fishing kit evaluations

Posted by: mick

fishing kit evaluations - 05/22/03 08:17 PM

Chris i was wondering how you where getting on with the fishing kit evaluations. Are they nearly finished yet or are you still having problems?
thanks
Posted by: Chris Kavanaugh

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/23/03 02:33 AM

I think I should probably submit the freshwater and improvised systems to Doug <img src="images/graemlins/blush.gif" alt="" /> Our salt water fishing is deeply impacted locally by the global depletion of fish. Estimates are that 10% of normal stocks remain worldwide with continued depletion <img src="images/graemlins/mad.gif" alt="" /> This translates into very restricted fishing off my local coast. Tie that in with several failed promises of a berth to go out and it's been a real fishy experience <img src="images/graemlins/tongue.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/23/03 05:44 AM

Chris,

To what do you attribute the global depletion, and when do you think it started?
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/23/03 01:11 PM

Depletion of fish is a result of people taking them out of the water and chewing on them and it started some 2.5 million years ago. <img src="images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />

(sorry, I tried, but I couldn't restrain myself)
Posted by: Saunterer

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/23/03 01:20 PM

BWAHAHAHA!!! I needed that this morning.

I might even have some fish for lunch.
Posted by: mick

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/24/03 03:42 PM

thanks for the reply
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/27/03 07:36 PM

Chris,

I am curious about your statement that "estimates are that 10% of normal stocks remain worldwide with continued depletion". I am sure that you are quoting what you believe to be an accurate source. Your integrity is not in question. May I ask the source of these figures? Was it some publication?

Did the source mention how and when the figures were derived and how they were validated? There would have to be at least two complete, worldwide inventories in order to get the starting and ending figures. And in order to be accurate, they would have to be conducted without any fish being counted twice. I can't even do that looking into an aquarium containing more than two fish.

I can't imagine how anyone would go about either inventory, especially the initial one, which would have to have been conducted so long ago as to have predated boats. It also would have predated written language, without which the beginning figures could never have gotten to the folks that did the second inventory.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/27/03 07:44 PM

If I may butt in check this article http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/InNews/fishkill2003.htm

Ed
Posted by: aardwolfe

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/27/03 07:58 PM

eodman has posted a link to a news article which, I think, answers many of your questions, but I believe historically, we can conclude that the ocean fish stocks were relatively stable up until the modern era of "industrial fishing". So I don't see that it would be necessary to have done a comprehensive count of the ocean's fish - we know how much fish was being caught 40 years ago, we know how much fish is being caught today, we can draw reasonable conclusions.

And the notion that the only way to count a group of something is to assign a number to every single member of the species is just wrong. Scientists have been using sampling techniques for over a hundred years to estimate numbers of things that are too many to count, and fish populations are no exception. In any event, I don't need to know how many fish there are now, or how many there were then, to be able to estimate that there used to be ten times as many as there are now.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/27/03 08:39 PM

Sorry, I remain skeptical. Just because some scientist or quasi-scientist says something does not make it so, and just because something winds up in print does not make it so. Scientists haven't even discovered all species in the ocean yet, and the're going to presume to count them? If they don't know where they are, or don't know that they exist, how can they count them?

People invent, twist, or selectively quote figures all of the time in order to make their favorite point. Just watch the news or read the papers. Who knows what their reasons are? Some are ignorant. Some do it to manipulate people. Some just parrot someone else's figures without checking them out for themselves, never mind that they may be dead wrong.

As big as the earth is, I find it difficult to believe that we have lost 90% of the ocean's big fish. Don't they breed anymore?

Sorry, I don't buy it.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/27/03 09:02 PM

I am not a scientist or a quasi-scientist. I occasionally fish but not enough to consider my personal empirical information valid. OTOH, logic can be our friend. If in year "n" 5 boats collect 50 fish a day and in year "n+x" 50 boats are required to collect 50 fish a day then something has changed. Possibilities are; 1) there are fewer fish by a multiple of 10; 2) fishermen are 10 times dumber than x years ago; 3) fish are 10 times smarter than x years ago. Of these three possibilities the first is the most likely. There may be other explainations and it is possible that the fish are much smarter (given some of the individuals I am forced to work with it is possible that the fishermen are 10 times dumber).

