Fred66
Well-Known Member
I know that hunting relies on landowners, and this is EXACTLY why hunting seriously needs to clean up its act if it wants to survive. If all trail hunts were as well behaved as yours supposedly is, I would see no problem with them - they would exist like any other sport. But the evidence overwhelmingly points to the opposite. You seem to find it hard to accept that hunting has created a really bad image for itself. And before you say that anti-hunt propaganda from LACS and the like is to blame, I have never followed LACS or any anti-hunt groups, I only have to keep up with BBC news and country forums to read the various escapades of hunts each year - the fatal pet attacks, livestock killed, crops trampled.
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Could you point me to genuine “overwhelming“ evidence that points to this ? There are probably in excess of 20000 days hunting per year in England and the number of proven incidents are less than 100 (don’t get me wrong that is still too many) but equally it’s less than 0.5%.
Who do you think gives the BBC their reports if not LACS or HSA ?
Its easy to be swayed by emotive pieces but these are not in themselves facts. If pets are killed by dogs then this is distressing for the owners and anyone who witnesses it , whether that dog belongs to a private individual or the hunt doesn’t change the distress.
I personally supported the middle way of greater regulation of the hunts, whereby they would have been licensed and that license could have been suspended or removed. This would have put animal welfare and control at the forefront but for whatever reason animal welfare was not as important as one upping the landed gentry. So we have a law that suits noone.