Saturday, December 17, 2011

More Madness............


The Victorian state government is going to start handing out long term 20 year logging licences, and we all shake our collective heads. What a madness and why? Because the minister Peter Walsh is from the Nationals and apparently his spin is that what he wants to do with this will provide “greater resource certainty” for the timber industry. As if that matters at all.

The five year plans had the timber industry cutting down trees with the same certainty they did when longer contracts were available, and 20 year contracts will only cause grief for the people of the state when they decide, as they must, that this malevolent harvest must cease before any contracts have run their allocated term. The current minister, reading from the Liberal sheet of excuses, that the previous Brumby government neglected the industry, and stifled investment is quite incorrect.

According to the Department of Primary industry figures here [http://www.dpi.vic.gov.au/forestry/about-forestry/victorias-native-timber-industry-2011]:

[quote]The gross value of log production of the Victorian native timber industry in 2008-09 was $131 million, accounting for around 23 per cent of Australia’s native timber industry.[end quote]

That hardly appears like a stifling amount, especially when we see that this was 23% of the native timber harvested in Australia. That looks rather bad enough, and this from 5 year contracts and labelled as a sustainable timber industry?

So what does a sustainable timber industry really mean:


  •  that the amount of timber taken in a year is replaced in that same year in another location one presumes. By allocating more land to be retained as forest
  •  that the forest is replenished as it was and no more areas are denuded than are increased elsewhere
  •  that the understorey that helps to maintain and sustain the forests is also replaced at the same rate that it's destroyed
  • •that the native animals dispossessed and killed are also replaced and replenished elsewhere, [because they are not transported to new country where there is no competition from humans or other animals, birds and reptiles]
  •  that the native animal habitat is replaced in another location is just as fecund and fruitful as the area where the latest years harvest and destruction was perpetrated?


If this is correct then we have nothing to worry about. It does seem fanciful and its certain this is not happening.

A long term timber harvesting contract is pretty precarious at the moment. Because if the trend continues as it seems to be heading, to try to make the environment receive as much consideration even if not action as it should, or even more than it has in the past. The Victorian government and the minister administrating and pushing for this, is going to have to live up to their promise of considering compensating the industry if their licences are cancelled, as they will be, with tax payers money.

The madness of this government is well known. They are all for the icing on the cake and care not how thick that might be even if the cake beneath it cannot support the lavish destruction they pile onto it.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Old bones.........

Reading various works on studies that have been done on animals, plants and such things that we see today, find reference and discussion on skeletons of those that are related to the animals of today in the past. What relevance to what we see now does this have? What does it matter that antelopes might have been tree climbers and meat eaters in a time past, if this was discovered? People write about the times on the earth 20 million years ago as if they were there and walking round, or flying their aircraft over the land and water of that time. Yet they couldn't have been there, and they are only working with what they know today by transposing it onto the soil, skeletal and moisture samples that they find, and declare to be so old or so ancient or whatever comes into their modern day reasoning. It proves what?

So what does this do other than justify the existence of people who are employed to do this digging and searching to satisfy their own curiosity first, and then generate the curiosity for the general public so they get money to do more of this work. The general public who are led to believe all this theory without any real proof they can establish themselves, telling them that it was actually so. Should we do anything with this study do we need to know these things and what relevance does it have to our world today or our lives at any time over the period that we can remember, or to any following generations. It appears to be of no use other than bulk out the books written about species we know today. It creates a history without any meaning and no certainty of accuracy.

The professors and other spout this information and are labeled as being very clever, not because they discovered this themselves, but because their memory is such that it retains what they read and believe, no matter if it is in some future time debunked. Even when debunked it just sets off another spiraling set of theories that could apply yet change nothing in the world at all. It is a rarefied environment which has certain people discussing ideas and theories that lead nowhere. Sadly the use and purpose of this generated knowledge just accepted and is never questioned by those of us to whom it's fed. The money used to discover this theoretical past could be better applied to study and research what is actually happening on the planet today. Forget the bones of animals long gone and look at animals of today so we can better understand them and their needs for survival.

Maybe researchers of the future will dig up and study the bones and other skeletal forms of animals that were on the planet even as we were ourselves. But which weren't studied and allowed or even actioned to become extinct. Thereby those future curious diggers and researchers will also find money to justify their employment. What a waste of resources.