Initially, I agree. But I also feel that any innovation, like computers and cell phones, gets cheaper as technology progresses.
Not the same thing. Technology gets cheaper the more people buy it because of advances in manufacturing during the product's lifespan and because the more copies of a product that are sold, the thinner the development/design costs can be spread.
Metals and other natural resources are priced based mostly on supply and demand. Lead is far more plentiful than bismuth so it costs much less. Bismuth prices will DEFINITELY not come down with more demand (caused by the switchover from lead) unless someone suddenly discovers a huge new supply of bismuth. In other words, it ain't gonna happen. It's as good now as it's ever gonna be--the more people forced to use bismuth, the higher the prices will go.
Sure, I like to shoot and drive my motorcycle. But the fact is that we can't keep treating the world like a toilet without some serious side effects.
No one, not even the far left environmental wackos are saying that lead bullets are turning the world into a toilet. In fact, the study that resulted in the law in question turned up evidence that contradicted the conclusion that lead bullets were the problem in this situation. EVEN if they were, the effect is so minor as to only be an issue for one particular species that has LONG been endangered for other reasons.
And frankly, I don't want to live in a world where every breath smells like an ashtray, or the soil is tainted with mercury, the fish are dying and the forest game are scarce.
Frankly I can't understand why you won't discuss the topic at hand instead of trying to turn this thread into a broad-based rant against pollution in general. Nobody likes pollution, but implying that lead bullets make "every breath smell", "taint the soil with mercury", cause fish to die or make forest game scarce is REALLY a stretch.
almost lost our national system by over using DDT which softens their eggs.
Has NOTHING to do with lead or lead bullets.
I don't know what causes CWD, but we could lose our deer and elk if it goes unchecked.
Has NOTHING to do with lead, lead bullets or pollutants, PERIOD. The most likely cause for CWD proliferation is overpopulation, it's a prion disease.
It's not a cute animal nor do many hunters want one.
Has NOTHING to do with ANYTHING. This thread is not about hunting condors (it's been illegal for decades) so whether or not "hunters want one" is about as completely irrelevant as is possible to imagine.
In my area there's Wyalusing State Park. Ever since I was kid there's been a monument to the idea of sloth, filth, greed and over hunting. It's a monument to the Passenger Pigeon.
TOTALLY irrelevant. This thread is not about sloth, filth, greed or over hunting. It's about people passing laws that restrict hunting based on studies which are not supportable.
The reason you're railing about pollution in general, sloth, filth, greed, mercury, DDT, overhunting, Badger Ordnance, CWD, etc. is because, like the people that passed the law you have no evidence that lead bullets are actually causing any problems with condors. Therefore the only thing to do is to try to make the law sound like a good idea in general based on the idea that it's going to reduce pollution overall (it won't, lead isn't CREATED, it's not a manmade substance--all the lead that will ever exist already exists now and always has) and that the impact of the law will be minimal.
In other words:
"We can't prove the law will do what it's supposed to do, but it seems like a good idea--and anyway, it won't bother anyone very much. Ok, so everyone who hates pollution raise your hand... GREAT, the motion carries."
That is NOT the way laws should be made.