Why Is The Government Killing The Last Of Our Wild Horses?

They are starving. Slaughter is the best option unless you folks would like to start rescues? Horses aren't cheap to feed but feel free.

Who is feeding all the cattle on government grazing land?

Ranchers who own them? Duh.

Cattle cubes, grain, mineral blocks...

All things a fucking wild horse doesn't get. Feel free to rescue some.


Mostly, you - the tax payer.

Read up on welfare ranching,starting with Howard Lyman.

I agree! Welfare moochers/ranchers like Cliven Bundy, who try to avoid paying their federal grazing fees are major contributors to this sad situation.
 
12122884_1003695423023438_7259134451725712433_n.jpg


You're running. It seems like it's been days … and it has. You're strong and powerful but your legs hurt so badly because you've been running for what seems like forever. You can barely catch your breath. You're trying to protect your baby, as well, but she can barely keep up and is stumbling on her brand new legs. But the predators are literally on your tail. You're being chased by those who intend to inflict harm, so you keep on running. You're in a panic. You're frantic. You're hungry, you're thirsty, but you can't stop. If you stop, they catch you. And when they catch you, it's over.

This is the life of wild horses today. The mustangs.

Our great mustangs descended from Spanish horses and were brought here in the 16th century by Spanish explorers. Their name in Spanish, mustengo, means "stray horse."

Just last month the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) completed a roundup of roughly 1,400 wild horses in Oregon in Beaty's Butte, historically known as the area of the Kiger mustangs.

According to a Pacific Standard report, there were five deaths on November 19, including "one 8 year old mare with old break in right hind leg and one 4 month old colt with old break in left hind leg." Two days later, 16 horses were dead. According to another report published in the same article, "The most heartbreaking [scene] of the day involved the foals. The helicopters are running these horses from very long distances, and often foals just can't keep up for as long as the rest of their herd."

What we once considered an American icon is now fodder for the latest cull by government entities. It seems nothing is sacred these days, even a beautiful part of our history.

When we hear that dogs are culled in Asian countries for fear of rabies, we rant and rave and express our disgust. Yet here in our very own country we are culling the last of our great wild horses, and our rants and raves seem to fall on deaf ears.

The horse has a long and integral part in the history of the U.S., which was founded on the backs of these great icons, as they helped pioneers settle the West. After being brought here by the Spaniards, the mustangs were used by Native Americans for a variety of tasks such as transportation. They were revered for their "fantastic stamina and speed," while their stocky legs made them perfect for long hauls.

Where once 2 million wild horses roamed in the 19th century, according to an article referencing Western writer J. Frank Dobie, "by the time the wild horse received federal protection in 1971, it was officially estimated that only about 17,000 of them roamed America's plains. More than 1 million had been conscripted for World War I combat; the rest had been hunted for their flesh, for the chicken feed and dog food companies, and for the sport of it."

In response to public outrage over the horses' annihilation, the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse & Burro Act was passed, protecting wild horses from capture and death. The BLM and the U.S. Forest Service were responsible for implementing the act and ensuring protections were in place for the wild horses while they also issued grazing permits to cattle ranchers on public land.

While they were once considered iconic and majestic, wild horses are now deemed nothing more than a nuisance by ranchers who use federal land for subsidized grazing. And we've let them down. Big time.

The kill buyers don't hide, according to Meagher. "There is nothing illegal in what they are doing. It's immoral, but it's not illegal. It is legal to buy horses here and transport across country lines" to sell to slaughter.

We owe our wild horses so much more than extinction.

To find out more about protecting and helping our wild horses, visit American Wild Horse Preservation, International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros, and The Humane Society of the United States.

More: Why Is The Government Killing The Last Of Our Wild Horses?

This is really sad. Cattle ranchers pushing iconic and majestic wild horses off government grazing lands. So now they're just a nuisance and sold to slaughter. Damn, that is really sad.

If you wish to contact President Obama:

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 202-456-1111
Petitions: Take action today to stop roundups and mustang slaughter!

PM-PZP-Auto-immune-disease.jpg


Protect Mustangs™
Love how Leftards defend manmade environmental disasters.
And lie about it too. Obama is not killing all wild horses.
 
