Hunting really divides people in Britain. We keep pets, and we name our animals, but we're not too worried about industrial hunting practices.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If you live in the countryside, you understand that hunting isn't just for toffs. It's for the farmers. It's for everyone's enjoyment.
We ought to ban hunting, I suggest, if there isn't a purpose other than sport and fun. That should be against the law. It's time now.
The food system is not a free market. In this country, we impose reasonably high standards of animal welfare - but we haven't applied the same standards to food we import, so all we're really doing is exporting cruelty from Britain elsewhere, and at the same time undermining our farmers.
We have the British motor industry as a role model for what happens when you try to save an industrial dinosaur. Britain was the first country to industrialise and the first to de-industrialise. We should learn from this.
No one is more keen than me to see the Hunting Act repealed, because I believe in the management of wildlife.
Britain is one of the biggest arms dealers in the world, after the States. There's a lot of money in weapons deals. We sell weapons, and our responsibility ends as soon as they leave the country; they're unpacked, and then before you know it, they're spread around the world.
I haven't been hunting for years. It is just a tradition I grew up with.
I come from a family of fishermen. Fishing is very important to us. We don't hunt. We're not gun folk.
In England, we don't have any guns whatsoever.
Hunting is not a sport. In a sport, both sides should know they're in the game.