National outcry on dog fighting

Duane@ssu

New member
This may start a fire,but it has come up three times here at my house.There is an up roar about fighting dogs,we have all seen it in the media.I want to be clear and state that I have no interest in dog fighting and personaly don't approve ,nor want to participate in it."But" is it right for the feds to tell us what we can, and cannot do with our dogs.If you raise dogs and want to fight them in a ring,that is your buss. and yours alone.I don't approve,but its not my call to make.I believe all dog men are entittled to make thier own choices.I'm worried that the bunny hungers are going to come after me next because I hunt coyotes and sometimes have a fight.Not trying to start trouble,just trying to make a point.Please respond as I would like to see how other dog men feel. Duane
 
Duane,

I hear ya. This country is lost to the liberals. They care more about our dogs than unborn babies. Try taking a dog out and "dispatching" it and you'll have charges filed against you. But these same folks will take an under age girl to an abortion clinic in a blink of an eye.

I'm afraid we are in the days where "right is wrong and wrong is right". /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 
Duane:
No blaze, no flame, not even smoke from me -- I (personally) empathize with what you’re driving at -- however there are limits. Decency requires that some lines be drawn within a society, and while as Mike has pointed out some lines are blurred? We (citizens, collectively) should still reach for loftier goals in pursuit of putting those other lines straight again, and animal cruelty is but one small area where we might start.

Allowing two domestic dogs to fight, simply to see which prevails is cruel; it serves no legitimate purpose, does not raise the spirit of man, and promotes a number of ancillary crimes. These aspects have an affect on the whole of society, making them everyone’s business. That is why we depend on law enforcement, to curtail activities that have a negative affect on society as a whole. Otherwise we have anarchy and civil disorder, so yeah; the Feds have a right and purpose for stepping in.

Frankly, methinks any man that would abuse a dog (in this or any other way) ought to be strung up by his hind-parts and kicked there a few times too!

...But that’s probably a topic for another thread. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
Sorry, I can’t agree.

Quote:
Allowing two domestic dogs to fight, simply to see which prevails is cruel; it serves no legitimate purpose


Yes it does. It’s exiting for many people, just like horse racing.
And besides animals beat the crap out of each other on a daily basis just to establish their dominance.

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does not raise the spirit of man


Huh?

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...promotes a number of ancillary crimes.


Like gambling, right ? Got your government lottery ticket yet?

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..negative affect on society as a whole. Otherwise we have anarchy and civil disorder.


Yes master.

PC
 
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Yes it does [serve a legitimate purpose]. It’s exiting for many people, just like horse racing.
And besides animals beat the crap out of each other on a daily basis just to establish their dominance. (Emphasis added)


And your former is the very same argument used by drug dealers, to justify their conduct. That doesn’t mean society as a whole should allow the freedom of heroin abuse or the promotion of it to our children, simply because it’s “exciting” for some people to engage. Why under that line of thought pornography-peddlers, abortionists, and even terrorists could justify doing what they do; under the guise ‘it’s my right.’ Hmmm, as a matter of fact they do!

Yeah animals combat everyday “to establish their dominance” one over another, and if done without man’s interference, THAT serves a legitimate natural purpose. People purposefully causing dogs to fight in a ring, has no redeeming quality; it is abuse, it is wrong-headed, it is unjustifiable and an indefensible act.

Now before popping off with more presupposed snipe (like: “Got your government lottery ticket yet?” or “Yes master.”), wholly unsupported by the facts? Find a better argument than suggested evasion of alleged rights and false governmental intrusions.

...Them dogs don’t hunt, pardon the pun. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wink.gif
 
Yote, I couldn't possible agree with you any more. I believe it to be wrong to the absolute core to let two domesticated dogs fight. Maybe it was my upbringing, maybe just my values in general. I have never seen a dog as anything less than part of my family and to imagine someone turning their dog loose in a ring to possibly get torn to shreds is absolutely astounding to me. Exciting? I think not. "Your freedom ends at the tip of my nose" is something that I have always believed but when it comes to topics such as this, I think your freedom should end well before that.
 
