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One of Us |
With all the blaming each other on this forum for inaction, or just SCI bashing, I have formulated what I would do , had I a magic wand. If I were in the Executive Committee of either SCI or NRA, I would plan a meeting of the "Heads of State" of both organizations. Like I have previously stated, I think the problem with protests or lobby days or whatever they are called is simply the optics of it. It just looks bad for a bunch of "perceived" affluent American sport hunters trying to keep their passion for killing "endangered animals" alive. With my magic wand, I would hire the finest PR firm in the US and create PSA's with American celebrity spokesmen to make an effort at educating rank and file America as to why it is crucial to the survival of these species to hunt them. Names like Madonna, Tom Sellick, George Strait are faces America knows and will listen to. There are a multitude of other athletes and celebs that are sportsman. Politicians only care about getting elected and raising money. Seeing a constituency of 70 Sportsmen will not get their attention. We will need to think outside the typical SCI and NRA box on this stuff if it is to remain viable and hunt-able. Just my thoughts. Steve Formerly "Nganga" | ||
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one of us |
Mate, if you've got a magic wand, just turn the clock back about 40 or 50 years & you'll have solved ALL of Africa's problems! | |||
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My magic wand is only available for "certain tasks" My point is, this is a perception issue, Politicians are such cowards, they will simply do the math. They will ask some aid, how many lobbyist are there? Are there any potential fundraisers in the crowd? Move on to the next issue that can benefit themselves in some way. If there are large voting blocks or an awareness for the need to keep sport hunting alive by the mainstream. We stand a chance. Formerly "Nganga" | |||
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One of Us |
Is Madonna a hunter? George and Tom would be great! And...like NRA had Heston help them get started...one of the above would be great for SCI or DSC. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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Administrator |
I can imagine Sellick or Straight representing DSC. But I would not imagine either of them getting involved with SCI. Too many bad apples involved with them in the past - and I gather some present and future ones too! | |||
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One of Us |
Yeah, Madonna owns some sporting bird property or something. And as far as representing SCI or NRA, the PSA's need not state whom is paying the PR firm that produces them. Heck even Ted Turner is a big hunter and has his fingers in all sorts of media. It is intuitively obvious to me, the same old efforts are NOT returning dividends. We all know the definition of insanity. Formerly "Nganga" | |||
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Steve, You are 1000% correct and has also been my mantra through all of this beginning with the lion. Aaron and I came to that conclusion back in 2010. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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One of Us |
Steve, I think your idea is very sound. Its a shame that we hunters are such a divisive group. Unlike the "antis" , we cannot seem to pull together as a whole, each hunting sector myopically focuses on their own region- or species-specific issues. | |||
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one of us |
I can't help but believe that Steve is correct. I can see the media turning this rally into something negative rather something beneficial to elephants, wildlife and rural Africa. The headlines could be very ugly. I apologize if I missed something but is there somewhere to send a cash contribution that will be used directly for fighting the USFW decision? I'm afraid the rank and file politicians are not in tune with this USFW decision as it seems many others have received similar responses to mine when contacting their senators and representatives. The responses I got were not even remotely close to addressing the issue so I'm not expecting much help there. Money usually talks if used appropriately so maybe we should "Put our money where our mouths are". And for crying out loud this not the time to be bashing SCI for the thousandth time. Mark MARK H. YOUNG MARK'S EXCLUSIVE ADVENTURES 7094 Oakleigh Dr. Las Vegas, NV 89110 Office 702-848-1693 Cell, Whats App, Signal 307-250-1156 PREFERRED E-mail markttc@msn.com Website: myexclusiveadventures.com Skype: markhyhunter Check us out on https://www.facebook.com/pages...ures/627027353990716 | |||
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One of Us |
