Exposing the Big Game

Forget Hunters' Feeble Rationalizations and Trust Your Gut Feelings: Making Sport of Killing Is Not Healthy Human Behavior

Exposing the Big Game

Rescuers Saved a Dog Found With an Arrow in His Head … Only to Learn His ‘Owner’ Was the One Who Shot Him

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

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UPDATED: RNC investigating man’s death following hunting incident

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/minnesota/articles/2018-12-22/family-of-missing-minnesota-hunter-still-seeking-answers

Robert E Howlett Drive — Goulds bypass road — is closed between Doyle's Road exit and the Main Road in Goulds while emergency responders deal with an apparent hunting accident in the area.
Robert E Howlett Drive — the Goulds bypass road — is closed between Doyle’s Road exit and the Main Road in Goulds while emergency responders deal with an apparent hunting accident in the area. – Joe Gibbons

Police are investigating the death of a 49-year-old St. John’s man following a hunting incident Friday morning.

Shortly after 9:30 am., the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary (RNC) received a report that a man, who was hunting with another man, was shot with a firearm.

RNC officers – including officers with the criminal investigation division and forensic identification services – responded to the call along with ROVERS Search and Rescue and air resources from Fire and Emergency Services.

The man was pronounced dead when first responders reached the location of the incident – a wooded area near Robert E. Howlett Memorial Drive in St…

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Family of Missing Minnesota Hunter Still Seeking Answers

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/minnesota/articles/2018-12-22/family-of-missing-minnesota-hunter-still-seeking-answers

The family of a man who went missing in eastern Minnesota while he was hunting is still hoping for answers.

Dec. 22, 2018, at 10:20 a.m.
U.S. News & World Report

Family of Missing Minnesota Hunter Still Seeking Answers

ST. PAUL, MINN. (AP) — The family of a man who went missing last month while hunting in eastern Minnesota is still hoping for answers.

The Pioneer Press reports that Lee Peltier was accompanied by three friends while visiting Nemadji State Forest near Hinckley on Nov. 3. The forest encompasses nearly 93,000 acres in Pine and Carlton counties.

Peltier’s family says the group purposefully split up while they were hunting to try and flush out some deer. The family says the 59-year-old was an experienced outdoorsman. He never returned to the group. He was reported missing the next day.

Hundreds of people helped search the area. No trace of Peltier was found.

Peltier’s…

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Ocean Deoxygenation as an Indicator of Abrupt Climate Change

The true Renaissance person is endowed with panoramic attention …. The habit of noticing the ensemble of everything and its constituent parts is a matter of will, not of innate aptitude. It involves the conscious noticing of things and the gaps that separate and connect them.~ Christy Wampole 

I’ve responded to Max Li’s inane email messages. Doing so did not make him go away. One of the adverse consequences of making myself available to the public is frequent exposure to a public characterized by people long on unsupported opinions and short on intelligence. My prior responses to Mr. Li’s correspondence did not clear up his obvious insanity. As a result, my future responses to him will appear in this space. As a result, I expect to hear from him less often, and I also expect others to benefit from Li’s ongoing errors.

Saw this on a foreign website. You are so far out in your human extinction calculation you look like a bloody fool.

Scientists know what killed most life on Earth 250m years ago and say we’re on the same path. http://www.stuff.co.nz/environment/climate-news/109167147/humans-blazing-similar-path-to-cause-of-ancient-mass-extinction

Mr. Li’s link references a review paper in Science, a premiere refereed journal. The journal article was widely reported by the corporate press (for example, the New York Times), probably because it adheres to the 2100 meme. It’s the standard, halfway-there approach. Color me shocked.

I turn, as usual, to evidence beyond the headlines. I know few people are impressed with this unusual approach. Indeed, I suspect few people even understand the idea. This is why I write primarily for myself: Writing forces clear articulation of the writer’s thoughts, as I explained to resistant college students for more than two decades.

Shifting the baseline is a common trick used by governments, media, and paid climate scientists, as I have explained repeatedly. We were on the brink in 1965, we had 10 years in 1989, and now we have until 2030. Shifting the baseline continues, even in the journal literature, which claims we are striving to achieve a target we passed long ago: 1.5 C above the pre-industrial baseline.

In the current case, shifting the baseline is hardly the only problem with the journal article. Indeed, the article refers to ocean deoxygenation (also known as hypoxia) as if this phenomenon could never occur in the near future, much less today. The study adds to information published in a March 2017 edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pointing to deoxygenation of the oceans. Neither study draws attention to earlier research indicating deoxygenation could become a major issue by 2030. Nor do they point out obvious, ongoing harbingers. They similarly downplay the rapidity with which deoxygenation can occur, as reported in the August 2017 issue of Science Advances. The latter paper mentions, quite importantly, that dead zones in today’s oceans bear remarkable resemblance to those during the Cretaceous. As pointed out in an article in the 19 December 2018 issue of Science Advances, “ocean oxygen loss may, thus, elicit major changes to midwater ecosystem structure and function.”

