Congress Has a Chance to Strike a Blow Against Horse Slaughter

July 14, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Today is Save the Horses Day (my phrase) on Capitol Hill for equine enthusiasts nationwide. The Humane Society and Animal Welfare Institute have invited horse lovers and rescue operations from across the country to convene at the U.S. Capitol to lobby their House members and Senators to support a bill that would ban the transport of U.S. horses to Canada and Mexico for slaughter.

I covered the group's breakfast session in the Russell Senate Office Building where Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) addressed the crowd. She explained her life-long love of horses and why she's one of four co-authors (along with Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) and House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-Mich.) and Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.)) of a bill, S-727/H.R. 503, to ban transport for horse slaughter.

Several years ago the last horse slaughterhouse in the U.S. was shuttered. But the bloody doors flew wide open at Canadian and Mexican slaughterhouses, waiting for the outflow of horses shipped from the United States. Transport of these mostly healthy, mostly young (average age: 7) horses in crowded, open trailers for days, almost always without food or water, is horrible enough. Then, they are lined up where untrained low-wage workers shoot bolts into their brains. The horses can take hours to die and the bolts frequently miss. You could not imagine a more inhumane fate.

Both groups discussed the "myth" of the unwanted horse. So-called killer buyers are making so much money off of horses' misery, they now outbid rescue groups trying to save the horses.

The bill, by the way, encourages as an alternative to transport, humane euthanization here in the U.S. by gunshot or sedation. I don't agree with that portion of the bill, but gun crazed horse killers can't complain the bill robs them of the power to kill their own horses. Unfortunately, it does not. What they lose by killing the horses themselves is the $400 fee the horse would bring at auction. And if they kill the horse legally, they usually have to pay something to dispose of the remains.

Tags:
horses,
animal cruelty

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Kate Stone

girl london escort of AL 9:07PM July 06, 2010

The reason people are so against horses being sold to slaughter is because a horse isn't like a cow. Cows were bred to be eaten, other then milk that is the cows only function. Horses are a different matter, though they are listed as livestock. Humans would not be where we are today without horses. They should demand a certain amount of respect. Though in today's society we have made horses a luxury instead of a necessity. It is a proven fact that horse meat is dangerous to eat. Because horses are not raised for food we inject them with several different kinds of required medications that should never be ingested by a human. If people are so worried about getting over populated then all we need to do is help spay and neuter the horses that are out there and put regulations on horse breeding. Horses are not like cats and dogs it take them 18 months to gestate and they only have one at a time. I feel that eating a horse is wrong just like eating a cat and dog is wrong. I have no problem with other countries participating in the barbarity of horse consumption but they can breed their own damn horses, we should not be exporting.

Because there is no market in the US for horse consumption us contributing to this inhumane act gains us nothing. Because it is already illegal in the US to slaughter horses us shipping overseas only benefits the person selling and shipping the meat. We can not collect any taxes for our country.

It has been proven that it is not the sick horses that are being eaten. You don't eat sick, low quality beef. They don't eat sick, low quality horses. So it isn't helping us in any way to ship horses for slaughter because they are killing the ones that can be put up for adoption. In fact almost half of the stolen horses that are someones pet or someones racer or someones baby are sold for shipment overseas and slaughter. If we ban shipment of horses for slaughter the rate of stolen horses will decrease to nothing.

So because of this I am against slaughter of horses in the US and I am against selling and shipping horses for slaughter overseas. I believe that it should be made illegal and those of us who rescue horses will deal with the "unwanted horses"

Thank you!

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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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