Horse News

Equine Writer Blasts Chauvinistic Wild Horse Blurb

OpEd by Nell Walton ~ Editor/Founder of the AllHorses Post

Article in Range Magazine Infuriates Wild Horse Advocates

Dear. Mr. Findley:

I spent some time reading your “Special Report MUSTANG Legends and myths. Faith, hope and charity.

And, I must say that I was completely and utterly dumbfounded at the depth of misguided opinion put forth in this so called “report.” This is no report. This is a poorly drawn editorial and to call it anything else is an insult to any thinking person’s intelligence.

I don’t plan on getting into the multiple mistakes as far as the details in regards to management (or mismanagement) of wild horses and burros. I just want to focus on your chauvinism, ignorance, arrogance and misogyny.

When I read this article, I was shocked at the publication date. I might have considered the attitudes towards women more in keeping with an article written in 1911, rather than 2011.

First offense occurs in the first paragraph with Marilyn Monroe’s scene in The Misfits – which you apparently see as a fitting example of how all women feel about the wild horse issue. Clearly you have admiration for Ms. Monroe – she knew her PLACE at least; poor broken Marilyn, whose divorce from Arthur Miller – the loss of her MAN – drove her to suicide. There were many other contributing factors that led to her untimely and tragic death, but it was extremely telling that you chose to bring up this particular one.

I guess without her man, a woman just can’t go on.

Wild Horse Annie, also known as Velma Johnson – instrumental in the passage of the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971. Apparently she was marginally acceptable, since she was a rancher from Nevada and had a sex-appropriate secretarial job. You even admit to a grudging admiration for her. But, you can’t seem to resist giving another misogynistic dig:

“Annie was passionate about ending the slaughter of horses, and sometimes almost as emotional as the choir of tearful women who followed her, but she was also a daughter of the West, both to a ranching family whose Double Lazy Heart Ranch was now her and Charlie’s home. She understood horses in a practical way, and held no illusions.”

I hate to break this to you, but there are plenty of MEN who are shedding tears over horse slaughter and the wild horse and burro issue, it’s not just the ‘choir of tearful women;’ this theme that you insist on spouting ad nauseum throughout the op-ed.

You have problems with Ginger Kathrens and her legendary Cloud series. A woman who doesn’t know her place. How dare she pick up a camera and air a series on Nature! How dare she bring the issues concerning the wild horses into the public eye!

Then there is your relentless attack on Madeleine Pickens. A good and decent woman who has committed the apparently unpardonable sins of being A) female, B) wealthy, C) attractive, D) born in Lebanon, E) smart and F) committed to her ideals. Yet another woman who doesn’t know her place. If you want to criticize Ms. Pickens’ plans for an eco-sanctuary fine, do your research and critique the plan. But, you spent more than TWO PAGES trashing Ms. Pickens like Hedda Hopper or Perez Hilton after being jilted by a celebrity they were chasing for an interview. There was nothing of VALUE in this tirade which imparts any information on her PLANS as far as the wild horse eco-sanctuary goes. Was that the best you could do? Do you lack the intellectual capacity or experience to evaluate the merit of the eco-sanctuary plans as a whole?

Your sycophantic fawning over Dave Cattoor is made even worse by this statement:

“His wife Sue had always attended to publicity matters with their own website and a willing response to questions. But now, they had to travel to Abbey’s selected HMAs with bleacher-full crowds rooting for the mustangs.”

Pity that Ms. Cattoor has to leave the kitchen to attend to business other than the more proper behind the scenes duties of publicity, website maintenance and (I am assuming) bookkeeping, while Mr. Cattoor can continue to enjoy the “thrill of the chase.”

Mr. Findley, much better use could have been made of this article if you had spent time addressing the real issue behind the wild horse and burro problems, as well as the struggles of the small family ranchers in the West. You were kind of close – it DOES start with W and it DOES have five letters.

The problem is not WOMEN – it is WATER.

