
Ill bite since i need my mind taking off other matters..
Where to start...
Fox hunting was pest control - though now banned it remains the only species specific method of controlling fox populations that also promotes survival of the fittest.
The idea that 1 single fox is hunted for hours and hours on end until it drops from exhaustion is just not the case, in any set 'country' (area that a hunt covers) there will be many foxes - the fit ones get away and that is fine. Those who are not fit, either are old, ill or injured, do not get away. Over the course of one days hunting, hounds will usually find and subsequently lose a number of foxes and a kill is by no means a guarantee.
Comparing our concept of being chased and fearing death to a wild animals is not helpful, we have lost our abilities to cope with the idea of being predated upon, because we have wiped out all our predators. Wild animals have, if you will, zones of awareness, they can be aware of danger a mile away, aware of danger half a mile away... (and very frequently the fox is a LONG way from the hounds) and its only in the last closing stages of a hunt, the last few minutes that fox really IS aware he is in serious danger.
If wild animals spent their entire time panicking and terrified of potential danger they would all drop dead of heart attacks, because they are unlike us, never EVER totally safe, rarely out of hearing of potential danger etc. They have evolved to cope with this.
This isnt just theory, i have and im sure many others have, witnessed this for myself, seeing the fox idley wandering along a hedgerow or smartly nipping up a stream whilst the hunt are ten fields away making a right racket.... ive watched rabbits casually nibbling grass with just one ear cocked to a dog 100 yrds away.. this is their life and they do not think or react like we do.
Shooting foxes if done well is great, but unfortunately for many areas of the country, highly impractical - its incredibly difficult to safely shoot (to do so you must be aware of what ELSE is around you and many tragic accidents have occurred to both non target species and human beings) - the places foxes like to live and hunt are full of hedgerows - can you guarantee that you wont miss, your round go through the hedge and hit something or someONE on the other side? If you cant... you shouldnt shoot!
As already mentioned, someone paid to shoot foxes is paid to shoot foxes, not dally around checking if these are the old, weak, injured, ill foxes who will become serious pests or rogues who have learned that picking off newly born lambs is easier than 'working' for a living, shoot first, ask questions later.
Theres a lot said about snobbery, about red coats and toffs on horseback and this is yet another misconception. Plenty of hunts involve no horses at all, many more are farmers hunts with hairy cobs and retired race horses making up most of the field..
In any case, the field subsidise the hunting, for the priviledge of riding over other peoples land they pay a fair sum (not sure how much these days but hundreds), and this money pays for the hunt not only to go out several times a week in the season, but to perform low cost services such as removing fallen stock, putting down livestock and disposing of carcasses (something which is not a simple task at all given the various rules and regs).
Without the field these services just cannot be provided, and the best alternatives are prohibitively expensive - the worst ones are cheap... snaring is afaik, still legal (unless someone can tell me that this is no longer the case), this is a very cheap option but very inhumane, none species specific and does nothing towards promoting a health, trouble free population of any animal.
As long as you have a licence you can take a shotgun out and take pot shots at a fox and as far as i know as long as your INTENTION is to kill it quickly and minimise suffering it is not a crime to miss or injure the fox (though you probably get your licence removed if you badly injure or kill another person.. )
Surely the fact that hunt fields have increased since the ban, shows without shadow of a doubt that for the field, the death of the fox had absolutely nothing to do with the enjoyment of the hunt!