Seals are generally universally endangered, as are, definitely, all whales. I suppose it's a matter of how one defines the term "endangered". My own stance would be to determine the numbers of wildlife present before the major whaling-hunts began(c.200-300? years ago), and leave them at that level.
That is not the generally accepted term for endangered and was not what I meant by it. I think
sustainable forms of hunting and management should be allowed as long as the populations continue to grow and are not considered endangered or threatened or even "near threatened," by the scientific criteria generally used, rather than by your historical criterion. So that's another thing we'll have to agree to disagree on I guess.
I think hunters should be educated to engage in ethical, sustainable hunting that uses as much of the animal as possible (so wolves should only be killed to control imbalances or avoid public backlash against them that might lead to vigilante killing of them, for example, since not much of wolves is of much use other than trophies and adornment) and does not threaten the survival of the hunted species, and trophy hunting should be discouraged. Do you consider it OK to hunt wild deer, water buffalo, whales, seal, and other large fauna when "ethical" forms of hunting are employed?
My main point is that the top-level carnivores/mammals, such as wolves/bears/great whites/whales, are absolutely essential to the food-chain, far more so than most other species, so that killing those off harms the environment FAR more than any others. So, my krill-oil-usage is far, far less harmful than killing a bear etc.
Banning all hunting and management of the larger fauna is the equivalent of trying to circumvent the food chain and in the modern world can result in distortions, such as decimation of prey species in a given area, starvation, disease, etc., due to imbalances in animal populations. Most environmental and governmental organizations understand this. We agree that predators and large fauna should be preserved, we just apparently disagree on how to go about this. A blind, arbitrary ban on all hunting of all species of bears until they reach pre-modern levels (which they cannot, since there will be die-off from starvation and disease before then) seems unrealistic to me. If hunting is banned, then taxpayers will have to pay rangers to periodically cull the populations to keep them healthy. In this modern world, some form of wildlife management is unfortunately necessary.
For my own part, I would forbid almost all domestication of animals as pets.
In the long run I tend to agree with you, as domestication is a distortion of the environment with many negative consequences, but wouldn't such a measure would be impossible to enforce in our lifetimes and have very bad short-term unintended consequences? Do you favor a ban of all domestication of animals?
An additional reason for my not wanting to eat bear, is that they are at the pinnacle of the mammalian revolution. Not only are they one of the strongest mammals, butalso one of the more intelligent.
OK, thanks for sharing. I think we're getting to the core of why you oppose any bear hunting here, and it's an understandable motivation.