Are you aware of how controversial whaling is internationally? Do you realise that Greenpeace campaigns heavily on the issue in Australia in order to take advantage of latent racism and our hip pockets, while barely mentioning it in Europe where it would lose them donations and where the locals kill more whales than the Japanese, completely ignoring IWC rules? How seriously do you expect other cultures to oppose Japan's right to eat whatever animals it wants? They have more to fear that we will arbitrarily object to something they do. The Indians would never consider imposing their taboo on beef on the rest of the world. The Koreans are sick of 'morally superior' westerners harassing them for eating dog. The Chinese are sick of us telling them they can't skin minks. The Canadians are sick ignorant Americans telling them they can't kill seals. How much do you think the rest of the world cares what we think, other than for something to laugh at?
http://www.ozpolitic.com/sustainability-party/why-allow-whaling.html#embarrassin...
Anti-whalers could board Japanese shipshttp://news.smh.com.au/antiwhalers-could-board-japanese-ships/20080224-1ucy.html
Anti-whaling campaigners chasing down the Japanese whaling fleet in Antarctic waters "were ready to be hauled back to Japan if that's what it took", protest leader Paul Watson said.
Seventeen Australian volunteers are among a crew of 33 on board the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (SSCS) vessel Steve Irwin, which is tailing Japanese harpoon vessels 3,630km south of Fremantle, WA.
Captain Watson said on Sunday the Japanese had successfully been chased out of Australian Antarctic territorial waters and a boarding party was again being prepared to deliver new protest papers to the Japanese crew of the Yushin Maru No 2.
"We have succeeded in chasing them out of Australian territorial waters and as long as we continue to stay on their tail they will not be able to kill any more whales, which is exactly why we're down here," Capt Watson told AAP via satellite phone.
"We will continue to keep on chasing them for the next three weeks - we have enough fuel and food to be able to stay the distance.
"Before long, they will have to call it a day and head back to Japan, certainly by mid-March as the sea and weather conditions will be too bad by then."
Anti-whaling push gets one million nodshttp://news.smh.com.au/antiwhaling-push-gets-one-million-nods/20080225-1umo.html
A Victorian man has collected one million signatures on his online anti-whaling petition.
Patrick Bonello reached this target on Saturday, exactly two years after starting up the Whales Revenge website in 2006.
Japan's whalers on the run: activistshttp://news.smh.com.au/japans-whalers-on-the-run-activists/20080225-1uky.html
Japan's whaling fleet is on the run and desperate to avoid any international legal problems, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (SSCS) says.
The anti-whaling group's main protest ship, the Steve Irwin, is continuing to chase the seven-vessel Japanese fleet through squally seas 200 nautical miles (370km) north of Australian Antarctic territorial waters, about 3,200km south of Western Australia.
Captain Paul Watson, master of the Steve Irwin, said he was confident the Japanese would fail to meet even half their quota before having to return home by mid-March.
"I'd be surprised if they have taken more than 400 whales by the time they return home.
"I think they're also a bit worried about the legality of staying in Australian waters to harpoon whales, especially if they tried to detain our people or take them back to Japan."
Whalers move back into Australian watershttp://news.smh.com.au/whalers-move-back-into-australian-waters/20080226-1utc.html
The Japanese whaling fleet has moved back into Australian territorial waters, sparking a call from the anti-whaling protest ship, Steve Irwin, for the Australian government to move in.
The captain of the Steve Irwin, Paul Watson, says the Japanese have moved back into the "Australian economic zone" but have not taken any whales for the past four days.
Activists have 'bugged' whaling shipshttp://news.smh.com.au/activists-have-bugged-whaling-ships/20080226-1utc.html
Anti-whaling activists say they've bugged "several" Japanese whaling ships, allowing them to track the fleet's location for at least another year.
Activists from the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (SSCS) claim to have hidden devices on a number of whaling vessels, including the harpoon vessel Yushin Maru 2 which was boarded by two protesters last month.
Sea Shepherd leader Paul Watson said only that the bug was planted when the two men climbed aboard the ship to deliver a protest letter, not that they had personally stashed the device.
Other bugs - of the type normally used to track migrating animals in the wild - were aboard other vessels in the whaling fleet, Watson said.
The bugs had already been used to lead the Sea Shepherd's protest vessel, the Steve Irwin, back to the whalers after a refuelling stop in Melbourne, he said.
"The batteries are good for another year," Watson said.