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Whaling on Whalers

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society's Paul Watson talks about taking a bullet from the Japanese, why Greenpeace activists are the "Avon ladies of the environmental movement," and Whale Wars, his new series on Animal Planet.

Fri Nov. 7, 2008 12:00 AM PST

MJ: How many times have you been arrested?

PW: I don't really have a count. Many, many times. But I've never been convicted.

MJ: You're currently facing charges, right, for allegedly interfering with a commercial seal hunt off the coast of Newfoundland?

PW: I'm not; two of my crew members are. But we'll win that case. Canada boarded and took our vessel in international waters, and the evidence that we're always in international waters is our GPS recorder. They boarded the ship, tore the ship apart in search of photographs, because in Canada it's illegal under the Seal Protection Act to witness, document, film, or videotape a seal hunt. If you've seen a seal being killed, you've broken the law, and it's punishable by a year in prison and a $100,000 fine. So I've been charged many times, and we always win. In '92, they held my ship for 22 months and I then sued them and they had to pay damages. So they're doing the same thing again.

MJ: Will you win by citing the UN Charter?

PW: No, we are going to win because we are a Dutch-registered ship with a Dutch captain and a Swedish first officer and a European crew arrested in international waters by the Canadian government. It's an act of piracy. And we have the Dutch government siding with us. Canada has already realized how embarrassing this whole thing is. They tried to give my ship back, but I wouldn't take it unless they gave in to my demands, and those demands are to drop the charges against my crew and deliver a letter of apology for their act of piracy. And then they can give me my ship back.

MJ: So they have your ship right now?

PW: They have the Farley Mowat, but it's costing them $4,000 a day to hold on to it. And after the trial—it won't go to trial for about a year—and after we win, we'll countersue and they'll have to pay damages. But what the Canadian government didn't realize is that I was trying to retire that ship. Because things are getting very expensive, especially with fuel costs, and it's really expensive to retire a ship. So the best way to do it is to have the Canadian government seize it and hold it for us. It's a great deal of money.

MJ: How many awards have you won? Or do you consider arrests and awards to be the same thing?

PW: I've won some awards. Time magazine designated me as one of the environmental heroes of the 20th century. Oh, and I've got some honorary citizenships, like from the Conch Republic of the Florida Keys. But the one thing I am proud of is I didn't get the Chevron environmental award. Never did get that one. Awards don't really mean that much. I put them up on the ship, but what's the good of them? I mean, unless it's got a check with it, who cares?

MJ: You are an advocate of population control.

PW: What I am really is somebody who adheres to the three basic laws of ecology, which are pretty simple. No species has ever survived on this planet unless they lived in accordance with the laws of ecology. The law of diversity: that the strength of an ecosystem is dependent upon diversity. The law of interdependence: that those species are interdependent with each other. And the law of finite resources: that there is a limit to growth because there is a limit to carrying capacity. And if any species doesn't abide by that, they will go extinct. And we will not be any exception. So the law of finite growth dictates that we have to bring our populations under control. There simply aren't the resources on the planet to continue to feed an escalating human population. That's why the oceans are dying. I happen to believe that the occupation of fishermen is the most ecologically destructive occupation on the planet. It could lead to the downfall of civilization and the extinction of humanity. Because if we overfish the oceans, we kill the oceans. If the oceans die, we die. It's as simple as that.

MJ: It's been stated that you think whales are more intelligent than people. Why do you say that?

PW: Well, first of all, physiologically, whales have bigger brains, more convolutions on the brain, four lobes to their brains, compared to our three lobes. All other mammals have three lobes. But [a whale's] is a nonmanipulative intelligence; they don't have technologies. We're conditioned that if a blob of protoplasm stepped out of a space ship with a ray gun it would have to be intelligent because it has technology. But we can't even come close to whales in areas like communications. I was arguing with a whaler one time and he said, "You say that whales are more intelligent than people. This is really stupid; how could you say something like that?" And I said, "I measure intelligence by the ability to live in harmony with the natural world. And by those criteria, whales are more intelligent than we are." And he said, "By those criteria, cockroaches are more intelligent than we are." And I said, "George, you're beginning to understand what I'm trying to tell you."

