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Judge Donald Molloy Blocks Deal To Lift Wolves' Endangered Species Protections In 2 States

Endangered Wolves Protections

By KEITH RIDLER   04/ 9/11 07:46 PM ET   AP

BOISE, Idaho -- A federal judge has denied a proposed settlement agreement between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and 10 conservation groups that would have lifted endangered species protections for wolves in Montana and Idaho.

U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula on Saturday rejected the agreement that could have led to public hunting of some 1,300 wolves in the two states.

In the 24-page decision, Molloy cited the court's lack of authority to put part of an endangered species population under state management and expose that population to hunting, noting "Congress has clearly determined that animals on the ESA must be protected as such," and the court couldn't "exercise its discretion to allow what Congress forbids."

He also said he couldn't approve the settlement proposed in March because not all the parties involved in the case agreed with it. Part of the argument for the settlement was that it could end litigation, but Molloy noted that was unlikely given the opposition by some to the proposed settlement.

Saturday amounted to a one-two punch for the 10 conservation groups as Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester and Idaho Republican Rep. Mike Simpson on the same day announced wolves in Montana and Idaho would be taken off the endangered list under the budget bill pending before Congress.

One of the reasons the 10 conservation groups entered into the settlement was because of growing political pressure and potential Congressional action to reduce wolf numbers in Montana and other states due a gradual increase of wolf attacks on livestock and some big-game herds suffering declines. The groups hoped a favorable court decision would provide greater protection for wolves than lawmakers might provide.

So the groups not only lost in court on Saturday, their fears concerning lawmakers removing federal protections for wolves also became more real.

"The congressional threat was very much on people's minds when we negotiated the settlement," said Andrew Wetzler of the Natural Resources Defense Council. "In light of the court ruling, it's going to make it more difficult to derail the rider that may well be attached to the budget deal that will provide much fewer protections for wolves than the settlement would have."

The proposed settlement effectively asked Molloy to reverse his previous rulings on the matter. Last August he faulted the Fish and Wildlife Service for a 2009 decision that took wolves off the endangered list in Montana and Idaho but not neighboring Wyoming. He said decisions on the Endangered Species Act should be based on science and not on political boundaries, such as state lines.

The federal government appealed that decision, leading to the proposed settlement agreement that has now been rejected.

"I can't blame Molloy for the ruling," said Kieran Suckling of the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the 10 conservation groups favoring the settlement. "It's a very tortuous situation. We entered into a settlement agreement we didn't love but thought it was the lesser of two evils."

The Alliance for the Wild Rockies, one of the four plaintiffs in the lawsuit that did not agree to the settlement, said Molloy's rulings have consistently followed federal law, and his rejection of the settlement followed those same principles. Just because some of the plaintiffs agreed to the settlement doesn't make the deal any more legal, said Michael Garrity, the group's executive director.

"We think the fastest way to remove (wolves) is for everybody to work together so they can be legally removed from the endangered species list," Garrity said.

Suckling said the center wouldn't appeal Molloy's decision, but planned to work to stop the wolf rider on the in the budget bill pending before Congress. Wetzler said his group would do the same, but was reserved about the possibility of success.

"Idaho and Montana have long maintained that they can responsibly manage wolf populations," he said. "They may get the chance to prove that. And we'll be watching."

Garrity called the rider "bad news for wolves."

"We don't think congress should gerrymander the Endangered Species Act," he said.

An official with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service did not immediately return a call from The Associated Press on Saturday.

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BOISE, Idaho -- A federal judge has denied a proposed settlement agreement between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and 10 conservation groups that would have lifted endangered species protections f...
BOISE, Idaho -- A federal judge has denied a proposed settlement agreement between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and 10 conservation groups that would have lifted endangered species protections f...
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11:53 PM on 04/16/2011
While Congress is at it, perhaps they should also consider taking Human Beings off the Endangered Species List!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edy Williams
06:31 PM on 04/24/2011
CONGRESS SHOULD ATTEND TO ISSUES OF A fREEZE ON RAISING ANY GAS! PUMP PRICES,."170 "WOLVES LEFT? tHIS IS A DISGRACE.TO kILL A WOLF,,THEY ARE BLESSED SPIRITUAL CREATURES,HERE SINCE EARTH WAS CREATED.. ONE WHO KILLS ONE WILL BE FILLED WITH A SPIRIT FROM THE DEVIL HIMSELF & BURN IN HELL!. Edy ,(RANCO MIRAGE CA).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AG creative
Ba Gawk!
06:51 PM on 04/16/2011
I'm actually baffled that Idaho protected any animal at all - let alone wolves!

