Breaking news in NYC today is that Mayor deBlasio is   pushing to introduce a bill in the City Council next week that would   effectively ban carriage horses by 2016. 
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/02/nyregion/mayor-de-blasio-unveiling-bill-to-ban-horse-drawn-carriages.html?_r=0
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/02/nyregion/mayor-de-blasio-unveiling-bill-to-ban-horse-drawn-carriages.html?_r=0
.
.
.
It is hard to imagine any thinking, caring City   Councilperson supporting such destructive and ill-thought legislation.   
Legislation that would literally put hundreds of people out of   work from carriage drivers, to stable hands, to groomers, to grain and hay   suppliers, to farriers to even the Mexican lady selling bunches of   carrots to carriage drivers each day. Legislation that would rob 220 beautiful,   loved and highly proficient carriage horses of their homes and jobs   and place them in the "horses needing rescue" pool -- a pool that is already   overburdened and unable to find placement for the 140,000 horses sent   to slaughter each year. 
.
It is more than obvious that this so-called, "Animal Rights"   measure is not about horses or animal protection at all, but rather land grab of   the lucrative real estate the horse stables currently sit on. Land that in   just a few years can be transformed into multi-million dollar condos for rich   celebrities and oil moguls from the Middle East.
.
Why else would a mayor who cares nothing of animals and would   not even allow pets in the house he is currently renting out, become so invested   (literally) in so-called, "Animal Welfare" legislation?  Could it be the   millions of dollars spent to defeat Quinn last year and donated   to deBlasio's campaign, most of which was from rich real estate   interests?
.
One has got to be hopelessly naive to believe for a moment   that this proposed legislation is about any kind of "horse welfare" as it   will ultimately be the horses who suffer most as their fate is literally cast to   the wind and left to chance. (At least humans can apply for Unemployment   benefits and food stamps.-- Horses can't.)  Reality is that the city cannot   legally "seize" animals unless there is concrete evidence of abuse and neglect   --which is non-existent in the case of the carriage horses who, on the contrary,   are extremely well cared for.  
.
Even more significantly, thousands of horses will ultimately   be trucked to Mexican and Canadian slaughterhouses for not having easy Central   Park jobs to come to in the future. Though some like to believe that horses   without jobs have limitless "bucolic fields" to romp and roam, the realities are   quite different. Where are those "bucolic fields" for the 3,000 horses currently   going to slaughter every week in this country? Horses are expensive animals to   care for and maintain properly.
.
In essence, the proposed legislation is extremely destructive   to horses, humans, the city (in terms of 19 million tourist dollars a year) and   perhaps most of all to Animal Rights as a legitimate and credible cause.   
.
Certainly, Animal Rights has lost a great deal of   credibility to this New Yorker who for more than 30 years was one of the cause's   most avid supporters. 
.
It's indeed tragic and unpardonable that as a species, we   would show so little gratitude and appreciation to the very animals   who helped to build this city as to crusade for their banishment and   ultimate destruction.  
.
Cancel my subscription to "Animal Rights" as this was the   issue so many chose to hang their hat on. 
.
I do not wish to banish any animals from my city, my   park or my life.  -- PCA
.
.
.
                                                     ***********
No comments:
Post a Comment