Wolves Circling the Fire
Of Beasts and of Tyrants
by Gary Marbut
President, Montana Shooting Sports Association
mssa@mtssa.org
http://www.mtssa.org
There
was a time in Man's evolution when he huddled around the nighttime fire gazing
outward at the glowing ring of eyes - the predators who viewed man only as food.
A few of these predators came in and joined Man at the fire and became dogs.
Others remained outside and have always been wolves.
These early Men learned to build structures, not only to keep out the rain
and the cold, but to protect Man and his weaker family members from the
ever-present wolf, who circled hungrily and constantly, always ready to snatch
as a meal any unwary member of Man's family.
In fact, one might reasonably view Man's entire development and the creation
of civilization as a process of fortifying against wolves, chief among Man's
predators. So, the process of civilization has been a contest against wolves,
with savagery and risk being at one end of the scale, and a complicated system
and evolution of security being at the other.
There are people nowadays who believe we need more wolves. There are people
who have understandable trouble grasping and accepting the great complexity that
modern Man's society has become, and who openly or secretly yearn for more
primitive and simpler times, where lines are more clearly drawn, and the
customs, associations and processes are not complex. These people thrill with a
comprehension of that which is wild and primitive in a way that Jack London
would certainly understand.
However, there is a reason for the colloquialism, to "keep the wolf from
the door." Because of its insatiable predation and unending hostility to
Man, the reputation of the wolf properly echoes down through the corridors of
time as the enemy of Man, and perhaps the greatest single impetus for Man's
journey along the path of civilization.
So, the contemporary struggle between those who wish more wolves to share
space with man, and those who still seek to protect themselves and their
families from wolves, may be viewed as a struggle between the progress and
regress of civilization itself.
The equation becomes more interesting when one notices that the leading
supporters for the pro-wolf, civilization-regression often live most closely in
the heart of civilization, in the steel and glass constructs of Man's major
hives. These may be the people most harried by the press and complexity of
modern society. For them, the advocacy is strictly an intellectual exercise, a
remote game they might play as in a game arcade at the shopping mall.
Would these same supporters send their children to play in the forests and
hills where real, live, hungry, flesh-eating wolves actually roam? Only if they
are so genetically removed from Man's heritage that they have lost all personal
survival instinct.
Yet, it is a tribute to the complexity of our society that these same,
well-fortified city dwellers, living in circumstances designed to "keep the
wolf from the door", can compel others of us living in the forests and
hills to live with those ancient enemies of Man constantly in our midst. They
make their warm and fuzzy movies about wolves, they give the wolves names
agreeable to children, they promote wolves as friendly, (almost) stuffed animals
to schoolchildren, but return each night to the civilized security of their
glass and steel caves, where their flocks and their children remain protected
against Man's ancient adversary. In their understandable yearning for simpler
times, they are selfishly willing to expose others of their kind to risks and
predation that they do not and will not suffer.
Whatever the motives of the predator-advocates, the effect is undeniable. Not
only the flocks of Man suffer, the billions of dollars sportsmen have invested
in restoring and enhancing populations of deer, antelope, elk, sheep, moose and
goats is disappearing at a disastrous rate. So, the predation occurs at an
alarming and increasing rate, if not upon the flesh of Man, then on his wallet,
his estate, and his ability to survive economically.
Under these circumstances, one might ask, who are the predators? Are the
predator advocates not preying on the others who will suffer the consequences? I
believe that the predator advocates actually understand their own predator
status, and are convinced they have the power and right to compel the conduct of
the prey - the others of their kind who will suffer from their schemes. When
they identify the animals for which they advocate as elite and powerful, they
also see themselves as elite and powerful - an identity transference of sorts.
The obvious question is, when will those who they view as prey, upon whom they
would vent their predatory savagery, when will the prey wake up and understand
the nature of this predation?
To bring the discussion full circle, those who believe we need more wolves
may be right, albeit for the wrong reasons. Maybe we have been too long without
predators, and we are getting soft. Maybe we need predators and tyrants nibbling
around the flanks of our flocks and families to challenge us to rebuild the
fortifications and sharpen our marksmanship. But, the predators against whom we
must fortify are those among our own kind who are comfortable seeing us as prey,
those who would threaten the survival of our freedoms for their own whims, the
would-be tyrants who would prey upon our liberties to serve their own agendas.
Maybe the wolves are a blessing - a wake-up call. If we are not awakened from
our slumbers near the fire by the howling out in the darkness, maybe we deserve
to be food for the tyrants.
Informational note: The Montana Shooting
Sports Association is the primary organization asserting the rights and
prerogatives of gun owners and hunters in Montana. MSSA president, Gary Marbut,
grew up on a 5,000-acre cattle ranch in Western Montana, is an officer of the
Western Montana Fish and Game Association, Montana's oldest and largest regional
organization of hunters and anglers, and is a lifetime hunter, in the last
decade hunting elk with a revolver.