HSUS trying to ban prairie dog hunting in CO

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HSUS is crap, they focus on hunting animals, but manage to avoid the real problems among the animal population.
-look at the pet stores selling prairie dogs as pets, that must be more traumatic for the poor dog then a 22-250 through the forehead..
 
The bigger question (to me) is where do things currently lie with the PD population? I don't think that our opinions should ever fall in the way of fact, and I don't know that any of us truly have the answer to the question (one way or another). But, are we, as hunters, willing to listen to objective third party information (from state/federal biologists and the like) regarding their populations, both now or in the future? I'm certainly not saying that PETA or HSUS should have a say in the matter, as they are fringe organizations that have other motivations... But, I am concerned with hearing what the un-biased wildlife biologists have to say on the issue!

All I am advocating is that we don't be totally opposed to proper management of the species, lest it be eliminated.

I obviously don't agree with PETA or the other organizations that would entirely outlaw hunting. And, I am well aware that most of the money that the CDOW gets comes from hunters and fishing (in fact, a little-known fact is that the CDOW is entirely self-funded, and doesn't receive any money from the state... Thus, hunting/fishing/habitat stamps really are crucial to their ability to do what they do).

Coloradokevin,

The biologist/DOW point of view on prairie dog populations is that they are doing quite well. Check out the Colorado DOW web site, they have links to prairie dog population studies. The DOW did start a prairie dog season last year that allows prairie dog hunting on public land from June 15th to the end of Feb. March, April, May and half of June are now off limits to hunting prairie dogs on public land. Before last year the season was year round. The reason being that this is the time of year they have their litters and the young ones are stupid. By June they have grown up, gotten fat and are a little smarter. While I enjoyed the hunting during the mud season around here and miss it, if it is good from a biological standpoint I agree with it. I have friends who need help with prairie dog and coyote control on their pastures anyway, so hunting is not done with the closure, just moved onto private land only. The current ban is being introduced by HSUS and PETA. They do not have a clue on what is good for a species, they just want to stop all hunting at any cost. Even if it means the extinction of a species. The biologists and DOW need to set the seasons and limits, not the anti hunting groups. They target prairie dogs hunters because we are a smaller group and they can get some un-educated hunters to join in with them. Thus banning hunting one species at a time.

I agree with some of the others here and assume the reason that the anti's are targeting the PD hunts are because of the small amount of folks hunting them. Kinda like going after bear hunting with dogs. Because there are relatively few folks that do it, there is less resistance, thus it makes it easier to influence law makers to take a stand against them, than against a form of hunting with higher numbers. Taking a path of least resistance, they start at the easiest targets and then will chip away with hunting privileges that only a few participate in until they can move on to bigger targets once they get their ball rolling.

This is why us as hunters must continue to support all forms of hunting, even if we do not actively practice it. If we don't, they (the anti's) will chip away till there's nothing left.

Is there someplace I can e-mail to show my support for the continuation of our right to hunt these little critters in Colorado?

Quote:
[email protected]

Correct buck460XVR, This is why every hunter needs to drop a quick e-mail to the wildlife comm. and tell them that any total ban on hunting is harmful to the environment and not favorable to hunters.
 
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I agree with some of the others here and assume the reason that the anti's are targeting the PD hunts are because of the small amount of folks hunting them.

And Prairie Rats have such a high Adorability Quotient.

Like Bambi.
 
backcountry said:
The biologists and DOW need to set the seasons and limits, not the anti hunting groups.

I completely agree with you on this point...

As long as the decisions have some scientific basis, and aren't clouded by political pressures, or the opinions of idealists who don't want to face reality, I'm happy :)

PETA is a fringe organization to me, and they don't represent anything I believe in. But, I'm always mindful of the fact that I don't want to stray too far in the opposite direction either.
 
Fringe? Fringe? PETA & HSUS as fringe? I figure that any group that publicly states they want laws to end our owning pets, eating meat, hunting and fishing and life as we have it is way, way, way beyond "fringe". We are talking serious outer space, here.

Ingrid Newkirk, founder of PETA: "A rat is a pig is a dog is a boy." She published that in her own newsletter, and has reiterated it quite often.

I don't think I'm "fringing" the other direction, but I'm for sure the other direction. :)

Art
 
PETA is a fringe organization to me, and they don't represent anything I believe in. But, I'm always mindful of the fact that I don't want to stray too far in the opposite direction either.

LOL

I mean, I think that people who believe the earth is flat are on the fringe, but I want to make sure I don't believe it's round, either.

Ah, the postmodern moral compass.

compass_07.gif
 
I couldn't make it to the meeting today because of work, however a couple of my friends went. With a great sigh of relief the measure was unanimously defeated!