They have no animal protection laws at all there!? You could light a cow on fire and the cops wouldn't do a thing.

Also, the gun laws are so lax that 'hunters' would be unloading automatic m-16s and ar-15s with extended clips on those wolves - not a fair chance at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CATNIP1
native Texan
10:12 PM on 04/12/2011
First the poor and the middle class, now the wolves. Republicans are focusing on the wrong things ! Where are the JOBS they promised in the last election ?
02:26 AM on 04/16/2011
CATNIP is right. Why is this rider attached to this bill? This rider will delist WOLVES in my PNW states and it's disgusting, slimy politics. It's disgusting . Be active. Contact your representatives and your 2 senators. Easy to find on the internet. It will take you five minutes to find them and either call or send an e=mail. THIS IS DEMOCRACY PEOPLE!! Do your part ! See what you are for gets approved. protect an engagered species (wolves). Feel good about standing up fpr his country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edy Williams
06:34 PM on 04/24/2011
hI cATniP!.yeS, WHAT ARE THE VITAL ISSUES HERE ? i SEE KIDS PUSHING THEIR GASLESS CARS ,THRU INTERSECTIONS. iTS ABSURD. wHERE IS THE CONCERN WASTED ON OUR POOR WOLFS, TO THE CRITICAL MATTERS? "jOBS"
09:49 PM on 04/12/2011
Wolves are important to balance the ecosystem. They need us to defend them. It's most effective to call or e-mail your senators and representa­tives. You are a taxpayer and your opinion should be heard. If you don't know who your representatives are, go to https://wr­iterep.hou­se.gov/wri­terep/welc­ome.shtml to find the representatives. Call and/or e-mail them. Contact your senators as well. This is not something that is supported by all "northern states". This is time sensitive, so please act soon.
01:24 AM on 04/16/2011
Absolutely!! Contact your senators and house of representatives (although they have already voted) and let them know that you will NOT stand for this RIDER attached (why do we allow this crap where the politicians attach crap to bills) to the budget bill that appeases politicians pandering to WA, (I live in WA) , Idaho, MT, WY,etc. Bullcrap!! You have more power than your know. Policians follow most popular opinions--so that means getting your friends to comment as well--think of it as your good deed of the day.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
05:31 PM on 04/12/2011
i tried researching Judge Molloy's email address and phone number and found nothing !!!!! we should ALL contact Montana's politicians, including Judge Molloy !!!!!...i'm sure we will be given the neccessary info if we ask !!!!!!...we must also contact our own state's politicians and discuss our concerns about possible wolf releases in our states and ask what we can do to help the wolves to survive !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

High Lander,
you hit the problem in the eye !!!!!!...the LOBBISTS !!!!!!!!!!
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saami
Cranky old lady
01:43 PM on 04/12/2011
Yeah! How can we let the judge know that we support his decision?
04:24 PM on 04/12/2011
Totally!! This judge had sense enuf not to let these 'conservative honkys' who wanna hunt 'lift' a ban on hunting endangered species! WTF do we have these endangered species lists/LAWS for???Now see the 500 DEAD TURTLES washed up on the Gulf that are also on the Endangered Species List..and YET..NO ACCOUNTABILITY by or for BP on these deaths?? That is why we have this LAW to make VIOLATORS ACCOUNTABLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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saami
Cranky old lady
05:02 PM on 04/13/2011
You are right. We are the only species that despoils our home planet, causes mass extinctions of other species and seems to feel this planet is here just for us.
07:26 PM on 04/11/2011
"increase of wolf attacks on livestock and some big-game herds suffering declines."

Wow, these einsteins are something else! What do you think happens when a predators numbers are increased? They turn vegetarian? Of course there were going to be more live stock deaths and the elk and deer herds would thin... That's exactly what was expected.

As far as livestock goes, boo-hoo, you lose a little money. They are not ravaging live stock. Picking off a few here and there is not ravaging. Nor are they ravaging the wild herd animals. It's amazing that people think its OK for us to hunt and kill herd animals to thin the numbers (the main reason most people say they should be allowed to hunt), but not the wolves.

