Moderators: chossmonkey, Dom, granite_grrl
adam wrote:Fred wrote:I didn't mean we should save the humans. I meant that people who say they want to save the environment should be saying they want to save humans. Because it's not the environment they want to save it's their life. Every human is selfish by nature. Saving the environment is for their own benefit.
although i agree humans are selfish by nature, using that as an excuse is a cop out.
of course saving the environment will benefit us. use whatever reason you need to to give yourself motivation.
The Teth wrote:Hey, if they had banned dragging (for fish...scallops might be a different matter) it would have hurt the big corporations and a small amount of fisherman, but 95% of fishermen would not have been effected and there would still be cod. The problem was that dragging killed the fishes food. Long lining and the inshore fishery would have been much more sustainable.
martha wrote:Baby steps. and we are making them. quotas are a good step in the rigth direction.
The Mitt wrote: I feel much dumber having read this thread!!!
adam wrote:and regardless of whether you will take offense cara, dragging IS BAD. anyone who SCUBA dives and has come across a dragging swath can see just how devastating it is. it is like clearcutting the bottom of the oceans. except loggers usually tend to leave the odd tree to reseed the area. nothing is left behind after a dragger goes by.
just because dragging provided food for yours and many other families isn't a reason to allow it to go on. there ARE other ways.... but like teth pointed out in making it easier to follow the 'right' way by making the 'wrong' way too costly, there simply haven't been enough pressures from legislation and enforcement to push the scallop fishery to find other means.
granite_grrl wrote:Didn't get a chance to read every post in detail, but I wanted to add this little bit.
I just finished an interesting book by Daniel Quinn called Story of B. In it it makes that point that this world isn't going to be saved by programs, it's going to be saved by a change in the way people think.
There are a ton of other things that the book discusses, and I wish I could do them justice in this post, but I doubt I can. I'll just recomend it here. I don't know if I totally agree with everything in it, but its a great book for a new view on things
Any one else read it?
Rebecca
The Mitt wrote:What does this beautiful flowers have to do with climbing? If a moderator was to do his/her job this whole thread would be locked. Don't you think we have gone away from the main topic at hand, I mean jeez flaming people was more interesting reading than thoughts from abunch of people trying to sound enlightened. God I'm going to puke!!! I feel much dumber having read this thread!!!
Sean
the 'big corporations' only came in to play in the last 20 years. the smaller fisherman have been offshore cod fishing for hundreds of years. lets not place all the blame on the corporations.
Blame can't really be placed on either. a hundred years ago, no one thought that we'd deplete the cod stocks. And once we found out or realized it, you can't just pull the lively hood away from thousands of families?
however, You can not cut fishermen or farmers or miners or foresters out cold turkey. Like...."I'm sorry Mr. fisherman, what you do is BAD for the environment, you have to stop now, find a better way to do what you are doing or do something else". That won't work. and won't happen.
The Teth wrote:I do not see a good alterative for scallops.
adam wrote:furthermore, all the fishermen who have their draggers taken away from them can learn to dive for a living...
and a single dragger could probably harvest 10 times the number of scallop per person involved vs having to dive for them. so look at the job creation possibilities!
adam wrote:yah, cause fishermen are too dumb and out of shape to learn how to swim...
there's nothing unrealistic about people learning to dive. and besides, the divers would still need people to tend the boats they were diving from.
adam wrote:\
if potatoe farmers discovered that their harvesters were destroying the land and the survival of the very crop they depended on, then yah, i'd say they'd be willing to pick them by hand.
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