Not-That-Bright
Andrew Quah
Japanese people are so tiny, how do they fit the whales in their stomachs?
Whales are not human beings, neither are dolphins. A species should have hunting of it restricted if it is endangered, but for no other reason.Kwayera said:The whalers in Japan - and Norway! - make me sick. I believe that whales are sentient creatures - it'd be like hunting humans, and we don't do that, do we?
And you know, there's no laws protecting the countless thousands of dolphins that are slaughtered every year in Taiji, Japan - they have NO proctection. When I have enough money, I'm joing to join the Sea Shepherd cruises to slash the nets that they herd the dolphins into shore with; better than Greenpeace, who do NOTHING.
No. Whales are not human beings. But I believe they are sentient, self-aware, just as we are - but if you feel the need to quantify it then look at it this way - the Japanese are poaching an endangered species, eating the meat and tacking the trophy heads up onto their walls, and calling it science.withoutaface said:Whales are not human beings, neither are dolphins. A species should have hunting of it restricted if it is endangered, but for no other reason.
EDIT: And if I linked you to some PETA footage of a slaughterhouse I'm sure you would feel sick as well, what's your point?
her point was that is not part of science..withoutaface said:The fact that they hang them up on their walls and eat the meat is highly irrelevant, deer hunters do the same.
Well IMO the fact that the japanese have INCREASED their quote, virtually doubling it, shows that their is a great demand for whale in Japan.....so Im sure alot dont like it, but their must also be quite alot that demand it!so before you bash the japanese people, just thought you should know that many of them don't condone the actions of these whalers either.
It is not irrelevant; I don't like deer hunting for trophy, either, particularly when the hunters take the head and leave the body to rot. But that's not my point. My point, which you keep ignoring for the sake of argument, is that the whales are killed inhumanely. They are not killed with a single bullet. There is no comparison between the two and I find it difficult to understand why you persist in, again, arguing what seems to be only for the sake of argument.withoutaface said:The fact that they hang them up on their walls and eat the meat is highly irrelevant, deer hunters do the same.
True - the killing stops only when the buying does, and it doesn't look like that's going to happen any time soon.Schoolies_2004 said:Well IMO the fact that the japanese have INCREASED their quote, virtually doubling it, shows that their is a great demand for whale in Japan.....so Im sure alot dont like it, but their must also be quite alot that demand it!
Phanatical said:Whale meat is quite a delicacy in Japanese cuisine.
Eating whales is like eating kangaroo. Only difference is nobody gets pissy at us when we hit a kangaroo with our cars.
Don't pass the buck onto the world stage, you know this is a regional issue for us to deal with at a regional level. Your party is weak on this issue, crisis even, and cannot even achieve a basic dialogue with the Japanese in an attempt to resolve it.Kwayera said:That's bullshit, leetom, and I don't think the Labor Government, heaven forbid it ever come to power, would do anything in addition to stop it. This is not a local Australian political issue - it is a WORLD political issue, and the world as it is today needs Japan as a trading ally more than it needs it as a non-trading entity. Geopolitics as an entity don't care much for environmental issues, particularly ones such as this, that can step on so many toes. The whales, unfortunately, take the brunt of this cautious approach.
Until the world sees this as an issue - not just the Australian government, you prejudicially brainwashed buffoon - not much is going to happen.
Well it is partly a global issue, those animals aernt the property of Australia.... they are resource of the world, and as a result their should be global interest in protecting them from a rogue state like Japan who continue to slaughter even endagnered whales in large volumes.Don't pass the buck onto the world stage, you know this is a regional issue for us to deal with at a regional level. Your party is weak on this issue, crisis even, and cannot even achieve a basic dialogue with the Japanese in an attempt to resolve it.
I dont think anyone has said we should break off ties with the Japanese, but what I have seen as the general consensus is that SOMETHING should be done to stop this masacre of whales..... how the hell can they use that loophole of 'research' when they now increase their quota (Was a scientific reason given for this) and when it is quite traceable that they are selling the meat!!!Australia's trading relationships with its Asian partners are quite capable of overcoming the odd controversy. The trading relationship with Japan is immensely profitable for both nations and it would be a madman indeed who threatened to break off ties over some simple whaling disagreements. Australia does not benefit financially from Japan's illegal conduct in the Southern Ocean and has nothing to lose from openly condemning Japan, something long overdue. Our economic arrangements with Japan will not be under threat even with a swift federal rebuke.
NO, whales take a long time from conception to sexual maturity...... the current rates of Jap whaling are NOT sustaintable and the whales CANNOT breed and replenish quick enough to replace those killed.i do support japanese whaling as a cultural sport and art, because the whales can continue to breed and replenish
History has shown us with many things that a nations "culture" sometimes has to change to adapt to the current environment, if this wasnt the case we'd still be hanging people as witches, putting aboriginals into camps, or the US would still be massacring indianssecondly, because it is an integral part of japanese culture. this goes the same with norway and sweden, who also have whaling rooted in their scandinavian cultures.
Yeah thats a good point. I think its quite obvious that the Japanese dont rely on whaling for cultural reasons, its purely for financial gain. They currently have a quote of like 900 whales, how many tonnes is that? At high prices per kg they are raking in the cash whilst a world resource is put on the brink of extinction.There is a clear difference between whaling for cultural reasons and whaling for commercial reasons. There is an American Indian tribe who, as an annual celebration of their tribe's history and culture, rig up the traditional fishing vessel (nothing more than a longboat type thing powered by rowing men) and conduct a token whale hunt, with traditional harpoons and the sort.
As for the Japanese, fitting out modern warships with high-powered grenade-tipped mechanical harpoons is hardly a celebration of traditional Japanese culture. And if ever whaling was even apart of Japanese culture, it certainly never took place in the Southern Ocean.