Hunting Wife
Well-known member
Or do we perhaps collectively have many decades of first-hand experience across multiple states and at the federal level working on the exact issues you keep telling us we have no idea about?…I think many people in this space have pre-conceived notions they apply to the broader group based on their narrow and often local experiences.
Many members here work on these issues, some at a very high level, though you haven’t been around long enough to know the types or depth of experience present within this membership.
Not sure if you are being intentionally obtuse, or you really can’t see past your own blind spot here.What are you talking about that hunters have screwed over non-hunters? You are echoing a non-sensical theme that the anti-hunting extremists organizations are trying to use to divide hunters from other outdoors users, a unity that has been made closer by much effort over the past few decades. As if you can’t have both. Yes their are extremists in both camps who believe that and shout get off my lawn, but most rational people on both sides are supportive. Anecdoatal, but I have never had someone say something negative or give me stink eye… and that includes hunting in southern California.
Anti-hunting groups are pretending these people are aggrieved to get their nose under the tent. As a wildlife photographer, how have hunters screwed me over? As a forager? As a hiker? As a horserider? They haven’t, duh! Thanks to hunting dollars there are tons of places I can do these activities, and miles of trails built. I WMA I hunted when I was in Virginia is a perfect example, super popular with horse riders, people walking their dogs, campers, foragers, birders, etc… 100% funded by hunting dollars. Did I ever hear hunters say keep all those other people out? No. Might a few have thought it? Probably… but again, this exclusion you and others are peddling is not accurate.
Again, anti-hunters, whether individuals or groups, should not be involved in wildlife management. It just can’t work. Can non-hunters? Sure. Can predator advocates? Sure. And they have been all along. But if you are against hunting then there is no actual thought or perspective. You are starting and and finishing at no.
The point is that you can not exclude portions of the public you don’t agree with from participating in the discussion of how public trust resources are managed.
Agencies are legally mandated to listen to all stakeholders. Thus far, certain voices have been excluded, by hunters, from revenue streams (disagree all you want but it doesn’t make it less true), and barred from participation by “others” (via lobbying and other shenanigans) in working groups, advisory boards, etc where management recommendations are often formed. If we’re really going to take the “extremists shouldn’t even be allowed to participate” stance, many many people in this country could argue the NRA should be excluded from gun control discussions. I imagine that would go over well now, wouldn’t it?
Does including these people mean that their opinions and demands must be met? No. That is not what anyone here is saying. Those opinions and demands should have to pass the smell test scientifically, fiscally, and socially, just like hunters opinions and demands. But trying to have some kind of double standard where some peoples ideas are heard and others aren’t is disingenuous.
My criticism of hunters is far from non-sensical and has nothing to do with being divisive. On the contrary, the point is to draw attention to our weaknesses so we can address them and put ourselves on a better footing and in a better bargaining position going forward. If we are so weak that we can’t withstand criticism of ourselves, we certainly aren’t going to withstand criticism from outside.
Or we can stay in our echo chamber, double down on our own propaganda, look like real jackasses, and lose all credibility with non-hunters. The choice is ours.
It’s been mostly a good discussion here. Thanks to those who have been willing to engage.