Finally standing up to the horrors of horse racing

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With the Belmont Stakes just two weeks away, let’s keep some grim statistics in mind: Every year, more than 2,000 horses are killed while racing or training.

Approximately 13,000 retired thoroughbreds are packed off to slaughterhouses. And that’s to say nothing of the hundreds — often in puberty and active racers — who suffer painful and lonely deaths in their stalls each year, from infection or neglect or catastrophic injury.

All in service of a multibillion dollar industry that largely looks the other way.

“They’ve been allowed to operate under this cloak of secrecy for nearly 100 years,” New York-based activist Patrick Battuello tells The Post. But that is beginning to change.

The rampant deaths at California’s Santa Anita racetrack — 25 since December, including a 3-year-old named Spectacular Magic last Monday — have made national headlines. This week’s episode of “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” ran a devastating expose of the industry, replete with footage of one-time champions killed in the most heartless and savage ways. Even the storied Jockey Club has called for reforms.

Just as the national conversation about football always includes concussion, viewership and fandom of horse racing should now include talk of these atrocities.

Let’s take what seems the least of it: so-called stall deaths. If only those were as clinical and painless as they sound. These young horses often suffer from laminitis, which causes excruciating hoof pain, or colic or limb fractures or broken necks, crushed spines, blunt force trauma.

“The confinement and the isolation is perhaps the worst of it,” Battuello says. “These are herd animals, naturally social, alone for 23 hours a day. So you often see bobbing and weaving and self-mutilation — these animals are going mad. Doctors will say, ‘The horse was found dead in a stall in the morning.’ That means the horse died alone, in a little 12-by-12 stall, painfully and horribly.”

Dr. Kate Papp, who treats horses at Penn National, told “Real Sports” of a horse she recently found standing on three legs, the other shattered and dangling. “Just the look in his eyes says, ‘Please, somebody, help me,” Papp said.

Trainers often demand that an injured horse be drugged up to race on broken legs and, Papp said, there’s no shortage of unethical vets who’ll do just that. “One injection takes two seconds and makes you $30,” she said. “And if you multiply that by 10 in one day, that’s $300 for five minutes’ worth of work.”

So deplorable are our protections of racehorses that the USDA allows them to be transported for slaughter for 28 hours straight, in cramped trailers, without food or water. “They’re panicked; they don’t understand what’s happening to them,” says Battuello. “When they get to the slaughterhouse, the terror just intensifies.”

A horse is first shunted into a high-walled metal stall. A worker stands above, wielding a machine meant to shock the horse’s brain and render the animal unconscious.

If that doesn’t work — and it often doesn’t — the horse is nonetheless strung up by one leg, awake and upside down, and slashed open until they bleed out and die. The meat is shipped to foreign markets and the rest of the horse is considered waste.

Leaving aside the ethics of sport, let’s acknowledge the human-equine bond. There are very few animals that have helped build our civilizations, fought alongside us in war, evolved for human companionship. In that regard, this bond may be second only to the human-canine one.

And as Battuello points out, we’ve begun a true reckoning with the ethics of animals as entertainment. Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus is out of business.

Rodeos are banned in some parts of the country, with Los Angeles likely next. Sea World never really recovered from “Blackfish.” Four states have shut down greyhound racing.

Can’t we at least get federal oversight for our racehorses — just as a start?

Battuello thinks so. “I’m heartened that the conversation has been engaged,” he says. “You can’t stop moral progress.”





https://www.google.com/amp/s/nypost...anding-up-to-the-horrors-of-horse-racing/amp/
 

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that is so wrong in many ways. people who have never stepped foot in a barn and now experts?

I don't have time to go over everything but this article and the HBO show is biased as hell! they enjoy the injuries. PETA is the worst!
 

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But I bet you eat cheeseburgers and steaks, am I right?

You becoming a SJW now?



Fake -- empathy -- now.
 

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A few track experts who Santa Anita brought in the examined the track surface couldn't find any problems but the theory here is all the rain we had ( record amounts) somehow played into to it. Something about having water sit on the track ( floating and sealing) takes place and it makes for a tight track.
It's bad PR for a sport that in southern cal has been dwindling in attendance and handle. Now Dianna Finestine wants to suspend racing till an investigation can be done..Not good if you love the sport.
 

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so cal got record rain, and the track was sealed to the point it was concrete and there was no give. 100% it was the surface.
 

