Horse Slaughter Ban Lifted: Horse Meat May Be Coming Soon
Published December 1, 2011
Flickr User lovelychristy02
Horse slaughter ban lifted: President Obama recently signed a bill that lifted the five-year-old ban on horse slaughter in the United States.
As a passionate horse lover, I can hardly contain my outrage after learning yesterday that, in line with a new bill signed by President Obama, our beloved American horses soon may be butchered legally in the United States to be used as meat for human consumption.
The most recent threat to American horses can be attributed to a new bill which resulted in the horse slaughter ban being lifted. In spite of President Obama’s 2008 campaign promise to protect horses from this outrage, our President has gone back on his word by signing the new bill passed by Congress on November 15. With the five-year-old ban on horse slaughter lifted, horse slaughterhouses may begin to crop up once again in the United States (although none currently exist). Supposedly, the bill was passed (as part of a funds allocation effort) to keep the Government open and funded until mid-December.
While horse meat may in theory could be coming to a store near you, the lawmakers, in their haste to pass the bill, did not include funds that would be allocated to pay for horse meat inspectors. As a result, the USDA is left trying to find a way to pick up the tab in this department. With no funds allocated for this ever-important inspection step in the slaughter process (without inspectors meat couldn't be approved for sale), tax payers could find themselves picking up the bill, with annual costs of between three and five million dollars. So much for being cost effective!
Horse Slaughter Ban Lifted: A Long History of Debate
This most current bill marks yet another notch in the belt that is a long history of debate over horse slaughter.
In 2006, anti-horse slaughter proponents were able to successfully get legislation passed through Congress which effectively cut off all funding for horse meat inspections, even though legislation to ban all horse slaughter in general had previously failed. Without horse meat inspectors, the sale of horse meat for human consumption was banned, and without any way to profit the three remaining horse slaughterhouses in the United States were closed in 2007.
Pro-slaughter proponents, however, claim that the ban on horse slaughter inadvertently caused a huge rise in the number of abandoned and neglected horses.
Horse Slaughter Ban Lifted: The Aftermath
As a result of the ban being lifted, horse slaughter advocates are hurrying to get a plant opened within 30 to 90 days in either North Dakota, Wyoming, Missouri or Nebraska, if state approval is given.
Should this come to fruition, up to 200,000 horses a year could be slaughtered in the United States. While the majority of their meat would be shipped to foreign countries, including Europe, Asia and Japan, some of the horse meat could be served in the United States. Rep. Sue Wallis (R-Wyoming) is hoping that horse meat could be served in her state to prisoners and school children.
The Truth About Horse Slaughter, and the Horse Slaughter Ban Being Lifted
Horses have never been raised for meat; they have been raised as companion animals who perform countless services to mankind. And the initial preconceptions of horse slaughter, such as the idea that horses slaughtered for meat are being put down to end their suffering, are just not true.
According to Charmaine Jens, Public Relations Representative for Americans Against Horse Slaughter, the truth is that the majority of horses slaughtered for their meat are not the old, infirm, neglected horses that are no longer useful, a smoke-and-mirrors perception which has become one of the popular party-lines for those in support of horse slaughter.
These horses are purchased by “killer buyers” who work for the foreign-owned horse slaughter industry. Healthy horses bring the highest price per pound. Incredibly, The USDA Guidelines for Handling and Transporting Equines to Slaughter state that more than 92 percent of horses slaughtered are “in good to excellent condition.” Sadly, these slaughter victims are the horses that can be re-trained, re-homed and once again become a precious companion animal.
Horse Slaughter Ban Lifted: The Fight to End the Practice Continues
The fight to prevent this travesty from happening is far from over. Horse and animal lovers who abhor the idea of horses being slaughtered for meat for human consumption and want to help should contact their Congressman immediately, imploring them to co-sponsor Senate bill S.1176 and House bill 2966.
Do you support President Obama in his decision to sign the bill Congress passed? Leave a comment and share your opinion.





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Comments (50)
I have seen a great increase in horse neglect and starvation cases since slaughter was banned. Ideally, I disagree with slaughter, as I disagree with kill shelters. That said,until we can find a way to care for these animals, it is more humane than the altenative, abandonment, starvation,and disease.
Exactly what it is that they mayweather vs cotto promise to do or to achieve, whether they actually do and/or achieve what they say online writing they are going to is of course a whole different discussion for another day.
Yet another broken promise from Obama...
Instead of wasting time and money fighting legislation that could be helpful, invest the money in feeding the hundreds of horses that are now starving to death in a very slow inhumnae way. The price of hay and feed has skyrocketed to the point that owning a horse is not a feasible option for many people. Even people who have owned horses as companion animals most of thier life. Put you money into the legislation to bring jobs back and gas prices down. Make owning a horse a possible endeaver and the slaughter houses will only be used for the culling.
So what? Pigs are much more intelligent than horses, yet nobody seems to mind eating them. Ridiculous humans projecting their hypocrisy on animals. You either do not kill any animals for food and go veggie, or you do not make moral differences. Why should a pig or cow have less of a right to live than a horse? I have eaten plenty of horse meat in Switzerland, France and Japan, and it is DELICIOUS. In fact, I am in Japan now and might have some horse tomorrow night to celebrate this development. Can't wait for my next slab of horse. As for those outraged here (author and semi-literate commentators) calling Obama evil over such a trivial piece of legislation: go fuck yourselves you hypocritical, stupid idiots. Go veggie or stop the laughable moral outrage.
Qbama is an evil disgusting (i was going to say human being but that is not even true) He has to go now!!!!!!!
Just stumbled onto this on the net, been Afghanistan since 09, still there.
Having lived my life with and around horses they are everything that everyone says about being special. What the Anti-slaughter folks miss is EVERYTHING. They see a man, woman or child bonding with a life partner, a beautiful, graceful animal glideing accross a pasture with the sun in the background, passion filled music playing in the background...what a folly. Having stood a herd of 50 brood mares, ran a training operation, boarded and trained horses I saw first hand what the internet did to the horse herd. It destroyed quality, it destroyed genetics, it destroyed the avergae prices, it destroyed an iconic way of life. I had more often than i care to remmeber people bringing trash in for training, unsound, unmanageable bred horses. They were decent riders so armed with a website and a few inspirational videos, now they are breeders and trainers, when they had no Biz doing either.....Leave it to the pros. People saw good quality prices going for sound, well bred and trained horses...mom and dad thought were good to go, a few brood mares the Stallion they picked up from down the road, who got sold for the wrong reasons....flooded the market with trash. Now they have 10 horses, there cousin has 6, 10 other families have the same and next thing you know just in one local area there is 300,400...500 hundred horses with no value, no market and then what...they can't ride or train 80 percent of them??? Lions tigers and bears got to eat as well. Not much on eating it, just because I did not like it. I saw first hand that 35% of the entire population needed thnning, I know that and beleive that ...because I lived it. When the plants closed it destroyed a lot of families and alot of the horse living in less than 2 years.