Well Jan that's a can of worms you opened here!
If hunting is your only criteria for your Safari destination may I ask why you return to America after each trip to Kenya?
Along with hunting, trapping (Snares?) is still legal in some states!!!
Also you yourself highlight the corruption of Kenya & recently infered in a post that Chinese diplomats were selecting their ivory on the hoof so to speak!!!
Here are my reasons to visit Zimbabwe, Botswana & Zambia.
No hotel excursions from the coastal resorts!
The tourists you meet there are wildlife enthusiasts not on a three day - see everything - Hows my suntan? - Any more ice? - Where's the swimming pool? - Can we see the Leopard now? trip.
I would add that my first ever trip was thus, although a sun tan & the beach have never been my thing! But I got the African bug & wanted to experience more than the soft protected world of the organised tours.
I love the bush, I love the soletude, I love to stake out a water hole & wait all day!
I love laying in my tent knowing that I am the only human for miles around, I love being the only vehicle with a pride of lions, I love sitting & having an elephant scratch himself on the Landrover while we sit with bated breath in awe of his majesty.
I love driving in areas where there has not been a vehicle for years! (I would add that we were requested to so by rangers to deter cross boarder poaching)
I love to meet the people in the villages to barter even to watch my punctured tyre as it is mended so it's not switched with an inferior one.
I have camped with Masai in Tanzania far away from the tourist routes, eaten with them joked with them my video camera was a great sourse of enjoyment to them on playback.
In Zimbabwe everyone in conservation is so pleased you have visited, why should I hand the wildlife over to the hunters?
Here are a couple of stories to show why I will continue to support these people besides the pure enjoyment I get from my trips.
one ranger was charged with the care of waterhole pumps, one pump in particular was very tempermental so he built himself a shelter so he could base himself at this pump, if he could not fix it he would sleep in the bush as the elephants would pester him if the water did not flow! He had not been paid for 4 months!!
Another on the day of his wifes funeral ensured that his campsite was clean before he buried her! Again it was a number of months since he'd been paid.
Black Rhino had been released into Hwange 3 rangers lived off the land as protection for the rhino, I am told they also had not been paid for some time.
Besides the pure pleasure my wife & I get from these trips we are showing our support to these dedicated people.... & we just love meeting
Benson every year!!