Monday, 22 April 2019

Hunted, Harried, Chased To Exhaustion...

...there should be a law against it!

It all started with a Tweet...


Where's our Royal-warranted animal protection charity, then? Gone to ground?


Tally ho! *blows horn*


Don't you feel any sympathy for the poor quarry, desperate to escape?


One by one, the earths are stopped...

And finally, the prey is brought to bay, panting, exhausted, bloodied. It's such a terribly cruel sport, isn't it? 

5 comments:

  1. Two members of the Caravan Utilising Nomadic Travellers arrested. They will either be:
    1. Reported for Summons which will he impractical to serve as they will simply move to another parasitic site, or
    2. Be charged with the offence of cruelty to a protected species and released on bail to attend court on a certain date, which they will fail to turn up to.
    The Police custody officer will know this, from previous experience of these vermin, but will want them out of the custody suite.
    Meanwhile, it appears the suffering animal had been returned by the charity, at no cost to the owner. Surely, it would have made sense to refuse to release the animal until the cost of vet treatment had been received?
    But, apart from 24 years of dealing with these pond life, what do I know?
    Penseivat

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  2. We have a huge, filthy shanty town, full of 'travellers' a couple of miles outside of our village. They squatted the land during WW2 & due to the weak law on squatting, after 12 years the land was theirs. They keep horses. The horses are invariably in terrible condition. Dead horses are not uncommon there. Despite endless reports to the useless RSPCA and police, nothing is ever done to alleviate the hell for these animals.

    The fields facing the main road are now hidden by huge earth banks, built by the 'travellers'. The police and the RSPCA are terrified of 'travellers' as are HMRC, the local authority and most local residents. I have lost count of the number of head collar injuries I have seen on these horses, the number of foundering, worm bloated, fat, scabby ponies, trying desperately to get their weight off their front hooves to relieve pain. Every few years they get an outbreak of Strangles. This has rendered the surrounding bridle paths a no-go area for horses & riders, for years.

    The one time (mid 90s)I ventured on to their site to alert them to a dying foal (Joint Ill turned into septicaemia) I had rocks thrown at me and my car. The police did not want to know. The RSPCA (back then, just adopting the corporate model mid 90s) told me that "we must be tolerant of different ways of caring for animals" They did nothing. Next day, dead foal.

    It stayed where it fell until was pulled apart by foxes, corvids and the underfed, scraggy dogs that roam the site and fields, freely.

    These people are utter scum. They blight any established community (theft, violence, intimidation, injury, benefit fraud the lot) and cause nothing but misery to any living being they come into contact with. I'd think better of them if they just quit keeping animals.

    ReplyDelete
  3. MIS,
    I'd think better of them if they stopped breeding, so they'd eventually die out, or stop breathing altogether. My personal choice is the latter.
    Penseivat

    ReplyDelete
  4. "These people are utter scum. They blight any established community (theft, violence, intimidation, injury, benefit fraud the lot) and cause nothing but misery to any living being they come into contact with."

    Are you talking about the pikeys, or the RSPCA/Council/Police? Seems the description fits both pretty well............

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  5. "Surely, it would have made sense to refuse to release the animal until the cost of vet treatment had been received?"

    I no longer expect sense from the state's minions or their fakecharity lackeys.

    "These people are utter scum. They blight any established community (theft, violence, intimidation, injury, benefit fraud the lot) and cause nothing but misery to any living being they come into contact with. "

    Agreed. Any other person treating animals like this would feel the full weight of the law. My contempt for them is boundless, but it's not as deep or as wide as my contempt for those who - through cowardice or 'diversity' policies - fail to treat them equally.

    The RSPCA will never, ever see a single penny from me as long as I live.

    "Seems the description fits both pretty well......"

    Spot on!

    ReplyDelete