Archive of Animals in Entertainment
The Cruel “Sport” of Dogfighting
In April 2007 the United States Senate unanimously passed the Animal Fighting Prohibition Enforcement Act; the month before, an overwhelming majority of the House of Representatives approved nearly identical legislation, which had been under discussion for six years. If signed into law by the president, this legislation would for the first time establish meaningful federal penalties for animal fighting. The bill amends the federal criminal code and the Animal Welfare Act to establish fines for violations. These include the use of an animal in fighting, the use of the mails to promote animal fighting, and the buying, selling, or interstate transportation of animals and of implements for use in fights, such as the blades that are attached to the legs of fighting birds.
For animal lovers, it is difficult to understand why someone would deliberately cause a dog to engage in vicious fights, inflicting and receiving grievous injuries—often death. Yet, despite the cruelty involved and the fact that dogfighting is illegal in all 50 states, the practice is a serious and continuing problem all over the United States. A dogfight takes place in a ring (a “pit”) made of plywood and is usually held in a secluded location such as a vacant garage or the basement of a house or business. Fights can last for hours, and the dogs are made to keep going even after having sustained gruesome and painful injuries such as torn flesh and broken bones. The fight goes on until one of the dogs is unable to continue. Dogs may die immediately of their injuries or sheer exhaustion or later from infections. […]
The Cruel “Sport” of Dogfighting
For animal lovers, it is difficult to understand why someone would deliberately cause a dog to engage in vicious fights, inflicting and receiving grievous injuries—often death. Yet, despite the cruelty involved and the fact that dogfighting is illegal in all 50 states, the practice is a serious and continuing problem all over the United States. A dogfight takes place in a ring (a “pit”) made of plywood and is usually held in a secluded location such as a vacant garage or the basement of a house or business. Fights can last for hours, and the dogs are made to keep going even after having sustained gruesome and painful injuries such as torn flesh and broken bones. The fight goes on until one of the dogs is unable to continue. Dogs may die immediately of their injuries or sheer exhaustion or later from infections. […]
Blair’s Britain Bans Foxhunting
When UK Prime Minister Tony Blair announced in 1999 that he intended to push through legislation to ban foxhunting, he stepped into a hornet’s nest that had been buzzing for at least half a century. All hunting with packs of dogs, including hunts for prey such as hares and stags, had been under attack. Blair’s Labour Party ultimately succeeded in passing the ban in 2005, after a long and often rancorous debate on the issue. […]