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STOP ANIMAL CRUELTY
Fatally Betrayed Equines: Katia Louise's Saving America's Horses
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The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However, we have to
show the truth about
cruelty to animals,
praying that you will
help to stop it.
Horses represent humanity.
What we do to horses
says a lot about what
we do to our own kind.
This is the Stop
Animal Cruelty series
on Supreme Master
Television.
This week we’ll hear
from journalist,
talk-show host, animal
advocate and co-founder
as well as executive
director and president of
the US-based non-profit
Wild for Life Foundation,
Katia Louise.
Also a talented filmmaker,
Ms. Louise wrote,
directed and produced
the award-winning 2011
documentary,
“Saving America’s Horses:
A Nation Betrayed.”
This revealing film
examines the utterly
inhumane horse slaughter
industry, and calls for
immediate measures
to protect the lives
of horses in the US.
Many prominent
American celebrities
appear in the film
including
actor Sir Paul Sorvino,
CNN news anchor
Jane Velez-Mitchell,
and actress Linda Gray,
among others.
“Saving America’s Horses”
is the short title for
“Saving America’s Horses –
A Nation Betrayed.”
And,
“A Nation Betrayed”
is a part of the title
because it’s a nation of
people betrayed
by the truth that horse
slaughter is humane.
It’s not.
It’s also the horse nation
itself being betrayed,
horses who trust us,
whom we’ve used
for our own gain.
And then we turn around
and send them off
this way after
they learn to trust us.
Through her extensive
research for the film,
Ms. Louise uncovered
the disturbing fact that
many horses in the US,
no matter how much
they may have been
loved as companions,
racers or
working animals, end up
at slaughterhouses,
sometimes
without the knowledge
of their caregivers.
It could be a situation
where, and this happens
quite frequently, we’ve
got children in the home,
and they’ve got
their family pet ponies.
And they grow up,
and the kids are going off
to college now,
and maybe the parents
are downsizing
in property or whatever,
to pay for college.
But they decide that
maybe the horse isn’t
something that they can
continue to care for now.
And they care deeply
about these horses. And
so they’ll give her a bath,
fix her all up,
maybe braid her hair
and go the extra mile
to make sure that
she attracts a good home.
And what they don’t realize,
a lot of people even
in the horse community
with their own horses
are naïve about this,
at the auction houses
the kill buyers
are going to be there
to purchase that horse.
The dealers that buy
horses for the purpose of
sending them to slaughter
are known as kill buyers.
And they frequent
the auction houses.
In the past, over
100,000 horses were
slain annually in the US.
In 2007,
federal legislation forced
the country’s last
three horse abattoirs
to close their doors.
However this has not
stopped the practice
of horse slaughter.
Sadly, some horses
in the US are now
being trucked
thousands of kilometers
to slaughterhouses
in Canada or Mexico
to produce horse meat.
Kill buyers and those
who want to re-open
horse abattoirs in the US
try to perpetuate the myth
that the horses that
are being murdered are
“unwanted”
and this justifies
their callous slaying.
So, there’s a term
that is used a lot.
Now I just want to talk
about it real briefly.
They want to say,
“the unwanted horses,”
and that there’s a problem,
and that we need to do
something with all these
“unwanted horses.”
The term “unwanted”
was coined by those
that are proponents
of horse slaughter.
And it suggests that,
these, social, intelligent
sentient beings,
are, disposable.
And, our world has come
to an age that we do find
it easy to dispose of things,
and, when our phone
gets old, or copier
stops working we toss it
and we get a new one.
There’s a difference,
these are individual
living beings,
and, at least to my way of
thinking and our belief at
Wild for Life Foundation
this is not what we do
with creatures that we
share our planet with.
They’re not disposable.
Once purchased
by the kill buyers,
these innocent,
once-cherished equines
begin their terror-filled
journey to a miserable death.
Their first stop is the feedlot,
where horses are
gathered in preparation
for transport.
There are what they call
feedlots, although,
that’s kind of a
misleading name because
people assume a feedlot
is where a horse
would get fed.
Often times these feedlots
don’t feed the horses
adequately or sometimes
they don’t even get any food,
or water, or shelter.
So the places where
they’re sent before
they go to slaughter,
sale yards, sale barns,
feedlots,
and collecting stations,
are pretty much all under
the same umbrella.
Next the ruthlessly
exploited equines
are sent to either
Canada or Mexico.
One of the big problems
in the transport of horses
is the fact that they use
a double-deck trailer.
It’s a trailer that’s built
for shipping cattle.
And horses are tall
compared to cattle.
They’re overcrowded.
They’re forced
into these trailers.
They’re whipped.
They’re beaten.
They’re very frightened.
They can’t move.
Sometimes it’s hard for
them to breathe because
it’s so crowded in there.
It’s slippery.
It’s metal floors.
They have to go up
and down these ramps,
and they could fall.
