Meet the Dr. Mengele of Whales

January 19, 2008

Humpback whale
Photo: James D. Watt

Commentary by Paul Watson
Founder and President of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society

“Meet Luis Pastene, the Dr. Mengele of the Cetacean world. This Chilean-born biostitute for hire is employed by the Japanese Cetacean Research Institute (CRI) and his job is to mutilate whales to finger, probe and gawk at their blubber, livers, ear-plugs, ovaries and testes, bones, lungs, skin and even the fetuses from thousands of whales.

Dr. Pastene loves his job as a whale vivisector and feels victimized by people who are concerned for protecting whales. “I’m getting so tired of the biased articles I read in Western newspapers each year at this time,” says Dr Pastene. “It’s time someone told the truth,” he insists.”

POST CONTINUES

Humpback whales
Photo: James D. Watt

“This perverse Chilean fetus fondler supervises nine other war criminal scientists employed by CRI to fabricate credibility for the so called scientific justification of the Japanese mass slaughter of whales. The institute is a bizarre institution situated appropriately close to the largest seafood market in the world at Tsukiji.

According to Dr. Pastene, the whales need to be killed so that they can be saved. “We need to understand stock structure,” says Pastene, “their movements, what they eat, and how they are being affected by pollution, and we need to understand the competition between the different species.”

According CRI, it is absolutely necessary to kill whales to save them. One wonders how the whales ever survived before the Japanese started their lethal research programs. Dr. Pastene especially likes to study whale ovaries to check the maturity status of the females. Of course this means that they won’t be maturing any further and they will certainly not be having any more babies. Usually about 25% of the females killed are pregnant which means that the actual kill of whales is 25% more than recorded.”

Humpback whale
Photo: James D. Watt

Sea Shepherd Jolly Roger
Photo: Sea Shepherd Conservation Society

Website: Sea Shepherd Conservation Society



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