Here for food

What the hell are those pesky bison doing on our land???

“This is a part of our country’s heritage,” said Alison Fox, executive director of American Prairie, a deep-pocketed nonprofit that has spent two decades buying ranches and grazing leases on public land in northern Montana to create the newly embattled home for bison.

The conflict centers on 900 bison owned by the group, which was allowed by multiple administrations, including President Trump’s first, to graze on federal lands, much to the consternation of politically conservative ranchers who wanted the land for cattle.

How dare those bison stomp all over land that ranchers want for cattle? It goes against God’s plan!

This winter, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management reversed course and canceled the bison grazing permits. Citing the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934, the agency said the federal grasslands where the animals grazed should go to livestock being raised for food, not bison largely enjoying their right to roam. The agency deemed the bison to be wildlife, not production livestock.

Yeah let’s do that with everything. If it’s mere wildlife, get rid of it; keep only the animals that humans like to make into burgers.

Conservation groups condemned the decision, as did Native American tribes, who say the anti-bison effort threatens their own herds as they try to revive bison populations that were hunted to near extinction by 19th-century settlers.

Blah blah blah. McDonald’s doesn’t care about conservation or Native American tribes. Get with the program.

But Montana ranchers like Perri Jacobs celebrated. She said the federal government, a perennial boogeyman for Western conservatives, finally seemed to be on her side.

“These lands are here for food,” said Ms. Jacobs, whose family has raised cows in northern Montana for nearly 110 years. “We have to understand that progress and time march forward. Bison just don’t fit on the landscape anymore.”

The lands are for food: they feed bison. The lands aren’t automatically “here for” whatever the new people decide they’re for.

The state’s powerful land board — which includes Mr. Gianforte and other high-ranking Republican elected officials — is also taking steps toward kicking bison off Montana state trust lands.

“We must ensure that public lands remain accessible and productive, rather than being locked away for the vision of special interests,” Mr. Gianforte said after the federal permits were canceled.

How is it “special interests” to try to preserve some existing wildlife and their habitats? How is that not a general interest? It seems to me the profits of ranchers are a pretty special interest.

Comments

3 responses to “Here for food”

  1. What a Maroon Avatar
    What a Maroon

    Also, bison can be human food.

  2. iknklast Avatar

    WaM, a lot of people use bison as food, in fact. In Texas, it isn’t unusual to find it on the menu in burger joints and steak joints. I’ve seen it less here in Nebraska, but it is definitely there.

    One popular word I’ve always seen in arguments about the environment – waste. We are ‘wasting’ water if it flows to the ocean without humans using it. We are ‘wasting’ land if it isn’t cultivated, grazed, or developed.

    Not waste…just different species besides humans are making use of it. That’s hardly waste.

  3. What a Maroon Avatar
    What a Maroon

    iknklast,

    Yeah, I see it sometimes in northern VA. We don’t eat much red meat, but to the extent possible if I’m making something that calls for beef, I try to substitute bison instead.

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