I just finished writing an article this morning about how the media sways its readers by twisting, distorting and inaccurately handing out information and then I stumbled onto this piece of confusing writing by Ken Allen, outdoor writer for the Morning Sentinel. (When you get to the page, scroll down a bit to find this part of his article.)
I guess Allen lines up on the left because he seems to have a problem with those lining up on the right. There’s nothing wrong with being left, right or somewhere in the middle. It’s what makes us an interesting lot. Right or left shouldn’t matter. What matters is debating facts and making decisions based on such.
What I find puzzling is that Allen used his platform at the Morning Sentinel to levy unsubstantiated comments lumping anyone opposed to his beliefs as being all the same. Allen’s rant comes in reference to what he describes as a movement by the right in the sporting world in Maine in a way that makes a reader easily see he doesn’t care much for. Read this.
Right wingers in the movement do not want to be told that they cannot use live fish as bait, that they cannot day-trip on the Allagash, that snowmobilers and ATVers have no access on certain lands, etc.
They’re consumptive users to the core and have no interest in backpacking for backpacking’s sake or cross-country skiing without a firearm or fishing traps.
We can argue all day about whether all people have a right to voice opinions and if being a consumptive sportsman is good or bad. Obviously Allen believes anyone who consumers their fish and game they catch is bad. But the culmination of his comments lumping what he calls, those in the right-wing movement, as having “no interest in backpacking for backpacking’s sake or cross-country skiing without a firearm or fishing traps”, is a ridiculous statement and quite childish when you look at the entire writing.
But it doesn’t stop there. Allen then makes an embarrassing statement that makes me question how much thought he put into it or whether he was just pulling a “Jim Zumbo” and reacting out of anger.
What makes these right wingers particularly tenacious is this: Some of them make a living at their chosen sports by working in an industry affiliated with bait, snowmobiles, ATVs, ice-fishing equipment and so forth.
First of all, doesn’t Mr. Allen make a living, of some sorts anyway, from what he does? Does that make him “tenacious”? Do right-wingers find that tenaciousness bad? If Allen makes a living thusly, then I guess I am to assume that making a living off writing about your chosen sport and having tenacity is higher on the list of acceptable practices than say selling bait, snowmobiles, etc.
By the tone of Mr. Allen’s comments, I would have to say that he views selling bait, working in the snowmobile and ATV industry, selling or manufacturing ice-fishing equipment and whatever else on his list he doesn’t approve of, as nothing any better than prostitution, selling crack cocaine or dealing in illegal arms trade. Are these activities above sponsoring terrorism?
If being on the right, having an opinion, some compassion for your “chosen” sport and taking an active role to protect what you believe to be in the best interest of all sportsmen is somehow wrong, maybe even evil, then where does that leave those on the left like Ken Allen?
His choice to lump all right-wing sportsman into a group of consumptive criminals, while ridiculing right-thinking people and painting a picture of them as somehow sub-human, isn’t a real pretty picture either.
As much as I might like to, out of angers and the sometimes overwhelming passion that wants to flow from within out through my fingertips to my keyboard, I won’t lump all left-thinker sportsmen into a group that thinks progressiveness is the right thing for our industry. Not all left-wing sportsmen believe that Baxter State Park, the Allagash and trout fishing should be for only select groups. Not all left-leaning fishermen think catch and release is the only humane way to treat a fish. Not all left-minded backpackers and cross-country skiers think that consumptive hunters and fishermen are evil people.
It’s only a few!
Tom Remington