We let grown men into many different types of "rings" to "possibly get torn to shreds". Now I'm not saying its right but if it is deemed wrong by the public I have the same fear as Duane that I might be next, I take my dog hunting knowing full well he could be injured in a fight with another dog(coyote)
 
JShepard:
Foremost I respect what you’re saying, however, I believe you’ve missed some points. Boxing (Pugilism), for example, involves the free will of people who enter that ring as do similar “ring” combative sports (football, basketball, baseball to some extent). These are highly officiated events that do not bear the distinction of great bodily harm as the single end result each time they are engaged. Injury may happen in the course and scope of those endeavors but destructive injury to the opponent is not the primary aim, competing in the contest is.

Dog fighting is different. The primary aim there is to impose infliction of great harm upon one animal by another, for no reason other than contest to determine which is tougher. Now other than Mike Tyson, people don’t generally BITE each other to shreds while boxing; playing football or other contact sports.

As to your concern perhaps echoing that of Duane? I hear ya there too, but again, while your concern is valid (in a questioning way) engagement of a governmental policy to prohibit use of dogs in hunting activities is remote -- in the far extreme. He’s one example why...

On August 17th of this year President Bush sign an Executive Order, directing federal land management agencies to “expand and enhance hunting opportunities” (one operative word being “enhance”).

Executive Orders can be powerful tools, allowing folks like us to engage the courts (under STRONG authority of law) to redress acts that contradict prior government conduct or direction. I’ll not bore you with the legal aspects, but let’s just say this order is powerful stuff for our (hunting) purposes.

Put it this way; PEER’s (Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility) Executive Director Jeff Ruch, a politically liberal group, had this to say about the order: “This order reads like it was written by a lobbyist...”

Kudos, Mr. President!

Bottom-line for me (and perhaps most of us) is that dogs should be treated with care, especially while serving our human interests (hunting or otherwise). That’s an ethical choice surely, but one the expectation of which can hardly be cited as unreasonable. Whereas hunters don’t send dogs after game with the express purposes of causing the pooch harm, although that happens on occasion; such can hardly be construed as a basis for outlawing the practice.

Be watchful of our government, certainly, but overly concerned our canine pursuits are next on some liberal agenda? I (speaking personally) wouldn’t give them that much acknowledgment, not to mention more than a fleeting thought of the slimmest chance such aims would succeed!

Methinks too often we, those with weapon interests, forget how powerful we truly are and allow those who would deprive us of rights, far too much credit.

But what do I know?

I’m just a guy who’s taken on Forest Service interests, winning core objectives (every single time, and there are many), and I have no compunction of doing it again if appropriate. (Sometimes, touchy-feely environmental aspects need to be nipped in the bud! Sometimes, they require being slammed hard and fast; squashed like a cockroach and wiped clean from beneath our shoes.)

...But I digress. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
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The purpose of my post was to start a discussion.There have been valid points made.As I read the replies,something that was stated caught my eye, not the quote, but the idea,"that we have nothing to worry about."I have seen more than one state outlaw hunting with hounds.OR,CA,MN,the list could go on but these I have personally seen.We all need to be aware that someone is willing to force their ideas on the public.Chasing bears and cats was deemed "unethical" in some states,because it was unfair to the animal.What would the say if they watched me stitch a dog that was torn up by whatever animal.What will stop them from saying that hunting with dogs is unfair to the dogs.Another example calf roping is now called "tie down" roping to appease the bunny huggers.If you think we are safe from their agenda you need to look around and see what has happened to other sports.
 
Duane:
As you’ll notice I’ve been silent on this topic for a day or so, to give others a chance to weight-in (since I’ve been pretty active). Given no one else has commented in that time I’ll make a few more observations then shut-up for a bit so as not to appear as though I’m hijacking your thread, or being argumentative. Neither is applicable, truly, as I empathize with much of your sentiment (caution). Because I too have some expertise in this area; having dealt extensively with Tree-Hugger mentalities regarding dogs, expressly concerning wilderness-engaged activities.

