As unlikely as it sounds, the most widely drug in the United States is made
from animal waste. The drug is an estrogen (female sex hormone) substitute and
used by millions of women worldwide to ease the symptoms of menopause (permanent
cessation of menstruation). The Wyeth-Ayerst (the drugs company) claims that the
"secret ingredient" (pregnant mares' urine) sets it apart from other estrogen drugs
on the market. But it is contains another ingredient as well: ANIMAL SUFFERING.
Tens of thousands of pregnant mares are confined to tiny stalls
for 6-7 months
(of their eleven-month pregnancies) at a stretch out of every year, some "lucky"
mares receive exercise every few weeks (some luck!), most of them don’t see a
daylight for months.
This confined perform For the sake of producing urine to
be used for the manufacture of an estrogen replacement therapy called Premarin
(which produce in U.S.A. and Canada mainly)
Pregnant mares are tethered to the front of stalls measuring just 3˝ to 5
feet wide and 8 feet long. For six months or so, while their bodies are
producing the most estrogen, these mares are unable to take more than a step
or two in any direction. They cannot turn around or even lie down; as a result,
mares are often suffered from lameness. Mares are forced to wear cumbersome rubber
urine-collection bags, which chafe their legs and cause sores, 24 hours a day. To
collect their urine.
Farmers are encouraged to limit the horses' drinking water so that their urine
will yield more concentrate oestrogens. Drinking water is the most basic thing for
a living creature to do. This act of greed causes mares to suffer from kidney and
liver problem. It also causes the mares to struggle and injure themselves during
water-distribution times
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to get to the water they so desperately crave.
As you can guess, mares are going through Artificial Insemination (AI), Which means
that they are regularly RAPED. The mares are all methodically impregnated to be on the
same eleven-month gestation cycle. The foals are separated
from their mothers by force.
The mares got a job to do! All day long, you can hear the heartbreaking sound of
separation mothers and babies calling plaintively to one another.
Still in trauma from having their children taken away from them, the mares will be re-raped
and re-impregnated; and then tethered in the small wooden stall. This may be enough for
the horses to lie down – but so is a coffin for a person. Would you like to live in one?
The mares are re-impregnated within days of giving birth. Many go through this harrowing
cycle for more than 20 years! This is heinous act; no one can really understand that
stressful life.
Sadly, the foals born to these mares are usually worth less than the urine their mothers
produce. To the PMU farmers, they are worth more dead than alive. Just as the male calves
born to dairy cows are considered a by-product of the dairy industry,
the foals of PMU
mares are considered nothing more than a living by-product of Premarin.
Their future is almost 100% death. Some foals will die soon after birth; a 65 percent
foal mortality rate is in the first week following foaling and 45 percent foal mortality
rate during the following week unable to survive the bitterly cold temperatures of the prairies.
The principle cause of death is exposure and starvation; the mares are usually turned
out in large unsheltered open paddocks, very often in sub-zero temperature, to deliver
their foals.
The foals are called "by products" by the industry workers. It is not surprising that
worker's attitude. Those workers see animals only as materials that provide them the next salary.
A few foals are used to replace worn-out mares on what farmers call 'pee-lines', but most
are sent to feedlots where they are fattened and then slaughtered for meat. Some of their
remains will be ground up and sold as dog food. (A filly foal has a less than one in 10
chance of not going to slaughter, a colt foal, less than one in 50!)
One retired farmer said: "When you have to see a colt being born and then have to destroy
it, it's rough because they are just babies".
Most Premarin mares will last about five years. When the mares become old, infertile, or
crippled, they are auctioned and sends to slaughtered. Every year one-quarter of the mares
are sent to be murdered and replaced by other mares.
At the auctions, PMU foals and worn out mares will join other horses who are "unwanted" or
"surplus" – most of whom will be sent to slaughter. The PMU foals are only between two to
four months old when they are sent to auction. Too young to be weaned, these tiny foals
can be regularly observed trying to nurse each other.
Auction houses facilitate the problem. They provide an "easy out" for irresponsible
equine owners, where all they have to do is 'drop off' an animal at an auction facility
and wait for a payment. Auctions have been found selling sick, sore, lame, disabled
blind and pregnant equines on numerous occasions. For every animal is sold, the auction
collect a fee, so, it is in the best interest of the auction's pocket to accept and
sell as many animals as possible.
Thoroughbreds and standard breeds that are no longer equitable to their owners are
sold this way so that the very last nickel possible is squeezed out of them. The
entire horse breed industry, regardless of the angle or involvement, is driven by
greed and money. The only thing that matters is how many pounds of usable meat will
come from the horse.
