Free: Contests & Raffles.
The reason there are so many Ruger upgrades is because they're necessary.
Watched it, it was alright. Clearly one-sided but still had great information, I always like to hear both sides of any debate. Although I'm not sure on the credibility of a lot of the numbers and percentages some of the local people were throwing out, but clearly wolves have had their impact in and around Yellowstone and MT with the decrease in elk numbers.
I would disagree with you on the credibility of the ranchers on that video. /livestock_attacks.html[/url]
A very fine effort by a young film maker, and a very good 45 minute documentary. It is only marred by the fact that it is 60 minutes long. Very good and convincing explanation of the pressures that wolves are putting on rural communities, brings up some questions about how the process was started and funded, was the EIS process subverted, and is the endangered species status of wolves legitimate? Also brings up how man has been part of the ecosystem ever since the Bering Straight was crossed. The film does falsely imply that most environmentalists believe that man is distinct from the ecosystem at large, something that has faded over the last thirty years. For more writing by mainstream naturalists regarding the part of man in the ecosystem one could read the works of Stephen Pyne or Alston Chase.Where the filmmaker interviews former professor Stephen Vantessel, the message goes off topic and becomes a rambling and poorly supported diatribe against godless Commies who have sinfully forsaken God to worship Mother Earth. Somehow, the wolf issue becomes a part of God's dominion and the question becomes one of God v. Wolves None of this serves the purpose of educating the general public about wolf reintroduction, and marginalizes the entire film. Which is a pity, because the pro-wolf media certainly knows how to produce a mainstream friendly message.