Mr. Lock says don't buy japanese products 4 xmas

Franky Wright

Registered User
Forum Member
May 28, 2002
3,363
16
0
58
Heaven, oh!!, this isn't it?!
Surprised there are no comments:com:
Or does Google not allow them like You Tube does?

I did check another video related to dolphin killing, think it was a you tube, and they were putting it nicely "bantering" about custom, poor trying to eat, and that other BS....

That was a tough one to watch....

Now I have to figure out the diff between Korean, Tiawanese, Chinese, and Japs?:com: This is going to take some work:SIB
 

lewehands

Registered User
Forum Member
Sep 12, 2005
837
17
0
Hell I don't know
Amazing what some peolple can do. :com:
If one absolutely must do that for survival then one should try to find a more humane way of doing it!
 

SixFive

bonswa
Forum Member
Mar 12, 2001
18,751
256
83
54
BG, KY, USA
Amazing what some peolple can do. :com:
If one absolutely must do that for survival then one should try to find a more humane way of doing it!

yeah, I could go for a faster kill. Seems a little ridiculous to drag them through town then machete them a little so they will bleed to death.

I don't have any problem with them being hunted and used (if it's legal; I'm not sure if it is??), but kill them a whole lot sooner than that.
 

PaSprint

Registered User
Forum Member
Jan 2, 2007
2,693
62
0
Central PA
I am in no way defending the video as it is tough to watch, but the next time any of you eat some bacon or ham you would most likely be horrified as how the pig was slaughtered.
I remember when I was young and my grandparents were still living....the day after New Years was always "butchering day" and the entire family (my mother had 7 brothers/sisters/married kids..ect....it was a pretty big crew) would participate.
Anyhow, my one aunt and uncle were farmers and they raised usually 4 pigs for the event and the "killing" part was pretty brutal to say the least.
My grandfather had a little .22 caliber pistol and would shoot the pig in the head which wouldn't kill it....pretty much just stun the pig and then they would immediately cut the throat big time wide open so it would "bleed out".
I really don't know the details as to why it "had" to be done this way but it's something to do with getting all the blood out of the meat? Pap always said that he "wanted them to bleed out before the heart stopped." Of course he usually always made a bad "stun shot" on one of em and the poor bastard would run around squealing like hell. Maybe someone with more knowledge on the subject can fill in the blanks but it was pretty mind scaring for a grade schooler to see every New Years.
 

MR. LOCK

Registered User
Forum Member
Dec 6, 2002
3,519
19
0
I am in no way defending the video as it is tough to watch, but the next time any of you eat some bacon or ham you would most likely be horrified as how the pig was slaughtered.
I remember when I was young and my grandparents were still living....the day after New Years was always "butchering day" and the entire family (my mother had 7 brothers/sisters/married kids..ect....it was a pretty big crew) would participate.
Anyhow, my one aunt and uncle were farmers and they raised usually 4 pigs for the event and the "killing" part was pretty brutal to say the least.
My grandfather had a little .22 caliber pistol and would shoot the pig in the head which wouldn't kill it....pretty much just stun the pig and then they would immediately cut the throat big time wide open so it would "bleed out".
I really don't know the details as to why it "had" to be done this way but it's something to do with getting all the blood out of the meat? Pap always said that he "wanted them to bleed out before the heart stopped." Of course he usually always made a bad "stun shot" on one of em and the poor bastard would run around squealing like hell. Maybe someone with more knowledge on the subject can fill in the blanks but it was pretty mind scaring for a grade schooler to see every New Years.

The Big difference is that Dolphins r Mammals.

also Japan is killing our oceans!!!!!!

Japan's whaling fleet is preparing to depart for its annual scientific hunt and 50 humpback whales will be targeted for the first time.

Japanese whaling is illegal. They're targeting endangered species in a whale sanctuary in violation of a global moratorium on whaling.

Bluefin tuna overfishing
Japan has been busted for serious overfishing of bluefin tuna. These magnificent oceanic "cruise missles" are among the most valuable seafood on earth. Without effective protection we might see the last one sold in our lifetimes, for some fantastic price.

In this context, the Japanese overfishing is a serious offense.

The Australian government was responsponsible for the bust, and they claim 20 years of Japanese poaching worth up to $8 billion, and illegal catch levels that prevented bluefin from rebuilding.

The Japanese government admits only modest and short term overfishing of bluefin tuna. However, they accepted stringent penalties that will cut Japanese bluefin quotas in half for 5 years.

It's a shame that some fishermen would so wantonly slaugher such a magnificent creature as bluefin tuna, in defiance of international management and conservation agreements. Bluefin are warm-blooded fish that can grow over 1500 pounds and swim nearly 50 miles per hour. The ocean version of a lion that runs like a cheetah.


Last Updated: Friday, 16 November 2007, 17:17 GMT

US wants freeze on tuna fishing
By Anna-Marie Lever
Science and nature reporter, BBC News


Delicious to eat - but an endangered species
The US is calling for a ban on the fishing of bluefin tuna in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea.

A three-to-five-years ban is being proposed to the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (Iccat).