I have been involved in some low-level lobbying efforts in state government, and I realize that there are qualitative and well as quantitative differences between state and federal government. Still, I think there are some basic principles that hold true at both levels. 1) Your average legislator is not very bright. 2) They are only interested and passionate about a couple issues (in addition to getting re-elected.) 3)They are keenly aware of the optics of their actions (unless and until they get caught in an airport bathroom trying to pick someone up.) 4)If you can get their ear in a quiet way, you can do some educating on your position. So as long as we're talking about magic wands, I would suggest a raft of very well-connected lobbyists who also are very educated themselves on the issues of wildlife, conservation and hunting as a tool of conservation. With elephant in particular, it would be the principle of "if it pays, it stays." If this (very expensive) raft of lobbyists could talk to enough Congress Critters, I think you would see some big changes in Washington that would favor the hunting community, the hunting industry, wildlife and residents of rural communities in Africa and elsewhere who have to try to live-- and compete-- with wildlife. Unless and until our very rational point of view can be gotten through their heads, we're just going to see more decisions of this sort happen: arguably well-intentioned, but not terribly well thought through. | |||
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I have to believe that there is a lot of well-reasoned arguments and opinions being presented to the USFWS as we speak, by people and organizations "on the ground" and otherise intimately involved in elephant hunting-conservation. As was stated elsewhere, we will never win over popular opinion, our only hope is appealing to those who make the decisions. While we see this as a travesty, there are many more who view it as quite the opposite. A march of thousands might sound impressive, and I hope SCI can produce this, but if not a handful of knowledgeable people presenting our case sounds pretty good. African hunting is a niche activity, and one of the several conservation tools available. We need to be seen as part of the solution, not as a bunch of whacky extremists. We do need to remember that ZIMBABWE and TANZANIA need to come to the party. If they had their houses in order, this restriction would not have been put into place. THEY need to demonstrate that THEY are able to get a handle on the situation, provide information as requested BY THE USFWS on a timely basis, and do everything in their power to not help make the anti's job easier than it already is. I absolutely do not agree with their decision, especially to impose this without any advance notice, but my point is that, in my humble opinion, if Zimbabwe and Tanzania cannot demonstrate responsibility, no amount of pressure is going to reverse this. | |||
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One of Us |
While I can see the point and it is true we are a minority right now in populartity...I believe it can be changed. When working on the lion...I became good friends with the President and CEO of Panthera. If you watch NatGeoWild on TV...they are the ones who funded the "Cause an Uproar for Lion theme" lion documentaries. The guy's name is Luke Hunter and is a very common sense type guy. Had SCI gotten behind the Definition of a Huntable Male Lion (in which Luke was a co-author) he would have promoted hunting as a conservation method. SCI rejected the definition and he views them as part of the problem now. But...lets say it had gone the other way. And Panthera made a documentary on how hunting blocks provides habitat for lion...public opinion could have begun to sway...just saying... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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Lane, I don't believe that the general public will ever see elephant (or lion) hunting as "necessary". Personally I think it is better to fly under the radar here [elephant/lion] but I could be wrong. Regarding mainstream hunting in general, I am encouraged at the apparent acceptance of hunting/killing in some of the reality shows. Not just Duck Dynasty, but the shows that run on NatGeo and Discovery (Naked and Afraid, Survivorman, etc). Hunting also works its way into shows like Buying Alaska, Alaska State Rangers, etc. where it is positioned as part of an "outdoor lifestyle". Ditto some of the food/travel shows (Anthony Bourdain now on CNN no less, and Andrew Zimmern). We need more of this, so that people who have never had any exposure to hunting accept it as normal. | |||
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We should lobby and fight for lot of other species Polar bear, walrus, jaguar, gaur etc. from conservation point of view As with the elephants, their numbers would go up with the money coming in. United we stand, divided we die " Until the day breaks and the nights shadows flee away " Big ivory for my pillow and 2.5% of Neanderthal DNA flowing thru my veins. When I'm ready to go, pack a bag of gunpowder up my ass and strike a fire to my pecker, until I squeal like a boar. Yours truly , Milan The Boarkiller - World according to Milan PS I have big boar on my floor...but it ain't dead, just scared to move... Man should be happy and in good humor until the day he dies... Only fools hope to live forever “ Hávamál” | |||