That said I believe where we differ in viewpoint on this subject, ever so slightly, is at the identification of opposing interests and level of threat those actually pose against our freedoms -- using dogs for hunting.

The latter could result from misunderstanding land management.

In the post above you cited witnessing “...more than one state outlaw hunting with hounds.OR,CA...the list could go on...” presumably under the impression environmentalists caused these shifts? Yet that is not always necessarily so.

For example California has not outlawed use of hounds while hunting; the state chose to regulate the use of all hunting dogs -- particularly as they pertain to big cats, and some game mammals. In California hounds can still be used to hunt big cats (Cal. Fish & Game Code §265.(a)(3), under certain conditions. Likewise Oregon has similar provisions. These are not overly restrictive, they are reasonable, and made state public policy for legitimate conservation concerns.

With respect to California’s dog hunting controls? These only apply in certain areas of the state called “Dog Control Zones” (mostly located within the Sierra/Nevadas) during certain times of year, but outside these areas (or during seasonal allowances) there are no prohibitions for use of hunting dogs -- hounds or otherwise (Cal. Fish & Game Code §265.(D)(b)(2) -- with the exception of certain mammal species.

It’s my understanding (which I’d be happy to confirm or counter through legislative records, if necessary and I can locate them) that Ronald Reagan was indirectly responsible for initiating the dog ban on cougar hunting in California. Yeah, the patriarch of modern political conservatism wanted to increase the numbers of diminished wildlife (big cats, condors, etc.) in California during his years as governor. He issued orders to this effect and Department of Fish & Game imposed restrictions (not just on dog use) in compliance...

Environmental conservation is not a bad word, nor a thing to fear.

Succinctly I believe to infuse dog fighting with the aspect of “Bunny Huggers” depriving our freedoms, is being overly cautious. Modern land management (state and federal) is bound by stacks of legislative red tape and among such, is the requirement to support its positions with scientific (biological) studies. Another is to provide the public with an opportunity to be heard for or against a land management action, BEFORE it is engaged.

So actions to restrict hunting with dogs cannot happen by stroke of a pen, there are processes involved that must be met... Even then, the courts can intervene when ample evidence supports NOT engaging land management action. I’ll not bore you with specifics of the many case law cites where the Forest Service has been stopped dead in its tracks, from doing or not doing a thing in conflict with law. And oddly enough it is the “Bunny Huggers” who’ve filed a vast majority of those suits, not logging or industrial interests as one might think.

Your concerns appear to apply under PERSONAL ethics, which have no standing in terms of implementing land management actions; none, zero, zilch, nada. So even if the “Bunny Huggers” pitched-a-fit that ”hunting with dogs is unfair to the dogs?” Without appropriate studies to support how this practice (using dogs for hunting) negatively affects the subject ecosystem, environmental interests (radical or otherwise) could pitch that fit `till their lattes dried up and it could have no bearing on a land management action. Municipal actions are similar, yet must yield to state and/or federal provisions of law.

Now I know what you (and perhaps others) may be thinking, the “Bunny Huggers” might use existing biological studies to ban dog hunting. Not hardly. The few canine in wilderness related studies available are inconclusive for the most part (C. Sime, 1999, for example), and funding for new studies is slim (actually, nonexistent). Moreover in order to restrict dogs from public lands on the basis of eco-harm, a study for that specific ecosystem MUST be done to support claimed environmental impacts.

Last year Richard Snyder of the Colorado Rocky Mountain Research Station assisted me with research as to canine vs. ecosystem related studies... None were found to augment those I’d already discovered! Correspondingly while many land managers don’t like dogs in their forests or areas, they cannot base a restriction on simple PERSONAL ethic lines. The science must back-up their decisions and if it doesn’t (which is often the case in dog related matters); they cannot act in a restrictive way where the public is concerned.

Dog restrictions happen very infrequently in the grander scheme of things. And when they are engaged, in say city park settings, uncontrolled pet behavior is usually at the core -- as such negatively affects those environments.

