I'm Dun
Well-Known Member
Surely the horse should be renamed Alive and Whipping
The difference is that CDJ was never convicted of a crime, or even taken to court over it. While it breached the FEI guidelines it didn't meet the threshold for criminal charges. It is a lot easier to come back from that, than an actual criminal charge and a lot of people will see it differently.At least they give some details. It must be such a strange read for a layperson, like she was caught whipping a horse and everyone delighted to have her back.
Can you imagine if it was that Olympic gymnastics coach who was outed as a sexual abuser? The Dutch volleyball rapist was booed at least, but hey the Guardian did do an article where he got to say how sorry he wasMaybe it's not that odd after all
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I don’t think most people pay attention to who owns what, myself included
I'm not saying people should treat her the same as a child rapist. The problem I have is that people aren't treating her like a horse abuser, which she is.The difference is that CDJ was never convicted of a crime, or even taken to court over it. While it breached the FEI guidelines it didn't meet the threshold for criminal charges. It is a lot easier to come back from that, than an actual criminal charge and a lot of people will see it differently.
Nobody can change that but i strongly believe that if you do something bad, it catches up with you at some point.
I'm not saying people should treat her the same as a child rapist. The problem I have is that people aren't treating her like a horse abuser, which she is.
Except the video of the whipping will be one of the last nails in the coffin of equestrianism at the Olympics.My view is that she is back for good and will probably be select to the next Olympics.
Nobody can change that but i strongly believe that if you do something bad, it catches up with you at some point.
I'ts her own conscience after all, she has to live with it.
I wish her nothing bad at all but in life, sometimes, things come back at you.
Except the video of the whipping will be one of the last nails in the coffin of equestrianism at the Olympics.
Why is that a problem. Most of the riders are professional so not ideally what the olympics are supposed to be about..
Because the general public were invested in her and feel let down and betrayed. And if she is doing that, what are the others doing is the obvious go to
1988 was quite a long time ago now. Can't see it rolling back to amateur requirements any time soon.Why is that a problem. Most of the riders are professional so not ideally what the olympics are supposed to be about..
Except the video of the whipping will be one of the last nails in the coffin of equestrianism at the Olympics.
There is never going to be an excuse for the sustained abuse she dished out that day. From what we can tell, she was trying to make the horse perform a movement, not trying to stop it putting its rider in danger, or any other understandable reason (even if you aren't a bunny huggerWe all get up next day and say I wished i had not done that but when dealing with a difficult horse you make mistakes and you just have to move on. people who deal with horses on a day to day have to be firm and make decisions that the bunny huggers do not like or getting killed. I was not there so I have no idear if this was a horse or rider problem or a pushy parent.
But she didn't say it the next day, she only said sorry when the video came out.We all get up next day and say I wished i had not done that but when dealing with a difficult horse you make mistakes and you just have to move on. people who deal with horses on a day to day have to be firm and make decisions that the bunny huggers do not like or getting killed. I was not there so I have no idear if this was a horse or rider problem or a pushy parent.
A) there's no evidence that this was a difficult horse or that safety was an issue here (although I doubt walloping an athletic horse being ridden by a teenager would pass any risk assessment)We all get up next day and say I wished i had not done that but when dealing with a difficult horse you make mistakes and you just have to move on. people who deal with horses on a day to day have to be firm and make decisions that the bunny huggers do not like or getting killed. I was not there so I have no idear if this was a horse or rider problem or a pushy parent.
Good point. Hugging bunnies may also be unethical. Perhaps "species appropriate and consent-led bunny interacter"Rabbits are prey animals. Do they like hugs?
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1.1K views · 17 comments | Deux courtes vidéos envoyées par une personne qui souhaite rester anonyme. On voit Ben Maher sur Dallas Vegas Batilly dans le paddock de détente du CSI5*, 1m60, le dimanche 2 novembre 2025 à Equitalyon. Ils finiront 21ième
Deux courtes vidéos envoyées par une personne qui souhaite rester anonyme. On voit Ben Maher sur Dallas Vegas Batilly dans le paddock de détente du CSI5*, 1m60, le dimanche 2 novembre 2025 à...www.facebook.com
Ben Maher: anyone care to give this lameness a score?![]()
No one wants to be punished full stop. The point is whether the punishments we're seeing are even vaguely appropriate given the multi-faceted awfulness of what several riders recently have been caught doing. If you like the sport they have dragged it into the headlines for all the 'wrong" reasons. If you like horses you'd prefer such people never went near one again. If you like children you'd prefer them not to suffer moral injury by either being severely disillusioned by their role models or being inured to deeply unethical behaviour such that they emulate it later.I do think that we should all remember that every one if us does things that we regret later and we all from time to time make poor judgements.Would we want to be punished for life for it?
I do think that we should all remember that every one if us does things that we regret later and we all from time to time make poor judgements.Would we want to be punished for life for it?
We all are already. That's just how society works. We are judged by our actions, sometimes our opinions, and nobody is owed forgiveness. Forgiveness is given.I do think that we should all remember that every one if us does things that we regret later and we all from time to time make poor judgements.Would we want to be punished for life for it?
We all get up next day and say I wished i had not done that but when dealing with a difficult horse you make mistakes and you just have to move on. people who deal with horses on a day to day have to be firm and make decisions that the bunny huggers do not like or getting killed. I was not there so I have no idear if this was a horse or rider problem or a pushy parent.