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Quote:Now you don't have to be part of the 'anti-marine park lobby' to connect the dots here.
PJ, asking people to join the dots is a euphemism for asking them to jump to unfounded conclusions. You may be right that the dots you see are consistent with an agenda to mislead, but what you fail to appreciate is that they are also consistent with responding to the facts, which happen to support marine parks. You need to look at the whole picture to tell the difference, not just whatever dots certain loonies show you.
But you won't respond to the facts - ie the validity of the report and it's conclusions. Leninistic statements about your faith in marine parks don't qualify. Quote:What do you mean by not just me?
I mean that other people bring up Pew as well. The whole anti marine park lobby seems to be getting into the nudge nudge wink wink act. It's a lot easier to handle than the facts.
Quote:Are you including me or not?
I did not intend to leave you out.
Quote:PS: give me an example of this recurring theme.
Your other thread.
If there is a lack of scientific discussion on the other thread thats your fault as you have repeatedly refused to be drawn on that most important aspect. Now you are treacherously trying to project that back onto me. Quote:Regarding fisheries management institutions - no marine parks in Australia were initiated from them.
What on earth is that supposed to mean? Are you suggesting that big
political changes can be traced back to a single nucleus?
Duh, you said they were the latest and greatest fisheries management tool - yet they have not been initiated by or even supported by our fisheries departments. PS: looks like you have made a freudian slip there - so the parks are political! Quote:Most individual fisheries scientist who are game to speak out are also against the current marine park mania.
Like the ones who signed the consensus statement? Or the ones in the paper you are criticising in the other thread? I suspect you are confusing being in a tiny minority with individualism.
160 signed the consensus, mostly from overseas and not many could be called fisheries scientists. Pew fellows feature highly, especially amonst the authors. There is no idication that the Austrsalian situtation was considered.
The GBRMPA scientists tend to be ecologists not fisheries scientists. They have a rather different world view. The look at other fisheries and degradation problems from around the world at their conferences and say 'look it's not happening here due to our marine park'. But they ignore the fact that it's not likely to happen here with our small population, remoteness of the reef and the light fishing pressure. Quote:A long way for an individual.
But they don't give it to 'individuals', do they? I would have thought it would go to research managers in charge of significant budgets, to be part of that budget.
Duh, they do give it to indivuals. Quote:Of course they are.
I think they have a very broad interest and this is only a tiny part of it. [/quote]
You "think" - do you know anything about them? The money they throw around is not tiny - especially in the cash starved field of marine research.