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Hunting the
Hunters:
The Bloody Truth about Fox Hunting
by Robin Roth
British blue bloods are
seeing red, and it's not just the blood of the foxes they
kill. "Tally-ho!" is no longer the cry of the English
countryside. In England, the trumpet is sounding on the fox
hunt and its accompanying way of life, as hunters are being
hunted by animal rights activists and labor party leaders
calling for an end to the centuries-old tradition. "The
unspeakable in full pursuit of the uneatable," was Oscar
Wilde's description of fox hunters, a group who, like the
royal family and Britain's conservative parliament, are fast
falling from public favor. Juxtaposing the cruelties of
class with the dictates of custom, fox hunting, like the
monarchy, is just another outmoded British tradition.
There are roughly 200
official fox hunts in England, entertaining about 50,000
Britons, and translating to the deaths of an estimated
13,000 foxes and 6,000 fox cubs each year. Belying the
barbarities of Britain's oh-so-civilized upper class, fox
hunting has come under attack both in England and the United
States, where it has increasingly become a favorite pastime
of new moneyed interests with old money snob appeal. While
British support for the hunt is on the decline, it is an
increasingly popular "sport" in the United States., where
there are an estimated 171 fox hunting clubs, with 20,000
registered members.
From the commencement of
the hunting season in November to its end in April, fox
hunters terrorize the fox population, in hunts which
typically last from late morning to tea time. Chased by
numerous hunters and hounds, and often, radio-equipped
trucks for tracking, the fox usually dies an agonizing death
after hours of pursuit. As a group called "earthstoppers"
usually fill every visible fox hole the night before the
hunt, the hunted fox has no means of escape, and is forced
to flee until exhaustion. Hunting hounds are bred for
endurance, not speed, which means that each fox hunt can
last as long as two hours, until the fox is finally seized,
and if lucky, shot, before being thrown to the hounds.
Sometimes, the fox is literally eaten alive by the dogs,
torn to pieces, with the tail, feet and head usually taken
as trophy. Some hunts still engage in the practice of
"blooding," where the foxes' blood is smeared on the faces
of those witnessing their first kill, usually
children.
In Britain, the League
Against Cruel Sports leads the appeal against fox hunting
and other bloodsports, followed by the House of Commons. In
July of 1995, the House of Commons unanimously agreed to the
Wild Mammals Protection Bill, introduced by John McFall MP,
which sought to outlaw certain kinds of cruelty to
free-roaming, or wild mammals. Although the bill did not
specifically outlaw hunting with hounds, and ran out of time
due to wrecking amendments submitted by pro-hunting
conservatives, it marks the first time the House of Commons
has voted on principal, by a vote of 253-to-0, for the
abolition of hunting and snaring. Plus, hunters had to admit
their bloodsports could be deemed tortuous in a court of
law. Alan Meale MP, a longtime supporter of the League, has
resubmitted the bill in its original form. If the bill
finally passes, for the first time in English history, all
non-domestic animals will be protected from cruelty, making
it criminal to "cruelly kick, beat, impale, crush, burn or
drown" any free-roaming mammal. Animal rights supporters see
it as the beginning of the end of fox hunting and other
forms of hunting with hounds in Britain.
Although public opinion
in Britain favors an end to fox hunting (a recent Gallup
Poll estimated disapproval of the hunt at 80 percent), hunt
supporters claim anti-hunt protesters want to abolish fox
hunting out of financial jealousy and class envy. Ending the
hunt, supporters maintain, would threaten the rural way of
life in Britain, resulting in the loss of thousands of
hunt-related jobs, and horses and hounds, which no longer
needed, would be killed. In addition to controlling the fox
population, hunt supporters argue that fox hunting promotes
rural economies, conservation and livestock survival. Like
wolves, foxes suffer from generations of myths portraying
them as cunning, vicious pests who plunder livestock and
kill children and pets. The fact that lambs and other small
animals are often found at foxes' earths is no evidence that
they were killed by a fox, as foxes usually carry away the
carcasses of dead animals for later consumption. In reality,
studies have shown foxes pose little or no threat to pets,
and a child is more likely to die at the hands of his or her
parents, than from a fox attack. Similarly, studies have
also determined that livestock deaths are usually the result
of poor husbandry, not the fault of foxes. Those who profit
the most from these myths are the people who kill foxes for
sport and financial gain. The League Against Cruel Sports
provides information to parliament on the cruelty of fox
hunting, countering the hunter's claims with facts backed by
scientific evidence gathered over the past 20 years, the
result of studies undertaken by the Universities of Oxford,
Bristol and Aberdeen, in addition to various ministries and
departments of agriculture, fisheries and food. Studies have
also exposed the fallacy of the hunter's other favorite
excuse: that fox hunting keeps the fox population in check.
Hunting is an inefficient form of population control, as
foxes naturally balance their numbers based on food supply
and territorial availability. Plus, when foxes in a given
area are killed, their places are taken by others. Bloody
beatings captured on film have proven to be powerful
purveyors of truth. The video camera has done more to dispel
the myths and realities of bloodsports than anything else,
as the brutalities of the hunt are captured for the public
eye, bringing the truth onto the tellies of millions of
Britons. Filmed evidence of pregnant vixens torn apart by
hounds, and live foxes thrown to dogs testify against any
humane claims hunters may have.
For fox hunters and
others who seek fun and sport in cruelty, time is running
out. In England, as many as 150 local authorities and 50
counties have banned fox-hunting on their land. If labor
leaders seize control of parliament in the next general
election, as predicted, foxes and the entire British
countryside will benefit.
Download the
Fox
Hunt Quicktime Movie.
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