Hearing human beings scream as they are being "harvested" does do something to our thinking.I eat steak, bacon, lamb chops, fish etc and have no problem with killing animals for food. I also buy free range eggs and would boycott any meat product if I was aware that the animal had been killed inhumanely, or kept in cruel circumstances. Perhaps that makes me a hypocrite, but I feel I'm among many who see no problem with eating animals that have been farmed for that purpose, kept in agreeable circumstances and then killed as humanely (read painlessly/quickly) as possible.
I said that you rarely hear anything rational, I pointed out that most of what you hear comes from tree huggers or economists, and that people in the know do exist, but are relatively rare and are even more rarely publicised by the media.
Obviously as an ex whaler you are an exception and more informed than the vast majority of people
and I agree entirely that sustainable whaling is (rationally) an unquestionable possibility which would allow more food to be produced without risk of extinctions.
The two problems are the 'cuddly factor' as you put it, and the greed of whalers (who usually don't want to stick to reasonable quotas, as is the case with many fisheries).
The exact same issues exist with seals, and many other 'cuddly factor' animals, and the reason we stand by in relative silence while fish species are taken beyond sustainable levels is that they aren't as cuddly.
Couldn't disagree more when Nioka was whaling maybe, all these years later I suspect its just bias from bygone era. I wonder if Nioka stopped because he though that the whaling was over done or because the law said stop.
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The law never said "stop". Whaling ceased because it became unprofitable. I was out 2 years before whaling ceased. (I was employed as a consultant, after whaling ceased, by three different companies still interested in catching whales.)
No maybe. Actual fact.
Bygone era ?. No way. However, like many opportunities on the stock market, I can see the business sense in sustainable whaling.
As for eating whale. Anyone who ate margarine during the whaling era almost certainly ate whale as the whale oil was mainly used by Australian margarine manufacturers in their product. I know that for certain because after I finished with the whaling company I was employed by a margarine manufacturer as a production manager.
Sdajii, I can understand your beliefs based on any species not endangered being fair game. Trouble is, we left the caves tens of thousands of years ago. Modern man is focused on farming food for human consumption and food that has been farmed for thousands of years. Doing this better is the way forward.
You talk of upcoming food shortage problems. Have a look in the "out of date" food bins at coles and woolworths and tell me there is going to be a food shortage. Modern societies waste massive amounts of food every day!
With the evolution of intelligent beings; the balance within nature is sadly up to us. Leave the wildlife be.
I think we've tipped the scales over already and we can not help but effect nature. I think I read somewhere that 3 billion was a sustainable number of humans coexisting on the planet. Might have been a pluck, but we might need a good culling one day unless we start drastically changing the way we live.With the evolution of intelligent beings; the balance within nature is sadly up to us. Leave the wildlife be.
Less than a billion was quoted as the maximum number of people we can support in the 17th century. Fact is there is enough food to feed current & existing numbers of people, however the distribution of resources is the major problem.I think we've tipped the scales over already and we can not help but effect nature. I think I read somewhere that 3 billion was a sustainable number of humans coexisting on the planet. Might have been a pluck, but we might need a good culling one day unless we start drastically changing the way we live.
unless we start drastically changing the way we live.
In part you can blame the greenies for the pine forrests and the loss of many koala fodder. By the continual theft from the foresty department of native forrests for national parks they have forced the forestry industry towards,clear felling, monoculture and pine trees. If sustainable harvesting of native forrests had been promoted then there would still be more native forests. Same could apply to whaling. The whale watch industry creates no value apart from entertainment. You cant be entertained if you are starving. only food can do that. I whalc consumes 5000lbs food a day. One whale equals 20 tonnes of food.
At one stage in my early career I was hired by the royal family in Tonga to design a whaling station for Tonga with the main aim to supply food for the Tongans. I also did the same for the Cook Islands. The jobs fell through because of the demise of the whales.
P.S. The Tongans never paid their bill.
There are many thousands of animals each yr that we cull and leave to rot which are perfectly good for human consumption. Perhaps consuming them would be a start.
No. I love seafood BUT I only take what I will eat. The problem exists when too many of me do the same thing. As was pointed out in another post it is the numbers of people and more precisely the area of land or sea that is needed to sustain those numbers. Reading your logic here it is about taking more and more. A cure rather than a prevention.So are you suggesting that we completely ignore the entire ocean as a food source? That is utterly ridiculous! The ocean covers two thirds of the surface of the planet, is extremely productive, and 99% of it can not be used for aquaculture. Are you saying that we should stop eating seafood? Do you know how many people would die if we did that?