PDs are prolific around here. On the way to the range, or driving down the highway, we're getting to the time of year that you can't count the ones that have been run over every mile on both hands. The desert is littered with towns. Heck, the dirt lot behind Wal Mart has a town in it. One of the biggest ones I've ever seen hangs out by the road- Oh, temptation.. :p

I strongly agree that the DOW should decide when and where to hunt our state's species based on research and reason. With that said, June 15th is on my calendar.. :D
 
Glad to hear the news from the meeting GJgo. Thanks for the post. The dogs are fat around here too, even with all the snow still on the ground... Looking forward to June 15th.
 
Expect one of Colorados famous ballot initiatives complete with big money from out of state. In some ways we will reap what we sewed when the antis bring out the video of exploding PD's and the this is your brain on hollow point shirts. The fight is not over and as seen in proceeding posts even amongst ourselves their is disagreement.
Hang together or hang separately our choice.
 
Good news!

http://www.nraila.org/Legislation/Read.aspx?ID=3887

Colorado: Prairie Dog Hunting Ban Defeated!

Friday, May 02, 2008


Please Call the Commission Members and Thank Them Today!

Thanks to your calls and attendance at last week’s meeting of the Colorado Wildlife Commission in Junction City, a proposed ban on prairie dog hunting was defeated by a 9 to 0 vote ensuring that the necessary hunting of these animals can continue. While radical anti-hunting/animal rights groups targeted prairie dog hunting as cruel, it is a traditional sporting activity and necessary management tool, especially for ranching interests in the state.
 
Yea, the wildlife commission is not interested in ending prairie dog hunting. The groups sponsoring the ban said they will try to get an anti prairie dog hunting bill on a Colorado ballet in November or file a lawsuit to stop prairie dog hunting... There was an article to that effect in the Denver Post. They are a bunch of crazies who do not even live in this state, but want to control what we do here...
 
I get solicitations for money from HSUS at least once a month.

I send back their postage-paid envelopes either empty or stuffed with other junk mail, or sometimes with NRA material. :)
 
But guess who is contributing to HSUS, kiddies!


Microsoft Funds Anti-Hunting Movement
Sportsmen nationwide called to take action

May 31, 2007 (National)



(Columbus) – Microsoft has rejected a U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance request to abandon its partnership with the nation’s leading anti-hunting organization.

Microsoft, the software giant, will make a $100,000 donation to the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and is partnering with the group on a pilot program called the i’m Initiative. Through the new program, whenever a Windows Live Messenger user has a conversation using i’m, Microsoft will give a portion of the program’s advertising revenue to one of ten organizations selected by the user. The HSUS is one of the choices, and there is no limit to the amount of money that can be donated.

The U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance, the nation’s leading sportsmen’s advocacy organization, has urged Microsoft to end its support of HSUS, but the company refused. According to Microsoft representative Tara Kriese, Microsoft believes the i’m Initiative is “a great way to enable people to help causes that are important to them.”

“Microsoft is going to pour hundreds of thousands of dollars, probably more, into an organization that recently issued a manifesto that targets hunting for extinction,” said USSA President Bud Pidgeon. “If there was ever a time for sportsmen to take grassroots action, this is it.”

Sportsmen should contact Microsoft and demand that its financial support of HSUS be terminated. Contact Bill Gates, Chairman, Microsoft, 1 Microsoft Way, Redmond, WA 98052. Phone: (425) 882-8080. Fax: (425) 936-7329.

The Humane Society of the United States opposes all animal use, including trapping, hunting and fishing. It was a key player in the campaigns to outlaw dove hunting in Michigan, trapping in California, and black bear hunting in Colorado. The organization has created a hit list of hunting traditions that it hopes to dismantle, including bear hunting and hunting with hounds.

“The HSUS already has a multi-million dollar budget that it invests in legislative and ballot campaigns to ban trapping and hunting,” said Pidgeon. “The partnership that it has formed with Microsoft, the maker of the Xbox, will allow the organization to make money hand over fist, and continue to fund efforts to ban outdoor sports.”

Sportsmen can make a difference in an issue like this. Companies such as Iams, General Mills, Accor Hotels, Pet Safe, Sears, and Ace Hardware ended relationships with HSUS after thousands of sportsmen levied strong protest.

In 2002, Jeep raised the ire of sportsmen when it aired a blatantly, anti-hunting commercial called the “Deer Hunter.” After a flood of sportsmen’s contacts, Jeep pulled the commercial in three days.

The U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance is a national association of sportsmen and sportsmen’s organization that protects the rights of hunters, anglers and trappers in the courts, legislatures, at the ballot, in Congress and through public education programs. For more information about the U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance and its work, call (614) 888-4868 or visit its website, www.ussportsmen.org.

Source: http://huntinglife.blogspot.com/2007/06/microsoft-funds-anti-hunting-movement.html
 
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Personally, I don't want Bubonic Plague, which is slowly spreading across the United States- through rodent populations, of course.

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/plague/qa.htm

Since 1959, the Fort Collins, Colorado branch of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recorded 393 cases of plague in humans. Of the 240 cases (61 percent) for which a source of infection was identified, 31 (13 percent) were attributed to contact with prairie dogs or their fleas...

From http://www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/species/mammals/btprairiedog/plague.htm
 
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