sorry guys but i fish for sharks and eat what i catch. i hunt for deer and bear with a bow and eat what i catch. i have no trophies taxidermed. i don't condone hunting for trophy alone. but i do not condone outlawing my freedoms as a member of earth either. that being said, commercial destruction of wildlife is a travesty...
I'll probably get :hanged:for this by some, but...
I come from a hunting family myself and I have done my fair share of tracking, hunting and fishing - I've had the foot aches and hook punctured fingers to prove it.
I believe there are two kinds of hunters/gatherers:
1. Those, like me, who believe it is ok to hunt responsibly and ethically for the purpose of using the meat, hide, whatever can be used, and yes the trophy also counts as part of that for some people, although if you knew me IRL, you'd also know I'd never pride myself on the death of something else by glorifying a trophy on my living room wall, but that's just me; and...
2. Those who slaughter indiscriminately
only for the trophies and Roland Ward records on their wall without any ethical concern or regard for the consequences of their actions and decisions whatsoever.
I have no beef with someone who hunts with compassion, forethought, and respect. A true hunter often, more than most others, knows how intertwined our relationship is to the animal kingdom. They choose to take skillfully from the land/sea so that there will always be more next year and always take only with discretion, respect and with compassion. I grew up with my Dad's mantra still ringing in my ears - "never take the shot unless you are 100% sure it will be the last and only shot, and always give the prey a
fair chance to outwit you and survive. If you want to hunt, then
hunt, but don't ever go corner and simply murder something".
Obviously shark finning is a deplorable act in my mind simply for the facts that it's being done for no good reason - texture in your soup? C'mon! And beyond that, the total waste of the entire animal after it's been mutilated and not even to speak of the horrible suffering that animal is put through before dying - despicable. Furthermore the numbers are dwindling because of this practice (amongst others) which goes against everything in me when I need to decide whether such a practice is done with discretion in regards to the health and stability of the marine ecosystem. This is not ethical gathering IMHO, not by a looong shot.
There is a very big difference between commercialized outstripping of resources that leaves a kind of scorched earth, so to speak, in it's wake, and a responsible hunter who gathers with discretion and care.
(Now let me get into my foxhole before the :flame: starts! /me swats at that crawling bug on his screen and runz!)