Even U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders is willing to describe ocean deoxygenation as a contemporary issue, as illustrated in the short video embedded below.

https://www.facebook.com/v2.6/plugins/post.php?app_id=&channel=https%3A%2F%2Fstaticxx.facebook.com%2Fconnect%2Fxd_arbiter%2Fr%2Fj-GHT1gpo6-.js%3Fversion%3D43%23cb%3Df1589c8116610f8%26domain%3Dguymcpherson.com%26origin%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fguymcpherson.com%252Ff1dfed07f616bbc%26relation%3Dparent.parent&container_width=0&href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2F9124187907%2Fposts%2F10157522565032908%2F&locale=en_US&sdk=joey&width=500

 

The 10 December 2018 online issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesincludes a paper titled, “Pliocene and Eocene provide best analogs for near-future climates.” When does the paper propose such a profoundly rapid rise in global-average temperature? As early as 2030, from this most conservative of sources.

It’s not only the world’s oceans currently impacted by hypoxia. Dead zones have already spread to freshwater lakes and streams.

Lacking habitat, humans will not survive Earth with a Pliocene-style climate. The same holds for Earth with an Eocene-style climate. Sadly, hothouse Earth is simply not suitable for us. We are vertebrates. We are mammals. Neither vertebrates nor mammals can “keep up” with projected gradual changes. To believe we can adapt to or mitigate for the abrupt climate currently under way is absurdly human.

Precisely zero humans will witness 2100. Indeed, there will be nary a human more than seven decades before the calendar reads 2100. As a result, no calendars will be turned to 2100. Rather, our species has a scant few years left on Earth.

Our extinction is imminent. As usual, I encourage readers to live accordingly.

Studies Warn of Increasing Sea Level Rise

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

The most recent gathering of scientists at the American Geophysical Union in Washington, DC, brought deeply troubling news about the Antarctic.

Jeremy Shakun, a paleoclimatologist at Boston College, told Science that the large increase in the loss of ice mass in Antarctica in the last decade or two could already be the beginning stage of the process of collapse of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet.

Ice loss in the Antarctic has tripled in just the last decade alone, and is currently losing 219 billion metric tons of ice annually. That number is up from 73 billion metric tons per year as of a decade ago.

“The big uptick in mass loss observed there in the past…

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More than 164,000 pounds of ground turkey recalled; 52 more people sick in deadly salmonella outbreak

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(CNN)Jennie-O Turkey Store Sales Inc. is recalling about 164,210 pounds of raw ground turkey products due to the possibility of salmonella contamination, the US Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service said Friday.

The recall was announced as the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 52 new cases of illness associated with the outbreak. This brings the number of illnesses to 216 people across 38 states since the outbreak began in November 2017. Eighty-four people have been hospitalized, and one death has been reported.
In addition, the Public Health Agency of Canada said Friday there have been 22 cases of illness in four provinces. The illnesses occurred between April 2017 and this November, but nearly half of the illnesses began in October and last month. Five patients have been hospitalized, and one person died.
Jennie-O Turkey Store Sales Inc. recalled 164,210 pounds of raw ground turkey products.

“Based on the investigation findings to date, exposure to raw turkey and raw chicken products has been identified as the likely source of the outbreak,” a public health notice from the agency said. “Many of the individuals who became sick reported eating different types of turkey and chicken products before their illnesses occurred.”
According to the CDC, the cases in Canada have the same strain of salmonella as those in the US outbreak.
Health investigators have identified the outbreak strain of salmonella in samples of raw turkey pet food, raw turkey products and live turkeys, the CDC said.
The recalled raw ground turkey products were produced at Jennie-O’s Faribault, Minnesota, facility between October 22 and October 23. The recalled packages are marked on the side with establishment number P-579 and were sold in 1-pound, 2.5-pound and 3-pound packages.
On November 15, the company issued a recall of more than 91,000 pounds of raw ground turkey products from its Barron, Wisconsin, facility.
Patients who were interviewed by outbreak investigators reported buying a variety of different brands of raw turkey products from many different stores. “A single, common supplier of raw turkey products or of live turkeys has not been identified that could account for the whole outbreak,” the CDC said. And the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service noted that additional recalls may be announced for products from other companies.
The investigation is ongoing. “The outbreak strain of Salmonella Reading is present in live turkeys and in many types of raw turkey products, indicating it might be widespread in the turkey industry,” the CDC said, adding that it and the Food Safety and Inspection Service “have shared this information with representatives from the turkey industry and asked about steps that they may be taking to reduce Salmonella contamination.”
Steve Lykken, Jennie-O Turkey Store’s president, said the company has made operational changes, including vaccinating turkeys to protect them from salmonella. He called it a much wider problem across the industry, even without the ongoing outbreak. “We know the issue of salmonella isn’t specific to us,” he said.
State health officials in Arizona and Michigan identified salmonella bacteria in unopened packages of Jennie-O ground turkey from the homes of two patients with salmonella illness. This bacteria was “closely related genetically” to the bacteria from the patients. “This result provides more evidence that people in this outbreak got sick from eating turkey,” the CDC said.
Lykken said, “As always, turkey remains safe to consume when handled and prepared properly. Jennie-O has information available on its website with step-by-step instructions on how to safely prepare and enjoy turkey.”
In the meantime, consumers should not eat any recalled products and should take steps to prevent salmonella illness. That includes washing hands and thoroughly cooking turkey to an internal temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit, as measured by a food thermometer. Washing raw turkey is not recommended because it can spread germs. And pet owners should not feed raw food, including turkey, to pets — the investigation for this outbreak identified three infected patients who live in homes where pets were fed raw turkey pet food.
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Salmonella is to blame for 1 million cases of foodborne illness in the United States every year, according to the CDC.
Symptoms usually begin 12 to 72 hours after consuming the bacteria and can last four to seven days. They include diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps, according to the CDC. Most people recover on their own. Patients who experience severe diarrhea may require hospitalization. If severely ill patients are not treated, the illness can be deadly.

