Jump to content

Haunani Hess

Members
  • Posts

    3
  • Joined

  • Last visited

 Content Type 

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2016

Sept/Oct 2016.2

Past Editions in PDF format

Advertorials

Focus Magazine July/August 2016

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2017

Focus Magazine March/April 2017

Passages

Local Lens

Focus Magazine May/June 2017

Focus Magazine July/August2017

Focus Magazine Sept/Oct 2017

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2017

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2018

Focus Magazine March/April 2018

Focus Magazine May/June 2018

Focus Magazine July/August 2018

Focus Magazine Sept/Oct 2018

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2018

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2019

Focus Magazine March/April 2019

Focus Magazine May/June 2019

Focus Magazine July/August 2019

Focus Magazine Sept/Oct 2019

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2019

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2020

Focus Magazine March-April 2020

COVID-19 Pandemic

Navigating through pandemonium

Informed Comment

Palette

Earthrise

Investigations

Reporting

Analysis

Commentary

Letters

Development and architecture

Books

Forests

Controversial developments

Gallery

Forums

Downloads

Blogs

Events

Everything posted by Haunani Hess

  1. Her psychopathy is made clear when she says "the more you hate the more I kill". We do need to take this very seriously. It is not hyperbole to say these individuals are psychopathic and merely pacified by killing animals. These individuals are not in any way shape or form, safe to walk freely in society. Stopping the legalization of wolf hunting is a natural result from pointing out the glaring truth about this dangerously criminal behavior.
  2. I think the basis of psychopathic behavior stands alone as a fitting argument to make this activity illegal. It really is the most simple and appropriate reaction. To keep society safe, we must demand behavior that is modeled after non-violence and respect for life.
  3. I think the basis of psychopathic behavior stands alone as a fitting argument to make this activity illegal. It really is the most simple and appropriate reaction. To keep society safe, we must demand behavior that is modeled after non-violence and respect for life.
  4. We're in a time where old systems are giving way to the necessary emergence of new systems. This is why systemic racism, ecocide, laws for nature, defunding the police and a plethora of transformational social change is shifting towards justice and equality. Wildlife management is included in this shift, and the complexity makes it difficult to navigate a path to justice because of many variables entrenched in the old system of doing things. What's happening to wolves, to what happened to Takaya, have many valuable contributions towards the argument for protecting not only wolves but wildlife, and the natural world. What killed Takaya was an anthropocentric mentality of violent entitlement. I am convinced by facts, that hunters of wolves in particular, fit the profile of serial killers, and I think it's safe to say the community of hunters at large also fit this profile. There is a consistent desire for repetition, a greater thrill, there's a dopamine rush from the kill and a need to take pictures as a trophy. I believe these people are not only enabled to become more and more psychopathic, but are cultivated and protected to do so, and are only temporarily pacified by killing animals. If there's any moral question about the violent depravity of a passionate hunter, try discussing the option of taking their right to kill away and the reaction is categorical psychosis, a response as if their life is in danger. There seems to be confusion as to why these people are allowed to carry on like true psychopaths, such as coyote whacking, and it's because state governments are using fish and wildlife as a gateway for facilitating the theft of public lands for expansive private ranch use, and the permission to kill natural predators for predation in their own habitat, the banks are complicit as well. The lack of law and justice, and order is appalling as these people deserve to be in jail, and poaching is a great example of what happens when laws are not enacted with appropriate severity for crimes and those who commit them. These people, the hunters, the officials keeping the gate open to abuse fish and wildlife programs, the bankers and the ranchers are all complicit in the unraveling of ecosystems through sheer stupidity, greed and violence.
×
×
  • Create New...