12122884_1003695423023438_7259134451725712433_n.jpg


You're running. It seems like it's been days … and it has. You're strong and powerful but your legs hurt so badly because you've been running for what seems like forever. You can barely catch your breath. You're trying to protect your baby, as well, but she can barely keep up and is stumbling on her brand new legs. But the predators are literally on your tail. You're being chased by those who intend to inflict harm, so you keep on running. You're in a panic. You're frantic. You're hungry, you're thirsty, but you can't stop. If you stop, they catch you. And when they catch you, it's over.

This is the life of wild horses today. The mustangs.

Our great mustangs descended from Spanish horses and were brought here in the 16th century by Spanish explorers. Their name in Spanish, mustengo, means "stray horse."

Just last month the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) completed a roundup of roughly 1,400 wild horses in Oregon in Beaty's Butte, historically known as the area of the Kiger mustangs.

According to a Pacific Standard report, there were five deaths on November 19, including "one 8 year old mare with old break in right hind leg and one 4 month old colt with old break in left hind leg." Two days later, 16 horses were dead. According to another report published in the same article, "The most heartbreaking [scene] of the day involved the foals. The helicopters are running these horses from very long distances, and often foals just can't keep up for as long as the rest of their herd."

What we once considered an American icon is now fodder for the latest cull by government entities. It seems nothing is sacred these days, even a beautiful part of our history.

When we hear that dogs are culled in Asian countries for fear of rabies, we rant and rave and express our disgust. Yet here in our very own country we are culling the last of our great wild horses, and our rants and raves seem to fall on deaf ears.

The horse has a long and integral part in the history of the U.S., which was founded on the backs of these great icons, as they helped pioneers settle the West. After being brought here by the Spaniards, the mustangs were used by Native Americans for a variety of tasks such as transportation. They were revered for their "fantastic stamina and speed," while their stocky legs made them perfect for long hauls.

Where once 2 million wild horses roamed in the 19th century, according to an article referencing Western writer J. Frank Dobie, "by the time the wild horse received federal protection in 1971, it was officially estimated that only about 17,000 of them roamed America's plains. More than 1 million had been conscripted for World War I combat; the rest had been hunted for their flesh, for the chicken feed and dog food companies, and for the sport of it."

In response to public outrage over the horses' annihilation, the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse & Burro Act was passed, protecting wild horses from capture and death. The BLM and the U.S. Forest Service were responsible for implementing the act and ensuring protections were in place for the wild horses while they also issued grazing permits to cattle ranchers on public land.

While they were once considered iconic and majestic, wild horses are now deemed nothing more than a nuisance by ranchers who use federal land for subsidized grazing. And we've let them down. Big time.

The kill buyers don't hide, according to Meagher. "There is nothing illegal in what they are doing. It's immoral, but it's not illegal. It is legal to buy horses here and transport across country lines" to sell to slaughter.

We owe our wild horses so much more than extinction.

To find out more about protecting and helping our wild horses, visit American Wild Horse Preservation, International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros, and The Humane Society of the United States.

More: Why Is The Government Killing The Last Of Our Wild Horses?

This is really sad. Cattle ranchers pushing iconic and majestic wild horses off government grazing lands. So now they're just a nuisance and sold to slaughter. Damn, that is really sad.

If you wish to contact President Obama:

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 202-456-1111
Petitions: Take action today to stop roundups and mustang slaughter!

PM-PZP-Auto-immune-disease.jpg


Protect Mustangs™
Living here in tamed Midwest, I get a good feeling knowing there are wild mustang.roaming the west. Why are they considered a nuisance? Is it because they are grazing on Federal land that partly belongs to me and not just the ranchers out there?
 
They are starving. Slaughter is the best option unless you folks would like to start rescues? Horses aren't cheap to feed but feel free.

Who is feeding all the cattle on government grazing land?

Ranchers who own them? Duh.

Cattle cubes, grain, mineral blocks...

All things a fucking wild horse doesn't get. Feel free to rescue some.


Mostly, you - the tax payer.

Read up on welfare ranching,starting with Howard Lyman.

