I have seen a lot of posts on other hunting forums saying that this is reaching their breaking point and they are done with applying for Utah. The people with money to burn will keep applying like usual and have better odds with a lot of the peasants pushed out of their way. Everything is working according to plan!
CCG, you are spot on! I firmly believe that things like this are all part of a push from powerful influences that have figured out that death by a thousand cuts is the way to change hunting management forever in their favor. I know I'll be called a conspiracy theorist, and I don't really care anymore. These things need to be called out for what they are from here on out.
Here's the deal: For better or worse, one of the most influential people in wildlife and related policy matters in Utah has been Don Peay. Don has gone on the record repudiating the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation. He has called it socialism and has advocated for the privatization of wildlife in America. These are not rumors, they are his words, and he has worked to make that happen. You think he's alone in this? Do you think this philosophy is extinct in the current SFW model? I don't want to turn this into a beat up SFW thread, but it is part of the discussion. Just to cite one aspect of this, does anyone remember when SFW was openly advocating ending the late elk hunt on the Dutton unit? Does anyone remember what the current SFW president said about why this should happen? I can't quote it word for word, but it was in an open meeting, so people can find it if they want it. He said too many "average Joe" hunters are killing giant bulls, and those bulls are valuable and could be sold, so we need to end that late Dutton elk hunt. Again, this happened in an open meeting, on the record. Not rumors, not hearsay, no hyperbole, this was the organization's official position, and not that long ago.
So now that we have the groundwork laid, let's look at all the things that have happened over the years.
We have tag reallocation to different types of hunts than historically have been in place. "If you really want to hunt, pick up a bow and go hunt!" How many times have you read that online in the last 10 years?
Antler point restrictions will give us bigger bucks to kill! We need those so we can get some age class in our deer.
Tag cuts. We are killing too many deer. We need to cut tags.
Let's take more and more of the public tags each year and put them into the conservation tag program in the name of "conservation."
Now weapon restrictions. "Oh, it's not big deal...just buy a new muzzy or go hunt a different unit." "Just buy a new rifle with open sights, or go hunt a different unit."
Now with potentially a huge increase in cost to hunt that seems to be a race to the bottom with all states...what do all these things have in common?
Each one of these things on it's own makes it harder for people to hunt. Not everyone can buy a new bow setup and go hunt. Not everyone can buy a new muzzy set up and go hunt. Not everyone can buy a new rifle and go hunt. Not everyone can just change units to go hunt somewhere different than they have grown up hunting and hunted their entire lives. Not everyone can afford to pay double for a hunting license or permit to go and hunt. And while each one of these things on it's own makes it more difficult to keep hunting, all of them in conjunction with each other make it flat out impossible for many to do it. Every step we take that makes it harder for people to hunt, we push more "casuals" or "average joes" or non-wealthy people away from hunting. Every single time we make it more difficult to do, we cut people out.
Yes, I have been saying that there is more to all these proposals than what is being talked about openly, and this hits it directly in the center of what I think is going on. Powerful forces know that you can't boil a frog by throwing it straight into boiling water. And eventually there is going to come a time where the "average Joe" is not only no longer able to kill the king's giant bulls, but won't be able to participate in hunting at all. And it will be because we as hunters consented to it every single step along the way.
We see one of these proposals and how it can benefit me personally, and I'm all about it. We don't think about how it impacts the whole, and we don't care. We simply look at how it benifits me in the here and now, and go for it. We have met the enemy to our hunting future, and it is us.
But, we can keep buying everything they are selling us on how great these proposals will be for "opportunity" when none of them actually produce anything but more restrictions to follow. I've often said my grandkids will likely not be able to hunt, but I won't see the death of our way of life in my lifetime. I am now of the belief that I will live to see the day.
Just wait until these same folks figure out how to monetize and commercialize fishing in the same way...