By Bill Croke on 12.11.08 @ 6:07AM
That's what wildlife managers call it. But it's an ugly national
problem.
I saw a short item recently in the Idaho Falls
Post-Register. Forty-six dead Canada geese were found
stuffed into a dumpster in Soda Springs, Idaho. A state wildlife
official speculated that the geese were shot "over decoys" placed
in nearby farm fields or from a boat on Blackfoot Reservoir.
It's a sickeningly familiar story. Two moose shot and left to rot
near Dubois, Wyoming this fall. Two yearling grizzly bears killed
near Union Pass in roughly the same area as the moose. An
increasing wasted antelope body count littering the gas fields
near Rock Springs and Pinedale, Wyoming. Senselessly murdered
mule deer left on the ground in Nevada. All this has nothing to
do with the legal autumn hunting seasons, an annual "rite"
properly observed by thousands in the West. It's even far removed
from old-fashioned good-old-boy poaching to put meat on the
family table, which seems almost moral by comparison. Old school
poachers don't leave rotting carcasses behind. Sometimes, if the
animal can be classified as trophy game, such as a bull elk, the
antlers or whole head will be removed, sometimes not. No, it's
"thrill killing," as wildlife managers call it, and it seems to
occur regularly somewhere in the West. It's actually a national
problem.
In Portage, Wisconsin, this was recently seen on a grand scale.
According to the Milwaukee
Journal-Sentinel, two young men, Josh Kerl, 21, and Adam
Stalsberg, 22, were arrested and each charged with two
misdemeanors for hunting deer in a closed season and hunting deer
at night. They were also issued a total of 74 citations for
various small game violations that carried fines totaling
approximately $8,000. The two were fined $2,100 per charge on the
deer and lost their hunting privileges for three years. What
boggles the mind -- despite the official leniency of the charges
-- is that Wisconsin wildlife officials estimate that Kerl and
Stalsberg, using spotlights and high powered rifles, killed some
600 animals in the past year. Sandhill cranes, owls, crows,
snapping turtles, ducks, red-tailed hawks, wild turkeys,
raccoons, possums, even sturgeons swimming in a reservoir.
"Thrill killing lends itself to instant gratification, not the
totality of the hunt," said Chuck Horn, Natural Resources
Conservation Warden Supervisor for southwest Wisconsin. That's an
understatement.
According to studies extant, these wildlife atrocities are
committed mostly by young men aged 15 to 22, the video game
generation. Much has been written about the nihilistic violence
that kids are exposed to when they play some of these games. A
study by the American Psychological Association posits that
"violent video games may be more harmful than violent television
and movies because they are interactive, very engrossing and
require the player to identify with the aggressor." The study,
authored by researchers Craig A. Anderson, Ph.D. and Karen E.
Dill, Ph.D. goes on to reveal that "young men who are habitually
aggressive may be especially vulnerable to the
aggression-enhancing effects of repeated exposure to violent
games."
My own experience observing kids playing video games (in the
Salmon, Idaho Public Library, no less) are that they always seem
to involve human characters hunting down and shooting other human
characters with automatic weapons, while being shot at
themselves. Since it's apparent that a small percentage of kids
can actually suffer psychological problems from playing these
games, an empathy deficit if you will, I think it might be an
easy jump to get up from a computer game, go out and pull the
trigger on an elk or a deer, and then walk away with a laugh.
After all, it's only a game.
It's no secret that hunting numbers are down (about 8% nationally
since 2001). Young folks -- even in the West, where they live
amongst abundant wildlife, are less and less being brought up in
the traditional hunting culture that stresses firearms safety in
hunter training courses, and an ethical view concerning the
actual act of killing game (field dressing, the proper care of a
carcass, etc.): the doctrine of "Fair Chase" and adhering to
local state hunting regulations as a moral imperative.
Western newcomers are mostly ignorant -- through no fault of
their own -- of the hunting culture; in fact, many are dead-set
against it. The thrill killers give moral hunters a bad name, yet
many new folks think the two groups are synonymous.
Yet, I think our four-legged friends will get a break soon, as
the video game-thrill killing trend graduates to a higher plane:
human beings.
Video games are mindless, as are the parents who let their kids
play them.
topics:
Hunting