© unknown |
BlackListed News | Apr 20, 2014 | Lee Rogers |
The Bureau of Land Management not only has involved itself in a domestic terrorist operation against rancher Cliven Bundy but they appear to be involved in widespread cruelty to animals. During the BLM's terrorist actions, they killed cattle for no reason, separated young calves from their mothers and even sabotaged equipment that the animals relied upon for water. Nevada Assemblywoman Michele Fiore has posted several photos documenting the BLM's inhumane treatment of these animals.
Now due to their failure to properly manage the horse population in Wyoming they are sending wild horses to Canadian slaughterhouses. These horses are actually protected from slaughter by United States law but a terrorist organization like the BLM does not care about the law. Simply put, they think they are above the law.
Could it be any more obvious that the BLM is not a good steward of the land and wildlife? More specifically the BLM is an institution of corruption and evil.
From Western Journalism:
The Bureau of Land Management is clearly having an image problem. As the outrage over its intimidating show of force during last week’s showdown at the Bundy Ranch in Nevada proved, the federal agency is now caught up in a controversy originating in Wyoming.
According to recent reports, agents herded a large group of wild horses in the state before ceding control of the majestic animals to state authorities. At that point, Wyoming officials sold them off to a slaughterhouse in Canada.
Obviously, this development outraged countless advocates already incensed by accusations that BLM officers gunned down multiple cows at the Bundy Ranch.
Paula Todd King, a wild horse advocate with Colorado’s Cloud Foundation, said it would have taken “very little to do this in a more effective way so that horses are not just sent off to slaughter indiscriminately.”
Though wild horses, which have roamed throughout the American West for hundreds of years, are protected by federal law, the BLM contends these animals do not qualify for such protection. Instead, agency spokesperson Sarah Beckwith contends they are strays descended from rodeo horses from four decades ago.
King, however, wondered how such a distinction is made.
“How long does a horse have to live wild and free before it’s considered wild?” she asked.
No comments:
Post a Comment