Trump wants to legalize slaughter of wild horses for food
Traditionally, America’s wild horses
have held a place of honor as proud icons of the nation’s pioneering history,
but all that is about to change if the Trump administration gets its way.
It appears that the Trump
administration views them merely as products to be exploited for profit – which
includes selling them for food to countries known for their cruel slaughter
practices.
To date, the administration has
adopted two different strategies to push their agenda – which we will detail
below.
Trump budget
plan loosens restrictions currently protecting wild horses
The Bureau of Land Management spends
about $50 million a year to house and feed more than 46,000 wild
horses and burros in corrals. Another 73,000 of the animals roam freely
across the western states, producing foals and grazing on public lands that
conservationists and federal officials say are quickly deteriorating.
It’s an
escalating equine-population problem, and the fiscal 2018 budget President
Trump proposed this week suggests a solution: using “humane euthanasia and unrestricted
sale of certain excess animals.”
The change could lead to sales
of wild horses to slaughterhouses in Mexico or Canada, as well as to the
culling of herds, to address what the bureau calls an
“unsustainable” situation.
Selling America’s wild horses for
food is part of a bigger Republican plan to use domestic program spending cuts
to fund massive corporate tax cuts, and
to eliminate the inheritance tax for wealthy families, like Trump’s.
Trump’s budget anticipates the $10
million savings would come through a reduction in the cost of containing and
feeding the animals. The savings also would include cutbacks involving roundups
and contraception programs.
The 1971 Free-Roaming Wild Horse and
Burro Act permits the sale of older, unadoptable animals. But for years,
Congress has approved budget language specifically outlawing the sale of any
wild horses for slaughter.
ASPCA president
and CEO, Matt Bershadker found the move to be highly disturbing, stating:
“These innocent horses should not pay the price of bureaucracy and poor land
management with their lives. Nor should animal lives ever be seen as a line
item in a cost-cutting proposal. America horses deserve better, and we owe them
more.”
Suzanne Roy, executive director of
the American Wild Horse Campaign, pushed back as well, stating that: “Trump
promised to return government to the people, and we trust that he meant it,”
adding that: “America can’t be great if these national symbols of freedom are
destroyed.”
The U.S. Bureau
of Land Management proposes regulatory changes which will put wild horses
in harm’s way
Fast-forwarding to the end of
January 2018, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) proposed regulatory changes
that are being considered by Congress that would imperil wild horses.
ABC News reported that:
“A wild mustang charging across an open plain is a symbol of the untamed
majesty of nature. But the predators chasing these horses are anything but
natural.”
It seems that the BLM is
“considering culling these animals for the first time in nearly 50 years,
putting the lives of thousands of wild horses at stake.”
Animal rights activists,
such Simone Netherlands, the spokesperson for the American Wild Horse
Campaign, are concerned that these horses could become extinct.
“The BLM, the very agency in charge
of protecting them, is asking Congress for permission to kill them,”
Netherlands said, adding: “They’ve stockpiled wild horses in holding pens … and
so now what are they going to do with all the horses that they’ve stockpiled?
The adoption rates are not high enough so they can’t adopt them all out. So now
we have a bunch of wild horses that the taxpayers are paying for and holding
facilities and their solution is kill them.”
According to ABC News:
But BLM maintains the activists and
the federal agency both want what’s best for the animals and denies that any of
their practices are cruel.
“There’s three things that wild
horses need: food, water and obviously space,” said Lisa Reid, a BLM
spokesperson. “As you can see we do have millions of acres out here, but not
every acre is producing viable forage for the horses. So you know just as with
any type of species they have to be managed just so that they don’t become …
overpopulated and diseased.”
[…]
“By our count we are overpopulated
by sometimes 300 percent on most of our herd management areas,” she said. “The
Bureau of Land Management is a public agency. We have to answer to all groups.
… So we have to try and find that balance to make sure that we can do what’s
best for the horses.”
What’s next
for wild horses?
ABC News concluded their article, reporting that: “the key
battle for the horses won’t be fought in the West. Their fate will be decided
in Washington, D.C., where Congress will decide if the Department of the
Interior’s budget allowing for slaughter will be enacted.”
“Eighty-four percent of Donald
Trump’s voters oppose the slaughter of wild horses, and a very narrow band of
people are for it because they profit from it,” said Chris Minakowski, a
lobbyist and policy analyst.
Those opposed to wild horses
continuing to be free say it costs as much as $1 billion dollars over 10 years,
but Minakowski said that number didn’t seem reasonable to him.
“It’s not reasonable because they
are calculating incorrectly,” he said. “They’re estimating that you have to
remove all these horses and put them into a holding and pay for them, which is
simply not the case.”
The Washington Post reported that:
Some animal advocacy groups say the
BLM has not proactively pursued horse and burro birth control, though other
activist groups have sued the agency over the use of injectable contraception
and the spaying of mares…. Matt Bershadker, president and chief executive of
the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said the animals
could be “humanely” managed with fertility control, but the BLM “would rather
make these innocent animals pay for draconian budget cuts with their very
lives.”
Regardless of the rhetoric and
excuses, there is more than the lives of innocent animals at stake here.
Horse slaughterhouses are notorious for the unspeakable cruelty these proud animals are forced to endure as they’re killed and processed for food.
Horse slaughterhouses are notorious for the unspeakable cruelty these proud animals are forced to endure as they’re killed and processed for food.
This is about more than eliminating
laws that prevent the sale of wild American horses for food. It represents a
cold-hearted approach to who we are as a nation. Putting money ahead of our
moral standards is fast becoming the national disgrace that is synonymous with
the name Trump.