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That's a lot of justification for killing something that can go fishing for food.
Except that's not how Polar Bears prefer to hunt. They prefer to hunt by holes over pack ice, where they wait for animals like seals to surface for air. When there's no pack ice, which is what is happening thanks to global warming, they hunt for whatever they can on land. And if that land is inhabited by humans, that means humans.
I would say the potential to kill and eat humans, including infants, is excellent justification.
Does it suck that this is our fault to begin with? Absolutely. That doesn't mean that human lives should be put at risk as well.
I wouldn't say it's sufficient justification, to be honest. I guess it depends on the population to some degree. But since we caused this problem, I would say moving even a whole village out of polar bear habitat is worth the cost of shooting even one, and we can suppose there will be more to come. I think we have a responsibility to get the hell out of their space, even at a huge cost to us.
Sorry... you think an entire village needs to be moved when a polar bear is seen in Iceland? How would that even work?
What do you mean how would that work? Polar bear habitat is declared national park, inhabitants get assistance moving elsewhere. Extremely expensive? Yes. Complicated? Not really.
I get that people aren't gonna go for this, but I stand by the position that it would be the ethically correct thing, and we should be honest with ourselves that we are compromising on that.
Did you even read the headline of this article? This is the first polar bear seen in Iceland since 2016. They swim.
Where exactly is this habitat supposed to be? The entire coast?
If humans had any respect at all for the natural world, they'd feed themselves to the bear.
Okay, we'll put you down as part of the "children should be eaten by bears if they had any respect for the natural world" faction.
There are still literally tens of thousands of polar bears.
As a global population for a species, that's low.
But as something that would mean relocating entire towns full of people — when towns are usually doing something important production wise and can't just be moved willy nilly — that's a whole lot.
"Move an entire town"
Then half a year later when the bear moves to another town, do it again. And again. And again.
Seriously? Do you know the size of the town compared to the national population in Iceland?
That's just a logistical nightmare which wouldn't even accomplish any of the virtues you're signaling so hard.
The polar bears aren't following the people. It can absolutely hunt (and would prefer) a coastline.
Do you know where most towns in Iceland are?
On the coast.
And? You think it's just going to keep going to the next town like some kind of horror movie monster?
Would it be possible or perhaps even likely for the bear to roam a few dozen kilometers to the next town?
https://www.wwf.org.uk/learn/wildlife/polar-bears
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iceland
What do you think?
Sure but you were talking like they were going to follow the humans around the island eating them one by one.
And you're talking as if they're gonna have the territory of a housecat.
Villages live in polar bear territory in Alaska, Canada, Greenland, Scandinavia, and Russia just fine. So Iceland has to learn some new rules. It's no reason to contribute to the extinction of a species.