RSPCA Employee going hunting?

minesadouble

Well-Known Member
Joined
18 June 2005
Messages
2,960
Visit site
How does this sit with you?? Personally I don't really get how you can work for the organisation that lobbied to have hunting banned and then decide to have a bit bash at hunting yourself.
It's something I feel fairly strongly about so is my view skewed by my beliefs???

Personally I would draw an analogy between the above scenario and working for the Labour Party whilst voting conservative!!
 

spacefaer

Well-Known Member
Joined
3 March 2009
Messages
5,686
Location
Shropshire
Visit site
Daughter of a friend of mine worked for the local RSPCA Centre for at least a year, while hunting every week - her mother and sisters also hunt. She obviously didn't agree with the HQs policies but she was a groom at the centre, handling young coloured cobs and helping them find new homes.
 

ycbm

Einstein would be proud of my Insanity...
Joined
30 January 2015
Messages
57,096
Visit site
How does this sit with you?? Personally I don't really get how you can work for the organisation that lobbied to have hunting banned and then decide to have a bit bash at hunting yourself.
It's something I feel fairly strongly about so is my view skewed by my beliefs???

Personally I would draw an analogy between the above scenario and working for the Labour Party whilst voting conservative!!

Are you suggesting that these employees are hunting illegally? If not, I can't see the problem, as the activity their employer wanted banned is banned.
 

Alec Swan

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 October 2009
Messages
21,080
Location
Norfolk.
Visit site
Many years ago, when I was in Heythrop country, there was an rspca inspector who hunted regularly. A good bloke he was, too! :)

Perhaps we should suggest an rspca pack. Just a thought! :)

Alec,
 

A1fie

Well-Known Member
Joined
15 October 2007
Messages
779
Visit site
One of the founders of the RSPCA was a hunter. Both sides are not incompatible with each other as each care passionately about animals, albeit with differing ideas on how best to do so.
 

chillipup

Well-Known Member
Joined
25 August 2015
Messages
2,115
Visit site
One of the founders of the RSPCA was a hunter. Both sides are not incompatible with each other as each care passionately about animals, albeit with differing ideas on how best to do so.

Oh no, not Mr Wilberforce again. Didn't he keep slaves and beat kids too !!
 

minesadouble

Well-Known Member
Joined
18 June 2005
Messages
2,960
Visit site
Obviously so Chillipup! I couldn't bring myself to work for the RSPCA if my life depended upon it - I'd take a job with UKIP first ;)!

It's not a Daily Mail story btw it's a person local to me, I think their horse's suspensory ligaments and their own inability to stay in the plate at any speed beyond the most sedate walk may scupper the plan before it takes off anyway.
 

Countryman

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 November 2010
Messages
414
Visit site
Not just him but a lot of the other founders and early supporters.
P.s Wilberforce campaigned for the abolition of slavery ;)

Richard Martin known as 'Humanity Dick' also helped found them as well as bringing in most of the 19th centuries animal welfare law. He was also mad keen on his hunting.

For the OP, I would say - if they're paying a salary, so much the better if some of it gets ploughed back into a hunt subscription!
 

joosie

Well-Known Member
Joined
24 June 2009
Messages
1,105
Location
New Zealand
Visit site
I don't have a problem with it. Each to their own.
Saying that, my boss's husband is a vet - and a very dedicated one, who gets excited about the animals he can help, and sad about the ones he can't - yet he is also a keen hunter and goes shooting every weekend. I do find it ironic that he's so dedicated to helping pets and farm animals but will go out and kill wild ones!
 

minesadouble

Well-Known Member
Joined
18 June 2005
Messages
2,960
Visit site
I don't have a problem with it. Each to their own.
Saying that, my boss's husband is a vet - and a very dedicated one, who gets excited about the animals he can help, and sad about the ones he can't - yet he is also a keen hunter and goes shooting every weekend. I do find it ironic that he's so dedicated to helping pets and farm animals but will go out and kill wild ones![/QUOTE

See I don't have a problem with that - I support hunting, shooting and fishing and don't feel any conflict with field sports and loving animals. I am however, quite careful in where I source my family's meat as for me it's about the animal having a good quality of life before it is killed.
 

Dizzle

Well-Known Member
Joined
24 September 2008
Messages
2,303
Visit site
I know someone that was very very vocal on facebook about being anti-hunting and pro-animal rights.

She worked in the accounts department of a pest control company.

Pot. Kettle and all that.
 

Clodagh

Well-Known Member
Joined
17 August 2005
Messages
25,194
Location
Devon
Visit site
I don't have a problem with it. Each to their own.
Saying that, my boss's husband is a vet - and a very dedicated one, who gets excited about the animals he can help, and sad about the ones he can't - yet he is also a keen hunter and goes shooting every weekend. I do find it ironic that he's so dedicated to helping pets and farm animals but will go out and kill wild ones!

I always say only us British could get so excited about seeing a litter of cubs in spring, and say how cute they are and enjoy watching them, then go out with a pack of large dogs in the autumn intending to do for those very same cute fluffies.
 

Orangehorse

Well-Known Member
Joined
25 November 2005
Messages
13,254
Visit site
I think that all hunts state at their meets that they intend to hunt within the law. Many hunts follow an artifical line, so can't see any problem with an RSPCA employee going hunting. That was a very big thing in the midst of the "ban" that those opposed said they weren't opposed to people going hunting and enjoying a gallop across the countryside so long as the fox wasn't killed (by the hounds anyway).

There is nothing illegal in killing a fox, it is the method that is used that is the point of dispute. A vet will come and cure farm animals, which are going to be killed for their meat. There are many vets who hunt/ shoot.

As for fox cubs being cute - well they are. So are young badgers - but I still don't like badgers running around our fields, not that I can do anything about it.
 

laura_nash

Well-Known Member
Joined
17 July 2008
Messages
2,364
Location
Ireland
towercottage.weebly.com
Personally I would draw an analogy between the above scenario and working for the Labour Party whilst voting conservative!!

My dad used to work for the Labour party and vote green. They paid him to provide a specific service (advice on his topic) and he did, he didn't need to agree with all their politics or vote for them.

I don't think an RSPCA employee has to agree with everything they do or have done (assuming they are not employed in senior management!).
 

marmalade76

Well-Known Member
Joined
24 April 2009
Messages
6,845
Location
Gloucestershire
Visit site
I know someone that was very very vocal on facebook about being anti-hunting and pro-animal rights.

She worked in the accounts department of a pest control company.

Pot. Kettle and all that.

Someone I know used tobdruve around in a car with RSPCA antinhunting stickers on it. Her job was exercising hunters.

Ha ha ha ha!! :D :D
 
Top