Again, I havent said they don't care. I said that the lads and girls working with the horses will feel any loss more than the 'antis'"Any injury/fatality in racing is dreadul, and believe me the people involved in the sport feel it more than the anti-racing brigade." is what you said. Sorry if I interpreted that wrongly, my point is that your assertion is false. It is also not the point - the 'antis' care about every single horse (and greyhound, camel etc.)
See last night - "Seriously (no sarcasm) I actually appreciate some of you voicing your thoughts when we disagree. I am sorry I did not come to this debate armed with pages of facts - it was just a spur of the moment comment this morning."Everyone is of course entitled to their own opinion, but if you're going to come on to a forum just to pick a fight, it's probably a good idea to do a little bit of research first so you actually know what you are talking about, rather than just reposting someone else's false equivalency. Otherwise you might come across as a bit of a prick. Just a heads up.
"Any injury/fatality in racing is dreadul, and believe me the people involved in the sport feel it more than the anti-racing brigade." At the very least there is an implication that we don't care. We protest because we care.Again, I havent said they don't care. I said that the lads and girls working with the horses will feel any loss more than the 'antis'
While you may feel upset at the death of a racehorse, there is no way you will feel the same loss for them as the people working with them every day. That would be like saying if my cat died tomorrow, you would be just as upset as me or my kids.
That's not me saying you don't care, but that you dont feel that loss as much as others.
I don't see where you're coming from here, Dennison. Trips has clearly stated the the grooms etc will feel "more" pain than someone not directly involved with the life of the horse. He doesn't say that an anti-horse racing person WON'T feel "pain""Any injury/fatality in racing is dreadul, and believe me the people involved in the sport feel it more than the anti-racing brigade." At the very least there is an implication that we don't care. We protest because we care.
Honestly not looking to argue here. I was trying to take your words at face value and it did seem the obvious conclusion. If your point was merely that stable staff care about their horses then obviously we all agree.I haven't implied you don't care. You're reading between the lines and finding what you want to find.
All these articles relate to US racing which has been a unregulated disaster zone for the last 10 years, with regards treatment if horses and use of drugs, although there has been strides in the last 12 months to improve it.See last night - "Seriously (no sarcasm) I actually appreciate some of you voicing your thoughts when we disagree. I am sorry I did not come to this debate armed with pages of facts - it was just a spur of the moment comment this morning."
So I just googled "is horse racing cruel?" Several articles saying yes, some offering pros and cons, none actually saying there is no cruelty.
The Ugly Truth About Horse Racing
An exposé by PETA, published in The New York Times, shows a side of the sport that the industry has tried hard to shield from public view.www.theatlantic.com
The Hidden Cruelty Behind the Glamour of the Horse Racing Industry
Horse racing has a reputation for elegance and attracts many wealthy individuals. Tragically, there is nothing glamorous about the world of horse racingwww.onegreenplanet.org
Five reasons why horse racing is cruel
The recent ABC footage of Australian horses being tormented and slaughtered on an industrial scale is sickeningwww.worldanimalprotection.org.au
Is Horse Racing Cruel?
Let's look at the facts, do you think horse racing is cruel? We break down both sides of the arguement on this important question.ihearthorses.com
You are right TT. Some people focus on one side of the argument, some on the other. Neither side should pretend that the other side does not exist. It may come down to how we see the role of mankind on this planet.Ultimately it comes down to one thing, which is your attitude to the fact that so far this year 64 horses have died on UK tracks.
Nobody likes that it just depends on how accepting your are of it against the wider good that racing offers
How many horses have raced?Ultimately it comes down to one thing, which is your attitude to the fact that so far this year 64 horses have died on UK tracks.
Nobody likes that it just depends on how accepting your are of it against the wider good that racing offers
There have been 347 meetings this year so if there have been an average of 6 races per meeting and 6 horses per race that means 2,082 horses have run in 3 and a bit monthsHow many horses have raced?