Hello:
"If you are an ANTI-HUNTER..., please stop reading now. I respect, (but not agree with) your opinion and way of life - RESPECT MINE. Thank you."
The above was THE ORIGINAL OPENING. Why was? Due to the following post I read TODAY by someone I have a connection with from high school:
⦁ "I'm just going to say it. Anyone who kills an animal (for sport) should be charged with murder. What is wrong with you people? Those who enjoy the "hunt" should all be put in cages together so they can hunt after each other--consenting killers. That's fair. I'd totally be ok with that. Animals do not give consent. I wonder how many hunters are atheists? Aren't they usually Christians or God-fearing people? If you believe God created all living beings/creatures, then why is it acceptable to kill animals? I'm not attacking people of faith, I'm attacking hunters who claim to value life and Christianity. I'm very interested in the feedback this will provoke."
Her post is accompanied by a family posing with a dead elephant, somewhere in Africa. I am appalled by the poor taste of picture this family took. I DO NOT condone this type "bragging" and vanity inflicted posting of pictures. Although I "thank" them for being outdoors people/family, I am more disappointed with their lack of respect, not just to hunters, but for and toward the beautiful animal. Too, I am equally pissed, this family would give more "ammunition" to anti-hunters and not protect the act of hunting.
Here is even a more disappointing and scary matter. This emotionally charged post, is that - emotional, and nothing more. Her emotions are blurred by cloud of hypocrisy and ignorance - true disconnection of predation, life, AND death. To say: "Those who enjoy the 'hunt' should all be put in cages together..." Massive human rights violation. I'd be scared of electing this person as my future leader of America, or defender of our sacred constitution. Furthermore, to add: "..so they can hunt after each other- consenting killers. That's fair. I'd totally be ok with that" end quote. Wow!! Not only is she an anti-hunter, but violent in nature (her thoughts sure depict it - don't you agree?) Who is the sadistic and savage one, here? The hypocrisy comes in the sense that she is "speaking up" for an animal, YET WISHING HARM, PROMOTING VIOLENCE, AND IS BEING HATEFUL. We, my friends, meaning people, humans, are animals. We are a type of species - FYI: Homo sapiens.
I get having a difference of opinion. I celebrate differences. It's what makes us all unique and special. But to cross the line with violent thoughts? It makes no sense. I hope she starts to rationalize and digest reality with rationalization, not pure emotion. Someday, I hope we may have an intelligent, adult conversation about life and death – hunting.
Now, I will get back on track. Most of the work has already been done for me. I'm just piggy-backing. After all, no need to re-invent the wheel...., so let me begin this adventure by asking you to watch the following video:
A vegan shows up to a book greeting, has the admirable courage to speak up, and asks Steven Rinella a deep question about killing.... The book is Meat Eater: Adventures from the Life on an American Hunter. Steve is the book's author, Host of @theMeatEaterTV on Sportsman Channel. Listen carefully to Steve's classy, respectful and intelligent answer.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2N0Utg7KYE
Rules:
1. Don't Skip: Please click on links and/or read special articles sequentially, for they are part of the blog's life, purpose, point. (labeled: "TO MY RESCUE".)
2. I will be posting in phases. There will be updates announced via my FB, Community Page, and Twitter. You will have to visit to keep up.
3. Share. I'm about the most simple person you are going meet. It will be easy to follow, read and hopefully, understand.
4. KEEP IT CLEAN!!! If you have a different opinion, or want to learn more about a certain hunting related issue or topic, please feel free to contact me or leave feedback.
Intro:
I recently, relatively speaking, took a memorable trip to El Paso, TX - the city my mother (RIP) chose to settle in. I was blessed to have been able to re-visit and enjoy incredible fellowship with middle-to-high school friends.
Most of my friends, whether by word of mouth or via social media, by now know I am an avid outdoorsman - a bowhunter. As redundant as it is, I hunt with a bow, with archery equipment ONLY - by choice!
Genesis 21:20
And God was with the boy, and he grew up. He lived in the wilderness and became an expert with the bow.
This "series" of a blog, "TO MY NON-HUNTING FRIENDS", is not to explain why I hunt or to talk about bowhunting strategies, but to give my non-hunting friends a different and hopefully better insight to what hunting is about, what misconceptions there are, what it means to individuals and what it means to the economy, conservation efforts, families and more.
