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THE BADGER CULL
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<blockquote data-quote="Old Boar" data-source="post: 3487234" data-attributes="member: 2957"><p>No one should be brow beaten into signing up for anything. Take some time and think things through, and then decide. If she would be in fear if she signed, fair enough. It is a shame it has come to that.</p><p>I would say that any warm blooded animal can get TB. A badger wandering through a playground and peeing in the sand pit can give children TB. Pets are at risk, as they stick their paws where badgers have been, and then clean themselves. It is not about cattle, it is about having something shedding a very dangerous bug freely in the countryside and towns. </p><p>None of us want to cull a healthy badger, but if we had nipped this in the bud years ago, healthy badgers would be about and not the sick diseased ones, passing this on to anyone and anything.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Old Boar, post: 3487234, member: 2957"] No one should be brow beaten into signing up for anything. Take some time and think things through, and then decide. If she would be in fear if she signed, fair enough. It is a shame it has come to that. I would say that any warm blooded animal can get TB. A badger wandering through a playground and peeing in the sand pit can give children TB. Pets are at risk, as they stick their paws where badgers have been, and then clean themselves. It is not about cattle, it is about having something shedding a very dangerous bug freely in the countryside and towns. None of us want to cull a healthy badger, but if we had nipped this in the bud years ago, healthy badgers would be about and not the sick diseased ones, passing this on to anyone and anything. [/QUOTE]
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THE BADGER CULL
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