ReaptheHeat
WKR
What get's me, is that these are the same people referencing the infamous "Yellowstone Study" while also not understanding the hypocrisy they display. The study has also been proven inconclusive/wrong and still quoted as gospel.For you guys wanting to see wolves on public lands, keep in mind the key thing you have to watch out for: That it is a trojan horse to ban hunting.
Follow the bouncing ball here:
1) The underlying ideology and root, implicit assumption of the left in general is this: "The only good land is 'intact' ecosystems that are untouched by human hands". If this state doesn't exist, they see the state of the land and ecology as wrong and molested.
2) The natural extension of this is that it is critical for them, as good people, to "restore" it to an "intact" state.
3) Re-introduction of wolves and other apex predators is part of making that ecosystem "intact" again. Watch out for this key-word, especially in scientific papers. "Intact", like "re-wilding", is dog-whistle code for banning hunting and all human activity not on-foot.
4) Re-introduction of wolves (and banning mountain lion hunting) dramatically reduces big-game populations available for human hunting. The mandate of state wildlife biologists is NOT protecting game for human hunting - it is maintaining "healthy herds". The more "natural predation", the less human hunting opportunity. It is that simple, and it is categorically unavoidable in every way on public lands.
5) By the very laws of nature, the predator-prey cycle over years means predators will reach population points that exceed the carrying capacity of the land of their prey species, resulting in over-predation, then starvation, sickness, and death of those predators, after which prey populations rebound, and the cycle continues. But once that tipping point is hit, human hunting of those game animals WILL be halted. It will start with pauses for a season or two on hunting game animals in specific zones "to maintain the health of the herds". Re-introduction of apex predators and bans on hunting them "naturally" sets a precedent of reducing human hunting opportunity, leading to complete halts in it.
6) Once "natural predation" hits hard enough, do you really think the "public" will want a bunch of hunters out killing wolves and mountain lions that are just doing what is natural? Do you think that the "public" will want humans killing off wolves so we can selfishly hunt deer and elk for ourselves?
7) What happens when "the long march through the institutions" (google it) leads to state game agencies being taken over by people whose ideology is anti-hunting general? Will there be any support by these "neutral experts" in these agencies for the "public" to hunt? Idaho and Wyoming's game agencies may still be populated by people who value hunting, but can the same be said by those in charge of California's, Oregon's, Washington's, or even Colorado's?
This is exactly where bans on hunting apex predators and re-introduction of them leads. It's literally a force of nature pushing out human opportunity, magnified by anti-hunting ideology.
For background, Denver and the Front Range would literally not exist in its current state if trans-basin water diversions over the Continental Divide did not occur. Let me say again, the Front Range is not a sustainable system for humans in its natural state. Hundreds of thousands of acre-ft destined for the Colorado River are diverted FOREVER to the Front Range. Many more acre-ft are pulled from the Arkansas Basin.
Guess what? The Yellowstone study used streams and rivers to develop feedback loops from wolves. So, in order to "fix" the areas west of the Continental Divide, we need wolves? Well, how about you put the water back, we could start there! We don't need wolves. too bad the people voting for this don't care about anyone but themselves, and sacrifices should only be made by the rural people. The places you pull water from to live comfortable lives are also where you are dumping wolves!
