I suggest you boycott until your dream becomes realityI didn't ask for equity, I asked for equality.
I suggest you boycott until your dream becomes realityI didn't ask for equity, I asked for equality.
Nr hunters are guaranteed tags for elk in idaho,montana,wyoming,arizona,new mexico,nevada,colorado, oregon, utah, and washington I am sure I am missing one somewhere. how many more tags does one group of hunters need?I didn't ask for equity, I asked for equality.
If they want the special privileges of hunting federal land in other states sounds like a fair trade. My post was extreme sarcasm for the cry baby’s whining about not getting tags and costing to much.And then no NR would be allowed to hunt on state land?
You have completely missed the point. You need to read up on US wildlife law, public trust doctrine. As many have said, wildlife is owned and managed for the residents of that state, period. Tax dollars and federal lands have absolutely zero to do with your privilege (not right) to take a wildlife resource from another state. The same is true for your state.I am equally as entitled as every other US citizen, yes. That doesn't mean I'm entitled to a guaranteed tag. It's a limited resource that must be managed.
My brother and I pissed off a lot of residents packing tens and sometimes over a hundred lbs of horn off the mountain. I guess you can lump working harder under "ruffling feathers".Better watch out who you piss off in WY. Enough non residents did enough ruffling of feathers to royally screw up their shed hunting privileges forever. Just pointing out facts.
It seems we've gone full circle. One of the first questions I asked>You have completely missed the point. You need to read up on US wildlife law, public trust doctrine. As many have said, wildlife is owned and managed for the residents of that state, period. Tax dollars and federal lands have absolutely zero to do with your privilege (not right) to take a wildlife resource from another state. The same is true for your state.
No one is preventing you from accessing or recreating on fed lands, only limiting your privilage to take an animal that is owned by the residents of that state. You can still access, fish, hunt small game, camp, hike, collect firewood, + 100s of other things on fed lands without an elk tag in your pocket. I get more pissed when private land owners they own the wildlife on their property, b/c they don't.
The public trust doctrine is at its heart of the North American model of wildlife Conservation. If you just plainly disagree that's fine, lobby your representatives and attend wfgd public meetings, use actual tools. But I don't know why you want to potentially dismantle the most successful wildlife conservation model in history just so you can have a slightly better chance at an elk tag.
Sent from my SM-G975U using Tapatalk
You should stop listening when politicians tell you the sky is pink.If oil or gold is discovered on federal land such as BLM who owns that resource, the State or the Federal Gov? I'm asking as I genuinely don't know the legalities here.
Game animals aren't a federal resourceThe debate here is, "What is appropriate discrimination to a Federal resource." I've put forth that it is not appropriate to discriminate against NRs of a state for a federal resource that happens to lie within said state. As of yet no one has provided an argument as to why that's appropriate other than "it would break the system."
.
Wild game is not a federal resource.The debate here is, "What is appropriate discrimination to a Federal resource." I've put forth that it is not appropriate to discriminate against NRs of a state for a federal resource that happens to lie within said state. As of yet no one has provided an argument as to why that's appropriate other than "it would break the system."
Then what is game animals that reside primarily on federal land? Is privately owned livestock not a resource owned by the ranch owner?Game animals aren't a federal resource
Where the WILD game reside means zero with respect to ownership. Livestock were purchased by someone. That someone holds "title" to them and can do whatever they want with them. They could sell you the right to hunt them if you want.Then what is game animals that reside primarily on federal land? Is privately owned livestock not a resource owned by the ranch owner?
I agree, but it's very closejust cause the elk are on someones private land, doesnt mean those elk belong to that private land owner
What he said ^^^^^^Where the WILD game reside means zero with respect to ownership. Livestock were purchased by someone. That someone holds "title" to them and can do whatever they want with them. They could sell you the right to hunt them if you want.
Wildlife is owned and managed by the state. It doesn't matter if the animal is standing on private, federal or state land.Then what is game animals that reside primarily on federal land? Is privately owned livestock not a resource owned by the ranch owner?
Yep, and when those livestock are grazed in federal or state lands they still are owned by the rancher. By your logic you think you are entitled to those cattle based off of where they are currently living.Then what is game animals that reside primarily on federal land? Is privately owned livestock not a resource owned by the ranch owner?