Wednesday Cecil News Roundup

Naples taxidermist reacts to ban on shipment of trophy animals
http://www.nbc-2.com/story/29710960/naples-taxidermist-reacts-to-ban-on-shipment-of-trophy-animals#.VcJBBBNViko
“He’s not happy about the new ban, but he said even though Delta,
United and American airlines aren’t allowing trophy animal remains to
be shipped into the U.S., it won’t kill his business.”

Cecil the lion killer Walter Palmer’s Florida vacation home vandalized
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3185082/Cecil-lion-killer-s-1million-Florida-vacation-home-vandalized-graffiti-pigs-feet.html?ito=social-twitter_dailymailus

‘LION Killer!’ sprayed on Florida home of Twin Cities hunter
http://www.startribune.com/vandals-tag-lion-killer-on-fla-home-of-twin-cities-hunter/320741711/?stfeature=S
“Pigs feet made to look bloody also left in the driveway of the Marco
Island residence.”

Trial due to open in Zimbabwe over Cecil the lion’s death
http://news.yahoo.com/trial-due-open-zimbabwe-over-cecil-lions-death-035034280.html

Zimbabwe has suspended the hunting of wildlife following the death of
Cecil the lion
http://qz.com/471639/zimbabwe-has-suspended-the-hunting-of-wildlife-following-the-death-of-cecil-the-lion/

Dubai expat’s billboard campaign to raise awareness of animal rights
http://www.thenational.ae/uae/dubai-expats-billboard-campaign-to-raise-awareness-of-animal-rights

Animal rights organisation against proposal to export dog meat
http://www.niticentral.com/2015/08/05/animal-rights-organisation-against-proposal-to-export-dog-meat-327231.html
“Kochi, Aug 4 (PTI) An animal rights organisation today termed as
“illegal” a controversial resolution adopted by gram panchayats in a
Kerala district proposing export of dog meat to China to counter stray
dog population, saying the state government was bound to follow rules
established by the Centre in this regard.”

Air Canada bans shipments of hunting trophies after killing of Cecil the lion
http://www.startribune.com/air-canada-bans-shipments-of-big-game-hunting-trophies/320681132/?stfeature=S

Major U.S. airlines halt carrying African hunting trophies after Cecil
the Lion killing
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/delta-air-lines-bans-animal-hunting-trophies-after-cecil-the-lion-shooting-2015-08-03
“American Airlines AAL, says it’s joining U.S. carriers Delta Air
Lines DAL, and United Airlines UAL, in banning hunting trophies from
baggage if they are from endangered species. This comes as worldwide
outrage over the killing of Cecil the Lion, Zimbabwe’s most famous big
cat, by a Minneapolis dentist last month shows no sign of abating.”

‘Canned hunting’ of lions in South Africa raises concern, debate
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-south-africa-lion-hunting-20150804-story.html

How Vegans Should Be Responding to Cecil the Lion
http://www.care2.com/greenliving/how-vegans-should-be-responding-to-cecil-the-lion.html

Guide who led Twin Cities dentist to Cecil defends his actions
http://www.startribune.com/bc-zimbabwe-lion-killing-nyt-0548-n-guide-who-led-hunt-that-killed-cecil-the-lion-defends-his-actions/320699191/?stfeature=S
“The guide who led a Minnesota dentist on the hunt that killed Cecil
the lion defended his actions Tuesday, a day before he was scheduled
to stand trial in Zimbabwe.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/08/03/delta-air-lines-bans-freight-shipments-of-lion-hunting-trophies/

While airlines ban hunting trophy shipments, UPS says it won’t bow to controversy

August 4 at 1:58 PM http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/follow_button.a64cf823bcb784855b86e2970134bd2a.en.html#_=1438717358015&dnt=false&id=twitter-widget-0&lang=en&screen_name=slarimer&show_count=false&show_screen_name=true&size=m

Hunters and others looking to ship lion, leopard, elephant, rhinoceros and buffalo heads and other big-game trophies across the world still have options available, even as Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and Air Canada announced this week that they will no longer allow such cargo on their planes.

Shipments of hunting trophies are still allowed by United Parcel Service, a UPS spokeswoman told The Washington Post on Tuesday, noting that the global shipping giant follows U.S. and international laws, not public opinion, in determining what it will and won’t ship.

