Your Opinion on Whale and Dolphin Hunting

I buy the meat in 5-7kgs slabs.

Kind of too much to do a mink whale spitroast, but if everyone chips in and someone comes early to help welding up the bbq...
 
Man is 3 parts. Body, soul and mind.
Animal is 2 parts. Body and soul.
Man and beast can never be the same.
If numbers of the animal is prospering. Get a quote system and Hunt them.
 
If it is done under regulation who am I to judge them.
 
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Sooo....has anyone started a dolphin hunting outfit yet? :p I want to get my booking in early :sneaky:
 
I won't be booking a dolphin hunt.
 
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I will. Eskimos should totally do the outfitting. How buoy hunting the Amazon? I would use around .300 for dolphin .370 and up to .950 jdj or the old bores (2-8) for whale. Nitro expresses and 50 bmg on the list.
 
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I see the antis have changed the name of the smaller whale: Killer Whale was too adversarial, now they are Orcas- much more politically correct and don't cause a menacing image of the poor misunderstood creatures.
Interestingly "Killer Whales" are in fact not Whales, but Dolphins. They are called Killer whales because they kill Whales, especially the young dependent calves of some of the bigger whales.
 
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I will. Eskimos should totally do the outfitting. How buoy hunting the Amazon? I would use around .300 for dolphin .370 and up to .950 jdj or the old bores (2-8) for whale. Nitro expresses and 50 bmg on the list.
Minkie whale 50mm cannon 25 kg harpoon 100 gram penethride explosive tip ......that is for a six ton whale
 
I was talking about smaller whales and dolphin mainly. Minke Whales are huge like an elephant. The harpoon would be needed for a big whale. Like a minke. Finishing off would be solids in big bores in case still alive. It would need a huge space if it would and could be preserved.
 
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458 win mag 500 gr solids ......never saw one needing finishing ......as the gunner is a master of his art and range is 15m to 25m and a grenade exploding has the desired effect .......

Greener did a brilliant 38sp blank harpoon rifle had one up for sale a while back did not have the money ..........
 
The old saying... better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it. You’re the expert Odinsravin. I trust you. The gunner must’ve been really good at his job
 
Interesting thread JKT.

I have pondered over the issue of Cetacean hunting ever since I started spending most week- ends chasing fish in the Arabian Sea/Indian Ocean about 9 yrs ago. I regularly see many many dolphins, both Bottlenose and Spinner (Spinner -great sight when chasing Tuna as the spinners are a great indicator of Yellowfin, particularly when they are on the hunt. The Tuna and Spinners work together when chasing smaller prey. ) Seen other types of dolphin too but dunno what sort they are.

Have also seen more than a few False Killer Whales (Pilot Whales)

(I have on several occasions seen over 100 sperm whales in a single sighting. (About 50 miles offshore.) Once they - the spermies were clearly panicking. We soon found out why as there were at least two killer whales - Orca )NB Orca is a better name for them as they are not whales but dolphins that kill whales) amongst them (see my previous post on this thread) They - Sperm whales- would have been a piece of cake to shoot. Absolutely no challenge whatsoever. )

Also people pay a lot of money to go out and watch them. A daresay that is worth a damn sight more to local economies / tourist industries than a few dead dolphin on the slab - to those who may try and argue the economics of the matter.

Hunting cetaceans would, after much thought and plenty of observation be a pretty bland affair (unless one was leaping into the water from the bow of a pirogue with a long harpoon, in which case it would be a most skilled and admirable way to hunt - if part of a sustainable fishing village or maybe harpooned from an Inuit kayak in deadly freezing water. Admirable in fact). I have often wondered about having a Greener Harpoon Gun on the boat (al-la Jaws, the movie ) Yes before any one says that it was "Navy Arms", it was but was Greener made and branded Navy arms. It would be easy to shoot a big Whale, the "fun" would begin once harpooned . Probably end up with a busted boat, a few drowned shooters and an injured quarry.. Hardly what I would want to use as an argument against any antis.. Years ago a young man could spend a couple of seasons in the south Atlantic, say South Georgia, and earn enough to set him up for life. Back then we had no Oil out of the ground to grease industry or to fuel lamps. so relied on Spermaceti oil which we no longer need. I don't meet any Victorian ladies wearing whale-bone corsets either.

Maybe when the oil runs out we can go back to hunting whales, but will need to rebuild a few sailing fleets first.

