Lurch - never heard the term 'drag hunting' before (barrel of jokes in that ... but won't go there for now!!

).
I can understand why drag hunts aren't particularly popular, but I do think it's a viable alternative to 'putting down' dogs/horses, supposed job losses, etc, that are being touted as the final outcome of the ban. Yes, it is ultimately going to be a case of trying to find some kind of compromise, and while both 'sides' are guilty of stubborness, to some extent, I can't help thinking - and this is my personal opinion - that a certain set of society (ie. the fox hunting community) are being a bit TOO melodramatic about the whole thing - because there ARE alternatives, and they don't HAVE to stop the riding, the dog keeping, the dressing up, the drinking, the socialising ... just the killing.
And yes, I can understand that people's emotions run high, and that for some, this is a deeply personal issue, worthy of taking a stand for/against. But democracy applies to EVERYONE - the idea that the majority rules - and sometimes, when the majority doesn't go in your favour, you just have to take it on the chin and put up, or shut up. Because this ISN'T simply a case of Government dictate, it's a case of the majority of people in the UK supporting the ban. And at the end of the day, no one can argue with that - save for stamping one's feet in a tantrum and screaming, "but we're special, the rules don't apply to us!" Yes they bl**dy well do ...
As an aside, I don't mind telling you that I have actively marched and demonstrated against the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq (and I actually come from a 'forces family'). I'm a peaceful kind of soul most days, though on these marches I have seen violence commited by both sides - by the demonstrators and police alike. This was an issue over which lives we going to be/are now being lost, so it's not surprising that some people got hurt trying to put their point acrross. My point here is that at the time, the majority of the UK population (according to the MORI poll at least) were AGAINST the war - yet the government (both Labour and Tory) decided to go against the grain and bring out the guns regardless. That, in my opion, was something worth risking a few bumps and bruises for. And on that occasion, the government really were (are?) the bad guys.
But not here ... it's the majority of UK people 'against' a minority - and no, it ain't pleasant, but in my book the majority rules the day.
One rule for all - NEVER one rule for some, and another rule for others ... !
I'm going to leave this thread alone now!!
G
