Too Thrilled for the Kill


By Michael Pearlman, 10-04-09

 
 

I didn’t grow up in family of hunters, but as an omnivore, I unequivocally support ethical hunting. It’s a way for parents to instill a love of the outdoors and conservation values to their children, to pass along a tradition while reminding them of the responsibility that accompanies a hunting license. Hunters who feed their families with harvested meat, respect state hunting regulations and do everything possible to minimize the suffering of their prey are doing nothing wrong. In fact, I believe obtaining food directly from the source is something to be proud of.

That stated, I’m also not afraid to say that I find the behavior of some who call themselves hunters abhorrent. For every law-abiding, ethical hunter in the field there are others, a generally hidden minority, who feel no shame in taking part in the wanton killing of animals for sport. This culture of destruction goes back hundreds of years, it’s not a phenomenon that began with the advent of four-wheelers, high-powered handguns and canned hunting safaris to Greenland and Africa. There’s clearly a segment of the population that uses hunting as an excuse to indulge in the power-trip that accompanies the use firearms to dominate other species. What I’ve struggled to understand is, how this behavior develops and how individuals justify it to themselves.

Bison hunting, reintroduced in Wyoming in 1998 as a population control, is a natural attraction for those with questionable hunting ethics. Obtaining a tag is a rare, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, and the massive animals aren’t exactly difficult to track. But when a Wyoming hunter recently paid for a guided bison hunt in the Jackson area, he decided he needed to set some kind of record by hunting with a pistol. When the client’s shots didn’t put the animal down right away (something the guide noticed) he approached the animal looking for the killing shot. Instead, a guide’s assistant wound up in the hospital after getting gored by the terminally wounded animal.

A handgun being used to hunt a 1,000-pound animal seems ridiculous to me. What kind of person derives joy and satisfaction by emptying a Smith and Wesson into a dozing bison? Should state Game and Fish agencies be encouraging or even tolerating these kind of novelty hunts? As distasteful as this appears to me, I have no doubt the hunter will be telling stories about this amazing experience for the rest of his life, despite the fact he’s complicit in the injuries suffered by another person.

In Southwest, Wyoming, a Bureau of Land Management employee was arrested and charged with shooting three wild horses in the corrals of the BLM office he once worked at. This act is the height of callousness, an assassination of animals that weren’t even able to flee. What thoughts were going through this man’s head as he pulled the trigger, and how did he feel afterwards? Did he smile with satisfaction, or was he seeking an outlet for some intense rage buried deep in his psyche?

For some segment of the hunting population, the sport is simply a power trip, an opportunity to extinguish the life of another living thing without any moral qualms. A minority of hunters don’t contemplate what constitutes an ethical hunt, or ever seek to explain why they’re doing it. It’s illegal to hunt from a paved road, but some hunters think nothing of prowling around the woods on a four-wheeler until they can take a shot at an elk without lifting their ass off the seat of their machine.The tricks and shortcuts are out there, some legal and some not. I’ve learned that what type of hunting choices someone makes says a lot about their character.

Hunting is sport for some, an art for others and a simple exercise in dominance for some tiny minority. But at the end of the day, to hold a hunting license is to hold a government-issued license to kill. The people who abuse that privilege reveal the sad and dark side of hunting and the human psyche. It’s a stain that won’t go away, one that reveals a problem that no amount of regulation or enforcement can correct.



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