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#11
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
The game never ends, when, KrakAttiK 's
whole world depends, on the turn of a friendly card: On Sat, 17 Apr 2004 19:36:13 GMT, tsarkon wrote: Seals make tasty meals and I look forward to consuming many of them this season. Keep supporting the cull and you might find that's all you're left to eat if the world boycotts CA. I wrote a letter to Newfoundland about this very thing and they were very helpful. I don't like these namby-pamby sealskin coats that are all nice and fluffy. I dress in my own punk style. They had a special coat made up for me out of some old boiler of a Cod Inhaler they ran over with a boat [& shot several times] It is absolutely Bee-youti- Full! It has propeellor lacerations and more bullet holes than Sonny Corleone. Hip & Punk, that coat has it all! Cheerio Yes they are good too. |
#12
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
You annal *******s have probably never been outside the urban life you
live. Stay in England where you belong. Because of you we have no more Cod. KrakAttiK wrote: http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=21446 Saving Harp Seals The Canadian government has announced plans to expand the seal hunt and permit the deliberate culling of nearly one million seals over three years... the highest level of government-sanctioned cruelty to seals since the 1960s. IFAW led the campaign to "Save the Seals" in the 1970's. Now we need your help to stop this latest attack on defenseless seal pups. IFAW Takes Action to End the Hunt The seal hunt starts this week and IFAW is on the ice. Read our field notes and view our photos and footage each day. Find out how you can help stop the cruelty. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=82073 Seal hunt facts Learn more about government-sanctioned cruelty in the seal hunt. And how you can save defenseless pups from suffering. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=82078 Latest News Click here to read the latest news on our campaign, in Canada and around the world. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=84957 Seal Images and Video: from the IFAW Archives Feel free to use photos and videos from IFAW's archives to decorate your desktop and help put an end to the seal hunt in Canada. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=33930 Sign our "Million Signatures for a Million Seals" Petition http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=85044 The Canadian government's plan to deliberately cull the harp seal herd has no scientific justification and is out of step with modern science. Sign our petition to call for an end to this cruel hunt. PETITION TO THE CANADIAN HOUSE OF COMMONS I, the undersigned, am deeply opposed to Canada’s plan to slaughter nearly one million seals over a three-year period - the highest quota in history. The vast majority of these animals (95%) are just days or weeks old and continuing to ignore the cruelty and waste inherent in this industry is simply unacceptable. Please act immediately to end this abuse and repair the damage to Canada's reputation as a humane and ecologically responsible society. Cheerio |
#13
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
You anal *******s have probably never been outside the urban life you
live. Stay in England where you belong. Because of you we have no more Cod. KrakAttiK wrote: http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=21446 Saving Harp Seals The Canadian government has announced plans to expand the seal hunt and permit the deliberate culling of nearly one million seals over three years... the highest level of government-sanctioned cruelty to seals since the 1960s. IFAW led the campaign to "Save the Seals" in the 1970's. Now we need your help to stop this latest attack on defenseless seal pups. IFAW Takes Action to End the Hunt The seal hunt starts this week and IFAW is on the ice. Read our field notes and view our photos and footage each day. Find out how you can help stop the cruelty. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=82073 Seal hunt facts Learn more about government-sanctioned cruelty in the seal hunt. And how you can save defenseless pups from suffering. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=82078 Latest News Click here to read the latest news on our campaign, in Canada and around the world. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=84957 Seal Images and Video: from the IFAW Archives Feel free to use photos and videos from IFAW's archives to decorate your desktop and help put an end to the seal hunt in Canada. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=33930 Sign our "Million Signatures for a Million Seals" Petition http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=85044 The Canadian government's plan to deliberately cull the harp seal herd has no scientific justification and is out of step with modern science. Sign our petition to call for an end to this cruel hunt. PETITION TO THE CANADIAN HOUSE OF COMMONS I, the undersigned, am deeply opposed to Canada’s plan to slaughter nearly one million seals over a three-year period - the highest quota in history. The vast majority of these animals (95%) are just days or weeks old and continuing to ignore the cruelty and waste inherent in this industry is simply unacceptable. Please act immediately to end this abuse and repair the damage to Canada's reputation as a humane and ecologically responsible society. Cheerio |
