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The Plea
of Man for the Conservation of Species
- To forbid, to prohibit is to encourage
the illegal and even illicit trade. It condemns many populations to
its downfall and, by starvation, drifts them from their land.
- To harvest an animal to sustain one's
life is, first and foremost, to maintain culture and traditions that have
ancestral ties and have firmly bound local populations.
- Man and animals are bound together: to
remove man from the environment is to sentence animals to death. To
allow the extinction of animals is to bring to an end man's
existence.
- Wildlife resources should not be
plundered but maintained in such a way as to facilitate their constant
renewal. In this, they will provide to man the indispensable
resources that sustain life.
- Everything begins with man and, in fact,
also ends with man. The true conservator of species is man. The
regulator is, once again, man.
- All-preservation, all-prohibition without
regard to the future of man, is fundamentalism that will lead to but one
consequence. That of death.
- We cannot let ourselves be mislead by
traffickers of sensational pictures or by exploiters of emotion who, with
their substantial financial resources, seek to destabilize entire and
defenseless populations.
- We must have confidence in man and not
conspire to condemn him. To respect his right to live in an environment,
which is his, represents the most effective and sensible means of
preserving all living resources.
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