I guess it is not of interest to you that Barrick Gold’s Cortez Hills Mine is pumping out 4100 gallons of water A MINUTE, and this is probably going to increase after a court-ordered injunction is lifted on February 13 – that’s next week by the way. The water is not reclaimable according to experts. Even someone with a limited ability for critical thinking should be able to figure out that this is going to have a huge impact on the water table AND WELLS, including those dug and maintained by the family ranchers. And, watering holes for the wild horses.

The wild horses are just the canary in the coal mine as far as what is happening in the West, and, editorials such as yours do nothing but continue to drive a wedge between the ranchers and the wild horse and burro preservationists. Two groups who both have “dogs in the fight.” Two groups that should be working together to address the real issue.

At the end of the op-ed there is this bizarre and nonsensical ‘aside’……

Tim Findley has nothing against wild horses, rich ladies or naive naturalists. He even feels an unusual sense of empathy in this case for the BLM. “In a way,” he says, “they sort of deserve each other.” But when he took this assignment last summer, he underestimated the passion of the RANGE boss and discovered he was a long way from San Francisco.

It is comforting to know that you can draw on your vast experience from the ranchlands of San Francisco. I was surprised. I thought your address would be 5801 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles.

A resident of La Brea Tar Pits of Hancock Park would be more in keeping with the attitudes in this OP-ED.

Sincerely,

Nell Walton

32 replies »

  1. If they had an icon of someone bowing that I could insert here I would. Instead I will tell you, Nell we bow to you. An excellent rebuttal to thinking that aligns itself more to ancient, out-dated half logic. That ANY sort of magazine would allow such a blatant slur of the feminine culture and abilities is beyond belief. I think there are several orgs outside of the horse issue that I am going to send this to. I am sure there will be more interesting comments and education coming into the life of Findley. If he has any friends I might advise them not to be standing too close when the lightening of public indignation swells up and b*****slaps him upside his pointed little head.

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  2. Last year Range had the best bio I ever read on Madeleine Pickens. It seemed as if they wanted their readers to know all they could about the opposition. The Owner Editor has as much derisive drivel to say about the wild ones also. She enjoys acting like a cowgirl who just can’t stand the likes of people who she thinks are so different from her. Thank goodness we are not the least bit like her. What gets me sometimes are the people who oppose us simply because they think we are a bunch of Eastern city girls. Wow… mar

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    • One thing is for sure, Mar, I ain’t no Eastern Big City Girl…but I have some very fine friends who are.

      They all need to realize that sterotypes don’t work when an issue speaks to clean, honest and decent people. We run the gambit on ethnicity, economics and demographics. We are simply folks who give a damn and that really scares the horse eaters. It’s hard for them to relate or understand someone with a soul.

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      • Yep, and by the number of Connecticut Yankees and New Englanders I can count there are some good Eastern ladies (and gents) in this fight. I am proud to be one. It really makes no difference, of course, as it is our hearts and minds that are in the right place. We are not so much Naive Naturalists as they are Corrupt Destructionalists. mar

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      • I count myself as one of those friends R.T. Fitch! I must thank you and Nell Walton for saying everything so well, even making me laugh on such a serious subject. I am not a cowgirl and never will be, but I still care about the wild Mustangs, stay informed, educate myself, write letters, call politicians and I am not going away or shutting up!

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  3. Outstanding Nell, simply outstanding! My hunch is that even if “Dear Mr. Findley” reads your well written piece it will go right over his pointed little head as his narrow mind will be incapable of comprehending your words. I am one of those men you allude to that feels passionately about the preservation of our wild herds in their natural environment. When I read and see the visual evidence of what the BLM is doing to them through the Cattoors and Holmes along with their own uncaring and ignorant attitudes, the tears that come are as much from angry frustration as from empathy and anguish for the physical and mental torture they are inflicting on the horses. I know these wild ones and their unique, historic life way so I view what is being done to them now as unforgiveable. Pehaps that is not a proper attitude since we are supposed to be charitable but I can find no mercy in my old, cold heart for any of them.