“There are many items shipped in international commerce that may spark controversy,” UPS public relations director Susan Rosenberg wrote in an e-mail. “The views on what is appropriate for shipment are as varied as the audiences that hold these views.

“UPS takes many factors under consideration in establishing its shipping policies, including the legality of the contents and additional procedures required to ensure compliance. We avoid making judgments on the appropriateness of the contents. All shipments must comply with all laws, including any relevant documentation from the shipper required in the origin and destination location of the shipments.”

[While other trophy hunters hide, Idaho’s ‘Italian Huntress’ is flaunting her kills]

Although FedEx doesn’t ship animal carcasses, the company “may accept legitimate shipments of parts for taxidermy purposes if they meet our shipping guidelines,” a spokesman said in an e-mail to The Post.

“These are legitimate shipments, not shipments that are illegally obtained,” spokesman Jim McCluskey wrote Tuesday. “Our priority is to ensure we abide by laws and regulations for all shipments.”

The policies of airlines and shipping companies are drawing extra attention and scrutiny following the death of one of Africa’s most iconic lions, which was killed in a hunt this summer.

That lion, known as Cecil, was killed in Zimbabwe by an American big-game hunter, an act that has sparked international outrage. Walter Palmer, a Minnesota dentist, has said he had “no idea that the lion I took was a known, local favorite.”

[Zimbabwean hunter says he did nothing wrong in luring Cecil the lion to his death]

“I relied on the expertise of my local guides…

Was Cecil the lion’s death business as usual?

Featured Image -- 10032

RONALD ORENSTEIN

CONTRIBUTED TO THE GLOBE AND MAIL

Published Monday, Aug. 03, 2015 6:00AM EDT

http://static.theglobeandmail.ca/1cc/news/world/article25795815.ece/ALTERNAT
ES/w620/web-wo-cecil-digest31nw4

Cecil the lion is shown in a handout photo taken Oct. 21, 2012, and released
on July 28, 2015, by the Zimbabwe National Parks agency. (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Ronald Orenstein is a Canadian zoologist, author, lawyer and wildlife
conservationist. He is the author of Ivory, Horn and Blood: Behind the
Elephant and Rhinoceros Poaching Crisis.

The death of Cecil the lion has shocked and angered people around the world.
It should. But perhaps the most shocking thing about his killing at the
hands of a selfish American hunter and his guides is that there may have
been nothing unusual about it. Zimbabwe’s government may have created the
situation that led to Cecil’s death.

Hwange National Park is ringed with private landholdings where hunting is
legal, though the land where Cecil was killed did not have an assigned quota
for lions. Luring Cecil out of Hwange has been called “unethical” by the
Safari Operators Association of Zimbabwe, and the Zimbabwe Parks and
Wildlife Act makes it illegal to “entice” an animal out of a national park
without a permit. However, a 2007 study found that 24 lions radio-collared
in Hwange were shot by sport hunters between 1999 and 2004. Further
killings have been alleged since. The difference this time is that Cecil was
famous.

Zimbabwe has been treating its wildlife as a commodity for years. Though the
kills have decreased recently, its hunting quotas for lions, among the
highest in Africa, have been called unsustainable by lion biologists. Lions
as young as two years old have been shot for trophies, despite
recommendations that only animals at least five years old should be hunted
to give young males a chance to reproduce.

In early July, despite protests from around the world (and arguably
violating its own laws against animal cruelty), Zimbabwe exported 24 baby
elephants from Hwange to a dubious safari park in China, claiming that the
move relieved elephant overpopulation. Zimbabwe’s Environment Minister at
the time, Saviour Kasukuwere, said that “it made commercial sense” to send
the country’s wildlife to China. The Zimbabwe Independent cited claims that
the money went to pay a shoe manufacturer for boots for the military.

Hunters argue that the fees they pay for the right to shoot a lion can
benefit conservation and alleviate rural poverty. Conservation is certainly
expensive, and money helps – though tourism revenue exceeds hunting revenue
in many African countries, and a 2010 study, published by the pro-hunting
International Council for Game and Wildlife Conservation and the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, found that hunting companies in
Tanzania contributed only about 3 per cent of their revenues to local
communities.

