only use regular PayPal to provide purchase protection
Started by busta biggun, March 21, 2016, 08:09:17 PM
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 25, 2016, 09:52:03 AMThis is a complex issue that goes beyond what each individual's perception of what a turkey is worth. But first, let's clarify a few points.As Hobbes pointed out, non-migratory wildlife in each state is "owned" by the citizens of the state. That includes wildlife (with some exceptions) that is both on public and private lands. Hunting for that wildlife is not a "right". It is a privilege that is legally granted by the citizens of the states to the state's citizens, as well as to non-residents as the states allow. As most state wildlife agencies are funded through hunting/fishing license sales, those agencies are naturally going to set fees at a level to insure the agency is adequately funded, while at the same time making sure the "resource" (turkey population) is managed properly. Those fees will be set to a degree on "supply and demand", but most agencies also take into consideration the concept that fees should be reasonable so that the "average citizen" can participate. Each of us has our own perception of what is reasonable and what is not, as well as how much we are willing to spend to pursue our passion as turkey hunters. For me personally, when I contemplate the overall expense of traveling to another state to hunt, an extra $50-$100 bucks for the license is irrelevant. For the enjoyment I get from the experience, that license fee cost is a drop in the bucket.
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 25, 2016, 12:41:32 PMOkay,...so we all know what happened back in the sixteenth thru nineteenth century in America. We get it. ...And before man's predecessors migrated to North and South America across the Bering Strait, there supposedly were no humans here at all. So why don't we just all go back to Europe and Asia and leave the America's to their "original inhabitants"? The point is that we cannot change history, and we certainly cannot go back a few centuries to right whatever injustices might have been done in the past. We work with the system we have in place now, "legalities" and all. I fully agree that the common man is getting the "short end of the stick" in terms of some hunting opportunities. I live in New Mexico where that reality is probably the worst in the with some species such as elk. The discussion here, however, is whether paying a couple of hundred dollars as a non-resident to hunt turkeys is out of line. I don't think it is for the enjoyment I get out of it. But, then again, that is just one person's opinion.