Attempts to manipulate voters in upcoming initiative about Colorado's wolves... In law this is known as lying by omission.... Concepts that receive significant attention are said to be foregrounded, those that do not are backgrounded. Backgrounding reaches an extreme when relevant information is entirely omitted.
Gray wolf. Photo: Jeffrey St. Clair
Less than three months from now Colorado will decide whether to support
Initiative 107, otherwise known as the Gray Wolf Reintroduction
Initiative. Polling done as recently as August of 2019 by Colorado
State University found that 84% of Coloradans support reintroduction and
suggests that the initiative will almost certainly pass. Understandably, the
prospect of big, bad gray wolves returning to the state’s sparsely populated
Western Slope has not sat well with a vocal minority of folks— outfitters,
elk/deer hunters, livestock producers, as well as the self-described
political organization Coloradans Protecting Wildlife and Stop the Wolf
PAC—who all oppose the initiative.
Although opponents have had well over a year to persuade voters that wolves
are wrong for Colorado and trot out every conceivable argument from wolves
are a vector to disease, to it’s not fair to wolves, to my personal
favorite, wolves will destroy habitat, polling currently indicates
that a paltry 16% of people oppose the initiative. So what went wrong?
Clearly there are several social, cultural, logistical, and geographic
explanations for the anti-wolf lobby’s inability to connect with voters. But
as is true with other controversies, how we regard wolves or any
controversial subject is often more about rhetoric than reality.
We can tell a lot about how a writer regards their audience by looking at
the rhetoric they use and the arguments they make. We also know that the
most compelling rhetoric generally demonstrates an awareness of facts and,
ultimately, of the empirical world from which those facts arise. This is not
to say that we aren’t all blinkered from time to time by our passions and
convictions, but if there is one thing that is consistently absent from
anti-wolf rhetoric, it is the sine qua non of informed decision-making: a
fealty to and honest presentation of the facts.
Chris Dorsey’s article “Colorado Initiative Latest Effort to Manage
Wildlife through Public Opinion,” which appeared in Forbes on August
5th, is illustrative. Despite the piece’s rather benign-sounding title, the
article is a veritable cornucopia of logical fallacies, slanted evidence,
claptrap, and half-truths whose sole purpose seems to be to mislead the
audience, though it isn’t entirely clear who the audience might be: Even
with a +7/-7 margin of error, the Colorado State University poll (and,
indeed, other polls like it) doesn’t suggest that there are many unmade
minds left to capture, nor that Dorsey and his cohort have any reason to
hope that support for the initiative will change.
Hard pressed to account for such a dramatic discrepancy between polling
numbers, opponents of Initiative 107 (and others like it) often levy the
charge that city folks have no right to make decisions that will directly
affect rural people’s lives. I get it. As a member of a democracy who must
also abide by legislation with which I disagree (here in Utah, for instance,
the agricultural community wields tremendous influence over how our
predators are treated), I am not unsympathetic to this complaint. But this
is how a democracy works: rightly or wrongly, for better or for worse, the
majority gets to decide how things are going to go. And I’m sure that rural
folks have voted on issues that don’t directly affect them but do affect
their urban and suburban neighbors. In the case of 107, however, this rural
gripe is not even true according to Ballotpedia.org:
Analysts of the [CSU] survey wrote, ‘Voting intentions were similar across the different regions of Colorado: 84.9% of sampled respondents in the Front Range, 79.8% on the Western Slope, and 79.3% on the Eastern Plains would vote for wolf reintroduction. The proportion that would vote in favor of wolf reintroduction was relatively similar among residents in cities, towns, or rural areas and individuals with and without children. Pet owners were more likely to vote for wolf reintroduction (88.3%) than those that did not own pets (76.4%). Voting intentions were broadly consistent across demographic categories, including gender, age group, income, and education.’
One can only speculate about why opponents of 107 haven’t squarely addressed this breach in their defense, but omission is one of the oldest ploys in the book. In law this is known as lying by omission. In his article How to hide global warming in plain sight, discourse analyst and Emeritus Professor of English Tom Huckin offers a more charitable term for omission, known as “backgrounding”:
To describe these sorts of textual manipulations, discourse analysts use a concept borrowed from the theater world: “staging.” Staging refers to the degree of prominence given to a certain concept in a text or body of texts. Concepts that receive significant attention are said to be foregrounded, those that do not are backgrounded. Backgrounding reaches an extreme when relevant information is entirely omitted.