The only reason people are pushing for this aside from fear and ignorance (and perhaps lust for the chance to hunt wolves), is the money lost from herd animals, which in the scope of things is not as much as we are led to believe...
08:59 PM on 04/11/2011
Fanned and faved for common sense!
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saami
Cranky old lady
01:43 PM on 04/12/2011
Me too!
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Praetoria Cohors
Pragmatic Libertarian
09:49 PM on 04/11/2011
"Nor are they ravaging the wild herd animals." What a provocative and completely ignorant statement.

http://www.saveelk.com/wolf_005.htm
http://www.mtmultipleuse.org/endangered/wolf_pics.htm
http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/cms/wildlife/wolves/manage/PopManagePlan.pdf

Who paid to have a non-indigenous species of predator into an environment where they have no checks and balances? That would be your tax dollars. And who is paying ranchers who lose livestock to wolf kills? That would be your tax dollars. Who is paying the salaries of government trappers attempting to reduce the wolf over-population? That would be your tax dollars. Why do wolf cubs get gassed in their dens? Because of your shortsighted beliefs.

But as long as you have that warm, fuzzy feeling inside, because you think you did the right thing, it is worth it, right? Go ahead, continue to try to control nature, and we will see how that works out for you. Better yet, post your town, so I can transplant a pack of Canadian Gray Wolves into your area. You should have nothing to worry about.
12:44 AM on 04/12/2011
Who is paying for ranchers to overgraze and destroy federal lands that I hike and camp on? My tax dollars, that's who! Who killed all of the predators for your selfish and profitable means, you!
Your venom is misdirected. Let's see how that works for you.Oh, and by the way, I happen to live in one of your Northern states that this impacts.
01:17 AM on 04/12/2011
Idaho has 82,747.21 square miles of land. Anyone with a brain can figure out that 1000 wolves (current population per you) are not going to be able to cover too much land on this much property. Especially since you're gonna come after them for complete annihilation. Not exactly sporting. Come on boys, just admit that you are on these forums for money, greed, and blood lust.
I am supplementing all of these supposed "tax dollars' that you hunters and ranchers are purportedly paying. Nooooo, it's all coming out of my pocket and I dont' have a say. It's my understanding that the federal government is giving you a little extra on the side (my money again--with no say on how it's used). Oh, yeah--I'm paying for everything! You then have the gall to demand the compete annihilation regardless of the effects on the ecosystem (but of course, we can't ask anyone without an advanced education (which wildlife management includes) to be able to understand/see past their own selfish agenda. some of us are willing to pay more taxes to uphold and support the beautiful land we life in. I'm really tired of paying all the money to have my public lands and wildlife destroyed for you selfish, selfish people.
07:20 PM on 04/11/2011
No mattter where you live in the 'country' or the outback or outskirts of cities..If you want to keep domestic animals you better be prepared to invest in their 'safe harbor'. If you can't afford to do so..Don't keep domestic animals around for tempting the wildlife, be it wolves, coyotes, bears, or mountain lions! You are in THEIR TERRITORY and if they can hop it or yank it down,..ie the fence..it'll happen. You have to cover your livestock from head to toe..Cages have to have a covering. And for the cattle industry..believe me they are prepared for a certain amount of loss,..as it is to them pretty much capitol investment that requires purchasing insurance against acts of nature. So no, I don't feel so much for the cattle industry. It's a business, but with small time livestock owners, they can also take precautions if they are living in these creatures territories. Unfortunately, many do not, and wonder why all the bear break-ins. PS. Never feed the wildlife. Unless you want company.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
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Praetoria Cohors
Pragmatic Libertarian
10:12 PM on 04/11/2011
From your sight:

"On August 5, 2010, a federal judge overturned a decision by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to remove gray wolves from the Endangered Species Act (ESA), restoring their endangered status and paving the way for these critical predators to rebuild their numbers to ecologically sustainable levels. This ruling is the result of a lawsuit brought against the FWS in 2009 by Defenders of Wildlife and other conservation organizations."

The original federal goal of a total of 300 wolves across Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana was reached in 2002. As of 2007, an estimated 732 wolves lived in Idaho alone. Currently, there are over 1000 wolves in Idaho. So why did this federal judge lie, and say, "we are merely paving the way for these critical predators to rebuild their numbers"? That goal was completely reached in 2002, but the ruling to re-list them as endangered was made in 2010? Can you say politics?

