the world hunt is called the "world HUNT". No matter how you personally percieve it; it is going to be percieved by the public as a hunt.
Just one sword sharpening another here...
To quote Vermonster13:
"The just get along thing is good for hunting to a point. It's when people use that line to defend methods that are highly objectionable, morally questionable or damaging to all of hunting that I have a problem with it."
What methods; moral questions; and 'things damaging to all of hunting' may we discuss: in the interest of helping to keep traditional archery alive ( this IS the 'Trad Gang' :without being subject to having threads closed down ?
What is your definition of the "big tent theory and its affects on hunting" ?
Seems like their is a 450 pound gorilla in the room that nobody dare talk about- and I am not at all convinced that is in our interest. Not at all.
Fred Bear once said to me that "when these dam* things (compounds) start shooting over 300 feet per second it will no longer be bowhunting".
Are we to ignore what Fred Bear said- and practiced in his own hunting ( with a traditional bow)- and feed the 'gorilla'. Or find a way to convince it to leave the room - that leaves both our swords sharpened?
Or our we to abandon the words of Bear; and Aldo Leopold ( who said 'bowhunting should never be such a presence as to be considered a part of game management decisions')?
Sticking your head out of a foxhole; or sticking your head in a hole might indeed both leave a target present.
But is it the politics of this site to open a forum where only being in a hole and not exposing ones self to anything is the ONLY way to be a part of discussing "Hunting Issues &Politics"?
I love and live for hunting with a traditional bow.
What are the parameters of discussion here; and what makes us think must live in fear of any reprisals for stating our point of view?
Who is the enemy of free speech; the person that says something incorrect or improper; or the person who lives in fear of that freedom?
Really sincerely: Brian
"They that can give up essential liberty to
obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither
liberty nor safety."
Benjamin Franklin
Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759