Times are different now. After careful consideration I am all for leaving them well alone.

Are we as a hunting community so short of quarry we need to be shooting Cetaceans? Really?

So my take on it is they wouldn't be much of a challenge from a sporting perspective and whilst I would not be averse to taking a pop, I would probably feel pretty flat afterwards. Akin to shooting a tiger in a zoo.

Just my opinion. As we say, "opinions may vary". By definition it is just an opinion and therefore can be neither right nor wrong.

Aye.
Ade
 
Interesting thread JKT.

I have pondered over the issue of Cetacean hunting ever since I started spending most week- ends chasing fish in the Arabian Sea/Indian Ocean about 9 yrs ago. I regularly see many many dolphins, both Bottlenose and Spinner (Spinner -great sight when chasing Tuna as the spinners are a great indicator of Yellowfin, particularly when they are on the hunt. The Tuna and Spinners work together when chasing smaller prey. ) Seen other types of dolphin too but dunno what sort they are.

Have also seen more than a few False Killer Whales (Pilot Whales)

(I have on several occasions seen over 100 sperm whales in a single sighting. (About 50 miles offshore.) Once they - the spermies were clearly panicking. We soon found out why as there were at least two killer whales - Orca )NB Orca is a better name for them as they are not whales but dolphins that kill whales) amongst them (see my previous post on this thread) They - Sperm whales- would have been a piece of cake to shoot. Absolutely no challenge whatsoever. )

Also people pay a lot of money to go out and watch them. A daresay that is worth a damn sight more to local economies / tourist industries than a few dead dolphin on the slab - to those who may try and argue the economics of the matter.

Hunting cetaceans would, after much thought and plenty of observation be a pretty bland affair (unless one was leaping into the water from the bow of a pirogue with a long harpoon, in which case it would be a most skilled and admirable way to hunt - if part of a sustainable fishing village or maybe harpooned from an Inuit kayak in deadly freezing water. Admirable in fact). I have often wondered about having a Greener Harpoon Gun on the boat (al-la Jaws, the movie ) Yes before any one says that it was "Navy Arms", it was but was Greener made and branded Navy arms. It would be easy to shoot a big Whale, the "fun" would begin once harpooned . Probably end up with a busted boat, a few drowned shooters and an injured quarry.. Hardly what I would want to use as an argument against any antis.. Years ago a young man could spend a couple of seasons in the south Atlantic, say South Georgia, and earn enough to set him up for life. Back then we had no Oil out of the ground to grease industry or to fuel lamps. so relied on Spermaceti oil which we no longer need. I don't meet any Victorian ladies wearing whale-bone corsets either.

Maybe when the oil runs out we can go back to hunting whales, but will need to rebuild a few sailing fleets first.

Times are different now. After careful consideration I am all for leaving them well alone.

Are we as a hunting community so short of quarry we need to be shooting Cetaceans? Really?

So my take on it is they wouldn't be much of a challenge from a sporting perspective and whilst I would not be averse to taking a pop, I would probably feel pretty flat afterwards. Akin to shooting a tiger in a zoo.

Just my opinion. As we say, "opinions may vary". By definition it is just an opinion and therefore can be neither right nor wrong.

Aye.
Ade
I guess it is adventure, cause we’re at sea. Also it seems like interest. Whales may seem lazy, but according to Moby Dick, they’ll unleash hell. Also, we like the sea, and hunting. Most of this seems to be smaller ones like 20 ft at most. Also, if you beeen with Inuits, there’s an interest. For some it’ll probably never go past an interest. Some of the other posts suggest they’re tasty, so that increases interest. As for hunting, we like to hunt our own food. This for me seems like interest, eats, and to write a story. Again to each to their own!(y)
 
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Great read.


http://luna.pos.to/whale/gen_con_pro_whaling.html


WHALING - CON & PRO

(This is the text, slightly revised and updated, of a brochure that was distributed to the media at the 1994 annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Puerto Vallarta.)

By Klaus Barthelmess


1. COMMONPLACE ARGUMENTS AGAINST WHALING
1.1 Ecological Arguments


The whales are becoming extinct
One cannot talk about the whales. Rather one must distinguish between more than 75 different species. Not a single whale species has become extinct because of whaling. Furthermore, one must distinguish between different stocks of whales. There may be threatened and non-threatened stocks of one and the same species.

