Rise like Lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number,
Shake your chains to earth like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you—
Ye are many—they are few.
— Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mask of Anarchy
It is time for the vast majority of the population, who do not hunt or trap or raise 'livestock' to take control of wildlife policy.
The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish (officially abbreviated NMDGF,
also known as “Maim and Squish”) is reviewing its policy on mountain lion
hunting. Mountain lions, known to game managers as cougars and to biologists
as pumas, are not legally classified as a federal endangered species,
although California, which has already banned mountain lion trophy hunting,
is considering classifying the species (Puma concolor) as a state endangered
species. Trophy hunting is the greatest threat to mountain lion populations,
which are also threatened by so-called depredation hunting and poisoning by
the livestock industry.
Trophy hunting is a form of thrill killing in which animals are killed for
purposes of display, typically by shared photos and mounted skulls or
taxidermy specimens. From 1984 to 2014 trophy hunters killed more than
78,000 mountain lions in the USA. (HSUS, State of the Mountain Lion) State
game departments do not publish statistics on depredation trapping, which
does not require a license.
The New Mexico Game Commission is charged with overseeing NMDGF, to assure
the protection of wildlife on behalf of the public. Four years ago the Game
Commission approved recreational mountain lion trapping, which they call
“sport harvest,” in spite of widespread public opposition. Activists cried
“shame, shame” and called for the abolition of the Game Commission. But
professional environmental and animal lobbyists squandered the time since
then on such dubious efforts as trying to prevent the governor from removing
Game Commissioners.
Game Commission meetings are, by law, open to the general public, but Game
Commission Chair Joanna Prukop has limited public speaking time at the
meetings to two minutes per agenda point, while giving unlimited time to her
former colleagues on the Game Department.
As an active member of the Boone and Crockett Club, Prukop is an outspoken
defender of trophy hunting and trapping according to the Theodore Roosevelt
model of conservation. Roosevelt, a notorious big game hunter, co-founded
Boone and Crockett with George Bird Grinnell (who founded one of the first
Audubon societies), and Madison Grant (who gained notoriety for writing
white supremacist tracts). Among the early members of the Club were Aldo
Leopold and Gifford Pinchot. After working for the U.S. Forest Service in
New Mexico, Leopold applied Pinchot’s principles of “harvesting” trees in
national forests to “harvesting” wildlife. Leopold went on to establish the
profession of game management in his book by that title. To this day, game
managers use the term “harvest” to refer to killing wildlife.
A Game Commissioner and a Wildlife Lobbyist walk into a bar...
The new chair of the Game Commission is promoting “ethical hunting,”
according to the principles of Boone & Crockett’s North American Model of
Game Management (NAM). She promoted the importance of NAM to hunters and
trappers at a recent talk at a brewery in Albuquerque sponsored by the New
Mexico Wildlife Federation.
NAM regards wildlife as state property. While NAM justifies this as
“noncommercial” use under a “public trust” doctrine, in practice it promotes
selling off state property for the benefit of the fur industry and
out-of-state trophy hunters.
Concerned about declining public support for hunting, Boone & Crockett has
been promoting a rebranding campaign, presenting “fair chase” hunting as an
ethical pursuit (pun intended). This was a major theme at brewery meeting.
Boone and Crocket outlines their strategy on their fair chase website:
This vocal minority is partly responsible for non-hunters turning away their support for hunting. The question is, what to do about them? One solution is support and practice fair chase hunting. Hunting being conducted under laws guided by science that are established to ensure the well-being of game species is an inconvenient truth for the anti-hunting agenda. Their workaround to this is to ignore this fact or bring their own junk science to the table to refute real science. But what they can’t work around is this truth: beyond game laws, the majority of hunters limit themselves for the benefit of game populations by choosing to hunt under the highest of ethical standards.
In joining NM Wildlife Federation’s campaign against coyote-killing
contests, APVNM accepted their argument that “fair-chase” hunting is
“ethical.” In this way, they fell into the trap set by Boone & Crockett.
Leopold, when he was a leader of the organization now known as the New
Mexico Wildlife Federation, aimed to completely extirpate mountain lions
from New Mexico. The New Mexico Game Department pretends to have calculated
the maximum number of mountain lion kills which would allow the species to
continue. The calculations which they call “extrapolation” appear to be
completely fabricated, and do not take into account effects of climate
change on wildlife populations.
Although NMDGF has a small number of public information sessions open to
anyone, key policy decisions are apparently made in private meetings with a
select group of special interest lobbyists the department recognizes as
“stakeholders.” In a presentation prepared for the Game Commission, NMDGF
acknowledges that it has met with Council of Guides and Outfitters, Back
Country Hunters and Anglers, NM Wildlife Federation, Animal Protection of
NM, Defenders of Wildlife, Wild Earth Guardians, Sierra Club, and Cattle
Growers Association.
In response to an inquiry regarding these meetings, NMDGF acknowledged that
there is no rule, regulation, or statute authorizing stakeholder meetings.
New Mexicans need a Game Commission chair who answers to the vast majority
of the general public who do not hunt or trap. Polling data shows that
hunters are at most 11% of the U.S. population (the U.S. Census Bureau puts
the number at 4%), yet hunters and trappers, with the support of livestock
interests, control state wildlife policy throughout the USA. It is time for
the vast majority of the population, who do not hunt or trap, to take
control of wildlife policy.
Rise like Lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number,
Shake your chains to earth like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you—
Ye are many—they are few.
— Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mask of Anarchy
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
0 marine animals
0 chickens
0 ducks
0 pigs
0 rabbits
0 turkeys
0 geese
0 sheep
0 goats
0 cows / calves
0 rodents
0 pigeons/other birds
0 buffaloes
0 dogs
0 cats
0 horses
0 donkeys and mules
0 camels / camelids