Safari Club International is firing on all cylinders with their enthusiastic applause for the National Park Service’s latest proposed rule—a game-changer that’s set to fling open the gates for hunting across Alaska’s vast national preserves. This isn’t some minor tweak; it’s a full-throated reversal of the overreaching 2015, 2017, and 2024 regs that sidelined state authority under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA). By reinstating Alaska’s traditional wildlife management framework, complete with those time-tested closure procedures, the NPS is handing control back to the experts on the ground who actually know how to balance conservation with sustainable use. And with a 30-day public comment period now live, this is your cue to saddle up and weigh in before the feds lock it down again.
Dig deeper, and this move is a masterclass in bureaucratic backpedaling after years of federal overreach that treated Alaska like a nanny-state petting zoo. Those scrapped rules? They were the handiwork of anti-hunting zealots who prioritized predator protection over the subsistence hunters and sportsmen who’ve sustained Alaskan ecosystems for generations—think bear baiting bans and wolf-trapping restrictions that ignored ANILCA’s explicit intent for state primacy. The implications ripple far beyond the Last Frontier: it’s a win for federalism, shoving back against D.C. desk-jockeys dictating local traditions. For the 2A community, this is pure rocket fuel—hunting is the lifeblood of gun culture, and restoring access means more rifles in racks, more youth in the woods, and a bulwark against the slow creep of gun-grabbing through wildlife protection pretexts. When states reclaim authority over their backyards, it sets a precedent that echoes in courtrooms battling ATF overreach or EPA land grabs.
Make no mistake, this proposed rule isn’t just about bagging a moose; it’s a shot across the bow for every conservationist, hunter, and Second Amendment defender tired of Washington micromanaging our heritage. Jump into those public comments now—your voice could tip the scales toward a freer, wilder America where lead flies free and wildlife thrives under proven stewardship. Who’s with me?