As a Vet would you eat an animal (any
animal) that had not been raised to be eaten? With all of the past and current
health issues with the cattle industry that “is” much regulated we
still have our issues. Horses sent to slaughter that have not been fed a
healthy diet or given any type of vaccinations I would think should not be
eaten by anyone. Or do the slaughter houses separate “healthy” from
unhealthy horses prior to slaughter. If horses were raised for food
following FDA / Organic requirements I can understand.
Susan
From:
ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Susan E. Garlinghouse, DVM Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2007
4:51 PM To: 'Rebecca Fabiszak'; 'Tx
Trigger'; 'Ridecamp' Subject: RE: [RC] Ethics of
slaughter..
Next time the
Manzanita ride manager takes the ride vets out for dinner at the local Indian
casino, I’m going to suggest we order in a pizza instead (“DON’T
GO INTO THE DINING ROOM!!! IT’S A TRAP!!!!
AAAAAAAAGGGGHHHHH!!!)<VBG>
Susan Garlinghouse
Veterinarian But
Probably Really Tough and Stringy (spread the word, please).
From: ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:ridecamp-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Rebecca Fabiszak Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2007
4:36 PM To: Tx Trigger; Ridecamp Subject: Re: [RC] Ethics of
slaughter..
Too good. What a way
to lighten the topic. beccy
----- Original Message
----
From: Tx Trigger <txtrigger@xxxxxxxxx>
To: Ridecamp <ridecamp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2007 5:13:26 PM
Subject: [RC] Ethics of slaughter..
Truman Prevatt posted: >>>That does not necessarily follow.
While the
Indian diet is mostly veterinarian - they do eat meat. <<<
Yikes!!! Hope our vets take note. Dr. Garlinghouse, be careful out there!
lol
Jonni