Source: Hunting. |
By Gundhramns Hammer
July 26, 2015
No more spring hunting. To protect biodiversity, the European Union´s Birds Directive expressly forbids the killing of migratory birds in
spring.
This goes against hunters´ killing grain, for it has resulted in a shortened bird hunting season in Europe.
And this measure has many a hunters unhappy, some even crying like babies.
In terms of hunting, this means that in countries like France, where hunters have an alien passion to kill birds, the killing season has ended on January 31, one month earlier than previous years.
And hunters will have to wait two more months to resume their killing spree, until September, much later than before. They were used to starting their killing feast every July.
Now, as expected, lots of people including infiltrated extraterrestrial alien hunters, hunters and narco-hunters as well, for there are hunters who are not hunters but narco-hunters, i.e., they use hunting as an pretext or disguise to go out into the bush to pick up the "jewelry" (cocaine, opium, Cannabis, etc.), have protested like hell.
In France, for example, over 100.000 people took to the streets in Paris protesting against the shortened hunting season a few days ago (Video 1).
And this measure has many a hunters unhappy, some even crying like babies.
In terms of hunting, this means that in countries like France, where hunters have an alien passion to kill birds, the killing season has ended on January 31, one month earlier than previous years.
And hunters will have to wait two more months to resume their killing spree, until September, much later than before. They were used to starting their killing feast every July.
Now, as expected, lots of people including infiltrated extraterrestrial alien hunters, hunters and narco-hunters as well, for there are hunters who are not hunters but narco-hunters, i.e., they use hunting as an pretext or disguise to go out into the bush to pick up the "jewelry" (cocaine, opium, Cannabis, etc.), have protested like hell.
In France, for example, over 100.000 people took to the streets in Paris protesting against the shortened hunting season a few days ago (Video 1).
Video 1. France: Protests against shortened bird hunting season. Uploaded by AP Archive.
Hunters say "it limits their freedom".
This is quite ironic because hunters go around shooting and killing animals wherever they can or please.
On other words, hunters take away someone else´s life: The animals´ lives. Hunters deprive animals of their freedom (Fig. 1).
Figure. A deer shot dead, deprived of its freedom. Source: JDS.
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Something to ponder about.
Mon Capitaine, people are supposedly "free" to make this a moral, religious, liberty, political, economic or whatever issue they wish, aren´t they?
Oui, mon ami. They can say whatever they wish even though what they might wish is nothing but an echo of what they were culturally made to wish, or think by that matter, like robots.
Besides, considering that culture binds minds, what is "freedom"?
And here, we are not going to fuck with hunting economics and politics or the
impact of hunting on population ecology or any other aspect of hunting, killing animals
for "sport" or for whatever reason, mon ami.
We will leave that to the real experts. But here we mean experts, not to those "experts" who
after all might not be experts at all but fakes in a world of fakes who go by and about pretending to be "experts" to make a confortable living like the experts without
being experts in a world full of people who function like moronic brainwashed biological robots or zombies.
Don´t worry. We are not here to make this post a killing field.
But whatever is whatever and for whatever is worth, one thing remains true and for this we will let someone speak up:
"The importance of hunting lies in its symbolism not its economics" (Carthill, 1993).
So, if it is not a matter of life and death, i.e survival, are you hunter out there hunting for symbolism or are you trying to kill the feminine (or macho, if a female hunter) aspect within you?
References
Carthill M. (1993). A View to Death in the Morning: Hunting and Nature through History. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, USA. 331 p.
Speth J.D. (2010). The Paleoanthropology and Archaeology of Big-Game Hunting: Protein, Fat, or Politics? Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, New York, NY, USA. 233 p.
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