Democrats in Congress are pushing legislation that would
devastate the hobby -- and damage the small businesses -- of a
group of American hobbyists: Snake collectors.
The Nonnative Wildlife Invasion Prevention Act (HR669),
sponsored by Del. Madeleine Bordallo (D-Guam.)
and co-sponsored by several House Democrats including Alcee
Hastings and Ron Klein of Florida, has got the "reptile geeks"
up in arms:
If passed as written this bill will BAN the import, purchase,
sale, trade and breeding of many, many reptiles and
amphibians... including Boa, Python and Eunectes. If this bill
passes it will destroy the reptile community and industry
overnight!
-- There is NO evidence to support the premise that the continued
import of Boa, Python & Eunectes would negatively impact the
economy, environment, or human or animal species health.
-- Broken Screens, the report which is the basis for the writing
of H.R. 669, is not a science based document. It is a propaganda
piece produced by a radical environmentalist group in league with
the Animal Rights Movement.
-- The so called Risk Assessment measures in this bill take a
Guilty Until Proven Innocent approach that flies in the face of
reason and promotes prejudicial treatment of all animals
listed.
-- Citizens of the United States are appalled that well funded
special interest groups are able to promote fiction as fact and
we demand Boa, Python and Eunectes be removed from H.R. 669.
I was alerted to HR669 by a well-informed source -- my
16-year-old son, Jim, whose snake
collection includes pythond.
As with CPSIA -- which
threatens independent American businesses with "National
Bankruptcy
Day" if it goes into effect -- HR669 looks like another
example of the Democratic congressional majority's appetite for
unthinking regulation that creates burdens for businesses and
individuals.
If
the Republican Party's new chairman
Michael Steele is looking for an issue to move forward, maybe
the "snake geeks" are a constituency worth cultivating. "Save Our
Snakes" might be an unlikely rallying cry, so how about:
"Don't Tread On Me!"
"There's all kinds of animals involved in it," said Wyatt. "It's
an attempt to ban almost every animal that's not native to the
United States."
Wyatt certainly can't be accused of being "anti-environment." A
lifetime outdoorsman, he runs Outer Banks Wild, an eco-tourism
and education enterprise based in North Carolina's Outer Banks.
"I love my environment -- I live in the outdoors," Wyatt says.
However, Wyatt says ordinary pro-environment activists like him
are trying to raise public awareness of the "very radical agenda"
of the Human Society of the United States, which he calls a
"powerful animal-rights extremist" group.
HSUS is "hiding behind the facade" of mainstream concerns about
"kittens and puppies" while actually pursuing radicalism, Wyatt
says. And, he says, HSUS is attempting to ban boas and pythons
because that exploits "prejudice against reptiles."
"They are anti-human. . . . It's crazy," Wyatt says.
dad29| 2.1.09 @ 9:10PM
Ahhhhh....
The CPSIA was passed almost unanimously in Congress (both Houses) and signed by Bush.
I'd like to call it a "Democrat" bill, too--but that's simply not true.
Dammit.