Thursday, 31 January 2008
Ex-Ministers get the begging bowl out
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
Japanese whaling fleet's false advertising
With both protest vessels returning to port, Japan's whalers are now free to resume the whale kill.
"Greenpeace claimed its actions had saved more than 100 whales by effectively rendering the rest of the Japanese fleet impotent. "Without the factory ship, the remaining hunter vessels have been unable to operate, bringing the entire whaling programme to a halt," it said.
It estimated that the whalers needed to catch about nine minke whales a day, and an endangered fin whale every other day, to meet its quota of 835 minkes and 50 fins by the time the hunt ends in mid-April.
Though commercial whaling was banned in 1986 Japan is permitted to conduct annual culls for what it describes as cetacean research.
The campaigners' exit from the southern ocean whale sanctuary will allow Japan's six-vessel fleet to resume the cull within days.
The Oceanic Viking, an Australian coastguard ship that was dispatched to collect evidence for a possible legal challenge to the annual slaughter, is still tracking the fleet but will not attempt to frustrate the whalers."
Guardian Unlimited yesterday:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jan/29/whaling.conservation
Exactly who did the Northern Rivers Area Health Service consult with before deciding on 'surge' beds?
Exit polls: Obama campaign sends another email to Oz
- 55% of the total vote, more than twice as many votes as any other candidate
- 57% of voters who had never voted in a primary
- 66% of voters who had never voted before at all
- Every type of community -- urban, suburban, and rural
- 58% of voters between ages 18 and 64
- 67% of voters between ages 18 and 29
The Liberal Party of Australia now a dying duck
Tuesday, 29 January 2008
hen house thoughts
I was over in the hen house talking to the chooks as I cleaned the roosts and nest boxes.
There were only a few still in the yard the rest were out chasing grasshoppers.
The gang of five were planning their next attack on my vegie garden, I saw a couple head of to the house verandas where they sit on the chairs and listen to the radio (they prefer ABC Classics Radio).
I hope I remembered to shut the house doors. If not they will be inside on the lounge or in the kitchen checking out the compost bucket.
The hens with me in the roosts were the tribal elders; if they were human they would have received the telegram from the Queen years ago. These girls don't travel very far from their home now, they are quite dignified in their movements no flapping and squawking for these old birds.
I babbled on about global warming, explaining to them that if the worst case scenario came to pass we will be sitting on beach front property with large areas of the Clarence Valley water logged and what that would mean for the people who live there.
They listened politely adding a few muted clucks while inspecting my cleaning efforts, then got busy arranging the new nest bedding.
As I walked back to the house I thought that the hens had the right idea, it is no use worrying about what you can't change.
You do what you can and clean up your local chook yard and pressure those in power to take their share of responsibility, all the while remembering the way you decide to live your life has a direct impact on our environment and therefore the planet.