(Photo -- Goslings at Boat Lake in Central Park.  But, will they   be spared from a USDA roundup in the next few weeks?)
  Yesterday, I accused the USDA Wildlife Services of "OCD" in this   blog.  Kind of tongue in cheek of course, but I   truly believe WS is more obsessed with geese than I   am.   That is saying a lot considering how "crazy" I am on the   majestic and whimsical birds who "move like Jagger."   
  First we shoot gulls at airports.  Then we expand the shootings to   other birds.  Then we focus on geese and expand culls to five miles within   the airports. And then seven miles and all five boroughs of NYC.     Finally we expand cullings to Jamaica Bay Wildlife   Refuge.  
  If birds cannot be safe at one of the most revered and   prestigious wildlife refuges in the world, one wonders where they can   be safe?  And where does all this killing end?
  It reminds one of some of the "craziness" with the TSA.  Sure, its   important to check people boarding planes that they are not carrying bombs or   other weapons. But, when that vigilance degenerates into the   humiliation of checking someone's colostomy bag, breast prosthesis or   strip searching small kids and 80-year-old grandmothers something has gone   off the rails. 
  Perhaps all these actions of massacring geese and strip searching   grandmothers are meant to make us all feel "safer."   But, it   seems they are more symptomatic of obsessive need for control as they go   far beyond what is normally "reasonable" and prudent.  
  Wildlife Services claim in the latest SEIS that bird   populations will not be adversely impacted and that some geese will still   remain following the senseless and brutal slaughters.
  One has a hard time "seeing" that both figuratively and   literally.  
  No matter how many thousands of geese killed and percentages   reduced, the goose population (according to SEIS)    mysteriously still remains between "20,000 and 25,000" in NYC for at   least the last five years.   That is astounding.
  The facts are that geese only breed once a year.  Not all adult   geese breed.  In fact,  they generally don't start to breed   until three years of age.  
  Nevertheless, geese are, as previously noted, very adaptable birds and most   of their young survive in urban locations due to the fierce protectiveness and   vigilance of the parents and lack of natural predators.
  But, unless geese severely alter their normal life patterns to "compensate"   for the endless predation of the city and USDA, there seems little way   their population in NYC could still be the same level as it was previous to   the mass killings.
  Certainly, one is not seeing a stable population of resident   geese at Central Park over the past five years.
  Just a few years ago, there would be nearly 75 geese at Harlem Meer   alone around this time of year.
  Last year, that number was "reduced" to 9 who molted at the Meer in the   early weeks of summer.  And currently, there is only one   pitiful family of 5 very human wary geese at Harlem Meer.
  There are a few more geese at the Boat Lake in Central Park this late   spring. But, that is only because one pair of geese produced six   goslings.
  That puts the number of geese this year at the Boat Lake in the teens -- or   a few more than last year, but still very low generally for an 874 acre park and   particularly as compared to past numbers.
  Nevertheless, despite the very low number of geese currently at   Central Park, there is no guarantee that the crown jewel of parks won't in fact   be on the USDA "hit list" in a few weeks.  No place with any   geese at all in New York City can be viewed as "off limits" for a   possible invasion by government agencies seeminly hell bent on   destroying geese.
  USDA has in recent years rounded up as few as 7 geese in some   locations.  It seems no number is too low for a potential roundup. 
  Unrelated, but similar in terms of government "management" is NYC   Mayor Bloomberg's  latest proposal to ban the sale of sugary soft drinks   over 16 ounces. 
  This does not affect me emotionally as I am not a big soda drinker nor   am I overweight. 
  However, as a thin person, why should I be prevented from buying a large   soda drink on a hot day?   Why would I have to purchase two sodas for   a higher price?
  The proposed measure is concerning as it is one more small step of   seeming government intrusion and attempted "control" into private   lives and what should be personal decisions of choice.
  More significantly, it seems this action is a kind of   "demonization" of certain people in society -- in this case, overweight people,   who, like smokers are being singled out and blamed for rising health care   costs.
  But, if we go down this road of singleling out certain segments   in society for blame in health care costs, where too, does this end?
  What about people overusing tanning salons (skin cancer), bottle feeding   babies, (supposedly a very bad thing although most babies were bottle   fed from 40's - 80's), drinking too much alcohol (liver disease) or   abusing prescription medications?
  Potentially, every human weakness or "vice" can be turned into governmental   campaigns or "bans" to seemingly "manage" every aspect of our lives down to   what we eat and drink.
  Educational campaigns are of course desirable and productive in terms   of aiding people to make better health choices in life. But, when those   educational efforts turn into restrictions, bans and not always so subtle   attempts to demonize certain members of society, they should raise red   flags.  
  All of these issues have similar thread.  That is, government   sometimes overstepping what should be proper and ethical bounds and making   decisions for otherwise free-thinking people. 
  I for one appreciate governmental efforts to make our skies safer for air   travel by minimizing and ideally avoiding bird strikes. 
  But, those efforts need to incorporate cooperation, responsibility and task   assignment on many levels. 
  From manufactures of airliners to develop and insure that modern jets have   some means of detecting and avoiding birds in the air, to the responsibility of   parks and city properties to humanely and non-lethally "manage"   their goose and bird populations to acceptable levels (through habitat   modification or egg addling), to the considerations of altering aircraft   speeds and altitudes during arrivals and departures from airports (the times   when most bird strikes occur).
  What is not acceptable is government simply deciding it is "cost   effective" and appropriate to round up wildlife from city parks ad   infinitum for slaughter.  Wildlife that in many cases is appreciated   and enjoyed by thousands of park goers and nature lovers. 
  Attempts to "demonize" and single out geese for what really are   our own failures to sufficiently and holistically address a   problem are similar to those attempts to blame and single out certain   segments in human culture for failures in education or problems in the health   care system.
  We really need to look at holistic measures in addressing all of   these issues.
  Some people complain that there is too much government intrusion into   private lives and that they want government out of their bedrooms and   cupboards.  
  I would only add that I want government out of our parks and USDA's   hands off our geese. -- PCA
  
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