NMS Dec 2020

Page 85

Coloradans Unleash Wolves on Their Neighbors A Fitting Metaphor for COVID by Adam Yoshida, The American Thinker

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ome recent news from Colorado is a better metaphor for the current unpleasantness than any novelist or screenwriter could invent. On Election Day (or rather, in the late campaign, during the two months or so of voting), the people of Colorado voted, by the narrow margin of 50.84 percent to 49.16 percent, to reintroduce gray wolves in the areas of Colorado west of the continental divide. Without digging too deep into the details, the people for the measure, labeled Proposition 114, supported it for environmentalist and conservationist reasons. The opponents, especially those who lived to the west of the continental divide, opposed it because they feared that the wolves would harm their property and themselves. However, the measure carried largely because Denver and Boulder, despite overwhelming opposition in most rural counties, voted for it by a 2:1 margin. I’ll let you guess on which side of the continental divide Denver and Boulder are. Seeing that news, I thought: Isn’t this the perfect metaphor for our present troubles? Hundreds of thousands of people, almost all of whom have never seen and will never see a wolf in their lives, vote to unleash the wolves on their fellow citizens who, from the perspective of those voters, live in faraway places of which they know nothing, so that they can feel a little better about themselves. Doesn’t that, I thought, also sum up what’s going on now with regard to COVID? One of the striking things about the advocates of die ewig ausgangssperre (roughly “the eternal curfew”; I think it sounds more elegant in German) is the degree to which there are virtually no limits to the sacrifices that they are bravely prepared to have others make for the sake of

their own psychological comfort. Like those voters in Colorado (though let’s be realistic: if we were drawing a Venn diagram of people who think we should be locked down until a Federation starship rescues us in the 24th century and people who voted for Proposition 114, we would be drawing a circle), the COVID cowards are more than willing to inflict losses on others to gratify their strange psychological issues. It’s really become a pattern for a certain type of progressive, when one also reflects upon all of those who were more than happy to see other people’s property burned and destroyed because they hallucinated that burning auto parts stores and stealing shoes from Target were some kind of remedy for racism. For all that the progressives have talked about empathy and worried about pathological narcissism these past four years, they don’t seem to have absorbed the material all that well. I guess all of the books they bought on subjects like that are gathering dust along with the copies of How to Be an Anti-Racist they purchased and opened long enough to take the forty-seven pictures they had to sort through to find one suitable for posting on Instagram. I’m sure that my progressive friends (though let’s be real: I’m not sure that any of us really has any actual progressive friends left at this point) will reply that unleashing gray wolves on the innocent ranchers and animals of western Colorado is just an exercise in democracy and that that is what America is about. But I would put it to you that there’s another word for when some D.J. in Denver decides that ranchers should just have to deal with the mess that the wolves make when they get at one of their cows because the idea of helping the poor wolves makes him feel

D V E RT I S E

in the New Mexico Stockman. Call: 505/243-9515.

better at night: tyranny. These days, I often think of some of my better ancestors and relations. The first ancestor of mine to come to North America was the Rev. Peter Bulkley, who, when ordered to apologize for daring to wear a surplice or use the sign of the Cross, promptly set out for Massachusetts. Another relation of mine was Capt. John Parker, who commanded the militia at the Battle of Lexington. “Do not fire unless fired upon,” he ordered his men, “but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here.” I wonder what such men would have done if they were ordered to shut down their businesses and pause their lives for a year or more so some thirty-five year-old person in some far-off city didn’t have to endure a 0.05 percent risk that he’d die if he happened to catch a particular virus. The answer should speak for itself: people will endure only so many wolves wandering and howling in the night before they decide to do something about it.

No ANLS for 2020

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rizona National Livestock Show (ANLS) Executive Director Tyler Grandil announced in November that the Show has been cancelled for 2020. “I have the unfortunate responsibility to inform you, that we did not receive approval to host this year’s show,” Grandil said. “We are faced with the unfortunate reality as many other livestock shows have, that we are 100 percent NOT in control of whether or not the show happens.” The Arizona National Livestock Show is planning to proceed with hosting a show for the 2021 year. For immediate questions, please refer to: www.anls.org/COVID

DECEMBER 2020

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Real Estate Guide

15min
pages 98-103

Seedstock Guide

2min
pages 93-97

NMSU Science Centers Provide Ag Community with Research-Based Solutions

3min
pages 88-90

Marketplace

2min
pages 91-92

California’s Energy Nightmare Heads to Virgina

7min
pages 86-87

Coloradans Unleash Wolves on Their Neighbors

4min
page 85

Navigable Waters Protection Rule (aka the New WOTUS Rule

16min
pages 78-82

New Mexico Federal Lands Council News

8min
pages 53-59

New Mexico’s Old Times & Old Timers

6min
pages 49-51

News Update

3min
page 44

World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset” Plan for Big Food Benefits Industry, Not People

5min
pages 45-48

Riding Herd

4min
page 52

Nat’l Institute for Animal Ag Named Beef Checkoff Contractor

1min
page 43

NMSU Researchers Explore Sustainable Southwest Beef Production

6min
pages 41-42

Era of Big Beef May Be Over as Americans Turn to Small-Scale Butchers in the Pandemic

4min
page 30

New Alliance to Tackle Climate Change

3min
page 39

New Mexico Beef Council Bullhorn

5min
pages 31-37

Remember this Acronym: RCEP

2min
page 40

Bull Buyer’s Guide

7min
pages 26-29

NMCGA President’s Message

14min
pages 10-15

Angus Foundation Honors Steve Olson

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page 17

New Mexico CowBelles Jingle Jangle

4min
page 16
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