I mean, last year I got severely criticized, I think it was by Brett Hume, who made a big deal because I had written something that said that worms were more important than people. And he said, "How could you say something like that?" And I said, "Well, I said it because it's true. From an ecological point of view, worms can live on the Earth without people, but we can't live on the Earth without worms. So they are more important."

MJ: Do you feel that looking at things through that ecological lens is a nice simplifying or clarifying principle?

PW: I think it does. I take a biocentric point of view. I look at things from the point of view of the Earth and the laws of ecology. As opposed to the anthropocentric point of view, where everything revolves around humanity. One way I used to explain it to my students was that if you walk into Mecca and spit on the stone, you're in big trouble. But every day we go into the most profoundly beautiful, mysterious cathedrals of the natural world, like the rainforests of Amazonia or the Redwood Forests of California or the Great Barrier Reef, and we totally desecrate these areas with bulldozers and drag trawl nets. And how do we react? A few people sign petitions or write letters to politicians. But certainly nobody would risk their life to protect them as they would with some pie-in-the-sky religion.

MJ: So this is almost like a religion for you.

PW: I don't really believe in religion. I believe in nature. I believe in ecology. I believe in life. But I don't believe in fantasies. And most human beings live in a world of fantasy.

MJ: The Animal Planet program documents your three-month 2007 to 2008 campaign in the Antarctic. What do you hope to accomplish with the program? What made you want to do it?

PW: When I saw Deadliest Catch, here we've got a TV show about a bunch of guys who go out in very rough water and do the same thing every week, catch crabs. Well, I said, "You know, we've got rough water. And we go out and risk our lives. And the water we go out into is even more remote and rougher than the Bering Sea. And we can also offer icebergs, penguins, and whales." So, I thought it would be a more interesting show. But it really gives an opportunity for people to come down into one of the most remote and hostile parts of the planet and see how people are willing to dedicate themselves and risk their lives to protect the whales from illegal activity.

MJ: So the show was your idea?

PW: Yes. We approached all of the networks, actually. And Animal Planet was the network that was interested. Also, Animal Planet is where Steve Irwin came from, and Steve was very close to us. He was going to come on our campaign, and in fact we named our ship the Steve Irwin.

MJ: You obviously understand the power of a message. What will it take to get people to stop stripping the oceans and killing whales? Is it a show like Whale Wars?

PW: Every year we call our campaign something different. Last year it was Operation Migaloo after Migaloo the white humpback whale. And this year it is going to be called Operation Musashi. And I named it in honor of a Japanese strategist named Miyamoto Musashi. I did this to get the Japanese more interested in what we're doing. But the other thing is, Musashi wrote of something called the "twofold way of pen and sword." And that's why the logo we have for this campaign is a crossed feather pen with a samurai sword. And what he meant by that was, confrontation has to be accompanied by communication or education.

MJ: So the show is the perfect marriage of those two things?

PW: We're going down to Antarctica to confront illegal whaling activities, to intervene to shut them down. At the same time we have to explain to people why we're doing this and how we're going about it. So it's intervention and education. And Animal Planet gives us the opportunity to do that.

MJ: Was your crew on its best behavior while the cameras were rolling?

PW: After a couple of days, the crew was almost oblivious to the cameras. In fact, sometimes I think they were overly oblivious to the cameras. They just sort of disappeared. And the Animal Planet crew was professional. They didn't really obstruct and they didn't interfere too much, so it was quite easy. It was a pretty easy partnership.

MJ: Did you have any control over what went into the show?

