Foxer said:We have provinces which allow it right now. Would the logical choice not be to use them to force the Feds to start issuing att's? Once that happens, pressuring our own province becomes much easier. Until then, the province can always hide behind the fact that there's 'no point in discussing it, the feds don't allow it anyway'.
Foxer said:C'mon bud - Did your association hold any kind of 'vote' on how the delegates should respond to the agenda? What percent of your members voted if they did? Would it be fair to say that the majority of your members did not participate in any formal referendum on the subject?
To be fair, Foxer, gatehouse posted some info that there may be support for hangun hunting.
Outside of a few people here (about 7.51%) where do you get the idea that most would not support it? Got some info we can work with?
Why is it, that you are insisting so much that this has to be a fear fight?
There has never- to my knowledge- been a hunting regulation changed in BC, where all hunters were asked ot submit a vote. Instead, it happens just as I described it.
So, no- not every person is every club was consulted. They never are, that just isn't the way it works. Your points regarding that are moot.
But those guys arent' the ones that are going to make change. They may object to it, but they aren't going to be a strong, vocal group opposing handgun hunting.
Foxer said:See - this right there shows a lack of understanding about both what i was saying and how things get done.
Actually, it is you that appears to lack the understanding about how thigs happen.
No - it's not moot. It is THE point. The point being - the bcwf resolution does not indicate the level of support in the hunting community at all. It just indicates the level of support amongst delegates - who were not elected, who were not operating on a mandate, and who had not consulted the members in any kind of meaningful fashion other than perhaps general discussion with a few.
How do you know who was consulted? Are you even a BCWF member? In our club anyone that is interested in the resolutions gets together at a meeting, we go over the resolutions and decide how we want our delegates to vote. This is a similar process followed by all clubs. The delegates are mostly elected by thier clubs in director/executive roles. They do not necessarily get to vote the way they want to, they vote the way thier club directs them to.
If members don't wish to participate, that is thier business, but the opportunity to consult is there, always.
If you want to win, you need support from the community. Your argument seems to be that you don't. Well, good luck with that
You are pretty adept at twisting words, aren't you?![]()
I never said that support is not needed. I dsaid that changes take place without everybodys input.
Everyone who wants to participate has an opportunity to do so, the majority won't bother, and therefore the decision making will take place by those that do show up. That is just the way it works- for everything.
How do you know who was consulted?
There has never- to my knowledge- been a hunting regulation changed in BC, where all hunters were asked ot submit a vote.
Everyone that is a member has an equal opportunity to express thier opinions if they woudl like to, but the majority are not interested enough to actually get out and do something, so if thier views arent' heard, it is only thier own fault.
So, no- not every person is every club was consulted. They never are, that just isn't the way it works.
You are pretty adept at twisting words, aren't you?
Oops! I will change it to 'fair fight' DONE!
Dont be too picky
Foxer said:LOL - well i really wasn't sure.Wasn't trying to nit pick, thought you meant something else.
The reason this has to be a fair fight is because it's not an insignificant change.
You don't have to 'fight fair' if you want to change something that is already expected to change, or there are provisions to change. For example, adding a 'bow only' season is much easier because the gov't already addresses changes to seasons every year and there's no actual change to the law. And you're dealing with one level of gov't.
In this case however, you're looking at some fundimental changes to the rules, and you're talking about a very contentious issue. the gov't has to think 'what will the public say'. THEN they'd have to draft new laws that cover the use of handguns. And they'd have to justify to SOMEONE why they spent all this time and risked public outcry for something the feds won't even allow to begin with.
THEN - once you've got all that done, you have to go after the FEDERAL level. And you're into a whole new batch of problems - you can bet the left wing beurocracy that makes up the gov't machine is going to HATE this idea. They'll fight it tooth and nail.
So what you're talking about is a long, hard fight that will require a great deal of effort and support (and probably in more than one province) to pull it off. That means money, time and resources that won't go to other issues.
You need the active support of members to tell the various orgs involved to 'keep going' - that its worth it and they should keep allocating the resources to do it. Otherwise - members will start to question why other things are not getting the attention they need.