Whether we are talking about global warming, mountain lions, or wolf
reintroduction, the point is that people deserve the best information upon
which to base their decisions. As information donors, writers do their
readers a profound (or extreme) disservice when we fail to mention key
details that would help audiences understand what is really (not just
personally) relevant. Dorsey makes this misstep when, about half-way through
his article, he writes: “What some see as a black and white issue has become
a blue versus red debate, with densely populated Democratic urban centers
imposing their will through the ballot box on rural, largely Republican
counties.” Dorsey taps into the tired “us versus them” trope, but makes no
mention of the fact that nearly 80% of people polled from the Western Slope
also favor wolf reintroduction.
A similar, though perhaps more egregious example of omission via
backgrounding occurs at the very beginning of Dorsey’s article where,
immediately following the image of a snarling black wolf (one of several
images whose function is obviously to evoke animosity toward the wolf),
Dorsey shares a cautionary tale out of California, otherwise known as
Proposition 117, or the California Wildlife Protection Act, whose purpose
was to ban mountain lion hunting.
According to Dorsey, “the ironic result of Prop 114 [sic]* has been that
more mountain lions are now killed each year in California than before the
supposed ban was implemented.” [(Dorsey refers to it as Proposition 114, but
the purpose of 114 was to increase the number and type of officers covered
under the Briggs Death Penalty Act).] He then cites a Sacramento Bee article
from 2017, which reported that “an average of 98 mountain lions had been
killed” annually for depredation since the hunting ban went into effect,
which is “nearly four times the number prior to the passage of the ballot
initiative.” Sounds damning, but what Dorsey doesn’t say is that in the very
next and last sentence of the paragraph the Bee writer adds that “Experts
caution that the higher numbers may reflect better record keeping and a
larger lion population.”
Granted, when it comes to losing 98 lions a year for depredation, 98 might
seem like 98-too-many, in which case improved record-keeping may not offer
much consolation. But as Wayne Pacelle, the president of the Humane Society
of the United States, was quoted as saying in the Bee article, “The core of
117 was ending the trophy hunting of mountain lions, where people were out
to kill unoffending lions for their heads.” In other words, Proposition 117
did exactly what it was designed to do, which was to end the needless and
wanton destruction of mountain lions that had managed to stay away from
people, livestock and, therefore, out of trouble.
Had the proposition not been passed, Californians could conservatively add
another 200 or more lions to the death tally. The Bee writer did his due
diligence by including this important fact in his article (“. . . the
numbers of cats killed under the depredation permit system is still lower
than the hunting season proposed before Proposition 117’s passage”), but
mum’s the word in Dorsey’s piece and readers are the poorer because of it.
Wildlife ecologist and Biology Professor John Laundré would agree. After
examining 20 years of data from California and 10 other states where trophy
hunting lions is still used as a “management” tool, Laundré and his
colleague Christopher M. Papouchis concluded that sport hunting has not
achieved its desired goals of reducing threats to people, livestock, and
deer. In fact, trophy hunting has had little to no effect on these variables
in the states where trophy hunting is permitted. In states where effects
have been measurable, it’s been in the opposite direction from what state
and federal wildlife management agencies had predicted, e.g., trophy hunting
doesn’t decrease lion predation of livestock; it actually increases it.
“So, the California model, based on public opinion, has actually worked
well,” Laundré told me for this article. “For the controlled minimal removal
of specific problem animals, the state has accomplished the same, or better,
than the other 10 states that use hunters. Hunters spread across the
landscape like a poison, indiscriminately killing in excess of 350 cougars
that would probably never cause any problems. And like poisons on the
landscape, they create more problems than they solve.” Thus, contrary to
Dorsey’s claim that, subsequent to the passage of 117, “the law of
unintended consequences prevailed as it often does when emotionally charged
wildlife management issues wind up on the ballot,” the people of California
did right by mountain lions and ecology by approving Initiative 117.
Examples of textual manipulation abound in Dorsey’s article. One can only
conclude, then, that Dorsey’s piece isn’t interested in providing a reasoned
discussion of the facts; nor is it interested in equipping Coloradans with
the best available information so that they may be confident in their
conclusions. The war on wolves and other predators rages on, but by most
indications the battle to defeat 107—the Gray Wolf Reintroduction
initiative—is over. Come November and with science on their side, Coloradans
will exercise their own civic duty and moral responsibility and do right by
wolves.
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