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    • I too feel the same way about the wild ones and how this government is treating them. Why is it that we are so helpless to stop this? There are so many of us but there are not enough of us. I know that many in the cities don’t really care about the wild horses but they should care about how this government is treating this great symbol of our American heritage. How are they getting away with ignoring our outrage? Where are all the wild horse heroes who have come out in the past? Why are they not outraged and tell their friends? Sorry but my sadness for the wild ones is tearing at my heart! I know this is like singing to the choir but I feel so helpless!

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  4. Love this piece. I think the first quote might actually have been in the book about Wild Horse Annie. Don’t know if he cited it or not. I bought the issue of Range that had the cover with two mustangs on the cover and a supposed debate about whether it was good or bad to have them—-leading up to Sue Wallis and her horse slaughter bill.

    What these folks can not stand about Madeleine Pickens is that she has money, beauty, intelligence, sophistication, and she is married to a wealthy man who respects her passion and her right to steer her own ship. All of these qualities give her Power, and the people who front this publication are enraged because they feel she had undue influence in seeing that slaughter essentially ended in 2007 in this country. Many of the people who buy Range or share the philosophy of at the owners believe that somehow this country owes them the right to make a living from animal agriculture whether there is a market for their products or not. There seems to be little leadership to help these people realize that there are certain products for which there is no market for. Unlike other industries that either change with the market or go out of business, these ranchers seem to think we should buy and consume their products whether we want them or not. On the other hand, we expect them to adapt. A lot of textile workers, furniture makers, tobacco farmers, auto makers, and others may have loved their way of life as much as ranchers do, but when the markets changed, many of these workers had to give up the life they knew and find something else. There is a sense that animal agriculture producers are somehow entitled to produce animals. Well, ok. But don’t expect American consumers to purchase products they don’t want.

    If ranchers want to be smart about this, they should align themselves with wild horse advocates and try to work out some way to keep wild horses in their HMA’s and quit talking about horse slaughter. Talking about horse slaughter makes us all think about slaughter in general, and makes steak less appetizing.

    Be innovative. Find a niche and fill it. If you can’t make a living doing what you love, then do it as a hobby and find something else to make a living.

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  5. I was looking at Range Magazine’s facebook page and I see that they were pushing the Summit of the Horse pretty hard. I also found a brief note saying that Tim Findley died on 12/24, but I can’t find mention of that anywhere on Facebook nor in Range Magazine. If that is the case, my condolences to his family, but my letter to him still stands.

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    • Nell, all that you said is correct so continue to stand by it. Perhaps now that he has left this dimension he is realizing many things he did not while he was here.

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  6. Hey I am a City Girl, I have always loved and respected Horses of any Kind, The Mustangs are particularly special in my Heart and in my Mind, as long as i can remember, I would always go to see them in Nevada and North Carolina they have always been the Most Beautiful sight my Eyes have ever seen on their Land….. They always were a very special breed their difference to me is the fact that they RING OUT FREEDOM with every move of their bodies, they show to me what Freedom is all about, In their presence, they show their Strength and Stamina and their complete innocence they show that they have a job to do that they never falter from that is to guard their families, and protect the Land……….They belong to the Land like the very ground they stand on……….. There is to me is nothing more Spectacular then sight and sound of a herd of Wild Mustangs on the move, on Land That Americas people set up for them and them only ………………We can never allow a greedy , blood thirsty pack of Evil Idiots to take their right to be there………. And that comes from a City Girl……………………

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      • Thank You Mar, There are many of us City Girls who Absolutely Adore the Wild Mustangs, we are strong in our conviction and our Allegiance to them to them ,and will fight for their Lives and their Freedom because it was meant to be that way !!!! That is a fact very clear and unquestionable………………………. I have no regrets where they are concerned…………………………………for what I do and will continue to do for them………………to survive this Horror Show From the BLM…………………and all who would harm them, and take their Freedom from them………..

