Hello Everyone,
Stopping us regular everyday folks from fishing has  got to be among the stupidest, most controlling ideas idiots can come up  with.  
I personally fish for a combination of things.  One it is generally relaxing.  I mostly fish in the local canals and  lakes.  The other is I eat the fish.  I like fish.   
I know some people in my own county that fish to  supplement their food source.  It does  not make up all of their daily nutrients, but it helps.  
This idiotic government control over all aspects of  our lives is getting worse all the time.   This is just another straw to break our backs.  
Godspeed,
Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit
Hey  Obama, Keep Your Hands Off My Fishing Pole!
By Doug Giles
“Many men go fishing all  of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after.” – Henry  David Thoreau 
God, I love fishing. I dig fishing almost as much as  hunting (almost). I love it so much that I moved to a place that is one of the  top angling spots in the world: Miami, Florida. And you know what? I milk these  waters as much as a working man can.   
My fishing roots extend back to Texas and my rowdy  childhood when my dad used to take me and my brother fishing on the many lakes,  ponds and rivers the Lone Star state has to offer.  
Our stringer was typical of a freshwater 60s and 70s  Texas catch: perch, crappie, black bass, white bass, channel cats, carp and gar.  It was way cool for this little redneck. Yes indeed, Bob-Dawg, I dug it  all.  
For example, as a young punk I took insane pleasure  in:  
Ø      Buying  fishing gear. Very cool.
Ø      Practicing my casting accuracy in my backyard (which  still serves me well to this day)
Ø      Reading  Outdoor Life and getting pumped on its fishing lies … I mean …  stories
Ø      Experiencing the inability to sleep the night before  getting up and declaring war on the fish
Ø      Buying  bait at freaky bait shops run by guys I swear worked as extras on the movie  Deliverance
Ø      Arriving at our strategic and wild location and having  the privilege of watching and listening to that which is untamed waking up and  beginning its tooth, fang and claw survival of the fittest exchange with Mother  Nature. Life and death in its purest form, Nancy  boys.
Ø      Taking  a crash course from my dad and other gents regarding different lures and the  various ways to present them.
Ø      And  then, of course, the entre, actually catching a fish and grappling with my  gigantic aquatic monster which was, in all reality, a pound-and-a-half bass. (I  didn’t care, though, because as far as I was concerned, I was  Ernest-Frickin’-Hemingway’s character Santiago, and that little bass was my  Marlin.) 
Ø      And  lastly, basking in the great satisfaction later that evening of watching adults  eat what this rugrat provided. I am iron man. Dun, dun. Dun na dun dunna dunna  dunna dun dunna dun.
As a young squab, the whole fishing enchilada, from  soup to nuts, represented what Bryan Adams called, “The best days of my  life.”  
With the busyness of college, getting married, raising  little girls, making money, and kicking ass, I got out of the fishing groove  until I moved mi familia to Miami where I became a fishing kid again and quickly  returned to my angling roots.   
After a couple of years of getting settled in, weeding  through the rip-off charters and bad captains, I landed on two Capitans who are  worth their weight in gold. After the Lord blessed me with those two leads I  quickly called my dad to get his butt on a plane to bend some rods South Florida  style. And oh my God have we crushed the fish. 
Not only has pops been a part of many insane hauls,  but my wife and my two infamous daughters have, as well. Matter of fact, my  girls grew up catching big game fish on light tackle twice their body length  without daddy’s help. That’s how they roll, boys. Grow a pair or go home.  
In addition to my familial fishing trips, we have had  the pleasure of fishing with folks from all over the world and from every  conceivable walk of life: from diplomats, bestselling authors, pundits, big name  rock stars, Fox News contributors, missionaries, attorney generals, terminal  cancer patients, and good buddies at church, to at risk teens without hope and  without a clue. We have always had an amazing time, sharing in our mutual  addiction that we seek no cure from (i.e. the screaming reel).  
The fish we have caught, of which I have the pictures  and videos to prove, include: giant bull sharks, lemon sharks, great  hammerheads, black tip sharks, spinner sharks (the most enjoyable shark to  hook), dusky sharks, sailfish, dolphin, goliath grouper (and their many  cousins), permit, bonefish, giant barracuda, tarpon, snook, speckled trout, jack  cravelles, amberjack, ladyfish, blue fish, snapper, tripletails, yellow jacks,  kingfish, Spanish mackerel, bonita, tuna, red fish and a couple of things I  didn’t know what the hell they were.   
We have caught them all: small, medium and large. In  the gorgeous ultra marine blue seas of the Atlantic, to the gin-clear flats of  Biscayne Bay, down to Key West, to the murky fish-rich waters of Chokoloskee,  the Ten Thousand Islands area, and the gorgeous, uninhabited sanctuary of  Flamingo.  
Yep, I blame fish for a lot of the great times in my  life. Check it out: All around the personal pursuit of my finny little friend,  my life and my relationships have been greatly enriched via stretched  monofilament and high-pitched Diawa drag screams.  
Which brings me to the point of my column. As much as  I have been there and have done that from a fishing standpoint, as you can guess  from my eight-hundred-word gush above, I can’t imagine not fishing for the rest  of my life nor my kid’s kids not being able to be anglers should they so desire.  Fishing is one of the cherished liberties and activities that keeps me giddy  about the great American experiment.   
That’s why when I hear crap that Obama and his  “progressive” ilk want to ban fishing, it gets me … uh … how shall I put this …  um… angry. Yeah, that’s a good word. Not only are they upending this nation on  many different economical fronts but now they’re talking about the  recreationally and economically disastrous move of banning fishing? What’s next?  Are they going to ban apple pie? Blonde-haired girls? Chevrolet? No, they own  Chevy now. What about baseball?   
For those who say, “Ah, it’ll never happen in  America,” that’s probably what some folks in Ontario thought before the World  Wildlife Fund and the International Fund for Animal Welfare completed their  successful campaign to convince the Ontario government to shut down one of the  best managed big-game hunts in North America, which crippled many small  businesses and the tourism economy of communities across northern and central  Ontario.  
My advice to fishermen everywhere is to refuse to be  silent and scream now via phone calls, emails and faxes to your reps as loud as  your Penn reel would wail with a 50lb kingfish strippin’ off its line.  
For more info on what BHO and his tree humping boys  plan to do, go here … and here. Lastly, click here to fish with my Captain, Gavet Tuttle, at www.BackForMore.com.  
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit

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