I voted to watch it, there is not a single question in my mind.
As has been already posted here, for lots and lots of people, this is one of the only wild animals that they see, and however much of a problem to reds, and commercial logging as they might be, you can't ignore that lots of people love them, and find that they charm and enrich their lives. Maybe that love goes no further than that, but maybe it changes some of those people forever - who knows.
Not getting into the ethics at all, but I'd expect that too rapid a decline in numbers would unsettle the balance, so any predatory species that depend on them will also suffer a decline in the short term, plus you'd only defer the problem, as any gaps will be filled a generation or two later as migrant animals found their way into new territory (as was proved by the DEFRA test badger cull in the SW a year of two ago).
I killed one on the road a few months back and I have to say I was beside myself. Over anthropomorphising I'm sure, but I'd invented this little life for her, that really centred on her just crossing the road to climb up and sit in the hedge eating the ripening hazel nuts as the first rays of the morning sun hit that side of the road.
:sad6:
As has been already posted here, for lots and lots of people, this is one of the only wild animals that they see, and however much of a problem to reds, and commercial logging as they might be, you can't ignore that lots of people love them, and find that they charm and enrich their lives. Maybe that love goes no further than that, but maybe it changes some of those people forever - who knows.
Not getting into the ethics at all, but I'd expect that too rapid a decline in numbers would unsettle the balance, so any predatory species that depend on them will also suffer a decline in the short term, plus you'd only defer the problem, as any gaps will be filled a generation or two later as migrant animals found their way into new territory (as was proved by the DEFRA test badger cull in the SW a year of two ago).
I killed one on the road a few months back and I have to say I was beside myself. Over anthropomorphising I'm sure, but I'd invented this little life for her, that really centred on her just crossing the road to climb up and sit in the hedge eating the ripening hazel nuts as the first rays of the morning sun hit that side of the road.
:sad6: