Gresham - I think having a highly informed LFS employee goes a LONG way in developing quality aquarists. Quality pretty much comes with a price and a 15yo getting $10 an hour most likely is not going to be quality.
Amen!
-Gregory
Gresham - I think having a highly informed LFS employee goes a LONG way in developing quality aquarists. Quality pretty much comes with a price and a 15yo getting $10 an hour most likely is not going to be quality.
anathema said:Hmmm, where the heck do you find an unincorporated area in commute distance to SF?
nudibranch said:I wonder how many of the politicians that are trying to pass this have actually been to enough fish stores and Fish Hatcheries to actually make a generalization about the majority of the industry? On top of that how many of them know enough about the animal themselves to really be making this sort of decision? Or have they really met enough of the hobbyists to really be making a generalization about them; do they really understand how committed hobbyists are? I understand the thing about goldfish and other cheap fish but why are they extending this stereotype to all branches of the fish hobby?
So do many other industries and they haven't shut them down. What about the cases were Wal-Mart employees have been payed below minimum wage or have worked under inappropriate conditions and places were pigs are given daily doses of veterinarian anti-biotics producing anti-biotic resistant bacteria that wreak havoc on the world. I just think we just don't have enough people on our side; it's not like we're are Wal-Mart, we don't have a ton of money and we most likely aren't making the goverment as much tax money. We aren't like the pig industry which produces us awesome bacon and food for many people; even though the government knows that pigs can be raised to just the same size without veterinarian anti-biotics being dosed all the time and yet it has not been enforced that the farmers can not use daily doses off veterinarian anti-biotics. I think we are being shut down to please the people who want the government to take action against animal cruelty for with some anecdotal evidence and one-sided statistics they can make us the bad guy make us the new puppy mills and when we are shut down it will seem as if a major accomplishment against animal cruelty has been achieved. Even though in reality just an industry with a few flaws would have been destroyed.Thales said:nudibranch said:I wonder how many of the politicians that are trying to pass this have actually been to enough fish stores and Fish Hatcheries to actually make a generalization about the majority of the industry? On top of that how many of them know enough about the animal themselves to really be making this sort of decision? Or have they really met enough of the hobbyists to really be making a generalization about them; do they really understand how committed hobbyists are? I understand the thing about goldfish and other cheap fish but why are they extending this stereotype to all branches of the fish hobby?
Because the hobby does it fair share of bad things.
nudibranch said:Thales said:nudibranch said:I wonder how many of the politicians that are trying to pass this have actually been to enough fish stores and Fish Hatcheries to actually make a generalization about the majority of the industry? On top of that how many of them know enough about the animal themselves to really be making this sort of decision? Or have they really met enough of the hobbyists to really be making a generalization about them; do they really understand how committed hobbyists are? I understand the thing about goldfish and other cheap fish but why are they extending this stereotype to all branches of the fish hobby?
Because the hobby does it fair share of bad things.
So do many other industries and they haven't shut them down. What about the cases were Wal-Mart employees have been payed below minimum wage or have worked under inappropriate conditions and places were pigs are given daily doses of veterinarian anti-biotics producing anti-biotic resistant bacteria that wreak havoc on the world. I just think we just don't have enough people on our side; it's not like we're are Wal-Mart, we don't have a ton of money and we most likely aren't making the goverment as much tax money. We aren't like the pig industry which produces us awesome bacon and food for many people; even though the government knows that pigs can be raised to just the same size without veterinarian anti-biotics being dosed all the time and yet it has not been enforced that the farmers can not use daily doses off veterinarian anti-biotics. I think we are being shut down to please the people who want the government to take action against animal cruelty for with some anecdotal evidence and one-sided statistics they can make us the bad guy make us the new puppy mills and when we are shut down it will seem as if a major accomplishment against animal cruelty has been achieved. Even though in reality just an industry with a few flaws would have been destroyed.
nudibranch said:I know there are places in the Marine and Freshwater hobby that do bad things but why not just tell them they can't sell fish? I mean they are grouping places with employees who know a ton about the reefing hobby and who have great livestock that they won't just sell to anyone with stores whose employees are payed minimum wage who don't know what anything about the reefing hobby and are trained to just say "That will look great in your tank" and whose livestock are kept in poor conditions and inadequate habitats.
Also does anyone know about what is happening with this law right now?
Snake food was almost exempt from the proposal. After all, pythons have to eat, and they like their lunch alive. But at a heated meeting, Commissioner Pam Hemphill questioned how it could be humane to sell live animals to be fed to other live animals.
"If a snake is caught with a rodent in a box, the rodent can scratch its eye and cause an infection," said Hemphill, who noted that reptiles on display at the California Academy of Sciences eat dead, frozen prey. "The snake can't escape, and the rodent might be stuck for one or two days in the box with the snake because the snake's not hungry right then.
"So it doesn't seem very humane to me," she continued. "And if the frozen [food] works, then I think the killing of the animals to be food is probably more humane."
It is legal in San Francisco to sell live animals for eventual human consumption, and the proposed ban would not stop markets from selling live fish, poultry, turtles or seafood for that purpose.
Jennifer Scarlett, a veterinarian and co-president of the San Francisco SPCA, notes that only a handful of stores in San Francisco sell animals of any kind and that the effect of a ban would be largely symbolic. But she said that symbolism, and the conversation that it raises, is critical in improving the lives of millions of helpless creatures.
GDawson said:Interesting update:
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-goldfish-20110627,0,6881137.story
Snake food was almost exempt from the proposal. After all, pythons have to eat, and they like their lunch alive. But at a heated meeting, Commissioner Pam Hemphill questioned how it could be humane to sell live animals to be fed to other live animals.
"If a snake is caught with a rodent in a box, the rodent can scratch its eye and cause an infection," said Hemphill, who noted that reptiles on display at the California Academy of Sciences eat dead, frozen prey. "The snake can't escape, and the rodent might be stuck for one or two days in the box with the snake because the snake's not hungry right then.
"So it doesn't seem very humane to me," she continued. "And if the frozen [food] works, then I think the killing of the animals to be food is probably more humane."
Humane for the rodent would depend on the mode of death prior freezing wouldn’t it? Rich, can you confirm that they only use frozen rodents for snakes/reptiles?