Dtiy The Odd Truth, March 19, 2003
Updated at 6:54 p.m. ETALBUQUERQUE, N.M. A federal judge on Friday cleared the way for horse slaughterhouses to resume operating in the U.S. as early as next week. U.S. District Judge Christina Armijo in Albuquerque threw out a lawsuit by The Humane Society of the United States and other animal protection groups that alleged the Department of Agriculture failed to conduct proper environmental studies when it issued permits to Valley Meat Co. in Roswell, N.M., and an Iowa company to slaughter horses for human consumption. The decision ends, for now, a two-year battle by Valley Meat to open its slaughterhouse. N.M. worker films himself fatally shooting a horsePlant owner Rick De Los Santos and his attorney, Blair Dunn, admi
stanley us tted they were surprised when the ruling came down, hours after a temporary restraining order that barred the companies from opening in August had expired. If I were a betting man, I probably would have lost a lot of money on this, Dunn said. I thought the court was headed in a different direction on this since she had issued the TRO. ... I am very, very happy to be wrong. The Humane Society vowed to appeal and said it would work with states to block the plants from ope
stanley cup ning. New Mexico Attorney General Gary King and Gov. Susana Martinez both have opposed horse slaughter. King said Friday he was disappointed in the ruling. But De
stanley polska Los Santos was making plans to get to work, two years after converting his struggling cattle slaughte Bnez 13 Highlights From One of the Biggest Furniture Fairs in the Country
Bad guys can ;t just close their window shades to hide
stanley mug from the law anymore. A European research group has developed a high-tech way to detect bomb makers and illegal drug labs鈥攂y sniffing what they flush down the toilet. The Emphasis project, led by an analytical chemist with Sweden Defense Research Agency and presented at
stanley cup becher last month International Symposium on the Analysis and Detection of Explosives, puts a series of four-inch-long sensors in the stream of a city sewage infrastructure. Bomb or drug ingredients dumped down the drain trigger a voltage change in the sensors, indicating that something other than the normal ones-and-twos is flowing into the labyrinth of pipes below the city. Similar sensors sniffing above-ground for telltale vapors help pinpoint exactly where production is going on. So far, the stalwart and
stanley mugs probably very stinky sensors have proven successful in poopy water lab testing. New Scientist reports they will be tested in real sewers next year鈥攁nd we ;re grateful, because presumably no one will ever complain about technology stealing this job. [New Scientist]
https://gizmodo/17-jobs-that-robots-were-supposed-to-steal-by-now-1442953958 Image: Shutterstock / chalabala