Also read: The 'Big Lick' is akin to dog fighting and cock fighting
"The “Big Lick” is a pain induced gait — it is a business built on the suffering and pain of horses."
Mr. Seay and his group, “Citizens Campaign Against Big Lick Animal Cruelty”
(CCBLAC) were instrumental in the major success of H.R.693 (the U.S. Senator
Joseph D. Tydings Memorial Prevent All Soring Tactics Act of 2019 or the
PAST Act), passing the U.S. House with a vote of 333-96.
It’s companion bill, S.1007 currently has 49 cosponsors with bipartisan
support just as the House bill did.
Achieving 51 would be a majority of the Senate but this may not be enough as
the bill has powerful enemies, including Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell
and sinister Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn.
So you can see why the bill requires as many cosponsors in the Senate as we
can possibly win. McConnell and Blackburn will be employing their full
arsenal of tricks to defeat S.1007 and keep the “Big Lick” alive.
Find your United States Senators.
See if they have cosponsored S.1007. If they have you are good right
now, but we’ll need you again later.
For the rest of us, please make a phone call to your U.S. Senators’ offices
who have not yet cosponsored S.1007. You can call them via the U.S. Capitol
switchboard at (202) 224-3121. Or you can contact their offices directly.
Look up their office numbers here.
Ask to speak to the Aide working on S.1007. Identify yourself as a
constituent. State the purpose of your call — that you wish the Senator to
cosponsor S.1007, the PAST Act. Give your reasons why. We like to write our
reasons down before we pick up the phone so we don’t leave anything out. Be
sure you have given the Aide your contact information before you hang up.
Back in June, Clant Seay, the champion of sored horses, wrote a special for the Columbia Daily Herald entitled “Walking Horse competition is not sport.”
We quote liberally below:
The “Big Lick” is animal cruelty.
Native Tennessean, MTSU Horse Science professor and equine veterinarian Dr.
John Haffner said, “The “Big Lick” is a pain induced gait — it is a business
built on the suffering and pain of horses. The fact is the big lick can only
be accomplished by ‘soring.’ When one soring technique becomes detectable,
another one is developed. The Big Lick is a learned response to pain, and if
horses have not been sored, they do not learn it.”
Legendary Tennessee sportswriter David Climer said: “For years, many of
those involved in the Tennessee Walking Horse industry have yearned for its
competitions to be taken seriously as a legitimate sport. Blood sport, yes.
Legitimate sport, no. Soring is still in common practice, and everybody
knows it. Soring is a means to an end — a high-hooved prance produced via
pain and abuse. An irritant is applied here, an abrasive chemical rubbed
there. The sadistic trainers even develop ways to keep the tortured horse
from reacting when the hoof is inspected.”
Previously Daily Herald Editor James Bennett referred to Tennessee Walking
Horse shows as a “sport,” blaming the problems of the “Big Lick” on a “few
greedy competitors.”
It’s not “a few bad apples; rather the entire barrel of apples is rotten”.
The “Big Lick” is no better than dog fighting and cock fighting, Seay
continued. All who practice or support it are guilty because animal cruelty
is absolutely necessary to create and maintain the “Big Lick” gait.
The Tennessee Walking Horse breed was hijacked about 50 years ago. It’s now
time to end the “Big Lick” forever and allow the Tennessee Walking Horse
breed to regain its destiny.
Thank you for everything you do for animals!
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