Bloodhorse Magazine Opinion
A
Humane End
Date Posted: 2/24/04 10:41:21 AM
Last Updated: 2/24/04 10:46:19
AM
By Priscilla Clark -- In
reviewing the position paper the American Association of Equine Practitioners
sent to members of Congress regarding HR 857, The American Horse Slaughter
Protection Act, stating that horse slaughter was "a necessary aspect of the
equine industry," I would ask that the organization's members consider the
following:
In 2003, the news of the untimely death of Ferdinand in a Japanese
slaughterhouse shook the racing world to its very core. Cries of outrage are
still being heard wherever horse lovers express their views, and the terror and
suffering Ferdinand undoubtedly endured in a slaughterhouse sparked profound
soul searching throughout the racing community. Like Exceller before him,
Ferdinand's manner of death has contributed tremendously to the growing
political momentum to protect all American horses from such a fate. This could
be accomplished with the passage of HR 857.
If the AAEP believes the slaughter of horses is humane you may ask why the
manner in which Ferdinand was put to death was so appalling to the racing world.
The answer is quite simple; the American public understands implicitly that
humane euthanasia means death by lethal injection and not being bludgeoned into
unconsciousness by a captive bolt in a slaughterhouse.
The American public is not the least confused about the consequences of
administering these two very different means of rendering death. They understand
that the horse, a highly intelligent animal, dies fighting for his life in the
slaughterhouse instead of peacefully passing by tranquilizers administered in a
stress-free environment. How the American Association of Equine Practitioners,
you who are entrusted by the American public to protect the welfare of horses,
could fail to make this distinction and equate death in a slaughterhouse with
humane euthanasia, is nothing short of remarkable.
It is clear that the overwhelming majority of Americans, whenever they have
an opportunity to express their preferences, choose euthanasia by lethal
injection as the only acceptable means of death for the animal that has
partnered with them to build this country. No opinion poll has ever shown
evidence to the contrary. Horses are raised solely for recreational and
aesthetic value in the United States, and to tolerate the butchering of American
horses for consumption in foreign countries is a betrayal of our American
values.
I find the apology for horse slaughter put forth in the AAEP position paper
specious in declaring that funding is not available for placing all of the
unwanted or confiscated horses with rescue groups. No one could responsibly
suggest that all aged, unwanted, or infirm horses should be cared for in
sanctuaries or should become charges of public money. The benefit of HR 857 is
not that all horses should be cared for ad infinitum, but that their manner of
death should be swift and merciful.
It has been empirically demonstrated that in California, where the
transportation of horses for slaughter has been outlawed since 1998, that no
loads of horses have been confiscated and placed into protective custody. Should
the remaining slaughter facilities in Texas be closed, the costly vaccinations,
Coggins test, and health certification legally required to move horses over
national boundaries would effectively remove the marginal profits to be made by
smuggling horses into Canada or Mexico.
The specter raised by the AAEP of thousands of neglected horses draining
public funds simply exceeds credulity. Slaughter statistics have dropped from
360,000 annually in the late 1980s to well below 50,000 today; all registry's
foal crops have remained relatively constant, and humane complaints nationally
have not risen.
By opposing HR 857 the AAEP has demonstrated it is grossly out of touch with
the demographics of horse ownership as well as the ethics and belief systems of
its clientele and the American public. Please uphold the faith entrusted in your
organization and come to the table to work with responsible horse owners to
truly protect the welfare of the American horse by ending slaughter in our
nation.
PRISCILLA CLARK is the president of Tranquility Farm, a California
locale for retired and adoptable Thoroughbreds.