I can buy the arguement that it's "unsportsmanlike" (if you define sportfishing as an activity in which the objective is to illicit a fish to strike a lure)... angling vs. "sportfishing"
Hmm... Was thinking about this today so took another look at the Synopsis. It says:
Although angling is the most popular form of
sport fishing in British Columbia, there are
other methods that you can use to take fish.
Your basic fishing licence entitles you to:
angle - fish (with or without a rod) with
one fishing line to which only one hook,
one artificial lure OR one artificial fly is
attached.
down-rig …
ice fish …
set line …
spear fish …
trap crayfish …
Seems that they're saying that there's more than one type of sportfishing. Not sure whether they're including spear fishing and trapping crayfish as sportfishing.
Again, it all comes down to definition, so I guess if you define sportsfishing as elicting a game fish to strike then flossing could not be considered angling. And while I hear what you're saying ("ask any layperson how to catch a fish, and they'll likely reply 'get the fish to bite the hook/bait/lure'") I challenge you to ask around; I've actually nonpartisanly explained the flossing debate to new & non anglers and have found that the majority have replied "who cares [if the fish didn't bite/was lined]?" The fact that officers do nothing but check licences and ticket people for fishing past boundaries at the popular bars
suggests that flossing is just a wee bit more acceptable -- in the eyes of the law -- than ripping a barbed treble through a school and dragging in fish @$$ backwards
Does that make it right? I guess that's up to each individual angler to decide for him-/her-self. As has been mentioned before on this forum, if you ask certain aboriginals they'll tell you that CnR sportsfishing is unethical; for where's the sport in "molesting" fish?
But that's it for entertaining this argument from me, DanL; I've promised Nitro to give it a rest