Thought-Factory.net Philosophical Conversations Public Opinion philosophy.com Junk for code

Mandy Martin, Puritjarra 2, 2005. For further information on MANDY MARTIN, refer here: http://www.mandy-martin.com/
If there are diverse kinds of knowledge and ways of knowing place, then we need to learn to value the different ways each of us sees a single place that is significant, but differently so, for each perspective.
RECENT ENTRIES
SEARCH
ARCHIVES
Library
Thinkers/Critics/etc
WEBLOGS
Australian Weblogs
Critical commentary
Visual blogs
CULTURE
ART
PHOTOGRAPHY
DESIGN/STREET ART
ARCHITECTURE/CITY
Film
MUSIC
Sexuality
FOOD & WiNE
Other
www.thought-factory.net
looking for something firm in a world of chaotic flux

a touch of humor « Previous | |Next »
June 23, 2005

Maybe Australia could bring a case against Japan to the International Court of Justice?

leakaphC3.jpg

Japan failed to gut the International Whaling Commission’s agenda. According to Humane Society International:

"Japan had planned to wipe out discussions of humane killing, whale sanctuaries, human health concerns, environmental threats and to abolish the Conservation Committee---taking the life blood out of conservation issues at the IWC."

Thank goodness.

Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research has a few pitiful papers published in peer reviewed scientific journals to show for 18 years worth of killing whales for 'scientific research'.

However, Australia is in a difficult position. Ian Campbell, Australia's Environment Minister, challenges Japan's cultural heritage argument on conservationist grounds. Yet he defends the destructive cattle grazing in Victoria's alpine national parks on cultural heritage grounds.

| Posted by Gary Sauer-Thompson at 11:21 AM | | Comments (2)
Comments

Comments

Hypocrisy in a coalition politician? Ah well, we shouldn't be surprised...
;-)>

Cameron,

He actually donned the cattleman's outfit and rode a horse around the Parliamentary grounds cracking a whip and talking about Australia's identity.

That's cultural politics for you. Tis a long way from the culture of the diasporia, is it not?