Commercial whaling will always endanger the stocks/species
Plainly wrong! The California gray whale stock, for instance, has been hunted by the Soviet Union since 1962 with an annual quota of almost 200 animals. In the same period, this stock has almost doubled its numbers to over 20,000 animals, so that at the beginning of 1993 the US government removed this stock from the list of endangered species. Overfishing of whale stocks has invariably occurred where there was economic competition for them.
In today's whaling operations this is no longer the case - almost for the first time in about half a millennium of whaling history.

Whaling cannot be controlled
Yes it can! Norway, for instance, has agreed to and implemented an inspection scheme, which has provided for inspectors on board every whaling vessel. Since 2005, the inspectors have been replaced by "black boxes" installed on board, that register GPS position, engine effort, steering commands, harpoon cannon shots, and the weight of each whale hauled on board in a manipulation-proof way.



gen_con_pro_001.jpg

The Blue Box (Control Box) of the Automated Electronic Monitoring System developed for monitoring the minke whale hunting in Norway.
(from "Electronic Monitoring of Norwegian Minke Whaling" by Dr. Egil Ole Øen, on High North Alliance Web site)

1.2 Ethical/Animal Welfare Arguments

Whales cannot be killed humanely

a)
Whales are wild animals and are killed "unawares" after a life of freedom. To many ethical philosophers and scientists, this is more acceptable than the breeding, husbandry, transport, corralling and slaughtering of domestic animals.


b)
The modern penthrite grenade explodes with such a vibration force and frequency that unconsciousness - and usually death - result instantaneously. Unacceptably long killing times only occur as an "accident", which can also happen in a state-of-the-art abattoir, where an animal may occasionally bleed to death or be scalded without having been stunned first.


c)
To make instantaneous death the criterion for the moral right to hunt and catch animals would render all kinds of fishing and most types of hunting impossible. In such an argument the cart is put before the horse.
Whaling destroys social and family bonds within a whale pod
That's correct. But this also applies to mort kinds of animals that are hunted or butchered, as well as to those whale pods whose members fall victim to natural predators.



gen_con_pro_005A.jpg

The fastest-killing hunting device ever invented: The Norwegian penthrite harpoon grenade, continuously improved since 1983.
Prototype parts and models. Photo: Barthelmess, 2005.

1.3 Economic Arguments

Whale products are superfluous or can be replaced by substitutes
That is correct, but again, this applies to products of , say, pigs or cattle as well. To discontinue the use of their products, however, has to be the consumer's own decision, not that of others. Apart from this, it must be noted that the most important whale product today the meat for human consumption, not pet food or frivolous things, as is often alleged.

Commercial whaling is a negligible factor in the economies of whaling nations
This is true for the national economy as a whole. But for the regional economy and communal structure, whaling has very great significance. (This explains the "stubbornness" of the whaling nations in the face of the political pressure exerted by the Western industrialized nations).

Whale watching is more profitable than whale catching
Whale watching is relatively "big" business only in coastal areas with an excellent infrastructure in the hinterland, e.g. the US East and West coasts, certain South African seaports, and limited areas in Australia and New Zealand. Everywhere else, whale watching remains a risky small-scale business. Present-day whaling, however, is universally conducted from relatively isolated communities with an underdeveloped infrastructure in their hinterlands. Therefore, whale watching may be a modest additional or alternative option for one or two boat-owners within a remote whaling community, but not for all the whale boat operators in the entire community. Furthermore, as the Norwegian example of the one small whale catcher converted to whale watching has shown, only about one third of the catcher's crew could retain their jobs with the new tourist enterprise, the others had to be fired. Finally, not every taciturn fisherman will rejoice at the prospect of taxiing ecstatically yahooing whale tourists from the very metropolises, which are responsible for polluting the seas that were his hunting ground.

Whale meat is heavily contaminated
This must not be generalized. All animal tissue from polluted environments is contaminated to some degree. That applies to seafood as well. Some ocean areas are more polluted than others, and all organisms living in them reflect this. Furthermore, research has shown, that individuals even from one and the same pod of cetaceans show enormous differences in contamination. It is true that due to their feeding behavior, the blubber, organs and meat of "hunting" toothed whales (Odontotcetes) are much more likely to be contaminated than in the case of the "grazing" baleen whales (Mysticetes), which skip over a few links in the food chain. From the nutritional point of view, baleen whale meat, especially from little polluted seas, may in fact be one of the healthiest foods one can eat today.