When a hunter is willing to pay tens of thousands of dollars into a corrupt
system, the benefits can be hard to find. Zimbabwean blogger Alex Magaisa
claims that there is “a huge amount of corruption and skullduggery” in
Zimbabwe’s hunting industry, and warns that there will be “more Cecils in
future.” The enormous prices hunters pay tempt operators to give clients
what they want, and fund the bribes needed to get it. When hunting quotas
are based on the industry’s bottom line, and the rules that exist are
ignored, trophy hunting becomes little more than organized, legalized
poaching, and the hunters’ targets little more than contraband.

African lions have been in serious decline for years. Numbering an estimated
75,800 in 1980, a combination of human population growth, habitat loss,
disease and hunting pressure has reduced their number to no more than 32,000
today (and possibly a good deal less). It is a decline that has gone largely
unrecognized. A 2011 petition to list the African lion under the U.S.
Endangered Species Act – a listing that would require the United States to
prohibit trophy imports unless they can be shown to benefit conservation –
still awaits action.

The revulsion at Cecil’s death may have been, in part, because he was an
animal with a name. I hope, nonetheless, that it leads countries like the
United States, the biggest importer of lion trophies, to take a closer, and
tougher, look at “sustainable” wildlife management, and to clamp down on
trophy imports that threaten the survival of Cecil’s nameless kin. If they
do, perhaps Cecil will not have died entirely in vain.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/was-cecil-the-lions-death-busine
ss-as-usual/article25805515

Time for Major Airlines to Stop Shipping Africa Big Five Trophies

Featured Image -- 10026

http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/08/time-for-major-airlines-to-stop-shipping-africa-big-five-trophies.html?utm_source=ha_080315&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=wildlife

By on August 3, 2015

Breaking News: Today, both Delta and United – the biggest U.S. based carriers to Africa – announced new policies that ban transport of trophies from lions, elephants, rhinos, leopards, and buffalo – the “Africa Big Five.” These announcements come in response to the global furor of the illegal killing of Cecil, and will put pressure on foreign-based carriers that serve major African cities to stop their carrying of trophies from these species. 

Dr. Walter Palmer’s behavior in killing and mutilating Cecil the lion is disgraceful. But he’s not a one-off character. He’s a very enthusiastic participant in the larger enterprise of globe-trotting international trophy hunting, where rich trophy hunters seek out and kill some of the largest animals in the world to fill their dens or private museums, get their names in the record books of Safari Club International, and brag to their buddies that they’ve killed the biggest and the grandest of creatures on earth.

Now, sure as shooting, a second low-life character has come to light – Jan C. Seski, a gynecologist from Pittsburgh – for a possible illegal lion killing under similar circumstances in April. In addition to the lion he killed, Dr. Seski also shot his sixth elephant on that trip. (He apparently threatened to shoot his neighbor’s dogs too – as if any of us needed more evidence that this guy, too, is a heartless thug.)

Seriously, what is wrong with these people? Why are they obsessed with killing the world’s biggest, most magnificent animals, and denying the rest of us the pleasure of sharing the earth with these creatures? What is it about the serial killing of animals that titillates them so much?

Cecil the lion with his cubs.

Cecil the lion with his cubs. Photo by Brent Stapelkamp

It’s been reported that after Cecil’s death, Palmer requested help in finding an elephant with tusks above a certain weight. He only left the country after he was informed by his guide they could not help him with that.

The trophy hunters like to excuse their passion for killing by saying that their spending promotes conservation. That’s nonsense, and more of a self-serving diversion.

A 2013 economic report demonstrated what anybody with their wits about them knows: These animals are worth more alive than dead. Kenya, which banned trophy hunting in the 1970s, has an  eco-tourism economy that brings in far more than trophy hunting brings in to South Africa as a whole.

The fact is, trophy hunting of lions, elephants, and rhinos is a net revenue loser for African economies. Trophy hunters may throw around some money, but they rob parks, reserves, and other natural areas of the wonderful animals that are the real draw – the animals that attract countless people willing to spend money to see them and to be close to them.  In that respect, trophy hunters are like bank robbers who leave a little cash behind.

