ChatterBank2 mins ago
This Can't Be A Vote Winner?
49 Answers
Just how (over?) confident do you have to be to risk saying this?
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/el ection- 2017-39 861011
It surely has to be a vote loser anywhere except the absolute depths of Tory Backwoodsville?
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It surely has to be a vote loser anywhere except the absolute depths of Tory Backwoodsville?
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by sunny-dave. 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.Clearly her view is known so she has been open about it rather than lying and then getting caught out when evidence is produced to the contrary like most politicians do.
I couldn't care less one way or another, I know foxy woxy is not cute and needs to be culled it's just the method in question I guess. Problem is, many city dwellers dont have a clue, I even worked with some who had never even touched or even been close to a cow or a pig etc yet were willing to spout off on how things should be done!
I couldn't care less one way or another, I know foxy woxy is not cute and needs to be culled it's just the method in question I guess. Problem is, many city dwellers dont have a clue, I even worked with some who had never even touched or even been close to a cow or a pig etc yet were willing to spout off on how things should be done!
I've read all your replies and thought deeply about them. I would never, never, ever stand up for the trapping of harmless song-birds, bear-baiting, cock-fighting or dogs chucked into pits to fight to the death etc., etc. These are all horrible.
However, the fox is a predator which needs to be killed. It is the method which seems to be in question. I oppose poison (drawn-out and cruel - I hated, really hated, having to put poison down for the rats in France when I moved out of my farmhouse (the dog was much quicker and kinder whilst I lived there, they were killed very quickly). Has anyone out there come across a rat curled up in its last death throes and had to put it out of its misery by smashing its head in with a stone? Can't think there are too many of you know the reality of co-existence with nature.
Shooting. Well some of you seem to think that one shot - always, kindly, through the brain - is the way to go. Again, please understand that this does not always (in fact it is rarely) happen. Shots go awry. Foxes may be (and often are) wounded in various places and hide themselves away - they then die slowly of septicaemia etc.. I couldn't wish these sorts of fates on any animal.
I think I am taking the humane attitude t.b.h.. A fox hunted by dogs is alive or dead at the end of the hunt. It is very quick. I have not seen dogs kill a fox - but I have seen greyhounds on a rabbit. One moment there is a rabbit, the next (and before you could blink) there is not. A pack of dogs is fast, very fast, believe me.
Being 'torn to bits' is an emotive phrase - but from experience death is as near instantaneous as makes no difference. So I conclude that hunting is a better than most methods of vermin control.
Logically, this being so, what is so wrong with 'following the hunt'? It comes down to a class thing, doesn't it? Also trying to control the behaviour and ethos of a section of the native community.
So, I'll stick with my belief that I would not oppose the repeal of the anti-Hunting ban.
However, the fox is a predator which needs to be killed. It is the method which seems to be in question. I oppose poison (drawn-out and cruel - I hated, really hated, having to put poison down for the rats in France when I moved out of my farmhouse (the dog was much quicker and kinder whilst I lived there, they were killed very quickly). Has anyone out there come across a rat curled up in its last death throes and had to put it out of its misery by smashing its head in with a stone? Can't think there are too many of you know the reality of co-existence with nature.
Shooting. Well some of you seem to think that one shot - always, kindly, through the brain - is the way to go. Again, please understand that this does not always (in fact it is rarely) happen. Shots go awry. Foxes may be (and often are) wounded in various places and hide themselves away - they then die slowly of septicaemia etc.. I couldn't wish these sorts of fates on any animal.
I think I am taking the humane attitude t.b.h.. A fox hunted by dogs is alive or dead at the end of the hunt. It is very quick. I have not seen dogs kill a fox - but I have seen greyhounds on a rabbit. One moment there is a rabbit, the next (and before you could blink) there is not. A pack of dogs is fast, very fast, believe me.
Being 'torn to bits' is an emotive phrase - but from experience death is as near instantaneous as makes no difference. So I conclude that hunting is a better than most methods of vermin control.
Logically, this being so, what is so wrong with 'following the hunt'? It comes down to a class thing, doesn't it? Also trying to control the behaviour and ethos of a section of the native community.
So, I'll stick with my belief that I would not oppose the repeal of the anti-Hunting ban.
jourdain2 - //Logically, this being so, what is so wrong with 'following the hunt'? It comes down to a class thing, doesn't it? //
I don't think it does.
Enough debate about this issue has taken place to debunk the idea that fox hunting is purely the preserve of the idle rich.
I don't for a minute believe that it is only rich idle people who hunt foxes, blood lust and hypocrisy knows no class barriers.
I don't think it does.
Enough debate about this issue has taken place to debunk the idea that fox hunting is purely the preserve of the idle rich.
I don't for a minute believe that it is only rich idle people who hunt foxes, blood lust and hypocrisy knows no class barriers.
It will make hardly a jot of difference come the imminent election. There are massive upcoming changes to the nation afoot which needs someone saying the right thing to vote for. Not that politicians' words are particularly trustworthy but one can't sanely vote for one deliberately saying the wrong thing. But should this subject be brought up, and result in dragging us back into primitive immoral behaviour, then it surely will give a massive problem to her successor as party leader.