synthetikxangel t1_j4o3qiy wrote
Reply to comment by Weird_Currency_412 in Philadelphia’s last carriage company cleared out its stables, but are its tours returning? by flamehead2k1
76 staff is the best of the best. They love these horses and would do anything for them. These horses are taken care off better then most pets. Just take 15 minutes to speak to someone who spends day in and out with these beautiful souls and you would understand
Angsty_Potatos t1_j4o6opn wrote
Working carriage horses is one thing. But anyone who knows a lick about horses knows that much asphalt walking is awful on them. Not to mention how desperately hot it gets on the streets in summer. Plus asking these horses to share the road with Philly drivers. It's terrible.
[deleted] t1_j4q411i wrote
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Lawlington t1_j4qk4n4 wrote
Who is “we”? Just because there’s a movie about them doesn’t mean the vast majority of Philadelphians support them taking subpar care of animals
[deleted] t1_j4qks8v wrote
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Lawlington t1_j4ql3n5 wrote
Depends on how it’s framed and who is in charge of directing it. There’s a market for garbage movies and documentaries, shit Netflix is stacking bills glorifying murderers, rapists and pedos in their shows.
brk1 t1_j4rda8p wrote
woke
Weird_Currency_412 t1_j4o4jfk wrote
I don't believe they are the only company that organize these functions. One company doesn't represent all. The same info you read about the one responsible company, I read and spoke to reasonable activist who argued something else.
synthetikxangel t1_j4o6fvs wrote
76 is actually the last carriage company in Philadelphia. And I didn't just read the info, I had the pleasure of being a driver there for three years (my horses have since retired to a farm of a former driver in Massachusetts).
The horses at 76 are loved. They save lives. I went through a very rough time right before I started there and seeing those gentle giants every day was the best therapy. They amount of happiness they bring is unsurmountable.
And before you say they are 'forced' to work....have you ever tried to make an 1800lb+ animal do something it didn't want to? Cause let me tell you, that's not reality.
ShartbusShorty t1_j4pbt4u wrote
If P.T. Barnum were alive, I’m sure he could convince you that man can and will force large animals into work, regardless of its desire to do the job.
synthetikxangel t1_j4ppt7t wrote
PT Barnum was a monster who exploited people as well as animals, so that’s a pretty trash example.
ShartbusShorty t1_j4sr4an wrote
sounds exactly like what we’re talking about here, homie.
synthetikxangel t1_j4stfsp wrote
Except for none of the horses or people are exploited. There doing a job and recording a pay. PT Barnum basically treated his “sideshows” as slaves
So not the same
Weird_Currency_412 t1_j4oahek wrote
Let's say you are right in your evaluation (mind you there are non-biased animal activist who are reasonable argue differently) why isn't this still a viable business model? Why aren't small business owners still advocating this service.
Let's use logic here (not saying you aren't). Yes, politicians can do more harm than good but they wouldn't push policies that causes people to lose jobs.
Also, you can coerce a 1800 lbs. animal to do something which was one of the video shown to me which changed my mind about the practice.
[deleted] t1_j4o6r46 wrote
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