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I guess the slaughter of pigs and cows is somehow "humane". Nope.
 

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This is sadder than sad for such a beautiful creature!

Has anyone ever lived on a chicken farm? The first time i saw one killed (as a child) was shocking.... a chicken--yep. But my grandparents had to pay their bills.
 

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How many turkey's are killed for thanksgiving? Unless you're a vegan shut your over stuffed cheese burger hole. Thanks!azzkick(&^
 
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A few track experts who Santa Anita brought in the examined the track surface couldn't find any problems but the theory here is all the rain we had ( record amounts) somehow played into to it. Something about having water sit on the track ( floating and sealing) takes place and it makes for a tight track.
It's bad PR for a sport that in southern cal has been dwindling in attendance and handle. Now Dianna Finestine wants to suspend racing till an investigation can be done..Not good if you love the sport.

The following has more to do with it than the weather

Trainers often demand that an injured horse be drugged up to race on broken legs and, Papp said, there’s no shortage of unethical vets who’ll do just that. “One injection takes two seconds and makes you $30,” she said. “And if you multiply that by 10 in one day, that’s $300 for five minutes’ worth of work.”
 

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The following has more to do with it than the weather

Trainers often demand that an injured horse be drugged up to race on broken legs and, Papp said, there’s no shortage of unethical vets who’ll do just that. “One injection takes two seconds and makes you $30,” she said. “And if you multiply that by 10 in one day, that’s $300 for five minutes’ worth of work.”

Is this because of Insurance reasons betall??

I mean, theres always a catch right?? sooooo,,,

insurance wont pay for a broken leg?? but it WILL PAY FOR A DEAD HORSE??

there has to be something the inside guys know? that we do not?
 
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Is this because of Insurance reasons betall??

I mean, theres always a catch right?? sooooo,,,

insurance wont pay for a broken leg?? but it WILL PAY FOR A DEAD HORSE??

there has to be something the inside guys know? that we do not?

listen I could tell you HORROR stories that would make you sick, Horse lover or not.
Death of a horse in the stall without injuries could very well be insurance fraud .

the part of the article I highlighted was about these horses going out and breaking down during Training or racing
Horses given drugs to mask their injuries and the Trainers not caring as long as it gets them a Purse check
I saw it for years for myself and still hear about it today.
 

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listen I could tell you HORROR stories that would make you sick, Horse lover or not.
Death of a horse in the stall without injuries could very well be insurance fraud .

the part of the article I highlighted was about these horses going out and breaking down during Training or racing
Horses given drugs to mask their injuries and the Trainers not caring as long as it gets them a Purse check
I saw it for years for myself and still hear about it today.


what track? big time or small time toilet?
 

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happens everywhere


No it doesn't. Maybe at small time tracks but at the big ones the horses are treated like royalty. SANTA ANITA problems were 100% due to the rain, anyone with a clue knows this. The rain stopped and the death toll stopped. Horses die, it's unfortunate but it happens, these horses wouldn't even be alive if it werent for racing.
 
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No it doesn't. Maybe at small time tracks but at the big ones the horses are treated like royalty. SANTA ANITA problems were 100% due to the rain, anyone with a clue knows this. The rain stopped and the death toll stopped. Horses die, it's unfortunate but it happens, these horses wouldn't even be alive if it werent for racing.

not sure where you get that unless you are talking because they are bred to Race.
was in this business for over 25 years, I think I know what I'm talking about somewhat.

On the Front you believe it's all the rain, not saying it doesn't have something to do with it, but it's not the only reason
Horses have been dying at Santa Anita before all the weather problems.

Behind the scenes, in the barns you have no idea what goes on. I Do, I have seen it, know guys that have done it
are they all doing it ? No, but it doesn't matter if they are at Belmont or some small track in the midwest
and in the article the Vet says it's another or other Vets that will give a shot to ease the pain of a horses injury, No not just Vets, but Trainers do it themself.
I could go on and on about this, from Pain killers to Milkshakes given by a trainer, anyway to cheat the system
Drugs being given that can't be detected because the racing board doesn't know what they are looking for.

Now are we talking about Grade 1 horses ?/ No
but I'm sure there are a few that get "Help"
 

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I have had 4 horses die in 20 in years.
2 weaklings and 2 claimers.

Of the ones racing, one shattered a leg while racing and the other tied up overnight. Spent $9k trying to save the second one. Its always sad, and expensive.
 

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