#14
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
You anal *******s have probably never been outside the urban life you
live. Stay in England where you belong. Because of you we have no more Cod. KrakAttiK wrote: http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=21446 Saving Harp Seals The Canadian government has announced plans to expand the seal hunt and permit the deliberate culling of nearly one million seals over three years... the highest level of government-sanctioned cruelty to seals since the 1960s. IFAW led the campaign to "Save the Seals" in the 1970's. Now we need your help to stop this latest attack on defenseless seal pups. IFAW Takes Action to End the Hunt The seal hunt starts this week and IFAW is on the ice. Read our field notes and view our photos and footage each day. Find out how you can help stop the cruelty. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=82073 Seal hunt facts Learn more about government-sanctioned cruelty in the seal hunt. And how you can save defenseless pups from suffering. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=82078 Latest News Click here to read the latest news on our campaign, in Canada and around the world. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=84957 Seal Images and Video: from the IFAW Archives Feel free to use photos and videos from IFAW's archives to decorate your desktop and help put an end to the seal hunt in Canada. http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=33930 Sign our "Million Signatures for a Million Seals" Petition http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=85044 The Canadian government's plan to deliberately cull the harp seal herd has no scientific justification and is out of step with modern science. Sign our petition to call for an end to this cruel hunt. PETITION TO THE CANADIAN HOUSE OF COMMONS I, the undersigned, am deeply opposed to Canada’s plan to slaughter nearly one million seals over a three-year period - the highest quota in history. The vast majority of these animals (95%) are just days or weeks old and continuing to ignore the cruelty and waste inherent in this industry is simply unacceptable. Please act immediately to end this abuse and repair the damage to Canada's reputation as a humane and ecologically responsible society. Cheerio |
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
"KrakAttiK" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Apr 2004 19:36:13 GMT, tsarkon wrote: Seals make tasty meals and I look forward to consuming many of them this season. Keep supporting the cull and you might find that's all you're left to eat if the world boycotts CA. Thanks to ******s like you, I have choosen not to go on vacation in the Great "Hypocrite" Britian region. Instead, I will stay in Canada, and spend my money here... Honestly, having walked this earth more then once, the Brits are as arrogant and ignorant as the Americans anyways, I'm much happier here. The money saved I will take a longer vacation in Asia later this year... Maybe I will snack on some dog or cat while I'm there. Cheerio -- To avoid grizzlies, the Alaska Department of Fish & Game advises hikers to wear noisy little bells on clothes and carry pepper spray. Also watch for signs of activity: Black bear scat is smaller and contains berries; grizzly scat has little bells in it and smells like pepper. |
#16
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
"KrakAttiK" wrote in message ... http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=21446 Saving Harp Seals Fri, April 16, 2004 The slaughter of the truth By MICHAEL HARRIS -- For the Ottawa Sun Not much has changed since that brilliant March day back in 1981 on the St. John's waterfront when Captain Morrissey Johnson threw a Greenpeace demonstrator off the deck of the Lady Johnson before setting sail for the annual Newfoundland seal hunt. I can still hear the smack. The young lady hit the wharf with a thud heard around the world. The crowd of Newfoundlanders cheered lustily. They were there for the traditional blessing of the fleet, wishing safe passage for their "swilers" and they didn't appreciate the international condemnation and humiliation that the "come-from-aways" were dishing out. What their urban denouncers did not know is that many of the people on the dock that day had lost family members in the annual trek to the hunt which had been going on since 1800. In the 19th century, the seal hunt, then a land-based harvest, accounted for a staggering one-third of Newfoundland's exports. Much of the island's history has been written in human blood in the twin quest for cod and seal. To this day, seal flippers are a hot commodity on the St. John's waterfront every spring, the main ingredient in flipper pie. Newfoundland is a place where rural people still have their feed of moose, caribou, seal, ptarmigan, and wild salmon according to the season. There are no sushi restaurants in places like Harbour Grace, Twillingate, or Harbour Breton. But there is the land and sea and everything in them. All these years later, emotions are still running high. In the United Kingdom, the Independent made the seal hunt its lead story under the headline, "The Bloody Slaughter." Even the BBC intoned that up to 350,000 "baby seals" would be killed this season, a gross distortion of the facts. And so the standoff continues. Newfoundlanders sorely resent their vilification by animal rights activists and the protesters continue to display an appalling ignorance and opportunistic exploitation of