Given that American Wild Horse Conservancy has a permit (#2700562), it must own the cattle.
The managing member of the LLC is American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign, according to the Nevada Business Portal, also known as the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses. Search for entity number E5230582020-2 or business ID NV20201732447.
So while CAAWH tells you it’s protecting wild horses, it’s running cattle in their lawful home while its partner organizations drive the horse numbers down to protect them.
The agency issued its final decision today, revoking the permits granted in 2022.
Only production‑oriented livestock operations qualify for grazing permits, according to the news release, and the agency lacks the statutory authority to allow bison on federal grazing allotments for conservation and ecological restoration.
The about-face, which may be rooted in politics, appeases ranchers in Montana and sends a strong signal to those who would establish conservancies on public lands by purchasing or leasing base properties and flipping the preference to wild horses.
Western Horse Watchers opposes the decision and urges American Prairie to explore all options for reinstatement of the permits.
The eugenicists at the Virginia Range and Pine Nut Mountains just got a shot in the arm with access to the new vehicle, courtesy of the Wild Horse Preservation League.
The goal is to minimize or even eradicate the need for future roundups according to a guest column in The Comstock Chronicle.
Of course, that can only be achieved by driving the birth rate to zero, shrinking the breeding population to zero and kissing genetic diversity goodbye.
Eradication of the Pine Nut horses benefits ranchers in the Buckeye Allotment, which includes the Campaign Against America’s Wild Horses, a leader in mass sterilization.
You heard that right. The advocates are getting rid of wild horses so they can run cattle on public lands identified for wild horses.