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Author Topic: Documentary "The Cove" exposing dolphin slaughter up for Oscar  (Read 9981 times)
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valhalla
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« Reply #15 on: 15-Mar-10, 09:45:33 AM »

We switched on Huckabee last night, caught the end of the Rove interview and as I was getting ready to do kitchen clean-up, saw "actor from the Cove".  Ok, plopped my butt back down and got a very real understanding of the herding and slaughter of the dolphins.  Between looking for Flipper/Cathy and the bloody slaughter, I'm not very comfortable about seeing dolphin shows again nor swimming with them at Discovery Cove.  Ok, only about 20 fisherman do the killing and it has been going on for about 400 years during the migration (for food), but it is the trainers who "sort" through the dolphins looking for the "right" ones that are perpetuating this slaughter.  150K for a Flipper and about 500.00 for food.  I get fishing and hunting for food, but this is literally shooting fish (mamales) in a barrel.


I caught that on Huckabee last night also. OMG, I cried myself to sleep. I felt so sick after watching and hearing these poor dolphins scream as they are being attacked. Awful. The slaughter ends this month but will start back up on Sept 1st. They need at least 1000 journalist there in Sept to get the word out. Most of the Japanese don't even know this is going on. I hope this ends soon as these poor Dolphins don't deserve this. I could never watch the full version, what I saw last night was enough and I'm very weak when it comes to KILLING anything but Kudos to the film makers for getting the word out.

I'm such a coward that I didn't listen to the cries!  scared blue I do understand that this is a very small population of people and tradition is part of the "food" purpose, but anyone with an ounce of humanity has to abhore the "collection" of dolphins for the purpose of training them and making lots of money with the remainders being killed as a by-product of the collection.  There a many traditions in different cultures that I don't like (parts mutalation is one), but it isn't my call to change another's culture or tradion.  This opposition to this slaughter of dolphins must come from the Japanese people, and I suspect it will.  
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dale
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« Reply #16 on: 22-Mar-10, 02:34:20 AM »

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/21/us/21sushi.html
and
http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/03/20/whale.meat.restaurant/?hpt=T2
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gayle
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« Reply #17 on: 22-Mar-10, 12:08:37 PM »

There is some justice after all.

Gayle
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Donna
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« Reply #18 on: 27-Mar-10, 11:56:55 AM »


TAIJI, Japan - "Heroes" star Hayden Panettiere and her boyfriend, world champion boxer Wladimir Klitschko, received a chilly reception Friday in the Japanese fishing village of Taiji, where they called for an end to its annual dolphin hunt.

Panettiere said she would "love to be a spokesperson" for the town if it abandons the hunt. Her visit to Taiji comes just weeks after "The Cove," a gory depiction of Taiji's dolphin slaughter, won the Oscar for best documentary.

The celebrity couple arrived in the morning with a small group of environmental activists. Panettiere tried to meet the mayor and representatives from the local fisheries union, but she and Jeff Pantukhoff, an anti-whaling activist from the U.S., were blocked at the door of the town hall.

"We are trying to peacefully come up with better ideas as to how to generate income and utilize the nature here," Panettiere told reporters. "We've been to Taiji before and it's a beautiful place with beautiful wildlife."

If Taiji were to quit killing dolphins, "I'd love to be a spokesperson or to help generate tourism," she said.

Fishermen in the village on the rocky coast of southwest Japan consider the hunt a proud legacy. But it has long been targeted by hardcore environmentalists and animal lovers, and the Oscar has given the opposition more mainstream attention.

Panettiere, followed by a crowd of media throughout the day, later walked through a large hole in a barrier along a path leading to the famous cove depicted in the movie. The cove was strewn with nets used to trap the dolphins, as well as firewood and debris left by the hunters.

Panettiere posed for photographs as she walked along the small pebbly beach for several minutes, but then two town officials ran up and after a tense exchange everyone left. A fisherman pulled up several minutes later in a truck and boarded up the hole.

"We just wanted to have a very peaceful and relaxed conversation," Panettiere said.

Panettiere, who plays an indestructible cheerleader on the hit U.S. TV series "Heroes," is also the spokeswoman for the "Save the Whales Again!" campaign, which wants to halt Taiji's dolphin hunt. The campaign cites studies that show dolphin meat contains dangerously high levels of mercury and is unsafe to eat, and says killing the animals is cruel and unnecessary.

The 20-year-old actress also protested the Taiji hunt in 2007, when along with five other surfers she paddled out into the cove where the hunt takes place in a peaceful protest that was broken up by fisherman. Scenes from that encounter are briefly shown in "The Cove."

The Japanese government allows about 19,000 dolphins to be killed each year. Taiji hunts about 2,000 dolphins every year for meat -- less than other places -- but is singled out in part because of its "oikomi" method of herding and killing them near the shore. Some are captured and sold to aquariums and dolphin shows at water parks.

Residents once welcomed foreign visitors, but in recent years have grown weary of what they feel are one-sided portrayals and grisly snapshots shown out of context. Overzealous protesters and photographers are occasionally approached and scolded by rough-and-tumble locals looking to defend their town's reputation.

As the group arrived, a truck of right-wing nationalists blasted slogans, saying Japan should not be singled out for whaling and dolphin hunts because Westerners "are killing cows." They also demanded President Barack Obama apologize for the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

There were no clashes between the environmentalists and the townspeople.

Klitschko, the six-foot, five inch (196 centimeter) heavyweight boxing champion, who just last week recorded his 48th knockout in defending his WBO and IBF belts, towered over everyone as he quietly took in the day's events.

"It's not about being aggressive and violent," he said.

Before the group left, John Quigley, an "aerial artist" who creates large works of art that can be viewed from the sky, made a giant outline of a dolphin on the sand.
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Donna
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« Reply #19 on: 15-Jan-12, 06:40:03 PM »

Sea Shepherd activist arrested filming cove dolphins

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/environment/la-me-gs-sea-shepherd-activist-arrested-filming-cove-dolphin-20120104,0,3929566.story
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