South African Airways suspended the transport of big game trophies from Africa several months ago, including the heads of lions killed on canned hunting operations in the country. But recently, under pressure from Safari Club International and other groups aligned with the trophy hunting industry, they resumed transports. Emirates Airlines, on the other hand, has remained steadfast in not accepting hunting trophies of lions, elephants, and rhinos. So has Lufthansa.  With the announcements from Delta and United, the momentum is clearly on our side.

Let’s let all the major airlines know it’s time to cut off the shipments for good of African lions, elephants, rhinos, leopards, and Cape buffalo – the so-called Africa Big Five. This “hunting achievement” award leads to disgraceful behavior, and the airlines should not provide a getaway vehicle for trophy hunters’ larceny.

Using wealth to kill the magnificent animals of the world is a misuse of the gifts these people have been given. If trophy hunters are serious about conservation they should do some real good with their wealth – and stop spreading destruction, pain, and death.

Take action today to tell the rest of the airline industry: Don’t fly wild »

wikileaks exposes gov’t knowledge of illegal hunting

There is hypocrisy all around this brutal hunting industry. The US government purports to be horrified at Palmer’s illegal activity, and there is talk of extradition.
What a farce!
Wikileaks documents show that the US government has been well aware all along of the illegal and unethical practices of US hunters in Zimbabwe (and elsewhere in Africa) – and deliberately chose not to act on this knowledge, hoping it would never become public.
Featured Image -- 10032

Dr. Palmer Should Die

For the crimes he committed against Cecil the half-tame Lion—luring, baiting, impaling and pursuing him for 40 long hours. For being a sadistic, narcissistic, psychopathic bow-hunter willing to put another sentient animal through sheer hell for a trophy, Walter Palmer DDS should die. And his accomplices—the guides, along with whoever shot another lion today–should join him on the gallows.

They should all be dragged into a court of law and sentenced to death ASAP. But unfortunately, that won’t happen. Walter Palmer and his ilk, his cohorts in crime, will probably live out their long lives and get off with a slap on the wrist; a fine, a public service sentence and possibly have their hunting licenses revoked for a while.

Why? Because they’re human beings—the most sacred of God’s creatures; the pinnacles of evolution and the reason it’s all here (sarcasm intended)—and a lion is just a lion. An animal: ours to do with as we see fit.

It’s the self-imposed law of the land, and there’ll be no justice for animals as long as speciesism rules.

Featured Image -- 10026

Cecil the lion’s brother, Jericho, is also illegally killed in Zimbabwe, official says

Updated 3:28 PM ET, Sat August 1, 2015

(CNN)The brother of slain Cecil the lion, named Jericho, was killed Saturday in Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, a senior park official told CNN.

Jericho was gunned down by a hunter operating illegally, said Johnny Rodrigues, head of the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force.

Cecil was also killed illegally, provoking an international outrage because he was a protected animal, and Zimbabwe is seeking the extradition of American dentist Walter Palmer on accusations that he and others illegally hunted the lion, authorities said.

<img alt=”Cecil the Lion's brother, 'Jericho,' killed by hunter” class=”media__image” src=”http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/150801145733-cecil-the-lions-brother-jericho-shot-dead-in-zimbabwe-corwin-intv-nr-00003826-large-169.jpg”>

cecil the lions brother jericho shot dead in zimbabwe corwin intv nr_00003826

Cecil the Lion’s brother, ‘Jericho,’ killed by hunter 

Cecil the Lion’s brother, ‘Jericho,’ killed by hunter 04:57
PLAY VIDEO

“It is with huge disgust and sadness that we have just been informed that Jericho, Cecil’s brother has been killed at 4pm today,” Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force said Saturday on Facebook.

“We are absolutely heart broken,” the Task Force added.

Jericho was considered to be caring for and defending Cecil’s cubs, but the survivability of those cubs wasn’t immediately clear in the aftermath of Jericho’s death.

Some of the cubs may have been Jericho’s, said David Macdonald, director of Oxford’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, who has been studying Cecil.

Male coalitions, often between brothers, oversee prides of females in lion society and protect the prides from threats posed by outsider male lions, the scientist said.

Opinion: Can Zimbabwe have lion’s killer extradited?

