moosea
Well-Known Member
It really isn't a large majority though. Most people couldn't give aabout it. They may think it's all about toffs on horses or they may think the idea of chasing foxes is deeply unpleasant but the law has already been changed to make that a criminal offence. The fact that there are so few convictions is because its 1) badly drawn up and 2) not a good use of police / CPS time.
Foxes will continue to be culled and it's naive to think shooting or poisoning are a better death.
If it wasn't a large majority then they wouldn't have banned it in the first place. Toffs on horses? We really are bringing all the old excuses out tonight.
Was dog fighting banned because it was mainly working class who took part?
It may be a criminal offence to chase foxes but there are hundreds of instances of it happening.
If being chased to exhaustion and then ripped apart by a pack of dogs is such a humane and fast death then why don't they use dogs in slaughter houses? Would be cheaper, solve the stray dog crisis and be oh such a quick and painless death. Perhaps they could use dogs in the human euthinasia clinics??
It's just ridiculous. Shooting, with a proper marksman, is obviously a quicker, more humane way to go.
I understand your point of view, but don't understand why trail hunting is the animal welfare priority when parliamentary time could be spent genuinely addressing welfare issues that affect far larger numbers of animals in predictably worse ways: killing pigs in gas gondalas for example - the RSPCA reckons that is 9-10 million pigs annually and it is recognized as an appallingly cruel death: or perhaps addressing the 7-10 million hens that have cages the size of a sheet of A4 paper to live in, or addressing 'rescues' that keep all sorts of animals in desperate and cruel conditions. I genuinely don't understand why those provable cruelties are less important than the potential cruelties by abuse of the existing trail hunting law.
What is the moral justification for prioritising lobbying, campaigning funds, parliamentary time and the cost of legislation in relation to trail hunting over all of the more numerous and easy to police animal welfare issues?
Of all of the cruelty you have mentioned not one of them is done for the pleasure of the spectator.
That's how they differ.