It is very unfortunate that there is portion of the hunting community who is so short sighted and selfish as to feel this way. How lucky are we that we have fellow hunters who have the ability and willingness to make donations that large. They could do anything with their money, (same as you and I) and they choose to put it directly towards benefiting our public resources. One animal, at most, that is taken in order to benefit thousands that you and I have the opportunity to hunt.
Where do you draw the line at the rich elite? Is it the people that are able to spend six figures on an auction tag? Is it people able to put $1-99k in for raffle tickets? Is it the people able to afford to buy licenses and apply in multiple states? Is it the people who have enough discretionary income to go hunting at all? Lord knows even buying the licenses,tags, equipment, and gas required to go hunting as a resident isn’t cheap. Globally, if you can afford to do even that you’re probably considered the rich elite. By buying a tag, isn’t that the state selling you a public resource?
What every one of those examples has in common is that money is going towards hunting and conservation. The difference is the donations from these auction tags, depending on the state, is almost 100% earmarked directly for wildlife projects and matched with federal funding. The same can’t be said for the money from us just buying our tags and licenses and raffles don’t generate even close to the same revenue.
Am I jealous of these guys? Absolutely. I’m jealous of their jets, their houses, their cars, their rifles, and their trophy rooms. I’d have it all if I could too. But just because I’m jealous doesn’t mean I’ll let that cloud my judgement about how beneficial it is for them to buy these tags and participate in hunting. They’ll spend the money one way or another. If it’s not $500k on auction tags, maybe it’s $25-50k on raffle tickets. Now the regular guy’s odds are worse and the state still doesn’t generate the same amount of money. Lose lose. That is already happening in Arizona.
The first to suffer from losing auction tags are OUR animals. The second is hunters as a whole. Especially here in the west. Don’t be so naive as to think otherwise.