By sister initiate
Jeanne Minier, Georgia, USA (Originally in English)
In the November 5, 2002 election
in the United States, millions of voters in five states supported initiatives
for the protection of animals.
In Arizona, voters overwhelmingly
said "No" to expanding gambling at greyhound dog race tracks,
where thousands of animals are mistreated and killed each year.
Also, pigs won a victory in Florida:
the passing of Amendment 10, the first measure ever adopted in the United
States that outlaws the confinement of animals on factory farms. This
Amendment bans the caging of pregnant pigs in gestation crates, which
are so small that the animals cannot turn around in them.
In Georgia, voters agreed to create
an automobile license plate that will generate revenue to pay for neutering
programs to prevent the birth and euthanasia of tens of thousands of
unwanted cats and dogs. Twenty states now offer such plates to help
resolve the problem of animal overpopulation and the suffering it causes.
Oklahoma became the 48th state
to ban cockfighting, and establish stiff felony penalties for cockfighting
violations. This state also defeated an anti-animal proposal that would
have required nearly twice the number of signatures to qualify an animal
protection measure to be put on a ballot for voting.
And finally, a request for Sunday
hunting on the ballot in six counties in West Virginia was defeated.
Hopefully, these victories are
just the beginning of more compassionate reforms for animals in the
future.