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SamH
Guest
That would be a start.I think you need to study nature and animal behavior.
That would be a start.I think you need to study nature and animal behavior.
Young and healthy animals either get killed or become old and sick animals. That’s the law of nature.Hunters typically do not hunt the old and sick, but the young and healthy. If hunters truly cared about leaving animals to die of “old age and infirmity,” they would just go after the really sick ones - perhaps first with a tranquilizer and then lethal injection. But no, hunters want to stalk their prey, for hours and hours–because that’s apparently fun.
psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/200907/stalking-hunting-stress-and-emotion
Of course, the fact that I don’t do X doesn’t mean what I say about X isn’t right.So you are letting all these animals die horrible deaths while lecturing others on how they could prevent it from happening?
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There is no good reason for hunters to go looking for “prey” in the first place.I wonder how many hunters worried about being the prey instead of the predator when hunting in cougar or bear lands. That has been on the back of my mind more than once when finding remains of dead animals, sometime holding a rifle does not make you feel in complete control.![]()
And it doesn’t mean that you are right either. The article you linked talks about the effect on animals when humans stalk them. What about when other animals stalk them? Does that have a different effect on the animal? I suggest you also study the other side of the argument. It might give you a little more insight. Animals are much crueler to each other that hunters are to them.Of course, the fact that I don’t do X doesn’t mean what I say about X isn’t right.
There are plenty of good reasons. You just have no clue of the why and so you say that there are no reasons. For example here in several areas of Texas hunters are now paid by the tail for each wild boar or feral pig that they kill. I personally prefer to go and hunt a pig rather than buying pork at the butcher store.There is no good reason for hunters to go looking for “prey” in the first place.
Suppose a man regularly rapes and beats his girlfriend, and one day, a neighbor decides to do the same - but with more “gentleness.” Are the neighbor’s actions okay if he says: “The boyfriend is always much crueler?”And it doesn’t mean that you are right either. The article you linked talks about the effect on animals when humans stalk them. What about when other animals stalk them? Does that have a different effect on the animal? I suggest you also study the other side of the argument. It might give you a little more insight. Animals are much crueler to each other that hunters are to them.
This is a logical fallacy because you are stating that something is intrinsically wrong to prove that the extension of that behavior is intrinsically wrong. I would assume that any intelligent person would affirm that an animal killing another animal is performing an act that is morally neutral, that the extrapolation is not automatically intrinsically wrong.Suppose a man regularly rapes and beats his girlfriend, and one day, a neighbor decides to do the same - but with more “gentleness.” Are the neighbor’s actions okay if he says: “The boyfriend is always much crueler?”
Do you really not see that there is a difference between humans and animals? We’re not talking about humans with an immortal soul. There’s a difference.Suppose a man regularly rapes and beats his girlfriend, and one day, a neighbor decides to do the same - but with more “gentleness.” Are the neighbor’s actions okay if he says: “The boyfriend is always much crueler?”
There is: it’s called hunting.There is no good reason for hunters to go looking for “prey” in the first place.
You are citing something quite interesting. In the UK the obsession of having cats as pets has affected the bird population in a critical manner.This is what happens when people live a life completely divorced from the land. They lose all perspective.
Just look at the damage done by the city-dwelling lawmakers in the UK, who have no concept of what life is like in the country, and yet they feel, somehow, that they are more informed than their country cousins and have passed some of the most idiotic laws ever heard of. (like: you will be fined if your dog tries to chase a rabbit.)
And on a related topic: Whatever you read in “Psychology Today,” believe the exact opposite.
Morally and legally no.Suppose a man regularly rapes and beats his girlfriend, and one day, a neighbor decides to do the same - but with more “gentleness.” Are the neighbor’s actions okay if he says: “The boyfriend is always much crueler?”
Something that PETA didn’t even bother doing.That would be a start.
PETA is completely clueless most of the time.Something that PETA didn’t even bother doing.
I wonder if people on here see a difference between hunting for sport and hunting recreationally.But I think one might argue persuasively that hunting just for “sport” is immoral.
Either that or they are ignorant (meaning that they ignore) of science. Or even both!PETA is completely clueless most of the time.
Do you think there is a difference? If so, what would it be?I wonder if people on here see a difference between hunting for sport and hunting recreationally.
I don’t see a difference. I was simply wondering whether anyone on here (particularly hunters) does.Do you think there is a difference? If so, what would it be?