It
has often struck me that the hard-core environmentalist's view of the
natural world is somewhat egocentric. The language with which they
describe the natural world and humanity’s place in it, smacks of a sort
of divine apotheosis; as though they consider themselves raised on high,
from whence they view all things as though through the eyes of
divinities.
They
don’t view humanity as just another stakeholder in the relentless
struggle that is life on planet earth. Rather, they seem to consider
themselves the guardians of all they survey, and final arbiters of
humanity’s place in ‘nature’; that place being firmly outside it,
looking in.
This
attitude is perhaps most evident in the anti-hunters’ views on humans
as hunters. It seems every syllable they utter, no-matter how simple or
complex, boils down to the same message:
“Humans should rise above their primitive drives to hunt and kill. Such things are fit only for mindless beasts of instinct and necessity who know no better!”
“Humans should rise above their primitive drives to hunt and kill. Such things are fit only for mindless beasts of instinct and necessity who know no better!”
The
anti would have all humankind walking through the world without leaving
a footprint, viewing it all from a superior, non-participatory
perspective, much as God might walk through the world gazing at all that
he had made and declaring it very good.
The anti-hunters appear to consider that their brand of non-participating observation of the natural world makes them somehow more “in tune” with it, and this I find strangest and most alien of all their philosophies.
"We don't own the planet. We're just managing it for future generations....or maybe a/god", appears to be their collective and very patriarchal attitude, and assuming this high-minded stewardship role sets them outside the fellowship of the eternal struggle that binds all creatures together.
The anti-hunters appear to consider that their brand of non-participating observation of the natural world makes them somehow more “in tune” with it, and this I find strangest and most alien of all their philosophies.
"We don't own the planet. We're just managing it for future generations....or maybe a/god", appears to be their collective and very patriarchal attitude, and assuming this high-minded stewardship role sets them outside the fellowship of the eternal struggle that binds all creatures together.
All
life on earth assimilates other life for its own survival; that is the
nature of the eternal struggle. There are few exceptions to this rule.
All creatures capitalise on some advantage – physical, intellectual or
instrumental – in order to secure the basic requirements of daily life.
The battle between hunter and hunted, predator and prey is not fair. It
is intentionally and decisively unfair, just as nature intended it to
be.
I have often heard it said that, “if
humans want to hunt they should do it fairly, like the animals do it.
The hunter should chase down his quarry and kill it using nothing but
his bare hands”, which is an odd theory, given that all other
animals exploit some advantage over their food. Nor is man the only
creature to employ tools, yet it is specifically man’s use of tools (the
gun and the bow) and the advantage this gives him over his prey, that
the antis condemn most vehemently.
Another common view is the one that runs along the lines of, “man should pick on something his own size and see how he goes”,
inferring that hunters should only wrestle with big healthy critters in
the 80 to 120kg heavyweight range that are best placed to put up a
fight he won’t soon forget, but this too naively romanticises the
'ethics' of other predators.
The
lioness does not search a herd of Wildebeest for the heaviest,
strongest buck that looks like he can give her a run for her money. The
lioness looks for the aged-frail, the physically disabled, the
malnourished social outcast, the newborn babe or the equivalent of the
toddler, that’s her preference. Still sound noble?
The
lioness has no concept of fair-play, nor is she familiar with the
Marquis of Queensbury rules. These are purely human constructs,
associated with the notion of ‘sport’, and this brings me to a point
that the antis and I might actually agree on – hunting is not a sport!
Shooting may be a sport...archery may be a sport, but hunting is not.
Early European Hunters |
When
the hunter hunts for meat, skin, bone, fur, sinew or antler, it is a
matter of survival and indeed a cultural process eons old, not sport.
The level to which the hunted contributes to the hunter’s survival may
vary with the individual, but regardless of whether he lives in the
Amazonian rainforests and has to hunt every day, or in
suburbia and chooses to do it only occasionally, the hunter who
uses his prey to the utmost is participating in the eternal struggle.
This is what affords the hunter the many intimate insights into
participation in the natural world that the anti lacks so profoundly.