PW: No, absolutely not. And I don't think we wanted to. Over the years I've always had journalists participate on campaigns and I've always told them, "You report what you see." You're not doing anybody any favors by putting a whitewash over the thing and pretending things aren't what they are. We've had people who participated and reported their opinions, which sometimes I didn't like. But when people report on this in book form or in a magazine article it gives me an opportunity to see what I'm doing from another person's point of view, which is highly constructive.

MJ: Have you seen all the episodes?

PW: I haven't seen any of the episodes because they haven't all been put together. I've seen a few takes on it. But we won't see the show until everybody else sees the show, as far as I know.

MJ: Are you trepidatious at all?

PW: No. It'll be what it'll be. And we believe what we were doing was right and just. Most importantly, we know that we don't put anybody's life at risk; we know we're not going to injure anybody; we know we're trying to uphold the laws. And I think that will come across in the show. Some of the things the Japanese accuse us of are certainly going to be laid to rest, that we were shooting at them and throwing dangerous weapons at them.

MJ: Do you expect to be flooded with volunteers after the show airs?

PW: We already are, really. It used to be difficult to get crew, to get volunteers. Now our most difficult task is saying no to people. We're getting very highly qualified people. But at the same time, I always want to make room for people who have no skills or experience because it's an opportunity for them to get involved. I mean, I first went to sea on a Norwegian ship as a deck boy. You can't even do that anymore, so it's almost getting difficult for young people to get their foot in the door on a lot of these things.

MJ: People talk about apathy among young people, but it seems like you're seeing the opposite.

MJ: I think there generally is a lot of apathy, but I think it's based on the fact that they've been raised in a society that leaves them powerless. One of the things I've been trying to do on the ship is to have our volunteers understand that they have the power to change the world. Don't depend on government or big organizations to solve these problems. They never have; they never will.

MJ: Do you see yourself as a maverick?

MJ: I think all my life I've pretty much seen myself as sort of a maverick, or at least enough people have told me that. I think of it as freethinking, really. One of the advantages I've had in my life is I was forced to…My mother died very young. I was from a very large family. I was forced to leave home at a very young age and go work on ships. So my education was in Africa and the Middle East and the Far East and everything, working my way up on ships. And I skipped my whole high school thing and went to university as a mature student when I was 21. But during that period of time, I wasn't being told how to think. I had to learn how to think. That made a difference.

MJ: Reportedly, you have an annual budget of $2 million. Where does it come from?

PW: It's all from private individuals from around the world. In fact, we don't do direct mail. We don't do door-to-door solicitation, things like that. It's sort of a word-of-mouth thing. What that means is that although we have a small membership, we have a very loyal membership.

MJ: Presently, you sail under the Dutch flag, but for a while you were a pirate ship, right?

PW: The Japanese kept putting pressure on everybody to pull our flags, the Canadian flag, the British flag, the Belizean flag, the Cayman Island flag. Every time we would register, the Japanese would go in there, and next thing we know we would lose our flag. So finally we went under the Dutch flag, and I really like the Dutch register's response to the Japanese, which is, "We don't take our orders from Tokyo." We assured them that we have not and would not ever do anything violent. One of the big problems is there is a misinterpretation of what constitutes violence. I have to agree with Martin Luther King, who said you cannot commit an act of violence against a nonsentient object. Causing damage to a whaling ship or a gun to me is an act of nonviolence, especially if it's being used illegally. One of our supporters is the Dalai Lama. Back in 1985, he sent me a little statue, which he said to put on the ship, which we still have. And I met him in '89 and I asked him what it meant, and the statue is called HayaGriva. He said it's the compassionate aspect of Buddhist wrath. And I said, "What does that mean?" And he said, "Oh, you never want to hurt anybody. But sometimes when they cannot see enlightenment, you sometimes have to scare the hell out of them until they do." Anyway, that's one of the reasons they called us pirates. And when I think back to it, it's appropriate because back in the 17th century, when piracy was out of control in the Caribbean, it wasn't the British or the Spanish navy that brought it under control. Piracy was shut down by Henry Morgan, a pirate. If you want to stop pirates, you need pirates to do it. So we look upon ourselves as pirates of passion in pursuit of pirates of profit.