So you see, the ”hunting with dogs is unfair to the dogs” argument is a potential bark without bite, lacking science to support restrictions. Therefore this is not the line our opposition would take on an official level, if their underlining motives were concern for our dogs. They would attack our interests by focusing on the environmental impacts of dogs, while engaged in hunting or other recreation activities in the wild.

Granted the changing of semantics to describe activities and issues is noteworthy; changing dog “owner” to “guardian” as cautioned by the AKC (thanks San Francisco!), or “calf roping” to "tie down" roping, can pose problems and issues of their own. These aspects should be monitored, certainly, but noting more until such infuse themselves into practical application; i.e., for our purposes: animals should be given responsive legal rights, based on terminology. The latter has yet to happen, even remotely.

I (personally speaking) wholeheartedly support any effort to be watchful against movements that could pose restrictions against our freedoms, so long as we (dog lovers, canine hunters, handlers, etc.) clearly identify a threat exists and to what extent.

Support of dog fighter rights out of concern we may be next, however, is to misunderstand the tactical elements involved. Surely we should consider those aspects in passing, but to grant our opposition too much ground they’ve not earned is simple error. We (dog folk, collectively) must consider tactics and procedures, over anxieties as to what might happen.

Thus we really are on the same page at the core of this issue, Duane. Where we apparently differ in viewpoint somewhat is at the level of concern a dog owner should extend toward “Bunny Hugger” antics. Albeit if I gave the impression we have nothing to be concerned with, that was not my intent (my bad if applicable). “Worry” in my mind indicates great concern, albeit that word (as used in your last post) could just be a matter of semantics. Not being nit-picky either, mind you.

I believe as perhaps you may that we should be mindful of potential opposition to our interests, but not oppressed by or obsessed with such.

...Otherwise we could be chasing our tails, pardon the play on words?

PS – In the interest of full disclosure: my expertise in this area stems from (research & development of) a three (3) year wilderness canine-specific project, handling protocols for which were developed in cooperation with the U.S. Forest Service (as indicated in my first post here at PM). This said so that none get the impression I’m trying to be a ‘know-it-all’ -- being new here at PM and all -- these subjects just happen to be within my avocational scope. (THE PRECEDING IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUDED AS LEGAL ADVICE. IF LEGAL ADVICE IS NEEDED, CONSULT A LAWYER.)
 
Mark... WOW what a write-up there. I don't know if I am with you or not, I'll tell you when I figure out what your saying. LOL All kidding aside, you have really thought out your comments and whether anyone agrees with you, you should be admired for you in-depth analysis. Good work. You make many good points and too many to mention. I wish in discussions all people would discuss like this. -MOyotehunter
 
i am not sure how i feel about this topic yet! the way i am thinking is kinda like hunting dogs these fighting dogs are not just someones family dog they deided to fight one day they are raised from a puppy and trained to fight and most likely enjoy it( much as most other dogs enjoy their sport). i think it is like combat sports for humans. Yes they do go out and aim to hurt eachother. I am a huge UFC fan and those guys train and fight to hurt eachother not just compete. they go out and try to either knockout, submit or have the referee stop it because the opponent is too hurt or cant continue. In my eyes it is kinda the same! however like i said I am not for or against dog fighting just trying to add my thoughts.
Makr i love that dog you have there it sure is a beutiful dog!
 
I am not an advocate of dogfighting either, but I do understand what the start of this post is driving towards.

One of the heads of the Tennessee Wildlife Resource Agency (TWRA) has stated that he will do everything in his power to end hunting with dogs. Whether it be coyote, rabbit, coon, squirrels, whatever. He, along with several other DNR types are for outlawing dogs for hunting. I believe that was the intent of the original poster. Give the anti's an inch and they will take a mile.

A great man by the name of Abraham Lincoln was once pressed to abolish rooster fighting. Kind of a dumb move, since he reportedly did some duties as a referee at the cockfights. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-006.gif
Anyway, Mr. Lincoln stated that as long as mankind continues to fight and kill one another, he would afford the gamecock the same right. That's paraphrased, just for the record.

