By
Donna Capurso
Insanity continues to remain alive and well in
the
U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service as evidenced at the
January 9 meeting at the Kootenai
River Inn in Bonners Ferry. The KVRI agenda was amended to move the
topic of the USFWS’s Caribou Critical Habitat
presentation to the top as every seat in the KRI
banquet room quickly filled with people and then
every bit of standing room was taken up with an
overflow that stood outside the double doors to
listen to the proceedings.
The
public in attendance obviously wanted answers
but only received rhetoric and ambiguous
statements from the USFWS. They either would not
or could not even provide an accurate count of
the supposed caribou other than they “believed”
there were about 45 caribou.
One gentleman in attendance presented
information on the caribou census count from
2000 to 2010 that countered the USFWS numbers,
and I have verified the information through IDFG
census reports.
The highest count during this ten year
span was 3 in the
United States;
the lowest was 1.
What
was probably most unsettling to me was the
disdain and contempt that I felt the USFWS
showed towards the public that pays their
salaries.
The only ones allowed to ask them
questions were the KVRI board members.
When the citizens in attendance realized
that their questions and concerns were blatantly
being ignored, tempers understandingly started
to flair.
When Susan Burch from the USFWS stated
that they knew the numbers of caribou have been
decreasing but they just couldn’t understand
why, there was a shout from the public that was
almost in unison, “It’s the wolves!!”
So,
let’s take a look at just a few of the
accomplishments that can be attributed to the
U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service:
·
The
grizzly bear became an “endangered species” in
1975. Starting
in 1999, the USFWS
began their plan to distribute grizzlies in the
Selkirk
Mountain
Range recovery zone as an endangered species.
I’m sure
everyone remembers
this past August when Bonners Ferry resident
Jeremy Hill
was arraigned on federal charges for shooting
and killing a grizzly while protecting four out
of six of his children and faced a year in
prison and a $50,000 fine if he had been
convicted.
After major pressure from this community,
those charges were dropped as long as Jeremy
paid a $1,000 civil fine.
Can you say extortion??
And when did a bear become more important
than a child?
If you are not familiar with what would
have been a travesty of justice, go to:
www.BoundaryCountyRepublicans.com and click
on “Chairman’s Corner” for that story.
·
Back in 1995, the
U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service introduced 35 Canadian
Gray Wolves into central
Idaho
and 35 into the Yellowstone area of
Wyoming.
Since then these wolves have multiplied and are
now roaming in huge packs with counts varying
from 800 to 2000 in Idaho alone and it has been
estimated that they increase their numbers by
30% yearly; it’s time to get your calculator out
if you want to see what is in our future thanks
to the USFWS.
These Canadian Gray Wolves grow to
enormous size, up to 180 pounds. Unlike
the smaller timber wolves that used to be native
to our area, these giant wolves have been
decimating the elk herds in Idaho as well as
other wildlife, ravaging farm animals all over
the region and have been attacking humans with
increasing frequency. These Canadian Gray
Wolves are considered killing machines and will
kill just for the sport of it.
Biologists call this “sport-reflex
killing” or “lustful killing”.
www.idahoforwildlife.com.
What chance do you suppose one or two caribou
that might wonder down from
Canada
to
Idaho
would have against a pack of these USFWS
imported wolves?
·
These imported wolves also carry Hydatid
Disease, a parasitic disease that affects both
humans and other mammals, such as cattle, sheep,
dogs, rodents and horses.
Basically, this parasitic disease is a
tapeworm that is transmitted to intermediate
hosts that
are usually herbivores, such
as sheep,
cattle and wildlife
via the ingestion of eggs garnered from the
feces of the Canadian Grays found on the plant
life that the mammals ingest.
Humans function as accidental hosts
because they are usually a 'dead end' for the
parasitic infection cycle as the eggs are
transmitted to definitive hosts (i.e. humans) by
means of eating infected, cyst-containing
organs.
Liver and onions anyone?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echinococcosis
·
The USFWS has the Canadian Lynx and Wolverine on
their agenda to set on us next.
Let’s
travel back to the year 2000 when seven
government employees (three from the U.S. Forest
Service, two from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and two from the Washington Department
of Fish and Wildlife) planted at least five
separate samples of Canadian lynx hair on
rubbing posts in the Gifford Pinchot National
Forest, the Wenatchee National Forest and the
Mount Baker/Snoqualmie National Forest in
Washington state. The workers then arranged to
have the hair samples sent to a laboratory as
evidence of the rare wildcats inhabiting those
areas.
Unfortunately for the
perpetrators, laboratory analysis showed that
one of the samples of fur they sent matched DNA
of an escaped pet lynx. Two others matched the
DNA of a lynx living comfortably in an animal
preserve.
What happened to those dishonest
employees who came very close to impacting the
economy of an entire region in order to justify
the banning on federal lands of off-road
vehicles, snowmobiles, skis and snowshoes, as
well as livestock grazing you might wonder?
They were “counseled” and taken off the
Lynx study project.
So much for credibility and integrity.
http://www.cfif.org/htdocs/freedomline/current/in_our_opinion/lynx.htm
The USFWS’s plan for
the Caribou Critical Habitat in the Selkirks
does not make any sense when you look at the
onion as it is peeled back.
