Thursday 18 April 2013

TODAY’S THE DAY OF THE BIG RALLY

At 12.15 today, the National Parks Association together with The Greens will conduct a “peaceful” No Hunting In National Parks rally in Sydney.

Their own propaganda on the rally advises that it has been contrived to coincide with school holidays so as many kids as possible can attend, all dressed in native animal costume, or carrying a plush toy for maximum emotive effect.

Even the posters have changed to mislead and tug at the publics’ heartstrings these school holidays – “DON’T PUT MY KIDS AT RISK” – they’ll read, as they march from Hyde Park to Parliament House chanting their messages of intolerance.

We all know that while the organisers may peddle the event as a “peaceful demonstration” the gathering outside Parliament House will boil with hatred for hunters and our culture of responsible conservation hunting.

For many children this will be a baptism into the doctrine of hate that fuels their parents’ philosophy of intolerance towards the hunter and his culture, and we can only hope and pray that following their parents example, they do not become the culturally intolerant schoolyard bullies of tomorrow.

There is another aspect to today’s march that’s worthy of note and that’s the call by some animal liberationists to carry posters that vilify Shooters and Fishers Party MP Robert Borsak for his hunting activities oversees. 

This appalling subset of the rally’s supporters is preaching a message of hate that goes so far as to indentify Borsak as “sub-human”, an epithet applied to cultures and races such as Jews and African-Americans, by neo-Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan in order to propagate hatred and intolerance, and ultimately to justify opression and ethnic cleansing.

Make no mistake; while Borsak may be the bullseye in this campaign, we are all its target!

That such people will be embraced by the rally’s organisers and encouraged to preach their hateful messages amongst children this day is more than irresponsible; it is a tragedy that will no doubt have ramifications for years to come. 

I’m sure you will join with me in wishing Shooters & Fishers Party MPs Robert Brown and Robert Borsak well as they suffer the slings and arrows of the anti-hunters. Moreover, I wish them safety in the presence of such zealous hated.  

If you would like to send a measured message of support to Borsak and Brown, you can do so on the Shooters & Fishers facebook page here 

If you would like to encourage others to leave messages of support, why not send your friends a link to this page too.

Anyway, I'll get outa ya way now....



UPDATE: 3PM APRIL 18TH, 2013

The media reports between 1000 and 3000 demonstrators attended today’s no hunting in National Parks rally in Sydney, depending on which 'objective' report one reads


Sydney’s population is approximately 4.6 million souls, so even if we credit attendance at 3000, that is the equivalent of 0.065% of the population who thought the issue of sufficient concern to brave a warm sunny day in the city.


Surely that’s an epic fail in anyone’s estimation, but the Public Services Association, the National Parks Association and The Greens will claim it was a huge success.


Of course if it is deemed a success, one can only suppose that if 3000 or more hunters turned out in Sydney for a pro-hunting in National Parks rally, that would be proof positive of broad public support for the proposal…wouldn’t it? 


Tuesday 9 April 2013

THE DOCTRINE OF HATE


Yet again the guardians of morality, decency and ethics spread their malignant message of hatred, encouraging people to slander and destroy a man whom they do not know, for actions, the details of which they know little about.

Yet they consider they know Robert Borsak well enough to call him evil, sub human and scum, while attributing all manner of antisocial intent and criminal culpability to his activities, though no legitimate court has tried him let alone found him guilty of any crime.

Were it not for the fact that Borsak shot an elephant, these same people might be demanding that his right to a trial by an impartial jury of his peers be respected at all cost. But in this case they're willing to make an exception because it serves them better to demand that he be burned at the stake on hearsay 'evidence'.

His critics are nothing if not adaptable to circumstance, their battle cry being "These are our principles, steadfast and uncompromising. If you do not like them, we have others!"

Let’s cut through the emotive, self-righteous pseudo-intellectual bullshit shall we...

They don’t like Borsak; they hate what and whom he represents, and they hate his culture. So much so that they will deny that it is ‘culture’ at all. They will call it a sickness and an evil and by doing so they will seek to obfuscate responsibility for the demonisation of that culture, which their hate campaign facilitates.

This is the nature of the zealot in the 3rd millennium; the social media lynch-mob, the angry villagers armed with virtual pitchforks and burning torches, the new-age Green Dominicans looking for witches to burn; the facebook trollers, the haters whatever their cause…and may the Gods have mercy on those subject to the justice they would preside over!

The belief that personal hatred justifies your actions and makes them righteous is the very essence of intolerance, prejudice and bigotry. It's what drove the Nazi death camps. It’s what drives the KKK to the conviction that African-Americans are sub human and can be treated - even killed - as animals.  It’s what made it OK for first settlers to shoot Aborigines. It’s what justified the theft of a generation. This politically expedient malevolence encouraging society to hate people because of their particular philosophy and culture, is what fuels the wars in the middle-east and anti-Islamic sentiment here at home. 

