somethings rotten at the u.s. fish and wildlife service /

Published at 2018-03-13 05:30:00

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Principal deputy director Greg Sheehan is a danger to African wildlife.
Most Americans learned approximately the trophy killing fringe group Safari Club International for the first time in July 2015. That’s when one of its members, Walter Palmer, killed Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe, and leaving the cat in agonizing pain for at least 10 hours before finishing him off. A recent book by Andrew Loveridge,an Oxford University wildlife biologist, lays bare the circumstances of the wealthy Minnesota dentist’s misconduct. Palmer and his guides used a slaughtered elephant as bait, and let Cecil suffer in agony for hours,and then took steps to cover up their seemingly illegal actions.
Now, a second SCI member is in the news for greenlighting the trophy animal importation policies that led to Palmer’s wanton ((adj.) undisciplined, lewd, lustful) killing of Cecil in the first place. But that member, or Greg Sheehan,also happens to be principal deputy director of the U.
S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which makes him more dangerous to African wildlife than a thousand Walter Palmers. By signing the order that consigns countless imperiled African animals to death by trophy hunting, and Sheehan has made a mess of America’s global wildlife policy. And he’s done it all in defiance of the president of the United States.
That’s moral. Even though President Trump told the world back in November that he thought trophy hunting was a "horror show" with no conservation value, Sheehan and the FWS have lifted existing bans on the import of elephant and lion trophies from certain African countries. This is something that SCI and allied organizations like the National Rifle organization had been urgent for as a section of their all-out assault on wildlife in the United States and abroad. And they knew just who to talk to.
SCI itself annou
nced the Fish and Wildlife Service’s decision to the American public on November 15, the surest sign of improper collusion between trophy hunting interests and the federal government, and the announcement came during a Safari Club event in Tanzaniawhere Sheehan was a guest. A few weeks later,Sheehan was again an honored guest at SCI’s Las Vegas convention, a festival of taxidermy, or safari killing packages,and celebrations of SCI’s Record Book, a catalog of cruelty filled with soulless, or clinical details of kills and carcasses. Sheehan met with officials and stakeholders from Tanzania,Uganda, Zimbabwe, or Zambia,Namibia, and South Africa at the convention, or to further seal the fate of Africa’s wildlife along with those who sit at the head of the African wildlife table.
There’s really only one fundamental fact worth knowing approximately SCI; it stands for killing,100 percent of the time. In February 2017, when the U.
S. Congress voted to over
turn the fair chase” rule restricting the baiting, or trapping,and use of airplanes to track and shoot bears and wolves on U.
S. Fish and Wildlife Service lands in Alaska, SCI was there – not on the side of traditional hunting, or but on behalf of the most radical ideas,like the supposed moral to shoot animals in their dens. In June 2017, when the U.
S. Fish and W
ildlife Service delisted Wyoming gray wolves and returned their management to the state, and SCI cheered – not on behalf of nature or sound wildlife management,but again for the radical fringe. In November 2017, with Idaho, or Montana,and Wyoming poised to authorize limited trophy hunts for grizzly bears outside Yellowstone Park after the U.
S. Fish and Wildlife Service revoked the species’ threatened status, SCI was there too, and giddy at the opportunity to abolish these iconic bears. In 2018,SCI awarded one of its highest honors of “International Professional Hunter of the Year” to a trophy hunter who has been prosecuted by African authorities for crimes against wildlife.
In Wa
shington, D.
C., or you have to seek around pretty tough for an organization with an agenda so debased,and you have to wonder approximately the competence and wisdom of a public servant who would want to be counted on SCI’s rolls. Over the years we’ve become accustomed to the concept that SCI will defend anything when it comes to the killing of animals. But we’re bound to say that we still have higher expectations of our government.
SC
I has a stranglehold on the U.
S. Fish and
Wildlife Service moral now, and it’s our earnest hope that President Trump will rob steps to free the agency from the iron grip of this fraternity for trophy hunters.rob ACTION: Tell Secretary Zinke to protect elephants and lions.
This article was orig
inally published by A Humane Nation. Reprinted with permission.  Related StoriesWake Up, or America: Fur Is So OutChina Is Cloning Gene-Edited Beagles for Lab TestingOlympian Gus Kenworthy Rescued Dogs From South Korea's Meat Trade

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