Yes I am conservation minded so no need to discuss this.You may believe that farming food is ethical and wild harvest is not, but... um... actually, if that's what you think I doubt there is any point in discussing it with you.
Yes I (still) do think it is right to farm animals and plants for human consumption. The conditions in which they are grown is an ongoing battle in some parts of the world but dignity and decency, although silly human traits as you may perceive, will ensure the inhumane treatment of farmed animals is discouraged and/or punished. As a boy I fed our wild pigs in a pen, fed our chooks and inevitably watched them killed, scraped, plucked, strung up, cut open, gutted and carved up.Yeah, no worries, in some magical way it is somehow more ethical to wipe out an ecosystem and turn a stable, biodiverse area into an unstable monoculture. Ever visited a pig farm? A chicken farm? I dare you to do so and tell me that farming animals is more ethical than wild harvest.
The wasted food would first become less to non-existent before any food shortage situation arises. If you see this start to happen let me know, otherwise keep your abstract thoughts in check.So, because we're wasting food now we're never going to run out of food?
Again abstract to support the initial comment of which you have no evidence. You could save yourself some time by supporting your claim of food shortage in our or next of kin's life with some evidence instead of abstract comparisons that camouflage your lack of knowledge.This is even more absurd than saying we should only eat farmed food. People used to waste oil, it was cheap, it was abundant, they seemed to think it would never run out. People used to say 512k of RAM would always be enough for any computer. People used to think that water was always going to be super abundant. Yeast in a bottle of sugary water gobbles it up like it will never run out... up until the point where it actually does. History tells us that we are about as stupid as yeast, and you are confirming that many have not learned. The fact that something is abundant today does not mean it always will be.
Oh I get it alright. Human being (mind) is the most wantonly destructive organism on the planet.If you don't want humans to stop changing the balance of 'nature', stop eating, stop using electricity, stop breathing. You know the building you're in right now? It wasn't always in a city, it was once wilderness, with wild animals running around. You know that land your food grows on? It was once wilderness, with wild animals running around. You know that rubbish you put into the bin at home? It ends up in a rubbish dump which was once wilderness. Know what happens when you go to the toilet? You know that computer you're using right now? It comes from a factory, which itself uses water from dams, minerals from mines... You know that electricity you're using, it comes from... maybe you get the point. When we're up against the wall, at least there will be the comfort that people like you finally get it.
nioka
i understand whales consume vast quantities of food, but is it daily?
a whale will feed only in certain zones and from what i understand will stop feeding and live almost entirely on the vast reserves stored in its bulk,
its fair to say whales dont consume daily, but have periods when they are feeding and storing up reserves? is that correct?
There are many thousands of animals each yr that we cull and leave to rot which are perfectly good for human consumption. Perhaps consuming them would be a start.
Sdajii:Wysiwyg:
See how you use an abstract comparison to present your case? It doesn't make you the smart human you think you are.You ask ME for evidence that a food shortage is coming? I suppose if I said something crazy like "Without air and water we would all die" you would want evidence for that too. I find it very difficult to believe that you are genuinely that ignorant.
Yes, I win. Your visionary talents have come to the fore, expanding on the boundless knowledge of human affairs including dietary preferences, food supply/demand data and sustainable culling of wild animals.You want to mock me for pointing out that people are short sighted, and also say that we needn't worry about a food shortage until the point where we actually see a shortage of food on the shelf at the supermarket. Wow, point taken, again, you win.
Insightful.Yes, humans are the most destructive species on the planet, although only because we have the power to be.
Wrong! Humans take more food than they need (to the point of and to extinction), use more habitat than they need, use resources wastefully and pollute the environment.Our methods are basically the same as any species,
Yes that I do believe. The Industrial Revolution has a cost though [hint] the real problem is exponential population growth. The multiplication factor.the majority of us lack the foresight to manage our situation until after the problem has started smacking us in the face, and if someone points out a coming problem (a human capability) the majority act like animals and figure that if it isn't already hurting us, we have no reason to think about it.
An obvious suggestion. It is an insane waste at the moment. The resources we squander are huge.
Agentm: One way or another, massive animals like whales don't grow up and continue living without eating massive amounts of food, whether they eat every day or once a month. Different whales have different strategies. Some eat seals, some plankton, some eat massive giant squid, some eat basically anything. Some more often, some less often, some are highly seasonal, some not so. All massive animals eat massive amounts of food though, and regardless of ecological strategy, no whale is an exception.
I think we've tipped the scales over already and we can not help but effect nature. I think I read somewhere that 3 billion was a sustainable number of humans coexisting on the planet. Might have been a pluck, but we might need a good culling one day unless we start drastically changing the way we live.
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