The drama is over. After days of terrifying a small Japanese community, a black bear has been captured, tranquilised, and removed. The beast, which had mauled several locals and turned a quiet town into a labyrinth of fear, is now safely detained. And what is the reaction from the chattering classes? A chorus of praise for the British eco-tourism model. Let me be blunt: this is absurd.
First, the facts. Japan’s infrastructure for dealing with such incidents is notoriously underdeveloped. The bear, Ussuri brown or black, roamed freely for days. The local authorities, paralysed by bureaucracy and a misguided reverence for wildlife, failed to act swiftly. They hesitated. They consulted. They dithered. Meanwhile, the people cowered. This is the result of a sentimental approach to nature that has become fashionable among the global elite: do nothing, and hope the problem solves itself.
Enter the British eco-tourism model. What does that mean, exactly? In practice, it is a system designed to manage human-wildlife conflict through careful monitoring, public education, and controlled interactions. In Scotland, for example, the reintroduction of the beaver has been handled with a combination of licensing, compensation for farmers, and a dose of good old-fashioned common sense. It works because it is pragmatic, not idealistic. It acknowledges that humans and animals must coexist, but it does not pretend that beasts are harmless playmates. The Japanese bear crisis is a perfect case study: the authorities failed precisely because they overthought the problem. They wanted to be kind, but they forgot to be effective.
The irony is rich. Japan, a nation that prides itself on order and efficiency, has been humbled by a bear. The solution was ultimately simple: a team of hunters and a trap. But the delay was a result of a cultural aversion to decisive action against animals. This is the same sentiment that drives the vegan activist to denounce beekeeping and the eco-tourist to photograph a wolf instead of running for her life. It is a luxury of the comfortable. The villagers, however, were not comfortable. They were afraid.
Why does this matter beyond Japan? Because the same intellectual decadence is creeping into British policy. We have our own problems with badgers, deer, and the occasional escaped exotic pet. The countryside is not a theme park. It is a working landscape. British eco-tourism works because it is grounded in reality: it balances the interests of farmers, conservationists, and ordinary people. It does not fetishise the wild. It respects it.
So let us not pretend that Japan is to be pitied. Let us instead admire the British example for what it is: a mature, unsentimental approach to living with nature. The bear is gone. The people are safe. But the lesson is permanent. Sentimentality is for the drawing room. For the real world, we need pragmatism. And if that annoys the aesthetics of the global elite, so be it.








