Judi McLeod
Judi McLeod, Editor






Features





Magazine





About CFP


Canada Free Press

CFP's Archive


print Print friendly

E-mail a friend

Contact Us

Humane Society of the United States, Sealing

Canada Skewers Phony Animal-Rights Seafood 'Boycott'

By ConsumerFreedom.com

Thursday, July 26, 2007

It's that time of year again, when the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) goes north of the border to bully the Canadian government. HSUS says it has organized a massive boycott of Canadian seafood as leverage to force Canada to cancel its annual seal hunt. (HSUS, by the way, was caught on camera last year ignoring the cries of a dying seal while filming its annual ice-floe fundraising video.) Last year we investigated HSUS's boycott claims; fully 78 percent of the restaurants and seafood businesses on HSUS's list weren't actually participating. And now Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans, (DFO) has done us one better, demonstrating that HSUS's phony "boycott" hasn't affected its chief seafood export to the United States -- the yummy snow crab.<>

In an analysis of snow crab prices and exports that DFO shared with us this week, the agency concludes that "HSUS's claims about the success of the boycott are much inflated at best, but more likely they are simply deceptive and misleading." We agree that HSUS simply isn't to be trusted, and today we're telling the Canadian media why.

According to data DFO purchased from the respected market research firm Urner Barry, snow crab prices were in a free-fall between 2004 and 2005. But we now know that the same thing was true of Alaskan king crab. Last time we checked, Alaska is not actually a part of Canada. HSUS has yet to explain how its Canadian seafood "boycott" could be responsible for ordinary market forces that appear to have affected the entire continent.

HSUS announced in early 2005 that its "boycott" would focus on Canadian snow crab -- after prices had already been declining for six straight months. And in some nifty sleight-of-hand, HSUS later took credit for causing this slide. At least now we know what the group is spending its $150 million annual budget on: time travel.

Perhaps the funniest part of this entire story is on HSUS's own website. Its published list of "boycotting" restaurants includes links to many of their websites. And as of this morning, several have online menus that include Canadian seafood.


The Center For Consumer Freedom is a nonprofit coalition supported by restaurants, food companies, and consumers, working together to promote personal responsibility and protect consumer choices.

 

Federal Debt Relief System