Michael Markarian is the president of the Humane Society Legislative
Fund, a 501(c)(4)
social welfare organization that lobbies for animal
welfare legislation and works to elect
humane-minded candidates to
public office.Friday, October 31, 2008
Two Different Men, Two Different Districts—Too Bad NRA
We
haven’t heard a lot from the fright-mongers of the NRA this election.
On the national stage, the stakes are just too high for their kind of
shrill scare tactics to attract much interest. Besides, they’re on the
wane anyway. Increasingly, Americans recognize the NRA’s radical agenda
for what it is—the spent politics of the fringe.
But the NRA is still plugging away. In down-ballot races, its
operatives and apologists are still trying to bully the brave. Two
legislative races in the swing state of Pennsylvania illustrate the
absurd actions of the NRA.
Despite common sense, and more importantly despite common decency, the NRA continues to defend Pennsylvania’s practice of allowing live pigeons to be used as targets
in gory exhibitions of killing—even though the animals are not
consumed, the killing has nothing to do with wildlife management, and
it is essentially just a killing exhibition. As you would expect, the
NRA would like to frighten any policymaker who would try to bring
Pennsylvania back into the family of civilized states and abolish such
wanton carnage.
One of those willing to stand up to the NRA in Pennsylvania is Rep. Frank Andrews Shimkus
(D-113, Lackawanna). He arrived in the legislature in 2007 as a
freshman from the state’s hard-coal country. Hunting is deeply rooted
in his district. Schools routinely close on the first Monday after
Thanksgiving to allow their older students to participate on the first
day of Pennsylvania’s annual deer hunting season.
Not so long ago, it would have been unthinkable for a legislator
representing this part of the state to speak out against any kind of
animal shooting. But Rep. Shimkus, who describes himself as a
conservative, went even further. He introduced legislation to ban these events
where hundreds of pigeons are released, one by one, to be killed. Let
me add, by way of aside, that one of the most appalling things in these
bloody spectacles is when wounded birds drop to the ground and are set
upon by children who learn from adults to twist the neck and pull the
heads off these animals.
That kind of scene doesn’t go down well at all in another part of
the state, the affluent suburbs of Philadelphia represented by
third-term Rep. Daylin Leach
(D-149, Montgomery). He joined in co-sponsoring the Shimkus bill. He
also took a leading role in pushing legislative leaders toward a vote
to outlaw these Neanderthal pigeon shoots—and it now appears, finally,
the legislature will face the issue head-on next session.
Live pigeon shoots are so inhumane and unsporting that the call to
relegate them to Pennsylvania’s history books is broad and
widespread—from liberals and conservatives, from rural and suburban
districts, from animal advocates and hunting advocates. Everyone seems
to agree except the rabid extremists at the NRA.
Rep. Leach, who describes himself as liberal and is now campaigning
for a seat in the state Senate, was so proud that his work for pigeons
earned him the NRA’s opposition that he posted the organization’s letter against him on his own campaign website.
"If the NRA is working against me, I must be doing something right!" the lawmaker wrote.
You said it, brother.
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