"There are about sixty such groups, and they are 'very protective of badgers in their local area,' Hambly said. 'They tend to be people in areas who, for whatever reason, started to watch badgers at night.' A badger might amble into someone’s back yard, for instance, or be spotted walking alongside a country round. Some groups, like the Lancashire Badger Group, have hundreds of members, while others have just a few diehards. The Badger Trust also operates a helpline for distressed badgers. 'People ring up and say, "There’s a hurt badger, can someone come and help it?" Or, "A badger’s been knocked down," or, "A badger’s destroying my garden."' Actual contact with humans, however, is rare. Many badger-lovers have never even seen a live badger. (They love them from afar.) You might glimpse one cutting through a field only because it is following an ancient route; badgers will use the same pathways for hundreds of years. 'They’re quite mysterious,' Hambly said."
From "Britain’s Badger Wars/The animals are being killed in droves. Are they pests or political pawns?" (The New Yorker).
January 13, 2025
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Badger Trust??
No Good, I've known too many Wisconsinites
Scratch out "Britain" and "badger." Replace with "USA" and "wolves." Plenty of urban/suburban nature lovers mess around with stuff they don't understand well.
UK Badgers: "We really wish there was some way we could keep damaging infrastructure and not be eradicated."
Delta Smelt: "Damaging infrastructure? Let me tell you guys about this neat trick..."
Lots of badger rescues featured on the Wildlife Aid youtube channel.
Victims of the Green blight or urban progress? Or aborting perceived "burdens"? Self-defense, perhaps.
1) We have no badgers.
2) In fact, we don't need badgers.
3) I don't have to show you any stinking badgers.
There isn’t much of a battle going on. The badger fans have won. They are one of the best protected and one of the most heavily regulated animals in the country
British Badgers
Probably Rudy Giuliani's radio confrontation with a ferret fancier is to be found somewhere online. For the caller, ferret fancying was something like a natural and universal human right. For Rudy, it sounded like it was more of a terribly depraved perversion that should be punished to the fullest extent of the law. Perhaps he was attacked by a ferret, badger or fisher cat as a child.
If you badger, they will follow.
informal (US)
a native of Wisconsin.
Semantic plays and an Althouse roast.
Article: "Many badger-lovers have never even seen a live badger."
Badger? Never met 'er!
JSM
If you want to be a badger just come along with me, by the bright shining light of the moon....
Well.... something is seriously wrong then. Badgers are more or less solitary creatures. Who is killing them 'in droves'?
OTOH, Germany has been overrun with raccoons, whose release has been incorrectly blamed on the Nazis.
Maybe the Brits just need more dachshunds?
Go Gophers!
Badgers are pests. They're vicious, not cuddly.
Well done, Mezzrow. You are heard.
What’s next, Wolverines or Nittany Lions?
https://youtu.be/eo16wFhWy2E?si=Gf5cGRBJJ8eWzYk0
In the UK badgers carry terburculosis. The terburculosis is transferred to cows. Cows with terburculosis must be destroyed. The badgers continue to be protected at the cost of the British dairy and beef farmers. The people of Britain don't want a dairy or beef industry.
Badgers are beloved due to Kenneth Grahame's Wind in Willows with Badger as the lovable ol' Grump always trying to steer toad in the right direction. Most people don't know what they're like in real life, so you get nonsensical attempts to "save them".
Like all Rodents they need to be culled and kept under control.
This was one of the episodes of Clarkson's Farm.
When farming was central to the society, animal control decisions were grounded in the realities of food production. When farmers became 2% of the population, animal control decisions became the province of pastoral fantasists. How many of us even know a farmer?
Urbanized wildlife is a thing in the US, with suburbs and cities supporting larger and larger populations of opossums, raccoons, skunks, foxes, coyotes, even bobcats (a Pflugerville TX suburb near my home famously tracks its local bobcats through its neighborhood via the nextdoor.com app). Badgers aren't a thing here, but I'd guess they are beloved in Madison neighborhoods, like the red fox Althouse photographed in her yard a few years back.
Hah!
Mustelids actually.
How did I know the link was to Clarkson's Farm?
What he said is true, they are highly protected.
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