Letter to the editor:
By Gary Wockner, member
Colorado Wolf Working Group
When I was last up in Yellowstone, I stood with my two young daughters
overlooking the rendezvous site of the “Druid Pack” of
wolves. We were privileged – honored even – to see this pack
briefly chase two bull elk, and then after the pack’s unsuccessful
chase, they returned to the rendezvous site and frolicked in the Lamar
Valley in full view of my family.
My children watched with wide eyes
and open minds. The delicate dance of predator and prey is truly one
of nature’s most astounding scenes.
And now, as one of the 14 members of the Colorado Wolf Working Group, I
am also privileged and honored to serve the Colorado Division of Wildlife
by helping them write a sane and responsible management plan for wolves
in Colorado. Our Working Group is making extraordinary, bi-partisan progress
towards a plan of which I firmly believe all Coloradoans – Republicans
and Democrats alike – will be proud.
And so it is with a very heavy heart that I recently viewed a TV advertisement
put out by President Bush which equates the Sept. 11th terrorist attacts
against the U.S. with a presence of wolves across the American landscape.
This ad – unveiled across the country on Friday, October 22 – can
be seen on the President’s website (www.georgebush.com ).
Click on: “Wolves TV Ad.”
As the ad begins, the scene is of a natural forest, but the music is ominous
and the voice-over says we live in a “dangerous world.” A second
later, we see a glimpse of a wolf in the forest. The ad continues with
talk of the “terrorist attacks on America,” while continuing
the ominous music and showing another glimpse of a wolf. And then the ad
shows a full picture of a wolf pack sitting in the grass at the edge of
a meadow.
The voice-over says, “Weakness attracts those who are waiting
to do America harm,” and then the wolves stand and begin stalking
towards the camera. The ad finishes with a picture of President Bush in
which he says, “I’m George W. Bush, and I approve this message.”
During these last days of the election, it is one thing for these candidates
to attack each other, but it is quite another to turn this disgusting wrath
against the benevolent natural world around us. This land and its wildlife
support our American culture in every single way – they provide the
food, shelter, recreational opportunities and awe that sustains us.
I can only imagine what inspired this ad and I can only imagine what will come
next: a Democratic ad showing Senator Kerry symbolically shooting a hawk out
of the sky? or a Republican ad showing President Bush symbolically plucking doves
off a high wire with a shotgun? How far down will this election reach?
I know about wolves. I wrote my Ph.D. on wolves and I’ve spent a considerable
number of years studying their role on the American landscape and culture. Wolves
are natural. Wolves are one of God’s creatures. Wolves do what every inhabitant
on this planet does – provide for themselves amidst the complex world in
which we all live.
I have a friend who was on the fifth floor of Tower One on Sept. 11th. He and
some of the widows of his colleagues know exactly what terrorists look like.
They do not look like wolves. Endangered wildlife are not our nation's enemy.
I have not shown this advertisement to my children. And I won’t. I attempt,
for the time being, to shield them from the uglier side of America. They still
have wide eyes and an open mind about the world and all its inhabitants. I won't
let them watch TV for the next week, for on TV dance predators and prey of a
different sort.
Gary Wockner (www.garywockner.com)
is a writer and wildlife ecologist in Fort Collins, Colo.
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