http://fis­handgame.i­daho.gov/c­ms/wildlif­e/wolves/m­anage/PopM­anagePlan.­pdf

This is exactly what the pro-wolf crowd does. It ignores the evidence and plays on people's ignorance regarding wolves. But now we are armed with video evidence, photos, and game biologists who back up the claim the we have opened Pandora's Box.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
05:59 PM on 04/11/2011
Thunder,
i hate to disagree with you...NOT !!!!! coyotes WILL ATTACK unprovoked, while wolves will run !!!!!...wolves are VERY PRIVATE animals, perferring deep timber to open ground !!!!! as for hunting game, they take the old, weak, and sick.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robin Terrace
daughter of a Union Ironworker
05:42 PM on 04/11/2011
First of all Ed Bangs pulled a fast on on the State of Idaho when bringing Canadian gray Wolves to Idaho who are not the indigenous specie to Idaho (or Montana or anywhere in the west). Since relocating here, where there is more light during the year than in N. Canada the females estrus cycle has accelerated so that the female produces 3 litters a year or more. The wolves are taking over here. Fish and game air surveys have reported significant decline of elk and deer herds. The elk have been hit the worst. Canadian gray wolves (which is the species that is here) are predator opportunists. It is BS that the myth circulates that they kill the sick and weak. Do a little investigating before making blanket statements about the poor wolves. Wait till some child gets attacked, then you will all whine we did not hunt them.
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gdauth
Dogs rule
06:35 PM on 04/11/2011
If the people of Idaho had not wiped out the indigenous wolf population in the first place you would not have Canadian wolves. Besides, I wonder how many Canadian wolves migrated into Idaho from Canada to fill the void that you people created by killing the resident wolf population. After all, they don't present their passport at the local border station. As for your theoretical death of a child by wolves, how many are killed each year by drunk drivers. Are you going to hunt down and kill drunk drivers? I think not. You are only using the dead child argument to prop up your emotional argument as to why you think wolves should be eliminated. And that is what you will do based on past performance.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robin Terrace
daughter of a Union Ironworker
07:31 PM on 04/11/2011
Good grief, That was a of vitriol! Wolves do not need to be eliminated they need to be controlled.
This what I will do based on past performance? You certainly made this into a personal attack. Not any wolves migrated into Idaho from Canada. They liked Canada it was their native environment and they stayed above the 49th parallel. We do still have indigenous wolves on the eastern slope of the divide here and they get along with everyone fine, so don't say we wiped them out. We did not. The Canadian gray, due to being misplaced into a different eco system, are opportunistic predators. Idaho needs the population of wolves controlled which at present they are not. I suppose you would like just wolves in the Rockies and no other wildlife because that is what we are headed for if they are not controlled. The argument in courts is to control the population of the wolves. Not wiping them out. We had a controlled hunt on wolves two years ago and our elk population rebounded. Get your facts straight. You are the emotional idiot. Obviously you do not live here. Get over yourself.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
04:57 PM on 04/11/2011
http://www.defenders.org/wildlife_and_habitat/wildlife/wolf,_gray.php

From My Cold Dead Hands !!!!
check this link out !!!!...there are alternatives for ranchers, and something J.D. Riser didn't mention that i did was: wolves hunt ONLY the weak, sick, and old of the "game herds" and livestock !!!!!...BTW, given the right place, YOU'D be in a "game herd" !!!!!!

