It doesn't have to be pro or anti Obama. Get that down and maybe people will stop calling you a troll.Would you describe for me what a pro-Obama,
anti-whaling thread would look like?
Um, isn't that like having an anti-whaling thread that isn't either pro or anti explosive harpoon cannon?
Sorry, but Obama isn't neutral on this issue. Unlike 99.99% of the American public (and you'd think everyone on a Star Trek forum), he's pushing for a renewal of commercial whaling, as every link I've posted has pointed out, including one written by the executive director Greenpeace who asked him directly to change his position. Obama blew him off.
I'm sure once the deal is done, Obama will give a rambling speech about how more commercial whaling will save whales, which will probably go over about as well as his last speech on the oil spill, and like that one, he'll be mystified as to why people can't see the genius of his position and wonder why the speech got eviscerated by Jon Stewart on The Daily Show.
This would all be political fun but the whaling decision will not only outlast Obama, but Obama's successor.
I tried to alert the liberal TrekBBS members here hoping that their voices could help stop the coming whale of a disaster (as Obama won't listen to any non-liberal voices), but to no avail. They'd rather shove their heads in the sand than doubt their trust in their glorious leader who promised them, promised them, that he would put an end to commercial whaling, not write a government check for it (Under the new proposal US tax money will be allocated to monitoring the newly legalized whale slaughter).
Where else could I have directed their ire? Blaming Bush, who opposed whaling and no longer holds any public office? Blaming the American whaling industry, which doesn't exist?
No, there are only a couple places to cast blame. Obama, the press who dare not speak against him, and the environmental groups (including the anti-whaling groups) who were willing to post the truth in obscure locations in a CYA attempt but were apparently afraid to beseige the e-mail boxes and fax machines of their own members and the press to really alert people to this story.
So the quarter-century whaling ban will probably come to an end next week, and it will die not with a bang but with barely a whimper. Already South Korea has said it might resume commercial whaling, and if South Korea and Japan are harvesting whales then we can expect North Korea to start harvesting them as well. Do you think some anti-whaling activists could survive an encounter with a North Korean whaling ship?
But like we've been learning with the oil spill, governments are filled with bureaucrats who value procedure and turf far above actual results, and one of the main arguments for the renewal of whaling is that if the IWC doesn't compromise it will cease to function. Well that's fine with me, because why should the world need an organization whose purpose is ensuring a sustainable harvest of tasty whales, one bought out by Japan and sold out by the US?