Kendall Jones.
She is the 19-year-old cheerleader who – just a few months ago – became famous when photos of herself with the bodies of African animals she had hunted went viral.
You might remember her as the publisher of photos like this:
And this:
The reaction to her photos was fierce. Some commenters were so offended by the images, they wrote that they wished Kendall would fight the big game on “equal footing” without a gun, or that she should have been “killed” in the place of the animals. Now, Jones has hit back at her critics.
In an interview with First for Hunters, Kendall Jones responded to these death threats, saying, “It’s rather concerning to see people condemn the taken life of an animal and in the next breath wish to see me dead. I just don’t see the logic in it.”
She also said that she didn’t understand why women specifically are the subject of such harsh criticism from animal rights organisations.
“I find it odd that only women have been targeted by these organisations,” Kendall revealed. “Why would these huge, powerful organisations go after me, a woman, a minority in the hunting community and attack me with their anti-hunting rhetoric? I am not the first to go on African safaris yet these groups attack me nonetheless.”
Top Comments
The problem with this 'rich white girl gets stuck into even richer white girl' type article is that it completely ignores the perspective of the people who actually live there and support hunting. No doubt we could imagine many alternate realities that would be better, but the reality is that the most likely alternative is that the locals, without hunting fees, have no incentive not to kill the pesky elephant that destroys their crops or the lion that takes their cattle. If this involved endangered species (which it does not) I'd be the first to argue against it but these are not scarce animals and we with our privileged lives should butt out - if Africans don't want this sort of thing their governments will ban it like in Kenya.
Hi guest, thanks for your response. I'm really trying not to 'get stuck into' Kendall Jones, and am in fact encouraging people to look at the broader situation. From some of the reading I've done in the area, it seems that a lot of South Africans don't like the current system; but also that the fees associated with hunting parks earn officials and authorities revenue, so they tend to support the practice.
White lions are endangered -- but I'm surprised that you say you wouldn't support the practice if the animals were endangered? The whole argument behind canned hunting as conservation is that it increases the number of species through breeding programs. (Unless you reject the conservation arguments, but are swayed by the arguments regarding hunting boosting the local economy, which also makes sense!)
In any case, I don't know that "it's not our country so we shouldn't talk about it" (or as you put it, should 'butt out') is a very convincing argument, as that logic taken to an extreme censures anyone in Australia from commenting on any social issue abroad.
There is always a justification for everything.. Doesn't make it right or ethical. This is one conversation solution.. But it's not a good one.