the seal hunt. Brigitte Bardot may have been replaced by Paris Hilton as the poster girl of the anti-sealing lobby, but the appeal is unchanged; a triumph of marketing over matter. Forgotten in the bloody pictures of "whitecoats" being clubbed to death is the harsh reality of all animal slaughter. Whether it is chickens in a mass production facility, cattle in a stockyard, or seals on the March ice off Newfoundland's northeast coast, there is nothing pleasant about the commercial harvesting of any living creature for human consumption -- regardless of what part is being consumed. Most of our urban kill floors are dark inner sanctums the public never gets to see. The great difference in the seal hunt is that it is an outdoor abattoir operation involving wild animals. The blood that is spilled is there for all to see. The impact is gruesome enough against the dazzling white snow and ice, but when you depict the slaughter of a baby seal that looks more like a stuffed toy than a creature in the wild it is emotionally devastating. It was largely because of that horrific image that the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) was able to raise $80 million a year to fund their anti-seal hunt protests in the 1980s -- an amount six times greater than the entire budget of the Newfoundland Fisheries Department to run an industry and fight back against well-financed detractors. Newfoundlanders are appalled by the hypocrisy factor. The French could force-feed geese to bloat their livers for foie gras, calves could be dispatched by the thousands for their livers and veal cutlets, lambs could be butchered for their prized rack, and cattle might be dismembered alive on slaughterhouse assembly lines, but there weren't many photo ops (or for that matter photographers), for those far vaster but largely accepted varieties of death on wheels. The icefields are another matter. Protesters documented, and in some cases, orchestrated, the most horrific images imaginable in which Newfoundlanders came across as sadistic brutes who routinely skinned baby seals alive for fun and profit. The protesters were so good at public relations that by 1983 the large-vessel seal hunt in Newfoundland was closed as country after country, including the United States, caved in to Greenpeace and the IFAW and banned the sale of seal products within their borders. More importantly, the real poster star of the anti-sealing campaign, the cute and cuddly whitecoat, has not been hunted since 1987, when it was given legal protection by the federal government -- protection that extends to this day. Yet when the Department of Fisheries and Oceans sanctioned this year's cull of 300,000 harp seals, the anti-sealing lobby reproduced pictures of the same animals that are no longer being hunted to condemn a practice that they have seriously distorted and never understood. The U.S.-based Humane Society is taking full-page ads in big American newspapers to urge a travel boycott on Canada -- the same group that was silent on the destruction of migratory salmon stocks at the hands of U.S. fishermen. The successful closing down of the annual seal hunt has been devastating to coastal communities in Newfoundland. Traditionally, the hunt provided fishermen with their first cash of the year and a means of outfitting themselves for the new fishing season. Since 1992, when the cod fishery was closed because of gross human overfishing, the intervention on behalf of the harp and hooded seal has led to an explosion in the size of their herds at the worst possible moment. In 1983, when the commercial hunt was closed, there were 3.1 million harp seals and roughly 450,000 hooded seals. Today, the herd has doubled in size, and that is bad news for Newfoundland's decimated cod stocks. Seals are prodigious feeders. They eat fish to the tune of 6% of their body weight per day. Although cod comprise only 3% of the seal's diet, the size of the herd has a deadly multiplier effect. In 1994, seals consumed 88,000 metric tonnes of cod off Newfoundland's northeast coast, compared to just 24,000 tonnes caught by the commercial fishery in the last year of the cod fishery before the closure. The grim fact comes down to this: Whether seals eat juvenile cod (38,000 fish to the tonne) or the cod's favorite food, caplin, they have a profound effect on the ocean's food web when their numbers are very high and the northern cod has been all but wiped out. Protecting one animal in the ocean's ecosystem without understanding the impact of the intervention on others is not compassion but tampering. For years, the sorcerer's apprentice has been loose on the Grand Banks. Perhaps that is why Greenpeace, traditionally a vocal opponent of the hunt, has decided not to campaign against the cull this year. Did the seals wipe out the northern cod? No, man did. Is every part of the seal hunt noble? Of course not. The harvesting of animals for their penises which are a hot aphrodisiac in China, is deplorable. (The practice has been banned.) But for the 11,000 Newfoundlanders who still get an important part of their income from today's limited seal hunt, they are not there to feed China's erotic fantasies or skin baby animals alive. They are there to cling to their bald rock and make a living with what's at hand, just as they've always done. Within the regulations of the hunt and the fiats of basic humanity, they should be left alone to do it. |
#17
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
tsarkon wrote in message news:NGfgc.147429$Pk3.92697@pd7tw1no...
