ConsiderThis wrote: » Death is the wild is rarely a good death. If you have ever witnessed an animal dying from "natural" causes in the wild then you'd realise that it is usually cruel and painful, often taking days with the animal in pain and open to predators to make the suffering worse. Many starve to death who are not attacked by other animals in their weakened state.
ConsiderThis wrote: » Death is the wild is rarely a good death. If you have ever witnessed an animal dying from "natural" causes in the wild then you'd realise that it is usually cruel and painful, often taking days with the animal in pain and open to predators to make the suffering worse. Many starve to death who are not attacked by other animals in their weakened state. One of the problems with the urbanisation of life is that many of us buy meat in nice plastic packets in the supermarket, with little or no understanding of how it got there, or how the animal lived or died. And so, it's natural we conclude that any animal who is killed by man must be worse off than those who die from natural causes. Does a fox who dies from natural causes have a less painful and better death than one who is killed by a pack of hounds? Or a stag who is stalked? Death is never nice, but it's a fact. And if a fox, or a stag, is killed by us or through natural causes, it's not always clear which is the better death. A knee jerk reaction that it must be better for a fox, or stag, for example,to die from natural causes simply ignores the fact that many animals which die from "natural" causes die painfully and cruelly and, often, the pain lasts for days. I don't expect many here will acknowledge that, and will just conclude that it must be wrong for man to kill, in any circumstances, and it's better to leave them to die of "natural" causes.
robtri wrote: » that is the weakest argument i have ever heard for the continuation of this sport.....
ConsiderThis wrote: » I never argued for the continuation of this sport.
djpbarry wrote: » No, you just condoned it.
ConsiderThis wrote: » No, I didn't condone it and didn't express any views on it.
djpbarry wrote: » You implied that death from natural causes may be as bad as death at the hands of a pack of hounds, tacitly condoning the practice of ‘the hunt’. Regardless of your own position on hunting with hounds, your point is a poor one. Put it this way; suppose an individual is diagnosed with <insert terminal condition here>, which may result in a slow, painful death. How likely do you think it would be that this individual would agree to being chased through the woods by a pack of hounds?
doctor evil wrote: » Not every shot is a clean one and there are some fools who do no use the right ammo. With fox hunting the same fox is not chased for hours, it either escapes, is caught and killed within seconds or it goes to ground. If it goes to ground it is often left alone unless the landowner/farmer wants it dispatched. I do not agree with cock/dog fighting or bear baiting. If fish were more cuddly looking would you be against it?
fairplay wrote: » If fish were deliberately tortured as the victims of foxhunting, hare coursing, and stag hunting are, then I would oppose it completely.
ConsiderThis wrote: » What was in my mind was last year in Botswana I saw an old lion, hardly able to walk from malnutrition and weak and emaciated, eventually being attacked by wild dogs who killed him by biting lumps out of him until he died a slow and horrible death.
djpbarry wrote: » So dying at the hands of a pack of dogs is a pretty horrific death? Great. Glad we're agreed.
ConsiderThis wrote: » I think most death is pretty horrific...
djpbarry wrote: » I disagree. Being chased and subsequently torn apart by a pack of dogs doesn't compare to being taken out by a single gunshot - one is not going to know too much about the latter, so I'm not sure it could be described as "horrific".
ConsiderThis wrote: » You don't consider it torture for a fish to have a barbed hook caught deep in the flesh of its mouth to be torture? And then to have it kept taught on a line pulling the fish through the water via the line and barbed hook, while the fish struggles against it, sometimes for minutes or hours? Whatever about catching fish in this way to eat, I have heard rumours that some people catch fish in this way for their own pleasure, and then throw the fish back once they have landed it!
fairplay wrote: » I don't fish or shoot but I regard both activities as far less inhumane than the deliberate prolonged torment of animals for sport. I don't understand that practise of catching fish and throwing them back into the water. Sounds daft, and time-wasting, apart from annoying the fish for no good reason!
fairplay wrote: » Provided an animal is killed with a clean shot then shooting couldn't be considered remotely as cruel as the other "pastimes" I mention.
fairplay wrote: » I Re fishing...this is always brought into a debate on bloodsports by the pro-bloodsports side, not because they oppose fishing, but merely to distract from their own support for proven acts of cruelty. When Richard Martin the Galway MP introduced a Bill to ban bear baiting and bull baiting in the early 19th century, his opponents cited fishing in the House of Commons debate...how, they demanded, could the MP want those wonderful countrysports outlawed when fishing was every bit as bad? Hare coursing fans love to drag fishing into the debate too...always as a Red Herring.
fairplay wrote: » I certainly ascribe dubious motives to pro-hunting/coursing/animal baiting people who enlarge on the "horrors" of fishing...of course they are not being sincere, as they certainly are not anti-fishing.
fairplay wrote: » I consider some activities, quite reasonably in my view, to be more more cruel than others and hence more deserving of legal sanction.
fairplay wrote: » There is a great deal of uncertainty about the extent to which fish suffer when hooked...though the fish does not in any event suffer for as long as a hunted fox or stag, or for as long as the baited badger or dog in a staged fight.
fairplay wrote: » I take it you are opposed to ALL bloodports, and believe that fishing and shooting should also be banned?
fairplay wrote: » I have never said I was in favour of fishing. It is simply a view I hold...that fishing is less cruel than hunting with hounds or animal baiting, this based on my observation of all these practises.
fairplay wrote: » I do however point out that in very many of the public radio debates on the cruelty of hare coursing and fox hunting over the years, the pro-bloodsport side has frequently held up fishing as something that the "antis" ought to be concerned about instead of opposing those other bloodsports.
fairplay wrote: » In all my years on this earth I have never come across ANYONE who had such detailed knowledge of the various bloodsports and yet had no opinion on the subject....
ConsiderThis wrote: » Where we appear to differ is that I consider hooking a barbed hook into the mouth and flesh of a fish, and then trying to drag the fish onto land, while the fish naturally pulls away from land and opposes being dragged onto land via a barbed hook lodged in its flesh, to me appears slightly more than merely "annoying" a fish.
fairplay wrote: » Re. While I don't fish or shoot, I have no hesitation in asserting that both activities are far lower down the scale where cruelty is concerned than activities that contrive to make animals suffer...such as carted stag hunting, badger baiting, dog fighting, or hare coursing. Fox and stag hunting are not just cruel...they create lots of problems for farmers over whose land they pass, causing havoc along the way.
fairplay wrote: » Re. For a person who claims to have no view either way on bloodsports, "Consider This" seems very anxious to ridicule and attack the fishing community while at the same time downplaying the proven and well documented cruelty of hounding animals to exhaustion, injury or death. His reference to "a few fields" in relation to the duration of a foxhunt displays either ignorance on his part of the "sport" or a desire to whitewash the savagery involved.