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  7. I live in Ohio, I am a woman, I don’t cook, my Persian husband of 24 years does all the cooking; and I don’t own a horse, guess that means I am not entitled to an opinion, how absurd Mr. Findley! I do have two college degrees, one even in agriculture from Ohio State, and the ability to think and reason, so yes I have a strong and valid opinion. Our American icon and my high school mascot, the wild Mustang deserve to be saved and roam free!

    Another woman who also has a strong and valid opinion, Madeleine Pickens, has a well-thought out plan, a plan that will save them from the total disgrace of the current mismanagement of the BLM, now just let her, I know she is a woman with brains, so it is hard, work her plan!

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  8. Hey Arlene, sorry about your case – being a city girl I mean :-). These words from your heart capture the essence of these special life forms exactly and I think of them the same way. They are an essential part of our history and our present. The lack of respect for the horses and for us that is being exhibited daily by our government and others cannot be excused on any level. The lies and purposeful misinformation spewed forth by the BLM and their partners in crime to “justify” their actions is unpardonable. It seems they are accomplishing what they set out to do but their immoral and illegal treatment of these wild spirits is only compounded by their empty pronouncements of being concerned for the welfare and health of the horses. May each of their souls ultimately burn in retribution for what they are doing.

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    • Hi there, Wambli Okiye, Thank You !!!! Yes an ole City girl over here, with the Open Range and its Magnificent Wild Mustangs in her Soul, In all of us here, the thought of being one of them , and to be able to be just plain ole Free to run with the wind in our faces and the Sun on our backs, oh how I envy them, their Proud ness just to be, cannot be better displayed then by a Stallion who protects what he loves, his herd, his nobleness sets my soul on fire………………… Their Allegiance to us is amazing, a thing of wonder…… If for this and this only, he essential for all of us………….. He is the Future…..he is the Past , He is now , He is Forever…………….He is the Teacher, with more to give then then he is credited with.. The lessons he teaches need no words……………………….. Those who cannot see the beauty and the worth of The Wild Mustangs, I feel sorry for them, because they are BLIND………………Mind , Body and Soul……………..

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      • Beautifully said Mitakola! It is clear that you are one who sees from your inner self, your heart, and I am struck by your ability to express your thoughts and feelings so openly. Though as Lyn said above many of us here feel as though we are ‘singing to the choir’ your thoughts and feeling put into words are a gift to us all. Thank you!!

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  9. WE CAN LISTEN TO NELL ON WEDNESDAY:

    Nell Walton joins us this Wednesday evening to discuss her novel titled “The Bone Trail.”
    Nell Walton is an avid horsewoman and also owns two wild horses, both of which came from a herd near Elko, NV. She is also the founder and managing editor of the online equestrian news magazine, The AllHorses Post. She has degrees in journalism and biology from the University of Arkansas, spent many years as a professional journalist and worked as an intern for former President Bill Clinton when he was governor of Arkansas. She lives in East Tennessee on a small horse farm with her husband, four horses, one donkey, two cats and two dogs. The Bone Trail is her first novel.
    AllHorses Post
    6:00 pm PST
    8:00 pm CST
    9:00 pm EST
    Call-in Number: (917) 388-4520
    URL: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/marti-oakley

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  10. Nell, you’re “right on the money” to point out how many thousands of gallons of water Barrick Gold’s Cortez mine uses per minute! And that’s just ONE MINE. Great article!

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  11. I am an American taxpayer. I want truth and transparency –that’s what Pres. Obama said we would get if he was elected. I want my tax dollars to be used the “American way” –for constructive projects and a strong future. I want the heritage and history of America preserved –so that there are concrete examples of what we stand for– monuments and prairies, rivers and wild horses. I want my voice heard and respected– not just used to get someone elected. I do not want my government to hurt me by denying me my rights or destroying my American symbols. If there are 10 of us working on this issue–we are not wrong. Emotion is not wrong. Caring is not wrong. And a mare on a mission is an awesome force.

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