Ontario rejects Barker call on spring bear hunt

By Keith Leslie, The Canadian Press
TORONTO – TV personality and animal rights activist Bob Barker tried but failed Tuesday to convince the Ontario government not to bring back the spring bear hunt, which the province cancelled in 1999.

                                “I feel deep concern about any animal mistreatment any place in the world, and this is in one of my favourite places, Canada, and I want to try to do something about it to protect these bear cubs,” Barker said in an interview from his home in Hollywood, Calif.

Barker, who last year helped fund the transportation of several elephants from the Toronto Zoo to a refuge in the United States, said it’s “barbaric” to let cubs starve to death after their mothers are lured from the den by bait and then killed by hunters.

“You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to realize you’re murdering every cub,” he said. “I urge every Canadian who knows anything about this to step up to the plate and take a swing for the cubs.”

Ontario Natural Resources Minister David Orazietti disputed Barker’s claims about cubs being left to starve to death during a spring bear hunt.

“I have a ton of respect for Mr. Bob Barker, but I’m not sure where he’s getting his facts on this issue, and that’s not in fact the case at all,” he said.

Ontario plans a pilot project with a limited hunt in eight of 95 wildlife areas this spring to see if it will reduce the number of emergency calls and instances where police are forced to shoot nuisance bears, added Orazietti.

“I’m not sure if Mr. Barker is aware that eight other provinces in Canada and all territories have full provincewide or territory-wide spring bear hunts,” he said. “This is a much smaller, targeted approach to deal with really what’s become a public safety issue.”

The Ontario hunt will be non-profit and limited to local hunters.

Barker called the spring bear hunt “unethical” and “legislated cruelty” that has nothing to do with science, and said it doesn’t matter that Ontario is trying only a small scale pilot project.

“Whether it’s an experiment or it’s going to last for 30 years, it is just totally unacceptable in today’s society,” he said. “I just can’t understand how they can possibly do this.”

Zoocheck Canada said there was no scientific rationale for the return of the spring bear hunt, and called the public safety argument “flawed.” The animal protection charity said research shows that bear-human interactions are closely linked to variation in natural food sources, not to actual bear population numbers.

The Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters urged the public to make sure “big city animal rights extremists” don’t derail the pilot project for a spring bear hunt.

“While the partial reinstatement of a hunt is a positive step, we believe that all of bear country deserves to experience the benefits of a spring hunt,” the group said in a statement.

Barker urged the province to explore other options such as laws to stop people from leaving food or garbage where bears can get at it, but Orazietti said Ontario had spent $35 million on alternative approaches to nuisance bears without great success.

“We’ve had over 50 resolutions from municipalities wanting to opt in to this pilot program, and that certainly speaks to the sense of urgency that communities have in northern Ontario in terms of dealing with this,” he said.

Orazietti said public safety was his main concern, and gave alarming examples like one northern community where a 400-pound brown bear wandered the streets on Halloween as kids walked about with bags full of candy.

“We have young kids in schools who can’t go out for recess because bears are in their playground,” he said. “Teachers are wearing bear whistles to call the students back into the safety of the school.”

Orazietti said it’s “too early to say” if the spring bear hunt in Ontario would be expanded next year, and will depend on the results of the pilot project.

“I think the most important thing we need to do now is to ensure that the proposed pilot project has the desired effect, including a reduced number of 911 calls,” he said.

http://www.northumberlandnews.com/news-story/4383746-ont-rejects-barker-call-on-spring-bear-hunt/

Distressing photos on petitions

I agree with this post, that’s why I used only images of wild-living animals in my book. I know that other folks think disturbing images can help shake people out of apathy, but for those of us who already care deeply, are these images helping or hindering our resolve? The point should not be to make people so traumatized that they feel hopeless about the whole subject. I’m talking about the kind of graphic image that turns your stomach and comes to you when you’re trying to sleep. Not necessarily like the photo of the bare-assed hunter sitting on the head of the deer he killed– although that one is disturbing and stomach-turning in its own right. I mean the kind that makes you feel like you’ve reached overkill (so to speak) and burnout on the whole issue.

