This is not cruel…

   

13 Comments

  1. Joal Taylor
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 2:00 pm | Permalink

    Ow :*(

  2. Dermot McGuire
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 2:30 pm | Permalink

    thank you. sickening isn’t it

  3. Evan Beaver
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 2:53 pm | Permalink

    Christ, I hadn’t been following this story. I didn’t realise the poor bugger died during the race! I’d figured it was just another one of those ‘humane destructions’. You know, when all 4 legs break after a race and they shoot them at the track.

    No good at all.

  4. Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 3:19 pm | Permalink

    FD: Thank you, thank you, thank you. If this doesn’t get through peoples’ heads nothing will. It’s called sport.

    Wonderful, harrowing, all those things. Five out of five First Dog.

  5. Greg Angelo
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 3:24 pm | Permalink

    This disgusting sport is a blight on a civilised community and the cretins who support it ought to have their legs broken and be shot. From a risk management perspective, there is a significant risk in each race of a horse being seriously injured or killed. We banned cockfighting and bear baiting sometime ago as these were regarded as uncivilised sports. Why do we continue with this appalling pattern of death and injury in the name of so-called “sport”.

    The racing community all around the world is prepared to subject these beautiful horses to significant risk to satisfy some fundamental urge which I suspect is some vicarious pleasure from seeing death or injury not unlike the Romans watching gladiators butcher each other for pleasure.

  6. Kerrie Gandara
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 4:18 pm | Permalink

    I feel ill thinking about it, let alone looking at it! How can people do this?

  7. SHARON HUTCHINGS
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 5:20 pm | Permalink

    7 horses have been killed in jumps races over the past month(5 in Vic, 2 in SA). It is a cruel “sport”. One trainer has apparently threatened to shoot all his horses if jumps are banned, and deliver a horses head to the Vic Minister’s office. And for the head of Racing Victoria to blame the horse, nothing to do with the hurdles or jockey, is just outrageous. Sad truth behind the greed-driven racing industry is that over-breeding is rife and many horses are sent to an early death at the knackery once their profitability wanes. As for industry concerns about the impact on crowds at events like Oakbank if jumps are banned, the vast majority that attend this annual hills picnic race aren’t at all interested in the racing (I’ve been a few times), it is merely an opportunity to dress-up, drink-up, pick-up and throw-up!

  8. Chris Johnson
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 9:27 pm | Permalink

    Until we see ARL or VFL players expiring on the playing field with broken necks and crumbled sesamoids few sporting thickheads are going to concede the wrything pain of injured animals and humans is shared. I think this country is fed up right now with double standards and its opportune for a moratorium on the obscenely cruel hurdle, buck-jumping and rodeo riding events. We’ve pilloried for decades the ghastly UK hunting habits - time to clean up our own backyard.

  9. Jonathan Green
    Posted Friday, 8 May 2009 at 9:56 pm | Permalink

    It’s a bit like the illegal immigrant argument. Most come by plane, but we get all hot and bothered about the visible few who arrive by boat. More horses die in race training or on the flat. Many more die for dog meat when they flop out at trials or after a few dud races and aren’t cut out for pony clubbing, horse sport or, gasp, racing over jumps. This is selective outrage. There’s a strong argument that says that the sort of nambypambyism inflicted on jumps racing — smaller fences, more brush etc — has made it faster, given the horse less to think about over the obstacle and thus left the whole thing more dangerous than before the hand wringers had their say. The entire business of horse training and racing is pretty hard arsed and tough on man and beast. But just because we see a few sad pictures in the paper we all get our indignant outrages in a knot. How moderne. How selective. How ever so slightly self indulgent. How ineffectual when it comes to confronting the true incidences of cruelty in racing: young horses over-trained and broken down, drugged, thrashed etc etc. You could almost imagine that it was a distraction that suited the promoters of the industry. Hive off the jumps and leave the flat folk to go about their business.

  10. a a
    Posted Saturday, 9 May 2009 at 12:12 am | Permalink

    No jumps, no jumps horses

    Wouldn’t even be alive today without the ‘sport’

    Probably enjoyed those few years of life

    Even with the 1/100 chance things might go wrong

    Sad, but true

  11. Chris Johnson
    Posted Saturday, 9 May 2009 at 10:55 am | Permalink

    Just quit the use of animals for entertainment.

  12. SHARON HUTCHINGS
    Posted Saturday, 9 May 2009 at 1:04 pm | Permalink

    Problem is Jonathan that to attract attention to the cruelty in horse racing, or any form of animal entertainment, the media are only interested in shock value. Footage of falls and deaths in jumps racing is shocking, and it should be banned. The other despicable cruelty in horse racing such as inappropriate feed producing stomach ulcers, confinement in tiny stalls for up to 22 hours a day, whipping, muscular skeletal injuries due to over-training particularly of young underdeveloped horses, then of course the early death at the knackery for many that are unsuccessful. The “selective” highlighting of jumps is because it is the most obvious, shocking and public cruelties. As you know, the other cruelty issues are generally hidden from public view. Hopefully once jumps are finally banned in Vic and SA, the other equally unsavoury aspects of the greed & gambling driven horse racing industry (and other animal “sports”), will also be exposed - if the media is interested?

  13. SHARON HUTCHINGS
    Posted Saturday, 9 May 2009 at 1:09 pm | Permalink

    Apologies for the bad grammar in my last post …. my kids are hassling me for their turn on the computer!