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Who Wants To Shoot An Elephant Summary

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Who Wants To Shoot An Elephant Summary
Who Wants to Shoot an Elephant, published in 2014 in the Best American Nonrequired Reading, Wells Tower argues why anyone would want to shoot an elephant. Tower begins building his credibility with personal facts sources. He also cites convincing facts and statistics successfully appealing emotional appeals. Although trophy hunting is bad, many people still do it. I believe trophy hunting is bad and I think it should it stop. If there is less of trophy hunting, we will be able to save more animals like elephants.
In the book, Tower first sets the stage by describing the first night at the hunting camp in Botswana, Africa. He talks about the American guide, a professional hunter named Jeff Rann who gives a resume of his exotic kills including a zebra, and a warthog. Then tower
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The statistics are that in Kenya the elephant population has decimated from 167,000 to 27,000 in 2013. Tower has learned that some experts have predicted that the elephants will be extinct in Kenya within a decade. The other statistics that is involved is that in both Tanzania and Zimbabwe there were 300 elephants that were poisoned in a single massacre. The U.S Fish and Wildlife Service, in April 2014, suspended the import of elephant trophies from both nations. One of the most important source that Tower uses is Satsumo. Satsumo is the Department of Wildlife and National Parks employee who tagged along with him and the Waldrips on the safari ride. He believes that Botswana’s hunting ban may ultimately turn out badly for the elephants. His reason is that “there will be more poachers and more elephants will get out of the reserve”. He also believes they will get to people’s crop fields. One possible solution to the survival of the elephants is that may involve people paying lots of money to shoot them for fun. All of this is going to turn out bad for the

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