as has been pointed out, we ALL (MEANING ANIMALS) have a place on this Earth
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From my cold dead hands
pro-gun/anti-criminal
06:15 PM on 04/11/2011
Thanks for the link, I bookmarked it and will look at it as soon as possible, I have a couple of homework assignments that are due soon--47 years old and I am going back to college.
07:47 PM on 04/11/2011
God, I feel sorry for you. Only because I'm there. Never a bad time for more education. Good luck.
09:00 PM on 04/11/2011
I actually did mention something in another post somewhere on here. Thunder keeps trying to argue that they wolves need to be culled to protect the herds. I said something along the lines of that being a bad argument when he enjoys hunting the herds, humans usually pick prime targets, and the wolves the weak ones.
I eat meat. I can't find fault in hunting animals who have hardly any natural predators. Deer populations across most of America would get out of hand if we didn't hunt them. Surely, shooting a deer which has lived a good life in the wild is far more humane than eating beef, chicken, or any other farmed meat. Friendlier to the environment as well. The problem is, as we point out, it's not our natural role as practiced. Human hunters almost always go for the healthiest target available. Not only do we feel better about the meat, if we even eat it, but in all honesty, we simply like the more impressive kill, the better trophy. That is certainly not for the betterment of any herd.
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sophiemaki
01:45 PM on 04/11/2011
i love wolves and cyotes......
all the land and the circle of . their life.........has been taken away from them..
it is not their fault.
02:11 PM on 04/11/2011
But at what point does their priority in the food web become higher than all others? When do humans make the decision to protect our own livelihood and provide safety at the expense of some species. I like wolves and coyotes too, but I also enjoy game herds immensely. The way I see it is that no species should be forced into early extinction through overhunting. However, both wolves and coyotes have shown a propensity for aggressive behavior towards humans, mostly unprovoked. Predator and herd numbers are never going to return to pre-colonial numbers since the land will never return to that condition either. Reintroduced species require the same regulation, if not more than any other game animal. It's just reality that overcompensating by favoring wolves over other creatures will have significant and widespread implications that can't go unaddressed.
03:55 PM on 04/11/2011
Unprovoked? Seriously? First of all and speaking about wolves, we have encroached upon their natural habitat. Secondly, we have hunted them close to extinction. Finally, they're wild animals. Most wolves. If they didn't, they'd be dead.
It's stupid to even associate the two. Coyotes are a much smaller predator and are not endangered in the least. Humans actually expanded their range when we started building bridges across the Mississippi and other rivers. In the past, they lived strictly in the west. Coyotes also are mostly incapable of harming humans. They have killed children and pets, but the vast majority avoid humans. I've been coyote hunting. They won't seek you out.
Wolves on the other hand, can kill people, but RARELY do and have survived only because they avoid us in almost all cases. If you were able to compare the number of humans killed by wolves to the number of wolves killed by humans, the latter would dwarf the former. Most of your 'unprovoked aggression' has been on farm animals. It's only natural that they would do so. They're predators. And most of the farmers who have killed wolves to protect their herds in the past hundred years and to today did so for profit, not protecting their food source and lives.
03:55 PM on 04/11/2011
What I find most ludicrous about your position is that you try to justify it with science, yet it isn't on your side at all. We are not competing with wolves for survival. We have our place in the 'food web' firmly entrenched. Wolves should not be treated like your 'game herds' because they have a different place in the food web and have been reduced far below what their numbers should be, even adjusting for a 'post-colonial' environment. The very reason we need to hunt many of the 'game herds' is that we have so forcibly upset the balance by eliminating 90% of the predators (by number) which would have normally preyed upon them and kept their numbers in check. If we ever reach a point where the wolf population rebounds significantly, then maybe open hunting. But 1300 is far from that.
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From my cold dead hands
pro-gun/anti-criminal
08:33 AM on 04/11/2011
This comment is going to be controversial, and it may seem to be illogical, but this is meant to make you think, so here goes.....

I do not believe that there are any animal species that are hunted (not poached, I am talking about regulated hunting where you are required to buy a license or permit in order to hunt) that are in danger of extinction....... If I am wrong about this statement, I need to know about it, please anyone out there that has evidence to the contrary, educate me.

What I am saying, is that hunters like to hunt, and whether you like that or not, they pay a lot of money to ensure that there will always be animals for them to hunt. The amount of money that non-hunters pay to protect animal species is much less, I think. ( If I am wrong about this statement, once again, I would like to be directed to the statistics or information that refutes this statement.)

If an animal does not want to be on the endangered species list, it is an advantage for them to be tasty. I cannot think offhand of any animals that we like to eat that are on the endangered species list.
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gdauth
Dogs rule
09:09 AM on 04/11/2011
Try wood bison. Bison is another species that we tried to wipe out. The reason was we were trying to wipe out the plains Indians by removing their food source. You can look up the endangered species list. Google it. We have a long history of trying to eliminate one species or another for one reason or another including each other. By the way, I have heard that humans are quite tasty, so I guess we are safe!
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From my cold dead hands
pro-gun/anti-criminal
09:42 AM on 04/11/2011
OOOOF. Ya got me. "tastes like chicken?"

Thanks for the reply. :-)
hagenjr
Shovel ready freeborn son of the Republic
03:05 PM on 04/11/2011
you can sport hunt bison in the dakotas, probably montana as well.


As for difficulty in shooting, almost none. They are nearly blind like a moose.

The meat is excellent however.
11:58 AM on 04/11/2011
Thanks for pointing out the obvious that so many "conservationists" don't seem to grasp. As hunters, our financial contributions do so much more for wild populations than groups like alf and PETA. Hunters and sprotsmen have an invested interest in keeping game populations healthy and large, thus ensuring longer seasons and higher limits. Hunters enjoy the animals they hunt, possibly more than non hunters. Afterall
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saami
Cranky old lady
01:50 PM on 04/12/2011
Hey, did you know that hunting is not a sport. In a sport all of the parties voluntarily join the sport. Calling it a sport is a lame excuse for killing. You are disgusting. I would rather have wolves and coyotes and mountain lions than hunters. At least they kill only for food.
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themodernleader
07:34 AM on 04/11/2011
  In this declining nation as we decline into the matrix of nature, the wolves are becoming our natural competitors in the balance of nature.  Humans will become a natural source of nutrition and survival for those magnificent predators.  Our administrative elite will not permit our sinking citizens from protecting themselves.
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saami
Cranky old lady
01:53 PM on 04/12/2011
WTF!