$15,000 for one animal? That’s not survival — that’s exploitation with a price tag.
If a walrus is worth $15,000, are we really feeding a community, or just feeding someone’s bank account?
An animal that rare and valuable shouldn’t be butchered — it should be protected.
$15k for meat? That’s more than what many families make in a year. Tell me again how this is “just survival.”
Turning a walrus into dollar signs proves it’s no longer about culture or tradition, just cold hard cash.
Ah yes, nothing screams “Arctic survival” like slapping a $15,000 price tag on nature’s giants.
So who actually gets that $15,000? The hunters? The community? Or some middleman selling tusks overseas?
If this is what it costs to feed people, maybe the real problem isn’t the walrus — it’s the system that makes food this expensive.
$15,000 for one walrus? That’s a luxury car — not dinner.
If feeding a town means eating meat that costs $15k, then something is seriously broken in this food chain.
Calling it “tradition” doesn’t justify putting a luxury price tag on a dying species.
$15,000 for one animal is just proof we’ve turned nature into a commodity instead of respecting it.
So a walrus is worth more dead on a plate than alive in the Arctic? Makes sense… for humans, not nature.
Slapping a $15k label on an animal is why people think wildlife is just stock on a market ticker.
If a walrus is worth $15,000, why are Arctic communities still struggling in poverty?
Keep hunting “$15k meals” and soon there won’t be any walrus left to price.
No living creature should ever have a price tag — especially not one this obscene.
What’s next? Auctioning off polar bears at $50k a head in the name of survival?
$15k walrus — sounds less like feeding a village and more like hosting a VIP banquet.
If the world thinks a dead walrus is worth $15,000, maybe the real “most hated predator” is us.