 

The people who peddle this poster encouraging the community to hate Borsak, do so in the belief that their perspective on hunting and animal welfare is the only  perspective worthy of respect, giving them the right to persecute and promote hatred with propoaganda contrived for that sole purpose. Yet Borsak’s activities are legal, whether the haters like it or not.

He obtained a licence to hunt the elephant, from the government that had jurisdiction over the animal and the hunt. He used a licensed firearm prescribed for the task. No ivory was imported to Australia as a result of the hunt. What then, has he done wrong, aside from daring to display pride in his culture and legal hunting activities?

From the very small amount of information contained in an article about the hunt, written by Borsak himself, these promoters of intolerance and execution by social media have taken it upon themselves to lash out in spiteful revenge for the death of the elephant and the pride of the hunter. In doing so they have thought about and determined that the inevitable pain and humiliation their public hate campaign will cause Borsak’s family is wholly justified. No doubt they'll claim that it's not their fault if his family is stupid enough to relate themselves to him.

High Priestess of Hate Sylvia Raye and her Minions of Malevolence have judged Borsak guilty of a offence against their sensibilities, so it goes without saying that his partner should be spat on in the street, his children persecuted and ridiculed at work, and his grandchildren marginalised and bullied at school.  The people who promote hatred and persecution are never responsible for the violence their actions foster.

When the mentally unstable person embraces this hate campaign as justification for blowing up a movie theatre during a screening of Life of Pi in order to make some obscure statement about hunting tigers in India, it won’t be the fault of Sylvia Raye and her ilk who encourage people to shoot messages of hatred into every office and bedroom, every tablet and iPhone, every street-corner and every schoolroom.  No-no, it will be Borsak’s fault for forcing them to resort to a hate campaign.

If he’d just bent to their political and social blackmail by agreeing to abandon his culture, to stop hunting elephants never again to represent the rights of people whose culture Ms Raye detests so fervently, everything would have been different. “Why did he make me do it”, she’ll cry on the stand, “Whyyyyyyyyyy?”

And the villagers who eat the elephants and other game animals that the likes of Borsak pay a fortune to legally hunt in Africa, what of them...does poverty absolve them of guilt for consuming the noble elephant? 

And the villagers who use the money derived from the legal hunt to fund community development initiatives at the coalface of poverty, hunger and despair, what of them? They promote the big game hunts and provide the guides, bearers and skinners without whom Borsak's hunt would not have been possible.

Do you plan to orchestrate a hate campaign against "sub human" African villagers who help kill elephants too, Sylvia?

If anyone is interested in the objective facts about legal big game hunting in Africa (as opposed to illegal poaching which no responsible hunter condones) along with its many benefits to the elephant and human populations,  you could do much worse than starting with program below from the UNSW series The Hot Seat -  "They shoot lions don't they?"

Anyway, I'll get outa ya way now....


Monday 1 April 2013

From revered to reviled: hunting in the new millennium



Hunting was once accepted as an essential part of daily human life. Many a family lived in fear of shivering through a harsh winter without furs for warmth and a larder stocked with nature’s mammalian bounty to keep their bellies full.
 
While a couple of centuries ago cameras with which to record the outcome of a hunt were yet to be invented, there can be little doubt that a successful hunt would have been an event celebrated by the whole family, if not the entire community. Evidence of this fact can be found in various festivals throughout the world that have been preserved across the centuries, and also in cave-paintings dating back many thousands of years.

The hunter was revered for his skills with the spear, bow or snare and for the pivotal role he played in the sustainability of both his community and his culture. Today anthropologists agree that the development of technologies such as the knapped spear-point and the bow afforded our species the capacity to harvest large quantities of game reliably, and this in turn afforded our ancestors more leisure time in which to explore their intellectual development.

In short, while it is often said that Australia’s early development rode on the sheep’s back, it is also true to say that for countless thousands of years the development of the human race rode on the hunter’s back.

With the advent of ‘civilisation’, the cash economy, butcher-shops and supermarkets the need to hunt – at least in the developed world – gradually approached redundancy. This is perhaps understandable in an increasingly busy, largely urban society, but what is difficult to understand is the hunter’s transition from a once revered figure to the reviled villain he is often portrayed as today.

I have often heard it said that many people are incapable of drawing any parallel between a cow on the hoof and the steak on the styrene in Coles and this is certainly a contributing factor, though I doubt many are truly ignorant of where their meat comes from. No, if anything the vast majority of people know – if only in a plausibly deniable sorta way – that somewhere there are people known as butchers, whom they like to think of as a kind of religious order that oversees the spiritual transition of cows into steak, sheep into chops, and pigs into....whatever it is pigs become in the next ‘life’.

It is the capacity to rely on someone else to make animals into meat which affords people the privilege of looking down on those of us who choose to make our own meat. I call this the “Pontius Privilege”, I wash my hands of it, and so I’m not really to blame! 

