Top man. A very rigorous nailing of all the points Apthorpe!Except to the extent that society accepts far higher rates of accident in other pursuits. Arguments based on accidents are valid, but only when they are within the context of society's tolerance for risk in other areas. Are more people killed in France skiing? Driving? Swimming? We can ban shooting on the basis of deaths and injuries at exactly the same time that it is decided to ban everything else with equal or greater risk. So it actually turned out to be very easy to disagree with that, given three seconds thought.
That is not an argument for or against the legitimacy of anything. In fact, hunting is a sport. Football is a game. Sports are field sports plus boxing etc - an active pursuit with the likelihood of blood being shed. What are commonly referred to as "sports" are "games".
This argument is effective when animals are not used for food or any other purpose. In a vegan world, that is valid. However 30 million animals is no more than 3% of the animals killed per year. Attack the 97% first and then come back. If one does not attack the greatest harm first, then one cannot claim the argument is one based on welfare or ethics.
This, again, is the consequence of operating from a flawed premise - that human behaviour and regulation is capable of being perfect. Because something individually wrong has been done, the entirety must be damned, is a false argument seldom opposed. The same argument could be used to result in banning animal welfare activism. In neither case is it appropriate or sensible. Killing of non-target species like an eagle is already illegal, so what conceivable benefit can there be to making something illegal illegal? It is symptomatic of the brain-dead functioning of most of our liberal establishment over past decades - the conceit that a problem is solved merely by condemning it.
Like most of the arguments here, this needs to be put into context, and restrictions made in context. The amount of plastic waste from ammunition is insignificant (although I think should be eliminated altogether as far as possible) and is not persuasive as an argument for banning hunting, not least because we don't need to use plastic bits at all. The pollution from lead: This is highly contentious and the data set and science behind this is very low quality and insubstantial. It is not likely to be material outside wetlands where it is already banned, and apparently we'll all be pretending other projectiles are as effective soon enough anyway. Doesn't lead to conclusion that a hunting ban is necessary.
The economic arguments in favour of the majority of human endeavour are weak. So what? The money allocated to football/ conservation/the textile industry/ electronics etc is hardly efficiently allocated. Ultimately, this is another "hair-shirt, go back to living up trees" argument.
All our concepts of acceptable and desirable human behaviour are traditions. The fact that a tradition exists now is, in itself, a strong argument in favour of it. Tradition, being the accumulation of multiple informed opinions developed over a long period of time, is a far more valid argument than the opinions of a small group of snotty morons suffering from the conceit that poor education + minimal intellect + sanctimony = correct opinions.
You'll probably dispute this, but consider that slavery is only considered an evil because of Anglo-Saxon cultural tradition. The recent Covid outbreak has shown that a "modern" perspective is that virtually all fundamental human rights are "undesirable". You really cannot accept that part of their argument.
The same issue affects all of these spurious campaigns to ban hunting, shooting, fishing, private ownership of land, etc. etc. and that is that they are inherently opposed to the basic building blocks of civilisation (not just Western), and that nobody is willing to oppose these people on the basis that their activism is fundamentally wrong. The details of each campaign are hardly relevant, the key points are that a small but very vocal bunch of hard left-wing morons seeks to co-opt the idle consent of a mass of idiots opining on things that are none of their business or beyond their comprehension, in order to ban things that they don't comprehend as a form of warfare on society.
Yes, a few birds of prey get wrongly killed, yet at the same time vastly more birds of prey exist because of the same activity. The excessive focus on the individual and specific, in ignorance of the general is harmful - even to the animals concerned.
I hereby propose Apthorpe to write our pro-hunting argument. Anyone second that?