WARNING: this post ends with a rather surprising and unexpected recommendation.
Summary 2: “OK, but why do YOU want to kill it?”
Assumption: our notional anti has accepted the previous arguments around why it is acceptable for people to hunt animals. What he or she isn’t happy with is that a hunter would take pleasure in doing so and therefore want to do it themselves.
Having hopefully adequately answered the questions around whether it’s even OK to hunt an animal at all, we move onto the potentially more difficult question of why an individual wants to do so in the first place. As Klenchblaize and others have mentioned, the fact that in the end we do this for pleasure (of various forms) is the difficult elephant in the room that we tend to shy away from. It’s not an easy topic, it rapidly becomes very personal (I’ll come back to that) but ignoring leads to some of the idiotic statements we saw around the time of the foxhunting ban with people claiming that foxes enjoyed being chased for example. This sort of self-defeating nonsense has to be avoided as GZL has touched on.
So, recognising that most people make choices based on several factors, what drivers combine in different proportions to make an individual want to hunt? Tell me if I’ve missed any, but I think it’s because of a combination of some of the following motivations:
1. Meat – this is the simplest, most basic driver, but quite frankly there can’t be many of us for whom it’s the main reason for hunting (as opposed to a moral justification)
2. Crop protection, species management, pest control – these are clearly things that need to be done and the main driver for some, but again few would choose to do this work for the money, so it’s an insufficient explanation on its’ own.
3. Upbringing, availability, broadly cultural reasons – I think a lot of people are in the position of hunting because they grew up in an environment where that’s what people did, and they follow suit, almost for some as a default activity rather than as a positive choice. At one end of the spectrum I see a lot of this in France where hunting was traditionally an easily accessible, cheap means of obtaining meat, recreation and a social activity. But it does tend to make for hunters who aren’t actually particularly passionate, invested or thoughtful about the whole thing. At the other end of the scale, I think that perhaps this area overlaps with some of the perceptions around class mentioned in posts #98 and #101 by Hereford and Tulloch. There are also very wealthy, privileged people who shoot because that’s what people in their circle do, and they have the access.
4. For sport, the challenge, status: this is a problematic area because if at one end you have what Willie_Gunn describes in post #103, catching a trout on a dry fly or shooting a fast, high pigeon, which are a test of skill and fieldcraft, at the other end you have those who fly to Africa to shoot Cecil the Lion (he’s not going to leave this discussion, there’s a lion in the room next to the elephant…) and put him on the wall. This may well make conservation and financial sense, but it’s clear that it sits uneasily. Most hunters are delighted to have put a woodcock in their game bag, but there are undoubtebly those who view a trophy as similar to a Ferrari or a big golden wristwatch. So this point runs the full gamut of moral judgements from being admirable and noble, to being greedy and callous. Tough one.
5. A means to access and use firearms – there are those who primarily like shooting, the hunting is secondary. Which isn’t a good or bad thing as such, just part of the mix.
6. They like to kill things – again, as a sole motivation, this is pretty unpleasant, but it’s an ingredient.
7. Instinct – several of you have alluded to this last one, perhaps most eloquently Buckaroo8 in post #76 and Klenchblaize in post #78. It’s not a choice so much as part of an integral part of who and what the hunter is.
I’m going to spend a little time on this specific point as it’s a potential argument winner as part of the mix.
This statement from Buckaroo8 raises the very valid possibility that less than 10,000 years of agriculture (much less than that in most of Europe) has left a lot of people with an urge to pursue animals and fish to eat that has not yet been removed by evolution. Now there are many other traits that could be like that, and the neverending dispute around the contributions that nurture and nature make to human behaviour remain unresolved. Having had a word with an evolutionary biologist this weekend, I’ve been told that work on human behavioural evolution is inconclusive and generally pretty bad, so although this can’t be proven, it’s a very valid conjecture.
For me, hunting is not a choice. I do not choose to be a hunter. I was born a hunter.
Klenchblaize makes it clear that to him, hunting is an existential matter. We’re back on solid philosophical ground that Camus and Sartre would be familiar with here. It’s nothing less than a way of validation one’s existence.
The taking of a life is an integral part that cannot and should not be relegated to an argument of a need to cull but rather see an acceptance that in many of us the desire to hunt remains a constant, close-to-the-surface itch, that must be scratched if life on this planet is to be of meaning beyond simply procreation.
The reason for which the above are in my view so important is that they set up a framework for discussion that would be familiar to anyone who has for example ever had a discussion about gay rights. Before you shout me down, think about how far that conversation has come. There are clear parallels: a minority group defined by something that is just a part of them, but is misunderstood, ignored or violently reviled by much of the rest of society for whom it is alien at best, sinful/morally wrong at worst, sometimes reacted to completely disproportionately. Often this group was (or still is in many countries) criminalised for something that‘s just a part of them although it does no harm to anyone, and most choose to deal with this by staying out of view of the public. But it’s only through confronting the prejudice or ignorance that they manage to change the mainstream view. What we have here is a precedent and an example we can draw from.
Have a good laugh about it, throw in a few quips, but I think that approaching this as at least in part
a civil liberties or rights argument is not only valid but a potential long-term winner.