Dolphins being murdered

Well here is a criticism...you sick fookers. Leave them alone.
Nothing to do with a cull on numbers,thats utter rubbish. They are herded into a cove and killed. Water covers 75% of this planet,what gives these idiots the right to say there are too many of them? We live on land,they live in the sea. Are they a threat?

Yeah cracking argument there Hoggs.

Only the Nips are surrounded by water, are grossly overpopulated for the size of the island and rely heavily upon marine animals for food.


Go try and live there first. :rolleyes:
 
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P.S. a Brit calling a Nip an idiot is more than slightly amusing.

Our western diet is a far cry from their healthy diet.

We must seem like neanderthal morons by comparison.
 
Cows, pigs and lambs here in the UK are not herded into a corner and stabbed/butchered with swords until the last one falls with its injuries.
Pigs are gassed, cows are stunned with a bolt gun (unless the arabs are involved) and sheep are stunned with electricity.
Its more humane.

Do you think our food-reared animals are pampered like pets?

SERIOUSLY? :eek:

My brother pampers his pedigree herd of cows like pets.
I also know a guy who can walk into a 8000 sq/feet building with 6000 free range egg laying chickens in it and call one chicken by name and it flies unto his shoulder.
His chickens are renowned for giving very high yields of eggs.
His animal welfare agriculture representive was astonished when he was given access to this sight and had previously explained that this type of behaviour was not possible in chickens.

I also know many who are downright cruel to their animals and its completely unncessary IMO.
 
My brother pampers his pedigree herd of cows like pets.
I also know a guy who can walk into a 8000 sq/feet building with 6000 free range egg laying chickens in it and call one chicken by name and it flies unto his shoulder.
His animal welfare agriculture representive was astonished when he was given access to this sight and had previously explained that this type of behaviour was not possible in chickens.

I also know many who are downright cruel to their animals and its completely unncessary IMO.

And you think we can feed a population of nearly 60 million by being considerate to our food stock.

GET REAL!
 
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Your indifference to animal suffering is clear to see. :evil: :evil:
 
Only the Nips are surrounded by water, are grossly overpopulated for the size of the island and rely heavily upon marine animals for food.

Sounds like Great britain to me, only we don't slaughter Dolphins.
 
Would I be interupting this arguement by suggesting a forum for cannibals?
 
Dolphins have been declared the world’s second most intelligent creatures after humans, with scientists suggesting they are so bright that they should be treated as “non-human persons”.
Studies into dolphin behaviour have highlighted how similar their communications are to those of humans and that they are brighter than chimpanzees. These have been backed up by anatomical research showing that dolphin brains have many key features associated with high intelligence.
The researchers argue that their work shows it is morally unacceptable to keep such intelligent animals in amusement parks or to kill them for food or by accident when fishing. Some 300,000 whales, dolphins and porpoises die in this way each year.
“Many dolphin brains are larger than our own and second in mass only to the human brain when corrected for body size,” said Lori Marino, a zoologist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, who has used magnetic resonance imaging scans to map the brains of dolphin species and compare them with those of primates.

“The neuroanatomy suggests psychological continuity between humans and dolphins and has profound implications for the ethics of human-dolphin interactions,” she added.
Dolphins have long been recognised as among the most intelligent of animals but many researchers had placed them below chimps, which some studies have found can reach the intelligence levels of three-year-old children. Recently, however, a series of behavioural studies has suggested that dolphins, especially species such as the bottlenose, could be the brighter of the two. The studies show how dolphins have distinct personalities, a strong sense of self and can think about the future.
It has also become clear that they are “cultural” animals, meaning that new types of behaviour can quickly be picked up by one dolphin from another.
In one study, Diana Reiss, professor of psychology at Hunter College, City University of New York, showed that bottlenose dolphins could recognise themselves in a mirror and use it to inspect various parts of their bodies, an ability that had been thought limited to humans and great apes.
In another, she found that captive animals also had the ability to learn a rudimentary symbol-based language.
Other research has shown dolphins can solve difficult problems, while those living in the wild co-operate in ways that imply complex social structures and a high level of emotional sophistication.
In one recent case, a dolphin rescued from the wild was taught to tail-walk while recuperating for three weeks in a dolphinarium in Australia.
After she was released, scientists were astonished to see the trick spreading among wild dolphins who had learnt it from the former captive.
There are many similar examples, such as the way dolphins living off Western Australia learnt to hold sponges over their snouts to protect themselves when searching for spiny fish on the ocean floor.
Such observations, along with others showing, for example, how dolphins could co-operate with military precision to round up shoals of fish to eat, have prompted questions about the brain structures that must underlie them.
Size is only one factor. Researchers have found that brain size varies hugely from around 7oz for smaller cetacean species such as the Ganges River dolphin to more than 19lb for sperm whales, whose brains are the largest on the planet. Human brains, by contrast, range from 2lb-4lb, while a chimp’s brain is about 12oz.
When it comes to intelligence, however, brain size is less important than its size relative to the body.
What Marino and her colleagues found was that the cerebral cortex and neocortex of bottlenose dolphins were so large that “the anatomical ratios that assess cognitive capacity place it second only to the human brain”. They also found that the brain cortex of dolphins such as the bottlenose had the same convoluted folds that are strongly linked with human intelligence.
Such folds increase the volume of the cortex and the ability of brain cells to interconnect with each other. “Despite evolving along a different neuroanatomical trajectory to humans, cetacean brains have several features that are correlated with complex intelligence,” Marino said.
Marino and Reiss will present their findings at a conference in San Diego, California, next month, concluding that the new evidence about dolphin intelligence makes it morally repugnant to mistreat them.
Thomas White, professor of ethics at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, who has written a series of academic studies suggesting dolphins should have rights, will speak at the same conference.
“The scientific research . . . suggests that dolphins are ‘non-human persons’ who qualify for moral standing as individuals,” he said.


Its called a 'civilised society' and obviously you are up there with the chimps. Ape-man!
 
Dolphins have been declared the world’s second most intelligent creatures after humans, with scientists suggesting they are so bright that they should be treated as “non-human persons”.
How do they allow themselves to rounded up and then slaughtered? not arguing with your passion here,just scientist words should be taken with a pinch of salt.
 
How do they allow themselves to rounded up and then slaughtered? not arguing with your passion here,just scientist words should be taken with a pinch of salt.

You think humans have never allowed them selves to be rounded up and slaughtered.... :eek:
 
Exactly the point I was trying to make,the scientist trying to make them out as intelligent only second to us,when it is clear that we lack in that department some what.Do the scientist judge the dolphins intelligence against ours or ours against the dolphins.
 
In this country we breed animals for the specific purpose of providing food.
As stated they are slaughtered 'humanely' with a swift kill.

Catching a wild dolphin by scaring the crap out of them so they instincively herd together for protection and then stabbing them with spears is not humane or moral. :evil:
 
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