Pro-Hunt Campaigning

AFRICAN INDABA

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When an anti-hunting crusade or anti-sustainable use message spreads across the web, many ordinary folks feel compelled to post their support on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and so on within minutes. They may feel that they will be noticed if they don’t show empathy with the animals; that they don’t appear as nature lovers. In many cases they fall for cleverly made-up stories which touch hearts and emotions. The nature of the social media prevents many users taking time to evaluate facts, background, context and consequences. A compassionate urban public seems to accept complex issues at simplified headline value, especially if the anyhow scant information is manipulated by skilled media artists into easily digestible and emotion-touching denominators; complex problems are reduced to 140 character tweets. The story of Cecil is a case in point!

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On the other side the millions of hunters apparently are too complacent to support pro hunt drives or engage in countering anti-hunting messages. Probably they also don’t want to be noticed; they may fear potential smear attacks or other niceties from the opposition. Hunters also apparently expect the good news to be delivered by their associations and clubs, complain if they get bad news, or just simply put their head into the sand, saying “I still can hunt, so why rock the boat!”

This must change! Hunters have the better arguments and scientific evidence on their side!

In an article in New York Times I recently read that the omnipresence of social media has created a new sort of shame culture. The author said that “in a guilt culture you know you are good or bad by what your conscience feels. In a shame culture you know you are good or bad by what your community says about you, by whether it honors or excludes you. In a guilt culture people sometimes feel they do bad things; in a shame culture social exclusion makes people feel they are bad.

The article explained that the world of social media is a world of constant display and observation. The desire to be embraced and praised by the community is intense. People dread being exiled and condemned. In this environment, moral life is not built on the continuum of right and wrong; it’s built on the continuum of inclusion and exclusion. In traditional shame cultures the opposite of shame was honor or “face” — being known as a dignified and upstanding citizen. In the new shame culture, the opposite of shame is celebrity — to be attention-grabbing and aggressively unique on some media platform.

Until now hunters did not actively fight this “new sort of moral system” that the anti-use spin doctors propagate; we did not aggressively dispute their unfounded claim to moral authority and their definitions of correct and incorrect action or behavior. Hunters rarely appear in public podium discussions and talk shows to showcase their superior conservation results in the field!

I submit that we need to debate with our adversaries publicly, often and consistently. We also need to include into these debates more representatives of indigenous people who have freely chosen trophy hunting as their conservation model.

The millions of individual hunters should actively engage anti-hunting activists. Hunters should disseminate on all networks the indisputable facts underpinning good conservation! Disseminating factual information wide and far can counter the emotionally-loaded anti-use propaganda. Talk to your neighbors, friends, and colleagues, whenever there is an opportunity!

We need to use all personal and social networks available – create campaigns and petitions, and show presence on discussion forums! Only if we show the world the hard facts, figures and science of conservation in an understandable form will we be able to reach the hearts and minds of people of good will. Well-meaning people, who rightfully care about and advocate for wildlife, need to have access to factual and science based information and have a right to know how real conversation works in the remote and not so remote regions of the world. These good people are – just as the hunters – concerned with the environment; they care for wildlife and nature.

The fact that hunting involves the killing of animals may be unsettling to many non-hunters and nature lovers. One doesn’t have to like hunting, but even if hunting doesn’t coincide with somebody’s own beliefs such individual aversion does not imply that hunting is amoral. Therefore it is essential that hunters use every opportunity to conclusively explain the differences between conservation and preservation and show that good conservation produces surpluses and that surpluses produced by nature can and need to be harvested.

Ultimately, we need to reverse the present “hunters vs. non-hunters” situation, since both groups care for and love wild places and wildlife. Shane Mahoney, known to most readers from his columns in African Indaba and other publications, advocates this cooperation. “Hunters need to take the lead in a broad-based conservation coalition, … and once again welcome all those who care for wildlife, helping them to understand hunting or to accept its contribution, even while they remain less than totally comfortable about it”, he said.

Mahoney also repeatedly said that hunters need to evaluate their actions in the field and from this individual insight discover and establish their own personal True North; their individual vision of an ultimate good like Fair Chase standards and respectable sustainable hunting practices worth defending even at the cost of unpopularity and exclusion! Importantly, hunters have to internalize all the good arguments for their daily dialogue with non-hunters.

If we don’t go out and argue facts and figures with a strong knowledge and with conviction; if we don’t passionately fight for what we believe in, we will lose the war. We need to constantly involve non-hunters in public debates! Hunters have the better arguments! Hunters care deeply for wildlife and wild spaces. This unites us with most of the non-hunters.

