4th generation farmer, JD Sales rep., Snowmobile racer

Joined September 2015
6 Photos and videos
Bill Anderson retweeted
Hiking in your 40s is a great way to meet new people. Today I met two paramedics, three nurses, a cardiologist and nearly met Jesus.
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Bill Anderson retweeted
USA has given Canada: Alliance for 100 yrs Safest & Longest shared border in World Greatest trading partner Military & Economic protection Tolerance of ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆโ€™s sissy extremism And in 12 short years Imbecile TRUDEAU & Demon CARNEY Have shut it down! FUCKโ€ฆ.CDNs are STUPID!
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Bill Anderson retweeted
At Huron Tractor, we believe in investing in the future of Ontario agriculture and our communities. Each year, the Huron Tractor Scholarship Program supports students pursuing post-secondary agricultural education. Visit the link to learn more: hurontractor.com/dealer-infoโ€ฆ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Big shout-out to our crew at Huron Tractor Blyth! ๐Ÿ‘ This team brings the perfect mix of hard work and good vibes every single day. Theyโ€™re always ready to support our customers, tackle whatever comes their way, and still find time to have a little fun while theyโ€™re at it.
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Look at all that shiny new equipment ready to get to work! ๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿ’› Our stores are stocked up to help you take on your next project with confidence. Visit your local Huron Tractor and let our team help you find the right John Deere machine for you. hurontractor.com/currentoffeโ€ฆ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Last night was about more than just hockey. ๐Ÿ’ It was about community, coming together, and showing up for something bigger than ourselves. From the players on the ice to everyone in the stands, the support for the Huron County Food Bank was incredible. Great job everyone!
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Amazing first day at the annual @DairyXPO ! Be sure to swing by and see us at the John Deere Dealers of Ontario booths. Proud to be part of an event that brings the Canadian dairy community together and showcases the innovation driving the industry forward.
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Mr. Carney, You stood at a podium yesterday and told Canadians that this country thrives because we are Canadian. It was a beautiful line. Polished. Applause ready. It was also insulting. Because it confuses thriving with surviving, and only someone who has never had to do either could make that mistake so confidently. Canadians do not thrive the way you describe. We endure. We adapt. We make do. We get through. We get up early not because it is inspiring, but because bills do not care about speeches. We work late not because it is fulfilling, but because standing still is not an option. We shovel our own driveways because help is expensive, unreliable, or nonexistent, and we still show up on time. That is not thriving, Mr. Carney. That is survival with dignity. We survive when systems fail. We adjust when costs rise. We absorb broken promises and carry on anyway. There is no applause line for that, because survival does not photograph well. We survive because farmers plant knowing Ottawa might change the rules halfway through the season. Because tradespeople build while being taxed, regulated, and lectured by people who have never risked payroll on a slow month. Because parents budget groceries like a tactical exercise and still manage to raise decent kids without permission from a federal narrative. We survive because Canadians are practical. When something breaks, we fix it ourselves. Not because we want to, but because waiting for government help usually means waiting forever. Or being told the service exists on paper. You speak of thriving while Canadians quietly ask which services you are referring to. Healthcare that exists in theory. Housing plans that never house anyone. Affordability programs that arrive long after the damage is done. We survive because communities step in when institutions step back. Not because systems are strong, but because neighbours are. We rely on each other because experience has taught us not to rely on governments that measure success by how well they explain failure. We survive because small businesses stayed open through lockdowns, fines, shortages, and paperwork that multiplied faster than revenue. Because families absorbed inflation while being told it was temporary. Because seniors adapted quietly to shrinking purchasing power while politicians assured them relief was coming. You call this thriving. Canadians call it getting through. We survive because we know how to get through winters. Literal ones and political ones. We stock up. We brace ourselves. We do not expect rescue, especially from people who have never had to wait for it. We survive because we question authority. Just ask the Freedom Convoy. Canadians have an instinctive allergy to being ordered around by people who exempt themselves from the consequences. We remember what happens when compliance is mistaken for unity. We survive because we do not confuse slogans with reality, no matter how high the elbows go or how loudly we are told to clap. We know the difference between leadership and performance. Between patriotism and appropriation. And while governments waste money, restrict rights, censor speech, divide citizens, and congratulate themselves, Canadians quietly keep the country functioning anyway. That is not thriving. That is resilience under pressure. So when you tell Canadians they thrive because they are Canadian, it lands differently on those of us who have actually lived it. Because confusing survival with thriving is easy if you have never had to survive. And that is the problem. Mark Carney speaks of thriving from a life buffered by boards, institutions, and global forums. A life spent above the consequences does not teach you the difference between getting ahead and just getting through. Those who have never had to survive often mistake endurance for success, and then try to take credit for it. So no, Mr. Carney. Canadians are not thriving because of you. We are surviving despite a government that made life harder, more expensive, more divided, and then attempted to dress our endurance up as its achievement. Our resilience is not your accomplishment. It is proof of a people who carried each other while being lectured by someone who does not recognize the difference. And Canadians are done applauding the performance. My advice to you Mr. Carney? Before defining Canadians, try surviving as one. As always, Melanie in Saskatchewan Link in description and below๐Ÿ‘‡๐Ÿป @MarkJCarney @liberal_party #cdnpoli
