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Personally, I wouldn't mind trying whale meat.
Likewise. I guess it's cause it's something unique. Or that ~forbidden fruit~ deal that attracts the tongue.

I don't think people really have much of a problem with eating whale, but just everything leading up to it. The way they're hunted and killed and their endangered status do cause some concern.

Or maybe society just has a problem with eating mammalian marine life. Does anyone ever eat dolphin? o.o
 
I don't think people really have much of a problem with eating whale, but just everything leading up to it. The way they're hunted and killed and their endangered status do cause some concern.
I agree with you there Amachi. Whale numbers are fast declining. We really should do something to save them actually.
 
Whales are on the decrease, so? Cod is rapidly vanishing due to massive overfishing, it is probably the most widely used/eaten fish.
 
I agree with you there Amachi. Whale numbers are fast declining. We really should do something to save them actually.
Well, there has been numerous attempts to get their numbers up, hence the worldwide ban on whaling (to which not every country complies with, but nyeh).
Whales are on the decrease, so? Cod is rapidly vanishing due to massive overfishing, it is probably the most widely used/eaten fish.
Funnily/sadly enough, you're right. I remember hearing something about that a while ago, but I ain't sure if anything was being done about it. It'd be in the best interest of the industries to protect them though, as if they were to disappear, they'd get no more money. Same goes for whales in a way - whale watching is lucrative somewhat.

And then you got the whole tipping the ecosystem out of balance ordeal, and we don't really want that.
 
Whales are on the decrease, so? Cod is rapidly vanishing due to massive overfishing, it is probably the most widely used/eaten fish.

Bad argument. The amount of whales in total is significantly less than the number of cods. I believe the fallacy in your argument is called 'accident', you have destroyed the exception.

Funnily/sadly enough, you're right.
He isn't.
 
Walks in. " I really think Japan is odd. If you ever went on some sites, you'd see what I mean."
 
Japan is a well known one.

And plus all those countries that voted for Japan at the summit when they were granting the rights to hunt the whales, which if I remember right was last year.
 
Heh, but hey, just think...I'm sure they think the same way about us. :]
 
Bad argument. The amount of whales in total is significantly less than the number of cods. I believe the fallacy in your argument is called 'accident', you have destroyed the exception.

He isn't.
not really. We know that both of these species are at risk, both due to human action, and so the appropriate action should be taken to ensure their survival. Whether or not efforts to protect the Cod population are extreme as those taken to protect whales is to be seen.
Walks in. " I really think Japan is odd. If you ever went on some sites, you'd see what I mean."
Oh yeah, them Pokémon sites are the weirdest >.>
And plus all those countries that voted for Japan at the summit when they were granting the rights to hunt the whales, which if I remember right was last year.
hehe, them countries that supported Japan were mostly poor and developing African nations who supported Japan's bid for the drop on whaling ban in return for aid and assistance, iirc.
 
hehe, them countries that supported Japan were mostly poor and developing African nations who supported Japan's bid for the drop on whaling ban in return for aid and assistance, iirc.

True. They were getting support, but there were a few larger countries too I think.

Hm... I found a list.
JAPAN, Antigua and Barbuda, Benin, Cambodia, Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire, Denmark, Dominica, Gabon, Gambia, Grenada, Guinea, Iceland, Kiribati, South Korea, Mali, Marshall Isl, Mauritania, Mongolia, Morocco, Nauru, Nicaragua, Norway, Palau, Russia, St Kitts & Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent & Grenadines, Senegal, Solomon Isl, Suriname, Togo, Tuvalu.
 
Well, there has been numerous attempts to get their numbers up, hence the worldwide ban on whaling (to which not every country complies with, but nyeh).

Funnily/sadly enough, you're right. I remember hearing something about that a while ago, but I ain't sure if anything was being done about it. It'd be in the best interest of the industries to protect them though, as if they were to disappear, they'd get no more money. Same goes for whales in a way - whale watching is lucrative somewhat.

And then you got the whole tipping the ecosystem out of balance ordeal, and we don't really want that.

Just ban Cod fishing for 20 years, as Haddock and Plaice are both pretty nice substitutes, as is paddock.
 
True. They were getting support, but there were a few larger countries too I think.

Hm... I found a list.
k, so they weren't mostly African nations ^^; But I know that some were supporting the whaling nations in return for international aid.

Norway is a whaling nation though.
Just ban Cod fishing for 20 years, as Haddock and Plaice are both pretty nice substitutes, as is paddock.
See, that's a more extreme course of action ^^; Cod obviously is an important export of many countries, and so a ban on Cod fishing would have a large negative impact upon their economies. It'd be better just to regulate and control Cod fishing, both for their populations and for their respective industries.
 
k, so they weren't mostly African nations ^^; But I know that some were supporting the whaling nations in return for international aid.

Norway is a whaling nation though.

See, that's a more extreme course of action ^^; Cod obviously is an important export of many countries, and so a ban on Cod fishing would have a large negative impact upon their economies. It'd be better just to regulate and control Cod fishing, both for their populations and for their respective industries.

There was a trial ban somewhere for about 10 years and the cod population rocketed up in that area, though no way near enough.
 
Easier said than done. Cod is a huge export for some areas, and banning its harvest would be putting a LOT of fishermen in some areas out of a job. :\ In theory, yeah, it's a simple way to make sure cod population increases but very few places are willing to put a ban in effect since it all but cripples their local economy.

Most places to impose regulations on how much cod can be fished though.
 
k, so they weren't mostly African nations ^^; But I know that some were supporting the whaling nations in return for international aid.

Norway is a whaling nation though.
Iceland is also a whaling nation. Small-scale hunting of small cetaceans is also conducted in St. Lucia, Dominica, and Grenada, while people living in a certain region of St. Vincent and the Grenadines are allowed to kill four humpback whales a year. In Russia, the native people of northeast Siberia are allowed to hunt a certain number of gray whales per year.
 
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