They could break legs
in there, they get stomped
to death.
They could be on that
trailer for two or three days.
They should be, rested,
fed and watered.
We have evidence that
that’s not happening.
Many arrive with
serious injuries,
head, back, neck injuries,
broken legs,
and no medical care
is given to these horses.
Once they’re designated
as food animals,
they don’t get the same
kind of treatment that
they got when
they were horses loved by
their family back at home
or on that racetrack.
It is a night and day
difference. It’s pure hell.
When they finally
reach their destination,
the extremely
distressed animals face
a brutal, bloody death.
The horses are walking
on metal floors.
Oftentimes they still
have their shoes on.
They’re slipping and
falling all over the place,
many of them injured,
terrified.
There is a smell to death,
and the horses have
a keen sense of smell.
The smell of death
permeates this facility.
Not only that but blood,
and the blood you can
smell over a mile away
from these facilities
as a person.
So just imagine
what it would be like
inside there.
So we got a horse that is
most likely injured,
if not terrified,
smelling death,
smelling blood, watching
what's happening to the
horses in front of them,
very resistant
to go into that kill chute,
beaten to get there,
many times,
bobbing up and down,
falling,
just anything to try and
escape the inevitable.
No way out.
You have someone
standing there with a gun,
a captive bolt gun
or a spear.
The humane guidelines
say that the horse should
only be struck once,
one time.
And there’s
a small target area right
in the forehead where
that horse is to be struck,
because that’s
the one place where
they could be stunned.
It's supposed to make
them unconscious
so they can’t feel
the pain and know
what else is going on.
And this is not happening.
They’re struck
all over the place.
Sure there’re a few that
might have been struck
properly,
but that doesn’t kill them.
They’re still alive.
And they’re hung by one leg,
all that weight.
The average horse
is a thousand pounds,
hung by an ankle,
upside down.
Their throat is cut so that
while their heart is beating,
the blood drains
from their body,
and the butchering
process begins.
These horses that are
still conscious are
suffering tremendously.
They’re, shot on the back
of the neck, on the side,
in the eye, in the face,
all over the place.
And they don’t stop
the (killing) line,
because that costs
too much money.
This happened in America.
This happens currently
in other countries
where this goes on.
We have an
overwhelming amount of
documentation, evidence
to show this.
It's on record.
The horses are suffering
tremendously.
“Saving America’s Horses”
also addresses
the outrageous abuse
of wild horses.
The film is just
as much about
the domestic horses as it
is about the wild horses.
And in fact,
it's the only feature film
that really advocates
for both wild and
the domestic horses.
Because both are subject
to slaughter in this country.
By some estimates
there were one million
to three million
wild horses in the US
at the beginning
of the 1900’s.
Now the population
in the wild is only
around 33,000.
Another 30,000 have
been taken from the wild
and put in government
holding pens because of
the unfounded fear of
the horses overpopulating
public lands.
These captive horses
may be adopted
and possibly fall into
the hands of kill buyers
who send them to
Mexico for butchering.
They’re rounded up
by helicopter,
they’re chased over
long distances,
sometimes over
lava fields and
extreme temperatures
in the dead of winter,
icy slippery conditions.
In the heat summer it’s,
120 degrees (Fahrenheit)
out there in the desert.
Run a horse for you know,
a hundred miles,
whatever it is,
over lava fields,
stampeded at helicopter
speeds under these
conditions is terrifying.
And it’s very cruel.
The little babies,
they’re not ready to run.
They try to keep up
with their mothers, their
hooves literally fall off,
trying to keep up
with their mothers.
Many injuries are sustained.
Katia Louise also
believes that horses
have a message for us.
Their message is that
they don’t want to be
treated this way.
They need us to help them.
They can’t talk.
We have to be their voice.
We have to tell
their stories for them,
and stand up for them.
“We’re here for you”,
is what they’re saying.
We’re here for you,”
so let’s be here for them.
What personal action
can we take
to support horses?
We can help
our horse friends
by never purchasing
horse meat or any
horse-derived products
as well as letting our
government officials
know that horse abuse
and slaughter
are unacceptable and
strong laws are needed
to protect equines.
May Heaven bless you,
Katia Louise,
for your passionate,
diligent efforts to
safeguard the beloved,
noble and beautiful
horses in the US.
May
“Saving America’s Horses”
be a huge success
and enable many
to hear your benevolent
call for eternal kindness
towards equines.
For more information
about Katia Louise,
please visit
www.KatiaLouise.com
Visit the Wild For Life
Foundation’s website
to find out more
about ending horse
slaughter in the US:
www.WildforLifeFoundation.org
The official website for
“Saving America’s Horses:
A Nation Betrayed”
is at
www.SavingAmericasHorses.org
Thank you for
your presence today on
Stop Animal Cruelty.
May horses and humans
forever enjoy long,
happy lives together.
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