- Citizens Need to Act to Base State Predator Control More on Science
- The Cora and Corey Show
- Surprise! Good News from the Alaska Board of Game!
- Alaska Politicians, Lawyers Fight Rages on Against Federal Authority
- Alaska's Q&A with Legislative Candidates
- Feds Right to Study Unimak Herd
- Unimak Island’s Caribou: A Crisis Created by Fish and Game?
- Thanks to the legislature, the Park Service and Rudy
- Here's the facts about predator control policies
- My turn: Speak out against wildlife management policies
- Al Barette, Alaska Board Of Game Nominee, Skins Wolf, Cites Bible (VIDEO)
- My turn: Predator 'control' is out of control
- Wildlife biologists feeling trapped by Rossi can speak up
- Board is dangerously out of touch
- Rossi to head wildlife division
- Game Board should listen to 500 residents, not 3 trappers
- State hypocritical in allowing Denali wildlife to be killed
- Alaska Board of Game candidate Mr. Al Barrette should NOT be confirmed by the Legislature.
- Alaska Legislature Plans $1.5 Million Astroturf Fight Against Endangered Species Act
- Alaska's War on Science Needs to End
- Predator Control
- Resource Development, Wildlife: We Need Them Both
- Alaska's Wild Game is Farmed for Benefit of Outside Hunters
- Wildlife resources managed for pleasure, profit of a few
- State's Wildlife Management Relies Too Much on Dead Animals
| Fish and Game is Doing Lousy Job Managing the State's Wildlife |
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The state's brochure to "educate" voters about predator control declares wild animals are "important food sources for Alaskans." The brochure claims that "the Intensive Management Law" -- a loony notion that nature can be legislatively mandated to pump out enough moose and caribou to feed all Alaskans -- "directs ADF&G to undertake predator control." But not even Bush Alaskans can "live off the land" anymore ("Fuel costs spur migration from Bush," Gregg Erickson, Aug. 10). It's all about the money being made by the recreational, motorized, wildlife-killing industries. Alaska's dwindling wildlife is a political subsidy that mostly feeds recreational hunting fantasies. The state claims to respond appropriately if "hunting pressure" causes wildlife declines. Yet hunting and trapping continue unabated in the hunted-out, trapped-out wildlife death zones of Hatcher Pass. State biologists always claimed there were "too many moose ... too many cows ... too many moose per square mile." Now there is hardly any wildlife at all. In Alaska, wild animals are "hunted" and "managed" the same way -- with guns and motors. The "ADF&G biologists" who approved killing all the moose now approve killing wolves from aircraft. Thousands of gallons of aviation fuel are being burned to blast wolves from the air so potbellied guys can be hauled into the wilderness like sacks of Mat-Valley potatoes, play pioneer-subsistence hunters, and then motor back to their comfy, Lower 48 lifestyles. -- Rudy Wittshirk, Willow |
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