Fox Hunting & Slavery
I should disclose upfront that I am strongly anti-hunting, and
these are my personal views. I've got four points to make and I'd love to hear responses from anyone concerned with this
issue.
1. Fox Hunting & Slavery
I'm originally from Devon in the South West of England, and I grew up in a community where fox hunting was widely accepted. I
am not, therefore one of those 'city folk who knows nothing of country ways'.
Looking at the defences that are being made by the pro-hunter, such as loss of liberty, I can't help but see the similarities
with the defences given at the end of the era of slavery in America. Back then, there were fundamentally three reasons put
forward why slavery should continue; abolishing it was against civil liberty, it would result in loss of income and that it
was traditional and communities were built on it. It seems almost bizarre that these same justifications are being put
forward now as to why hunting should continue. The cry for 'liberty and livelihood' has been heard before over an equally
distasteful and anti-social practise.
2. Back the First Principles
I believe the key reason why foxhunters don't want to stop hunting is far more basic when considered on its first principles.
Fundamentally, foxhunters find fox hunting fun. The omission of this central point in fox hunting's continued
self-justification is as blatant as the US Administration's omission of the key reason for an incursion into Iraq; that
there's Oil in the region. When we admit that this ritualised cruelty to animals is continued on the grounds of 'fun', it is
much harder to both tolerate, and defend.
3. Civil Liberties and Democracy
One of the key arguments against banning hunting is the loss of civil liberty. But, which is the greater infringement of
civil liberty and loss of democracy; the dilemma that a pro hunter is currently facing or the case of a house of parliament,
representing the people of this country, voting by vast majority for an all-out ban on fox hunting, which is then overturned
by a non-representative house of lords?
Democracy, the last time I looked, was about and based on representation... Who is actually being failed most by the
democratic process; those at risk of being banned from hunting or those trying to ban it?
4. The Countryside Alliance March
The march in London by the Countryside Alliance was a great disappointment to me. Coming from Devon and now living in Sussex,
I am all too aware and supportive of how forgotten the countryside can be, so I back the fundamental grounds for the march
wholeheartedly. However, I think it was a real shame that fox hunting got grouped in with these valid concerns. Many like
myself would have been marching too if it not had been supporting hunting. In fact I believe the numbers would have been
doubled. Now, I feel that this has been a disservice to the countryside where real issues such as local economy, communities
and livelihood were pushed aside and didn't receive justified centre stage coverage. The pro-hunting faction swamped these
and hijacked the agenda.
The debate to date has omitted these crucial points. I am keen to understand the hunter's perspective and cut to the chase
(excuse the pun) of the argument. Why isn't drag hunting a more humane, and financially viable, alternative? Why is hunting
supposedly the only way to secure the future of pockets of the countryside? Why can't you admit you think its just plain
fun?



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