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Educational Features

The traditions of shooting and hunting in this country are older than the country itself. Firearms have protected us, provided for us and given us joy for centuries. For years, the sport of hunting was an endeavor to be proud of, to take seriously and honorably.

Boy, have times changed. The threat to the shooting and hunting heritage we have enjoyed for so long is growing, seemingly each and every day. Why? Two reasons, really two sides of the same coin. First: hunters and shooters are by nature, for the most part, a quiet bunch, the type of people who would rather spend their time participating in nature than discussing their beloved sports with the non-shooting public.

Second: The non-shooting, non-hunting public rarely spends their time thinking about those who do hunt and shoot. So, when powerful organized groups aggressively attack the shooting and hunting sports, backed by millions of dollars, and inundate the media with their messages, they make an impact, regardless of the truth of the statements they make. The general public is swayed against the hunting public, not because they truly believe shooting and hunting threaten their way of life or the planet they live on. No, just because they just don’t know the whole story.

That’s why education is the key to saving the sports we love. Young people interested in the shooting and hunting sports of course need to be educated in the basics of firearms safety, the ethics of hunting and the like, but now more than ever, they need to be instructed as to the important role the hunting and shooting sports play in the overall picture that is nature. They need to be instructed that not only is hunting fun, it is important to the balance of nature, more so now than at any other time in our history. They need to know about the millions of dollars spent by sportsmen every year that go directly toward government programs to improve the environment and enhance not only the proliferation of game species but non-game species as well.

That’s where you come in.

Let’s face it. The more educated shooters and hunters are about the importance of their sports, the better able they will be to inform the non-shooting and non-hunting public of its importance. And that, indeed, is the key to our survival.

So you owe it to yourself, your sport and your future enjoyment of hunting and shooting to educate yourself thoroughly about all aspects of hunting and shooting. Not just the basics, the things you need to know as a hunter, such as hunting tactics, firearms safety and the like; these things mean little to the non-hunter. You need to study the ethics of hunting, and check out some of the realities of the importance of hunting, and be ready to lay those facts out when your sport needs defending.

Here are the facts:

Hunters pay a tax on every piece of equipment related to their sport. The money taken from this tax, around $200 million annually, is distributed to the states to pay for wildlife management programs, habitat, etc. Whose idea was this tax? Hunters’, that’s who. Hunters gladly pay this tax, which benefits not only game species, but non-game species as well. What other group does that? And that is to say nothing of the fact that most wildlife programs across the nation are funded primarily through the sale of hunting and fishing licenses and tags. And how about the millions of dollars raised by sales of the federal waterfowl stamp, which supports and enhances the national wildlife refuges that dot the country?

Hunters are active participants in nature, very important participants. There is only so much habitat in the world, which will support only a specific number of animals. Hunting is the most viable means of controlling wildlife populations. Think of it this way: Hunters pay to provide a service, the important service of wildlife population control.

As a hunter, you are a conservationist. You are an environmentalist. You are an integral part of nature. That’s not just an emotional statement, a result of a nice self-image. That is a fact. A fact to be proud of, a fact to be shared.


 

 
 

 

 
 
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