They have placed Canadian Gray Wolves in
our
Selkirk
Mountain
Range which are not native to this area, where
they have proliferated beyond control and the
State of
Idaho
had to declare an emergency due to this issue.
They have placed the grizzly bear in the
Selkirks which are also predators to the
caribou.
Cougars are also predators of the
caribou.
The only predators to the Canadian Gray
Wolves, the Grizzly Bear and the Cougar are man.
With the USFWS plan, man will not be
allowed into the Caribou Critical Habitat of
more than 375,000 acres, where these predatory
species will proliferate unabated.
When there are no caribou, moose, elk,
deer or any other food sources for these
predators, they will migrate to locations where
they can find food sources.
The wolves have already killed people and
threatened others and this is with declared wolf
hunting seasons.
There have been very few of the Canadian
Grays eliminated.
Whether it’s in the
name of the spotted owl which curtailed logging
of old growth forests in the Pacific NW, the
snail darter which stopped the completion of the
$119 million Tellico Dam in Tennessee, or the
lowly fairy shrimp which devastated housing
projects in the San Luis Obispo area, real
people are losing their homes, property and
livelihoods in an abuse by the USFWS by what was
intended to be a noble cause. The
USFWS created a new endangered species in the
San Joaquin
Valley
of
California
- farmers. Thanks to environmental regulations
designed to protect the likes of the three-inch
long delta smelt, one of
America's
premier agricultural regions became a drought
ravaged area due to the mishandling of the ESA.
Were you aware that under a provision
added to the Endangered Species Act of 1978,
that after the snail darter fiasco, a panel of
seven cabinet officials known as the "God Squad"
is able to intercede in economic emergencies?
Besides the audacity of such a title, the
problem here is that doing so would force the
Obama Administration to acknowledge awkward
questions about the role its own environmental
policies have played in scorching the Earth. And
the list goes on and will continue to as long as
“We the People”
allow this abuse of power of the federal
government to rule our lives, our liberties, our
freedoms and our future destinies.
So, what can we do?
1.
To start with, our
county commissioners need to do what Bonner as
well as other counties are doing by invoking
their rights for coordination.
Coordination basically means that by
federal statute the Feds have to coordinate with
the counties.
Coordination is different from
cooperation.
Coordination provides equal footing for a
county entity with the federal gov’t on issues
that affect the counties.
This
insidious takeover of
Boundary
County
is not about saving the Caribou, but rather it
is all about the control and power of the
federal gov’t over the citizens of not only our
county and state, but our country.
I have provided our county commissioners
with information on a Coordination workbook they
can obtain to help them implement coordination
and it is my hope that they will follow through.
2.
Did you know that the
sheriff is the highest constitutional executive
authority in the county?
Very few people realize that the sheriff
has the legitimate authority to prevent federal
agents from entering the county – or the power
to throw them out once they are there.
Some of the county sheriffs that are
standing tall and taking the lead in enforcing
the US Constitution:
Maricopa County, Arizona Sheriff Joe
Arpaio; Elkhart County, Indiana Sheriff Brad
Rogers; Josephine County, Oregon Sheriff Gil
Gilbertson; Sheriff Richard Mack, retired.
If you want to know more, just Google
their names.
www.cspoa.org.
3.
I am
but one person, one woman, one mother, one
grandmother, and one resident of Boundary
County,
but I will do whatever I can to keep the
federal government from taking over our county,
our property, our lives, our way of life, our
independence and the very air we breathe.
It is time to draw a line in the sand and
I ask every patriot in our county to join me.
This article, along with a “Call to
Action," will now go to every Republican
chairman of all the other 43 counties, Governor
Otter, every Idaho Senator and Representative
(both Republican and Democrat), and every U.S.
Congressman to assist us with the challenge we
are facing.
I will send this to every news media
outlet I can find and email every contact in
Idaho
that I have.
Our
Idaho
legislature is now in session and they need to
sponsor and pass legislation that will assert
our Tenth Amendment rights and keep the Feds out
of
Idaho,
starting with
Boundary
County.
Idaho
needs to manage our own land, our own forests
and our own wildlife, not the federal
government. Our four US Congressmen need to
stand up for
Idaho.
Now is the time to take responsibility for
ourselves in order to preserve any kind of
future without federal domination over our
county.
To
contact our
Idaho
legislators:
http://legislature.idaho.gov/howtocontactlegislators.htm
To
contact our
US
Representatives:
http://www.house.gov/
To
contact our
US
Senators:
http://www.senate.gov/
Will it take time and effort to make all these
contacts?
Absolutely.
It will also take courage and moral
fortitude to defend the US Constitution,
particularly the Tenth Amendment, to follow the
rule of law, and to stand up for our rights as
Idahoans and American citizens.
We, as those citizens, need to keep aware
and informed, to not be afraid to inform others
and to keep our elected officials accountable
and if they are not up to this task, to take
action at the ballot box.
We as a community will need to stand up
together and tell the Feds, “NO MORE!”
Is saving our county worth the effort?
Only you can answer that question for
yourselves.
"For evil to flourish,
all that is needed is for good people to do
nothing."
Edmund Burke
Donna Capurso is the Chairman of the Boundary
County Republican Central Committee and is a
candidate for Idaho’s House of Representatives,
Legislative District 1, Seat A, in the upcoming
May 15th primary.
She can be contacted through her website
at:
www.Capurso4Idaho.com.
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