iwfan53 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 27, 2020 2:16 am
Can you source your definition of poaching? I can't help but feel that since the island that the dinosaurs are on belongs to Ingen, Ingen created all the dinosaurs, the situation is more equivalent to if a ranch is hit by a thunderstorm, which creates a hole in its fences through which all the cows stampede out, and now the ranch owner wants to round up and recapture the cows, which were always his property to start with, so it doesn't become illegal to recapture them just because an act of nature temporarily allowed them to escape.
If the Island isn't an official animal sanctuary, and at the start of the movie it very much isn't since turning it into one is what Hammond wants to accomplish, I can't see how capturing the dinosaurs rises to the level of "poaching".
You realize I addressed that point literally in the next paragraph. Concerning the fact Ingen owns the dinosaurs. I was merely explaining that just because animals aren't killed does not mean it isn't poaching. There are illegal exotic animal markets out there that do what the hunters in the movie do, capture animals through non-lethal means, and it is still considered poaching by a number of governments. That was the issue I was addressing, not whether or not the hunters in this movie can be classified as poachers, but that just because you don't kill an animal doesn't mean you can't be classified as one.
More to the point, Hammond created the creatures. He dreamed them up, he financed the research, he made them possible. Technically, they're his. And Peter, his nephew, is try to assert his control over them in his uncle's ailing state. And, according to the dialogue, he wasn't supposed to be here yet. So he's either jumped the gun on the legal matters because he doesn't want to wait anymore or he's pushed the issue through some kind of court loophole to reassert the dinosaurs as HIS company assests, not Hammond's.
So if I really wanted to argue specifically concerning the point about whether or not the hunters are Poachers, I would've come at that angle from the get. Again, I was explaining that poaching is not limited to killing animals in the general sense, not the film.
But if you want a legal definition towards my point that killing animals is not the only thing that encompasses poaching
poaching[ poh-ching ]SHOW IPA
SEE SYNONYMS FOR poaching ON THESAURUS.COM
noun
the illegal practice of trespassing on another's property to hunt or steal game without the landowner's permission.
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/poaching
Now while again, the precise legal claim to the dinosaurs is still hazy, considering Hammond was the man who financed their existence but did so through Ingen, if our "heroes" are attempting to convince people that Hammond's position is accurate, legally they would have to back his claim to the dinosaurs, the island and everything on it. Allowing him to do whatever he wants with it, including making it a preserve. And given this is Ingen, who kinda suck as the wider universe has revealed over time, it is likely that the board is forcing its position that they own the dinosaurs and not Hammond. So, while I'm not really arguing about whether or not this is poaching, I will say there are plausible grounds to call it so.
Regardless, it does nothing to make me sympathize, like or feel sorry about the well being and safety of a bunch of military wannabe thugs running around an island doing their thing for Ingen's little Circus Maximus. Even if they do legally own the dinosaurs and the island, I already explained why I find that extremely problematic and morally wrong. So again, if they get eaten... that's a shame. (munch popcorn)