Vegangirl's avatarVegan Lynx

Once again, I must complain about awful, upsetting images on petitions. Why do they need to be there? People who wish to sign petitions against cruelty do not need to see the images. Just reading about what’s happened is traumatic enough. I may be sensitive, but I do wish people could respect that, instead of trying to force me to endure traumatic memories for a long time afterwards.

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MEXICAN GRAY WOLF ALERT

Arizona senators approve bill allowing livestock owners to kill Mexican wolves
PHOENIX — The Arizona Senate has approved a bill that allows livestock owners to shoot wolves protected by federal regulations if the… wolf is attacking other animals.
Senate Bill 1211 passed by an 18-12 vote on Monday..This would be devastating for the critically endangered Mexican gray wolf population which totals just 83 in the wild
Support Lobos of the Southwest for more information on how you can help save the Mexican Gray Wolf. The bill now goes before the House of Representatives.
http://www.mexicanwolves.org/index.php/news/1185/51/Urgent-Act-Now-to-ProtectLos Lobos
If you live in AZ follow this link to contact your state legislator http://www.azleg.gov/alisStaticPages/HowToContactMember.asp
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‘You Don’t Look Like a Deer’

http://www.chicagonow.com/steve-dales-pet-world/2014/02/you-dont-look-like-a-deer-animal-news/

By Steve Dale,            Tuesday at 8:53 am

'You Don't Look Like a Deer': Animal News
Chris Galentine

Anyone can make a mistake. Clint Galentine was on a nature walk in Florida this past Sunday, February 23, when a hunter apparently mistook him for a deer, shooting him not once but twice with a high-powered rifle.

“I don’t know how he mistakenly thought we were animal[s],” Galentine, 37, told ABC Action News from his hospital bed. Galentine doesn’t even have antlers.

The alleged shooter, Michael Trott, 43, reportedly had all the required hunting and firearm licenses, according to Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officials. No charges have been filed against Trott, but the investigation is ongoing, as well as perhaps a suggested eye exam.

Galentine was hit twice in the left side and now has difficulty speaking. One bullet went through his left arm, breaking a bone and possibly causing permanent damage.

“I was in a little in shock,” said Galentine. “I looked around and I was bleeding.”

He says the hunter ran up to him and apologized. Not sure what that apology might have sounded like.

Galentine and his family are pushing for a change to the hunting area and location of hiking paths

You know what they say – “at least he hit something.”

HSUS Activists oppose sport hunting of mountain lions

http://journalstar.com/niche/neighborhood-extra/news/activists-oppose-sport-hunting-of-mountain-lions/article_7fd9ba8e-95d3-5096-9f47-ad9aed6d5c17.html
4 hours ago

Nebraskans asked state lawmakers to further strengthensnrsslion state animal protection laws during Humane Lobby Day on Monday (Feb. 24).

Participants urged state lawmakers to support legislation pertaining to several animal-related issues, including penalties for animal abandonment and neglect and prairie dog population management. Advocates urged against passage of a bill that would permit the sport hunting of mountain lions. The Humane Society of the United States sponsored Humane Lobby Day.

The Humane Society of the United States is the nation’s largest animal protection organization, rated the most effective by its peers. Since 1954, The HSUS has been fighting for the protection of all animals through advocacy, education and hands-on programs.

HSUS rescues and cares for tens of thousands of animals each year, but its primary mission is to prevent cruelty before it occurs. More details may be found at humanesociety.org.

Vegans—Not Hunters—Are the Best Environmentalists

Hunting is the antithesis of environmentalism. The very notion of the gas-guzzling, beer-can-tossing hunter as an environmentalist is laughable even to them.

