The Economics of a Bloodbath 

Source >
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11659086/site/newsweek/

The annual baby-seal hunt is underway in Canada. Could
devaluing these beautiful animals actually save them?
Heather and Paul McCartney visited a seal pup in the
Gulf of St. Lawrence on March 2
Tom Hanson / AP
Heather and Paul McCartney visited a seal pup in the
Gulf of St. Lawrence on March 2

By Patti Davis
Newsweek
Updated: 4:53 p.m. ET March 3, 2006

March 3, 2006 - Despite mounting pressure to cancel
the yearly seal hunt, in which hundreds of thousands
of baby harp seals are killed simply for their pelts,
the Canadian government is allowing the bloodbath to
continue.
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Between 2003 and 2005, an estimated 1 million seal
pups were slaughtered according to the Canadian
Department of Fisheries and Oceans. The kill levels
are twice as high as they were in the 1960s when
international outrage succeeded in closing down
several markets for seal pelts. The United States
banned the import of seal products in 1972, and the
European Union agreed to a partial ban. Canada
eventually banned the killing of “whitecoats” (baby
seals) in 1987. But those white coats are replaced by
spotted gray coats in a matter of weeks--at which time
the seals are eligible for the hunt.

Last year alone, more than 315,000 seals were killed.
Some environmentalists report that some of the animals
are skinned alive and are left to die in agony.
Canada’s claim that the hunt is regulated and
monitored has been disputed every year by protesters
who show up at the same time the sealers do and have
witnessed what really goes on.

The hunt begins in March after females give birth to
pups with soft plush fur. That fur is the reason that
the ice floes turn red with blood. The defenseless
pups, who have no way to escape the sealers’ clubs and
rifles, are prized only for their pelts. Only for
fashion statements.

Some people have held out hope that with a new prime
minister, the annual hunt can be stopped. Stephen
Harper has replaced Paul Martin, who was an
uncompromising supporter of the hunt. As yet, though,
a regime change hasn’t helped. There has been no
indication that it will be canceled.


However, there is some good news. Italy has banned the
import of seal products, and the British government is
strongly considering doing the same. It’s clear that
if compassion will not end this mass slaughter, maybe
economics can. If no one is buying seal pelts, the
pups (less than three months old) will not be clubbed,
shot and skinned. Many might actually fulfill their
life expectancy of 30 years.

On Thursday, Paul and Heather McCartney visited the
Gulf of St. Lawrence to bring worldwide attention to
the pups whose fate is in the hands of the Canadian
government. Working with the Humane Society of the
United States, they have stated their commitment to
make this a global issue.

Predictably, sealers don’t appreciate the high-profile
attention the McCartneys’ visit will bring to this
issue. The Canadian press quoted Jack Troake, a
70-year-old sealer, who said, “It’s something we’ve
done for 500 years. It’s helped to sustain us. We go
to bed with a full stomach, a tight roof over our
heads. It’s part of our culture, our history.”

Are we to actually believe that there is no other way
for thousands of people to make a living? That all
they are equipped to do is kill seal pups and skin
them? And as far as traditions dating back hundreds of
years, there are plenty of old traditions that have
been banished as countries have grown more civilized:
town lynchings, slavery, bleeding people with leeches,
stoning women to death … to name a few.

In the end, supporters of the seal hunt may find that
their worst enemy is global warming. Unseasonably warm
temperatures have prevented the formation of many ice
floes, which is where females go to give birth. There
is extremely low ice cover in both the Gulf of St.
Lawrence and waters northeast of Newfoundland, both
primary breeding sites.

It would be nice if appealing to the hearts and
compassion of human beings was enough. But some of
earth’s inhabitants sadly only listen to money.
Countries that are banning imports of seal products
will probably make the most difference. Perhaps the
only way to save these beautiful creatures is to
render them economically worthless. It’s a strange
world when the only way to save something valuable is
by devaluing it.


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