Mayo
Very Well-Known Member
Wow who would have guessed, an extreamist web site. Had a good read shot holes in most of there so called facts, and no others to be complete bollocks. The site contridicts it's self a lot, and doesn't acknowledge a lot of facts. Seems to be trying to tie the legal system up with a lot of junk. Tourists don't see wild kangaroo's because they rarely leave the tourist destinations and city's. Police can't be everywhere at one to police everything. Forign employees are used because some people don't want to work here in Aust, they prefer the doll instead. Yes we have mismanaged the land by using european farming methods but that is fast changing, We no they are not working so we are creating new ways to do things. Yes Roo's are hit by cars but so are many other species. Roo meat was potentially another meat source in Britain untill fanatics like that lot spread there bollocks about cruelty where do they think the rest of there weat comes from. There was a potential market which could have turned government to legalise Roo farms to get better quality meat if quality Roo meat shooters would be less inclined to shoot wild Roo's because there value would drop wouldn't it. You keep losing the court cases because you don't have good evidance to back it all up. Thought to be this, suposedly this, the figures show this but we believe it to be more like that, just doesn't cut it, not with me and I'm suprise a court room even entertained you with that sort of info. If roo's were farmed then they would probably be treated, or dipped, to eradicate any diseases, bacteria or infections that could harm us those shooting Roo's for money would lose there business for quality meat and skins. Then it would really just come down to a numbers game, are there to many, or not enough. There would be no money in culling them for meat and skins, and the Roo meat industry would probably have to come under AQIS as a farmed meat, for quality assurance. Therre by bringing it to the same rules and reg's as other main line meats.