But the mistake made by Brother Wild Food is not picking snow rabbits, but picking and hunting wild animals and plants at will. Accurately speaking, the focus of this matter should not be on whether the snow rabbit is rare or valuable, but on publicizing that the natural ecological environment should be protected as much as possible in the wild, leaving nothing behind or taking anything away.
But while criticizing Brother Wild Food, you can't escape from this pot in academic circles. The reasons are as follows:
It is not enough to take the law as the bottom line only, but should it be correct to take the requirements of botanists as the bottom line for daily entertainment? The requirements of this kind of ignorance and public morality should have been bound by laws and regulations.
I agree with the other views of the answer in principle, so I only intercepted some of them. But obviously it is absolutely wrong to throw the pot. What do you mean others have business to do? Protecting your precious research object is not business? If your academic circles don't ask the government for legislative protection, and you don't supplement and revise the list of endangered species, who else can do it?
This reminds me of attending a seminar on women's rights when I was in college. The discussion was very lively, but when I asked you what you were going to do, it was quiet. People who have gone to college are at least among the top 10% in China. Who will do it if you don't do it?
It's useless to speak more justly than anyone else. The defects in these lists and the blank in law are your academic dereliction of duty. Officials don't pay attention to it. What about your academic and folk directories? What about science popularization? What about publicity?
You said yourself that the locals are picking when they don't know each other clearly, so is your attitude towards those locals conniving? There have been large-scale picking and selling, and your academic circles don't care? Isn't this large-scale collective behavior serious enough?
So is this the scene of a large-scale academic keyboard man gathering? Can someone tell me what you have done to protect these endangered species?
I'm curious. What would you do if Brother Wild Food bought fresh snow rabbits picked by local people instead of picking them, just like Brother Wild Food's routine operation turned farmed chickens into caught pheasants? Who will you throw the pot at?