Cooling Marshes, Kent, 7th December 2014

Monday 17 September 2012

When it comes to badgers, it IS black and white...

Badger (Meles meles) source:  http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Badger-badger.jpg 

When it comes to badgers, it is black and white – there is simply no excuse for the appalling situation we find ourselves facing today. Despite good scientific evidence in favour of vaccinations and widespread appeals, our dear government looks likely to press ahead with plans to start a trial cull of badgers in Gloucestershire and Somerset. According to reports this could result in the needless deaths of 100,000 animals or a third of the national population. 

It was interesting to talk to a few friends at the weekend about the Badger cull. They’re all good, smart, clued up folk, yet I was quite surprised to find some were not aware of the issue or the proposed cull. And that’s totally fine, I mean it doesn’t have to crop up in everyday life or interest everyone but rather than reflect a lack of interest, I think it’s more a sign of how well the media (and the government) have managed to keep this under the radar. Who can blame them though when there's more pressing matters to address (or undress?) like some women's pixellated tits. It was nice to see the issue make the front page of the Guardian this morning, rather than quietly filed under the ‘Environment’ tab (or on page17 of a Red Top).

I think this is a story deserving of every front page, heralding as it does a sinister dark pass in the government’s thinking on how to manage the countryside. Owen Paterson, Environment Secretary, even managed to spin it as helping badgers - by not allowing them to suffer the effects of bTb. And vaccination would do what? I’m having a pretty hard time getting my head around the chain of events.

We find ourselves on the verge of witnessing the needless slaughter of an iconic and much loved native animal. It’s a decision that flies in the face of sound scientific evidence and is instead fuelled by a bloody minded insistence that they know best. Expensive, unsustainable and destructive, the desire for action in a direct, physical sense has replaced all sane, compassionate thought. Forget the fact that this won’t work and will cause numerous problems for farmers, landowners, protesters and others, it promotes a way of managing the countryside that ultimately threatens something far greater than a single species. It perpetuates the image that nature and our countryside is something that needs to be battled and fought against with GUNS and steely determination. Midnight SWAT teams descending on woodlands and field boundaries, ruthlessly crashing through terminating THE ENEMY. What a message to send. THIS…this is the BEST we can come up with? Are you f**king kidding?!

So what happens next?

Well, it’s worth taking a look at this short video and signing the petition if you haven’t already. Then tell all your friends. Look, you couldn't say no to David Attenborough could you?!:


The petition is a long shot and unlikely to make any difference at this late stage, but it will provide them with an idea as to the strength of public feeling on the subject. With the Badger Trust’s judicial challenge failing last week, parliament not sitting until mid-October and the permits already flying out of Natural England, you’re guess is as good as mine as to what will happen. I’d like to think of them all sitting there as the door bursts open and a messenger runs in yelling ”WAIT, wait…have a look at THIS!”, before he slings a folder with 100,000 signatures across the table. But I’m not sure it works like that. Why not tell your MP what you think too? Check here for details. At the very least you'll get a fancy headed letter in the post.

Every nature lover in the country wants to see farmers make a living and bovine tubercolosis (bTb) eliminated, but this is NOT the way to do it. It's time we showed some respect. I feel sorry for the farmers who'll have to go through this, who have been put in this position by the government. For while I am sure there will be some for whom the cull is of little significance, another job on the list, there will be those who are saddened and shocked by the actions.

Apologies if this was a rambling, repetitive blog, one of those days. I'll leave the last word to Johnny Rotten:


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