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Good simple grain cart for sale. Has IForeman/libra cart scale system. facebook.com/share/1FXugp32oโ€ฆ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
The environmental impact of mining the rare metals required for windmills. Mongolia has large reserves of rare earth metals, especially neodymium, the element needed to make the magnets in wind turbines. Its extraction has led to a 5-mile wide poisonous tailings lake in northern China. Nearby farmland for miles is now unproductive. Seven million tons a year of mined rare earth after it has been doused in acid and chemicals and processed through red-hot furnaces to extract its components.ย  Rusting pipelines meander for miles from factories processing rare earths in Baotou out to the man-made lake where, mixed with water, the foul-smelling radioactive waste from this industrial process is pumped day after day. Some people call this #GreenEnergy
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Now through September 30, take advantage of special finance offers on select pre-owned 2022โ€“2025 John Deere tractors, sprayers, and combines, including this 2024 John Deere 6155M โ€“ AutoTrac ready, low-hour, and built for serious performance. store.hurontractor.com/used-โ€ฆ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
๐Ÿ’ฏ๐Ÿ”ฅ๐Ÿ‘‡๐Ÿผ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
14 Aug 2025
Mark Carneyโ€™s playbook is straight from Venezuela, manufacture an external enemy, blame them for your failures, and distract from the crises you created. #AlbertaIndependence
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Combine Clinics are back! ๐Ÿ“† August 19 โ€“ Exeter ๐Ÿ“† August 21 โ€“ Chatham Program runs from 9:30 AM to 2:00 PM. No registration. Free lunch. Expert tips on S-Series & X9 setup. Enter to WIN a free Combine ASI take advantage of our Parts Specials. ow.ly/Om8a50WtjAu
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Bill Anderson retweeted
It's great to see evidence like this which soundly refutes the lies and propaganda spread by those opposed to environmental sustainability.
Glyphosate is one of the most vilified chemicals. Influencers claim it causes countless health issues. It doesnโ€™t. Glyphosate interferes w/EPSPS, a plant enzyme. Humans donโ€™t have EPSPS = no mechanism of harm. 50 YEARS of data show this. This is basic biochemistry.
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Bill Anderson retweeted
That would be a bad day, hopefully nobody was injured.
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Why should anyone remember this day, 81 years ago? I'll save you the search engine hunt. May 21, 1944, is the anniversary of a terrible ordnance explosion/fire at Pearl Harbour, resulting in more than 160 deaths. As tragic as that World War II incident was, it's not the reason for my question. In fact, there's likely no real reason for anyone to particularly remember May 21, 1944. Except for context. On May 21, 1944, Canadian and fellow Allied troops stationed in Britain were a mere 16 days removed from D-Day. 16 days until many thousands of Canadian troops and their Allied brothers would fight their way onto the beaches of Normandy in France and into the teeth of the German Nazi war machine in order to liberate a continent from systemic brutality and protect the children of Europe. On May 21, 1944, none of these young men in Allied military units (Army, Navy, Air Force) knew what was waiting for them 16 days on. They understood an invasion was inevitable and were ready to fight, hopefully survive and if not, understood they may perish. 81 years and 16 days ago your grandfathers or great grandfathers may have been among these young Canadians. How dismayed and ashamed might they be to know their sacrifice would be openly ignored on the streets of Toronto some decades later as an ambulance responding to an emergent call seeking assistance for a child in distress would be rerouted by Canada's largest police service in order to avoid facing down a bellowing street mob mobilized in support of a declared terrorist organization? People across this unsteady nation have since expressed outrage and revulsion over video evidence of increasing political and law enforcement dereliction of responsibility with documented evidence of surrender to threatening mobs roaming Canada's downtowns while police with officious enthusiasm arrested those who either challenged or documented the mob behaviours. National and provincial government response has been deafeningly silent, or perhaps limited to usual word salad featuring "unacceptable," "disrespectful" and similar blather. In 16 days leaders(?) of these governments will either in person attend commemorative services in Normandy honouring the young men of June 6, 1944, or issue grandiose proclamations saluting their sacrifice. However, when ambulance rubber quite literally hit the road in Toronto just a few days ago to assist a child facing health distress, raising the unselfish bravery of young Canadians who on D-Day crashed onto Normandy beaches to defend a continent's children would have been an unwelcome reminder of courage to those who chose to accept and defend mob behaviour. --- Here's how my friend @joe_warmington described the scene. torontosun.com/opinion/columโ€ฆ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Huron Tractor is proud to carry and service STIHL outdoor power equipment. From leaf blowers to battery-powered chainsaws, Huron Tractor has the gear you need to tackle yard work like a pro. View the STIHL Spring Flyer hurontractor.com/stihl-savinโ€ฆ
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Bill Anderson retweeted
Will we be duped again!
Thoughts from the wood pile with @randyhillier 60 years of Canadian elections summarized in 15 minutes. Will we be duped again?
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RT @GasPriceWizard: Look at this, friends. If you think Mark Carneyโ€™s Liberal Industrial carbon taxes, which he plans to ratchet up wonโ€™tโ€ฆ
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