War 🇬🇦 US millionaire big-game hunter dies after being crushed by elephants - Finally, some good news.

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An American millionaire big-game hunter has died after being crushed by a group of elephants during a hunting expedition in Gabon.

Ernie Dosio, a 75-year-old vineyard owner, was hunting yellow-backed duiker, an antelope species, in the central African country of Gabon when the incident occurred last Friday. While in the Lope-Okanda rainforest, he and his guide unexpectedly came across five female elephants accompanied by a calf.

Originally from Lodi, California, Dosio had built an extensive collection of hunting trophies over the years, including animals such as elephants and lions. He was reportedly a familiar name within the Sacramento Safari Club.

According to the Daily Mail, safari operator Collect Africa confirmed the death of its client. The company also reported that the professional hunter guiding Dosio sustained serious injuries during the encounter.

Reflecting on Dosio’s life, a retired hunter who knew him shared with the UK outlet: “Ernie has been hunting since he could hold a rifle and has many trophies from Africa and the US. Although many disagree with big-game hunting, all Ernie’s hunts were strictly licensed and above board and were registered as conservation in culling animal numbers.”

The same source, based in Cape Town, described the incident as the elephants being “surprised” by Dosio and his guide’s presence.

Dosio was the owner of Pacific AgriLands Inc, a company managing 12,000 acres of vineyard land in Modesto, as well as offering services and equipment financing to wine producers. Officials from the US embassy in Gabon are now coordinating the return of his remains to California, the Mail reported.

Gabon’s forests are known to shelter approximately 95,000 forest elephants, most of the species’ global population, which are considered highly endangered.

Every year, clients of the trophy-hunting industry claim the lives of tens of thousands of wild animals across the world. Legal hunting tours in Africa are popular with some wealthy Americans, including Donald Trump Jr, who was pictured holding a severed elephant’s tail more than a decade ago.

International trophy hunting is a multimillion-dollar industry. In South Africa, estimates for the industry’s worth range from $100m in 2005, to $68m in 2012, and $120m in 2015, according to the EMS Foundation.
 
big game hunting funds conservation of the animals a lot more than the dumbasses bellyaching about it on social media.

If you eat factory farmed pigs and stuff don't see whats orders of magnitude worse about hunting animals. In a way, hunting an animal that has a chance to get away and live in its natural habitat is more ethical than caging an animal for life and slaughtering it with no chance.

If you are okay with hunting common animals don't really understand whats the big deal with hunting exotic ones if its going to lead to an overall improvement in their protection.

Having said that it is fair that the animals fight back and there is an element of risk to the hunt for the hunter themselves. The animals are more protected overall and they pick off a few hunters. Whats to complain about?
 
big game hunting funds conservation of the animals a lot more than the dumbasses bellyaching about it on social media.
The alternative to Western hunters isn't the animals living peacefully by themselves, it's the Africans slaughtering them to extinction. The only thing stopping that from happening is the money that Westerners pay them to hunt. They're smart enough to realize that if they kill all the animals then the hunters will stop paying them, but they don't care at all about the animals.

Non-hunting "conservation" charities are all USAID-tier grifters that pay their executives hundreds of thousands of dollars a year and do nothing useful.
 
I wish journalistic style guides would recommend 'squished' instead of 'crushed' when talking about death by elephant. It's way funnier.
 
The guys who go out hunting are generally the best conservationists that you're going to find. Truth of the matter is death from a human hunter is going to be far better for most animals than the natural demise they would otherwise have. Not to mention that in some places hunting serves a critical role in controlling the population of animals like White Tail Deer which can provide a real hazard to drivers on the road if allowed to breed unchecked.
 
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