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Old 09-01-2006, 10:24 AM
Spitty Spitty is offline
Machiavelli Incarnate
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 4,342
Default Enjoy the horsemeat Jean Luc, "let them eat horse"

You disgust me frog cowards.

http://lists.envirolink.org/pipermai...03/001093.html

Texas horses served on a platter to wealthy French diners
_____

America's relationship with France may be strained, but one thing hasn't
changed. Texas horses, by the thousands, are being slaughtered and
shipped to France to satisfy the palates of wealthy French diners.
Only two horse slaughter plants exist in the United States today. Both
are in Texas, both are foreign owned (one French) and both are operating
in violation of a Texas law that prohibits the process or sell of horse
meat for human consumption.
"In Texas, we ride our horses, we don't eat them," said State Rep. Steve
Wolens (D-Dallas) who spoke on the House floor in opposition to House
Bill 1324, the bill to legalize horse slaughter for human consumption.
"I think the majority of Texans would agree it's reprehensible to
slaughter our horses for French cuisine.
As attorney general of Texas, John Cornyn, now a U.S. senator, ruled in
August 2002 that the two horse slaughter plants, French-owned Dallas
Crown in Kaufman and Belgian-owned Beltex in Fort Worth, were operating
illegally and must shut down or face prosecution.
To stall prosecution, the two plants filed suit in federal court to stop
the enforcement of Texas law and were granted a temporary injunction
just last month. The horse slaughter plants scored their second victory
when HB 1324 passed in the Texas House by a vote of 81 to 55 and will be
heard in a Senate committee hearing as early as next week.
If HB 1324 becomes law, it will override current law to make horse
slaughter for human consumption a crime only if the consumption occurs
in the United States. These two plants slaughter live horses, process
their meat, and ship it to France, Belgium, Germany and Japan for human
consumption in those countries.
Proponents of HB 1324 claim the vast majority of the horses slaughtered
are old, sick or lame. But in reality, the majority of horses sent to
slaughter are young, healthy horses bought by "killer buyers" who attend
horse auctions where they compete with families and other horse brokers
looking for good, sound horses. A French horse meat butcher was quoted
as saying "I only buy American meat, which is red and firm. In
butchering terms, we call it "well structured," the best you can get."
State Rep. Toby Goodman (R-Arlington) called for an amendment to HB 1324
that would require a horse be certified unfit by a veterinarian before
it could be slaughtered. "If only old, sick or lame horses are going to
slaughter, why did the bill sponsor object so strongly to this
amendment?" he questioned.
Proponents of HB 1324 claim that horse slaughter provides a convenient
and humane way of disposing of unwanted horses, and some have tried to
equate it with euthanasia.
Christopher J. Heyde, policy analyst for the Society for Animal
Protective Legislation, said that horse slaughter is not humane, adding
"to claim that slaughter and euthanasia are similar is irresponsible and
false. The animals are not always stunned properly, nor do they
necessarily remain unconscious until death."
"I've visited a horse slaughter facility during the slaughter process
and I can assure you that the fear and anticipation experienced by these
horses is unimaginable. You could smell the fear and see the panic. The
slaughter process inflicts immeasurable suffering and cruelty on the
horses," said Heyde.
Proponents also claim if these two Texas plants close, horses will be
transported to Mexico. However, after California banned horse slaughter
in 1998, horse industry experts say they have lost only an estimated
1,000 horses to Mexico over the past five years. More than 42,000 horses
were slaughtered alive in these two Texas plants just last year.
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