Sunday, 10 February 2008
Whale meat market stagnates in Japan but still it hunts in the Southern Ocean
Asahi.com reported the following yesterday.
"Japan's research whaling has long been criticized from around the world as commercial whaling in disguise. Now, research whaling faces a domestic blow--stagnant sales of whale meat."
It went on to say that despite an increase in whale kill numbers and the amount of whale meat supplied to the domestic market jumping by 30% between 2005-2006, the Japanese Government sponsored Institute for Cetacean Research (ICR) had to reduce it's wholesale whale meat price by 20%.
The Institute now appears to be seriously in debt to the Government.
The Japan Times online also featured an article yesterday condemning the current practice of killing whale calves and lactating females.
While the European Union, never happy with Japan's 2008 whale kill quota increase, has now called for a unified stance on whaling.
The current state of play is that the population of Japan is not regularly eating whale meat even with a price decrease and lethal 'scientific' research is not financially viable in its own right.
So why does Japan continue its annual lethal research in the Southern Ocean, when non-lethal methodology is likely to cost less and be just as effective?
Why does the Japanese Government continue to allow and subsidise a whale hunt which is not paying its way and reimbursing grants given to ICR ?
If whale meat is not enjoying high sales for domestic human consumption, where is this whale meat going? Is it being stockpiled or is it being converted into pet food?
Estimates of the annual worth of the whale meat industry show that someone's making an end product profit, but who?
Australia and the rest of the world deserve an answer from the Government of Japan.
Two Australians go to court to censor Google but dynamic Internet beats them
Two South Yarra real estate agents, from the firm Castran Gilbert, are suing Google for the removal of allegedly defamatory material (concerning that firm's agent dealings with a single disabled person) shown on the results page when using an ordinary Google search.
Google Inc. has since denied public access via it's search engine to the primary material/article.
Until these men went to court I had never heard of any person connected with this court case.
However my curiosity was piqued. I found that typing one name into the search box and three mouse clicks yielded a result. I was able to read the entire original article from a secondary source.
Thus proving that i) the real estate agents have unnecessarily highlighted the alleged defamation they want suppressed and ii) the Internet is so large and dynamic that it is almost impossible to remove any information once it is posted.
I guess the last laugh belongs to the original article's author.
Labels:
Australian society,
e-ephemera
Saturday, 9 February 2008
Land
I had reason the other day to pull out the land title deeds for the family farm. It is a Torrens title, a very common form of land deed in Australia. It contains such things as the address and a description of the land in the form of lot/ section/plan.
On looking out my window I reflected on how little of what was written on that piece of paper was actually related to what I was seeing before me, and decided that it is an artificial construct that relates to our society rather than the land itself.
My grandson had excitedly told me that dinosaurs had walked here, I couldn't argue with that.
This got me to thinking about ownership in our society. How could anyone claim definitive ownership of land or any object that was there before they were a twinkle in their father's and mother's eyes, and will be there generations after they have gone.
Perhaps in the light of what we are finding our about the planet, life systems, greenhouse problems etc, we should re-think our language and our use of it.
I think stewardship might be a better word and concept suited to our times. This has rights attached to it as well as responsibilities.
I for one am aiming to hand this small plot on to future generations with the best biodiversity of native flora and fauna I can and still be economically viable. I am amazed at the number of people who believe that the society they live in and its economy have nothing to do with the environment that supports them. Who don't understand that if that fails so do they. Perhaps I should spend less time on the tractor, it gives you too much time to think.
On looking out my window I reflected on how little of what was written on that piece of paper was actually related to what I was seeing before me, and decided that it is an artificial construct that relates to our society rather than the land itself.
My grandson had excitedly told me that dinosaurs had walked here, I couldn't argue with that.
This got me to thinking about ownership in our society. How could anyone claim definitive ownership of land or any object that was there before they were a twinkle in their father's and mother's eyes, and will be there generations after they have gone.
Perhaps in the light of what we are finding our about the planet, life systems, greenhouse problems etc, we should re-think our language and our use of it.
I think stewardship might be a better word and concept suited to our times. This has rights attached to it as well as responsibilities.
I for one am aiming to hand this small plot on to future generations with the best biodiversity of native flora and fauna I can and still be economically viable. I am amazed at the number of people who believe that the society they live in and its economy have nothing to do with the environment that supports them. Who don't understand that if that fails so do they. Perhaps I should spend less time on the tractor, it gives you too much time to think.
Labels:
Australian society,
environment,
rural affairs
Only the rich and trendy eat whale meat in Japan?
Although support for whaling is still strong in Japan according to a recent telephone survey conducted by Asahi Shimbun, the younger generation is not as enthusiastic.
"Consumption of whale meat has decreased to 30 grams (one ounce) per person -- equivalent to a slice of sashimi -- compared with 2.5 kilograms (five and a half pounds) in the early 1980s."
This domestic consumption had in fact been dropping well before the 1980s and the introduction of the international ban on commercial whaling.
Among Japanese restauranters the enthusiasm for whale meals has been tempered by the fact that whale meat has not been available to ordinary people for a long time and many have not tasted whale meat.
It has been reported that Japan's whale meat industry generated the equivalent of around AUS $74 million annually by 2006.
Either this is making for incredibly expensive meals that only the rich can afford or whale meat and by-product are being used by industry for other purposes - pet food perhaps?
Might be time for those with companion animals to contact Australian pet food companies and seek assurances that they are not buying generic seafood product from Japan to include in local cat and dog food.
Will Rudd's razor gang rein-in ASIO's building plans?
Somewhere on the national books there appears to be a plan to supply ASIO and ONA with a new building to the tune of an estimated $460 million.
The spooks are not exactly living in squalor at present, so will Rudd and Tanner put this new building on hold for a year or two as they try to rein-in government spending?
I'm one voter who fervently hopes so.
Why would ASIO need extra office space anyway? When they assist with common law kidnapping they are more likely to use public parks and private homes, according to court records.
Labels:
federal government,
politics
Kevin Rudd returns to NSW North Coast to inspect flood damage
Having Labor's Justine Elliot and Janelle Saffin as federal MPs for Richmond and Page seems to be paying dividends.
Kevin Rudd has again visited the North Coast and yesterday, as Prime Minister, he inspected flood damage in the Kyogle area.
Locals are hopeful that this on-the-spot look around will result in more funding for flood damage repairs to infrastructure, roads and businesses.
With Elliot and Saffin on the case I expect a shoe-in. On ya!
Kevin Rudd has again visited the North Coast and yesterday, as Prime Minister, he inspected flood damage in the Kyogle area.
Locals are hopeful that this on-the-spot look around will result in more funding for flood damage repairs to infrastructure, roads and businesses.
With Elliot and Saffin on the case I expect a shoe-in. On ya!
Friday, 8 February 2008
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