Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

This is bad PR? Who knew?

- THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Most Americans don’t hunt, but they’re OK with other people doing it. It helps that it’s a familiar part of American history, that it’s a common source of food and that most of the harvesting occurs out of the view of those who might blanch at it.

Most, but not all. Idaho Game and Fish Commission­er Blake Fischer not only brought his pastime to the attention of people he doesn’t know but rubbed their noses in it. After a hunting trip to Namibia, he treated a large circle of acquaintan­ces to photos of his exploits—notably, one of him grinning over primates he had taken with a bow. His wife, on her first visit to Africa, wanted to see him hunting. “So I shot a whole family of baboons,” he crowed.

It doesn’t take a genius to know that any sentence that begins, “I shot a whole family . . . ” is bound to turn off some folks. The fact that baboons bear a distinct resemblanc­e to humans makes hunting them particular­ly problemati­c. Then there’s the matter of killing beasts for mere fun. Fischer might have realized the need for some discretion, at least.

Lacking that, he brought down an avalanche of anger on his own head when the images started circulatin­g.

Fischer didn’t offend just Hollywood types. Former Idaho Fish and Game Commission­er Fred Trevey urged him to resign “to shield the commission as an institutio­n and hunting as a legitimate tool of wildlife management from the harm that is sure to come.” Keith E. Carlson, another former commission­er, agreed: “I don’t know how you can say anything good about a photo of a guy smiling with a stack of dead baboons with a baby in front.”

The object of all this criticism seemed baffled by the response. “I didn’t do anything illegal,” he told the Idaho Statesman. “I didn’t do anything unethical. I didn’t do anything immoral.” Killing baboons, he argued, is a form of wildlife management just like that practiced in the United States with various creatures.

Fischer doesn’t seem to appreciate the distinctio­n most people make between seeking food and bagging trophies for kicks. Most Americans, polls indicate, accept the former and oppose the latter.

There is also the matter of sensible restraint. Fischer paid no heed to the recommenda­tion in Idaho’s hunter education guide: “Refrain from taking graphic photograph­s of the kill and from vividly describing the kill within earshot of non-hunters.” Sharing gruesome pictures is a good way to give hunters a bad name.

If Fischer wants to continue doing things that most people find offensive, he might want to skip the photos and emails next time. As any savvy game animal knows, high visibility is a good way to wind up in the crosshairs.

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