The dogfighters of old very rarely allowed their dogs to be killed in the pit. Once they saw that their dog had been beaten they would pull the dog, kind of like throwing in the towel in boxing. Nowdays, you have these thugs that have gotten their hands on the breed and have no regard whatsoever for the animal. All they see is money. They are also the ones that have, through stupidity, allowed the pit dogs in some cases to become man biters.
The old timers wouldn't allow a man biter. They were in the pit within mere inches of these dogs, not like they do today, and they didn't want a dog to go for them. Any dog that showed aggression towards people was put down.
Like I said I don't condone dog fights, but it was dog fights, bull fights, wars, etc., that made Mastiffs, Bull Mastiffs, American Bulldogs, Staffordshire Bullterrier, American Pitbull Terriers, Bull Terriers, as well as others into the dogs that they are today.
 
are you trying to say DUANE is against hunting with dogs? If so you are sadly mistaken. I do believe he has some hounds and such he uses now. I could be wrong but i think i may be right! If I am wrong sorry.
 
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are you trying to say DUANE is against hunting with dogs? If so you are sadly mistaken. I do believe he has some hounds and such he uses now. I could be wrong but i think i may be right! If I am wrong sorry.



You are wrong, apology accepted. Duane is basically saying that first they went after dog fighting and now they will go after chasing coyotes with dogs or some other form of hunting with dogs.
They are already trying to outlaw using dogs for hunting hogs, especially catch dogs. They deem using dogs as "stressful to wildlife". Bay dogs chase the hog until he bays and then the catch dog will go in and grab the hog and hold him until the hunter can kill it.
There is a big push to have this made illegal right now.
Here's some of the HSUS propaganda to have it banned.
http://www.hsus.org/acf/fighting/hogdog/hog_dog_fighting.html

I believe that's what Duane is talking about and I am in total agreement with him.
 
oh ok makes sense now sorry!! i sure would hate to see it happen, i wonder what the outlook is on decoy dogs do they look at that the same because your not actually hunting with them? I hope i did not offend you or anyone else that was not my intention! thanks for understanding!
 
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Bopeye:They are already trying to outlaw using dogs for hunting hogs, especially catch dogs. They deem using dogs as "stressful to wildlife". Bay dogs chase the hog until he bays and then the catch dog will go in and grab the hog and hold him until the hunter can kill it.


Respectfully, I believe you’re mistaken, the article you cited indicates nothing of a sort with respect to “trying to outlaw using dogs for hunting” activities. The focus of HSUS is to stop the hog dog games, an activity (again) held within the confines of a ring; not an outdoor legitimate hunting sport. Moreover, nowhere in the HSUS piece is “stressful to wildlife” mentioned as a basis for action.

No big deal that the HSUS article, mentions the two types of dog hunting camps: bay & catch dogs. HSUS has not taken a position against hunting with dogs, only against using dogs in the confines of a ring against disarmed pigs. In fact the article expressly cites Louisiana Rep. Warren Triche’s introduction and passing of a 2004 bill to ban hog dog fighting in that state, “excluding hog hunting” activities.

Where is the threat to hunting interests?

Oh the ‘give `um an inch, they’ll take a mile’ argument? That would be an inaccurate assessment, because (as I’ve stated before) in order to ban dog hunting environmental impact studies would be required; if the basis of "stressful to wildlife" were remotely applied to public lands use. In the (HSUS) case you cited, hunting with dogs is only a background mention not a formal position against by HSUS.

...HUGE (massive, humungous, gigantic) difference!

Please don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying your viewpoint is invalid only that such needs to be tempered with FACTS -- not speculation. Whereas to extrapolate that HSUS is taking a position against hunting with dogs, simply because hunting with dogs is pointed out foundationally in a writing dealing with dog hogging IN A RING? Well, that’s speculation lacking a clear statement of position to back the notion.
 
Well stated points all, but I must disagree with many of them.