One possible explaination is that all the well meaning bans of this and that type of fishing (deep water nets etc.) has made the fishing industry so much less efficient.

One possible explaination is that the fish have all turned gay due to over-population of liberal minorities and are just not breeding as fast as they used to.

One possible explaination is that ....

But it seems likely that as the human population rose and it's appetite for seafood remained steady and high our consumption rate eventually surpassed the fish breeding / growth rate with the natural consequences being depletion of stocks.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/27/03 10:30 PM

One thing we both can agree on is that there are a number of possible explanations. Something that should be considered before we all go off the deep end is that something in the fishes environment may have changed, and the entire school has simply moved. The school could have been driven from one area to another, or simply attracted from one area to another. The questions are what has happened, and why.

It is possible that over time, the school has learned that certain sounds signal danger, such as the sounds of the engines of the fishing boats or other equipment. That is not as far-fetched as it may seem. Whitetail deer learn over time that the presence or absence of certain sounds and scents are normal. They instinctively preceive any change in the norm as a danger signal and react accordingly. Depending on the danger, they may permanently leave the area.

It is possible that due to volcanic action, landslides, weather, etc, that the underwater currents have changed enough, even temporarily, to motivate the fish to go elsewhere.

It is possible that normal currents are carrying bacteria or chemicals from dumped garbage and the area usually frequented by the school is now disagreeable or hostile, causing them to hunt for more favorable areas.

It is also possible that there have been changes in water temperatures, the speed or temperature of underwater currents, the acidity or salinity of the water, its ability to hold oxygen, etc. Any of these factors could effect the behavior of the school. They could effect not only the school, but also the plants or animals used as food by the school. If the food thinned out sufficiently, or if the number of predatory fish increased sufficiently, the school could well move to another area.

Assuming that the problem exists at all, I doubt very seriously that this is the first time that this has happened, and I think that it will correct itself over time. I find this a whole lot more plausible than the idea that in the short life of industrial fishing that we have wiped out 90% of the large fish in the oceans.

Here is something to consider. Take a look at gas prices. Someone in the Middle East can just belch, or hint at an oil shortage, and the next day we pay 10 cents more per gallon. The prices of groceries respond pretty fast to shortages, too. Has anyone noticed the massive increase in the price of fish that would indicate that we are eating the last 10% of the large fish in the entire world? Neither have I. <img src="images/graemlins/shocked.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: aardwolfe

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/28/03 12:20 AM

>>Sorry, I remain skeptical. Just because some scientist or quasi-scientist says something does not make it so, and
>>just because something winds up in print does not make it so. Scientists haven't even discovered all species in the
>>ocean yet, and the're going to presume to count them?

Nobody said anything about counting them. If I see a satellite photograph of the Amazon rainforest, and 10 percent of it is on fire, I don’t need to count every last tree to know that 10 percent of the forest is on fire. We don’t need to count them, or even estimate the numbers (although that can be done and probably has been) to know that there are dramatically fewer of them now than there were 30 or 40 years ago.

>>People invent, twist, or selectively quote figures all of the time in order to make their favorite point.

“After all, facts are facts, and although we may quote one to another with a chuckle the words of the Wise Statesman, 'Lies--damned lies--and statistics,' still there are some easy figures the simplest must understand, and the astutest cannot wriggle out of."
Leonard Henry (later Baron) Courtney (First recorded instance of the expression "lies, damned lies, and statistics")

>>Just watch the news or read the papers. Who knows what their reasons are? Some are ignorant.

You said it, not me <img src="images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />

>>As big as the earth is, I find it difficult to believe that we have lost 90% of the ocean's big fish. Don't they breed anymore?

Not if they’re extinct.

>> Something that should be considered before we all go off the deep end is that something in the fishes environment may have changed, and the entire school has simply moved.

We’re not talking about a school, we’re talking about the Grand Banks of Newfoundland and the Flemish Cap.