MJ: Are you setting sail again anytime soon?

PW: We're getting the Steve Irwin outfitted to leave on December 1st from Australia to return to Antarctica.

MJ: Is there a possible Whale Wars sequel in the works?

PW: We're talking with Animal Planet about returning for a second season. And I believe they're going to do it, but I can't really speak for them. I don't think we've actually signed that deal yet.

MJ: You're 57. Is this something you're going to do for your entire life?

PW: I don't really believe in retirement. I think that as long as you've got any life in your body, you can use it. My grandfather died at 96, and he was murdered. My other grandfather lived to be 90. We're a long-living family, no heart disease and no cancer, so I think we'll probably be around for a while.

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Comments

Paul Watson, you are one of my person heroes. Without people like you willing to put your lives on the line for nature, we would all be lost.

oops, meant "personal" there!

I've long been a admirer of the bravery and conviction (or maybe that should be lack of convictions) of Paul and the Sea Shepherd Society.

We watched Rob Stewart's doc Sharkwater recently, and once again Paul and his crew were front and centre when no-one else seems to care.

I hope to one day be able to help out on deck too.

Robert in Vancouver

How cool! After reading this, all I can say is "Arrgh!"

What the world needs most are young people that look up to Capt. Watson and his crew. His whole philosophy of life is a credit to our race (the human race that is). What he is doing is nothing short of heroism.

Fight the good fight! Let the Avon Ladies keep begging for money...

Watson is a fraud who's business is sucking money out of the most gullible, ignorant members of the United States population. Selling fake conservation to the ignorant(ie conserve the cutest) is a set-back to genuine conservation.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_gTBDFTXE0

Paul Watson You are a terrorist and you will be stopped this year

Mike, you realize that,

Mike, you realize that, because of what you said, you are a terrorist. Who exactly is going to stop Paul? You? That's how I choose to interpret it. So therefore you are a terrorist. Labeling someone a terrorist has lately gotten way out of hand. My 14 year old son is a terrorist because he terrorizes his 12 year old sister.... Can you label a gang 'terrorists' because they defend their turf? How about surfer nazis who defend their surf spots? Or vigilantes who go after illegals in Arizona?

sea sherperd are supporters of animal prisons like that run by steve irwins disney like organization.how come theres no whales or dolphins in this prison?do sea sheperd believe different animals have different rights to to freedom?

Hey Paul keep up the good work. Now we need somebody to help the starving people all over the globe!!!!!

Watson is a fraud who's business is sucking money out of the most gullible, ignorant citizens of the United States. Fake conservation (ie. "conserve the cutest") is a set-back to genuine conservation.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_gTBDFTXE0

“WHALE WARS is an epic adventure that looks at the consequences of taking a stand on an issue,” declares Marjorie Kaplan, president and general manager of Animal Planet. “It’s so important that WHALE WARS calls Animal Planet its home. It’s truly compelling television, and it’s entertainment with a conservation message infused to its core.”

Perhaps one of the most chilling departures from the entire 40 year global eco movement was this year when Sea Shepherd traded it's last shred of dignity and credibility for the cameras of Animal Planet and thus began Eco-Edutainment Television-where the message and outright fabrication of events have subsumed the horrors of actual whaling. Where dead whales and story lines are traded with advertisements for SUV's and laundry detergent. This is a meeting of eco media and horror that never should have happened and now that it has will change the landscape of the global eco movement for years to come.

Sea Shepherds anti whaling operation last season was one of unrelenting and breathless press release after press release. Sea Shepherd members were "taken hostage" by evil Japanese whalers. Sea Shepherd members were "harassed", titular head of the organization Paul Watson was "shot in the chest".