The
fact that I may choose to survive by hunting and you by shopping, does
not make me any less a man, but it does make me undeniably more a part
of nature and its struggles than those who would roundly condemn me for
my cruelty and inhumanity will ever appreciate.
“Ah, but”, the anti says, “humans have a choice!”,
and this is often true. Certainly we have a choice to live a life
devoid of killing, but does that make us superior, or just remote from
what is natural?
Most
who choose "not to kill", and criticise others for not making that same
choice, are in fact killers by proxy, employing others to kill on their
behalf. Even the vegetarian/vegan kills; he simply makes personal
judgement-calls on the value of life, based on size, intelligence and
charisma.
For
instance, the rabbit is smart, fury, cuddly, big-eyed and seriously
charismatic and so it is cruel to shoot him. Earthworms and bugs, not so
much, so the vegan is quite happy to chop through thousands of their
kind every time he turns his garden.
Oh
he may make like a Buddhist and claim it fills his soul with woe, but
he digs nonetheless....chop, chop, sorry, excuse me, wups, mea culpa,
chop!
I’m
unfamiliar with the philosophy that dictates that insects and cold
blooded things are less worthy of respect than thermoregulating cuddly
thangs, but I think it’s fairly safe to assume that bugs and cold blooded
creatures weren’t invited to the synod where it was all thrashed out.
The
sheer romance of the antis’ view of the wild world is also noteworthy.
They will sit enthralled watching one of Sir David Attenborough’s
excellent documentaries, in which the lion or lioness stalks a herd of
antelope, and they will view the death that ensues without moral or
ethical commentary. But should a human hunter kill an animal, any
animal, he is instantly criticised, rebuked, abhorred.
More
interesting still is what I've come to think of as the antis’ legal
code. If a human hunter kills an animal – any animal – said animal is
immediately declared ‘innocent’, which leads me to presume that if a lion kills an antelope, the creature must have been ‘guilty’, though of what I cannot imagine. Perhaps it’s a case of “wrong place, wrong time, serves yaself right ya stupid bastard”? That would certainly be a very Australian way of looking at it.
Perhaps
in this there are lessons to be learned? Perhaps if, when trying
society’s worst criminal offenders – rapists, paedophiles, murderers etc
– the courts were to empanel 12 lions and lionesses good and true, we
might finally see some hint of the ‘truth in sentencing’ we all crave.
The
more I think about it, the more I am forced to conclude that it is not
hunters or hunting that the antis truly abhor, but humanity itself. We
may never know in what epoch some members of the human race first began
to think themselves superior for their inability or unwillingness to
engage in the eternal struggle, but it happened and I cannot say the
race is the richer for the ignorance and intolerance the occasion has fostered.
I
often wonder when the antis will turn on chimpanzees, for the humble
chimp breaks all the anti-rules. He is clever, he is mammalian, he acts
very much like a human and he uses tools to hunt other mammalian
species. Oh yes, he does!
Chimpanzees
have recently been filmed fashioning spears, which they use to stab
those dear little bushbabies with the super-cute big eyes, when they
retreat into tree hollows. They have even been filmed using clubs to
kill piglets. It’s clear the chimps don’t have to kill...I mean, there’s
loads of fruit and bugs in the jungle isn’t there? And the bushbabies
and little piggies clearly don’t want to be speared and/or clubbed, or
they’d not run away.
And
a chimp against a bushbaby, I mean....surely that’s the equivalent of a
super-heavyweight going up against a chronic asthmatic grandmother
who’s trying to flee the scene while burdened with heavy shopping? Hell, chimpanzees
even smile with the apparent joy of successfully providing for the
family. Shame on them for there reverse-anthropomorphism!
But
I’m betting the chimps will be safe from anti-hunter victimisation for
as long as they don’t figure out that chucking the spear will give them
an even greater advantage over their quarry. Or maybe they’ll continue
to be immune from ant-hunter contempt even then, because they are not
people, and it is people; people who do not agree with them, not hunters
that the antis really hate.
Anyway, I’ll get outaya way now....
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