>>The school could have been driven from one area to another, or simply attracted from one area to another.

If you found the state of California deserted, would you seriously consider the possibility that everyone has just decided to move to the Mojave Desert? I’m sure the Mojave Desert is a lovely place, but it simply couldn’t begin to support the entire population of California. 100 square miles of fish don’t simply decide to leave their feeding grounds; what would they live on?

>>The questions are what has happened, and why.

I’d venture a guess that it has something to do with a two-legged creature that can’t take a hint. <img src="images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />

>>It is possible that over time, the school has learned that certain sounds signal danger, such as the sounds of the
>>engines of the fishing boats or other equipment. That is not as far-fetched as it may seem.

Sorry, but yes it is. As I said, we’re not talking about a single school of fish, we’re talking about hundreds or thousands of square miles of fish. Fish gotta eat something, so they normally congregate where the food supplies are plentiful – that’s why the Grand Banks were such lucrative fishing grounds. If they left, where would they go?

>>It is possible that due to volcanic action, landslides, weather, etc, that the underwater currents have changed enough, even temporarily, to motivate the fish to go elsewhere.

Well, there’s this thing called the Gulf Stream. And there’s this other thing called the Labrador Current. And as far as I know, they’re big and obvious and fairly well understood, and they’re still there. Where they’ve always been.

>>It is possible that normal currents are carrying bacteria or chemicals from dumped garbage and the area usually
>>frequented by the school is now disagreeable or hostile, causing them to hunt for more favorable areas.

Like the Mojave Desert, maybe? <img src="images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />

>>It is also possible that there have been changes in water temperatures, the speed or temperature of underwater
>>currents, the acidity or salinity of the water, its ability to hold oxygen, etc.

Okay, this argument boils down to “It might be global warming and not overfishing”. But I’m of the firm belief that we should do something about both.

>>Assuming that the problem exists at all,

Ask the people of Newfoundland if the problem exists at all.

>>I doubt very seriously that this is the first time that this has happened,

No, I believe something like it happened about 65 million years ago.

>>and I think that it will correct itself over time.

Well, if you mean that mankind will be wiped out and replaced by another dominant species, then I agree it will probably correct itself over time. I’m not sure that’s what you meant though.

>>Here is something to consider. Take a look at gas prices. Someone in the Middle East can just belch, or hint at an >>oil shortage, and the next day we pay 10 cents more per gallon.

I wasn’t aware there was an international fish cartel.

>>The prices of groceries respond pretty fast to shortages, too. Has anyone noticed the massive increase in the price of fish that would indicate that we are eating the last 10% of the large fish in the entire world? Neither have I.

Have you looked at the unemployment rate in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland lately? I have, and it ain’t pretty.

Fishing and oil have very different pricing models. So do fishing and farming, for that matter. If a farmer’s crop fails because of drought, he can’t just move to a different section of the prairie and farm some more to make up the shortfall, nor can he simply stay out and farm longer hours. A fishing boat can, up to a point. They’re paid by what they bring in. If they’ve been out for six weeks and they haven’t brought in their quota, then they can stay out another six weeks, or move to another fishing ground. They work harder, they work longer hours, they take more risks, but they get paid the same – so, up to a point, it wouldn’t surprise me if the price of fish stays the same.

Have you read Sebastian Junger’s book, The Perfect Storm? He makes an interesting statement about the exponential curve. I won’t discuss the mathematics of it, but the gist of it is that, when a ship is getting into trouble at sea, the line between “I think we might be in trouble” and “Holy [censored] we’re going down” can be razor-fine. I think there are too many people who are sticking their heads in the sand and ignoring the warning signs.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/28/03 01:45 AM

Actually, I wasn't referring to an individual school of fish, but was using the singular to try to illustrate a point. It was a lot easier than trying to refer to multiple schools every time.

I disagree with you about the global warming, but I think that you made a valid point when you pointed out that the fish congregate where the food is and then asked the question where would they go. This was one of my points as well when I pointed out that they could be attracted from one place to another. I don't deny that various places may be overfished, but I maintain that it is a stretch to say that we have lost 90% of the world's large fish.

