I read the article and wow, what a botched job of propoganda!
This will certainly sway the public.
Kentucky..... is being overrun with thousands of horses no one wants _ some of them perfectly healthy, but many of them starving, broken-down nags. Other parts of the country are overwhelmed, too.
The reason: growing opposition in the U.S. to the slaughter of horses for human consumption overseas.
-- actually, this has been going on in many states for quite a while... even when slaughter was an option.
Some people who live near the strip mines in the mountains of impoverished eastern Kentucky say that while horses have long been left to roam free there, the number now may be in the thousands, and they are seeing herds three times bigger than they did just five years ago.
As far as I know slaughter ops were up and running until recently so can't blame the anti-slaughter folks for this one. Ponies have gone for even less than $75 for as long as I've been following the results of auctions... over 5 years.
Every state has laws against letting livestock run estray... so maybe this will be one area where NAIS will help. I'd say prosecute the people turning them loose. In ohio, they have to pay the board where the animals are kept until they claim them and get them fenced back in.
I know I'll get flamed by some, but I have no problem with putting down horses where there is no alternative. Owners who are starving a horse should be shown that the $250 to put a horse down and have it hauled away is cheaper than defending an animal cruelty charge and doing jail time.
"I can't absorb the price," Francis said. "You try to hang on until the price changes, but it looks like it's not going to change. ... What do I do? I've got good quality horses I can't market because of the has-been horse."
"Kill buyers" used to pay pennies a pound for unwanted horses, then pack them into crowded trucks bound for slaughterhouses that would ship the horse meat to Europe and Asia.
Man, this is really going to help this guy's business. His name was "Nelson Francis" and he breeds gaited horses.
A federal court ruled recently that Texas must start to enforce its long-ignored 1949 ban on the transportation and possession of horse meat.
Uhh... I thought Texas fought for the right to enforce the law?
What to do? Stronger laws w/bigger fines and jail time... then actually enfoce them. Ohio has a fast track program to prosecute bounced checks, I wish they would come up with the same for animal neglect.
The Days End Farm sounds like they are pro-slaughter, sent it to them to ask if they support it or not.
Too bad there isn't a place to respond to the article.
Kami