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Forums - General Discussion - Seal Clubbing is a sick tradition and it must end!

Panama said:
Arent seals considered a pest to sealife hence they cull the population. Or am i thinking of something else?

Pest is a strong word, but they do comsume a ridiculous amount of fish.  And with few natural predators their population can get out of control.  We have millions of them in Canada and about 60-70,000 are allowed to be culled each year.  Humans have lived off seals in this area for thousands of years.  It's a natural ecosystem for them to be hunted. 



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spurgeonryan said:
Kaneman! said:
How is this any worse than cutting a live chicken's head off? Why not protest that? Because seals are cuter?

 

Also most of the world does not eat seal.

Most of the world does not have millions of seals.  There are lots of regional animals that are food sources.  Should we ban Florida crawfishing because they are only eaten in the south?



I see that the party is over, sad times D:



spurgeonryan said:
TheLastStarFighter said:

Most of the world does not have millions of seals.  There are lots of regional animals that are food sources.  Should we ban Florida crawfishing because they are only eaten in the south?

I have no problem with seal clubbing, just saying why it ia probably more frowned upon. Same as whaling and ape killing. People still eat whale meat, but it pisses the world off whether it is Native Americans eating the whale or the Japanese.

It's mostly because of PR.  It's really annoying speaking as someone living in Eastern Canada.  You see images of this:

and this:

...which is ridiculous.  First, if you're looking to maximise your seal hunt for fur, meat and oil,  you're hunting grown seals, not cute baby pups.  But no one shows images of these ugly 400lbs beasts:

And no one shows how a hunter actually hunts a seal, which is pretty much like you hunt a dear:

Seals - especially baby seals - have eyes like puppies which make them great fodder for lobby groups like PETA.  They're also in far-away Canada so it's easy to pick on the industry without harming people at home.  But they're just an animal like any other, and hunting them is pretty much like hunting deer anywhere else.  Hunters hunt them with rifles.  The traditional stick with a spike "club" of Inuit origin is seldom used, and would typically be used to end a seal that had survived the gunshot and was suffering - much like cutting a deer's throat. 

It's just hunting, hunting like any other animal and is not done for "fun" or to be mean to a creature.  People in the north love the meat, and the fur make ridiculously nice coats and hats.  Warm, waterproof and they shimmer like they're made of Christmas tinsle.