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Articles
about the Iditarod
It is the most immoral, reprehensible "sporting event" in the USA. Thirty-eight
states and the District of Columbia have anti-cruelty laws that would
make the Iditarod illegal because of overworking an animal, according
to helpsleddogs.org, a Web site devoted to helping our defenseless friends.
Unfortunately, institutionalized animal abuse is as common in Alaska as
wandering moose. They are not alone. Commerce rules, not common sense. The Iditarod benefits no one but a drooling pack of unconscionable profiteers. From race organizers to those involved in tourism -- even the newspapers from Anchorage to Fairbanks who fawn over the Iditarod as they line their pockets with advertising revenue. For 1,151 miles, sled dogs will pull their glory-seeking, money-grubbing masters through the Alaska wilderness. Even venerable PBS got suckered into glorifying the race last year. You want to talk killing fields? In the last three years, nine dogs have perished during this mad marathon of canine misery. No one has any idea how many are destroyed in the weeks after the race because of debilitating injury that renders them useless as "athletes." Unlike humans, they have no choice. Countless more experience pain and suffering in a never-ending cycle of training that begins in "puppyhood" -- if, that is, they are permitted by their tormentors to live and are not culled. During a recent race, a musher was videotaped kicking and beating one of his dogs. This abuse is common and there's a reason why many sled dogs cower when approached, Classen says. "They've had the hell beaten out of them," he says. "You don't just whisper into their ears, 'OK, stand there until I tell you to run like the devil.' They understand one thing: a beating. These dogs are beaten into submission the same way elephants are trained for a circus. The mushers will deny it. And you know what? They are all lying." Five weeks ago, Classen contacted the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner to express his outrage. "A civilized person," he wrote, "is supposed to end cruelty, not add to it." He says the newspaper did not publish his note, which also included a letter from a man who worked six years in one of the foremost kennels in the mushing industry. He confirmed dog beatings and far worse. Like starving dogs to maintain their optimum racing weight. Skinning them to make mittens. Or dragging them to their death.
This weekend, Classen will sit next to his ailing 12-year-old golden retriever
and try to comfort her, even as others are in distress. "I'll read the
papers to see how many dogs died," he says. "I hope all the mushers break
their necks."
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