"Scientific" whaling is commercial whaling in disguise
Completely wrong! Research whaling programs entail immense costs, only a fraction of which can be recovered by the sale of whale meat.


1.4 Legal Arguments

Whaling is illegal
Whoever makes such a claim proves nothing but ignorance of the legal regimes that apply to whales. Whaling is managed and regulated on a number of levels, both in the form of international conventions or agreements, such as the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling on which the International Whaling Commission (IWC) is based, the Agreement which established the North Atlantic Marine Mammal Commission (NAMMCO), or the Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans in the Baltic and North Seas (ASCOBANS), as well as legislation formulated on the national level, such as the Marine Mammal Protection Act of the USA. Only a sovereign state can "rule" what happens to the whales within its jurisdiction, i.e. if they are either found in the territorial waters of that state, or if a vessel registered in that state encounters them on the high seas. In an international treaty, convention or agreement, however, the contracting parties are not "subjects to be ruled", but equal partners who convene to cooperate for their mutual benefit, while at the same time agreeing to forfeit certain sovereign rights of their own. To ensure in the best democratic spirit their equal rights, an international contract must contain a strong provision to protect dissident minority positions among its contracting parties. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) requires states to cooperate on the management of whales through the appropriate international organizations. This was also reaffirmed by Agenda 21, which resulted from the Rio Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in 1992.
No aspect of Japanese (research) whaling or Norwegian (commercial) whaling today is "illegal", either on a national or international level.


1.5 Whale-Related Arguments

Whales are uniquely special ("humans of the sea")
Pseudo-scientific platitude! Whales are over-stylized by the media ("totemic animals of the New Age"). Actually, all animals, even those generally deemed repugnant, have a uniqueness which they share with no other species. This is what makes zoological species "specific".

Whales are intelligent
Extremely debatable! Especially as there are no agreed definitions of intelligence. And even if there were, this would not suffice to morally proscribe whaling. Pigs are no doubt more "intelligent" than cattle, but this does not lead people to make a distinction when it comes to killing them. (For comparison, using the same criterion of intelligence as a moral qualifier upon human society could mean, e.g., that the higher "IQ" of one accident victim might result in a higher insurance payment than in the case of a "dumber" victim).

Whales are gentle giants
Wrong! They are entirely "normal" giants, and, as with any other animal, there are some rather disgustingly violent aspects about them as well, such as:

  • intraspecific fighting, esp. mating fights, which sometimes end fatally;
  • interspecific fighting, with several deaths recorded, between species competing for the same food resource;
  • rape of females and subordinate males;
  • violent attempts by males to copulate with females that have just given birth, in the course of which some newborn calves are drowned or fatally bruised;
  • rough methods of socializing the young, e.g., by barring them from breathing at the surface.


gen_con_pro_003.jpg

In maritime cultures, whales have always represented the psychological archtype of the "Great Fish".
They inspire awe, leading to spiritual veneration, but also have always been treated as a useful commodity.
The biblical story of Jonah is a symbol of death and rebirth.
Book initial "V", South German, ca. 1530. Barthelmess Whaling Collection.

Whales have fascinating (a) communication (b) language

a)
Absolutely! But squid, for example, communicate through stimulation of skin pigments, only this exciting kind of communication is not as widely studied as communication in whales.
b)
The "language" of whales can at best be defined in the sense of an artificial computer language, but in no way in the sense of an "intelligent" natural language with its ability to express abstract notions. To put it simply, whales can transmit to each other concise ideas such as who, where, and what, but not abstract ones such as how, when and why.
Whales can "sing" or even "compose
The well-known and popular "songs" come almost exclusively from male humpback whales on their mating grounds. Thus, they may not be an expression of fun, but of a stressful mating ritual. Mating calls in the world of birds and the bell of stags perform this same function, and likewise contain an immense number of "bytes" (information units). But to human ears they don't sound so appealing. The fact that annual variations have been noted in whale "songs" is nothing extraordinary in the animal kingdom, either.