I think it that It is obvious that we aren't going to convince each other, so what say we agree to disagree agreeably?
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/28/03 03:08 AM

I still think that they all probably turned gay!
Posted by: aardwolfe

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/28/03 04:43 PM

>>Actually, I wasn't referring to an individual school of fish, but was using the singular to try to illustrate a point. It
>>was a lot easier than trying to refer to multiple schools every time.

And I pointed out that this was misleading. There’s no comparison between finding a ghost town in Arizona, and finding the entire state all but deserted. The former is analogous to the example you were using; the latter is analogous to what the scientists have found.

>>… I think that you made a valid point when you pointed out that the fish congregate where the food is and then
>>asked the question where would they go.

And the obvious answer is that there’s nowhere else for them to go. They could no more survive “somewhere else” than they could survive in Antarctica or the Mojave Desert.

>>This was one of my points as well when I pointed out that they could be
>>attracted from one place to another.

In which case the fishing fleets would simply follow them. The fact that the fishing fleets haven’t been able to do so indicates strongly that the fish haven’t “gone someplace”, they’ve just gone.

>>I don't deny that various places may be overfished, but I maintain that it is a stretch to say that we have lost 90%
>>of the world's large fish.

But you don’t seem to offer anything other than a personal opinion, whereas the scientists who have been studying this for years have hard facts.

>>I think it that It is obvious that we aren't going to convince each other, so what say we agree to disagree
>>agreeably?

I’ve never been a big fan of this argument, that we should be allowed to believe anything we want, regardless of whether or not it is supported by the facts.

Suppose you posted on this forum that you thought Potassium Cyanide was harmless and nutritious, and that you intended to feed large quantities of it to your children so they would grow up big and strong. Should we be expected to simply “agree to disagree”? <img src="images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />

We’re talking about the potential destruction of the world’s fisheries, and your response boils down to “Don’t worry, be happy, it’ll all sort itself out in time.” Which is probably true, but we may not be around when it does. <img src="images/graemlins/frown.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 05/28/03 05:57 PM

Quote:
It is possible that over time, the school has learned that certain sounds signal danger, such as the sounds of the engines of the fishing boats or other equipment. That is not as far-fetched as it may seem. Whitetail deer learn over time that the presence or absence of certain sounds and scents are normal. They instinctively preceive any change in the norm as a danger signal and react accordingly. Depending on the danger, they may permanently leave the area.



To presume that fish, with brains the size of thumbtacks or smaller could exhibit the kind of sophisticated response to their environment that deer do is a great reach. Further to think that this sort of sophisticated response would be sufficiently sophisticated to fool the vast number of highly advanced humans and their technology who are making a living hunting them when even deer haven't been able to do so is completely absurd.

Whether it is 90% depletion or 20% depletion is, perhaps, open to debate. That there is some significant depletion of world-wide fishing stocks is beyond question. The search for the cause of this depletion is worthy of attention. Commercial and political response to this depletion is likely to be effective if done correctly. Whether the lower availablity of fish in our oceans (it's not just here or there, everyone is reporting it from everywhere on the globe. If the Japanese were finding a tripling of fish in their water then it wouldn't be so alarming that there is a drastic reduction of fish in Canadien waters.) is due to global warming, polution, over-fishing or whatever, if fishing is curtailed then one of the pressures on the fish populations will be aleviated.

It is provable that humans have hunted to extinction various species on land. Why then is it so hard to believe that we can do it in the oceans?
Posted by: frenchy

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 09:29 AM

I recently find an article about that subject at the following address :
http://fr.news.yahoo.com/030515/202/373hx.html , but that's in french.
It relates to an article from the british NATURE magazine, mid may, 2003.

I have tried to browse their web site (www.nature.com) but did not found it.

I have found these other related news :

http://www.nature.com/nsu/011129/011129-12.html

http://www.nature.com/nsu/020225/020225-2.html

Hope it helps...