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Your concerns appear to apply under PERSONAL ethics, which have no standing in terms of implementing land management actions; none, zero, zilch, nada. So even if the “Bunny Huggers” pitched-a-fit that ”hunting with dogs is unfair to the dogs?” Without appropriate studies to support how this practice (using dogs for hunting) negatively affects the subject ecosystem, environmental interests (radical or otherwise) could pitch that fit `till their lattes dried up and it could have no bearing on a land management action. Municipal actions are similar, yet must yield to state and/or federal provisions of law.

Now I know what you (and perhaps others) may be thinking, the “Bunny Huggers” might use existing biological studies to ban dog hunting. Not hardly. The few canine in wilderness related studies available are inconclusive for the most part (C. Sime, 1999, for example), and funding for new studies is slim (actually, nonexistent). Moreover in order to restrict dogs from public lands on the basis of eco-harm, a study for that specific ecosystem MUST be done to support claimed environmental impacts.



The idea that regulations must pass scientific and evidential scrutiny to be implemented is almost laughable. We have far too many examples of regulations that make no scientific sense whatsoever not only having been passed but having been upheld by a liberal judiciary. In your own state the northern CA spotted owl controversy, specifically designed to prevent lumbering of old growth timber, has been to and through federal and state courts for what? more than 20 years? and continues today. States doing one thing, feds doing another, and courts ordering them both to do something else? Explain to me if you can how the plethora of conflicting laws, regulations, and court mandated actions, can all be based on a solid scientific basis.

When the professionals on the spot (and the public) disagree, they can be overridden and often are. I attended the public hearings in Cheyenne WY on the reintroduction of large predators (wolves), and though both the public and the state wildlife biologists were strongly against it, the Feds implemented the program anyway.

Those are just two examples (among many) specifically involving wildlife management, I could write a book on ridiculous regulations from nuclear power-plants, DDT, CFCs, refineries, MTBE, etc., etc., etc. We have way too many examples of silly regulations that make absolutely no scientific sense being implemented because they were successfully sold to a gullible public by the environmental wackos/bunny huggers using misinformation.

In addition to regulatory action we have numerous examples of legislative action overriding good sense. I won't even try to identify the thousands of specific instances, we can all give numerous examples. Legislators pander to the voters whether their opinion is scientifically sound or based on emotional arguments promulgated by by a special interest group. Can anybody remember the Clinton "assault weapons" ban (the dregs of which you are still living with in CA)?

Considering the successes they've had to date, the basic premise that running hounds and dog fighting have no relationship where banning hound hunting is concerned, and that the bunny huggers are nothing much to worry about, is in my opinion misguided. The current uproar in the press over illegal dog fighting could easily be piggybacked into regulations on running hounds.

To the basic question, let me state upfront that I have never been to a dog fight (or run hounds) and of course never been involved with fighting dogs. Having said that let me go out on a limb and state that I see nothing inherently wrong with organized dog fights.



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Allowing two domestic dogs to fight, simply to see which prevails is cruel; it serves no legitimate purpose, does not raise the spirit of man, and promotes a number of ancillary crimes. These aspects have an affect on the whole of society, making them everyone’s business. That is why we depend on law enforcement, to curtail activities that have a negative affect on society as a whole. Otherwise we have anarchy and civil disorder, so yeah; the Feds have a right and purpose for stepping in.



Mankind has taken pleasure in watching "blood sports" for thousands of years and continues to do so legally today around the world without "anarchy and civil disorder", so that argument is fallacious on it's face. Roman Caesars spent vast fortunes in animal vs animal, animal vs men, and men vs men (gladiatorial) spectacles expressly to maintain civil order.

Given that multi-thousand year history, how did it become a "given" in the last 60 years in our particular culture that "Allowing two domestic dogs to fight, simply to see which prevails is cruel; it serves no legitimate purpose, does not raise the spirit of man"? How did it become a "given" (among some) that dog fighting (and c*ck fighting, and bullfighting) is somehow morally wrong? The same argument could be (and is) made about hunting in general and with as much authority. If PETA, HSUS, et.al. are able to convince enough of the populous that it's a "given", would that make it right or scientifically sound to ban hunting?

For that matter how do you justify the premise that an activity must serve a "legitimate purpose" and "raise the spirit of man" in order to be allowed?

