thank you for the concise reply. These are all very good points. However, I just have not seen something that you and other folks keep alluding to: that hunting was being threatened and was on the brink of being done away with and therefore we needed to recruit millions of additional hunters to "have on our side" to protect the sport. I don't get that. And it is my personal opinion that that is just a talking point to justify business pursuits that pertain to hunting.
I understand your perspective. I don't think hunting was in death throes, but I was concerned long-term about the decreasing participation and the aging-out of the participants. I think part of this also relates to where you live and who your friends are. When I lived in MT, I thought almost everyone hunted. I wore camo to school some days. When I moved away, I saw a very different perspective - that hunters were not doing a good job of talking to the "other side." I also discovered that there is ground to talk to those people by focusing on food and conservation and showing respect to the animals.
I think that in another 20 years we would have seen a lot more places start to look like California (strict gun laws, frequent ballots for criminalizing things like trapping, etc.). The shifts in hunting demographics over the last few years have pushed that fight out for now.