ChatterBank5 mins ago
Is A Goldfish An Animal?
30 Answers
http:// www.wor cestern ews.co. uk/news /region al/1141 8731.Ro ss_on_W ye_man_ avoids_ prison_ sentenc e_after _drinki ng_four _fish_i n_Neck_ Nominat ion_dar e/
Yes the question could be "is this person an animal"?
But I don't want to discuss the disgusting drinking 'game' called 'Neck Nomination', but what I need to ask is "was the RSPC going a little over the top over this?
The court heard that this idiot will be able to keep his pet goldfish as Magistrates declined to disqualify him from owning animals. He could have also faced a six month jail sentence, and under the Animal Welfare Act, 'torturing or killing' the fish - each several centimetres in length - carries the same weight as killing four horses.
Do we make it a criminal offence to hook fish in angling, or allowing them to die out of water during commercial fishing, or even boiling a lobster alive.
/// Wooding was sentenced to an 18-month conditional discharge for two offences under the Animal Welfare Act; causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal and failing to ensure the welfare of an animal of which we was responsible for. ///
Yes the question could be "is this person an animal"?
But I don't want to discuss the disgusting drinking 'game' called 'Neck Nomination', but what I need to ask is "was the RSPC going a little over the top over this?
The court heard that this idiot will be able to keep his pet goldfish as Magistrates declined to disqualify him from owning animals. He could have also faced a six month jail sentence, and under the Animal Welfare Act, 'torturing or killing' the fish - each several centimetres in length - carries the same weight as killing four horses.
Do we make it a criminal offence to hook fish in angling, or allowing them to die out of water during commercial fishing, or even boiling a lobster alive.
/// Wooding was sentenced to an 18-month conditional discharge for two offences under the Animal Welfare Act; causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal and failing to ensure the welfare of an animal of which we was responsible for. ///
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No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well obviously a goldfish is an animal, and so are all other fish, and eating them alive is pretty disgusting. I personally object to boiling lobsters alive in particular, if it comes to that, although I believe that the argument over whether lobsters feel pain in the same way that humans do is an ongoing one so perhaps it's my own squeamishness.
I think the sentence received is the right one because this looks like a one-off stupid act rather than part of a pattern of cruelty to animals.
I think the sentence received is the right one because this looks like a one-off stupid act rather than part of a pattern of cruelty to animals.
I particularly like this bit
"If I'd know there was a law against it I wouldn't have done it."
Tha'ts the only reason he wouldn't have done it because it was against the law not because it might be cruel to the fish hahaha. What an idiot but its OK because he:
"He was stupid, he was irresponsible, but he has learned the error of his ways."
"If I'd know there was a law against it I wouldn't have done it."
Tha'ts the only reason he wouldn't have done it because it was against the law not because it might be cruel to the fish hahaha. What an idiot but its OK because he:
"He was stupid, he was irresponsible, but he has learned the error of his ways."
Clearly a fish is not a vegetable nor a mineral, so yes, obviously it is an animal.
For sure one must define what is permissible as animal rights for each species. I assume a pet is given more rights than an animal breed for food. Neither are allowed to be made to suffer unnecessarily. I suspect food animals probably aren't to be eaten alive for that reason but I'm not an expert. Being cooked alive is usually allowed if the animal is not believed to feel pain during the process, a claim that seems on shakier ground these days.
I'd suspect the RSPCA would be right to prosecute this case regarding pets, or else they are tacitly saying it is ok to have these sorts of drinking games.
For sure one must define what is permissible as animal rights for each species. I assume a pet is given more rights than an animal breed for food. Neither are allowed to be made to suffer unnecessarily. I suspect food animals probably aren't to be eaten alive for that reason but I'm not an expert. Being cooked alive is usually allowed if the animal is not believed to feel pain during the process, a claim that seems on shakier ground these days.
I'd suspect the RSPCA would be right to prosecute this case regarding pets, or else they are tacitly saying it is ok to have these sorts of drinking games.
Sandeels (a species of fish ) are used as live bait to catch bass (another species of fish). A hook is passed throught the sandeel's body via the mouth so that the hook protrudes from the sandeel's anus. This is then drawn through the water to catch the bass. I cannot see how swallowing a goldfish or four live is any worse yet this method of fishing is carried out with no prosecution.
Yes. Section 4 of the Animal Welfare Act 2006 (which deals with unnecessary suffering) only applies to "protected animals":
An animal is a “protected animal” for the purposes of this Act if—
(a)it is of a kind which is commonly domesticated in the British Islands,
(b)it is under the control of man whether on a permanent or temporary basis, or
(c)it is not living in a wild state.
It is doubtful indeed that the sandeel meets this definition but a captive goldfish most certainly does. This also explains why hauling a wild fish from the water by a hook in its mouth to either die of suffocation or to be sodded about with before being returned to the drink (in short, angling) is similarly not likely to fall foul of the Act.
An animal is a “protected animal” for the purposes of this Act if—
(a)it is of a kind which is commonly domesticated in the British Islands,
(b)it is under the control of man whether on a permanent or temporary basis, or
(c)it is not living in a wild state.
It is doubtful indeed that the sandeel meets this definition but a captive goldfish most certainly does. This also explains why hauling a wild fish from the water by a hook in its mouth to either die of suffocation or to be sodded about with before being returned to the drink (in short, angling) is similarly not likely to fall foul of the Act.