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Welcome to the XDTalk Forums - Your HS2000/SA-XD Information Source! forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Also, registering gets you started on gaining access to The Trading Post and Blogs after 30 days and 100 posts! Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! |
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#1 | |
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XDTalk 2K Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Tucson, AZ
Posts: 2,697
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Congress onto horse racing
I don't know how the rest of you feel, but for me this is pretty much the most absurd thing I have ever heard. As if there is absolutely nothing else for Congress to worry about, they are now going to stick their noses into horse racing. I am not a horse racing fan by any means, although I did watch this past weekend to see if history would be made. But I feel this is a huge slap in the face to the American people. Apparently these schmucks haven't filled up a gas tank lately.
Congress wants answers from horse-racing industry House panel to study drugs, breakdowns and breeding By Andrew Wolfson • awolfson@courier-journal.com • May 23, 2008
![]() Citing concerns that "leading officials in the sport" have failed to address longstanding concerns over the welfare of thoroughbred racehorses, a House panel has demanded that state racing commissions provide information on breakdowns, drug use and breeding. Saying the public demise of Eight Belles in this year's Kentucky Derby shows that the "thoroughbred breed has become increasingly fragile," the leaders of the U.S. House Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection say they want answers by June 2. The panel expects to hold a hearing sometime next month on the state of horse racing in the United States, said Kristin Walker, press secretary to U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield of Kentucky, its ranking minority member. Whitfield and subcommittee Chairman Bobby Rush, D-Chicago, made their demands in a letter sent this week to the Lexington-based Association of Racing Commissioners International, which represents 44 jurisdictions. They ask the organization to identify by name every trainer who has been sanctioned for medication infractions during the past five years and for a list of the nature and severity of the injuries of every horse over that period. They also ask if the racing commissioners would favor a comprehensive tracking system for track-related thoroughbred injuries and if they would support a central national body to govern horse racing, such as the one in the United Kingdom. The letter does not reveal how the information will be used, but it does say that "we believe Congressional oversight should play a role in determining whether the special status of the sport under federal law is still warranted." In 1978, Congress enacted the Interstate Horseracing Act, allowing racetracks to televise their races to off-track locations for wagering, then amended it in 2002 to allow wagering at home over the phone and Internet. Alex Waldrop, chief executive of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, said yesterday that the "health and safety of our horses is a top priority for the thoroughbred racing industry, and we do appreciate Congressmen Rush's and Whitfield's interest in our sport." He said he believes the commissioners' group will cooperate fully with the request. Waldrop said the NTRA supports an injury-reporting system but opposes a federal racing commission because there are already groups like his own and the commissioners' association to promote uniform regulations nationally. "We believe that states are the right places to govern these issues," he said. Waldrop testified before the subcommittee in February, when it examined how drug use in various sports, including horse racing, was affecting safety and the integrity of competition. The congressmen's letter says that "many, if not most, racing experts believe that the thoroughbred breed has become increasingly ... incapable of withstanding ... the rigors of dirt racing on the track." It cites charges that breeders are "biologically engineering horses to run very fast at a very early stage in their lives at the expense of long-term durability," and the use of race-day medications that allow unsound horses to compete and pass on their genetic infirmities to their offspring. Officials with the Kentucky Horse Racing Authority, Racing Commissioners International and Churchill Downs could not be reached for comment. Congress wants answers from horse-racing industry | courier-journal | The Courier-Journal
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"A big mouth don't make a big man." - John Wayne, The Cowboys GUNS KILL PEOPLE LIKE SPOONS MADE ROSIE O'DONNEL FAT!!! |
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#2 |
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XDTalk 2K Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Northern California
Posts: 2,800
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a more appropriate title would be "Congress wasting more time and taxpayer money on sh!t that doesn't matter when there are ten quadrillion more important things to be doing, like figuring out how we are going to keep high energy prices from destroying our nation."
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What country can preserve it's liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants. It is it's natural manure. - Thomas Jefferson Ruger 22/45 MKIII Springfield XD-9 Service Stevens Model 67 Series E 12g 1948 M44 Mosin-Nagant |
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#3 |
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XDTalk 5K Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Vegas
Posts: 7,539
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Wow - 1st big oil, not Big Horse Racing. Gee, we got $4 gas, a worthless dollar, Iran building nukes and this is what they fill their days with.
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The American Revolution was a new war fought by a new kind of soldier...snipers built this country |
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#4 | |
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XDTalk 2K Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Tucson, AZ
Posts: 2,697
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I wanted to use that exact title but I ran out of room, so I figured this was to the point as well.
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Quote:
"A big mouth don't make a big man." - John Wayne, The Cowboys GUNS KILL PEOPLE LIKE SPOONS MADE ROSIE O'DONNEL FAT!!! |
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#5 |
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XDTalk 10K Member
![]() Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Valley of the GUN
Posts: 14,516
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I have heard that steroid use by horses would allow them to pull larger wagons, or cars for owners can't offord gas. It's the stop gap they are trying to fix. We all know those same people will soon ... Not be able to buy feed ... So Congress must be on to something
Fire them all.
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Voting for Obama is like putting a gun to your head and hoping he calls for its confiscation before you can pull the trigger - AZXD SCOTUS judge appointments ... Will last much longer than Obama or McCain. Who do you want selecting people who have the ability to support or remove individual rights ?? AZXD |
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#6 | |
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XDTalk 2K Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Tucson, AZ
Posts: 2,697
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Those are my sentimonies exactly! *in my best Homer Simpson voice*
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Quote:
"A big mouth don't make a big man." - John Wayne, The Cowboys GUNS KILL PEOPLE LIKE SPOONS MADE ROSIE O'DONNEL FAT!!! |
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#7 |
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XDTalk 1K Member
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Have I ever mentioned that our governement is busted, run by people who are morons with no clue, and should all be fired for imcompetence?
Do they have a suggestion box in Washington?
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This is a perilous time, and more than ever, the world needs a united and strong America. If, God forbid, we live to see Mr. Obama president, we will live through a socialist era that America has not seen before, and our country will be weakened in every way. - Jon Voight |
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#8 | |
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XDTalk 2K Member
![]() Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: NE Illinois
Posts: 2,119
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Quote:
seppuku Then hose down the stables and start over with new stock.
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There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance— that principle is contempt prior to investigation. - Herbert Spencer ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ "The inherent vice of Capitalism is the unequal distribution of blessings, the inherent vice of Socialism is the equal distribution of misery." - Sir Winston Churchill |
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#9 | |
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XDTalk 1K Member
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Quote:
I disagree. That would be too easy. They need to be forced to go home and find a real job and work for thier money. The only problem I can not get around is who to replace em with.
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This is a perilous time, and more than ever, the world needs a united and strong America. If, God forbid, we live to see Mr. Obama president, we will live through a socialist era that America has not seen before, and our country will be weakened in every way. - Jon Voight |
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#10 |
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XDTalk 5K Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Houston, TX, USA
Posts: 9,252
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Replace them?
Do we NEED them to begin with? That is the bigger question...is it not? I think this country runs best when these guys are doing nothing. Remember during the Clinton years, when the govt. actually shut down for a few weeks? Did ANY of you miss a darned thing? That alone ought to prove that 99% of what they're up there doing will NOT be missed. LOL - brickboy240
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The top 25% of wage earners in America pay 86% of all federal income taxes collected. (according to 2007 IRS website data) Es mejor morir a pie que vivir arrodillado Volvo...the Swedish Brick! |
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