I agree! Welfare moochers/ranchers like Cliven Bundy, who try to avoid paying their federal grazing fees are major contributors to this sad situation.[/QUOTEig


If it weren't for tax subsidies, hamburger would cost in excess of $50 a pound. Yes, that's actually true.

The consumer pays for meat in taxes, pays again at the grocery store and pays again with heart disease, cancer and other diseases.

Not to mention that most of the crops we grow and most water goes to livestock and we get very little in return.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Well first of all we go through 4 pages of thread before someone realizes horses are an invasive species. They are not native to America but were introduced by the early Spanish conquistadors, and changed the whole culture,of many Indian tribes, which in today's climate would be a cardinal sin.......Horses: Breeds

In other news, the usual liberal tug at the heartstrings ignores the usual facts of the case. The bureau of land management conduct these round ups to keep horses from overpopulating and starving to death. Horses that are kept are put up for adoption or kept in holding pens that probably then go for meat or glue. There are 45,000 wild horses on federal land. They all deserve to live in a healthy environment.


So are cattle and they're the reason for shooting horses.

Cattle do much more damage than horses but govt subsidizes cattle ranchers - like Clive Bundy. There's no money in horses and who cares if cattle trash the land?

SUBSIDIZES the ranchers?? They provide land so poor in value that NOBODY wants it.. That's what the BLM manages. And the ranchers build wells and fencing and fire access roads and make all sort of improvements on the land. Entire communities put out of biz when the BLM gets a bug up its ass about some new management gimmick.
If the BLM is shooting horses to PROTECT cattle grazing -- then they are certifiably nuts and hypocritical.. Well they are of course...
 
What is it that luddy and Lakota want? Too many wild horses for the land they are on. What is enough? All wild populations in this country are managed. Why don't you guys go down and show them how to do it. Or better yet, why don't you let the govt sell some of the 95 percent or so of the state of Nevada they own, you guys can buy it and let the horses run free and manage them yourselves. Your self righteous indignation gets so old, especially when it has no relation to reality. Answer this question. Why do we need more wild horses?
 
12122884_1003695423023438_7259134451725712433_n.jpg


You're running. It seems like it's been days … and it has. You're strong and powerful but your legs hurt so badly because you've been running for what seems like forever. You can barely catch your breath. You're trying to protect your baby, as well, but she can barely keep up and is stumbling on her brand new legs. But the predators are literally on your tail. You're being chased by those who intend to inflict harm, so you keep on running. You're in a panic. You're frantic. You're hungry, you're thirsty, but you can't stop. If you stop, they catch you. And when they catch you, it's over.

This is the life of wild horses today. The mustangs.

Our great mustangs descended from Spanish horses and were brought here in the 16th century by Spanish explorers. Their name in Spanish, mustengo, means "stray horse."

Just last month the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) completed a roundup of roughly 1,400 wild horses in Oregon in Beaty's Butte, historically known as the area of the Kiger mustangs.

According to a Pacific Standard report, there were five deaths on November 19, including "one 8 year old mare with old break in right hind leg and one 4 month old colt with old break in left hind leg." Two days later, 16 horses were dead. According to another report published in the same article, "The most heartbreaking [scene] of the day involved the foals. The helicopters are running these horses from very long distances, and often foals just can't keep up for as long as the rest of their herd."

What we once considered an American icon is now fodder for the latest cull by government entities. It seems nothing is sacred these days, even a beautiful part of our history.

When we hear that dogs are culled in Asian countries for fear of rabies, we rant and rave and express our disgust. Yet here in our very own country we are culling the last of our great wild horses, and our rants and raves seem to fall on deaf ears.

The horse has a long and integral part in the history of the U.S., which was founded on the backs of these great icons, as they helped pioneers settle the West. After being brought here by the Spaniards, the mustangs were used by Native Americans for a variety of tasks such as transportation. They were revered for their "fantastic stamina and speed," while their stocky legs made them perfect for long hauls.

Where once 2 million wild horses roamed in the 19th century, according to an article referencing Western writer J. Frank Dobie, "by the time the wild horse received federal protection in 1971, it was officially estimated that only about 17,000 of them roamed America's plains. More than 1 million had been conscripted for World War I combat; the rest had been hunted for their flesh, for the chicken feed and dog food companies, and for the sport of it."

