Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsL4ljOkvUk
the jurgen experience so when did you start hunting because you're all about your whole message is like sustainability right yes and this is the knock on fishing is that people have an idea that fishing is not sustainable and jordan peterson actually talked about this yesterday and he said what they've figured out is that if you take large blocks of the ocean and make them uh off limits to fishing because all the fish live within 40 miles of the shore most of the fish do instead if you take large blocks of these areas and designate them as off limits to fishing then the fish grow and thrive in those areas and they venture out into other areas and it's like it helps it's a win-win well actually that's that study was retracted in october damn it jordan you [ __ ] up uh sorry jordan um it's so basically what they call mpas which is marine protected areas right and there was the studies who came to the conclusion of the fact that if you increase by something like like four or five percent the amount of marine protected areas you would increase the fish stock by 20 and the story was retracted because the doctor who was in charge of the study apparently the study the result was was uh understudy was depending on the result of this one and it was a bunch of stuff that was just like kind of not okay at all and like the other guy who caught throws a paper with her was her brother-in-law so she broke a bunch of rules when it comes to to etiquette kind of science wrote the paper was her brother-in-law yeah there was like some weird things going on and so the story the the paper was retracted the paper being attracted to scientific industry is pretty pretty intense here it is retraction of flawed mpa study implicates larger problems in mpa science so they not only didn't only found that out but they also found out that basically she had vested interests and governmental policies so there was also there was a political meddling into all of this right so she had a bias in what she was trying to achieve from that study so this is this is also also a pretty good website i'm
i'm partner with them and they're university of washington and they talk about a lot of sustainable seafood and things like that you partner with them yeah we just built up a blood a blood basically together to talk about sustainable seafood you know like people are interested into seafood which is about six people in the world but you know we're a great little community people are interested to see if a lot of people are interested in seafood so what is uh what's the best way to keep uh ocean fish and ocean wildlife sustainable it's it's such a complex topic it's very very complicated because there's a lot of assets to it right but it's the thing that i tell people is tell me what you believe in i'll tell you what to eat because there's not one answer you know you can think about protecting the ocean you can think about carbon footprint you can think about modern slavery you can think about modern slavery oh there's a lot of people who works on boats and different countries that are barely paid really so if you're buying fish you might be buying fish that was caught by slaves yes so there was a big documentary called fish okay so just to clarify on that point though is the cyst spirits you talk about that a lot but let's you have a french accent and sometimes you talk it's fine english is your second language i only have one you're better than me but when you say she's busy nobody knows the [ __ ] you're talking about you might see spiricy it's a film it's a documentary yes c spirits it was a netflix and they kind of portraits a pretty doom and gloom situation of fisheries around the world and it's this is about 80 percent of the seafood being consumed around the world that is still sustainable there is issues there is issues in third world countries and remote places the united states is the best country in the world when it comes to sustainable seafood really it's about 99 of the seafood being consumed that's coming from the us that is sustainable oh well that's good yeah so when you say sustainable how do they do that are they doing doing that with uh offshore farms
because i know they have some of those because i was in uh hawaii um and uh we were shout out to my friends at strike zone there was uh we were on a boat and we were catching these yellowfin tuna and this guy was telling me um one of the gentlemen that i was fishing with that these fish are not even native to that area that they were a part of like a like a farm they have this enormous like kind of roped-off area where they had left like i don't know how they do it they have like a large net or something like that yeah enormous area and they would feed these fish and they were using them for sushi and they were you know capturing them so they live in the ocean they would feed them little fish and [ __ ] like that and plump them up and then a storm came and [ __ ] up their net and then they got out into the ocean and we were catching them and apparently there was one area where you could catch a lot of them and that's where we caught them and i was like this is really interesting because could they do this all the time like is this a way to like re-introduce fish into the ocean and you know because they behaved like wild fish it's not like a any other animal that you raise in captivity and they become domesticated fish just have that little robotic go eat kill like switch in their brain you don't have to teach them how to do it i mean it's farming is uh it's like it's a pretty touchy subject because there's good farming this bat farming you know the same thing with things with animals when you think about fish farming the same thing as cattle this is basically the exact same thing so this good way to raise it and it's bad way to raise it and it's i think it's just about finding that species tuna is a bit tough because they're pelagic so it means that they're migrate migratory fish yeah migratory yeah yes and so it's you know what they often do especially with bluefin tuna like tuna that have very high value is they're going to catch it in a while they're going to put in the pans and fat them up
making sure like they're nice and chubby and then they can sell it too how do they catch them in a nap yeah normally pursain is probably one of the it accounts for a lot of uh i think over 65 percent of the tuna cats around the world it's a great way to catch tuna because it's basically you throw a net around a school of tuna so there's very little by catch because you just grab that's cool and then that's it okay so you don't have to worry about dolphins yeah so the problem becomes when you use what you call a fad so fast is the fishing grading device and what it does it creates like a little habit that normally looks like some stuff hanging and then you have a small fish then the medium fish and the big fish and the predators around so what did a lot of people do is they put those fats in the middle of nowhere it creates an ecosystem throwing giant gigantic sorry net around it pick up everything that's when the buy cash gets terrible but per saying when you're cashing is cool without fads the buy cash is very very low so bycatch is what they call it collateral damage so it's a bunch of fish that you don't want what do they do with the fish that they don't want like what if they do that and they they throw a net and they get like like manta rays or something that they're not looking for it's they throw them overboard most of the time they're dead um a lot of people try to say like why don't we just keep the buy cash when it comes to fish obviously not nobody wants to eat dolphin apart and other parts of the world what parts of the world eat dolphin japan i think do they eat dolphin i know they kill them that cove documentary is horrible so you can buy it at the store really yes i want to see dolphin meat on a shelf let me see that that's like to me that's like people
meet it's pretty it's pretty yeah it's pretty intense they're very very smart you
