Here is a statement from Robert Redford about horse slaughter and a video about what is happening to our wild horses via the Return to Freedom American Wild Horse Sanctuary and the chance they are giving some wild herds. ~Declan
“America’s Wild Horses are fighting their last stand. Competition for our natural resources continues to threaten our wilderness areas and wildlife species. These horses are interwoven into the very fabric of what is America. What threatens them threatens us all. I support the pioneering and innovative efforts of Return to Freedom and I urge you to do the same.” —Robert Redford
Wild Horse Preservation. Education. Sanctuary.
Return to Freedom Wild Horse Sanctuary is dedicated to wild horse preservation by protecting the freedom, diversity, and habitat of America's wild horses through sanctuary, education and conservation, while enriching the human spirit through direct experience with the natural world.
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Robert Redford Replies
There is no place in America for a foreign-driven horse slaughter industry. We are not, nor have we ever been, a horse-eating culture. Horse slaughter is a cruel and bloody business of roundups, neglect, transportation, and kill floors. In a [USDA] 2012 poll, an overwhelming majority of Americans (80%) actively opposed horse slaughter for human consumption.
Money — not simply justifiable concerns about land erosion, drought, other native species, and horse welfare — is the bedrock of horse butchery and cuts to the crux of the matter. As a long-time environmental activist, I am well aware that our global community is facing serious threats to our natural resources, not the least of which is water. But to assume a fix to the questionable overpopulation of America’s wild and healthy domestic horses is to kill them (for profit, no less) is to insult the core of our cultural values.
America is the home of the horse. It is a paleontological fact that the horse we know today originated on this continent. Around the world and throughout recorded history, horses have been the founding blocks upon which we built the nations we hold sacred today, scars and all. They plowed our fields, raised our cities, and carried us into battle. During World War I alone, more than one million rounded-up American wild horses poured their blood onto our battlefields. Another million horses died for our nation-building Civil War. They also carried Native American Warriors across this great land in an effort to preserve their nations, too. They stood by the Choctaws and Cherokee peoples in the tragic Trail[s] of Tears and fought with Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho at the Battle of Little Big Horn. Good, bad, or otherwise, it was the horse who settled Western civilization. Horses transported our goods, logged our forests, hauled coal from our mines, herded our livestock, and gave us the iconic cowboy. It is the horse who is the single most influential animal to affect humankind.
Now, as then, the horse remains interwoven into the very fabric of our country’s diverse communities. Nearly 10 million of the more than 55 million horses in the world live in the United States. Each year alone, U.S. horse-related industries (care and maintenance, sports and entertainment, investments and employment) draw more than $102 billion in revenue. The USDA reports that 92% of the 1% of America’s horse population that is sent to slaughter is able to establish productive partnerships with us — if given the chance. Surely we can find responsible and humane alternatives for the relatively small percentage of American horses that are relinquished by their owners. To make horse slaughter a viable industry, more horses will have to fill the kill pens — creating an industry that does not currently exist, one that will breed irresponsible stewardship, perpetuate inexcusable suffering, and increase horse populations in general — which means MORE, not fewer, horses pushed into the horse slaughter pipeline to satisfy its investors.
Take a stand with me. Contact your representatives and demand that Congress pass the Safeguard American Food Exports (SAFE) Act (H.R. 1094/S. 541) to prevent horse slaughter from resuming in our country and to permanently stop the shipment of our wild and domestic horses to slaughter for other countries. When we commit as a nation to stop horse slaughter in America, we can more productively use our time and resources to implement viable solutions for discarded horses by way of educational programs, responsible management, and volun-tourism on private, public, and tribal lands.
In the end, this fact remains: our horses deserve better — and we, as Americans, can do better. Only when we join together to end the sale and shipment of horses for slaughter can we efficiently, financially, and effectively work together to solve our horse crises — as well as our environmental and natural resource threats — solutions that will benefit us all, irrespective of nation.
—Robert Redford
This morning my heart and soul are heaving with sadness having read about the Supreme Court's lift of the temporary ban on horse slaughter plants in the U.S. I have actively written my legislators, contacted the White House,and posted horse slaughter blogs on my Facebook account. Does it make sense for a national rally, as many other groups have done to really be heard? I live in Arkansas and do not make a high level income. Nonetheless, I have adopted four Mustangs and rescued a Paint horse. I also have rescued nearly 100 dogs, and dozens of cats. They all have been spayed/neutered and vetted. For those I was not able to place in good homes are well taken care of and loved. My concern is we are in a critical fight/war to save our horses now and for the future. Once horses are labeled "meat" future generations will know them only as such. Thank you for your commitment. Sincerely, Dawn Dyer
ReplyDeleteThis morning my heart and soul are filled with anguish having read about the Supreme Courts lifting the ban on opening horse slaughter plants in the U.S. I have witnessed horses transported down the highways here in Arkansas, and was disgusted by the reality and the condition of the horses. I have actively written legislators and the White House, posted on Facebook to alert my "friends", and it is as though we are unheard. Does it make sense for a national rally to get our point understood? I live in Arkansas and have adopted four Mustangs from BLM. I also rescued a Paint horse, and have saved the lives of 100+/- dogs, cats, ducks, geese, and wildlife that I have found. All vetted, spayed/neutered (fowl and wildlife excluded). Though I am not wealthy, my horse and pets are well tended to and loved. I am direly concerned once the horse becomes tagged as "meat" future generations will know them as only that. We are at a critical point for protecting our horses. Thank you for your involvement. Our horses need powerful support. Sincerely, Dawn Dyer
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mr. Redford. You have spoken to this sensitive subject very eloquently and I commend you. However, you have given me the idea this is a small problem (92% of the 1%). Everyone needs to understand the insane horror involved in horse slaughter and to allow even one (1) horse to experience this horror is too much and completely unacceptable. You have the eye of the nation. You have the ability to spread the news and touch a lot of people. I've seen all your horse movies and love them. But, you may need to do another one that isn't quite so pretty to make people see the horror and the injustice. Maybe then it will stop. Maybe then the roundups will stop. Maybe then the horses will be released from the BLM's pens and allowed to return to their homes wild and free again.
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