In response to public outrage over the horses' annihilation, the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse & Burro Act was passed, protecting wild horses from capture and death. The BLM and the U.S. Forest Service were responsible for implementing the act and ensuring protections were in place for the wild horses while they also issued grazing permits to cattle ranchers on public land.

While they were once considered iconic and majestic, wild horses are now deemed nothing more than a nuisance by ranchers who use federal land for subsidized grazing. And we've let them down. Big time.

The kill buyers don't hide, according to Meagher. "There is nothing illegal in what they are doing. It's immoral, but it's not illegal. It is legal to buy horses here and transport across country lines" to sell to slaughter.

We owe our wild horses so much more than extinction.

To find out more about protecting and helping our wild horses, visit American Wild Horse Preservation, International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros, and The Humane Society of the United States.

More: Why Is The Government Killing The Last Of Our Wild Horses?

This is really sad. Cattle ranchers pushing iconic and majestic wild horses off government grazing lands. So now they're just a nuisance and sold to slaughter. Damn, that is really sad.

If you wish to contact President Obama:

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 202-456-1111
Petitions: Take action today to stop roundups and mustang slaughter!

PM-PZP-Auto-immune-disease.jpg


Protect Mustangs™


Thanks for the wake-up call. I checked out how our Canadian wild horses are doing and the situation here looks worse than in the U.S. Some sites say there are as few as 1,000 wild horses remaining in Canada. Our plains aren't as ideal as yours for the breed but still all this land and only 1,000 left. Something wrong there. The world is so fucked up we forget about the "little" details that make it a beautiful place still.

a-blog-cover2-e1448645801598.jpeg

I sent for one of these and a small donation. 1,000 is just too close to zero. I hope your post inspires others as well, thanks.

"Our Canadian wild horses are indeed wild. The genetics show that they are descendants of an historic blood line of Iberian wild horses long extinct in Europe, and have a long history of sustained freedom for several hundred years. Our Canadian wild horse comprise an important genetic reservoir of horse population".

"Wherever man has left his footprints in the long ascent from barbarism to civilization, we find the hoofprint of a horse beside it." - John Moore
The Wild Horses of Alberta Society

 
They are starving. Slaughter is the best option unless you folks would like to start rescues? Horses aren't cheap to feed but feel free.

Who is feeding all the cattle on government grazing land?


holy crap- i agree with Lakhota! Hey Lakhota- guess what? THIS Conservative loves all animals and nature- there are millions of us out there. I spend most of my spare time rescuing cats through my TNR group and im signing and sharing petitions daily for many many animals from lions to dogs.
 
12122884_1003695423023438_7259134451725712433_n.jpg


You're running. It seems like it's been days … and it has. You're strong and powerful but your legs hurt so badly because you've been running for what seems like forever. You can barely catch your breath. You're trying to protect your baby, as well, but she can barely keep up and is stumbling on her brand new legs. But the predators are literally on your tail. You're being chased by those who intend to inflict harm, so you keep on running. You're in a panic. You're frantic. You're hungry, you're thirsty, but you can't stop. If you stop, they catch you. And when they catch you, it's over.

This is the life of wild horses today. The mustangs.

Our great mustangs descended from Spanish horses and were brought here in the 16th century by Spanish explorers. Their name in Spanish, mustengo, means "stray horse."

Just last month the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) completed a roundup of roughly 1,400 wild horses in Oregon in Beaty's Butte, historically known as the area of the Kiger mustangs.

According to a Pacific Standard report, there were five deaths on November 19, including "one 8 year old mare with old break in right hind leg and one 4 month old colt with old break in left hind leg." Two days later, 16 horses were dead. According to another report published in the same article, "The most heartbreaking [scene] of the day involved the foals. The helicopters are running these horses from very long distances, and often foals just can't keep up for as long as the rest of their herd."

What we once considered an American icon is now fodder for the latest cull by government entities. It seems nothing is sacred these days, even a beautiful part of our history.

When we hear that dogs are culled in Asian countries for fear of rabies, we rant and rave and express our disgust. Yet here in our very own country we are culling the last of our great wild horses, and our rants and raves seem to fall on deaf ears.

