Alexis Crosswell makes a better argument against trophy hunting …show more content…
5 Reasons Why Trophy Hunting Is Not Conservation is also an opinion piece, but uses scientific and reliable sources to further prove its claim. While the first article provides a valuable perspective on the way we think about hunting, it only provides a personal opinion. This personal opinion is from someone who lived in Zimbabwe and experienced what good hunting can do, but he does not have the knowledge of what trophy hunting can do to the economy and environment. In Zimbabwe, We Don’t Cry For Lions is more about the western perspective on the sympathy towards lions, but does not state whether trophy hunting is a scientifically proven positive industry. 5 Reasons Why Trophy Hunting Is Not Conservation provides scientific evidence as to why trophy hunting is not sustainable. Goodwell Nzou says “don’t offer me condolences about [Cecil The Lion] unless you’re also willing to offer me condolences for villagers killed or left hungry by his bretheren.” This is the basis of his argument. He feels people who are defending hunting don’t understand what it’s like to live amongst lions. Alexis Crosswell provides scientific evidence to prove that killing a male lion like Cecil can cause more deaths, as the back will be attacked by other male lions, and therefore trophy hunting is not sustainable. Nzou provides a valuable …show more content…
While Nzou provides a very important perspective, it does not argue well for trophy hunting. The only thing the article convinces the reader of is that western people should stop being so upset when a lion is killed. Crosswell gives her readers the other side of the argument and gives logical reasoning against it. While both have their biases, Crosswell leaves hers out of her article much more than Nzou. In the end, the reader will be against trophy hunting if given only the information about the subject from these two