A Lion Is a Pig Is a Dog Is a Boy

11825732_10153390282711508_1843680943326951608_n

That’s a loose adaptation of Ingrid Newkirk’s famous saying. Translation: in terms of being capable of suffering and having a will to live, we’re all created pretty much equal.

But the other night, when I shared Vegan Outreach’s post, “I Am Cecil,” one reader was troubled by its perceived message that seems to compare an endangered, charismatic predator to a factory-farmed pig.

I can understand both sides. Wildlife advocates are screaming for blood, in a war cry heard round the world, while animal-rights activists are hoping to harness the outrage that people are feeling over the abuses suffered by this beloved lion. On one hand there’s Cecil the lion, who was hit with an arrow and pursued for forty hours before finally being shot, decapitated and skinned. At the same time—each and every day—animals by the billions suffer endlessly on factory farms and almost no one seems to care or pay them any mind.

I’ve seen this kind of situation before. Back in 1999, members of Washington’s Makah Tribe were planning a trophy hunt of their own. Their target? An innocuous grey whale.2003875881-300x0 Long story short, much to the dismay of whale advocates, a “sacrificial” whale was shot with a fifty caliber elephant gun. Meanwhile, somewhere in the Midwest, millions of chickens, cows, pigs, turkeys, etc. were in effect sacrificed as well by people who had never heard of the Makah’s or seen a grey whale.

The only good I can think of that came out of the whole bit of ugliness was, after considering the hypocrisy of advocating for one species of animal while still eating others, my wife and I swore off meat and have been vegan ever since. As a result of 16 years of veganism (times 2), thousands of animals have been spared the horrors of factory farming.

Of course I’d love to see the uproar over Cecil become the final death knell for trophy hunting that wrenches control of wildlife from the hands of hunters and their government apologists. But, while we’re waiting, concerned people can actively end a lot of animal suffering every time they pass a drive-through window or a sit-down steak house restaurant. And folks who make the ethical switch to a plant-based diet would not likely be inclined to pay $50,000 for the sick thrill of killing a lion with an arrow.

Ted Nugent Posts Photo of Himself with a Lion Carcass

68439_10151399495155861_1116657731_n

http://radio.com/2015/07/31/ted-nugent-posts-photo-of-himself-with-a-lion-carcass/

By Brian Ives

Ted Nugent is at it again.

The “Motor City Madman” and scourge to animal rights activists everywhere just posted a photo to his Facebook page showing him over a lion who he had, apparently, just killed in a hunt. He refers to it as “Fernando the lion” and says it is “Cecil’s great great grandpa.”

In the photo, he is sitting on the carcass, saying “this pure natural legal proper scientificaly [sic] sound necessary hunt like all hunts was pure SPORT TROPHY MEAT FUN.”

Related: Ted Nugent Weighs in on Cecil the Lion Debate

As he noted to Radio.com in a recent interview, it his his stance that animals must be hunted in order to keep the population under control.

He also says, “Every sacred precious [sic] part of this animal was utilized. We hired 40 people on the safari, shared the meat, claws, skull, sinew, body fluids, teeth, blood, organs, skin, hair, tongue, eyeballs & each & every hard earned resource this magnificent RENEWABLE resource provided while bringing in critical massive revenues to the local economy while making room for new lions to be born & bringing value to valuable creatures.” However, he doesn’t address that Cecil was killed and his head taken as a trophy, but none of the rest of the carcass was used at all. According to CBS News, Cecil was found beheaded and skinned. Additionally, Animal Planet’s predator expert David Salmoni explained to CBS News that Cecil had six cubs who will now probably be killed by a male lion from another group of lions.

Related: Ted Nugent Posts Picture of Kid Rock with Dead Endangered Lion

And the hunt that resulted in Cecil’s death was, in fact, not legal, at least according to the Zimbabwean government who arrested the hunting guide and land owner who were allegedly involved in the incident. 

And now, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is looking for the American who paid north of $50,000 for he privilege of killing the lion. “The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service is investigating the circumstances surrounding the killing of ‘Cecil the lion.’ That investigation will take us wherever the facts lead,” said Edward Grace, the agency’s deputy chief of law enforcement, in the statement (via Huffington Post).

