Shark Killing, Ridiculous
#101
Posted 16 February 2014 - 06:11 PM
#102
Posted 16 February 2014 - 09:26 PM
They set up 'shark no go zones' where if a shark enters that area it can be caught and killed. But if they have lots of baited lines in the area they don't want the sharks in, aren't they just luring them into the wrong places?
- JackMack likes this
#103
Posted 16 February 2014 - 09:39 PM
#105
Posted 22 February 2014 - 02:58 AM
ps. hope none of you use any form of pest control, after all what makes one animal vermin or food or sacred???
#106
Posted 22 February 2014 - 04:01 AM
Your argument is not really very coherent, but I will have a go at some of the bits.
i know i will be villified for this
Not so much vilified as ridiculed, I think.
We aren't talking in this thread about killing stuff for food. I imagine a lot of the sharks are killed for food. I just post it for some attempt at scale and proportionality.
Nothing wrong with killing stuff and eating it, but finning; killing stuff to eat about 3% of it ,is just silly and extremely wasteful. We extract omega 3 from very small fish on the whole, and krill... wtf do krill have to do with this, sorry? Killing sharks and dragging them out to sea is pointless and wasteful. I can't see how any of these 2m odd tiger sharks they are racking up are habituated to people.
I'm not a fan of cage diving. Cheap thrills for adrenalin junkies. Right up there with shooting tame lions on game ranches.
Yep. We are the apex predator, and we need to be a bit responsible about the way we exercise that. just because we can alter the balance doesn't mean we should send it all to hell in a V8.
AH.. pest control... Another red herring. The suburbs and our houses are a completely artificial environment. I lay cockroach baits. I do not see this as hypocrisy. Cockroaches are in no danger of even being locally scarce, let alone endangered. There is no bycatch to speak of, and we are not pulling their legs off and leaving them to starve, so what's your point? If Cockroaches were scarce and in danger of extinction, that might be different, but they breed so fast they have all the good jobs in Canberra now.
Ah... "intellectual snobs", is it? Namecalling is not nice. What if I were to characterise those opposed as neanderthal dumbarses? See? Doesn't advance the argument at all, does it? Now stop it. Try to spend some energy elaborating on your points a bit.
I usually find people who use the "intellectual snobs" line tend to follow it with an argument maintaining that their ignorance is as good as someone else's knowledge.
Cull is 1) ineffective
2) expensive
3) wasteful
4) not well thought out in terms of impact or alternatives
5) a sop to those of the voting public "want something done": cheap votes.
#107
Posted 22 February 2014 - 04:31 AM
#108
Posted 02 March 2014 - 04:58 PM
Unfortunately our brain hasn't evolved with our physical evolution over the many thousands of years because we still think like a Neanderthal. Anything that we don't understand or that gets in our way, our first reaction is to CRUSH, KILL and DESTROY. It doesn't help when our leader is one (Neanderthal) as a lot just play follow the leader. Good on you Colin you know best GRUNT, GRUNT, GRUNT ( that's neanderthal for ) YOU GREAT WHITE DICKHEAD.
#110
Posted 03 March 2014 - 01:42 AM
Looks just like the little tosser.
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