Exactly how much have you read in terms of peer reviewed scientific journals regarding the cognition and ethology of fish? Your opinion of them as being set so far apart from other animals seems ill-informed to me by its very nature, as modern research of the minds of fish increasingly demonstrates that many species are extremely high functioning and complex, cognitively, behaviorally, etc.
Either way, pain is not a function of emotion as your post suggests; it is sensed pysiologically and outwardly demonstrated through behavioral responses. And there have been numerous studies indicating that fish show pain behaviors. Perhaps you've never had the misfortune of dealing with a badly wounded fish first hand, but the stress and pain behaviors are extremely blatant and comparable to those seen in other vertebrates, and research backs anectdotal evidence of this. That being said, since the issue here is the suffering of the animal, I reiterate that issues like the intelligence and emotions of the fish is a moot point when it comes to determining if fighting fish is cruel and should be illegal.
As I said, I don't think it warrants the same penalty as dog fighting necessarily because the surrounding sociological issues, but why on earth should any form of animal fighting be legal? Really, please offer one rational reason for why it ought to be legal. And don't bother saying "enforcement issues," because honestly, what law IS well enforced in this country.
I find it pretty tragic that a forum full of fish enthusiasts has such a low opinion of the species they keep, to the point of thinking they don't even warrant legal protection. And for the record, all captivity is selfish and involves breeding and confining animals for our amusement, so if you wish to have a debate on the ethics of fishkeeping - which really isn't the topic of the thread - you'd have to open that argument to all captivity. Including the dogs and cats that are given such (IME unwarranted) higher regard. Even still, I find it funny that the ethics of fishkeeping is being questioned if fish matter so little that they apparently don't even deserve legal protection from the most pointless and brutal forms of exploitation.
Either way, pain is not a function of emotion as your post suggests; it is sensed pysiologically and outwardly demonstrated through behavioral responses. And there have been numerous studies indicating that fish show pain behaviors. Perhaps you've never had the misfortune of dealing with a badly wounded fish first hand, but the stress and pain behaviors are extremely blatant and comparable to those seen in other vertebrates, and research backs anectdotal evidence of this. That being said, since the issue here is the suffering of the animal, I reiterate that issues like the intelligence and emotions of the fish is a moot point when it comes to determining if fighting fish is cruel and should be illegal.
As I said, I don't think it warrants the same penalty as dog fighting necessarily because the surrounding sociological issues, but why on earth should any form of animal fighting be legal? Really, please offer one rational reason for why it ought to be legal. And don't bother saying "enforcement issues," because honestly, what law IS well enforced in this country.
I find it pretty tragic that a forum full of fish enthusiasts has such a low opinion of the species they keep, to the point of thinking they don't even warrant legal protection. And for the record, all captivity is selfish and involves breeding and confining animals for our amusement, so if you wish to have a debate on the ethics of fishkeeping - which really isn't the topic of the thread - you'd have to open that argument to all captivity. Including the dogs and cats that are given such (IME unwarranted) higher regard. Even still, I find it funny that the ethics of fishkeeping is being questioned if fish matter so little that they apparently don't even deserve legal protection from the most pointless and brutal forms of exploitation.