dkras wrote:[quote]Horses that were slaughtered in the US were slaughtered under guidelines approved by the USDA and the AAEP with a USDA veterinarian on site before any animal could be processed.
Just because a USDA veterinarian was on site doesn't mean that every horse was stunned effectively. The captive bolt method wasn't designed for horses and it therefore oftentimes doesn't put them in the plane of "surgical" anesthesia that the USDA guidelines call for:
According to the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act of 1978:
"The regulations describe four acceptable methods for producing a state of surgical anesthesia (surgical anesthesia is defined as a state where the animal feels no painful sensations)".
The 4 methods are:
• Chemical (Carbon Dioxide -CO2)
• Mechanical (captive bolt)
• Mechanical (gunshot)
• Electrical (electrical current)
The only two that are applicable to horses are mechanical, both captive bolt and gunshot. I advocate gunshot if slaughter is deemed neccessary.
However, my point is....why do horses even have to go to the slaughter plant? Can't we just euthanize them if they are culls? Why subject them to the transport and the sights, smells, and sounds of the slaughterhouse? To make $300? To save $300?
The problem is; it is hard to get them to die by petting them to death so the bleeding hearts would never be satisfied.
There's the callous attitude that I keep encountering. As an outsider to this industry, I find that attitude repulsive.[/quote]
I disagree with your ideas on slaughter but you seem to be thoroughly brainwashed so I won't try to argue with it.
Why do horses have to go to a slaughter plant? Because there is a worldwide food shortage and getting worse. Horses have no value if they are not being used in some manner, when slaughter plants are open those horses are worth $1+ per pound. That reduces the occurrence of people starving horses because each pound loss is at least $1. The closing of US plants did not lessen the demand for horsemeat; it only gave the profit to Mexico and Canada. The main legitimate concern of animal rights people was the transport to slaughter. The people who did that are now free to do whatever because there is no US slaughter; therefore no enforcement of US laws concerning transport to slaughter. The horses are getting far worse treatment than they ever did before the processing plants closed.
That is not even going into burying all those horse carcasses you want to euthanize. A lot of areas won’t even allow burial of animals let alone large animals. It cost $100 to cremate an average size dog, imagine what it will cost for an 1100# horse. Zoos can’t buy the carcasses in some states because of animal rights activists’ interference and if they are euthanized by a vet the meat is not useable.
The whole problem is "outsiders to the industry", such as yourself, interfering with things they know nothing about.