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Tuesday, June 18, 2013
"a total misunderstanding of the rules" says the Danish Equestrian Federation
Oh
dear- it was all a "total misunderstanding" - now, everyone BUT the
professional media can "photograph until you drop" at the upcoming Ecco
FEI European Championships. Although this press release by the Danish
Equestrian Federation (thanks to Epona TV for translating) has already
disappeared from their site. Make no mistake, though, Ecco AND the
Danish Eq. Fed. still support riding horses with heads cranked to their
chests. It's just that certain professional media aren't allowed to
photo/video them doing it. Go forth spectators and take photographs,
film the riders, film the horses - and enjoy posting the evidence
anywhere you like - the Fair Use law says you can do so.
The irony of their statement - a total misunderstanding of the rules - is killing me.
Personally, I think they have " a misunderstanding " on how to ride and treat horses fairly and not abusively. They surely know it's wrong or they wouldn't try to hide from the cameras in the first place.
Hence my point about the irony killing me. The FEI's own rules absolutely indicate that what is being done to these horses in warm-up and the tests themselves is wrong. If they administered their own rules, all would be fine. But they don't. They make up reasons why it's okay for these riders to do these things - re-defining terms, separating what happens in warm-up from the actual competition rides, etc. They in fact exhibit, in every competition, a "total misunderstanding" of their own rules.
That it is a willful misunderstanding seems clear.
A "total misunderstanding"? And no photo/video allowed? That alone should be incentive to keep the heat on their treatment of horses. Riding horses in "straight jackets" is not style, it is cruelty.
Thanks so much for taking the time to comment - I love reading them and respond as often as I can. I also love comments that add to the original post, so feel free to share your own experiences, insights, and thoughts.
The fact that they backed away from this rules change is great evidence that pressure and exposure make a difference!
ReplyDeletePersonally, I think they have " a misunderstanding " on how to ride and treat horses fairly and not abusively. They surely know it's wrong or they wouldn't try to hide from the cameras in the first place.
ReplyDeleteHence my point about the irony killing me. The FEI's own rules absolutely indicate that what is being done to these horses in warm-up and the tests themselves is wrong. If they administered their own rules, all would be fine. But they don't. They make up reasons why it's okay for these riders to do these things - re-defining terms, separating what happens in warm-up from the actual competition rides, etc. They in fact exhibit, in every competition, a "total misunderstanding" of their own rules.
ReplyDeleteThat it is a willful misunderstanding seems clear.
A "total misunderstanding"? And no photo/video allowed? That alone should be incentive to keep the heat on their treatment of horses. Riding horses in "straight jackets" is not style, it is cruelty.
ReplyDelete