Horses bound for slaughter are shipped, frequently for long distances, in a manner
that fails to accommodate their unique temperament. They usually not rested, fed,
or watered during travel. This considered as waste to the shipper. Economics considerations
dictate the conditions including crowding as many horses into trucks as possible.
Terrified horses are crammed and transported to slaughter in double-deck trucks,
which are too small for their bodies.
The truck ceilings are so low that the horses are not able to hold their heads in a
normal, balanced position. The flooring of the trailer becomes increasingly slippery
and slimy with manure and urine. Exhausted horses, desperately trying to maintain
their footing, as the trailer careens along Interstate highways, will trample the
inevitable downed horses, who lost their footing hours – and miles – earlier. The
small once are crushed to death when a larger horse has fallen on them. And maybe
the worst case is of pregnant mares which give birth to foals on the trailers
– while they're en route – with the helpless newborns getting trampled to death underfoot.
By the time the trailers arrives the slaughterhouse, the very long and
harrowing trip has taken its toll. The horses who have managed to survive
the trip are completely exhausted, starving, dying from thirst, in pain, and
frightened. Many of them will have sustained injuries – such as broken limbs
or gouged out eyes. Some of them didn't survive the trip, then, a rope or a chain is used to
drug the dead and downed – yet still alive – horses out of the trailer.
Once inside the building more callous workers, standing high on the railing that
lined the stalls, beat the horses on the nose, forehead, neck, back,
or hindquarters to get them to move. This continued until they entered the kill chute.
"Two egregious acts of cruelty took place right in front of me"; Said an eyewitness.
"Running across the floor of the barn was a great-covered drain about three feet deep.
A section of the grate was missing in one of the stalls through which horses were being
forced. Because they were crammed into a space and panicking, each horse fell into the
open hole, unable to get out since the floor was wet and slippery. Workers continued to
beat the horses until they were able to throw their bodies out of this hole. Due to the
overcrowding and panic, a large male got his leg hooked over one of the upper rails.
Again, workers proceeded to beat him continually until the horse lunged forward gouging
his leg open on the solid metal fence, which force his leg free of the rail. Federal law
requires the
presence of inspector during slaughter, but an inspector was nowhere to be found".
This is sadly but not surprising what this eyewitness tells. Humans are known for
their disgraceful attitude to non-human animals.
This is not something new nor exception. Moreover, this will not going to stop.
According to a federal law, horses must be rendered unconscious prior to
slaughter, usually with a captive bolt pistol, which shoots a metal rod into
the horse's brain. But it is cost for some slaughterhouses. In places like
these, horses are bashed in the head, sometimes repeatedly, in order to stun
them so that they will fall down and lie still for the 'process' (even with
the bolt pistol, they remain conscious). The stun is not intended to kill them,
and it does not, unfortunately. Once down, the horses are caught by the hind
leg and hoisted into the air, where they are dangled down a line to an
individual who slits their throat causing them to bleed to death. Tens of
thousands are murdered this way every year.
As many as 75,000 foals will be taken away from their mothers and killed
before their first birthday to produce a hormone replacement therapy,
which is one of the most widely prescribed drugs in the world – Premarin –
thereby the drugs companies earns billions of dollars a year.
Premarin is the single most prescribed drug in the U.S. (and the third most
prescribed in Canada), holds 85% of the estrogen supplement market worldwide,
and is Canada's most lucrative pharmaceutical export to date. Premarin ranks at
number eight in Medicaid subsidized prescription drugs. Yes the taxpayer, you and
I, are paying for that cruelty.
The Canada's leading horsemeat exporter says the pregnant mares' urine industry
is his biggest source of supply. The mares live on Premarin 'farms' are doomed to
life of deprivation and suffering on the 'pee-line' because Wyeth-Ayerst thinks
horse urine is "good" for women's health. More likely, it is profitable so-called medicine!
It is estimated that there are more horses today (used for equestrian events,
PMU farms, horseracing and as currency) than there were in the days of the horse-drawn carriage.
No horse wants to end up on someone's plate. Every year, more than 10 billion farmed
animals are tortured and killed for food. Those cows, pigs, chickens, sheep, goats,
turkeys, ducks, gees, fish… no more willingly gave up their lives to end up on someone's
plate than these horses do. Whatever the species, ALL animals experience immense
suffering and unimaginable horror at the factory farms as well as on the slaughterhouses,
at the auctions and during transport.
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