Well if a game camera breaks the fair chase rule then so does:
1. a stand
2. a weapon
3. camo
4. removing your scent in anyway
5. anything else beyond what an animal uses
You want to fair chase then get out there like the coyote, lion, or bear and do it with your bare hands (no rock). As has been stated above...you hunt an oak tree, apple tree, water hole, game trail, choke point or anything else that is going to draw an animal into a spot and it is the same as baiting. If it is legal than by all means do it if you want to and don't if you don't agree with it. Using a trail camera doesn't mean that the animal of my dreams is going to come back when I'm there or present the killer shot. It is all by chance. Watch any animal show and they will show you how they use what they have and know to increase their odds at eating that day. They hunt in packs, seek out the weak or wounded, stake out food sources and water holes and even send out scouts (like our game cams

).
We did several classes at our church on ethics. We covered all sort of ethical areas from medical to sexual to war and peace. I did the class on war and peace and most of the people are for peace. But mention WWII and the situation then and how the nation responded and war wasn't so bad (older crowd). It was nothing to loose thousands of men to take a hill or island and they went on to the next one. Because they agreed it was a good cause. Move to today and we freak out that over 3,000 men and women have lost their lives in Iraq and Afganistan. Times change and so do our ideas of what is right and wrong.
Hunt the way you feel comfortable with and don't look down on those who have a different (legal) way of doing it.
My 2 cents worth
Reid