Let me take a moment and deep breath as I disclose the obvious: I'm not a PHD, nor will I self-proclaim I am an expert writer. Therefore, to reach my desired goal, I have done research to help me (aka, I Googled). I also have knowledge and input from my years of hunting and relationships built: Professional hunters, authors of the topic, "educated" experts, etc. I strongly feel it is only fair, since I speak and write as a hunter with a biased perspective and do not have the expertise to come up with such compelling articles, research, and methodologies to express my intent (labeled: "TO MY RESCUE".)
Reasons for this blog:
1. In El Paso, I had a brief conversation with a wonderful individual. She expressed how sad she felt with the concept of "killing" innocent animals. I sincerely saw her strong, sad emotion protruding from her eyes. It wasn't the moment to sit her down to try and give her insightful thoughts and information that may have helped ease her mixed emotions. She's very educated and classy. ("I hope you take time to read this write-up".)
2. During a late night dinner, or breakfast, depending on your perspective, the topic of my hunting came up. I was asked how I felt killing poor animals, how I can shoot Bambi. Have you ever heard of a "crash course"? For ten minutes, or less, I had the floor. I naturally and effortlessly went off (respectfully of course) on a hunter rant. All eyes and ears were on me, and they looked like "deer in headlights", pun not intended. When I was done, I strongly believe that most present LEARNED "a" something. I know that from the list of topics that I touched on, they at least took something with them that helped rectify some of the skewed facts and misconceptions they may have had - correction, that they did have.
3. Back in St. Louis, MO, while watching a game of baseball at a local pub, a patron asked me if I hunted. His question was prompted out of curiosity due to the "camo" shirt and cap I was wearing. He boldly asked me if I equipped the deer with weapons so that it'd be an "even play field". I looked at him, while he ate his chicken wings, and told him "welcome to my world". I reminded him he and I are scavengers (we eat other "someone's" or companies' kill) and killers. He scavenges and kills via purchasing his meat at restaurants or grocery stores....I kill most of mine. He smiled, we shook hands, and he apologized for his indiscretion. I smiled back and bought him a drink.
4. This is MY opportunity to expand, with help of other people's words and work, what my crash course was about.
TO MY RESCUE: Article "Outdoors: Sportsman's book takes aim at converting non-hunters" -by Dennis Dunn
"Introducing children to the outdoors........is crucial to continuing our hunting heritage, according to Dennis Dunn."
What would have become of me if I hadn't had a father who introduced me to the hunting experience at an early age is anybody's guess. I honestly can't imagine a life without the beloved outdoors adventures I've been privileged to enjoy, and it is hard for me to comprehend what it must be like for those not as fortunate.
However, some manage to find a way into the hunting world despite the lack of a fatherly mentor.
Dennis Dunn is such a man. He hails from Seattle, and neither his biological father nor stepfather were hunters. He was introduced to archery by his mother, and he picked up a fascination with bowhunting. From humble beginnings of bringing down squirrels, Dunn has become one of the world's renowned bowhunters, one of only a handful who has taken all 29 huntable big game species in North America.
And Dunn has accomplished his quest using bows that are devoid of sight pins or any other distance-measuring devices -- bare bow, in other words. Neither does he use release aids, only three fingers and a leather glove.
In his book "Barebow," Dunn chronicles his "adventures and misadventures" during his 43-year pursuit of the North American Super Slam -- his encounters with those 29 species. His book is written in a way that appeals to both the hunter and non-hunter. It is the pursuit of the non-hunter, in fact, that now consumes Dunn's energy, as I discovered recently at the Southeastern Outdoor Press Association annual conference in Punta Gorda, Fla.
"I've found that in general the anti-hunter is not amenable to arguments of rationality and the facts," Dunn said. "They tend to think with their emotions, and their minds are made up.
"'Don't confuse me with the facts' is the (type of thinking) you run into there. The non-hunters constitute about 80 percent of the population and they're the ones who will determine the outcome of this ideological debate and struggle at the polls. The non-hunters are the ones who will determine if hunting remains a legal human activity.
"I think the best way to fireproof against the anti-hunting propaganda ... is to give them literature, like the book I just finished writing."
