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I have heard this Native American romanticism for so long now. I think that stereotypes serve no one even when they are supposedly positive.
I am an organic farmer and have lived in rural areas for my adult life (I have never hunted, nor do I intend to start). Thus I have known many hunters. I would say that maybe half of them never kill anything. It seems to be their excuse to go out and walk around and track animals. They always "miss". My personal conclusion is that they feel the need to justify being out and about with some task that sounds acceptable to others in the community. I am referring to people who live in the country who claim to hunt. Not the city people who show up on the first day of hunting season all decked up in new gear shooting everything, including me. Really, bullets inches by and breaking windows in houses and all these other horrors. People on farms lose lots of pets the first day of hunting season. Sept 1 is always a nightmare.
One of my friends was commenting on the fact that other social omnivores (wolves, coyotes, dogs) don't appear to feel guilty about killing and eating other animals. So, she asked, why do we feel guilty about it?
My current idea is that the killing of domesticated animals is the main reason that the modern religions came to be. My theory is that killing undomesticated animals as a group was what all the social omnivores did. The idea that we were domesticated by wolves roughly 100,000 years ago resonates with me. But once people started to be domesticated by herbivore animals about 15,000 years ago things changed.
The difference between killing a wild animal and a domesticated animal seems morally huge to me primarily because you know the animal. You grow food for it and you feed it, you may have helped with it's birth, you took care of it when it was sick. You depend on it, it depends on you.
Sorry to change the subject. It has been on my mind for so long and I hope that some of you here in this group can help me figure this out.
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