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Re: Bring Back Fox Hunting
Damien, you need to get out of the city once in a while, that liberal fog is rotting your brain. ;)
I assure you, no such hierarchy exists out here in the big, wide countryside, where a farmer will kill a fox or a rat with precisely the same amount of forethought as he would swat a fly. The calculation is expediency, and nothing more. And regardless of any argument from the Theory of Evolution, philosophy still generally holds the human race to be fundamentally different to the animal kingdom, being capable of morality and self-awareness. We don't make a taboo out of killing people because we're the most intelligent animal; we do so because as beings, we set ourselves apart and above animals and therefore do not treat each other as animals. I'm surprised to see you justifying your position on an ill-defined appeal to higher morality ("it just is"). If that's your view, that's fine. However where this thread has been over and over again in the past 4 years is into the territory of what gives one group of people the right to criminalise an activity enjoyed by another group of people. "it just is", is not sufficient justification. Nor is an appeal to "democracy". One of the fundamental ingredients of a stable democracy is the understanding that the winning side will use its power responsibly and not victimise the losers (which, incidentally, is why Egypt is going to hell in a handcart. Morsi won the election, but seems not to have understood everything that entailed). Yet, in "banning" fox hunting, that is what Parliament did. There was no public health issue and the fox as a species was not under threat. There was simply the fact that one group of people didn't like what another group of people was doing, and being the larger group, they acted to ban it. Thankfully such misuses of our democratic process are very rare. It is on a point of democratic principle that I hope to see the Act repealed. |
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The way democracy works is that if enough people object to something then it will be legislated against. The fox hunting ban came about through democratic means. There is no point of democratic principle to repeal it any more than there is a reason repeal the abolition of slavery. |
Re: Bring Back Fox Hunting
we don't like to think about it but we continually 'consume' meat products to the tune of slaughtering about 750,000 animals in slaughterhouses each and every day
and yet none, or not many, of us see the blood on our hands preferring instead a neatly bar coded version and possible bonus on a waitrose card or similar |
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A specific measure, criminalising a widely-followed activity for no coherent reason, is a classic example of what not to do with a democratic mandate. The animal welfare argument was, and still is, contested - not that it was ever truly about animal welfare. Let's be clear here - an activity that was a legitimate pastime one day, was a criminal act the next. That is draconian. And the reason for it was neatly summed up as the vote was announced in the Commons by Dennis Skinner, who shouted, "that will show the toffs". It was just an ugly old piece of class warfare. |
Re: Bring Back Fox Hunting
it was Blair blowing crap to the wind with his 'classless society'
christ! - how I abhor the cretinous peace envoy :dunce: the national socialist party in germany were the first to come in under a left wing ticket |
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And I think you are wilfully conflating the concepts of majority rule and minority oppression. There are plenty of things that a majority of people in this country object to, which nevertheless are tolerated and do not become criminalised, because for the most part our representatives recognise that the purpose of democracy is to safeguard freedom, not to restrict it. Smoking remains legal, despite the extreme harm it can cause. Religious organisations continue to enjoy exemptions from aspects of our equality laws, when religious reasons are cited, despite these legal guarantees supposedly being the hallmarks of a modern, tolerant society. |
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I was born and brought up in a country community in Worcestershire, if a farmer had a problem with foxes he didn't wait for the hunt to convene he went out with a team who baited and shot the foxes. Many farmers in the area I lived in at that time, 50's & 60's, would not allow the hunt on their land due to the damage and disruption they caused. Locally the hunt were seen to be a "gung-ho" band there for a day's "sport", it was not unknown for the hunt in full cry to ride straight across the main roads causing traffic chaos. I am not pro or anti fox hunting, however the Warwickshire hunts I had to follow as a child due to my favourite aunt in Stratford on Avon being an ardent supporter generally resulted in more horses being injured than foxes killed! |
Re: Bring Back Fox Hunting
are you - like dr spock from the starship enterprise or some thing jeez
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** i can't remember if Labour had included banning fox hunting in any of their manifesto's or was it just something that labour used ,knowing they would have large public support for the ban |
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The animal welfare argument is highly contentious. What parliament did - as you say, taking advantage of an unusually large Labour majority - was to enforce a moral view on a minority by statute. |
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Perceptions change, and your arguments against the fox hunting ban can easily be transposed to slavery. At the time, trading and keeping slaves, was a widely followed practice that suddenly became illegal, because some people didn't like what others were doing. In hindsight, there's little that's Draconian about that. And I'm not conflating anything thank you. Any form of government is going to be a trade-off between what's considered acceptable and people's liberties. As it happens, animal rights have come to the fore in recent years, and this means that unnecessary cruelty against animals is frowned upon. Just like smoking in the Pub, where others are affected (unless it's the HoP Pub, but that's another matter). |
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