Bullfighting: Animal Cruelty Never Justified as Cultural Privilege

Humane Society International


  • Bullfighting is not a fair and even fight between bull and matador. México Antitaurino

  • A picador pierces a bull’s neck with a barbed lance. México Antitaurino

  • Horses are often injured during bullfights. México Antitaurino

  • This bull is stabbed with banderillas, wooden sticks with spiked ends. HSI

  • A sword is rammed deep into the bull’s body, causing a painful death. México Antitaurino

  • Many Mexicans have never attended a bullfight. Empty seats are a common sight at these events. México Antitaurino

  • A bull’s ear is sliced off as a trophy for the torero. México Antitaurino

  • A dead bull is removed from the ring the old-fashioned way.
    México Antitaurino

Bullfighting — a horrible spectacle of animal abuse that ends in the slow and tortuous death of an animal provoked and repeatedly gored with knives and swords — is justly in decline. The torment and stabbing to death of animals for amusement can never be acceptable.

In an unbelievable turn of events, however, with so much of the world opposed to the cruelty, bullfighting’s defenders are now seeking to claim their barbarism as a cultural asset under the terms of a United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Convention (UNESCO).

Wanton cruelty

It ought to be obvious in the 21st century that such wanton animal cruelty can never be justified as a cultural privilege. The campaign to classify bullfighting as some kind of a cultural treasure is nothing more than a futile attempt to resuscitate a fading commercial industry that is being abandoned wholesale by both the public and politicians throughout the world. Over the last decade, scores of governments have voted to ban bullfighting, and many more are currently considering action to suppress it.

Support for blood sport waning

Even in the countries where bullfighting has traditionally thrived, support for the blood sport is waning, and sponsors are not making enough money to keep it alive. Increasingly, it is being subsidized by governments, a wholly inappropriate use of public funds. Subsidies are meant to address a common good and to help society. Bullfighting doesn’t fall into that category by any measure.

To great acclaim last year, politicians in Catalonia, Spain voted to outlaw bullfighting in that region. The last bullring in Barcelona will shut down this summer, while a popular shopping and entertainment complex has already spring up on the site of a former bullring in the city.

Animal cruelty erodes civil society

All of these developments make the initiative within UNESCO perplexing, to say the very least. An international body charged with honoring and safeguarding our global cultural heritage should not be asked to dignify a blood sport on any grounds, and it ought not consider such a proposition either, for a public spectacle that allows an animal to be tormented, taunted and cowed by men wielding barbed sticks, swords and knives can never be worthy of protection.

The presence of animal cruelty erodes the fabric of any civil society, with serious effects, most notably its tendency to desensitize children to violence. Bullfighting – a conspicuous form of animal cruelty — is no different from any other, and it is deserves no quarter within or outside of UNESCO as a manifestation of human culture.

Learn More Button Inserter