Everyone is jumping on Mike, but he's not completely wrong. He could have said ita little nicer, but it is not really fair to try to control where others hunt on their own land. He pays the taxes on that land, right up to the fence, therefor he should be able to hunt right up to the fence. If you catch him tresspassing, then you have a right to complain.
I agree. Mike isn't really wrong with what he said. What are you going to do when you approach the guy? Tell him to move his stand off his property? As far as not letting the guy track a deer onto your property? That's pathetic IMO. With your reasoning you should be dropping every deer in their tracks so they NEVER go onto a neighboring property. Keep good relations with your fellow hunters and neighboring landowners. Work together and everyone will be better off in the long run.
A lot of times boundary lines happen to be seperated by field edges, land terrain, etc.... which happen to make up good natural funnels and travel routes. I've noticed a lot of hunting on edges of property because it's good hunting.