
Here’s a little fact: there are 4,000 black rhinos in the entire world, down from 70,000 in the 1960s. Here’s another fun fact: the purpose behind the permit to kill one old black rhino in Africa for $350,000 was to help encourage the rest of the rhino population to flourish. Like survival of the fittest - with a gun. At least, that’s the reason, according to the club’s executive director, Ben Carter. “Science shows that selective hunting helps rhino populations grow,” he said in a prepared release. “Removing old, post-breeding bulls, which are territorial, aggressive and often kill younger, breeding bulls, cows and even calves, increases survival and productivity in a herd.” He also said the money raised from the auction will go toward rhino conservation, but his critics have their doubts. But let us assume that what Carter says is true. That the killing of this essentially space-hogging black rhino will serve to ...