The horse has a long and integral part in the history of the U.S., which was founded on the backs of these great icons, as they helped pioneers settle the West. After being brought here by the Spaniards, the mustangs were used by Native Americans for a variety of tasks such as transportation. They were revered for their "fantastic stamina and speed," while their stocky legs made them perfect for long hauls.

Where once 2 million wild horses roamed in the 19th century, according to an article referencing Western writer J. Frank Dobie, "by the time the wild horse received federal protection in 1971, it was officially estimated that only about 17,000 of them roamed America's plains. More than 1 million had been conscripted for World War I combat; the rest had been hunted for their flesh, for the chicken feed and dog food companies, and for the sport of it."

In response to public outrage over the horses' annihilation, the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse & Burro Act was passed, protecting wild horses from capture and death. The BLM and the U.S. Forest Service were responsible for implementing the act and ensuring protections were in place for the wild horses while they also issued grazing permits to cattle ranchers on public land.

While they were once considered iconic and majestic, wild horses are now deemed nothing more than a nuisance by ranchers who use federal land for subsidized grazing. And we've let them down. Big time.

The kill buyers don't hide, according to Meagher. "There is nothing illegal in what they are doing. It's immoral, but it's not illegal. It is legal to buy horses here and transport across country lines" to sell to slaughter.

We owe our wild horses so much more than extinction.

To find out more about protecting and helping our wild horses, visit American Wild Horse Preservation, International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros, and The Humane Society of the United States.

More: Why Is The Government Killing The Last Of Our Wild Horses?

This is really sad. Cattle ranchers pushing iconic and majestic wild horses off government grazing lands. So now they're just a nuisance and sold to slaughter. Damn, that is really sad.

If you wish to contact President Obama:

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 202-456-1111
Petitions: Take action today to stop roundups and mustang slaughter!

PM-PZP-Auto-immune-disease.jpg


Protect Mustangs™


Thanks for the wake-up call. I checked out how our Canadian wild horses are doing and the situation here looks worse than in the U.S. Some sites say there are as few as 1,000 wild horses remaining in Canada. Our plains aren't as ideal as yours for the breed but still all this land and only 1,000 left. Something wrong there. The world is so fucked up we forget about the "little" details that make it a beautiful place still.

a-blog-cover2-e1448645801598.jpeg

I sent for one of these and a small donation. 1,000 is just too close to zero. I hope your post inspires others as well, thanks.

"Our Canadian wild horses are indeed wild. The genetics show that they are descendants of an historic blood line of Iberian wild horses long extinct in Europe, and have a long history of sustained freedom for several hundred years. Our Canadian wild horse comprise an important genetic reservoir of horse population".

"Wherever man has left his footprints in the long ascent from barbarism to civilization, we find the hoofprint of a horse beside it." - John Moore
The Wild Horses of Alberta Society
Send your Canadian mares here for a few week. Our American stallions will breed them up quickly and you'll soon have many more wild horses
 
C'mon all you bleeding hearts. Get real.

There have no real wild horses in North America for tens of thousands of years.

The Prehistoric Horses of North America

They could not adapt to the land as it changed. Then, Man comes along and reintroduces them to the Americas where they soon compete with other, better adapted creatures.

They simply breed too fast and there are too many of them for nature to support. Would you let them starve or die in these spaces where they roam? Or would you do the humane thing and put them out of their pain?
 
12122884_1003695423023438_7259134451725712433_n.jpg


You're running. It seems like it's been days … and it has. You're strong and powerful but your legs hurt so badly because you've been running for what seems like forever. You can barely catch your breath. You're trying to protect your baby, as well, but she can barely keep up and is stumbling on her brand new legs. But the predators are literally on your tail. You're being chased by those who intend to inflict harm, so you keep on running. You're in a panic. You're frantic. You're hungry, you're thirsty, but you can't stop. If you stop, they catch you. And when they catch you, it's over.

This is the life of wild horses today. The mustangs.

Our great mustangs descended from Spanish horses and were brought here in the 16th century by Spanish explorers. Their name in Spanish, mustengo, means "stray horse."