Exposing the Big Game's avatarExposing the Big Game

Originally posted on April 22, 2012

You’ve probably heard the cliché, “Every day is Earth Day to an environmentalist.” Well, it’s true actually, at least to a true environmentalist—the kind of person who makes daily choices based solely on their concern for our planet and the life it supports. The gal, for example, who chooses not to eat farmed animals because of the enormous amount of abuse (not to mention gargantuan carbon footprint) inherent in those Styrofoam and shrink-wrapped packages that clog the sprawling meat isles across the country; or the guy who does not hunt because wild animals are a part of the living Earth he loves and respects.

Eager to look like the sensible ones, conventional environmentalists often assume the wobbly, half-hearted stance of dismissing, rather than embracing, the animal rights movement. On the other hand, dedicated animal rights advocates don’t shy away from calling themselves environmentalists. They…

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Interview on EXPOSED: The U.S. Secret War on Wildlife with Brooks Fahy

http://www.voiceamerica.com/episode/76044/exposed-the-us-secret-war-on-wildlife-with-brooks-fahy

February 24, 2014

Hosted by Eli Weiss

Wildlife Services-a barbaric, wasteful and misnamed agency within the US Department of Agriculture, has been having their way for almost a century, our government’s secret war on wildlife has been killing millions of native predators and birds as well as maiming, poisoning, and brutalizing countless non-targeted and endangered species, along with quite a few pets and seriously injuring people. Brooks Fahy, the man behind Predator Defense and the landmark film, “EXPOSED”, brings three former federal agents and a Congressman who blow the whistle on the atrocities committed under the guise of problem animal control, and proving Wildlife Services for what it really is: A barbaric, unaccountable, government sanctioned, out-of-control wildlife killing machine funded on our dime, which apparently thinks they will continue getting away with it. But, we can tell Congress to defund Wildlife Services, and after this program, you will.

http://www.voiceamerica.com/episode/76044/exposed-the-us-secret-war-on-wildlife-with-brooks-fahy

coyote contest kill

The Animals Support Gun Control

On the way up to the mountains to ski some of the seven plus feet of snow which fell during the past week, I passed a car with a bumper sticker that read: “The Animals Support Gun Control.” That brings up an issue you almost never hear about, ironically enough, after someone brings a hunting rifle to school and tries to peck off every kid or teacher they can get a bead on.elk-000-home17300

Oh, you hear about gun control, that’s a given, but almost never in the context of how they’re used against non-human animals—for sport or savagery—in contest kills, often geared especially for young people, as if to tempt the next mass-murderer out of hiding and onto the playground for some real fun and games.

You can’t expect grade-schoolers to understand the subtle difference between a sacred human life and those of other animals they’ve been trained to kill—before they could even develop a conscience—by their proud parents, who use their kids’ eagerness to please and to play follow the leader against them, in hopes of recruiting a life-time hunting partner.

The disturbing trend among states to lower the legal hunting age, practically to infancy, suggests the word “Columbine” evokes only the image of a pretty flower to them. Meanwhile, hunters in states like Idaho are actively luring young children to try their luck in coyote or wolf killing derbies to further degrade the value of life that movies and video games have already taught them to disregard a thousand times over. The town of Holley, New York, just held another appalling example of state-sanctioned sadism in the form of an animal-kill contest they dubbed the “squirrel slam.” “Sporting” events like the so-called “squirrel slam” are an embarrassment that only adds to the global perception that this is an inherently violent country.

Not to be outdone, the Oklahoma “game” department just announced that the senior class of Sasakwa High is sponsoring a crow-killing contest, set for the end of this month—complete with prize money for whoever murders the most crows. It’s a spectacle sure to inspire the next killer-in-waiting to turn their semi-automatic on their fellow classmates.

These kinds of hunting events beg the obvious question: how can kids be expected to know the difference between officially sanctioned animal cruelty and acts of cruelty they come up with on their own?

So if you feel your Second Amendment rights are withering away at the mere mention of gun control, relax that death-grip on your rifle for a moment and consider what the animals would have to say about the issue, if only we allowed them a voice.

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