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Opponents highly critical of program
management
(Note: There are three articles listed here. The first is far more
fairly reported than the other two. Not counting the agency oversight
committee members and other Helena officials, there were 84 in
attendance at the meeting: 77 that understand the use of large
predators, including but not limited to Canadian gray wolves, is to
steal property rights, and 7 who were paid by their self-proclaimed
"environmental organization" employers to make the trip and
employ platitudes and pabulum. How does the presence of unknown but
vast numbers of large predators steal property rights, you ask? It
does so by severely restricting personal freedom to travel and
recreate as well as the reasonable and normal use of one's property,
from walking out to the mailbox to walking the family pets or simply
allowing children to play on the porch or in the yard. Gone is the
ability to go places without weapons, for self-defense comes to the
forefront of peoples' psyche when they've seen calves, lambs, foals,
dogs, horses, cattle, sheep, etc., torn to pieces and eaten alive. For
those wondering how people can identify which large predator species
does this, it is not difficult: wolves eat bones. Wolves eat their
meals while their meals are still alive and struggling. Kim
and Lori Carnegie of Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, will never see their
beloved son, Kenton Joel Carnegie, again -- or hold the
grandchildren he might have fathered -- because last fall wolves in
Saskatchewan viewed this healthy 22-year-old as a meal, and
partook of him for over thirty minutes, until his horrified friends
drove them away. Kenton Joel Carnegie ran for his life. The wolves
pulled him down and he somehow got back up twice before they pulled
him down for the third and final time. Those
in appointed, i.e., unelected positions like Ed Bangs ed_bangs@fws.gov,
Mike Jimenez mike_jimenez@fws.gov,
et al, do not care about other people's private property, freedom,
peace of mind, or any of the things that made America great. They are
not concerned, contrary to popular belief, with the health or well
being of wolves and other large predators. Their job seems not to
be to "save" anything that's truly
"endangered," but rather to make endangered the rural
private property owners and their families and ways of life. Their
interest appears to lie solely in their own profit motive.
This is often called "job security.")
August 12, 2006
By Nick Gevock of the Montana Standard nick.gevock@mtstandard.com
25 West Granite Street
Butte, Montana 69701
800-877-1074 or 406-496-5500
Fax: 406-496-5551
To submit a Letter to the Editor: editor@mtstandard.com
Ennis, Montana - Ranchers and wolf opponents, who packed a special
meeting in Ennis Friday, blasted state wildlife officials for the way
they have handled wolf management since taking over from the federal
government last year.
Officials with the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks
have been too slow to authorize the killing of problem wolves and at
times have hampered federal trappers from lethal control on state
lands, more than a dozen people told members of the agency oversight
committee of the Environmental Quality Council. Critics were particularly incensed by FWP’s policy of approving
any control measures before they take place on state game ranges.
Copyright 2006, The Montana Standard.
Ranchers criticize state over wolf management
(Note: This is typical AP "story writing:" never mention
that there were 77 folks in attendance who were there to see that
the property rights stealing agenda of siccing large predators on
rural America was "on the record" and made public, and 7
from self-proclaimed "environmental" groups. No mention of
the attendees that came from California, Idaho, and South Dakota with
the same message: those using large predators are destroying our
custom and culture and economic base. No surprises in this story;
after all, the AP has an agenda to "report." Bold red
indicates the use of Language Deception. These comments/note were
submitted as a comment in the Casper Star-Tribune, but have not yet
been posted with the story. Please be sure to check The Prairie Star http://www.ThePrairieStar.com
of Great Falls, Montana, and Agri-News
http://www.cattleplus.com/NewCattleplus/pages/agri.html of
Billings, Montana, next week for decidedly more accurate articles.
Please consider traveling in these areas by road, bicycle, horseback,
foot, ski, snowmobile, etc., and that walking with your dogs, or having
a breakdown and having to walk for help, puts you into sights of
large predators. Those that "re" introduced large predators
were/are fully aware of these infringements to your property rights,
freedom to travel and recreate, etc.)
August 12, 3006
No author provided at originating website address/URL.
Published by the Casper Star-Tribune
Casper, Wyoming
To submit a Letter to the Editor: letters@casperstartribune.net
Ennis, Montana - State wildlife officials take too long to authorize
the killing of problem wolves, ranchers and others said Friday at a
meeting of the agency oversight committee of the Environmental Quality
Council.
