Free: Contests & Raffles.
I have compared the previous version, with this new draft side-by-side. The most glaring change has been in the definition of conservation:Version 1 Conservation--Science informed actions to preserve the health and resilience of natural environments including fish, wildlife and humans, safeguard the intrinsic value of nature, and provide equitable benefits to current and future generations of human and non-human life. These actions include protecting and restoring air, soil, water, biological diversity, ecosystem processes and evolutionary potential. New Version: Conservation--Science-informed actions to perpetuate the health, resilience, and intrinsic value of native species and natural ecosystems. My take. Version 1 is too wordy and unwieldly so simplification was good BUT the removal of people/humans element from the definition is BAD as is the inclusion of the word NATIVE before species and NATURAL before ecosystems. The new definition completely removes many popular game and fish species from the definition of conservation. These species could be removed completely from the state under this paradigm. The term Intrinsic value must also be expanded to include extrinsic value (economic, cultural, recreational etc) Later in the document, the word conservation is used over and over so it needs to include all the species we currently want and manage, native or non-native. Secondly, the term "natural ecosytems" is never defined, only ecosystem and ecosystem management. The human element needs to be returned. Conservation, historically as a word, has always had an element of human use. I also strongly believe that a principle that includes the realities of the 21st century should be added. This additional wording should acknowledge that the goal of recreating "natural" ecosystems composed of only native species is aspirational, but not practical or even possible in most (if not all) places. Not many ecosystems that had grizzly bears or wolves in 1700 can support them now, so re-making intact ecosystems is impossible. The realities and limitations of today need to be incorporated, along with a stronger human element that reflects the guidelines in the RCW.
This is all part of the playbook with these liberal extremist groups. They just redefine the words and control the direction of debate/conversation/policy in that manner.In this instance, they don't like what conservation is and the vital role hunters play in it so they will just change the definition of the word conservation so that it's a definition they want.IMO we should be 100% pushing back on this. Words have meaning and those meanings are important. There is also no reason for this policy change. The department already has guidance and state laws to follow. Again, they don't like that, so they will just change it.If you've been paying attention at all for the last 30 years you can think of many examples of this same strategy. "Woman" and "Marriage" are two.
Could someone more educated (than me) on this help with some wording on what should be pointed out and listed? I'd love to get some language that others could plagiarize.
IMO we should be 100% pushing back on this. Words have meaning and those meanings are important. There is also no reason for this policy change. The department already has guidance and state laws to follow. Again, they don't like that, so they will just change it.