American Public Roars After It Gets a Glimpse of International Trophy Hunting of Lions

http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne/2015/07/cecil-lion-killed-by-trophy-hunter.html?credit=web_hpfs1-cecil-072915_id93480558

Cecil the lion is dead because Walter Palmer the dentist is a morally deadened human being.Featured Image -- 9991

The man traveled clear across the world – from the suburbs of Minneapolis into the pay-to-slay world of Zimbabwe, where dictator Robert Mugabe sells off hunting rights and other natural resources to the highest bidders – for the chance to kill the king of beasts. In this case, the victim was a lion who has been widely photographed and somewhat habituated to a non-threatening human presence in Hwange National Park. The hunt was a “guaranteed kill” arrangement, where Palmer paid about $50,000 to hire professional guides to help him complete the task. The local guides knew exactly what they were doing. In the dark of night, they lure a famed, black-maned lion from an otherwise protected area, with a dead carcass as bait. Palmer then stuck Cecil with an arrow.

Even though he’s used that weapon to kill countless other rare animals all over the globe – from leopards to black bears to Argali sheep – Palmer didn’t deliver a killing shot. He wounded the animal, and because he did it at night, I bet he didn’t have the courage to track the animal at that time. So he waited, while the lion tried to live minute to minute and hour to hour after receiving the stab wound from the arrow. At some point, Walter and the professional guides resumed the chase. It took them nearly two days to find him, and then they apparently shot him with a firearm. The killers then removed a radio collar nestled around his neck – because Cecil was also the object of a study by Oxford researchers. Some reports say they tried to disable the signal from the collar, unsuccessfully. The team took the customary pictures of the westerner guy standing atop a beautiful, muscled animal, and then they decapitated and skinned him, as keepsakes for Palmer’s global crossing in order to conduct a pointless killing.

The lion is one of Safari Club International’s Africa Big Five, along with elephants, rhinos, leopards, and Cape buffalo, and the idea of killing each of them motivates thousands of wealthy people to do it. It’s one of more than 30 hunting achievement and “inner circle” awards you can get if you become a member of Safari Club – including Cats of the World, Bears of the World, and Antlered Game of North America. If you win all of the awards, and there are plenty people who do, you have to shoot more than 320 different species and subspecies of large animals. In the process, you spend millions of dollars, in addition to spilling an awful lot of blood and spreading a lot of death.

Partly because of the dramatic decline in lion populations, and also to stop heartless and selfish people like Palmer from meting out so much pain and suffering, The HSUS and HSI filed a petition four years ago to protect lions under the terms of the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Last October, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, to its credit, proposed a rule to list the lions as threatened.

The United States is the world’s largest importer of African lion parts as hunting trophies and for commercial purposes. Between 1999 and 2013, the United States imported about 5,763 wild-source lions just for hunting trophy purposes; and the last five years of this period averages to 378 wild-source lions per year. Worse, this number has increased in recent years. That’s a lot of Walter Palmers doing ugly things.

The Oxford University study Cecil was part of was looking into the impact of sports hunting on lions living in the safari area surrounding the national park. The research found that 34 of 62 tagged lions died during the study period. Of these, 24 were shot by sport hunters.

When we think of Bengal or Siberian tigers, we think of big cats nearing extinction. We should think the same way about lions, since their populations have been plummeting. They are in danger of extinction in the foreseeable future.

For most of us, when we learn they are in crisis, we want to help — to protect them from harm, because we empathize with their plight.

But for one subculture in the U.S., when wildlife are rare, that means they want to rush in and kill them precisely because they can do something that few others can.  It’s like the rush of trophy hunters to Canada to shoot polar bears when the United States announced it planned to list them. “Let me shoot a polar bear before they are all gone!” They want to distinguish themselves from others who live in the world of competitive hunting.

Sadly, Cecil’s story is not unique – American hunters kill hundreds of African lions each year and are contributing to the steady decline of the species.  Today we sent a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which recently took steps to protect chimpanzees and African elephants, urging the agency to make final its regulation to upgrade the legal status of lions, to restrict people from trekking to Africa and bringing back their parts for no good reason. Not for food.  For vanity. For ego gratification. And because they are morally deadened.

Ask the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services to protect African lions from extinction »

Editor’s note: This version has updated numbers on wild-source lions trophy-hunted each year.

Also from Wayne: Miss Cecil the lion? End trophy hunting