Op, no you aren’t.
My thing is, you shouldnt have to pay a membership fee to see who owns what land. That should be free public records.
Then there’s the fact that guys are profiting from those membership fees meanwhile our local public lands are filling up with ppl who never had a clue these places existed and would have never found them otherwise. They get there and walk around looking at their cellphones and pointing at landmarks. Without a clue how to approach the area, they end up walking open ridges or through timber pockets, blowing out the game. In one scouting trip a guy or two can pressure the game enough to change their pattern or bedding area, or worse, cause them to go nocturnal.
What’s worse is they’ll bring in and set up other “scouting tools”(cameras), meaning they’ll be back to trudge through all the same countryside again (or multiple times) to check them or move them, then post and/or share the pics with anyone who will give them a “like”. Then do the same (if by chance they were successful) either by showing off the area in background of harvest photos or just get so excited about their “new spot” that they just show off the landscape for everyone to see. Even just showing a quality animal can have guys salivating and jumping on their map apps to try to find out where that pic was taken.
Putting all that aside, to me you shouldn’t be profiting off the exploitation of America’s public lands and natural resources, nor should electronic technology be substituted for hard work, sweat, and boots on the ground. The game doesn’t get to use it, why should we?
Look at it this way, we as humans are already on a rapid course to absolutely destroy the world we live in, why speed up the process with technology?
When you start putting profits first, well, just look at what we’ve done to the earth because of $$$. We’ll do the same to our hunting opportunities, I’m certain.