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Studies comparing Kenya since ban of hunting with other countries

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23 August 2010, 01:16
Caracal
Studies comparing Kenya since ban of hunting with other countries
Hi,
does one of you have any studies on this or other studies that show that hunting protects Wildlife instead of destroying it?
I've found a lot of infosbut no good quality studies.

Regards

Caracal


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Instagram: dr-safaris
23 August 2010, 02:08
Antelope Sniper
There was a recent UN study. This might give you what you need to find it:

http://www1.voanews.com/englis...imals--98843969.html
23 August 2010, 02:11
Will
Do you think a study is really needed to figure that out?!!


-------------------------------
Will / Once you've been amongst them, there is no such thing as too much gun.
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and, God Bless John Wayne. NRA Benefactor, GOA, NAGR
_________________________

"Elephant and Elephant Guns" $99 shipped.
“Hunting Africa's Dangerous Game" $20 shipped.

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If anything be of note, let it be he was once an elephant hunter, hoping to wind up where elephant hunters go.

23 August 2010, 05:02
Milo Shanghai
I agree that the retention of hunting would have been beneficial. But the real problem in Kenya has been and will continue to be, population explosion.

At independence there we under 9 million people in Kenya. Now there are 40 million.
23 August 2010, 05:06
Will
quote:
Originally posted by Milo Shanghai:
I agree that the retention of hunting would have been beneficial. But the real problem in Kenya has been and will continue to be, population explosion.

At independence there we under 9 million people in Kenya. Now there are 40 million.


The do-gooders save them all. And then when the famine comes the do-gooders will be in high gear.


-------------------------------
Will / Once you've been amongst them, there is no such thing as too much gun.
---------------------------------------
and, God Bless John Wayne. NRA Benefactor, GOA, NAGR
_________________________

"Elephant and Elephant Guns" $99 shipped.
“Hunting Africa's Dangerous Game" $20 shipped.

red.dirt.elephant@gmail.com
_________________________

If anything be of note, let it be he was once an elephant hunter, hoping to wind up where elephant hunters go.

23 August 2010, 05:11
SteveGl
There are lots and lots of studies that show the benefits of trophy hunting: to the wildlife, the rural peoples of Africa, the economies of the countries, and on and on. A good place to start is at the CIC website. They have links to their own and others studies throughout. Start at their publications page HERE.

: : :
23 August 2010, 05:28
SteveGl
Also, Peter Lindsey has done more than one - like this study.

Rolf Baldus too.

: : :
23 August 2010, 07:18
Wismon
quote:
Originally posted by Will:
quote:
Originally posted by Milo Shanghai:
I agree that the retention of hunting would have been beneficial. But the real problem in Kenya has been and will continue to be, population explosion.

At independence there we under 9 million people in Kenya. Now there are 40 million.


The do-gooders save them all. And then when the famine comes the do-gooders will be in high gear.

Well if humans are such a problem here on Earth what specifically is preventing the two of you from leading by example and slipping it's surly bonds? Or is it just others' existence you begrudge?
23 August 2010, 12:09
David Hulme
quote:
Originally posted by Wismon:
quote:
Originally posted by Will:
quote:
Originally posted by Milo Shanghai:
I agree that the retention of hunting would have been beneficial. But the real problem in Kenya has been and will continue to be, population explosion.

At independence there we under 9 million people in Kenya. Now there are 40 million.


The do-gooders save them all. And then when the famine comes the do-gooders will be in high gear.

Well if humans are such a problem here on Earth what specifically is preventing the two of you from leading by example and slipping it's surly bonds? Or is it just others' existence you begrudge?


Productive humans are not the problem. Those who put pressure on our planet are the useless people who sit in the village drinking all day, waiting for the next aid truck to pull in and for their many children to return from their daily poaching/tree-chopping excursions. The white rat syndrome, you know? As the population increases, more and more rejects surface....


www.rogerwhittallsafaris.com
23 August 2010, 17:20
ddrhook
the massive government corruption does not help in Kenya either. everyone knows that Mkuki is the center for ivory poaching and smuggling but the local political honcho is involved ie. bribed
24 August 2010, 05:51
Wismon
quote:
Originally posted by David Hulme:
quote:
Originally posted by Wismon:
quote:
Originally posted by Will:
quote:
Originally posted by Milo Shanghai:
I agree that the retention of hunting would have been beneficial. But the real problem in Kenya has been and will continue to be, population explosion.

At independence there we under 9 million people in Kenya. Now there are 40 million.


The do-gooders save them all. And then when the famine comes the do-gooders will be in high gear.

Well if humans are such a problem here on Earth what specifically is preventing the two of you from leading by example and slipping it's surly bonds? Or is it just others' existence you begrudge?


Productive humans are not the problem. Those who put pressure on our planet are the useless people who sit in the village drinking all day, waiting for the next aid truck to pull in and for their many children to return from their daily poaching/tree-chopping excursions. The white rat syndrome, you know? As the population increases, more and more rejects surface....


Various faulty, faggy, United Nations 1970’s-esh “spaceship earth” doom-and-gloom predictions notwithstanding, in free countries people are net economic assets, not liabilities. Indeed, they have to be: their choice is to create wealth (read “work”), or starve. Or, as Thomas Sowell put it, name one country who’s GDP has increased while its population decreased. A free country, of course, is one with property rights and rule of law and without socialism or other forms of government “redistribution” (read, “theft”) of wealth.

It is only in welfare states of various stripes where people become a net economic drain but in such places the problem isn’t the people, per se, rather it’s the kleptocratic government.
24 August 2010, 06:02
Antelope Sniper
quote:
Various faulty, faggy, United Nations 1970’s-esh “spaceship earth” doom-and-gloom predictions


And doesn't all this owe it's self to the French Revolution philosophers? Another great example of them screwing up things over 200 years ofter the fact.
24 August 2010, 18:33
Peter
quote:
Well if humans are such a problem here on Earth what specifically is preventing the two of you from leading by example and slipping it's surly bonds? Or is it just others' existence you begrudge?


Because they are "productive assets" while all these Africans are just liabilities! Shit, we should just be able to go over there and kill all the game we want, slip 'em a few bucks out of the kindness of our hearts, and then go home!!
And now it's the fault of all the "French philosophers" who talked about "liberty".
Loved the post wisman!
Peter


Be without fear in the face of your enemies. Be brave and upright, that God may love thee. Speak the truth always, even if it leads to your death. Safeguard the helpless and do no wrong;