Dunn has managed to convert his beautiful bride, Karen, from the ranks of the anti-hunters.
"Like a lot of other anti-hunters, she bought off on a lot of false concepts or images of what hunting is really like," he said. "It was a slow process. The first part of it had to do with getting her to read enough stuff with factual content so that she started to question premises and assumptions of the stuff she had been getting from the mainstream media. Finally, I gave her a book to read -- "In Defense of Hunting" by Dr. James Swan -- and I recommend (it) to anybody. You cannot read that book and not come to understand how vital hunting is."
Dunn points out the vast majority of non-hunters are not vegetarians who consume meat in some form.
"The typical city-dweller sees nothing connected with death," he said. "But eating is as much a blood sport as hunting. Something has to die if you're going to eat chicken, beef, lamb or whatever. Once you approach it from that point of view, then you can talk to them about hunting being more intellectually honest because you're not paying somebody else to do your killing for you. You're going out and taking responsibility for the death of your own food. You become part of the prey-predator drama, just as man has always done -- up until a few hundred years ago when just about everybody had to hunt to survive.
"Now with modern animal husbandry where most people live in the cities and buy their antiseptically packaged meat at the meat market or supermarket, most modern citizens around the world have lost touch with their ancestors and with their natural world that has always provided man with what he needed to survive. Hunters choose to reconnect with their ancestral soul by immersing themselves in the forests, the fields, the mountains and take that responsibility upon themselves to provide food, as much as they can. And in that process they are always in a position to be in touch with their relative insignificance in the cosmos. ... They find themselves engulfed by the outdoor world, which is so awesome and so vast, compared to what we live in in the big city."
Dunn suggests that each hunter reach out to his or her circle of family and friends who are non-hunters and educate them.
"They have the contacts in place to get into the ears and minds of those people," he said. "They need to realize non-hunters will determine their fate down the road. Every hunter and fisherman has to become more proactive at converting the waiting to be converted."
The focus for all hunters, Dunn said, should be the younger generation, which has lost its connection to the outdoors.
"Children need to be introduced to the world of nature as soon as possible and come to understand the prey-predator drama," he said. "If you introduce boys and girls to hunting at an early age -- definitely pre-teen if not pre-10 -- they come to learn in a hurry what life and death is all about and how precious life is and how easily it can be snuffed out. They learn empathy and compassion. They learn self-discipline. They learn patience as they learn the skills of hunting. ...
"The virtues that our parents and grandparents had to learn to survive are not being learned by most young people today in the schools they attend. Unless their parents (or mentors) take the leadership role in teaching them those virtues -- and the outdoors life is one of the best ways to do it -- we're all going to be in trouble." - Dennis Dunn
Historical Background and Perspective:
Genesis 27:3
Now then, take your weapons, your quiver and your bow, and go out to the field and hunt game for me...
First, let me disclose MY history with hunting, killing animals I eat and where "religion" comes to play in my life. Please do not confuse my beliefs as convenient or validation for what and who I am. I came to learn of these scriptures as an adult. Please do not feel this is a hypocritical outreach, for I will be the first to admit, I am an imperfect follower and believer of my God.
I was born in Colonia Anahuac Chihuahua, Mexico. It's was a very small town with antiquated customs, where we celebrated grandious traditions, events, fiestas - such as Quinceneras, Dia de Los Muertos, Dia de Los Ninos, etc., small or straight up large bashes. Killing of a puerco/marrano (swine - Sus scrofa domesticus: also domestic pig, hog. I googled that, btw.) and gallinas (chickens) to prepare meals for a few, up to hundreds is NOT uncommon. My uncles would take me along, on horseback, to chase (hunt) rabbit. I'd help chase that wild pig to be killed for the fiesta. God forbid we killed our own if we didn't have to (grandma rule).
I was already a hunter. Simply, the label was never thought of. I, we, were under-informed and used unorthodox methods but nevertheless, hunters we already were.
Religious? Well, from Quinceneras, weddings, etc., down to in individual homes, we gave thanks to God for the blessings. We thanked God for the meal before us. Eating and sharing was part of consuming what we killed, even beans and tortillas from the corn my family harvested off our family land.
