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Well when residents continually push out nonresidents for public land hunting I’m just saying don’t expect support for your hobby. Hunting is purely a hobby and most residents rely on federal public land to use, state land great i get that but to limit those that pay for your play ground and then say hey we live here and pay taxes etc just doesn’t matter to the 99% paying for your playground.I don’t understand the angst against residents? Each American citizen owns the same amount of public land. No one in New Mexico has complained about non-residents. In fact we are trying to get rid of the outfitters pool to give non-residents better odds and more tags. Residents and non-residents should have equal opportunity to book with an outfitter or not. There should not be any landowner tags that can be used to hunt public lands. Take those land owner tags and put them into the public draw. That way residents will actually get 90% percent of something and the non-residents would have 10% of something.
That way If a non-resident or resident for that matter, draws a tag for a unit they can choose to book a hunt on private land with an outfit like Infinite Outdoors or an outfitter if they choose for that matter. At the present time the big-game hunting is almost completely commercialized for non-residents. There are so few tags in the public draw for residents that we go for years without drawing any big-game tags at all. Few non-residents can afford to spend 30K per season to hunt big-game in another state. Obviously the outfitters will put the hate on residents and Infinite Outdoors so they can keep more slices of the pizza.
But know this. If Public lands disappear, so will the land owner tags and then residents and non-residents alike, even the wealthiest of non-residents, won’t be hunting.
Yes we know that, yet many of those tags are only good on federal right?I don’t know how many times this needs to get covered on this website, but you are not drawing a tag to hunt land, you are drawing a tag to hunt a certain states animals. You have access to federal land in whatever western state you want, whenever you want it, that’s what your taxes are going towards. You do not have priority to that’s states animals over its own residents. Animals are kept in trust by each state for the benefit of its own residents, non-residents have no legal claim to hunting them unless granted by the state.
Yeah but that is still a minority of the population.Hunters are but a small population of those recreating on federal lands out here in the west. In fact, hunting season in the mountains is quieter than it is with recreational users in the spring and summer. You can also ask anyone who lives out here, there are plenty of out of state plates at each trailhead taking advantage of those public opportunities.
I’d love if the wilderness society would randomly select parcels that add up to the amount of land that could be taken and show that in comparison to what it is now. Maybe one interspersed and one blocked together so people can get a sense of how much land it is. 3 million acres doesn’t sound like a lot in comparison to 250 million but I bet it’d look a lot bigger on a map.View attachment 895421This is the map. Holy guacamole!
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[UPDATE] This Map Shows The 250+ Million Acres of Public Land that Could Be Sold Under New Bill
Editor's Note: Since this article was first published, the Senate has amended the original version of this legislation to allow to sale of federal lands under grazing permits. That changed added over 130 million acres to the original total. So, the original estimation we published was 120 million...www.themeateater.com
I’d love if the wilderness society would randomly select parcels that add up to the amount of land that could be taken and show that in comparison to what it is now. Maybe one interspersed and one blocked together so people can get a sense of how much land it is. 3 million acres doesn’t sound like a lot in comparison to 250 million but I bet it’d look a lot bigger on a map.
lol, not only that but a pew pew quieter that you can already make quieter. It’ll just be a bit cheaper and easier. Terrible trade. NO DEAL!Did you just equate selling 250 million acres of public land to making your pew pew quieter??
Touché sir you win![]()
What’s your single issue that is somehow convincing you to justify this? What issue could MiKe Lee and the GOP be so much better compared to the alternative that you’re willing to start the process of selling our public land? Which really will be a tremendous transfer of wealth from us, to the few who buy access to the sales. Like how hard is it to say. “This is ******. Stop it or I will advocate against you.”So, 250 million is a slippery slope fallacy.
I'll listen to the podcast, but I am a little burnt out on echo chamber, sky-is-falling discussions trying to convince everyone to be a single issue voter and acting like there is wild game habitat on every acre of public land.
Natural species who came up with nukes. Nukes are natural. Therefor we should just accept the consequences without trying to advocate for a solution that will work best for the most for the longest.We have evolved into destroying wayyyyyy more habitat than we “need”
No other species comes even remotely close. We have huge WANTS, But very few basic NEEDS.
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But your house logic and analogy was perfectly sound?This is just an intellectually lazy argument assuming only an all-or-nothing scenario and that all land is equal.
The slippery slope and appeal to emotion isn't going to work outside of an echo chamber.
Natural species who came up with nukes. Nukes are natural. Therefor we should just accept the consequences without trying to advocate for a solution that will work best for the most for the longest.
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I’m sure this will be somewhat controversial but anyone who is going to claim the slippery slope fallacy here as a way to not be concerned about this better be consistent and be okay with universal background checks or other “common sense” gun control measures. You cannot be calling it a fallacy on one end and then turn around and vehemently use the exact same fallacy on a different issue in my mind. But I’m a hypocrite about that as well, so I don’t have a ton of room to stand. Just seems like from the outside that we’re claiming the slippery slope is a fallacy on this issue but when the argument against universal background checks, etc. is constantly the slippery slope it’s not a fallacy then.Edit: additionally, you keep bringing up slippery slope fallacy. Because you memorized your logical fallacies. However, A slippery slope argument is not a fallacy when there's a demonstrable and logical connection between the initial action and the subsequent consequences, and when the predicted outcomes are reasonably likely to occur.
It’s not a fallacy if it’s not a fallacious. A slippery slope fallacy claim is only really valid when it lacks sufficient support by a demonstrable or logical connection to future consequences. All fallacy claims really try to get people to argue the point at hand using support and demonstration. There is nothing inherently logically flawed about laying out a potential series of events that can follow an action. There is though when it makes huge jumps without support. Ex: “If we reduce building regulations, next thing you know all our houses will be falling down!” Likely Slippery slope fallacy unless they can support that jump or potential jump.I’m sure this will be somewhat controversial but anyone who is going to claim the slippery slope fallacy here as a way to not be concerned about this better be consistent and be okay with universal background checks or other “common sense” gun control measures. You cannot be calling it a fallacy on one end and then turn around and vehemently use the exact same fallacy on a different issue in my mind. But I’m a hypocrite about that as well, so I don’t have a ton of room to stand. Just seems like from the outside that we’re claiming the slippery slope is a fallacy on this issue but when the argument against universal background checks, etc. is constantly the slippery slope it’s not a fallacy then.