EARTH for Animals
(Environmentalists Against Ranching, Trapping and Hunting)
June 2015
To borrow a term popularized by Sea Shepherd Captain Paul Watson, the game managers are aptly described as biostitutes.
Nothing has changed in the year since Scott Bidegain was forced to resign
his position as Game Commission Chair after promoting an illegal cougar
hunt. As a member of the New Mexico Cattle Growers Association Board of
Directors, Bidegain personified the close connection between the livestock
industry and the Game Commission.
For that matter, nothing has changed since the Game Commission was first set
up in 1921, about the time President Warren Harding appointed NM rancher and
former US Senator Albert Fall as Secretary of the Interior. Fall made a
career out of opening up public lands to the oil industry in the notorious
Teapot Dome Scandal.
As the June meeting of the New Mexico Game Commission approaches, the
so-called wildlife biologists of Game and Fish have modified their proposal
on cougar trapping. Facing widespread opposition from editorials and letters
in the Santa Fe New Mexican and Albuquerque Journal, culminating in a rally
at the state capitol, they dropped their proposal to set cougar traps on
public land. The new proposal would allow unrestricted cougar trapping on
private land, while increasing other forms of cougar hunting on public land.
The career game managers who fancy themselves “biologists,” continue to
serve the interests of ranchers and trappers, while ignoring the need to
protect wildlife populations. The department’s original proposal had nothing
to do with biology or any other science, as it was dropped in the face of
public opposition. The current proposal is hardly better. And they continue
to kill cougars while the proposal is up for discussion. Last week they
killed a cougar in a Raton neighborhood for allegedly attacking a puppy, and
they continue to set out cougar traps in Los Alamos.
Nothing has changed in the year since Scott Bidegain was forced to resign
his position as Game Commission Chair after promoting an illegal cougar
hunt. As a member of the New Mexico Cattle Growers Association Board of
Directors, Bidegain personified the close connection between the livestock
industry and the Game Commission.
For that matter, nothing has changed since the Game Commission was first set
up in 1921, about the time President Warren Harding appointed NM rancher and
former US Senator Albert Fall as Secretary of the Interior. Fall made a
career out of opening up public lands to the oil industry in the notorious
Teapot Dome Scandal.
With the support of hunting and livestock interests, New Mexico established
a Game Commission to maintain populations of huntable wildlife in accord
with the principles of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation.
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation has aptly summed up the model as follows:
Man has hunted since he walked the Earth. Every early culture relied on
hunting for survival. Through hunting, man forged a connection with the land
and learned quickly that stewardship of the land went hand-in-hand with
maintaining wildlife – and their own way of life.
In the first half of the 20th century, leaders like Theodore Roosevelt and
Aldo Leopold shaped a set of ideals that came to be known as the North
American Model of Wildlife Conservation. They articulated the philosophy
that all wildlife belong to all of us.
It is useless in any case to look to science to set public policy. In a
Wildlife Society article titled An Inadequate Construct, Dr. Michael P.
Nelson challenges the tenet of the North American Model which “asserts that
Science is the Proper Tool for Discharge of Wildlife Policy.” Nelson states:
“This is mistaken for equating a desire for policies informed by science
with science discharging or determining, by itself, what policies ought to
be adopted—a serious, but very common, error in ethical reasoning.
Scientific facts about nature cannot, by themselves, determine how we ought
to relate to nature or which policies are most appropriate.”
By making a career out of serving their political masters, New Mexico’s
professional game managers have combined the world’s two oldest professions.
To borrow a term popularized by Sea Shepherd Captain Paul Watson, the game
managers are aptly described as biostitutes.
The current drought, exacerbated by anthropogenic climate change, is likely
to continue for decades, threatening wildlife habitat. All wildlife is
threatened, including species not officially recognized as endangered. It is
time for the State of New Mexico to repeal outdated laws which view
predators as threats to livestock. It is time to abolish the Game
Commission.
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