The debate
about hunting in the Ecology & Place strand of openDemocracy has
been mainly focused on human communities and their ways of shaping the
landscape. Of course, hunting is partly about those things but only partly.
It is also about animals, and about the ways we should treat them.
Even if we agreed with Roger
Scrutons rose-tinted vision of rural harmony, and of the role played by
hunting in bridging the gap between landlord and tenant, squire and farmer,
haves and have-nots, this does nothing to justify hunting either then or now.
And if there is a proper debate, it is surely about the justification of
hunting, not about its history.
Moreover, isnt all this
stuff about class conciliation a bit skewed? The same people who argue this
point Scruton included also talk of the Labour Partys opposition to
hunting as an expression of class war. You cannot have it both ways. Either
hunting unites the classes or it divides them. It seems to me obvious that it
divides them.
The animals point of view
Why did a debate about
hunting take off in Britain? Essentially, because people have been learning to
see hunting from the animals point of view. When, like Descartes, people
believed that animals were automata, with no feelings but only a kind of
invisible clockwork inside, they had no qualms about treating them in whatever
way seemed enjoyable or useful.
We human beings have
moved on since Descartes day. We know not just that we are animals, but that
we belong to the same family tree as other mammals, that our physiology and
bodily processes are just like theirs, and that our mental processes too are
from the same general pattern.
Some people believe that
animals have rights. I dont go that far, since I recognise that rights are a
kind of social construct. Rights exist only when there is also law and contract
and litigation. But just because the other animals fall short of us in those
respects (lucky things) it doesnt follow that they have a lesser capacity to
feel fear, pain, grief, anxiety, distress and all the other emotions that lead
us to take pity on each other. You just need to look at a dog with a broken
leg, or a mouse caught by a cat, to recognise the symptoms of pain, fear and
panic. If you pity people then you will pity these animals too.
This is what the debate over
hunting is really about. If I saw a child being pursued across a field by a pack
of dogs, I would be horrified: his fear would be my fear, and his pain when
caught would be my pain. This is what I feel when I see a fox in the same
situation.
This doesnt mean that I
value a foxs life as I would a childs; rather that I am an animal with
sympathies, and my sympathies go out to those who suffer. When I see the fox
running for its life, I take sides against its attackers. I want to stop this
cruel and unnecessary thing.
But I have no hope of
doing so: it is all happening too fast, I am not an athlete, and besides I
dont know how to call off a pack of dogs. So I stop and think. I remember that
this thing is happening only because some human being set it in motion. And
human beings are governed by laws, and can be punished for disobeying them.
So naturally I am drawn
to seek a legal solution. It would be enough to pass a law forbidding hunting,
and this thing need never occur again. So that is what I decide should be done.
I begin to lobby for a change in the law. And others do likewise. This is what
we have been witnessing, and the process is now, at long last, coming to its
rightful conclusion, and the law will, in all probability, be changed.
Respect, not rights
But, say the advocates of
liberty and livelihood, you are trampling on our rights. You are denying our
ancient freedoms. You are taking away our livelihoods. This is the argument
that has been rammed down our throats (though not, I am pleased to say, on openDemocracy).
It is surely obvious what
is wrong with this argument. You cannot pass a law without curtailing someones
freedom. Call that freedom a right if you like, it makes no difference.
Freedom must be curtailed if people are to be governed. Few rights are
absolute, and most can be qualified in the interest of the greater good.
That is the point of the
analogy with bear-baiting. People who hunt protest that it is unfair to make
the comparison, and I take the point that bear-baiting has a sadistic aspect
which may be (and I assume for the purpose of argument, is) absent from
fox-hunting. But the argument about liberty and livelihood would apply equally
to both sports. And if it justifies hunting it justifies baiting. Since it
doesnt justify baiting, it cannot justify hunting.
We have to accept that a
law banning hunting will make it impossible for people to hunt or to make a
living from hunting. That is simply a tautology. And how do you protest against
a tautology? Hugh
Brody and Rupert
Isaacson are on uncontroversial ground, when they describe the role of
hunting in pre-agrarian communities, and present it as an integral part of a
valid way of life. I can even agree with them that we ought not to invade those
communities, or threaten their huntergatherer habits, or confiscate their
territory, since hunting and gathering are part of their social identity and
cannot be taken away without destroying them.
But people in developed
societies such as Britain are not huntergatherers. Our relation to the
landscape is not even the relation briefly enjoyed by our agrarian ancestors.
There are far more concerned urban ramblers than farmers people who go out
from the towns in search of what remains of a mutilated and pillaged natural
world. Our attitude to the few surviving animals is one of tender concern and
apprehension for their future. We know that these animals depend on us. They
are on our conscience in a new way.
For we all of us,
farmers and hunters alike have marginalised animals, removed their natural
refuges and exposed them to constant fear and danger. We have to evolve a new
and more creative relation to the landscape if we are to treat them properly. I
dont pretend to know what that relationship will look like. But I do know that
it must begin in compassion. It must put concern for other species at the top
of its agenda. Otherwise it will just be one more step towards the abolition of
the natural world.
Of course, the hunting
fraternity argues that it has an important role to play in conservation. They
claim: we are not out to exterminate the fox or the deer, but to manage them.
We look after habitats, control populations, ensure balance between species,
look after boundaries and hedgerows. We are the true friends of wildlife, not
you, the urban onlookers who do nothing to manage the land.
Some of that is true. But
it is also irrelevant. We urban onlookers dont manage the land because we
cannot: nobody allows us to try. And when we protest at the environmental
destruction, the cruelties and the grim monoculture of those who do
manage it (always, it seems, in the interest of their own profit and pleasure),
we are simply told to stop interfering in matters of which we know nothing.
But it is urban onlookers
who have awoken people to the damage done by large-scale agribusiness; who have
made the most fuss about the removal of hedgerows, habitats, archaeological
sites and ancient pasture lands; who founded the RSPB and who have agitated
ceaselessly against the depletion of songbirds at the hands of farmers. It is
people such as George Monbiot
who have been the voice of the land against those who claim to speak for it but
who in fact merely own it.
And it is urban onlookers
who have been first to speak out for animals, and to demand that the compassion
that we extend to dogs and cats ought to be extended to foxes, deer and
badgers. I concede that compassion will not be enough. But against those who
say that it is merely another name for urban sentimentality, I would reply that
it hasnt yet been tried.
A hunting ban will be only the first step towards
trying it; one followed by other steps which, one by one, will unfold a new
form of land management, replacing the unkind and damaging ways of modern
agriculture, and bring about a new and lasting harmony between town and
country. This is my hope at least, and nothing that I have read from the
hunting fraternity persuades me otherwise. It is surely time to respect the
natural world, to treat it naturally. Or, to use the old Anglo-Saxon word, to
treat it kindly, according to our kind.
Hunting animals is wrong
Hunting is about animals as well as people. And people are also animals. We need to amend our attitudes and practice towards other animals to become compassionate and caring.
This article is copyright Graham Harvey and openDemocracy.


