Can you please elaborate on this? I know there will be some bro-science integrated but I’d appreciate specific analysis of evidence.
I understand the frustration surrounding the transition of wolves / grizzlies to state management but I don’t see the correlation to gun nor food control. While there have been movements for gun control, few advocate for the complete banishment of guns.
To me it could represent some form of nostalgia when animals roamed the continental US. It isn’t necessarily fair to the animal because humans have invaded nearly every avenue of their life making survival and life without human interaction nearly impossible. It is short-sighted yet individuals want to integrate certain animals where they once were prominent.
I see this kind of "request" for information more and more these days among supposed sportsmen.
It's like asking for peer reviewed scholarly articles supporting the notion that 2+2 equals 4.
Typically involves mention of "conspiracy theory" or other buzzwords meant to discredit any reasonable demonstration of common sense or rational thought...and of course a mandatory statement that the slippery slope argument is a logical fallacy despite a mountain of case studies indicating otherwise.
Let's look at it this way:
In states where ballot box biology has been instituted (CA, WA, CO, NJ, etc) have hunting opportunities expanded or shrunk since, and have ungulate populations grown or shrunk? How has the public sentiment towards/against hunting shifted in that same time frame (roughly 30 years) in those places?
Let's take a closer look at WA since that's the state I'm most familiar with:
In the 1990s hound hunting for predators is put up to citizen's vote despite WDFW opposing that legislation, and it's outlawed by a landslide. The cat population has since exploded, and elk and deer numbers are down to historic lows from the Blues to the Methow...while the WDFW is killing problem cats with taxpayer funded hound work on an industrial scale lol. The same block of voters have kept a progressively further left governor in office since, with the most recent one responsible for appointing the commission which recently voted to end the Spring bear hunt, DESPITE the agency bios full endorsement and an estimated 35k bears. I personally know a fella employed by the USDA who's colleague kills North of 20 bears every year in WA for the gubernment because there are so many...you won't read about that in the Seattle Times of course...
Take 2 minutes to look at the way any environmental litigator .org feeds their members information...entirely devoid of objectivity and overflowing with pathos based propaganda.
Reminds me of the famous Martin Niemoller quote:
"First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Jew. Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me."
First it was the predator hunters, then it's the trappers, then it's the ungulate hunters...sound familiar?
Now the wonderful thing about America is that if your prerogative is to keep your head in the sand, you're 100% entitled to do just that, but for those of us who have watched the slippery slope erode our hunting heritage bit by bit, the long-term goal couldn't be more obvious.
Perhaps a better way to frame your question would be "Who are the most powerful and influential people on Earth, and do they want me to be dependent on the system or dependent on them?"