Just last month the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) completed a roundup of roughly 1,400 wild horses in Oregon in Beaty's Butte, historically known as the area of the Kiger mustangs.

According to a Pacific Standard report, there were five deaths on November 19, including "one 8 year old mare with old break in right hind leg and one 4 month old colt with old break in left hind leg." Two days later, 16 horses were dead. According to another report published in the same article, "The most heartbreaking [scene] of the day involved the foals. The helicopters are running these horses from very long distances, and often foals just can't keep up for as long as the rest of their herd."

What we once considered an American icon is now fodder for the latest cull by government entities. It seems nothing is sacred these days, even a beautiful part of our history.

When we hear that dogs are culled in Asian countries for fear of rabies, we rant and rave and express our disgust. Yet here in our very own country we are culling the last of our great wild horses, and our rants and raves seem to fall on deaf ears.

The horse has a long and integral part in the history of the U.S., which was founded on the backs of these great icons, as they helped pioneers settle the West. After being brought here by the Spaniards, the mustangs were used by Native Americans for a variety of tasks such as transportation. They were revered for their "fantastic stamina and speed," while their stocky legs made them perfect for long hauls.

Where once 2 million wild horses roamed in the 19th century, according to an article referencing Western writer J. Frank Dobie, "by the time the wild horse received federal protection in 1971, it was officially estimated that only about 17,000 of them roamed America's plains. More than 1 million had been conscripted for World War I combat; the rest had been hunted for their flesh, for the chicken feed and dog food companies, and for the sport of it."

In response to public outrage over the horses' annihilation, the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horse & Burro Act was passed, protecting wild horses from capture and death. The BLM and the U.S. Forest Service were responsible for implementing the act and ensuring protections were in place for the wild horses while they also issued grazing permits to cattle ranchers on public land.

While they were once considered iconic and majestic, wild horses are now deemed nothing more than a nuisance by ranchers who use federal land for subsidized grazing. And we've let them down. Big time.

The kill buyers don't hide, according to Meagher. "There is nothing illegal in what they are doing. It's immoral, but it's not illegal. It is legal to buy horses here and transport across country lines" to sell to slaughter.

We owe our wild horses so much more than extinction.

To find out more about protecting and helping our wild horses, visit American Wild Horse Preservation, International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros, and The Humane Society of the United States.

More: Why Is The Government Killing The Last Of Our Wild Horses?

This is really sad. Cattle ranchers pushing iconic and majestic wild horses off government grazing lands. So now they're just a nuisance and sold to slaughter. Damn, that is really sad.

If you wish to contact President Obama:

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 202-456-1111
Petitions: Take action today to stop roundups and mustang slaughter!

PM-PZP-Auto-immune-disease.jpg


Protect Mustangs[emoji769]

Having kept, bred, and cherished horses for years, I read this thread with remorse and interest until the thread finished up with "to protect contact Obama @ White House". What a crock! Like he cares, about anything!!!
 
And we round these PZP treated horses up, take them to slaughter, have their flesh made into dog food, and feed it to our beloved pets!!! Hitler was no monster, I guess, we clearly are, and should win the award for being worse than he was.
 
And we round these PZP treated horses up, take them to slaughter, have their flesh made into dog food, and feed it to our beloved pets!!! Hitler was no monster, I guess, we clearly are, and should win the award for being worse than he was.

I know this is going to sound cruel. I too was around horses in my youth and sorrow when I know so many of them are starving to death in areas never meant by nature for them.

Keeping them from starving to death is far more humane.
 
And we round these PZP treated horses up, take them to slaughter, have their flesh made into dog food, and feed it to our beloved pets!!! Hitler was no monster, I guess, we clearly are, and should win the award for being worse than he was.

I know this is going to sound cruel. I too was around horses in my youth and sorrow when I know so many of them are starving to death in areas never meant by nature for them.

Keeping them from starving to death is far more humane.

Depends upon what statistics you read. Some reports are there are too many, and others they are nearly gone. Starving to death is probably more humane than injecting them with PZP. Either way, it's a matter of whatever you subscribe to that allows you to sleep at night. Frankly, I've preferred horses to human friends. They are more predictable and far less cruel.
 

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