iwalton wrote:Anglinarcher wrote:
My name has nothing to do with bow fishing.
Hey, my apologies.
As you can see, you go down a slippery slope, once you take the position that something bad is "here to stay", you give permission to ignore the problem.
I'm all for arguing over the topic, but let's avoid using such a
classic informal fallacy, shall we?
Making carp a "food fish" did not make your friends, if you actually have any, start eating carp.
Cute. A little defensive here eh? Let's try moving beyond such personal attacks and let me ask you, in your vast experience working with fishery management, what you would suggest WA officially designate the common carp (and mirror carp too?) as, if not a food fish? Certainly not a gamefish, like the northern pikeminnow? Just about every major type of fish in WA has some sort of classification as per its legal status. Tiger muskies are an interesting way to control the population, and I agree, the new 50'' rule might very well reduce carp numbers.
I will concur, carp are indeed "here to stay", but just like misquotes, I won't start liking them, I will continue to slap them, and I will use whatever preventative is available to prevent them from spreading.
Well, at least we agree on one thing:)
IWalton, I'm kind of sorry I was out fishing and not responding for so long, but the responses so far have been interesting. OK, not really, I don't find the discussions nearly as fun as Walleye Fishing. LOL
I'm impressed that you went to the web that taught something about what a "slippery slope" argument was. The philosophical points of view taken by this site are by no means main stream, but I see where you hang your hat now. I still contend that if we take a fatalistic point of view that something is "here to stay" that we are giving permission to leave it status quo. The very fact that carp are suffering from, and being killed by, what appears to be a virus in Spokane Lake (AKA Long Lake) would tend to prove that perhaps carp are indeed not "here to stay", unless we choose to do nothing.
I think perhaps the defensive response is yours, but I suppose I can see how you could have interpreted my comments about friends as such. In fact, I do not question that you have friends, I question that you have friends that eat carp. A favorite Liberal Argument is always that one knows something
special because they have some
special connection to a
special group. Unfortunately, more often then not, such connections do not exist, but the claim seems permissible under the presumption that the
end justifies the means. I do not subscribe to the belief that the end justifies the means, so I find that I must question your connections to aforementioned
special groups.
My experience obtained dealing with fisheries would suggest that listing carp as a "Non-Game fish", or an "Invasive Species" would serve the State well. With such designations, elimination of carp by fishermen would not be illegal. Fish flesh, such as carp or pikeminnow fillets (yes, I would suggest pikeminnow should be re-designated from game fish to one of these two categories), could be used as bait, or garden fortification, under such categories. Such a designation would not by it's nature allow littering, but it would decriminalize
not eating carp. Under the designation of "food fish", like Salmon is, then wasting would constitute doing anything other then eating them. As for the commercial fisheries program for carp, commercial fisheries will only work if the returns of such catches offer sufficient monetary return that it is profitable. In short, the carp problem will need to be completely out of hand before it will be profitable. Additionally, most bodies of water are either too small, too deep, or too shallow to ever functionally fish for carp commercially.
A couple of final comments for iwalton, we can't even agree on how many things we agree on.
You agreed with me about the Tiger Muskies and on the misquotes. two things not one. Isn't it funny that the first personal attach was yours regarding my moniker, but you want to be the first one to suggest we move beyond "such personal attacks". Would that also apply to your intentional use of the term VAST experience? I suppose that attacks are only personal if you are the one receiving them?
Too much water, so many fish, too little time.