From "The Crimes Behind the Seafood You Eat/China has invested heavily in an armada of far-flung fishing vessels, in part to extend its global influence. This maritime expansion has come at grave human cost," by Ian Urbina (The New Yorker).
Squid fishing, or jigging, in particular, has grown with American appetites. Until the early seventies, Americans consumed squid in tiny amounts, mostly at niche restaurants on the coasts. But as overfishing depleted fish stocks the federal government encouraged fishermen to shift their focus to squid, whose stocks were still robust. In 1974, a business-school student named Paul Kalikstein published a master’s thesis asserting that Americans would prefer squid if it were breaded and fried. Promoters suggested calling it “calamari,” the Italian word, which made it sound more like a gourmet dish. (“Squid” is thought to be a sailors’ variant of “squirt,” a reference to squid ink.) By the nineties, chain restaurants across the Midwest were serving squid. Today, Americans eat a hundred thousand tons a year....
[China] divulges little information about its [distant-water] vessels.... I spent the past four years... visiting the fleet’s ships in their largest fishing grounds.... When permitted, I boarded vessels to talk to the crew or pulled alongside them to interview officers by radio. In many instances, the Chinese ships got spooked, pulled up their gear, and fled. When this happened, I trailed them in a skiff to get close enough to throw aboard plastic bottles weighed down with rice, containing a pen, cigarettes, hard candy, and interview questions. On several occasions, deckhands wrote replies, providing phone numbers for family back home, and then threw the bottles back into the water....
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I am uncertain if the agenda is to criticize the working conditions of the boats, to stoke fears of the Chinese fishing in international waters or to make me a vegetarian. A bit more focus to your propaganda, please…
Regarding the first two, the Chinese are different than American liberals- they think and act differently and probably won’t change in the face of your peer pressure and American liberal propaganda tactics. The Chinese are very much not your peers…
…regarding the last I like to eat animals and my species has a history of omnivorous behavior and I’d like it to continue. Yes, killing animals for food can seem ugly and barbaric but 1- please see the beginning of this sentence and 2- the other members of the food chain will not stop killing other animals because American liberals are applying peer pressure with a strategy of leading by example. The other animals are very much not your peers…
Fish are always eating other fish. If fish could scream, the ocean would be loud as shit. You would not want to submerge your head, nothing but fish going "Ahhh, fuck! I thought I looked like that rock!
- Mitch Hedberg
"Oh the foes will rise
With the sleep still in their eyes
And they’ll jerk from their beds and think they’re dreamin’
But they’ll pinch themselves and squeal
And know that it’s for real
The hour when the ship comes in"
The pull-quote title, "a squid ship", led me to expect a post about the Air Force's opinion of a Navy destroyer. Sad face when I see it's about fishing.
I'm as omnivore as the next person, but the squid population has nothing to fear from me.
Back in grad school, a Mexican grad student I knew had a side business with a Japanese squid fishing company. To make a very long, and sometimes amusing story very short, one night he and I went out on a squid boat in Santa Rosalia, B.C. It was kind of fun, but very different from most fishing. I don't remember the squid ink being that big a deal.
Once you see a factory ship, your views of Chinese commerce forever change. They ply their trade in far-off places, where enforcement is just a notional aggravation. The ship pulls in and deploys its work boats, which steam off, pulling out the nets. The ship scrapes every living thing from the water column, it all gets dragged back to the ship, every single wiggling thing. Then it gets processed for the protein. It's like watching a giant mechanical plague of locusts come swarming through your local waters, leaving a stripped ocean behind.
Working a barge rig in the Mediterranean once, the lights from the drilling rig would attract all the little squiddies at night, and if the evening tide was low, the barge's sunken top deck would emerge from the waters, full of little hand-sized squid, which we could then collect with a bucket. Fresh calamari, yum!
Of course the food section in the Sunday Times will paint a different picture as they lavish praise on some young chef and the innovative ways she prepares calamari.
The Chinese will also lead the way in development of Soylent Green, when the squid and jellyfish and krill are all overfished and gone.
I hate China.
Instead of climate change we should be working on saving our oceans. Fish farms have been a short term solution, but sooner or later a widespread disease is going to rip through the pens and the scramble to overfish the oceans, which is happening anyway, is going to be a big problem.
From my apartment in Hong Kong, I saw the cuttlefish (same family as squid) boat lights out in the bay every night. It was very pretty.
"The blinding glow of the bulbs, visible more than a hundred miles away..."
After a quick search:
"If you're a person with normal vision acuity — a rating of 20/20 — and you gaze horizontally from around 5 feet (152.4 centimeters) above the ground, you can see about 3 miles (5 kilometers) into the distance, which is the point at which the Earth's curvature bends away so that the surface is no longer in view."
So you can see the glow from a hundred miles? Maybe from a mountain top or from the air...
This is "Free trade" and "Globalization" at work. These two policies, plus mass migration of the 3rd world to the 1st world is driving us into enviromental disaster.
But the so-called "enviromentalists" and "Greens" only want to disucss climate change. That's also the agenda of the rich and the billionaire class. Even Mitt Romney wants to fight climate chnage.
BTW, maybe some Chinese reporter can investigate working conditions in US packing plants or sweat shops that are full of illegals working for a pittance.
Affordability and availability in productivity or labor arbitrage.
One Summer long ago, I was driving on a road in southern Rhode Island. I drove over what I later read was (accidentally dumped) squid waste. It was absolutely the worst smell I've ever encountered.
"Squid Ship" would be a great name for a punk band.
"thesis asserting that Americans would prefer squid if it were breaded and fried."
Personally I prefer it grilled like they do in Croatia.
Joe Smith: The glow of lights goes up into the sky. Recalculate your observational possibities considering a one, two, three mile high glow from bright lights on an otherwise very dark sea.
"Joe Smith: The glow of lights goes up into the sky. Recalculate your observational possibities considering a one, two, three mile high glow from bright lights on an otherwise very dark sea."
I understand this. But it would be incredibly inefficient to let light escape upward instead of directing it down toward the water.
I still don't believe it.
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