Fast forward. Years later, I met Rick Short, a hunter. He invited me over for dinner – a mix of vegetables with a generous portion of seasoned, well prepared meat – VENISON. This venison was from a hunt that resulted in a kill. It was then I shared stories of horseback riding in the open country to hunt rabbit. It was over this humble dinner, I realized I wanted to re-connect with that kid hunter in Mexico. Sixteen years later, I am still living that dream, with an emphatic passion, love and respect to the game I pursue. Today, as I write, my freezer is filled with meat off my first deer kill of the season.
Acts 10:13
And there came a voice to him: "Rise, Peter; kill and eat."
TO MY RESCUE: A true, historical, educated perspective and excellent article "Hunting - world, body, life, history, rate, human" - by RICHARD S. MACHALEK:
"Social scientists report that humans have employed hunting as a subsistence strategy for at least 90 percent of Homo sapiens' history. The anthropologists Richard Lee and Richard Daly conceptualize hunting, the pursuit and killing of other animals, as one component of "foraging," a broader complex of subsistence activities that also includes the "gathering of wild plant foods, and fishing" (Lee and Daly 1999, p. 3). Hunting entails searching for and killing (or, on occasion, capturing and confining) a wild, unconfined animal. While humans hunt and kill animals primarily as a source of food, they also hunt in order to neutralize a threat (i.e., a tiger or leopard that preys on people), to remove a pest (i.e., rodents or birds that consume agricultural products), or to eliminate a competitor (i.e., predators that kill game animals).
As a human activity, hunting is magnified in its significance by a deceptively simple feature: the evasiveness or resistance exhibited routinely by prey. Because of the behavioral challenges that it presents, hunting has had far-reaching consequences for key aspects of human social, psychological, and cultural life. Since the mid-1960s, for example, anthropologists have argued that hunting may have been a powerful and fundamental force shaping the very nature of cooperation and sharing among early humans.
One such claim involves what the behavioral ecologist Bruce Winterhalder calls the "risk reduction hypothesis." The failure rate of hunters is notoriously high. Even among experienced, highly skilled subsistence hunters who pursue big game animals, any one hunt is much more likely to result in failure than in success. Studying the Hadza of Tanzania in 1993, the anthropologist Kristen Hawkes reported that when hunting big game, Hadza men failed to make a kill 97 of every 100 days that they hunted. When a large game animal is killed, it often represents a "windfall" in excess of what any one hunter and his or her immediate family can consume. These circumstances promote reciprocity and sharing among hunters. By sharing the meat provided by a successful kill, a hunter effectively "buys insurance" against failure in future hunts. When, in the future, he or she fails to kill prey, other successful hunters with whom meat has been shared previously will reciprocate and provide meat to the unsuccessful hunter. The science writer Matt Ridley argues that the cooperation and reciprocity associated with hunting may help constitute the basis of systems of moral and ethical culture. In short, hunting is an activity that promotes cooperation and sharing because it entails the pursuit of a highly valued resource, access to which is unpredictable and risky.
Anthropologists report that while both men and women hunt, in the vast majority of human societies this activity is predominantly male. Yet, it is not self-evident why males are more likely to hunt than females. Scholarly interpretations of the 1990s link hunting to sexual activity and rewards. While the matter is debated among social scientists, some researchers argue that males are motivated to hunt not only because of the food they acquire but because of the social esteem and increased sexual opportunities enjoyed by successful hunters.
The extrinsic rewards of a successful hunt may provide clues about why hunting is intrinsically exciting and satisfying to many people, especially males. To the extent that a behavior confers significant survival and reproductive advantages, evolutionary psychologists like Leda Cosmides and John Tooby suggest that humans are likely to evolve specialized psychological mechanisms that promote such behavior. Accordingly, if hunting yields highly valued protein in the form of meat, promotes stable patterns of cooperation and exchange, and provides males with a currency that they can exchange for sex, it is reasonable to surmise that human males may have evolved psychological attributes that make hunting highly intrinsically satisfying and rewarding to them, whatever the accompanying risks. While this line of reasoning appears promising and compelling to evolutionary minded social and behavioral scientists, it may be too early to conclude that humans are psychologically equipped with specialized mental mechanisms that are the product of humans' Pleistocene history as hunters.
