On the rest of Walter Starck's flawed argument. Note that there is not a single argument there that stands up to any scrutiny.
http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1168478179/54#54Japan, through the leverage of aid assistance to small island states, may find enough supporting votes to overturn the prohibition.Australia does the same thing. This is not a valid reason to ban whaling anyway. The method of obtainaing or rpeventing the ban is a totally separate issue from whether the ban is justified.
The research is in fact nothing more than the routine data gathering that was conducted during decades of commercial whaling and the catch is still sold commercially. The only real difference is a reduced kill which they now wish to expand.
Again, not a reason to justify the ban. It is a purely technical issue, and technically the Japanese are allowed to.
The economics of whaling are marginal in terms of employment, profit, and contribution to GDP.Not a valid reason to interefere with Japan by banning whaling. This is like Japan arguing we should ban farming in Australia because it is subsidised.
The product plays no significant cultural role beyond prestigious consumption. This is so not a valid argument. It's like arguing we should ban expensive sports cars. We have to justify the cultural imperialism. The Japanese do not have to justify theuir culture to us.
The determined effort to pursue whaling despite disapproval from all of the other major nations appears to be nothing more than recalcitrance in response to external disapproval.Argumentum ad populum. Not a valid argument.
While debate has raged over things such as population sizes, recruitment, sustainable yield and broader ecological effects there is a conspicuous silence on the most blatantly obvious issue of all. It almost appears there is some unspoken taboo on any mention of the ethics of whaling. Conspicuous silence? He must ahve his head in the sand. These days it's all about ethics, not sustainability.
Whales and dolphin are sentient beings.Then so are pigs.
Killing them is on a par with killing members of our own species.Then the same with pigs.
They have complex social relationships.So do pigs.
They treat us with a level of respect and curiosity unequalled by other wild creatures.crap.
Those who have worked closely with them are universally impressed with their intelligence, inventiveness, playfulness and ability to communicate among themselves.Plenty of people feel the same way about pigs and cows.
Any burden of proof must lie with the disbelievers.We don't have to prove anything, because the right lies with the whalers. This line of argument would ban the harvest of all animals.
To slaughter them as prestige food or routine data gathering is unconscionable. A senior Japanese delegate to the IWC has publicly referred to minke whales as "cockroaches of the sea", an attitude eerily reminiscent of other perpetrators of genocide. Pure fluff.
Recent surveys indicate that while 75% of Japanese support a return to commercial whaling the majority of their young people are opposed to it.Argumentum ad populum.
Politeness in the face atrocity is a form of complicity.Circular argument. He ahs to prove it is an atrocity first (and stope ating bacon).
It is time to call it what it is. Whaling is purely and simply murderRemind you of PETA at all? "Meat is murder"?????
The International Fund for Animal Welfare estimates that this year some 10 million whale watchers will spend over US$1 billion on tours, travel, food and accommodation in 87 countries.Not a valid argument. This is like saying we should ban fishing because scuba diving is so valuable. They are not mutually exclusive.