I support it, not cos I like the idea of killing badgers, but precisely because I like badgers and want to see a healthy badger population and also ! the continuation of livestock farming in the parts of the country where the best grazing is, which is the areas most populated by badgers with TB.
The thing that makes me angry is that far more badgers will have to die now, than would have been the case had either the badger act not been drawn up so blanket in protection (which is the case for no other non-endangered animal) or the opposition forced the legal process to go on so many years and successive governments to bury their heads in the sand.
No one knows how many other species are starting to be infected too, sheep certainly are, and when pet cats and dogs start getting it, and spreading it to their owners, I think it will be taken much more seriously, but it will probably be too late by then for human health. TB treatment is extremely unpleasant and gruelling and resistance is growing to the drugs, we simply have to get a handle on it.
Scottish landscapes are less favoured by badgers, with in large areas thin rocky soils unsuitable for setts etc, however it is only a matter of time before the outbreaks caused by people buying in cattle from elsewhere get into the wildlife populations and we lose the TB free status. We haven't become TB free so much as not become a TB area yet.
Without drastic action, the very tight and getting almost impossibly restrictive controls on cattle farming in TB areas will result in the death of cattle farming in large parts of the UK, except for the totally indoor super sheds where the cattle never get to see a blade of grass.
Badgers will still be not endangered at the end of the cull, numbers wise. I do think a better approach would have been to amend the badger act to allow diseased setts to be cleared out (badgers culled) with a zone around them clear of badgers, and clean setts left in peace.
If farmers are subject to ever growing restrictions, demands to fund the cull caused by govt failure to control a zoonotic (passed to humans) fatal disease and action by antis, and failure to massively fund vaccine development, then I can see many of them just refusing to cooperate with the TB regime en masse and simply wiping out all badgers from their entire land, whatever the law states. You can only push people so far.
We cannot have high welfare extensive livestock farming unless we tackle the proven wildlife vector for this horrendous disease which was almost eradicated prior to the badger act coming in. (cattle movements can take the TB to a new area with a one off appearance on a farm, but the spread of TB once there is down to wildlife vectors)
Thankfully I'm not in that position.