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It does not require rocket science to be able to reason with people. There are the hard core antis, which no reason is going to change at all. But, the absolute majority of the general public are not hard core antis. They just listen to what the antis are saying. And those are NOT very hard to change their opinions. One just have to have a reasoned argument. SCI has made themselves a reputation of not being very trustworthy at all, even by hunters, and many of their own members. They need to have a dramatic change of policy, get all their members on board, and start clearing their shady reputation before we can expect anything worthwhile from them. I find it quite amusing how some individuals who seemed quite logical in the past, have changed once they have gotten involved with the inner workings of SCI. Instead of being free thinkers, they have become the mouth piece of what we have all been experiencing from SCI top management. It is called towing the "party line" in politics, and look where that has gotten us. | |||
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Saeed, I think you have it right on this. The "rank and file American" listens to the current "pop culture" icons, Johnny Depp, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Aflick, Sean Penn etc. If we could just line up some icons that believe what we believe, the "general public" would listen to the message and might use some critical thinking. They might become open to sport hunting used as a conservation tool. We as sportsmen, for some reason can't figure out how to use the tools of society to win popular public opinion. Keeping sport hunting in the shadows, as Bill C says, WAS the intellegent route. Social media and people who just cannot keep themselves from posting dead animals all over the internet have made that a moot point. We are 'out" now and we must either figure out how to successfully conduct damage control, or we are finished. Formerly "Nganga" | |||
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Steve: Good thoughts but… Did (do) the public listen to Charlton Heston or Tom Selleck or Ted Nugent? For all the good intentions of those of like mind I honestly believe we are fighting a losing battle. For all the current conservative talk out there blowing sunshine up our backsides, there are more gun control laws, more anti hunting laws, more abortions, more government intrusion in our lives, more taxes, more gay this and that, etc., and the list goes on. You are preaching to the choir here, my friend, but it's a lost cause. I hate to be negative, but that's my opinion. Cal _______________________________ Cal Pappas, Willow, Alaska www.CalPappas.com www.CalPappas.blogspot.com 1994 Zimbabwe 1997 Zimbabwe 1998 Zimbabwe 1999 Zimbabwe 1999 Namibia, Botswana, Zambia--vacation 2000 Australia 2002 South Africa 2003 South Africa 2003 Zimbabwe 2005 South Africa 2005 Zimbabwe 2006 Tanzania 2006 Zimbabwe--vacation 2007 Zimbabwe--vacation 2008 Zimbabwe 2012 Australia 2013 South Africa 2013 Zimbabwe 2013 Australia 2016 Zimbabwe 2017 Zimbabwe 2018 South Africa 2018 Zimbabwe--vacation 2019 South Africa 2019 Botswana 2019 Zimbabwe vacation 2021 South Africa 2021 South Africa (2nd hunt a month later) ______________________________ | |||
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Personally, I think Ted Nugent is a liability to hunting and firearm freedoms. He come across as a looney nut case. His intelligent message gets lost in the nutty presentation. I feel that same as you, now that we are out in the open, a change of strategy is in order or… a new hobby. Formerly "Nganga" | |||
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There are lot of well known people in sport and other activities who are avid shooters and hunters. But, they keep that secret to avoid any backlash from the stupid general media. Currently, there is no such thing as a journalist. All we have are a bunch of silly nitwits who like to blow things out of proportion, get their few minutes of fame, and disappear. The damage, however, has already been done. | |||
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One of Us |
Steve, Since it is your plan...how do we move on this? If you want to lead the way...I will help you. Personally...if we are going to go with a already formed org as the foundation...DSC would be the way to go. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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Bruce Willis might be another potential along with Clint Eastwood. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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One of Us |