Despite the demise of the hunter-gatherer era about 12,000 years ago, hunting has maintained great significance in many human cultures. In A View To a Death in the Morning (1993), Matt Cartmill traces the symbolism and imagery of the hunt from the hunting-gathering era, through the agrarian era, and into modern, industrial times.
SPECIAL NOTE: Hunting, once reserved for socialites in the early twentieth century, has become popular sport for all classes.
BETTMANN/CORBIS sees the symbolism of the hunt as rich with information about how human beings understand and assess their place in nature. In the Greco-Roman world, hunting was elevated to cosmological significance in the form of deities such as Apollo and Artemis/Diana. In later European art, literature, and philosophy, hunting themes became freighted with complex meanings about class relations and social justice. In contemporary industrial societies such as the United States, media products such as the animated film Bambi are said to express a view of nature in general and animals in particular as good, and humanity as evil, or at least "dubious." Thus, writers like Cartmill see the human significance of hunting in the post–hunter-gatherer era as primarily semiotic, as pertaining to the symbolization of humanity and its relation to nature, and to itself.
In contemporary Western societies like the United States and Great Britain, it is conflict over the moral meanings attending hunting that has made it the focal point of intense and protracted political debate. Members of animal rights organizations such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and Friends of Animals vilify hunting. They also denounce hunters whom they see as arrogant and insensitive for engaging in an activity that is described as "recreational" or "sporting," and necessitates the death of a "sentient," nonhuman animal. Yet many hunters themselves impose entirely different meanings on the hunt, and some, such as the naturalist Paul Shepard, even assign it spiritual significance, construing it as an activity that expresses a deep and profound reverence toward nature and living things. It is unlikely that these divergent views will be reconciled in the near future. If humans are, in fact, possessed of an evolved psychology that derives from a hunting-gathering past, it has yet to be determined if this evolved psychology and the contours of modernity are somehow reconcilable or, rather, are fundamentally incommensurable.
Finally, hunters and recreational shooters in modern societies like the United States have played a significant role in wildlife conservation. As members of various hunting and shooting organizations, such as Ducks Unlimited, the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, and the National Rifle Association, hunting enthusiasts have generated billions of dollars that have supported various types of game management programs, habitat protection and restoration, and conservation education. Some of this money takes the form of direct contributions to such programs, and other monies are generated indirectly by taxes on hunting equipment purchases and various license, tag, permit, and stamp fees. One of the oldest and most important among such hunting-based revenue sources is the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act of 1937 (also known as the Pittman-Robertson Act), and it has distributed more than $3.8 billion to state fish and wildlife agencies since it became law. Thus, somewhat ironically, modern hunters contribute significantly to the survival of the very species whose individual members they hunt and kill."
Bibliography
Cartmill, Matt. A View To a Death in the Morning: Hunting and Nature History. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993.
Cosmides, Leda, and John Tooby. "The Psychological Foundations of Culture." In Jerome H. Barkow, Leda Cosmides, and John Tooby eds., The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and the Generation of Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992.
Endicott, Karen L. "Gender Relations in Hunter-Gatherer Societies." In Richard B. Lee and Richard Daly eds., The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.
Hawkes, Kristen. "Why Hunter-Gatherers Work: An Ancient Version of the Problem of Public Goods." Current Anthropology 34 (1993):341–351.
Hawkes, Kristen. "Why Do Men Hunt? Benefits for Risky Choices." In Elizabeth Cashdan ed., Risk and Uncertainty in Tribal and Peasant Economies. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1990.
Hill, Kim, and Hillard Kaplan. "On Why Male Foragers Hunt and Share Food." Current Anthropology 34 (1993):701–706.
Lee, Richard B., and Richard Daly, eds. "Foragers and Others." In The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.
Ridley, Matt. The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation. New York: Viking, 1996.
Shepard, Paul. The Tender Carnivore and the Sacred Game. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973.
Winterhalder, Bruce. "Diet Choice, Risk, and Food Sharing in a Stochastic Environment." Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 5 (1986):369–392.
RICHARD S. MACHALEK
Enough for now:
Whew! So far so good? I think so. I sincerely hope you have captured a sense of what hunting is about. Next, I will touch on the ECONOMIC IMPACT. Stay tuned and thank you for reading :)
- Alex Tagle
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