There are essentially three types of people in horse
racing. There are the crooks who dangerously drug or otherwise abuse their
horses, or who countenance such conduct from their agents, and who then dare
the industry to come catch them. Then there are the dupes who labor under the
fantasy that the sport is broadly fair and honest. And there are those masses
in the middle—neither naive nor cheaters but rather honorable souls—who know
the industry is more crooked than it ought to be but who still don't do all
they can to fix the problem.
The first category, the cheaters, are a small, feral
minority still large enough to stain the integrity of the sport for everyone
else. The second category, the innocents, also a small group, are more or less hopeless—if
they haven't figured out by now they are being wronged they likely never will.
So it is from the third category of horsemen and horsewomen, the far-too-silent
majority, the good people who see wrong but won't give their all to right it,
where serious reform must come if the sport is to survive and thrive.
And that's why exposés about the abuse of racehorses, like
the one posted last week by Joe Drape in The New York Times, are so important.
They don't aim to offer salvation to the unholy or to rouse the ignorant from
their slumber. They speak directly instead to the many good and honest people
in horse racing whose consciences are still in play. And they say to those
respectable people, in essence, "You are fooling only yourself if you think
the whole world isn't aware of and repulsed by what nasty business you allow to
go on inside your sport."
To read more on this story, click here: The Ugly TruthAbout Horse Racing

