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Queequeg
The painting just needs the Hope logo.
Could you please add Michelle in a bikini made from palm fronds and coconut husks?
No, but I could add her in a hot Klingon outfit.

![]()
Queequeg
The painting just needs the Hope logo.
Could you please add Michelle in a bikini made from palm fronds and coconut husks?
Funny thing is, I googled that for kicks and got an article about how the outgoing Bush administration was trying to renew commercial whaling.You know that if Bush was about to allow the renewal of commercial whaling there would be about 8,300 Google News hits on "Bush Whaling".
In contrast, Obama deeply bowed to them from the waist.
Funny thing is, I googled that for kicks and got an article about how the outgoing Bush administration was trying to renew commercial whaling.You know that if Bush was about to allow the renewal of commercial whaling there would be about 8,300 Google News hits on "Bush Whaling".
Funny thing is, I googled that for kicks and got an article about how the outgoing Bush administration was trying to renew commercial whaling.You know that if Bush was about to allow the renewal of commercial whaling there would be about 8,300 Google News hits on "Bush Whaling".
yes that's been pointed out the OP and numerous occasions but he's still pushing the claim it's Obama pushing for it.
It was hot in Washington last Friday when I paused, jogging in place, at an intersection, where the D.C. police allowed President Obama and his motorcade to speed by.
"POTUS" was heading to the Gulf coast to survey the unfolding tragedy of the BP oil spill. I was headed to a White House meeting later in the day with Nancy Sutley, chair of the Council on Environmental Quality, who had been engulfed by the BP debacle for weeks. The focus of our meeting was another massive issue: whaling.
If there is a full-time whale hugger who worked harder to elect Obama, I have yet to meet them. On my own time, I labored for Obama in three primaries and the general election. I was encouraged when he promised, on April 16, 2008, to "ensure the U.S. provides leadership in enforcing wildlife protection agreements, including strengthening the international ban on commercial whaling. Allowing Japan to continue commercial whaling is unacceptable."
Which is why it has been so troubling to find that a proposal to overturn the international ban on whaling is being pushed by the Obama administration.
The moratorium on commercial whaling achieved in 1986 is one of the great conservation victories of our time. Yet Obama administration officials have apparently decided to bow to the wishes of Japan, Iceland and Norway, the last countries still killing whales for commercial purposes.
Eighty-eight member countries of the International Whaling Commission will gather later this month in Morocco to decide the future of our planet's great whales. The proposal before them would overturn the whaling ban, reward stubbornness with whaling quotas, approve Japan's whaling in the Antarctic whale sanctuary, and establish expensive new observer schemes.
I'd be curious to see the reasoning behind the proposal. So far, this thread has just been a lot of "oh me, oh my", but not a lot of detailed analysis of what's actually being pressed for.
Flights, girls and cash buy Japan whaling votes
<snip>
To find out about the secret deals which patch together Japan’s alliance of African, Asian, Pacific and Caribbean states, The Sunday Times approached the key ministers and fisheries officials from those countries in an undercover investigation.
Two reporters posed as lobbyists who had been hired by Dr Hans Kruber, a fictional Swiss billionaire philanthropist who had created the European development fund for fisheries.
Our proposal was designed to mirror the alleged tactics of the Japanese. Government officials were told we were putting together a coalition of countries who would vote against whaling. They were each offered £25m in aid over 10 years from Kruber’s fund and all they had to do was vote against the whaling quotas at the Morocco meeting.
Six countries indicated they were willing to consider our offer and went away to discuss it with senior officials and ministers. They were St Kitts and Nevis, the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Grenada, Ivory Coast and Guinea. Even more revealing were officials’ revelations about their relations with Japan.
Actor and environmentalist Pierce Brosnan stars in a Save The Whales Now television ad written and filmed by his wife, Keely, in their Malibu backyard.
In it, Brosnan asks President Obama to honor his campaign promise by ending illegal whaling.
The Brosnans' are taking action after reports that the Obama Administration may approve a new International Whaling Commission Treaty that doesn't immediately ban whale hunting in Japan, Iceland and Norway.
Commercial whaling was banned in 1986.
No one was surprised when conservation organizations such as the Natural Resources Defense Council challenged the anti-environmental policies of President George W. Bush. But it's a shock to many when we part company with the Obama administration.
It happens. And it's happening right now on the question of what to do about commercial whaling and, more specifically, whether to maintain the 25-year-old moratorium against the killing of whales for profit. Last week, the International Whaling Commission announced a proposed 10-year deal, spearheaded by the Obama administration, that would suspend the moratorium and allow whaling countries to kill whales legally for commercial purposes for the first time in a generation.
There's no disagreement between the council and the administration about the fact that the moratorium is one of the singular environmental achievements of the 20th century. Before it was adopted, on average an estimated 38,000 whales were being killed each year. Since the moratorium, that number has dropped to about 1,240, and whale populations have begun, little by little, to rebound.
There's no disagreement that whales are among the most extraordinary creatures ever to inhabit the Earth. And there's no disagreement that we need to protect them, or that many of the large whale species covered by the proposed agreement -- humpback, fin, sperm, sei and Bryde's whales -- are depleted or near extinction.
The problem is how best to protect them.
Or they're too busy talking about the worst oil spill ever. Heck, a city was flooded and it only made a side note.The compliant press is once again asleep at the switch.
Can Obama do nothing right?
Or they're too busy talking about the worst oil spill ever. Heck, a city was flooded and it only made a side note.The compliant press is once again asleep at the switch.
Or they're too busy talking about the worst oil spill ever. Heck, a city was flooded and it only made a side note.The compliant press is once again asleep at the switch.
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