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I used to think that this line of thinking was pretty far “out there”. It certainly is a roundabout approach to eliminate firearms from the hands of working class, “average joe” civilians…. However, one need not pay attention to the anti-hunting and pro-predator propaganda long to see that there is a definite correlation between the types of individuals pushing gun legislation and those pushing for extended protections on predators. It’s the same people.But… he’s not wrong about that… there is a lot of overlap in the sorts of people who want wolves, don’t like hunting, and don’t think “civilians” should own firearms… and there are definitely people for whom it is all part of a plan towards their ideal world where there are fewer people, people aren’t part of the natural world except as enlightened spectators, and those same enlightened spectators make all the decisions.
Spend some time around the academics and the people they educate and you might see this. These people plan a long game and play a long game.
This is no different than the U.S. government's ploy to exterminate the Native American from the Great Plains. By killing bison in the millions they were able to cut off the necessities for their people to live. No traditional meat, no clothing, no shelters... Many tribes livelihoods were entirely dependent upon the survival of the bison. Once those were gone, the military was able to extirpate those people from their traditional lands and claim it in the name of "western expansion." At least in this case, the end goal was pretty cut and dry.100% agree. They're pretty masterful at it. Especially indirect action to get a specific outcome.
My understanding of bringing giant wolves (and they're effing huge) down to the lower 48 was to restore ecological balance to these ecosystems that maybe don't have the option for increased hunting and population reduction through those means. The Canadian Greys were introduced to Yellowstone in 1995 when elk populations were off the charts and beyond carrying capacity for the park and the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. This reintroduction allowed the National Park Service to reduce elk numbers without bringing hunters -- or paid professionals -- into the park to kill elk and try to keep the general population happy that they're not allowing anybody into a park with permission to kill. After all, the Organic Act of 1916 is focused on preserving national parks for the public. This is a much different guiding principle than that of the Forest Service or other land agencies.I won’t speculate as to why anyone would think it necessary to bring in giant wolves from Canada to keep elk populations under control when hunters would have been extremely happy to pay for the privilege of doing so.
Ecosystems have a way of balancing themselves out without human interference. Take a look at the observations of moose and wolves on Isle Royale; you can see the data where populations have balanced themselves repeatedly over the course of almost 70 years. Is it perfect in our mind? No, but in a controlled environment where hunting isn't allowed, it's a way for land and wildlife managers to keep moose population in check while keeping the majority of that population healthy because it's closer to the actual carrying capacity of the landscape.
This is no different than the U.S. government's ploy to exterminate the Native American from the Great Plains. By killing bison in the millions they were able to cut off the necessities for their people to live. No traditional meat, no clothing, no shelters... Many tribes livelihoods were entirely dependent upon the survival of the bison. Once those were gone, the military was able to extirpate those people from their traditional lands and claim it in the name of "western expansion." At least in this case, the end goal was pretty cut and dry.
What's the end game for these folks that are trying to criminalize guns and remove all hunting rights?
My understanding of bringing giant wolves (and they're effing huge) down to the lower 48 was to restore ecological balance to these ecosystems that maybe don't have the option for increased hunting and population reduction through those means. The Canadian Greys were introduced to Yellowstone in 1995 when elk populations were off the charts and beyond carrying capacity for the park and the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. This reintroduction allowed the National Park Service to reduce elk numbers without bringing hunters -- or paid professionals -- into the park to kill elk and try to keep the general population happy that they're not allowing anybody into a park with permission to kill. After all, the Organic Act of 1916 is focused on preserving national parks for the public. This is a much different guiding principle than that of the Forest Service or other land agencies.
Why Canadian Grey wolves? Because their much smaller cousins, the Southern Rocky Mountain wolves were exterminated in the 1930s and we didn't have an exact match to replace them. My understanding is they were smaller, slower, and needed to kill less elk to sustain themselves. Ecosystems have a way of balancing themselves out without human interference. Take a look at the observations of moose and wolves on Isle Royale; you can see the data where populations have balanced themselves repeatedly over the course of almost 70 years. Is it perfect in our mind? No, but in a controlled environment where hunting isn't allowed, it's a way for land and wildlife managers to keep moose population in check while keeping the majority of that population healthy because it's closer to the actual carrying capacity of the landscape.
I would venture to guess that another reason wildlife managers chose to introduce the species to that ecosystem -- and I don't know about the situation in Colorado, wildlife management through ballot initiative is a whole other mess -- was based on hunter numbers already being on the decline. Hunting has gone from being a way to feed one's family to being a largely recreational activity with the added benefit of some game meat being in the house on those years that someone's lucky enough to shoot their BOAL, GOAL, DOAL, or whatever else. I think we're in this shift where people's parents were under immense social pressures to afford the classic suburban house, drive an hour to work each day, take their kids to sports practice, cook dinner, get the kids to bed, maybe have 30 minutes to watch some TV, then go to bed themselves, that traditional outdoor activities like hunting and fishing have taken a back seat other than the one week a year they get to go "try it out" and then they don't like it because all the grouchy old men complain about Texans being at their favorite lake or trailhead.
Now I know nobody ask for my opinion, but I'm going to share it anyways: we need to introduce more people to hunting. We need to be more welcoming of people to the outdoors in any way we can. By inviting that 16 year old kid down the street to go sit in a whitetail blind to shoot a doe or call in a turkey we're making hunting easier to enjoy and reducing those barriers to entry. Lets all become someone's mentor, don't be so judgmental when people ask questions, and keep these traditions alive so we can all continue to enjoy them for generations to come.
What's the end game for these folks that are trying to criminalize guns and remove all hunting rights?
How's about an actual conversation about what you disagree with and maybe we can understand where our ideas separate instead of pitching a proverbial bridge to imply how stupid I am?
Seriously? I have a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you, it’s a really good deal trust me.
This is certainly a better visualization of ecosystems. However, something has to keep animals at or below carrying capacity otherwise we end up with large herds with high levels of illness and low body condition. My point is solely in regard to areas where hunting is not an ideal management practice based on the initial creation of the parks (Yellowstone in this instance, with Isle Royale being used as an example with more data points -- I've seen your posts, Q, I know you like the data) based on the wording of the Organic Act of 1916. I do not believe wolves are a great management practice for other areas like national forest where hunters are more helpful to manage herd densities and health. I genuinely believe it better for hunters to be used to manage those landscapes and reap the benefits that come from being outdoors and harvesting their own food.Ecosystems don’t “balance themselves out.” They teeter-totter back and forth wildly based on a myriad of factors. It’s the same as the “boom-and-bust cycle” in free market systems.
Can you elaborate on this? PM is cool, I don't want to derail this thread too bad. I'm certainly more interested in this type of information than I am watching a satirical movie.You can go back and read “radical” law review articles or PhD papers from the early 1970s and see the roots of the madness infesting our country today.
I see what you're saying now. Death by a thousand cuts to assimilate those of us who'd rather spend their time outdoors and more connected to nature. I think I've seen something similar to this in history books...You can't force people with guns and hunting traditions off land and into the cities. But you can nudge them over generations, just by making their choices increasingly a hassle and not worth it, salami-slicing them into behaving "appropriately."