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What if you went into a bank with a gun and a note telling them to give all the money in the drawer and then left without the money just so you could see if you could do it without buggering them. If you don't take the money did you really rob them?
Your argument is pretty silly.
So you're advocating poaching as a test case if you accidentally release. Hardly ethical in my book but to each his own. By the way it is all of our land not your land. If you want to break the law then go for it.
Some states such as Arizona define "taking" of game animals as the pursuit. Does no good to ask here. You can roll the dice and deal with the fall out which might include losing your ability to apply or hunt in most of America for a few years which in turn would burn most accumulated points due to not applying or as Option 2 you can stay out of the wilderness. If I drew a tag where the only way to access non-wilderness was to cross wilderness then I would be consulting with F&G and a seasoned lawyer prior to applying. There are enough people out there complaining about being victims that I have no sympathy for those who end up on the wrong side of the law because they felt things were not fair. Fair is where you see carnival rides.
Better yet, how about I DO go out there, fully doing what I think I have every right in the world to do? On MY land.
I'm curious how you think this would hurt non-residents or hunters in any way. Non-residents are already treated like second class citizens on their own land; land that feeds and waters and houses Wyoming's game animals. Hunters, well, they would not be affected at all. I think a test case might be in order. Hmmm. Maybe in a few years when I retire.
After reading the rest of your posts, it's obvious that under no circumstances would you be willing to even consider the validity of other people's points. When everybody else's argument is silly, stupid and not even worth acknowledging, it's obvious you're just trying to stir the pot and show how smart (actually dumb) you are and how dumb (in your eyes) everybody else is.
Poaching is poaching, but to be clear I do not support the resident guide law . That was passed by the state outfitters board and it originally stated you had to hire a professional guide. Lobbying got it changed to resident guide. Most residents I know do not support it either. Now for your release statement I too shoot a LONGBOW. My fingers have been on a string for about 35 years so no I don't have the amount of experience you but I have seen first hand premature releases with compound shooters. If you think that poaching for a test case is any different then your ethics are far different from mine so be it. What is the difference between poaching and trying to avoid prosecution for it. Let me know when you come out and I'll let the warden know. He'll find your post interesting and will probably like to meet you. Done with this BS.
1. As I explained above, I draw on animals I don't intend to shoot to see if I can execute the motion without buggering them.
2. I don't accidentally release. But if I did, so much the better for a test case.
There is only ONE post that I found unworthy of a logical response, and that is the post with the analogy of bank robbery with the case in point. So, I doubt you read the rest of my posts. What I am willing to consider is any post that argues in favor of Wyoming's law and the reasons behind it. Or why a person should obey a law and not test it if they believe that law is wrong and they have no other effective recourse. If I am so dumb, then why have you not offered an argument? Is it because you cannot? I don't think anyone else is dumb. A post might be dumb, but that does not mean the person is dumb. But then everyone else has offered arguments that merited a response.
Is the law stupid? Yea it is.
After reading the rest of your posts, it's obvious that under no circumstances would you be willing to even consider the validity of other people's points. When everybody else's argument is silly, stupid and not even worth acknowledging, it's obvious you're just trying to stir the pot and show how smart (actually dumb) you are and how dumb (in your eyes) everybody else is.
Should have left it at that. Letting Wyoming off the hook because some other state (Oregon) is worse, is simply no argument.
The balance of your post brings up a good point: Why exactly is it that the states, including Oregon, own the wildlife? I'm sure it has something to do with history and the logistics of dealing with something that migrates from federal to state to private land and back. But when you think about "our" federal land providing so much food, water, shelter and home to these animals, and yet we can't hunt them, it seems BS. The feds do take over when the ESA comes into play, and with migratory birds, etc., but other than that, the states could, if they wanted to, just cut us off altogether.
If PETA types took over a state, what then? No hunting, even on federal land? If that doesn't seem possible, just remember the very reason states have the control over wildlife in the first place (history, logistics, etc.). Look at the population growth, Public Land Transfer movement, livestock vs wildlife conflicts, etc. So yeah, Oregon may suck but they are sucking with animals that are supported by MY (OUR) land, at least in substantial part. And non-residents only have a voice en mass, or not at all.
By all means go out there and pretent to poach an anmimal but make sure you do it where a warden will see you so you can prove your point. Because you obviously think you're smarter than everyone else.
Do you really want to challenge the "North American Model" and state control of wildlife? Giving it to the Feds, minus ESA and migratory birds, would be far worse in my opinion.
I don't know if I do or not. That is why I asked. Without some argument in support of it, I'm left to wonder. Offer me some argument. Wouldn't a State outlawing hunting, either all-together, or just for non-residents, also present a threat to the North American Model? What about federal ownership of wildlife: are you arguing that the feds would prevent hunting on federal land? Or that states and the feds would be at such odds that states would slaughter wildlife that wandered off federal land? Or that the feds would stop allowing state resident cattle and sheep on federal land? Or just that the feds don't have the expertise of local state wildlife agencies? Or what?
If it comes down to an argument that the feds would be too bureaucratic and byzantine in the licensing, I would have to say Colorado is so F'd up that I hate applying. It's a population thing, and not the State's fault. But my point is, why would the feds be any worse?