This is the very reason that I recommend that hunters from around the world vote on the motions of the debate in New York City (4th May 2016) between two very eminent representatives of our hunting community and two of our most vocal opponents – HSUS president Wayne Pacelle and Borne Free CEO Adam Roberts. The high stake of this live debate is the public perception of hunters and of our actions (see box on this page).

Teddy Roosevelt once said “People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care” – the founder of the National parks movement in the United States and the great conservationist Roosevelt knew that hunters do care for wild landscapes and biodiversity. He was a passionate hunter all his life!

It is up to us to prove to the world that hunters care for wild landscapes and wildlife!

Author: Gerhard R Damm, President CIC Applied Science Division and Publisher of African Indaba
 
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The fact that hunting involves the killing of animals may be unsettling to many non-hunters and nature lovers. One doesn’t have to like hunting, but even if hunting doesn’t coincide with somebody’s own beliefs such individual aversion does not imply that hunting is amoral. Therefore it is essential that hunters use every opportunity to conclusively explain the differences between conservation and preservation and show that good conservation produces surpluses and that surpluses produced by nature can and need to be harvested.

:S Agree:
 
Well said. I agree with all. A stronger messaging campaign is needed. I especially look to organizations like DCS and SCI. Fighting it out in court or lobbying politicians in court isn't enough. If the public opposition becomes to great, all legal arguments will go out in favor of the popular trend. Also, education alone is likely not adequate- we need to really sell the value of hunting, the historical heritage, and most of all the fun! After all, we wouldn't do it if it wasn't so incredibly enjoyable.

Also, great quote:
Teddy Roosevelt once said “People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care
 
Use every chance you get to promote the good we do. And while a lot of anti hunting folks won't listen to a lick of what we are saying those who do may understand and accept to a degree, and honestly that's all we can ask for.
 
I agree with you Johnnyblues but getting others to listen with an open mind is sooooooo difficult! But we should all keep trying.
 
I agree with you Johnnyblues but getting others to listen with an open mind is sooooooo difficult! But we should all keep trying.
Couldn't agree more. Difficult yes but worthwhile endeavours are rarely easy. Never give up.
 
I think the important piece here is to differentiate between "non-hunters" and "anti-hunters."
Plain and simple, anti-hunters are the ones you will probably not sway and many are not worth your time. They are the hard core zealots with the bumper stickers to prove it. They don't dislike hunting, they have an emotional hate towards it and anyone who hunts.

Non-hunters are the ones we meet and see almost everyday. They are the average voter that neither hunts, nor is an anti-hunter. They make a snap judgement based on what they read or see in the news or on social media as African Indaba mentions. But, these people will make rational judgements in an individual setting when they have the time to think thoroughly through the topic. They get emotionally caught up initially, but they calm quickly and can be persuaded with logic.

I spend my time on non-hunters all the time. We do it without thinking. Our every action is a representation of us as hunters. Whether we like it or not, if we litter, the judgement is that all hunters litter. If we get emotional and aggressive with our arguments, then all hunters must be that way. If we make videos and post them on the internet that are a poor reflection of hunting, then we all look bad.
 
Just as an example, I swayed a woman that worked at a local Cabela's about trophy hunting in Africa. Yes, you read that right, she worked at Cabela's.

I was there to pick-up a new suitcase I'd purchased for my trip to Namibia, and she asked me where I'd be going with my nice, new suitcase. I told her I'm going on Safari in Namibia. You should have seen her face.
Her: "What are you going to do with the animals?"
Me: I'm going to have them mounted and shipped back to the US.

At this point, her look of disdain was very apparent. I began to explain to her how trophy hunting actually helps keep animals alive and in abundance in many parts of the world. She didn't understand how it worked in other countries. We're spoiled in the US I told her. I explained how our system is so different in that We the People own those lands for all uses. It doesn't work that way everywhere else.

After about 30 minutes of polite discussion, I had her laughing and she completely did a 180. She actually thanked me for taking the time to explain this to her. She'd never really traveled much. You can guess where most of her misinformation comes from. This is the same for about 80 percent of the US population. Most on AH are blessed in that we can afford to go and do the things we want, which for most here is hunt.
 
Lrntolive I once had the polite conversation with my older sister. She listened but would not be swayed because she places human characteristics on animals. I think most antis do this without considering any other point. My sister loves a good steak but thought I had committed a crime when I shot my Cape buffalo. Never mind that we ate steak from him and that the rest ended up in fine eateries in Pretoria. Go figure!
 

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