Whales and dolphins are "friends of man
Wishful thinking! They are also "friends of driftwood", if you like. With some species - notably toothed whales and gray whales - there is a more or less pronounced instinct to play: they may toss marine turtles, flotsam, bunches of seaweed around. A few individual gray whales - not at all! - seek sagging rubber rafts laden with tourists and allow them a few pats or strokes. A few species of dolphin and porpoise are also known to - sometimes and after a certain time of habituation - permit swimmers and divers into their company. Other animals, even carnivorous predators, sometimes do the same. Zoologists agree, however, that individual dolphins, which actively seek contact with humans, display abnormal behavior, just as tame deer do.

We still know so little about whales
Today whales are among the best studied wild animals. Scientific literature about them is substantially more extensive than, for instance, about sparrows. The fact that new questions arise with the emergence of new knowledge lies in the very nature of science.


1.6 Cultural Arguments

Modern harpoon-gun whaling is unfair, since the whale has no chance
The more unfair a hunt is, the more efficient it is. From an ecological point of view, an efficient hunting method is desirable, because fewer whales escape wounded. In consequence, Alaska Inuit have begun using a small version of the Norwegian-made penthrite grenade in addition to their traditional whaling tools in order to reduce the struck-and-lost rate in their open-boat whaling operations. Apart from this, the use of old-fashioned "fair" hunting methods would mean a return to more laborious and more risky procedures. No working person would tolerate such restrictions being imposed by outsiders.

Whaling is barbarous, uncivilized
Arrogant culturo-centrism! And a fairly modern point of view at that. In the sixties, in some cases in the seventies, when modern commercial whaling was still being conducted by today's foremost anti-whaling nations - USA, New Zealand, United Kingdom, Germany (under foreign flag), the Netherlands and others - the whaling men (and women) and their families enjoyed high social prestige in their societies.



gen_con_pro_002.jpg

Terrorist action against whalers - factually committed or only propagated -
generated income for fundamentalist "animal rights" organisations in the West.
"World opinion" has proscribed whaling
Pure presumptuousness! This opinion is almost exclusively found in densely populated urban Western societies, where people have become alienated from nature and where care for pet animals compensates for weakened family ties and social bonds. These societies - perhaps 20% of the world population - may be the most outspoken and influential, but by no means do they represent "World Opinion". Incidentally, these very societies have emerged from the Eurocentric culture, which has a woeful history of colonialism and a lamentable habit of deliberately ignoring the values found in foreign cultures. When it comes to whaling, these societies still fail to acknowledge the democratic right of dissident minorities.

Whales are killed for sport, in a blood frenzy or out of murderous lust
Atrocious propaganda resulting from sheer ignorance of the living conditions in remote fishing communities.

Other occupations and customs are history, too
True, but whaling can be continued at an ecologically responsible level. Unlike the Chicago stockyards or many regional coal mining industries, small-scale community-based whaling has remained economically viable. And it is not for outsiders to forcibly change this.

Out of "historic guilt", people must make amends with whales
Subjective feeling of conscience; it cannot be imposed upon others.

Ethics evolve: humans have first overcome the scourge of racism, then of sexism, and in the future will overcome that of speciesism
This is a hypothesis, not an established fact, and even as such it is extremely disputable. Racism and sexism discriminate against fellow humans, speciesism discriminates against non-humans. It is true that the introduction of human rights was long opposed on the grounds of tradition, but they finally succeeded as established values, because they are "intraspecific" rights, i.e. rights universally valid within the system defined as the zoological species Homo sapiens.
In contrast, "animal rights" would be "interspecific" rights, i.e. rights valid across the boundaries of species diversity. Since every carnivore or predator by nature infringes upon the "right" of its prey to live, "animal rights" are not universally valid within the system defined as the animal kingdom. "Animal rights" thus appear to be a philosophical construction by humans for the explicit purpose of regulating human-animal and not animal-human or animal-animal interactions.
Furthermore, the demand for "animal rights" itself discriminates against other human beings on what can be called "topographical" grounds. The reason is that humans who live in either high latitudes or high altitudes nutritionally depend on a substantial share of animal protein in their diet. On the basis of their habitat alone, these people are denied access to the ethical standards propagated by the "animal rights" protagonists.



gen_con_pro_004.jpg

Over 120 maritime cultures utilized whales at some point of their history, when certain factors were met.
Most of them discontinued whaling when other factors became effective.
In the few whaling cultures still active today, this is not the case.
French whaling for sperm whales, oil painting by Louis Gamain, 1832. Photo: international art trade.

