This is unfortunate, and I will feel bad for these people, but I will not blame them for being evil, or slackers, or anything like that. If anything, I see them as semi-helpless victims of the industry itself. I'm sure that many rhino/elephant poachers* only poach because they need to support their families, and I feel sorry that they would have to stoop to being associated with such a business in order to make ends meet, and yes I will even feel bad for their families if one of them gets sniped while in the process of harvesting a horn or two, but I would not at all feel bad about there being less poaching as a result.When you see people losing their jobs, and/or are out on the streets because of that, then will you still say that it's good? It employs 10,000s (if not more) people.
EDIT: Because I tend to have such trouble making myself clear, let me expound on the above. I think that these industries are actually taking advantage of the current oversupply of labor by selling/spinning their inherently environmentally destructive process as "good for jobs and good for people" because they know there will then be that resistance to eliminating those jobs later. I'm sure you can ask @DarkAudit how that sort of thing turns out.
--Patrick
*I mean the ones who actually do the hunting, not the distributors/smugglers, who no doubt mark up their product thousands of percent once acquired from the poachers themselves.
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