Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Bear hunt travesty, elephant appreciation & ‘cat days’

                                                                                                     Kehoe pic

Gov. Phil Murphy’s banning of bear hunts on state lands only displeased hunters and animal advocates alike -- the former wanting all possible territory for trophy hunting; the latter wanting no territory used for bear hunts -- but it also seems to have brought out the worst in many people.

First, though, it’s important to realize that Murphy’s halfway action continues to jeopardize New Jersey’s black bears -- possibly even more than before, since historically most bears have been killed on private land.  And get this: some hunters are threatening to drive bears off state property onto private property for the sole purpose of killing them as soon as they get there.
   
Sweet, isn’t it? 

But it gets worse. Now we’re hearing about farmers selling plots of their (private) land for
hunters to use, and hunters offering to pay land owners who report bears on their property so they might swoop in and shoot them.  Talk about “canned hunts” and must-kill mentalities.

The latest development: three pro-hunting groups may challenge Murphy’s executive order that bars bear hunting on state lands.  One hunter-rep said, “This is both a legal and scientifically sound hunt.”  To which anyone who knows anything about the situation would say “Hogwash.”  At least.

Black bears’ bad rap is essentially undeserved, but numbers of hunters keep earning a bad rap! And that includes their enablers, the state officials who disdain non-lethal means of managing bears.
 
In fact, “Murphy’s law NJ” -- when things are done halfway, damage is maximized -- pertains here. Former President Barack Obama encouraged our “better angels,” but that concept seems  wasted on our governor: with his half-way, please-no-one ban, Murphy has unleashed the worst impulses of people after trophies and money. 

The first week of the hunt begins October 8, with a second week in December. There’s still time to phone the governor’s office every day (609-292-6000) and urge him to keep his promise to end the hunt -- on all state lands.

Appreciate, and save, elephants 

Last Saturday, September 22, was Elephant Appreciation Day -- the least we can do for these endangered iconic animals who if they’re not being slaughtered for their tusks are being captured and forced into heavy labor, performing or wasting away in zoos.

California’s Performing Animal Welfare Society, or PAWS (Pawsweb.org), houses both African and Asian elephants saved from circuses and other forms of abuse devised by humans.

A contented PAWS resident for the last 11 years, Asian elephant Gypsy was kidnapped from her wild birthplace and family, and sold into a life of circus captivity, with “near constant chaining, performing at the point of a bullhook and continuous travel” -- for 40 years.

Appreciate?  Well of course, but more important so we never have a world without them, Save the Elephants.  (savetheelephants.org)

A comforting idea

Since (sigh!) we’re barely beyond summer, including the “dog days of summer,” here’s a modest proposal to even things up a bit: the “cat days of winter.”  Why not?

Even though historically, dog days have to do with the dog star Sirius and the sun -- and a period of uncomfortable sultry weather -- there’s no rule against cat days of winter coming into being by decree.

What could be better in cold gray January and February than following the lead of comfort-loving cats?  Seek the cozy and the warm; cuddle in fluffy blankets; keep the fireplace going and glowing.  Do the equivalent of stretching out on radiators at sunny (well-insulated) windows.  

Doze. . .



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