2. ARGUMENTS IN TOLERANCE OF WHALING

2.1 Economic Arguments

Today's whaling is ecologically responsible
No whale stock is any longer under hunting pressure from competing whaling efforts. Therefore whalers now have a vested interest in keeping stocks at a sustainable level. In the years of competitive whaling - which lasted for almost five centuries - this was different, because a whaler who spared a whale "for tomorrow" only worked into the pockets of rival whalers.

Whaling is no longer an over-capitalized business
Today's whaling is community-based. In Japan there are four, in Norway about 30 shrimp boat-sized vessels (average 20m or 60 ft.), which are usually owned by families and crewed by four to nine people. This happens to be a small-capital form of enterprise which many "green" economists recommend as a safe-guard against the destructive over-exploitation of our planet's natural resources. In addition, together about half a dozen large-scale whale catchers can be operated by Japan and Iceland. Since there is no more competitive whaling for a world market, these vessels will never participate in any "whaling olympics".

Whaling is a livelihood in economically vulnerable regions
Perfectly right! In up to four communities in Japan and about six in Northern Norway whaling is the economic mainstay. It is a decisive factor in keeping people from migrating to the big cities as well as a safeguard against the build-up of ecologically harmful industries in remote settlements.


2.2 Legal Arguments

Whales must not be taboo
If the zoological order of cetaceans (whales, dolphins and porpoises) is by consensus declared exempt from man's moral right to harvest from natures resources, this will constitute a legal precedent so that in the future it could be argued likewise for other species of animals. Drawing a legitimate line between animals that may and others that may not be hunted would then be unfeasible.


2.3 Cultural Arguments

Whalers enjoy high social prestige
Whales represent the psychological archetype of the "Great Fish". That's why their hunters and their families enjoy the highest prestige in their communities, even if work in other branches of fisheries may be harder or more dangerous, or other marine jobs may be better paid.

Since whalers live OFF nature they also live WITHIN nature
Small whaling communities are a good setting for acquiring and transmitting knowledge about nature from generation to generation. This intimate knowledge is derived not only from contact with the prey, but also with non-exploited species, and it covers oceanographic and meteorological phenomena as well.

There is a whaling culture
This is confirmed by everyone who has ever lived with whalers. They are not just a group of people with their own professional skills, but they also have their own social organizations, their own jargon, their own folklore, their own arts and crafts, in short, they have a distinctive cultural identity.



gen_con_pro_005B.jpg

"If you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not laugh?"
(Shylock, in Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice", Act 3, Scene 1).
Photo: Nigel Bonner, Barthelmess Whaling Collection.

2.4 Questionability of the Counter Arguments

Psychological compensation
It is noteworthy that the anti-whaling movement has its origin and mainstay with just that part of this planet's population - viz. the people in the urban centers of Western industrialized nations - whose lifestyle bears the largest share of responsibility for destroying the natural environment worldwide. They are just about 20% of the world population but consume approximately 80% of the world's natural resources. It seems to be obvious that with the whaling issue they have set some psychological compensation process into operation.

Ethics
Ethical standards are culturally defined. They must not be imposed upon other cultures. If any such attempts are made through political or economic pressure, this fulfils all the criteria for the concepts of "cultural chauvinism" or " cultural imperialism".

Profits
Enormous sums are earned with the organized whaling counter-protest. The anti- whaling organizations offer a kind of conscience service to city-dwellers who have become alienated from nature: they "sell" them the illusion of being mature and competent savers of nature. Annual income rates of hundreds of millions of US dollars have led some critics to speak of a "protest industry". It seems clear that, where such enormous sums are at stake, the scientific and moral integrity of some anti-whaling information campaigns should not always be taken at face value.


The Author

Klaus Barthelmess is a collector of whaling-related art, a professional whaling and sealing historian, museum, media and PR consultant. He earned his degrees from the University of his native Cologne, Germany. In the late 1970s and early 1980s he cooperated with several international and German anti-whaling organisations against the over-exploitation of some whale stocks evident at that time. In the course of field studies of Atlantic and Pacific whaling cultures, he has participated in whaling and whale-processing operations, and has conducted experiments in experimental whaling archaeology. He has authored and co-authored several books and numerous articles on whaling history, the history of cetology, whale-related fine arts, historical whale stranding records, sealing history and the whaling debate, and serves on the editorial boards of several specialized periodicals.

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