There's just no way to 'sneak' this one thru. So it's going to have to be something close to a 'fair fight' as you say.
Foxer said:Sigh. You just admitted a few posts ago that there is no general polling of the membership.![]()
Remember this?:
Again you try to twist things Foxer. Those ccomments are in response to your incorrect assumption that the delegates opporate independently from membership. Good try though.
I think it's a lot more likely you're adept at trying to defend a really weak argument and get upset when you get caught out.
Here's the bottom line - you're making a crap argument that has had little thought go into it because you started with an answer and are now trying to work back to a question. And when you get caught out in it, you become a little pissed off and try to change the argument and the direction of it. Then you claim i'm 'twisting' it. I'm not - i'm pointing exactly to what you've said and my stance has been exactly the same.
Ha Ha ha..All I can htink about wiht this comment is your strong position that 2" of barrel was going to render a handgun useless, and your inability to admit you were wrong.....![]()
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My argument is the same, I have just been attempting to clarify to *you* how the process works, since you appear to lack that knowledge.
This is simple. There is no widespread support apparent in the hunting community, the bcwf resolution is NOT indicative of whether or not hunters will support the idea, and you NEED support to muster the political will that is necessary to make a change of this magnitude on the provincial AND federal levels.
Not indicitive? Because you say so?![]()
At the very least it is far more indicitive than gitrduns poll of 4 people, which started this discussion.![]()
The purpose of the resolution was to remove any obstacles if someone wanted to pursue handgun hunting, especialy at the federal level, so the feds coudl not say "Well, you can't hunt in BC wiht handguns anyway"
It's a resolution, passed less than a year ago, and it hasn't been a priority, so litlte has been done. If and when some people want to get the ball rolling, it is my opinion that resolution and the letters sent to gv't sets a precedent that the BCWF will most likely support advances to further handgun hunting.![]()
As i mentioned earlier, this isn't my first time looking at it. I've spoken to quite a few hunters, and members of the bcwf, and even a couple of gov't folk about the subject.
Of the rest - most are 'not sure' or haven't thought about it, but lean towards the 'maybe we shouldn't, i'd have to think about it' side. Most could see SOME circumstance where it wouldn't be horrible, like the 22 for grouse thing, but most have grave reservations about abuses and problems for handgun use in general.
The gov't does NOT support handgun hunting. Provincially or federally. You're talking about significant change. It will take a strong effort to get first the province to change, (the easiest of the two) then the feds.
I believe if the question was put to hunters in general today "do you think we should allow the use of handguns in hunting big game in bc without restriction" it would come back 'no' as an easy victory. If you asked "do you think we should allow the use of handguns in hunting with significant restrictions to prevent abuse or problems" i think you'd be looking at best at a 50/50 split. Could go either way. If you were to ask "should people be allowed to carry 22 cal pistols for use on small game and varmints" you're more likey to get a win, maybe 60 percent and change.
Anyone posting on this thread that really gives you a warm fuzzy feeling with the display of his high degree of tact and interpersonal skills.TPK said:Wow, this thread is still going strong ... even though there only seems to be a few participants. I was trying to catch up but fogged over once again and just jumped to the end few pages.
I agree with Gatehouse as that's how our R+G club works. We get information from BCWF and others with regards to what's coming down the pipe, or, as in this case, what we want to push back up the pipe. We vote on what direction we want to go, majority rules, and that's the position we move forward with. The BCWF President for our region is presented with our "voted on" decision (or request) and asked to present that on our behalf.
Now, not every member shows up to our meetings and I believe that was along the lines of what Gatehouse was indicating with his comment regarding the world is run by those that show up (I think). So our club presents a position based on the majority of votes that were present at the time the question was asked. Now as Foxeer is indicating, that isn't always representative of what the majority of the club's members feel, but as they didn't show up to vote, their vote wasn't counted. So a club could be presenting a position that doesn't really have a majority of it's people backing it. ... I think that was Foxers point. ... now if I could only remember my point .... Oh ya, hand gun hunting , I want it !!




























