|
WORD COUNT
315
JUNE 17, 2009
DOPING
RACEHORSES TO WIN FAST BUCKS – by Jim Hightower
Remember
the old folk song about a horse named Stewball? "Stewball was a race
horse/ and I wish he were mine/ He never drank water/ He always drank
wine."
Gosh,
those were the good ol' days for racehorses. Today, they're "drinking"
exotic cocktails containing corticosteroids, hyaluronate sodium, and
even - get this - cobra venom! Actually, horses are not drinking these
painkillers, anti-inflammatories, and stimulants. Rather, owners and
trainers are injecting the substances into their racing steeds.
I'm not
talking about nags and losers running on third-rate tracks, but
top-of-the-line thoroughbreds, such as those running in the Kentucky
Derby and other premier races. It is now common for billionaire owners
to medicate their multimillion-dollar animals with drugs that cover up
their ailments and fragilities, making the horses themselves vulnerable
to painful and fatal breakdowns on the track.
This is
one reason that there are about three breakdowns a day in our country -
more than double the rate in England and Australia, where such careless
doctoring is prohibited. The motivation of those in charge of these
animals' welfare has become a selfish desire to win at all cost to reap
big purses and glory. Training these delicate horses has become
"chemical warfare," says one prominent breeder.
Indeed, in
a survey of 20 owners or trainers of horses intending to run in the
recent Kentucky Derby, only three would reveal the veterinary records
showing what substances were injected into their animals. Most claimed
this was proprietary information, one actually invoked his horse's right
to privacy, and one pleaded ignorance, saying: "I'm a mortgage banker. I
don't know what goes on back there [in the horse stalls]."
What's
going on, of course, is a race in which ethics is losing to the fast
buck. As one of the honest owners says, "[We] should be taking care of
these horses. We're the ones that speak for them."
--
For more information
on Jim Hightower’s work – and to subscribe to his award-winning monthly
newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown, visit
www.jimhightower.com
-- A photo of Jim Hightower is available at:
CLICK HERE
# # # # #
|