‘Hunters and Hoosiers should be scared’: Deadly deer disease threatens Indiana’s borders

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

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A deadly disease that likely would devastate Indiana’s deer population is knocking at the door. And experts say it is a matter of when — not if — it comes barreling in.

Chronic Wasting Disease, which is fatal for any deer that contracts it, has been found in three neighboring states. In two of them, Michigan and Illinois, deer with CWD have been found within 30 miles of the Indiana border.

“Indiana cannot be surrounded on three sides and not have it come in at this point,” said Joe Bacon, an avid hunter and president of the Indiana Deer Hunter’s Association. “Hunters…

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Earth Has Seen CO2 Spike Before. It Didn’t End Well.

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2018-12-20/my-15-favorite-nonfiction-books-of-2018

It’s unclear exactly what happened 252 million years ago as the planet warmed, but 90 percent of species went extinct.

Humans might avoid their fate. Especially if an asteroid helps out.

Photographer: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Asteroid impacts used to be science popularizers’ favorite existential threat, but space rocks have been displaced by atmospheric carbon. This is not just fashion but the result of a new reading of our planet’s past.

In the 1990s, scientists thought asteroid impacts had triggered five mass extinctions, including the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Now, they’ve come to realize that the other four…

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Ancient Antarctic ice sheet collapse could happen again, triggering a new global flood

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

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It’s happened before, and it could happen again.

Tens of thousands of years ago, a giant ice sheet in Antarctic melted, raising sea levels by up to 30 feet around the world. This inundated huge swaths of what had been dry land. Scientists think it could happen again as the world heats up because of man-made global warming, new research suggests.

Such a collapse would again cause seas to rise dramatically, which would lead to a global flood.

Researchers led by geologist Anders Carlson of Oregon State University said the ice sheet disappeared about 125,000 years ago under climate conditions that were similar to today’s.

If future research confirms this finding, “the…

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Cubs rescued from dumpster

Reminder to keep garbage bins locked with hibernation just around the corner

A conservation officer tags the bear cubs’ ears before reuniting them with their mother. (B.C. Conservation Service)

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bear-cubs-rescued-from-dumpster-1.4953176

Two bear cubs that somehow managed to get stuck in a recycling facility dumpster had to be rescued by conservation officers in Sooke, B.C., on Monday.

It’s not clear how the cubs climbed up and into the dumpster — but once in — they couldn’t get out.

Sgt. Scott Norris with the B.C. Conservation Service says the mother bear watched calmly from a distance when help arrived.

“When we showed up, we pulled into the yard and there was mom sitting at the back of the yard, sort of 50 yards away just watching,” he said.

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BC CO Service@_BCCOS

South Island CO’s rescued two bear cubs trapped in a dumpster at a materials recycling facility today in . The cubs were ear tagged and reunited with their mother who was patiently watching from afar. CO’s are reminding people that bears are still out looking for food

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The cubs were safely tranquilized, had their ears tagged and were pulled out of the dumpster.

They were then returned to their mother at a neighbouring property.

The dumpster didn’t have any food waste in it, but Debbie Reid with Wild Wise Sooke says the bear cubs’ rescue is a good reminder to secure all garbage bins.

“What triggers bears to sleep is the fact there is no food … but in Sooke we have people leaving out garbage and pet food and things like that,” she said.

“So the natural trigger isn’t being triggered.”

The conservation service says bears on Vancouver Island usually don’t go into hibernation until January.