Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Trapping Today Should be Legal, but Limited Essay -- Argumentative Per
Trapping Today Should be Legal, but Limited           Trapping is a very important issue, which is connected to many other  larger issues. For instance, trapping lies at the heart of the First  Nation's distinct society issue. Before I talk about the present, however,  I would like to discuss whether trapping should have been illegal when  Canada was first being settled in the 17th and 18th centuries.         When the first explorers came to the new world, it was regarded as a  huge slab of worthless rock standing between Europe and the riches of the  Orient. The only reason these explorers even explored this continent was  the hope of finding the North-West passage, a route to the Orient.  Fortunately, while searching for this North-West passage, some of these  explorers stumbled onto a virtual magnet for settlement: The Fur Trade.  When people heard how pelts of all kinds could be obtained so easily and  sold for so much, the idea of not settling in the new world was ridiculous.  Suddenly settlers came to this "slab of worthless rock" and tried to set up  permanent living there. Even after a few failed attempts the draw of the  fur trade was responsible for the settlement we call New France.         After the first steps toward a permanent colony in the new world were  made, the next steps came in leaps and bounds. The French government was  sending everyone they could to settle in New France. Courieurs de Bois,  began coming to the colony to trap furs and sell them back in France.  France granted land to poor people that were willing to risk the great  voyage. The colony flourished, and grew.         It was the fur trade that was mostly responsible for this colony.  However, some think that by this point the colony was large en...              ...ance law. What would all the lawyers do if suddenly practising  law was illegal? The First Nations, I believe, should be allowed to  continue trapping as long as it is under limits. However, I believe that,  after all, their ancestors had such a successful relationship with the land  that trapping within limits should not be a problem.  Another problem that  would arise if trapping is illegalized is that it is said that too many  predators (wolves, etc.) would roam the forests and be dangerous to farms  with livestock on them. It is said that trapping keeps the populations of  these predators low, so they will not pose as much of a threat to farms.         In conclusion, I feel that trapping today should be legal within  strict limits that allow for the way of life of the native peoples and for  the balance of nature, but do not permit gratuitous killing of animals.                        
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