PHASA with the help of DSC and SCI have started a fund and have hired one if the best PR firms in JHB to do just this. They are wanting to start a campaign of information and want to try and transform the "Trophy hunting " industry. They have done studies as to what percentages of society hate hunting, tolerate hunting etc. What words ,used in the industry are distasteful to the general public etc Already we have been asked to re-brand "trophy hunting" to something else like " selective hunting of old animals etc.." What we need to post on social media etc it's a Mammoth undertaking and ALL hunters should get involved in the education of non hunters Dave Davenport Outfitters license HC22/2012EC Pro Hunters license PH74/2012EC www.leopardsvalley.co.za dave@leopardsvalley.co.za +27 42 24 61388 HUNT AFRICA WHILE YOU STILL CAN Follow us on FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/#!/leopardsvalley.safaris | |||
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One of Us |
Exactly, we need to rebrand trophy hunting. In our terms. Paid celebrities without image problems can accomplish this. Lane, I wouldn't mind leading an effort, but this needs to be a very professionally run PR campaign, the size and scope of the "Got Milk" campaign. We are talking millions and millions of dollars. It really needs to be a co-op of all the outdoor, hunting and advocacy groups. They (we) are all at risk and all stand to gain. Shooters, hunters have always allowed the opposition to define us. They have successfully made us look like a bunch of dumb rednecks, or black goretex wearing tools. Regards, Steve Formerly "Nganga" | |||
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Hummmm - Tom Sellick was at SCI in Vegas just this year, so I guess MAYBE he is getting involved with them since one needs to be a MEMBER to attend? Into the "bad applel" barrel he goes I guess? Larry Sellers SCI(International) Life Member Sabatti 'trash' Double Shooter R8 Blaser DRSS
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I agree and I will make a contribution if this moves forward. | |||
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Absolute bloody madness and a total waste of money. I'm all for educating the great unwashed about the positive contribution hunting makes to wildlife conservation in general and Africa in particular but dear God almighty one wonders what overpaid, overeducated mucking foron dreamed that one up! Whoever it was, is living on Planet Insanity! | |||
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Whoever is behind any pro-hunting media campaign should not be an asshole or an egoist or anyone living in fantasy land or a boring idiot...If they are they will make all hunters look like assholes.I cant think of anyone who would be good. | |||
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One of Us |
Steve, You are 100% correct. If you want to mount an effort in this...I again will help. I think the money could be raised and I think DSC would get behind it. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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One of Us |
In my opinion there needs to be a scientific arm of the major organizations, and the goal of the organizations should be more outwardly in regards to conservation than gold medals and fancy dinners. When SCI or etc etc can LEAD original scientific/humanitarian efforts and not just be a club for hunters, they will begin to be seen differently. SCI, et al. need to a source of empirical data form which other organizations draw their conclusions. Rebranding trophy hunting is a hard sell. Essentially, you will have to convince people (that is after all what the goal is) that killing animals helps them. There is more positive movement towards hunting in this country now by the 'localvore; movement, in response (and rejection of) to commercial food production. People realize that they can get the best meat/seafood possible by getting it themselves, and that has changed their attitude. That's why Anthony Bourdain was OK with killing an ELand - albeit from a truck- (it was high-grade meat after all) on CNN. Just like the pro-gun organizations need to be leaders and not reactionaries in the fight, pro-hunting organizations need to be the same. They need to appeal (like it or not) to the NPR listener (if you scoff at the idea of pro- (or at least ok-with-)hunting NPR listeners, you aren't paying attention to who is listening to NPR) who is intelligent, but just not sure of things on the ground. That are OK with elephant hunting as long as it represents a holistic approach to wildlife sustainability into the future. That understand the conservation/hunting model is a complicated one and sometimes involves ideas and methods that seem contradictory. And hunting organizations need to be more conversation-oriented in their approach. Hunting will not be saved/preserved by tree-stand whispering bubba's high-fiving over some 'toad' that they shot, and yucking it up. That's even offensive to me ( and most of the hunters I know). Like it or not, it's going to be preserved by the 'next' generation of hunters, and I don't necessarily mean the sons and daughters of current hunters; I mean the group of people who do not embrace the 'whack'em and stack'em' attitude, the machine-gunning and laughing-while-doing-it slaughter of hogs from helicopters, the pretty-girl-deer-killing hottie-who-never-seems-to-get-her-hands-dirty, rather it will be the ones who think before they act, who act in the best interest of the overall ecosystem, (and who aren't afraid to use that word), and who can speak intelligently to others about the facts of why hunting is a sustainable model. We've got a log way to go, in my opinion. | |||
