Trump is not a simple, run-of-the-mill idiot. He's a truly unique idiot whose fame in history will be on a par with deranged rulers like Romans Nero and Caligula, Charles VI of France, The Zhengde Emperor of China, or Ivan the Terrible. Trump will be known as The Moron President.
Just as Zionists label Lebanese sheep innocently crossing the border as "terrorists", Moron Trump wants only US wolves (holding US passports), not Canadian wolves (illegal migrants) of the same exact species, re-introduced in Colorado.
This is the summum of ignorance. Wolves and all non-human animals don't know anything about borders. Only an imbecile like Trump would make such an abysmally stupid argument, espeically driven by spite against the Biden administration. Trump may think that Canadian wolves would "poison the blood of American wolves", just as migrants and immigrants of the human species, he once said, are "poisoning the blood of America".
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FILE - In this photo provided by Colorado Parks and Wildlife, wildlife officials release five gray wolves onto public land in Grand County, Colo., Monday, Dec. 18, 2023. (Colorado Natural Resources via AP, File) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — The Trump administration is telling Colorado to stop importing gray wolves from Canada as part of the state’s efforts to restore the predators, a shift that could hinder plans for more reintroductions this winter.
The state has been releasing wolves west of the Continental Divide since 2023 after Colorado voters narrowly approved wolf reintroduction in 2020. About 30 wolves now roam mountainous regions of the state and its management plan envisions potentially 200 or more wolves in the long term.
Following two winters of releases during President Joe Biden's administration, wolf opponents appear to have found support from federal officials under President Donald Trump.
Colorado wolves must come from Northern Rockies states, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Brian Nesvik told Colorado Parks and Wildlife Director Jeff Davis in a recent letter.
Colorado must “immediately cease and desist any and all efforts related to the capture, transport and/or release of gray wolves not obtained” from northern Rocky Mountain states, Nesvik wrote.
Most of those states — including the Yellowstone region states of Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, where wolves from Canada were reintroduced in the 1990s — have said they don’t want to be part of Colorado’s reintroduction.
That could leave Colorado in a bind this winter. The state plans to relocate 10 to 15 wolves under an agreement with the British Columbia Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship, Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokesperson Luke Perkins said in a statement Friday.
The agreement was signed before the state got the Oct. 10 letter from Nesvik, according to Perkins. He said the state "continues to evaluate all options to support this year’s gray wolf releases" after getting “recent guidance” from the Fish and Wildlife Service.
Though some of Colorado's reintroduced wolves have come from Oregon, wolves released most recently have come from British Columbia.
The issue now is whether the federal agency required that wolves must only come from northern U.S. Rocky Mountain states when it designated Colorado's “experimental” population of reintroduced wolves.
A federal notice announcing the designation in 2023 referred to the northern Rockies region as merely the “preferred” and not the required source of wolves.
Defenders of Wildlife attorney Lisa Saltzburg said in a statement that the Fish and Wildlife Service was “twisting language” by saying wolves can't come from Canada or Alaska.
People in Colorado “should be proud of their state’s leadership in conservation and coexistence, and the wolf reintroduction program illustrates those values,” Saltzburg said.
The Colorado governor's office and Colorado Parks and Wildlife are in touch with the Interior Department about the letter and evaluating “all options” to allow wolf releases this year, Gov. Jared Polis spokesperson Shelby Wieman said by email.
Fish and Wildlife Service spokesperson Garrett Peterson, whose voicemail said he wouldn't be available until after the government shutdown ends, didn't immediately return a message seeking comment.
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