Laws to permit the colour "blaze pink" for hunters have been proposed in five states in the US. How did this become a legislative trend?
As the legislative session drew to a close last week at the Minnesota state capitol, a curious piece of legislation became the focus of ire for lawmakers - a bill to make something called "blaze pink" legal for hunters to wear.
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Last spring, Wisconsin Representative Nick Milroy had the idea that "blaze pink" might also be an acceptable safety colour as well as a way to get some new blood into the sport.He even got a textile scientist at a local university to investigate whether there were any safety concerns.
"The fastest growing segment in new recruits into hunting are females, and that's one of the big reasons that companies have been marketing things like pink camouflage, pink guns, pink knives," he says.
Participation in hunting in the US has been on the decline for decades, and the sport is overwhelmingly dominated by men.
Safety Orange to become Safety Pink?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 29 2016, @12:40PM
I don't think they know what that second word means.
(Score: 3, Funny) by LoRdTAW on Sunday May 29 2016, @03:22PM
You've obviously never hunted deer in a vagina before.
(Score: 2, Interesting) by mrgren on Sunday May 29 2016, @03:57PM
Blaze camouflage patterns work because most animals have limited color perception. Shocking pink to us just looks like another drab color to them; the broken PATTERN disguising your shape is what makes it camo.