Eltortu
Established Member
Please explain, why should I care about chameleons being an invasive species? What about the invasive race that practically exterminated Native Americans? What about the fact that non-native plants are actually a much bigger threat than chameleons? How do you intend to stop something that is impossible to stop? And why should anyone waste their money and time, on a lizard hunt, when we are a much bigger threat to the ecosystem than the chameleons could ever be?
Tell me, why should I care about chameleons, when the government is not even organized enough to regulate the amount of antibiotics and drugs that are feed to the hamburgers that we eat? When we have so many rivers flowing with high toxicity levels? And you are actually concerned about chameleons because chameleons are -by definition- an invasive species?
Well I fully disagree with your condescending notion, I think it is absurd. If you knew how many plants are non-native invasive species, and how much the invasive plants have in turn affected native animals, you wouldn't be at all concerned about chameleons.
You talk a good deal about ignorance: tell me smart man, what do you intend to do about it? Whom would pay for it? Whom would benefit from it?
My opinion is, for each chameleon that you catch, there is a corporation that is completely unregulated, throwing toxic into the water, feeding animals whom naturally eat grass with a combo of corn and antibiotics to counter the fact that the animal gets sick from eating something that it should not be eating, etc, etc. If you think you would be doing the world a favor by fighting against the great aggressor that the chameleon is, then perhaps you already are in that pit of ignorance that you seem to despise.
Human beings do not even know if they are 100% native or if there is an alien element in the mix, yet people like you are arrogant enough to believe that they actually do have a say in what is native and what isn't: I find your argument idiotic, not because I think it's conceptually wrong, but because it's disconnected from reality and would be detrimental if effectuated under the given circumstances.
If you had any real conviction, you would not own any chameleons nor any other non-native invasive species. If you cared so much about the native ecosystem, then a little hobby is a small price to pay, wouldn't you think? Yet you are incapable of giving up a small luxury in exchange for the well being of the ecosystem.
If invasive species were all illegal for every person, then fair enough, but to be the legal owner of an exotic pet and at the same time complain about an inevitable outcome, is, as far as I'm concerned, comparable to eating meat and simultaneously arguing that meat is murder: completely devoid of any real conviction.
I have no real problem with the argument from a conceptual point of view, if certain animals are a real threat to the ecosystem of a nation, then make them illegal for all people, and that should greatly minimize the threat; but when a chameleon owner is the one whom is complaining, I find it offensive and condescending.
Do you need a hug?