Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

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Hammerhead
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Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by Hammerhead » Sat Mar 31, 2012 7:44 pm

Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy
by Dylan Polk • March 21, 2012 •

Buddy Chapel - The Principal ....
Image


Chances are your office pales in comparison to Petersen’s Hunting editor-in-chief Mike Schoby’s. An accomplished globetrotter, Schoby’s office is covered with trophies from his hunts around the globe. A couple whitetails (normal enough) plus a red stag (getting better), a caribou (now we’re talking), various species of antelope, a javelina caught mid-stride, and to top it all off, a baboon holding a stack of business cards.

He’s also a master angler; a mounted goliath tigerfish — the holy grail of freshwater fishers — is mounted above his doorway. It is without a doubt the coolest office in our building, one that would surely make some animal rights activist’s head spin before keeling over.

Of course, this is a hunting magazine; that sort of thing is pretty much expected, if not required. The point is, hunters, no matter where they work, love to show off the trophies of their kills, whether it’s at home or at their place of work.

But does that include teachers, principals and other school officials? Take South Carolina principal Buddy Chapel, who before this past weekend, had an office that would rival Schoby’s in terms of the sheer volume of his trophies. From antelopes to hogs, and even a stuffed lioness, Chapel, a former Marine Corps drill sergeant, adorned his high school office with the variety of mounts.

But, early last month, the collection became a public matter after the photo above appeared in a local newspaper.

Two bothered individuals wrote letters to the editor and generated enough controversy to force Chapel to remove the display from his office. Apparently, these folks felt hunting had no place in a public school.

Chapel told local reporters previously that he offered to meet elsewhere if students were uncomfortable in his office but most students seemed to like the collection.

We understand not everyone is as into hunting as we are, and being that this is America, they’re free and welcome to make that choice, but that doesn’t mean just because an overly sensitive non-hunter is offended, hunters should have to disguise their hobby — or hide it completely.

Be that as it may, principals are in fact public officials whose freedom of expression is limited; you could make both arguments for and against Chapel’s trophies.

What’s truly remarkable is the offense taken to a legal activity. Hunting is a licensed, heavily promoted activity in Africa, and a huge part of African economies that may otherwise struggle. The money generated from African safaris not only stimulates countries financially, but it also goes back into wildlife conservation.

Rather than analyze the facts of the situation, however, the offended parties seemed to have simply seen heads hanging on a wall and assumed something evil had happened. One of the letter writers, a South Carolina teacher named Marian Martin, posed the question, “What message is he sending those kids?” ----- That we as human race survived for 120 Million years merely on Hunting

Well that’s a good question, and one that never had a resolution. The message is, Chapel enjoys hunting. That’s it. What’s more reprehensible to us is the fact that these people took it upon themselves to speak for students who Chapel said had never gotten the willies from the display. To that, we pose the same question: What message is that sending the kids, letting someone else speak on your behalf? Even if the students did have a problem with it, shouldn’t they be allowed to address it themselves?

This is a high school after all.

The offense taken to a legal activity without full understanding of the situation, along with the audacity to speak for an entire student body, is much more harmful than being stared down by a mounted gemsbok.

What do you think? Let’s hear it in the comments section.

------------------------------------------------------

http://www.petersenshunting.com/2012/03 ... ntroversy/
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. - Edmund Burke

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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by goodboy_mentor » Sat Mar 31, 2012 7:50 pm

It is an attack on freedom and liberty guaranteed by the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution.
"If my mother tongue is shaking the foundations of your State, it probably means that you built your State on my land" - Musa Anter, Kurdish writer, assassinated by the Turkish secret services in 1992

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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by grewal » Sat Mar 31, 2012 8:10 pm

Well I think the office of Principal is a public place which influences a lot of young students which might not be mature enough to understand or make out a reasoning between right or wrong. So I suppose the gentleman should display his so called prized possessions at his private property.
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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by Mark » Sun Apr 01, 2012 2:12 am

I bet if he just had kept the lion mount he could have gotten away with it, but that many mounts is just poking a hornet nest with a very short stick.

Marine or not, logic tells me that the reason they are all in his office is that his wife gave the ultimatum they were not to be in the house any more! ROTFL
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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by prashantsingh » Sun Apr 01, 2012 1:26 pm

Lovely trophies.
Looks a little crowded though. Each one of those animals needs a single wall to appreciate their actual beauty.

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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by shooter » Sun Apr 01, 2012 2:45 pm

I am 100% absolutely prohunting, pro trophies but can understthe viewpoint of the teachers too. I am not sure what bad message it sends to the students.

I would be more inclined towards a point like whats private stuff that has nothing to do with his job adorning walls that are a part of a public building.
Personal paintings: yes as school has arts classes.
Ditto for personal books or baseball medals.

But i would also like to know if the principal was into racing cars (again nothing to do with schooing) and had filled his office with memorabilia of racing cars/F1/NASCAR would they still have him remove them?
You want more gun control? Use both hands!

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One does not hunt in order to kill; on the contrary, one kills in order to have hunted. by Jose Gasset.

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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by Vikram » Sun Apr 01, 2012 4:07 pm

What Shooter said.
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Re: Principal Removes Hunting Trophies Amid Controversy

Post by drifter » Mon Apr 02, 2012 12:32 pm

Agree with shooter 100%, only if he was preaching about hunting and his work was compromised because of his trophies adorning the wall. If the individual's passion is legal and not obscene why the fuss?.

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