A completely one sided article. Not one word on the necessity or desireablity of managing wolf populations.
1 posted on
12/10/2012 2:32:26 PM PST by
marktwain
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To: marktwain
She was a good girl and was beginning to turn her
life around...
2 posted on
12/10/2012 2:34:27 PM PST by
tet68
( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
To: marktwain
200 dollar phones have GPS tracking technology yet these collars cost the taxpayers $4000 each. I need to be selling something to uncle sam.
3 posted on
12/10/2012 2:35:50 PM PST by
Newbomb Turk
(Hey Newbomb, where's your brothers ElCamino ?)
To: marktwain
Worlds most famous wolf shot by hunters.
And here I thought this was about Bill Clinton...
6 posted on
12/10/2012 2:38:06 PM PST by
tet68
( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
To: marktwain
Hopefully, the next human eaten by wolves is the author.
8 posted on
12/10/2012 2:44:41 PM PST by
exnavy
(Got ammo, Godspeed!)
To: marktwain
Our settlers shot the damn wolves because they were killing stock. They did just right. We're the nutsy ones.
Message to Enviro nazis....IT IS NOT 1800 !!
To: marktwain
I think the wolf reintroduction program has been such a resounding success that we should replicate it all along both the east and west coasts. Every native predator should be brought up to historical populations. Start in VA, then NY and CA. Hundreds of wolves and cougars should be let loose in Washington DC, NYC, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, et al.
Share the joy!
12 posted on
12/10/2012 2:51:52 PM PST by
TChris
("Hello", the politician lied.)
To: marktwain
Shooting a collared wolf is not illegal
== = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Gee, I didn’t know wolves had their own clergy.
Also, I am fairly well read, not the dumbest guy in the block but I have to resort to a Joe Don Looney quote (well almost) when asked about the Super Bowl being the means to all ends.
“If it were so important why do we have one every year”?
“How can you claim it is so popular when Millions of people in China don’t have a clue”.
The first I ever heard of this wolf was about 5 minutes ago so it can’t be all that famous???
13 posted on
12/10/2012 2:55:09 PM PST by
xrmusn
(6/98 "It is virtually impossible to clean the pond as long as the pigs are still crapping in it")
To: marktwain
14 posted on
12/10/2012 2:56:13 PM PST by
Hillarys Gate Cult
(Liberals make unrealistic demands on reality and reality doesn't oblige them.)
To: marktwain
Odd, I thought the most famous wolf in the world was killed by a wood-cutter. (And the runner up boiled in a kettle by three little pigs.)
(Sometimes the most famous exemplars of a type are fictional.)
17 posted on
12/10/2012 3:00:37 PM PST by
The_Reader_David
(And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know...)
To: marktwain
I thought the most famous wolf shot was "Limpy"...
Limpy: The Story of Wolf 253
Wolf 253 (also known as "Hoppy" or "Limpy") one of 1,500 gray wolves that lost federal protections in March when the federal government "delisted" wolves from the Endangered Species Act / Photo courtesy Steve Justad
He was known by the nicknames of "Limpy" or "Hoppy," depending on who you talk to; the name comes from an old injury that left him crippled for life. His official designation was Wolf 253, part of the wolf population brought back from the verge of extinction in the northern Rockies, and one of 1,500 gray wolves that lost federal protections in March when the federal government "delisted" wolves from the Endangered Species Act.
And on March 28, 2008, he was shot dead.
19 posted on
12/10/2012 3:03:37 PM PST by
raybbr
(People who still support Obama are either a Marxist or a moron.)
To: marktwain
Also leaves out the part where these are Canadian Timberwolves not indiginous to the Northwest. They are humongous, aggressive and scary.
Hunters out calling up Elk are now finding themselves confronted by these monsters. They are killing hunting dogs like its going out of style and decimating the Elk herds.
20 posted on
12/10/2012 3:06:32 PM PST by
Georgia Girl 2
(The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
To: marktwain
A completely one sided article. Not one word on the necessity or desireablity of managing wolf populations.
What is needed is a program to manage inner city populations.....not wolf.
22 posted on
12/10/2012 3:08:23 PM PST by
Red in Blue PA
(Read SCOTUS Castle Rock vs Gonzales before dialing 911!)
To: marktwain
A completely one sided article. Not one word on the necessity or desireablity of managing wolf populations.
...while conservationists and scientists are alarmed by the hunts that come so soon after wolvers were re-introduced into the area in 1995. These parasites of society (conservationists and "scientists") whether private or public, are always anti-people, plus they struggle violently to make sure that THEY are the only ones annointed enough to enjoy nature generally, and public lands specifically.
I hate the delusional controllers, and I'm neither a hunter, hiker or the outdoorsty type. But I like to think that if I ever become one, I won't have to fight the army of otherwise unemployable, delusional ones.
24 posted on
12/10/2012 3:19:26 PM PST by
publius911
(Formerly Publius 6961, formerly jennsdad)
To: marktwain
If they didnt want the thing shot they should have put an orange vest on it.
25 posted on
12/10/2012 3:23:26 PM PST by
Brooklyn Attitude
(Obama being re-elected is the political equivalent of OJ being found not guilty.)
To: marktwain
“The changes have made headlines and caused controversy, with hunters and ranchers treating wolves as a threat to be eliminated, while conservationists and scientists are alarmed by the hunts that come so soon after wolvers were re-introduced into the area in 1995.”
-snip-
“832F was also popular with tourists because of her immense size and ability as a hunter. Park wildlife experts said that she could take down animals on her own, according to the New York Times. Wolf advocates said that she was a devoted mother to her cubs as well as being leader of a relatively large pack.”
Gee, wonder why the ranchers considered her a “threat”???
26 posted on
12/10/2012 3:25:43 PM PST by
GilesB
To: marktwain
Genetically, wolves are just another breed of dog. Kill all the wild ones.
27 posted on
12/10/2012 3:27:44 PM PST by
freedomfiter2
(Brutal acts of commission and yawning acts of omission both strengthen the hand of the devil.)
To: marktwain
I guess she’s a Zomby Woof now.
29 posted on
12/10/2012 3:31:05 PM PST by
Huskrrrr
To: marktwain
It doesn’t matter to the anti-hunting people if there five hundred wolves or five million. It wouldn’t matter if the wolves were not only taking livestock but killing the occasional human. Ditto for deer hunting where I live. At one point I hit four deer in five years. There were just too many, and the number of motorists and bikers killed in collisions with deer was rising. But the anti-hunters don’t care. These are the people for whom animals are just as important as humans.
To: marktwain
33 posted on
12/10/2012 3:46:01 PM PST by
gotribe
To: marktwain
832F is so named because she was a research wolf. What were her conclusions on the effectiveness of rifle ammunition?
34 posted on
12/10/2012 3:53:38 PM PST by
Repeat Offender
(What good are conservative principles if we don't stand by them?)
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