Seals make tasty meals and I look forward to consuming many of them this season. A-MEN! There is nothing so stimulating and satisfying as fresh killed wild meat, whether its any one of a hundred species of fish, duck or goose, or whether its whale, deer, kangaroo, impala, springbok or pig. Leave the grain stuffed tasteless beef and pork for the weak of stomach, give me wild meat any day. Oh yeah, meat eaters are better lovers. |
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
"Andy" wrote in message . au...
"KrakAttiK" wrote in message ... | http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=21446 | | Saving Harp Seals Hey ****-wit. they dont kill baby harp seals. Eben the National Geographic says so. I have seen you retards using those picture from the 70s still. I am going to Canada for skiing. Bugger the skiing. That's like being a heroin addict on ice. Climb up high, then slide back down again. I'm going to Canada to do some serious hunting. Nothing like a Caribou steak on a cold Canadain winter night, washed down with a bottle of a good dry red wine. |
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
"William J. Wolfe" wrote in message om... | "Andy" wrote in message . au... | "KrakAttiK" wrote in message | ... | | http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=21446 | | | | Saving Harp Seals | | Hey ****-wit. they dont kill baby harp seals. Eben the National Geographic | says so. | | I have seen you retards using those picture from the 70s still. | | I am going to Canada for skiing. | | Bugger the skiing. That's like being a heroin addict on ice. Climb up | high, then slide back down again. | | I'm going to Canada to do some serious hunting. Nothing like a Caribou | steak on a cold Canadain winter night, washed down with a bottle of a | good dry red wine. Sauteered in baby harp oils, with a dash of crispy dolphin skin? |
#20
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IFAW - Saving Harp Seals
"William J. Wolfe" wrote in message
om... .. Oh yeah, meat eaters are better lovers. - Interesting that you should feel a need to point that out. .. '.. a high level of total cholesterol and a low level of high density lipoprotein cholesterol are important risk factors for erectile dysfunction. ' http://aje.oupjournals.org/cgi/conte...act/140/10/930 'Researchers have established that though erections can be inspired by everything under the sun, ultimately they depend on blood flow. And, just as blockages in the arteries to the heart can cause a heart attack and choked-off blood to the brain can lead to a stroke, when the arteries to the genitals are clogged, that part of the body will not work so well either. When the arteries are impeded only slightly, it takes longer to get an erection. As the obstruction worsens, complete impotence occurs. By age 60, this affects one in four American men. The bad news is that artery blockages, a major cause of erectile dysfunction, are strongly linked to one of America's most popular food categories-meat. The good news is that such blockages can be prevented, and even reversed, by changes in diet and lifestyle. Breakthrough research by Dean Ornish, M.D., at the University of California-San Francisco showed that a combination of a low-fat vegetarian diet, moderate exercise, stress management, and no smoking lets the arteries begin to clean themselves out in 82 percent of patients. Many of the other factors contributing to impotence, including diabetes, obesity, and hypertension, can also be influenced by a menu change. Side effects from various medications are another root cause of impotence. In fact, two of the worst culprits are blood pressure pills and cholesterol-lowering drugs, both prescribed for conditions that could be dramatically improved by a vegetarian diet. With the right food and exercise, many men can cut back on, and even discontinue, drug therapy. ...' http://www.pcrm.org/health/Commentar...ntary9806.html |
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