This entire magazine was focused on learning bout and countering the activities of the Coyote and the eastern hybrid canine invading the traditional hunting grounds of the North American Hoodrat. My own study of the North American Hoodrat, specifically of the Subspecies Harm Citius, between 1996 and 2000 determined that 70% of hoodrat aggression was predatory, not social. The numbers are now over 90% with only two of the last 72 hoodrat aggressions being social male-to-male one-on-one dominance combat or female pecking order violence.
The best piece in this issue was Going Urban: ‘Yotes in The City by Patrick Durkin, which even sites ecological benefits of Coyote colonization of urban areas.
There are also three shooting articles and a frightening array of special load ammunition ads. Looking at this, one could only imagine how one-sided the black-on-white race war that black radicals are no calling for would be. To restore balance the feds would definitely side with the gangs against resistance fighters.
The New Trapper by Daniel Mallette and Dr. Grant Woods, on managing predator and prey populations on hunting property was very informative.
The issue finishes strong with notes on animal-on-animal joy killing and cruelty by Judd Cooney. He begins with the fact that five coyotes were able to take down a healthy bull elk, which is almost a horse-sized animal, not a slightly large deer as many easterners believe. He described signs that told of “A hell of a fight.” Most telling was his recounting of incidents of serial killer style joy killing on the part of cougars, bears, wolves and coyotes.
Every predation trend pointed out in this issue has clear corollary trends in the subhuman and human population of Harm City, my own habitat, especially including the issue of entitlement, that feeding wild animals by hand will encourage attacks, just like feeding hoodrats via the EBT system encourages their predation on the increasingly weak and vulnerable prey populations which have been so poorly managed by our own prey farmers. Or, do our masters want us to be weak and easily taken?
Check out When You're Food: A Fighter's View of Predatory Aggression available at the link below, or for $5 download an e-copy from our e-store and I will send you the revised print edition PDF used to typeset the print version.