Is Salon.com Soft on Horse Slaughter?

June 30, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Interesting that supposedly liberal Salon.com sports an article about horse slaughter that reads, in part, like a cheat sheet from the slaughter industry. I have written about the despicable horse slaughter industry from a decidedly antithetical perspective. I would have thought a progressive mouthpiece such as Salon.com would share my views on this issue. Instead, the piece on horse slaughter, although written by a self-professed horse and donkey owner, seems to favor the slaughter industry:

Not many people realize slaughtering horses for meat has been big business in the U.S. for generations. Yet in recent decades, public sentiment, matched by state and local laws, has risen against the practice, and in 2007 the last three U.S. horse slaughterhouses were shuttered….Which is exactly what has been happening in the two years since horse slaughter stopped here. The number killed in Canada and Mexico doubled to 49,000 in 2007 and rose to more than 72,000 last year, according to trade data.

What the author doesn't tell you is that even though these numbers are still horrific, they are down from the number of horses that used to be slaughtered in the United States before domestic horse slaughter was banned. According to the Humane Society:

Prior to the closure of all three foreign-owned plants in the U.S., over 100,000 horses were being slaughtered in the United States and processed for human consumption. Now, tens of thousands of live horses are transported across the border to Mexico and Canada for slaughter. After these horses are killed, their flesh is shipped to Europe and Asia for human consumption. Their owners are often unaware of the pain, fear, and suffering their horses endure before being slaughtered.

So, yes, the unspeakable suffering these poor horses endure when they are shipped abroad for slaughter must also be banned. And the Humane Society and other animal protection groups are working with Congress to pass such a ban. But the argument that it is more cruel to horses to ban slaughter here is fatuous at best and promotion of a heinous industry at worst. Ban it here. Ban slaughter of U.S. horses shipped for slaughter to Canada and Mexico. But most important, Congress should place controls on overbreeding of horses, which in turn increases the number of horses sent to slaughter.

Tags:
horses,
animal cruelty

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Bonnie,

You need to educate yourself a little better on the topic and look at the broder picture. Yes here in the U.S. we don't eat horse meat. Horses are looked at like they are domestic animals, much like that of a cat or dog. However much like that of a dog or cat people mis treat horses. Horses get the abuse much worse though, people don't understand how to take care of horses. This is a much bigger animal that consumes a substantial amount of food. They are not animals that can be thrown in a field and forgot about. Take a look around!! There are so many horses out there right now suffering due to lack of food and proper care. An with the pass of the no slaughter bill you basically are advertising for people to continue to let their animal suffer. Now you tell me where is this fair?? I own horses, I too if unable to take care of them would ship them off in a heart beat!! Not to mention this meat isn't going to waste. There are third world countries that are benifiting from this meat and you basically just said to them, " I would rather let my horse starve in a field then feed you!" There is an over population of horses something needs to be done and the slaughter plants are the solution, you and you anti slaughter bill is doing nothing but hurting the situation that much more. WAKE UP!!!!

Jill Kohler of MO 12:59PM August 30, 2010

Horse meat IS tainted with many drugs that are NOT permitted in food animals. In the US, horses are not classified as food animals, so there is NO USDA oversight - no nothing.

If you don't believe this you are woefully uninformed and dangerous. Allow me to quote: In an interview with EWA, Henry Skjerven, a former director of the Natural Valley Farms slaughter operation in Saskatchewan, Canada, said: "Unfortunately, North America, US and Canada, were never geared for raising horses for food consumption. The system as it stood when we were killing horses was in no way, shape or form, safe, in my opinion."

Skjerven went on to say, "We did not know where those horses were coming from, what might be in them or what they were treated with. I was always in fear - I think that it was very valid - that we were going to send something across there [to the EU] and we were simply going to get our doors locked after we had some kind of issue with the product." http://www.animallawcoalition.com/horse-slaughter/article/1006

Also check here: http://www.flyingfilly.com/drugs_in_horsemeat.htm

This is real, check with the FDA, or the European Union if that's what it takes to convince you. Frankly, I'm appalled at your handing out such uninformed and irresponsible advice.

Suzanne Moore of IN 8:26PM November 02, 2009

Of course Salon was soft on horse slaughter. In China, the executives responsible for melamine contamination in exported grains were beheaded by the Chinese government. While we don't do that in this country, we still have a moral responsibility not to poison our customers overseas.

Breaking: Canada and the EU are cracking down on drugged US horses going into the food supply. Sadly, just like the Chinese melamine scam, the people responsible for contaminating the food supply knew all along.

As of next April, Canada is imposing a 180-day quarantine on undocumented horses coming from the US. This may well make the US horse killing industry crash. The EU has a passport system tracking every drug in horses raised for the food supply. They are very concerned about the lack of any records on US horses, and they are well aware how many are medicated - including EPOs, hormones and things like cobra venom in race horses.

For some drugs used regularly in the US, like bute, wormers and fertility drugs (even minute doses of those can cause miscarriage in women) there is no legal use in food animals.

Too bad the US Farm Bureau kept pushing for horse slaughter, knowing about the drugs all along. Makes them look, well, greedy. Bernie Madoff driving a double deck trailer.

With these strict new rules we take one giant leap into the post-slaughter era in the US. Zero tolerance for drugs is the tipping point that will put an end to US horse slaughter, way before the last puppy mill style breeders admit that it's not acceptable to cut up healthy, young companion animals with a knife while many are awake and sensitive to pain.

Instead of arguing for an outdated practice that its customers no longer trust, that is making people sick, we need to get busy planning for the post-horse-slaughter era with responsible breeding practices, retraining and rehoming.

The game is changed. Hallelujia.

Susan of NY 3:53PM August 04, 2009

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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