Alain
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 05:13 PM

Frenchy,

Thank you for the input. I have read the article several times, and have tried to be fair, but I just don't buy into it. If others wish to, that's fine, but I do not.

I have a number of reasons for not accepting this. For one thing, it is mistake to believe everything you read or hear, regardless of how many times it is repeated. To do so is to be naive and gullible as well as unwise. For another thing, many things are not what they appear to be. Just because someone is considered to be a scientist by himself or others does not make him one, and it does not necessarily make his assertions correct. Even if he IS a scientist, even a good one, that by itself does not make him correct. Also, just because certain information is authoritatively used as "facts" and "statistics", it does not necessarily mean that the information is accurate. The accuracy of those "facts" and "statistics" goes out the window if they are fabricated, or are based on incorrect, incomplete, or misinterpreted data.

Apparently, I am not the only one that doesn't accept the theories promoted in this article. You will notice that some fishery managers also find them very hard to accept. The article makes a lame attempt at damage control by saying that these people are in denial.

Some questions anyone reading this article should ask are, who are these people mentioned in the article? What are their qualifications, and what is their agenda? What do we know about their accuracy, integrity and professionalism? How did they obtain their data, and how did they arrive at their conclusions? Did they do independent research, or just quote someone else? Were their conclusions independently verified? Has anyone duplicated their efforts and arrived at the same conclusions? What information can be gathered from those who disagree with these theories? Or, should we blindly and stupidly assume that everyone who disagrees with these theories is wrong?

This article has the familiar ring of other reactionary artlcles I have read in the past. It also has the familiar ring of a story that many of us learned as small children, about a chicken that got hit in the head with an acorn (a nut from an oak tree) and ran around shouting, "The sky is falling, the sky is falling!"

In my opinion, this article has too many holes in it to be taken seriously. I would itemize them, but you can identify a number of them for yourself if you will study the article closely.

Too many people are content with letting others do their thinking for them, and as such, will fail to be intellectual or moral survivors. The mantra of too many is "Wherever they lead me, I will follow, and whatever they feed me, I will swallow". I don't intend to be one of them.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 05:41 PM

Quote:
Some questions anyone reading this article should ask are, who are these people mentioned in the article? What are their qualifications, and what is their agenda? What do we know about their accuracy, integrity and professionalism? How did they obtain their data, and how did they arrive at their conclusions? Did they do independent research, or just quote someone else? Were their conclusions independently verified? Has anyone duplicated their efforts and arrived at the same conclusions? What information can be gathered from those who disagree with these theories? Or, should we blindly and stupidly assume that everyone who disagrees with these theories is wrong?



These are certainly the important questions to ask when evaluating any information. I think that in the case of the information presented in the articles it is pretty evident that many of these questions can be summarily answered by saying that they are respected academics who have spent years studying and are attempting to come to an objective answer to a puzzle that they have studied.

If you have evidence that contradicts that statement please present it. If there is some underlying motivation that you can document that casts doubt on their integrity or skills please enlighten us so that we may be as wise as you in our evaluation of their prognostications.

[RANT ON]
If your claim that they are misleading us is based on the authority of your own study, skills and knowledge then please answer all of the above questions for us so that we may evaluate your prognostications adequately and wisely. I have heard from more than one source, funded by differing and competing sources, come to similar conclusions, we are indeed depleting our natural resources. Everything from fish to oil to breathable air. There seems to be great debate as to how fast and how bad it is but you are the only one I have heard to claim that "It just ain't so!". Please tell me how you know and what your level of study and skills are so that I may judge for myself whether you know what you are talking about and whether you have an underlying motivation that casts aspersions on the integrity of your findings.

[RANT OFF]
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 06:35 PM

You have completely missed my point again. I was trying to point out that you can't just take something as fact just because someone says it's fact.

You say that it is pretty evident that many of these questions can be summarily answered by saying that they are respected academics who have spent years studying and are attempting to come to an objective answer to a puzzle that they have studied.

My response is, why is it pretty evident, and to whom?

Respected academics? Who says?

Spent years studying? Really? How many years, and studying what? How do you know?

