GuyJean wrote:There IS a bigger picture in most situations.
thank you. i was trying to find this precise sentence.
they are not hippies and it is not about cuteness.
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GuyJean wrote:There IS a bigger picture in most situations.
Two members of an American environmentalist group were arrested for cutting a whaling net with a knife at the bay of a whaling town, police said. .........
Both Watson and Cornelissen, a Sea Shepherd member and Dutch photographer, have denied the allegations
Stuff the dolphins, Save the Tanukis
japslapper wrote:Stuff the dolphins, Save the Tanukis
No No No. Dolphins is best eaten as yaki-niku - dont need to stuff them - thats what you do with turkeys. Save the tanukis? Nah - have tanuki for starter - tanuki soufflee is great!
Taro Toporific wrote:Since it LUNCHTIME...
Let's SCIENCE for Lunch!Japan finds new breed of whaleThursday November 20, 2003/ The Guardian
A new species of whale has been discovered by a team of scientists in Japan. The whale, which has a distinctly broad, flat head, belongs to the family of filter-feeding baleen whales....
japslapper wrote:Stuff the dolphins, Save the Tanukis
No No No. Dolphins is best eaten as yaki-niku - dont need to stuff them - thats what you do with turkeys. Save the tanukis? Nah - have tanuki for starter - tanuki soufflee is great!
Nagged wrote:Let's not forget that whales and dolphins kill other creatures, including themselves. Read "Beached whales 'bullied' to death".
Also, with depleted fish stocks aorund the world's oceans, culling some of the more populous species would be the environmentally sound thing to do. Hence my signature below, it work's both ways.
Wouldn't the "environmentally sound thing to do" be first to determine the biggest reason for the depletion?
Nagged wrote:Thanks for your dirty hippie opnion. It's very much appreciated.
Nagged wrote:This will ultimately lead to either their own extinction or the predators switching to other species for food that may also cause serious imbalances.
Nagged wrote:However, while protection may serve a purpose if done in the right fashion, needless protection of some species can lead to very serious problems to the entire ecology.
Nagged wrote:In order to protect what remains, some intelligent conservation policy is required.
japslapper wrote:It's a commonly held belief that people have too many kids - but that is not supported by the statistics - people now are are not breeding like rabbits they are just not droping like flies - it means people are living longer and getting educated which can only be good for the world and the environment![]()
"GuyJean [/quote wrote:So, are you saying the world's population is decreasing? What statistics show this?
japslapper wrote:I didnt say the worlds population is decreasing I said the rate of reproduction is decreasing.
Less developed countries, home to 81 percent of the world's population, have 90 percent of the world's births per year. But infant mortality rates are significantly higher in those nations. - http://www.prb.org/Template.cfm?Section=PRB&template=/Content/ContentGroups/PTarticle/July-Sep2002/Has_Global_Growth_Reached_Its_Peak_.htm
The outcome depends greatly on birth rate trends in China and India, which are home to nearly 38 percent of the world's population. China's birth rate has been low for many years, with no apparent prospect of rising. In India, however, the birth rate's decline has ended, at least for now, as higher fertility and slower decline in India's populous northern states have begun to have a noticeable effect on national trends. - http://www.prb.org/Content/ContentGroups/Datasheets/wpds2002/2002_World_Population_Data_Sheet.htm
japslapper wrote:People are having less kids - but those kids have a higher quality of life, thus live longer - which obviously has an effect on the population size and demographics - in other words the average age of the world population is getting older.....( and wiser)
I wish I was as optimistic as yourself.. I think I'm too bitter sometimes, but I see a huge discrepency with the haves and have nots; people ARE getting better, smarter and living longer as long as they live in the right neighborhood...
Do you really think the American general population is getting smarter?
Nagged wrote:This thread seems to have gotten away from the environmental issues and steered itself to the usual political and philosophical meanderings.
japslapper wrote:and the biggest and easyist problem to solve is the issue of fresh water supplies. If we could help the bottom end humanity we would ultimately be helping conservation - and in a way that is long term and sustainable
..Kamen developed a closed system, powered by whatever fuel is at hand, that traps the energy released when the boiled water vapor recondenses. Essentially, he's recycling heat. Result: a low-power, low-maintenance device that will cost around $1,000 to manufacture and makes 10 gal. of drinkable water an hour... He's exploring distribution strategies in Bangladesh, and later this month he'll head to Africa to meet with Rwanda's President. - http://www.time.com/time/2003/inventions/invwater.html
japslapper wrote:Nagged wrote:This thread seems to have gotten away from the environmental issues and steered itself to the usual political and philosophical meanderings.
Quite the contary old chap. The issues are very linked. To deal with the conservation issues one needs education (even applicable to many hippies). The largest thwart to education is the poverty cycle (admitedly getting smaller as a proportion) - and the biggest and easyist problem to solve is the issue of fresh water supplies. If we could help the bottom end humanity we would ultimately be helping conservation - and in a way that is long term and sustainable
I still get a good laugh at looking at the Sea Sheperd site. I think their propaganda must be written by a six year old.
japslapper wrote:Fellow FGs I recomend this book - it dispels many of the myths Eco-warriors throw around to raise funds - and highlights the real areas for concern and immediate action. Unfortunately for SeaShepherd et al dolphin hunting is not a concern.....(not unless your a dolphin that is)
Self-described "sceptical environmentalist" Bjorn Lomborg will speak in Wellington tomorrow, at the invitation of the Business Roundtable - and a lot of people who should know better will make arses of themselves.
It is not that Lomborg is a charlatan. His book, The Skeptical Environmentalist, offers a fresh - and possibly very useful - perspective on environmental management. Employing the tools of his trade - he's a statistician - he attempts to set environmental problems in a broader context, and suggests both that some problems aren't as bad as they appear, and that we need to reassess our priorities.
Well and good. But the tendency of some people to treat the Dane like the Second Coming - and dismiss various bodies of genuine scientific expertise while they're at it - is actually quite embarrassing.
japslapper wrote:I still get a good laugh at looking at the Sea Sheperd site. I think their propaganda must be written by a six year old.
...I know and it makes me sick that some folk will believe it and cough up their hard earned cash. I have had a few evil thoughts lately concerning SS.I wanna know is hacking into their page to alter some things feasible? How illegal is it? etc etc. Taro do you know? I know jack about computers.......
charges laid against them in connection with the freeing of 15 dolphins on November 18, 2003 in Taiji, Japan.
japslapper wrote:What lies!
http://www.seashepherd.org/media_031201_1.html....silly buggers they just cut a net - in broad daylight! Right now I am enjoying Japanese (in)justicecharges laid against them in connection with the freeing of 15 dolphins on November 18, 2003 in Taiji, Japan.
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