"It's like a guy's robbing a bank and you have to go get an arrest warrant," committee member Sen. Jim Shockley, R-Victor, said. "It doesn't make a lot of sense." More than 50 people attended the meeting that drew Fish, Wildlife and Parks Director Jeff Hagener, agency biologists and several state legislators. People from Idaho and Wyoming [plus California, South Dakota and Montana] and members of anti-wolf groups pushing for indiscriminate killing of the predators also attended. A few members of conservation groups praised FWP for the job it has done since it took over wolf management from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last year.
Shockley said when ranchers were dealing directly with federal officials, problem wolves could be taken care of quickly. But since the state has taken over, things take too long. "It was working. Why didn't we just leave it the way it was?" he asked. Sheep rancher Joe Helle of the Dillon area was among those who complained about FWP's policy of approving any control measures before they take place on state game ranges. "We're concerned that wildlife management areas will become sanctuaries," Helle said. But Kurt Alt, FWP Southwest Montana wildlife manager, said the agency, as manager of the game ranges, wants to inspect any potential livestock kills to ensure it can defend killing problem wolves when it's needed. Alt said that's important because some people have criticized grazing on the game ranges and would rather see livestock removed. He noted the rotational grazing is important for improving grass and he doesn't want to see the grazing end. "We'll be able to support our actions to our worst critics and our biggest supporters," Alt said. "It does not mean that WMAs will become safe havens for wolves that kill livestock." The misconception that FWP was banning lethal control on game ranges was the result of a misunderstanding between the state agency and Wildlife Services, said Carolyn Sime, FWP wolf program coordinator. She agreed both agencies need to communicate better. But although FWP decides when a wolf can be killed, it can't give Wildlife Services permission to trespass on U.S. Forest Service or private lands, Sime said. Larry Handegard, a federal trapper, said his agency has always had to have permission from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to kill wolves and now needs it from FWP. Some people urged the committee to recommend the Legislature pass a bill to sue the federal government so wolves can be taken off the federal Endangered Species List. "Fish, Wildlife and Parks has forfeited their right to manage these predators," said Bob Fanning, president of Friends of the Northern Yellowstone Elk Herd, an anti-wolf group. "We need this in order to get this out-of-control bureaucratic nightmare under control." FWP wants to see wolves delisted so it can begin to use hunting and trapping to manage the population, Hagener said. The agency has been frustrated by the federal government's unwillingness to delist wolves in Montana and Idaho, where management plans have been accepted, because Wyoming's management plan has been rejected. But Hagener said even once wolves are delisted, biologists will manage them to keep a sustainable population. "We view wolves as part of the wildlife of the state," he said. "We're going to have to learn how to live with them."
Copyright 2006, The Casper Star-Tribune.
Additional related reading:
Ranchers sound off a (sic) wolf meeting
(Note: This article is better than the Star-Tribune version, but still
has a long way to go to achieve accuracy. Once again, those
two-legged, agenda-driven, faceless ones that set The Wildlands
Project into motion to depopulate most of America -- and the world --
of its rural private property owners and resource providers, are never
mentioned. Nope, the wolf is used as the scapegoat, as though the wolf
had a choice, being hand-raised, a variety never native to these
places, radio-collared and tracked and "re" introduced into
the wilds of the United States under the guise of the "Endangered
Species" Act.)
August 12, 2006
By Scott McMillion scottm@dailychronicle.com
Bozeman Daily Chronicle
Bozeman, Montana
406-582-2655
To submit a Letter to the Editor: citydesk@dailychronicle.com
Ennis, Montana - More than a decade after wolves were reintroduced to
Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho, fear and loathing of the
big predators remains strong among some Westerners.
That much was made clear during a five-hour meeting here Friday. One Wyoming rancher said she's afraid to take
her grandchildren camping in some places. Many of the comments at the meeting echoed what wolf
opponents were saying during the 1995 reintroduction.
Copyright 2006, Bozeman Daily Chronicle.
http://www.propertyrightsresearch.org/2005/articles05/wolf_truth_information.htm (Note:
The first five links listed at this URL no longer work; there may
be other broken links.)
Ranchers
criticize state over wolf management
Billings Gazette - By The Associated Press. ENNIS -- State wildlife officials take too long to authorize the killing of problem wolves, ranchers and others said Friday at a meeting of the agency oversight committee of the Environmental Quality Council. ... Wyoming notifies feds of intent to sue over wolf management
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