Anonymous ID: aaff6c July 26, 2021, 7:18 a.m. No.14201748   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1803 >>1817

wait what?

on the 23rd, a guy named Dan Bailey just happens to be in Dan Bailey's Fly Shop, to confront Tucker but he has no affiliation with the store?

 

>https://heavy.com/news/dan-bailey-tucker-carlson-video/

Dan Bailey is a Montana man who confronted Fox News host Tucker Carlson at a sporting goods store in Livingston. His Instagram video of the July 23, 2021, incident went viral. Bailey can be heard telling Carlson he is “the worst human being known to man.”

 

Although the encounter occurred at a fishing store called Dan Bailey’s Fly Shop, the store says Bailey is not connected to the business. “On July 23rd, a well-known television personality, Tucker Carlson, was affronted while shopping at Dan Bailey’s Outdoor Company. Coincidentally, the person engaging Mr. Carlson was a local resident named Dan Bailey.This person has no affiliation with our business, other than he shares the same name as our founder, who passed away in 1982,” the company said on Facebook.

 

Dan Bailey’s Fly Shop added, “To be clear, we treat every customer equally and respectfully. Our staff was professional and cordial to Mr. Carlson, as we are with all of our customers.” Carlson and Fox News have not commented about the video.

Anonymous ID: aaff6c July 26, 2021, 7:28 a.m. No.14201803   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1817

>>14201748

  1. Bailey Was Born in Casper, Wyoming, & Graduated From Montana State University & the University of Montana With Degrees in Conservation & Land Resource Analysis

 

Bailey was born in Casper, Wyoming, and now lives in Livingston with his wife, according to his Facebook profile. He and his wife have been married since 2018, according to his social media pages.

 

According to his LinkedIn profile, Bailey graduated from Montana State University-Bozeman with a bachelor’s degree in land resource analysis and management. He then graduated from the University of Montana in 2013 with a master’s degree in resource conservation, he wrote on LinkedIn.

 

  1. Bailey Is the Yellowstone Program Manager for the National Parks Conservation Association

 

Bailey has worked as the Yellowstone Program Manager for the National Parks Conservation Association in Livingston since 2019, according to his LinkedIn profile. According to its website, the NPCA is based in Washington D.C.and is a nonpartisan and independent membership organization aimed at protecting and preserving national parks and advocating on behalf of the National Parks System.

 

The website says, “With more than 1.6 million members and supporters beside us, we are the voice of America’s national parks, working to protect and preserve our nation’s most iconic and inspirational places for present and future generations. We celebrate the parks — and work tirelessly to defend them — whether on the ground, in the courtroom or on Capitol Hill.”

 

Bailey previously worked as the Montana regional representative for Pheasants Forever from 2013 to 2019, according to his LinkedIn profile. The nonprofit conservation organization is based in Minnesota and has a mission “to conserve pheasants, quail, and other wildlife through habitat improvements, public access, education, and conservation advocacy,” according to its website.

 

  1. Bailey Is an Avid Fisherman& Hunter& He Has Spent Time Working as aConservationist in Mongolia

 

Bailey is an avid fisherman and hunter, according to his Instagram profile, which features several photos from trips and adventures both in Montana and around the world.

 

Bailey has also been involved in conservation efforts in Mongolia, including as a board member for the Taimen Fund. According to its website, “The Taimen Fund was established in 2013 to continue earlier efforts by The Tributary Fund, ecotourism fly fishing companies, and international anglers to protect Mongolia’s wild taimen. Whereas taimen were once fishable by permit in Mongolia as recently as the mid-2000s, conservation efforts have since resulted in comprehensive taimen laws and regulations. In December 2005, the Mongolian government registered the taimen as a ‘rare’ species, a species whose population is in severe decline and threatened with extinction. Since 2008, the law has mandated catch and release practice and required the use of single barbless hooks for all anglers fishing for taimen.”