But the Pontius Privilege doesn’t account for why so many seemingly intelligent people who claim to have a deep reverence and an all abiding respect for nature and its processes, remain so rabidly opposed to hunting, which is clearly an integral part of nature.

Many of the world’s most charismatic animals – lions, tigers, leopards, cheetahs, panthers, polar bears, wolves etc – are viscous killers that show no regard whatsoever for the concept of ‘mercy’. Yet the same people who revile the modern-day hunter will sit glued to the tele as a pack of wolves pursues, drags-down and disembowels a reindeer calf while its mother looks on.

My many inquiries of people who are all for animal-violence but dead against hunters hurting warm fuzzy things, reveal that we humans are supposed to “know better”.  We are of a higher order it seems, capable of determining right from wrong, good from evil, humane from inhumane, and this is what sets us apart from animals that kill other animals for food. But whatever your view on whether or not people should hunt, surely we must all agree that carnivores in the natural world have no choice but to hunt. In fact the precarious balance of each and every ecosystem depends on its apex predators, as diminishing their numbers has proven in any number of environments right across the globe.

In short, we respect and seek to preserve the viability of predators and their quarry in every instance, except when it comes to human predators, which so many members of the community will readily denounce as wicked, bloodthirsty or even uncivilised despoilers of nature’s delicate balance.

It seems that when it comes to humans, many believe that by removing themselves from the hunter-prey equation they somehow become members of a superior, more enlightened species. I would have thought it qualified them as a unique species, perhaps even a species ‘alien’ to the natural order of things on this planet, but certainly not superior.

A little further digging reveals that aside from the odd vegetarian who, given half a chance, would have Hyenas on tofu and lentils, it is not our carnivorousness that offends people so much as the fact that we do not hunt ‘naturally’. That is to say we use guns and bows and the like, and these tools are considered cruel and unnatural methods of harvesting meat, so those who use them are condemned.

I can only assume that were I to strip naked and head into the forest with a group of friends to run a deer down until it was cornered, that would be OK? Once cornered, of course, I could drag it down, chew into its neck and throttle it while my buddies in the pack kicked the life out of it before tucking in, and this would be natural...perhaps even an Attenborough moment?

It is not that we hunt that upsets people so, nor that what we do is unnatural, but rather what upsets them is the fact that what we do is so very natural that we are a constant reminder that humans are not the ultra-superior god-like beings that some people like to think they are. They are challenged by the fact that modern-day hunters are closer to nature’s battle for survival and evolutionary order than they can ever hope to be, and they lack the integrity, responsibility, courage and commitment to be a part of the ecosystems they revere.

Having failed miserably in their bid to be superior beings, they focus their efforts on criticising us for our gun and bow ownership, as a means of promoting a climate of fear and loathing of hunters. They do so in the hope that by comparison, their own flawed philosophies will shine all the brighter.  But that which the chronic hoplophobe calls a weapon, the hunter calls a tool, and while it is undoubtedly a fact that from time-to-time someone may use a tool inappropriately, it is also a fact that not everyone who robs a corner-store armed with a screwdriver is an electrician, and we do not seek to demonise all electricians each time someone robs a corner store armed with a screwdriver.

Ordinarily groups with a social justice bent would say that promoting negative stereotypes is unjust, even offensive, however when it comes to the vilification of hunters, groups such as The Greens have declared an open season!

If one member of the community uses a weapon inappropriately, The Greens waste no time at all in maligning all hunters and gun-owners, demanding their immediate disarmament for the good of the whole community. We are frequently accused of the most malignant intent and the most heinous crimes against man and nature, and our motives for hunting are misrepresented on a daily basis in order to serve The Greens’ political and social management ends. Hunters are routinely painted as untrustworthy, evil people who “kill for fun”, yet I have never met a hunter who claims that killing for ‘fun’ is part of the hunting equation. This appears to be a fiction of the green imagination, or perhaps an assumption based on their understanding of their own drives.

Still, despite the slings and arrows we are forced to bear, and despite venomous campaigns of lies and deceit aimed at eroding community respect for hunters, one unassailable fact remains. Without the activities of hunters throughout thousands of generations of human development, there would be no symphonies, no Shakespeare, no art beyond the cave wall, no great pyramids or cathedrals, no science and no civilisation as we know it.

All these things and more were made possible by the hunter whose bounty afforded his fellows the luxury of leisure time in which to ponder the meaning of life and how its quality might be improved. Even the freedom to denigrate our culture and beliefs today, was a gift from hunters of the past who have always been among the first to lay down their lives to protect such freedoms.

Our gifts and our contributions to society and our fellow human-beings have been many and of inestimable value. Even if The Greens’ and the anti-hunters’ campaigns of intolerance, hatred and bigotry prevail in the new millennium resulting in an end to hunting, its culture and traditions, there is one thing they can never diminish.

It is to the efforts of hunters of the past that they owe thanks for their evolution and the rights and privileges they take for granted and habitually abuse today.