When you first started posting on this forum I'm sure all of us responded with the sense of welcoming a new poster. While I find your posts entertaining, the humor in them is beginning to be stale.
Posting outrageous claims and throwing out your conspiracy theories without any backup links or credible support does little for your credibility. While the pro-feedlot boys may still be enjoying the humor in your posts, I notice that even they have stopped cheering your outrageous claims.
Please provide links and support for your claims or I will start calling you out on them. Oh, and posting links from fish farm news and "wildakgirl" do not qualify as credible links......
With your new-found interest in fact-checking and good science, perhaps you might consider applying it to your own posts. For instance, your repeating of claims that PRV is responsible for disease would be a good place to start.
To date, the PRV virus has not been implicated in causing any disease. That is why it is known as an orphan virus. Studies have found the virus can be present in fish showing the clinical signs of a number of different diseases but there has been no causal linkage between the virus and any of those diseases discovered. As well, the virus displays a genetic similarity to the virus discovered in Norway but it is unknown whether the virus is a global virus endemic to many areas or if it is a local virus found only in Norway. At this point, it is equally likely that the virus is endemic to our waters and the that wild stocks passed it to the farmed stocks.
In spite of the way the information has been presented by Routledge and Morton, there is not enough known to support the claims they are making and you are assisting in propogating. The original and only study associating PRV with HSMI acknowledges that there is no identified causal mechanism but instead suggests that there is a "plausible" causal relationship and suggests that it must be confirmed by the standard mechanisms delineated in Koch's postulate in order to establish PRV as the cause of any disease. The study can be found here:
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0011487
Of course, that confirmation has not been done but it hasn't stopped Morton, Routledge or yourself from behaving as if it has.
Would you call that good science?