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One of Us |
Excellent, and articulately said. We are too few to be considered a constituency. We live in a society that is different than which we were raised. We really cannot change society. We can, however change societies view of conservation of species through hunting. We really need to count on as you say, the NPR's and other demographics that aren't really that emotional about it... either way. But yes, a hard sell. Formerly "Nganga" | |||
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+1...well said! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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Steve The mucking foron is a non hunting PR organization that has done extensive research amongst the public. When asked if they are opposed to hunting very few are, if asked if they are opposed to trophy hunting 70% + are. That's the reality of what we are up against Dave Davenport Outfitters license HC22/2012EC Pro Hunters license PH74/2012EC www.leopardsvalley.co.za dave@leopardsvalley.co.za +27 42 24 61388 HUNT AFRICA WHILE YOU STILL CAN Follow us on FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/#!/leopardsvalley.safaris | |||
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Dave Mate, do you (or anyone else for that matter) really think that changing the name from 'trophy hunting' to 'selective hunting of old animals' is going to make one iota of difference to the way people think about it? Surely not....... to me at least, the idea is totally & utterly ridiculous! I agree that something needs to be done and that something is probably education related but that has to be the silliest idea I've ever heard. Jeez. Talk about calling a spade an earth inverting horticultural implement. | |||
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It was an example But " trophy hunting" has a negative response from joe soap public. What would be a good alternative phrase to replace trophy hunting ? Dave Davenport Outfitters license HC22/2012EC Pro Hunters license PH74/2012EC www.leopardsvalley.co.za dave@leopardsvalley.co.za +27 42 24 61388 HUNT AFRICA WHILE YOU STILL CAN Follow us on FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/#!/leopardsvalley.safaris | |||
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one of us |
No matter what you call it, it'll still be trophy hunting so call it what it is. As I see it, changing the name won't achieve anything in the eyes of the public who might be as dumb as a sack of spanners but very few are quite that dumb. What needs to be done is change the public perception of what trophy hunting is, not what it's called & bearing in mind that every medium whether TV, radio, movie or press has pretty much always cast us in a bad light for the last half century, it ain't gonna be easy. I'd suggest we start by cleaning up our act by banning unethical practices such as shooting captive bred lions and then start to do something about telling the world about how hunting helps wildlife instead of just telling each other how good we are. The antis are a massive threat to our sport but at the moment, we're our own worst enemy & we need to address that before we address anything else. I was going to say my opinion isn't worth anything because I know nothing about PR....... but that said, I obviously know more than the person who thought up the daft idea of changing the term 'trophy hunting' to 'selective hunting of old animals' | |||
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I say just drop the "trophy" and call it hunting. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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What we need is for the authorities in Zimbabwe and Tanzania to ask the FWS that they have to do to get the ban lifted. Have they done this? Is there even any dialogue? If not, the ban will be permanent. There are simply not enough elephant hunters to influence Congress or anyone to reverse the decision. I suspect that the great majority of licensed deer hunters would support a ban on elephant hunting. Indy Life is short. Hunt hard. | |||
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Then they are idiots. Mike | |||
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+1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J. Lane Easter, DVM A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991. | |||
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Administrator |
The "general public" needs to be given a dose of reality after being woken up from their stupid PC induced sleep! Why don't we just call a spade a spade? I would make a gruesome video of how a sheep, pig cow or chicken fares from the minute it leaves the field to the minute a chef puts it on the table in front of some idiot pretending hunting is bad. | |||
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