The call comes amid deep concerns that the stock may collapse if the level of overfishing continues.

The European Commission recently closed its bluefin tuna fishery for this year after quota limits had been exceeded

Bottom line it's all about the food chain. Japan has no regard for the worlds oceans. Time to stop buying Jap products.
 

MadJack

Administrator
Staff member
Forum Admin
Super Moderators
Channel Owner
Jul 13, 1999
105,464
1,781
113
70
home
U may be right but Japanese r animals.

Does this look humane?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmjNaf6ddF0
i don't have to click to know what's there. there are many videos on youtube showing cats and dogs being tortured in Taiwan and China as well.

i'm not disagreeing with any of your postings, just letting you know that pigs are mammals too ;)
 

MR. LOCK

Registered User
Forum Member
Dec 6, 2002
3,519
19
0
i don't have to click to know what's there. there are many videos on youtube showing cats and dogs being tortured in Taiwan and China as well.

i'm not disagreeing with any of your postings, just letting you know that pigs are mammals too ;)

Fair enough jack.

"I'm not a tree huggin lib. I spend a lot of time in the ocean ' used 2 surf back in the day". Love to watch Whales and Dolphins in Santa Barbara & Big Sur. The whales migrate thousands of miles from California to Australia to deliver their calfs. Japan is hunting illegally and it eats me up inside knowing that next year they may be gone. It breaks my heart."

Most slaughtered whales 'pregnant'
Email Print Normal font Large font July 24, 2007 - 10:00AM

More than half the whales killed by Japanese whalers in the Antarctic last summer were pregnant, the Humane Society International (HSI) said today.

The group said that of the 505 Antarctic minke whales killed, 262 of them were pregnant females, while one of the three giant fin whales killed was also pregnant.

The findings came from a review of Japanese reports from their most recent 2006-07 whale hunt in Antarctic waters and were released ahead of the resumption of a Federal Court case the HSI is taking against Japanese whaling company Kyodo Senpaku Kaisha Ltd.

Japanese whalers take hundreds of whales each year in Antarctic waters for so-called scientific study purposes.

"These are gruesome statistics that the Japanese government dresses up as science", HSI spokeswoman Nicola Beynon said in a statement.

She said the HSI was hoping the court would set a date for a full hearing of the case at today's directions hearing.

"The full hearing will be to determine whether Japanese whalers are in breach of Australian law when they hunt whales in the Australian Whale Sanctuary in Antarctica and whether the court will issue an injunction for the hunt to be stopped," Ms Beynon said.

"HSI will ask for the final hearing to be held as soon as possible before the hunt starts up again this summer.

"It has been three years since HSI launched the case and many hurdles have been overcome to get to this point.

"It horrifies Australians to know that pregnant humpback whales breeding in the warm waters off Australia this winter will be targeted by the Japanese hunters in Antarctic waters this Christmas."

hIistory of Whales in Australia
Australia has a long history with whales. Learn more about 25 years of whale protection in Australia. From the days when people hunted them for their oil and blubber to the day in 1979 when the Australian Government banned the hunting of whales in Australia in favour of whale protection. At the time the ban was introduced almost all whale species had been hunted to the brink of extinction. In the 25 years since, the numbers of whales swimming along our coastlines has increased slowly, allowing more Australians to enjoy the thrill of whale watching. This has seen a dramatic shift in people?s attitude towards whales with Australians today preferring to watch and learn about whales rather than hunt them. It has become widely acknowledged that whales are worth more alive than dead with whale watching proving to be a booming economic industry in Australia. While we celebrate the annual migration of whales past our coast, sadly whales are far from safe once they leave our waters. The threats to their survival still loom with countries such as Japan, Norway and Iceland continuing to kill whales under the guise of so called 'scientific whaling'. Each year several whale groups leave their feeding grounds in Antarctica to begin their epic voyage of approximately 10,000kms to Australia?s warmer waters. While abundant food is available for whales in Antarctica, newborn calves would not survive in the icy waters of the Antarctic; hence the annual return to the warm waters.

Many females make the journey while pregnant so they can give birth in Australian waters.

Y The fuk does Japan have 2 invade australian waters????

a bunch of leeches

lock
 
Last edited:

yyz

Under .500
Forum Member
Mar 16, 2000
43,338
2,261
113
On the course!
You can't pick and choose which animals you want on your plate.

A lot of you guys really need to just keep your eyes closed, I think.
 

gardenweasel

el guapo
Forum Member
Jan 10, 2002
40,583
231
63
"the bunker"
look,i`m trying to do my part and not eat animals(told the old lady no turkey for thanksgiving but she`ll get some "stuffing"....:rimshot ...)...i`m trying to find that brite bridge to happyland....

but,then i come on here and see these pictures?.....

you have any idea how hard it is to clean spewed celery and peanut butter off a keyboard?........"simple green" don`t get it....

have a heart,,,,
 

saint

Go Heels
Forum Member
Jan 10, 2002
9,501
140
63
Balls Deep
You can't pick and choose which animals you want on your plate.

I agree 100%. You either eat absolutely no animals or fish period, etc or you lose the right to pick one species to cry about and show disregard for another.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top