Jupiter551 said:Californian voters don't have the right to decide about public policies?Bocefish said:There is no conflict of interest except the one that is in the minds of Californians that think cougars should NEVER be hunted.
That drug analogy is ridiculous. A far more accurate analogy would be if California had banned rainbow trout fishing and Richards went to another state to fish for the species legally. Would there still be a conflict of interest in their & your opinion?![]()
Yes actually, he would be just as open for question if he had gone elsewhere to hunt or fish or kill any species that was illegal in his home state where he is involved in deciding legal hunting status.
Of course they have the right to decide public policies IN CALIFORNIA.
Jupiter551 said:The drug analogy is perfectly appropriate - tell me why it isn't please, and be specific. It involves a government appointee, able to influence legal status in his own state, responsible for enforcing in his own state, travelling elsewhere to partake in activities that he would arrest members of his own state's public for. It is perfectly suited.
The drug analogy is inappropriate because it has nothing to do with the profession he currently holds. Richards is perfectly competent to uphold the Fish & Game laws in California while going outside of California to participate in legal activities elsewhere. If he killed a hippo in Africa, would that also be a conflict of interest? Richards is not the ultimate decision on wildlife laws in California anyway, he is just one educated person that votes in the process of which species are to be managed and how. If people don't like him or the way he does things, don't re-elect him in 8 months but He did NOTHING ILLEGAL to be fired for. PERIOD.