Attempting to come to an objective answer to a puzzle that they have studied? Objective? How objective, and how do you know? How do you know that these academics aren't giving us their subjective ideas that have been reinforced by subjective research based on their own preconceived ideas?

I am not disputing the fact that we are depleting our natural resources, but I believe that the situation can be improved by proper management and conservation. What I disagree with is the assertion that 90% of the large fish are gone.

If you wish to believe something just because someone else says it's true, be my guest.

By the way, you should concentrate on fine-tuning your sarcasm. It really strengthens your position and underscores your credibility.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 07:37 PM

Attempting to avoid sarcasm and rant (this time) the following is meant as serious discussion - if you can respond in kind I would enjoy your input.


In reviewing your posts I find only assertions that these individuals are biased and potentially deceptive in their results and that believing what they say is niave foolishness and the implication is that they should be ignored since they hold a position that things are severe. I haven't found one shred of actual evidence that they are wrong or any actual evidence that they may be motivated by anything other than academic persuit.

You may be right that they are biased and trying to raise a stink over something that isn't so just to (insert hidden agenda here). But my point is that you haven't shed any ilumination on the subject. If you have evidence (other than a rather benign optimism) that these studies are wrong or that the individuals behind them are biased or motivated by some hiden agenda then you haven't presented it. What is the bias? What is the hidden agenda? Where are their methods and procedures innaccurate? What studies have you done that lead you to a different opinion? How are your methods and procedures superior to theirs? What is your hidden agenda? What is your bias?

When I know as much about you and your opinion as I do about the individuals with which you disagree then I will be able to learn something meaningful. Perhaps you will convince me that they are decievers with a hidden agenda and I a niave fool for having believed them - perhaps not. Until I know more about you, your methods and procedures, your credentials and agendas I cannot even consider your opinion on a par with theirs.

I learn much from the results of others studies that I don't have the time, skill or inclination to validate through my own study. I do check the sources of this type of information for credentials and motivations when I need to make personal decisions based on such information. I am always interested when someone casts doubt on any information that has been presented and I find that often the most reliable truth comes from considering both sides of a debate. I find disagreement without discussion a waste of time. If you have anything other than wishful disagreement to present then out with it. To accuse these researchers of lack of integrity and active deciept merely because you disagree with them does not bring forth any new information that would help us to move the discussion forward.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 09:22 PM

The implication is not that they should be ignored because they hold a position that things are severe. If there is any implication, it is that at best they should be considered questionable until proven otherwise.

I have not been offering any concrete proof one way or the other, because I don't have any more proof than anyone else. What I have offered are possible alternative explanations for any perceived reductions in fish populations. What I have presented have been opinions only. If someone chooses to disagree with my opinions, that is perfectly alright with me. Perhaps they have some well-considered opinions of their own.

I have also tried to make it clear that it is unwise to believe everything one reads or hears. To do so is to be naive and gullible. I am surprised that anyone in your profession would have a problem with that. Anybody can spout stuff as "fact", and anyone can pose as an expert. Backing up those claims is another matter.

You have implied that you know enough about these people to remove all doubt as to the accuracy of their claims. You have been strangely silent about this. What, specifically, do you know about them?

You also say that you have not found any actual evidence that these people are wrong, but what actual evidence do you have that they are right? Are you seriously looking for evidence one way or the other, or are you willing to accept what they say because you already agree with them? If you have any evidence to support these people and their theories, then, as you say, out with it.

Hucksters come a dime a dozen, and outlandish claims need to be met with a good dose of skepticism. It's always a good idea to use one's head for more than a hat rack.

Considering your caustic sarcasm of late, I don't think you are in any position to talk to me about not moving a discussion forward.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: fishing kit evaluations - 06/02/03 09:34 PM

My apologies for any and all offense both intended and un-intended. I have learned a tremendous amount from this forum and am truly sorry if I have lowered the comfort or enjoyment of any other forumites.

I find this current thread to have reached the end of its usefulness for me - I cease to learn anything new from this discussion - so I will refrain from directly reply on this topic.