I think we are talking past one another. To your point, I suppose you are correct, proposals like this could take away a rifle hunt in a given unit. My point was that these efforts will never take away modern rifle hunting completely. Not even close.
But I would argue if a wildlife agency is worried about a wildlife population, they could close the unit to all, or restrict harvest in other ways which still allows hunters (albeit not all) to go hunting.
If given those two options I would choose the later. You may not and that's OK too.
Agreed, I think we're probably 99% on the same sheet of music.
Something I should clarify, is that a big part of my approach to all of this comes from knowing how the anti-hunting/Earth-first types strategically go after their objectives, salami-slicing over long time-horizons. I'm looking at this issue of weapon restrictions from the perspective of the long-term, strategic protection of our ability to both hunt
and pass this cultural tradition and skill down to our kids.
Think about this: if your kid can hunt big game for exactly 6 years while at home (age 12-18)...how many tags do you think the average family can get for that kid before they leave home? How many years go by with no chance to hunt? How much harder is it to generate and preserve hunting as a value in a home, if they get 1 or 2 tags and then they're off somewhere else?
How many generations of that does it take to kill off the interest in hunting, broadly?
Every single lost tag pushes us down that slippery slope.
I look at this from the shoes of those who do not have your interests at heart, or even that of deer populations - and how they use issues just like this to salami-slice things away from us over long time-horizons.
Once the anti-hunting/Earth-first crowd figures out how to pack the leadership and oversight of our wildlife agencies, they'll salami-slice our opportunities to hunt down to nothing over time. They've done this indirect salami-slicing that plummets tag numbers by eliminating the ability to control the populations of 3 apex-predator species (cougars, wolves, grizzly), all of which kill deer and elk on a weekly basis in many places. That's just one approach, but if it limits hunters over time, especially over decades, it kills off interest in hunting. And that also kills off interest and "justification" in the mind of the left for people to have guns. Or have vehicle access to vast swaths of the West. It is ALL interrelated - I've seen their documents and talked to their people. It's very real.
You can look at the wildlife management agencies in both CA and CO to see this happening, with far less hunting opportunity than decades past - and it has nothing to do with tags getting filled by hunters. And it could easily happen to us here in NV, with Clark County's population base, and what's happened in Washoe over the last decade.
That was a very long way of saying that I see danger in limiting modern-weapon tags - and why I see it as part of a slippery slope danger for a lot more than just my ability to get a nice buck.