Glacier FarmMedia – Canadian farmers have front-row seats to the world’s biggest geopolitical risk, according to David Frum.
An Ontario farm had the third highest dairy herd performance index in Lactanet’s annual national awards. Lochdale Holsteins, of Alexandria,…
“I think the thing that worries me the most is the threat that lies within the United States,” said Frum, a journalist, former White House speechwriter and conservative intellectual, during Manitoba Ag Days.
“If Americans make the wrong decisions in the next months,” the result could be “chaos” within the world order.
Frum’s concerns spring from failure of the U.S. political system to rise to its traditional responsibilities in guarding the relatively free and open world system that has prevailed since the Second World War.
The U.S. has become paralyzed and caught up in left-right partisan fighting in the face of rampant Russian belligerence, Chinese attempts at regional intimidation and threats to the existence of Israel.
This is dangerous, Frum said, in a time when a 30-year, post-Cold War period of peace among the larger powers appears to be ending.
The global trading system has been fraying for years with the death of the original Trans-Pacific Partnership, torn up on day one of Donald Trump’s presidency. It heralded an era in which protectionism became acceptable again.
While Trump railed against free trade and globalization, Frum noted that President Joe Biden has done nothing to advance world trade. There is no trade agenda in the Biden White House, said Frum, who worked for George W. Bush in the 2000s.
That compounds the problems with world peace, he said, because trade and peace are tied.
“As trade shrinks, conflict arises. As conflict arises, trade shrinks.”
Frum has shared his insights with farmers over the years. He has spoken at Canola Council of Canada and CropConnect meetings. He is the son of revered Canadian broadcast journalist Barbara Frum.
He seems at ease at farm shows, and at Ag Days he walked among the giant machinery and cutting-edge technologies before his speech.
“I think that the people you feed do not understand that this is an information industry … that serves a planetary market,” said Frum.
“You are the most integrated, most globalized, most knowledge-based industry, probably, that there is anywhere in the world.”
– Ed White is a reporter with The Western Producer.
Source: Farmtario.com