Both trophy hunters and serial killers [of humans] obsess on and stalk their victims, whom they objectify and depersonalize in their single-minded quest to boost their self-esteem....
Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, had this to say about the growing problem: “Until we have the courage to recognize cruelty for what it is—whether its victim is human or animal—we cannot expect things to be much better in this world. We cannot have peace among men whose hearts delight in killing any living creature. By every act that glorifies or even tolerates such moronic delight in killing we set back the progress of humanity.”
"Proud" hunter with murdered Cougar...
In light of the rise in violent crime, many have pondered the question:
“How do I know if my neighbor is a psychopathic serial killer?” Well,
unfortunately, it’s not easy. Unless of course you happen to live in any
number of rural areas across the country where hunters are required to wear
blaze orange—then the psychopathic serial killers stand out like a bunch of
sore thumbs.
Okay, so maybe it’s a bit hyperbolic to compare hunters to serial killers.
Yes, they both obsess on and stalk their victims, whom they objectify and
depersonalize in their single-minded quest to boost their self-esteem, and
the kills made by both hunters and serial killers are followed by a cooling
off period, but serial killing usually has a sexual component to it.
Let’s hope hunters aren’t literally getting off on their exploits.
Maybe a better comparison for a hunter would be to a mass murderer: the
inadequate type who snipes with a hunting rifle at innocent passers-by from
a clock tower, or fires an AR-15 at cars from an embankment over a freeway.
Either way, the plain fact is cruelty to animals often leads to the killing
of people. The perpetrators of the Columbine mass school shooting in
Colorado honed their slaying skills by practicing on woodpeckers with their
hunting rifles. David Berkowitz, the self-proclaimed “Son of Sam” serial
killer, who habitually took sport in shooting lovers in parked cars along
the streets of New York City, began his criminal career by shooting his
neighbor’s dog.
Why does the public put up with these people in their midst?
The mainstream media downplays the behavior of serial animal killers as
though hunting was just another “sport” to report on; like they were
covering some Boy Scout Jamboree. They repeat by rote hunter/”game”
department jargon like the animals were inanimate objects, using emotionally
void terms such as “crop” for deer or “wolf harvest” for the unnecessary
torture and murder of sentient beings vastly more admirable than their
pursuers.
Worse yet are the noxious spread of anything-goes anti-wolf/anti-wildlife
websites and chat rooms now widespread in social media. Consider the
following comments made in response to a hunter showing off the cougar he
killed (photo below)...
In other words the poor cougar suffered, possibly for days, in a trap,
before being shot by a trophy hunter. “Non-target” species like cougars
often end up in traps set for other undeserving animals.
The Ravalli Republic reports (in typical mainstream media passionless
fashion) in their article, Montana, Idaho trappers catching more than just
wolves:
In the first year that wolf trapping was allowed in Idaho, trappers captured
a total of 123 wolves.
But according to a survey by the Idaho Fish and Wildlife Department, those
same trappers in 2011-2012 also inadvertently captured 147 other animals,
including white-tailed deer, elk, moose, mountain lions, skunks and ravens.
Trappers reported that 69 of those animals died as a result.
Trappers reported capturing 45 deer. Twelve of those died. They also
captured 18 elk and four moose. One of the elk died.
The same number of coyotes ended up in traps as deer. Trappers reported that
38 were killed. Mountain lions also took a hit. Nine were captured and six
died.
“There are a heck of a lot of people out there trapping furbearers,” said
the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks wildlife management chief. “And there
also are a lot of people trapping coyotes, which aren’t even regulated.”
Meanwhile, Idaho allows trappers to use wire snares that collapse around an
animal’s neck as it struggles to free itself.
The Idaho Department of Fish and Game’s state wildlife game manager
vacuously adds, “No one wants to catch a deer. It costs them a lot of time.”
Any society that looks the other way when people murder animals for fun does so at its peril. Marine biologist, Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring, had this to say about the growing problem:
“Until we have the courage to recognize cruelty for what it is—whether its victim is human or animal—we cannot expect things to be much better in this world. We cannot have peace among men whose hearts delight in killing any living creature. By every act that glorifies or even tolerates such moronic delight in killing we set back the progress of humanity.”
It doesn’t get much more cruel or moronic than this...