ycbm
Einstein would be proud of my Insanity...
Should we stop putting horses at risk by using them for crowd control?
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Title of this thread =/= OP. Police horses aren't just used for crowd control.
But if they don't do crowd control how on earth can anyone justify the cost? Ceremonial duties when we can't investigate burglaries properly? Patrolling the streets when bikes and drones don't eat, pee their beds and need vets?
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So you think it’s a cost thing??
I think there are huge welfare issues with it. And if you remove the welfare issues inherent in crowd control, it becomes a cost/benefit thing.
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By your reasoning we shouldn’t have a police force then as it’s putting people at risk
Should we be put on the streets with our own horses? I mean we could be attacked? Many horse riders have been in altercations with people and been assaulted, horses are stabbed just being in fields, human beings can be cruel without an animal doing a job.
Ycbm, coming at a tangent, you say horses can't refuse....
Neither can they in any activity, racing, sj etc etc, particularly at lower levels when inexperienced or forceful owners or trainers are at work....
I agree, people just forget animals that get eaten. I do think police horses are at risk and should be reconsideredMilitary war dogs, police horses… mostly loved and cared for. Some element of risk to the job. Relatively low numbers.
Cows, pigs, sheep, intensive poultry farming. Often horrific conditions for their entire short lives. Large numbers.
I’m just maybe a bit too straightforward in my thinking. If we’re going to complain about animal treatment, surely we should start with the ones whose lives are the worst, in the largest numbers, rather than just the ones we actually see the most, if that makes sense?
yes - no need for it in this day and age, but keep police horses for visible patrols on commons etcShould we stop putting horses at risk by using them for crowd control?
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AbsolutelyMilitary war dogs, police horses… mostly loved and cared for. Some element of risk to the job. Relatively low numbers.
Cows, pigs, sheep, intensive poultry farming. Often horrific conditions for their entire short lives. Large numbers.
I’m just maybe a bit too straightforward in my thinking. If we’re going to complain about animal treatment, surely we should start with the ones whose lives are the worst, in the largest numbers, rather than just the ones we actually see the most, if that makes sense?
Absolutely true, but two wrongs don't make a right. We can easily abolish both forms of animal cruelty (or misuse) at once, if we want as a society.Military war dogs, police horses… mostly loved and cared for. Some element of risk to the job. Relatively low numbers.
Cows, pigs, sheep, intensive poultry farming. Often horrific conditions for their entire short lives. Large numbers.
I’m just maybe a bit too straightforward in my thinking. If we’re going to complain about animal treatment, surely we should start with the ones whose lives are the worst, in the largest numbers, rather than just the ones we actually see the most, if that makes sense?
I find your response a bit bizarre and unrelated to anything I wrote.
People can choose to put themselves at risk and thankfully people in many professions will do that.
Horses can't choose.
Would you take your own horse to a demonstration that he was there for precisely because of the likelihood of violence?
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Its the tip of the iceberg really, Should we use police dogs, dogs for the disabled, guide dogs, search and rescue dogs...Should we continue horse sports? Dressage, eventing, show jumping.
Should we even ride horses. Its a massive, massive subject.
Yes I understand that but they are very often attacked by other dogs and are not allowed to display natural behaviour when working. Police dogs and search dogs are put in danger during their work. Its really not black and white.Guide dogs and assistance dogs aren't generally put in harm's way though. It's not just about the concept of a "working animal" but the concept of putting that animal in actively dangerous situations.