The fact is none of this actually happened the way it was portrayed and 90% of it was fabricated for Animal Planet's cameras creating for the first time a hybrid media organization that,truth be told, is becoming more horrific than actual whaling. Even Discovery Networks are backing away from Watsons "attempted assassination claim" realising their exposure to it might have a negative blow back for the network.

The question most credible NGO's are asking themselves these days, what is worse? Killing whales for bogus research, or exploiting the killing of whales for television ratings and eco donations from a well meaning and ill informed public?

Paul Watson and Sea Shepherd, like the Republican Party, are out of fresh ideas, and out of a true game plan to stop whaling in the Antarctic. One might even suggest this is not the real agenda here. It is well known that Watson hates, with a passion reserved only for the mentally unbalanced, his fellow anti whaling rivals Greenpeace. By allowing reality television crews and cameras aboard his vessel Watson creates his own reality and 20 million unwitting viewers go along for the ride not knowing events are not as they seem. Worldwide Sea Shepherd has all but painted itself into a corner, with fewer and fewer countries and ports allowing his brand of hysterical eco activism into their waters.

Sea Shepherd has chosen, in lieu of actual action, to Wag the Conservation Dog. Where this goes from here is any ones guess. What other NGO's should be doing right now is taking a hard stance against for profit reality television shows like Whale Wars. In the final summation will this stop whaling? No, sadly it will not.

Paul Watson's tireless, intrepid work to stop the slaughter of marine mammals does carry with it a certain element of discomfort as it serves as a mirror to those among us who have surrendered to the cheap seats. Stop criticizing. Do something.
After 30 years, I know this hero by the work he does. Help him, help this planet, and stand up to those who continue to slaughter.

I just finished watching "Whale Wars." It was great entertainment. I especially loved watching the stupidity and incompetence of Paul Watson and his disciples. I don't approve of killing whales, but I now feel sympathy for the Japanese.

you better find my dag on orca whale

I know Watson a long time.

I know Watson a long time. The first thing which needs to be understood (and generally isn't) is that the United Nations treaty against whaling provides for a 'right of private action'. This international act, passed while Carter was U.S. President allows enforcement by anyone. Watson (and company) are the 'anyone'. Thus, his attacks on commercial ships, while violent in nature, are nonetheless sanctioned by the International Anti Whaling treaty. He is essentially a 'bounty-hunter' for the United Nations. I do not always agree with the U.N.. In this case, they did something right. There is absolutely no need to kill marine mammals, who, might very well have higher intellects then ourselves. The line needed to be drawn and Watson is the artist. Respectfully submitted~

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yes yes yes yes yes. more of this, please.

tagged as: 
rabblerousers of the world, unite. and, um, actually DO something that isn't simply symbolic. this guy's definitely got the right idea. a vaguely-proposed solution/question/suggestion: if there are so many willing and interested volunteers, shouldn't there be more organizations to train them and put them into action at appropriate levels? there isn't a "question to the mag and its readership" tag but maybe there should be. because i'd be interested to know what some of the better organizations/programs that train people for serious environmental activism are, and i'd like to hear more about them. and i'm sure i'm not alone. and i bet that the MoJo readership and/or it contributors/staff could be of great help in identifying some good models, if any exist.

What does he achieve?

Silly question, but can anybody explain to me how Sea Shepherd's dangerous tactics have actually reduced whaling in the past 30 years? No? The major reason why whaling continues is actually about protecting Japan's far more lucrative (and far more environmentally damaging, incidentally) tuna fishing industry - the Japanese Ministry of Fishing is apparently concerned that giving an inch on whaling will see their right to catch (I prefer "denude the oceans of", a more accurate description) tuna curtailed. The most likely route to stopping whaling is through the force of Japanese public opinion, not western. Until Sea Shepherd and Greenpeace actually start campaigning in areas that actually might result in a cessation of whaling, I'm forced to conclude that they're more interested in looking like eco-warriors (and drumming up donations) than stopping whaling.

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