Rural red-state rednecks fight to preserve hunting rights

Jake  Glass
   Hunters in rural areas apparently without many supermarkets are pushing their state legislatives to guarantee their rights to slaughter animals for a cultural pastime. In hair brained states with many nimrod folks such as Alabama hunters are worried about losing their adrenaline rush of hunting bear,rabbits,raccoons, and other animals that are meant to be in the wild and not some fools dinner plate. These hunting-rights advocates have long held political sway in their pathetic red states but now they are pushing even for more power to retain some of their practices such as using dogs to pursue game that have been targeted by animal-rights advocates. These are spiritless macabre mother fuckers that need to seek a rush and pleasure chasing bears with the aid of dogs into trees and courageously shooting at them from a distance. Waterfowl is another species they deem to slaughter in much the way passenger pigeons were eliminated from the skies of America. Seventeen hick states have a constitutional amendments to safeguard the practices of these paranoid Fuckheads yet they are still demanding more guarantees from their officials.  These over reactions  are to efforts to curb the excessive brutal methods many of these hunters use to increase their success rates and these hunters will financially fight as much as possible to defend these ugly practices. The battle to end the tide of these hunting practices a of course being lead by progressive states that have made many of these changes in laws regulating many of these actions but of course the Southern states are fighting it all of the way. Either way it plays out younger generations are not sharing or continuing the tradition of hunting as a sport and families that try so hard to install this tradition on their kids sold feel shame. Onl more involvement of animal rights in politics to counter these hunters can effectively curtail these traditions and prevent more animals needlessly becoming even endangered and threatened than they already face with loss of habitats.

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