Amanda Radke
...Whether it’s activists scheming
to catch a “gotcha” moment on camera or environmentalist groups gunning
to gobble up and “retire” acres of prime rangeland, not to mention the
Silicon Valley investors of the fake meat companies slinging mud our
way, there are far greater challenges facing our industry today than our
grandparents could have ever imagined. It’s scary to even think about,
to be honest.
1. “American Prairie Reserve just as bad as the Missouri Breaks Monument” by Ron Portner for the Billings Gazette
This is a scary example of how the activists are working to gain
control of the land in order to eradicate farmers and ranchers from the
fabric of our nation.
Poertner writes, “APR is gobbling up farms and ranches to stitch
together 500,000 acres of deeded property with 3 million acres of public
land to create a wildlife reserve larger than Yellowstone Park. The
Bureau of Land Management facilitates that effort by its stated
intention to approve APR’s grazing leases for bison and in so doing
essentially grants operational control of huge tracts of public land to
APR.”
2. “Meet the activists risking prison to film virtual reality in factory farms” by Andy Greenberg for Wired
This is a must-read article, and it’s hard not to feel an icy cold
chill — not because of the dramatized horrors perceived and imagined by
the writer, but because of the absolute terror I would feel about activists sneaking onto my property in the middle of the night and putting myself, my livestock and my home at risk.
“We’ll have a precedent that says the right to rescue is legally
recognized, that if an animal is suffering, ordinary citizens have the
right to give them care,” [Wayne] Hsiung [cofounder of Direct Action
Everywhere] says. “I’ll go right back to the factory farm, literally
right after the trial, walk right back in and take another piglet out.”
3. “Animal rights activists suspected in Wisconsin deer stand damage" by Tim Nelson for MPR News
It’s not just animal agriculture that is in the crosshairs of
activists; hunters cannot escape the damage to personal and private
property done by these organizations. With graffiti reading, “Hunt the
hunters” painted inside the destroyed deer stand, it appears the
activists even want to threaten the lives of these outdoorsmen.
Nelson writes, “Authorities in Wisconsin are investigating damage to
deer stands and trail cameras, possibly in connection with the Animal
Liberation Front animal rights group. Photos posted to the sheriff's
office Facebook page show toppled and broken deer stands sprayed with
profanity along with the symbol and initials of the Animal Liberation
Front.”
4. “Ohio woman wearing fur is stabbed by animal-rights activist in church, police say” by Morgan Phillips for FOX News
Phillips writes, “Police believe that Meredith Lowell, 35, stabbed
the woman wearing fur boots based on a prior arrest in 2012, in which
Lowell was charged with attempting to hire a hitman to kill a person
wearing fur.”...
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Friday, December 06, 2019
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