The overwhelming majority of rural Africans are agriculturalists and pastoralists, not hunters. It wouldn't occur to them to go hunting for food any more than you or I.Let the natives hunt for food if they need to cull the herd.
I often hunt for food. In the pantry, but still.The overwhelming majority of rural Africans are agriculturalists and pastoralists, not hunters. It wouldn't occur to them to go hunting for food any more than you or I.
Extra food is extra food.The overwhelming majority of rural Africans are agriculturalists and pastoralists, not hunters. It wouldn't occur to them to go hunting for food any more than you or I.
According to your constitution, all men are equal, or something. But as they say, some men are more equal than others.
To be fair, it says they are created equal. Then they meet their parents and find out what color their skin is.
Yes, but these people are farmers and herders with specialised food-production techniques; why would they drop that to practice a form of production they haven't practised and don't understand? It's like asking a lawyer to start practising surgery because, hey, a job's a job.Extra food is extra food.
Yes, but these people are farmers and herders with specialised food-production techniques; why would they drop that to practice a form of production they haven't practised and don't understand? It's like asking a lawyer to start practising surgery because, hey, a job's a job.
Am I misunderstanding something? I thought she was fired because she put photos of her on a hunting trip up on her facebook/twitter or whatever. Models are chosen for their physical beauty, right? And not their holidays or hobbies or tweets or any other activity that might conceivably be deemed "too masculine". So I'm confused by your post, B - what "visual" thing are you referring to here? Not the fact that she went on a hunting trip, surely? Looking too masculine, i.e. having a beard or something, then sure, that's a visual thing. But doing something masculine, in her own time, not on the job, and in no way affecting her visual attributes in a photo shoot -- surely that's a different thing?Why is that scummy? A job as a model is completely visual and if a company has requirements as to what the person they hire projects visually, then that either needs to be adhered to or the person can find another job. I've really no issue with any of this so long as the terms of the contract were followed.
What if a male underwear model suddenly began developing man boobs. He could still model the underwear just fine, but it may well not be the image the company using him to model their underwear wants to project. Too feminine and all that. Are you suggesting they should be obligated to continue using him?
Am I misunderstanding something? I thought she was fired because she put photos of her on a hunting trip up on her facebook/twitter or whatever. Models are chosen for their physical beauty, right? And not their holidays or hobbies or tweets or any other activity that might conceivably be deemed "too masculine". So I'm confused by your post, B - what "visual" thing are you referring to here? Not the fact that she went on a hunting trip, surely? Looking too masculine, i.e. having a beard or something, then sure, that's a visual thing. But doing something masculine, in her own time, not on the job, and in no way affecting her visual attributes in a photo shoot -- surely that's a different thing?
If you disagree with this, then I assume you would oppose discrimination against convicted pedophiles being hired as elementary school teachers.
Yet more silly jerkish trolls instead of even trying to discuss your own topic.The OP was a question about a concern I had reading the linked article. It's a concern that most people here don't share and the root cause is instead probably ignorance about wildlife management. But why don't you link in the Wikipedia page to logical fallacies? Maybe quote-block half of it onto the forum. That might be helpful.![]()
Exactly, yeah. There seems to be this assumption that rural Africans are all ready to pick up a spear and go bounding off after an antelope because, well, isn't that what they do in Africa? But that's as you say a picturesque view without any firm relation to the realities of life as an agriculturalist or pastoralists. There's no reason why the duties related to population control in Africa should revert to "the locals" rather than to professionals, simply because it's Africa.And the tour guides are tour guides. I get the feeling what Africa needs is largely political stability and economic development. Not subsistence based hunting. I mean sure, tribals dancing around a fire shaking a spear is I guess kinda picturesque, but I'd best most of the people involved would rather have some more contemporary amenities.
I guess you can draw a rough-ish correlation to my Dad. He could hunt deer to eat them, the wander through our farm. There is a season for them, and he would be a "local." But my Dad does other stuff. He's never learned to field dress a deer or developed a relationship with a butcher. He doesn't spend his time sitting in trees with a gun or bow. He lets people that ask him do that instead. They usually give him a fruit basket and possibly some venison if they get anything. That exchange is worth it to him.