I understand that most of the infrastructure surrounding dog fighting is pretty sordid and is populated with with an element that is heavily involved in other criminal activity as well, and that it is largely controlled by organized crime.

Dog fighting was made illegal in the first place largely as part of the effort to suppress illegal gambling (non-government taxed), not for any "humane" reasons. At the time the actual infrastructure and practice (apart from gambling) was comparatively "civilized" as Bopeye related. The heavy involvement of criminal elements came after it was made illegal. When legal, there were licensed referees, rigid rules, etc.

The sale and distribution of alcohol was fraught with violent crime for years too (as the illegal drug trade is now), then we ended prohibition. Alcohol is still just as dangerous to the user as it ever was, and there were (and are) still costs to society, but the situation is vastly improved without prohibition.

I put it to you that the reason for the involvement of organized crime and the disgusting conditions may be because it's illegal. If it were a legal business I expect it would be no dirtier than any other "blood sport". As Bopeye said, when it WAS legal, the whole enterprise was a completely different affair.



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Oh the ‘give `um an inch, they’ll take a mile’ argument? That would be an inaccurate assessment, because (as I’ve stated before) in order to ban dog hunting environmental impact studies would be required;



The "incrementalism" argument IS valid. We have seen it work in far too many cases to believe otherwise. Smoking, seatbelts, "weapons" in school (even a picture of a space gun) etc, etc, the examples of incrementally increasing regulatory and legislative restrictions are legion. Here in this thread we can see the principle at work. Do they look at decoy dogs the same as hunting hounds, how are bay dogs equated with catch dogs, etc.

The premise that environmental impact studies (or any other scientific basis) would be required to ban dog hunting is simply belied by history as well. Neither regulatory nor legislative action requires a basis in scientific fact, merely that a sufficient percentage of the gullible populous be convinced that it's a good idea at the time.


So...let me put forward a few premises (stated positions) of my own:

Allowing animals to fight each other or people to fight animals (bullfighting etc) is NOT an unethical activity. It hasn't been considered unethical for thousands of years and if not for a relentless campaign by bunny huggers wouldn't be considered so now.

Using dogs to hunt is probably the reason they were domesticated in the first place thousands of years ago. It's no more or less ethical now than it was then.

There are powerful lobbies (PETA, HSUS, etc.) who have had numerous incremental successes in the past in influencing restrictions on the use of animals, including hunting.

The passage of those regulatory and legislative restrictions depends more on swaying an uneducated and gullible public than on a proven scientific basis.

We would be foolish in the extreme to be complacent about the efforts of the enviro-whackos/bunny huggers given their past successes at causing restrictions to our activities to be passed.


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Please don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying your viewpoint is invalid only that such needs to be tempered with FACTS -- not speculation. Whereas to extrapolate that HSUS is taking a position against hunting with dogs, simply because hunting with dogs is pointed out foundationally in a writing dealing with dog hogging IN A RING? Well, that’s speculation lacking a clear statement of position to back the notion.



Facts? Clear statement of position? How about these statements of what the HSUS opposes (among many others including bear baiting and contest hunting) from their web page?

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Hound Hunting

Many hunters chase bears, bobcats and mountain lions until they can be treed or cornered using packs of dogs. The dogs' collars are fitted with radio transmitters so all the hunter must do is follow the signal, then shoot the trapped animal down from the tree at point-blank range. Training exercises often involve hunters allowing their dogs to rip apart baby animals so that the dogs develop a taste for blood.

Field Coursing

Dogs are used to chase rabbits, foxes and other animals in competitions. When the dogs catch their quarry they often fight over the terrified animal, sometimes literally tearing him apart. Even if the animal is not caught, he may later die due to the fear and stress associated with the chase.



I'd say we as hunters and hound hunters in particular should be very worried.
 
One thing that makes this a valid concern is the use of voter initiative campaigns to pass wildlife related laws. Hound hunting for bears, cougars and bobcats has been banned in Washington State. This ban was based entirely on emotional response to a well-financed media campaign and had nothing to do with the population levels of these animals.
 
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