If there was a healthy market for non-RT grain in the UK, then producers would have a choice - produce to RT standards get X, or produce to legal standards and get X-5% (or whatever). Its the (probably illegal under competition law) refusal of UK processors to buy UK sourced non-RT grain that is the issue here.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Goweresque, post: 7384115, member: 818"] Its hardly a new phenomenon, the 'buying off' of critics via a nice little sinecure here and there.............. Anyway Guy Smith manages to spectacularly miss the point - the issue is not that the grain processors mix RT grain with imported grain, its that they refuse to accept non-RT grain from UK producers while perfectly happy to accept it from abroad. If there was a healthy market for non-RT grain in the UK, then producers would have a choice - produce to RT standards get X, or produce to legal standards and get X-5% (or whatever). Its the (probably illegal under competition law) refusal of UK processors to buy UK sourced non-RT grain that is the issue here. [/QUOTE]
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