THE SHINE, THE SPIN & THE TRUTH
The Australian horse racing industry is desperately committed to polishing its image — and nobody illustrates that better than trainer Ben Currie, whose name has appeared recently again in upbeat feature stories promoting his “ambitious return” to stables on the Sunshine Coast.
For example, at first glance, this article reads like a comeback story: a determined young trainer, optimistic plans, a family operation rebuilding their brand.
But at its core, the story reveals something far more troubling:
The racing industry will celebrate almost anyone — no matter how serious their history — as long as it helps protect the illusion that horse racing is ethical, controlled, and accountable.
AND THAT ILLUSION MATTERS MORE THAN THE TRUTH…
Let’s talk about why this is BEYOND outrageous…
Ben Currie is not merely someone who “made mistakes” or served a minor penalty.
His record includes years of high-profile allegations and sanctions involving:
PROHIBITED SUBSTANCES ADMINISTERED TO MULTIPLE HORSES
TEXT MESSAGES REFERRING TO THE USE OF A JIGGER (ELECTRIC SHOCK) ON HORSES
A HORSE TESTING POSITIVE FOR COCAINE
CRIMINAL FRAUD CHARGES OVER ALLEGED PRIZE-MONEY DOPING SCHEMES
MULTIPLE RACING SUSPENSIONS
REPEATED LICENCE REFUSALS EVEN AFTER PENALTIES CONCLUDED
Ben Currie does not currently hold a racing licence and has been denied attempts to regain one.
Yet the racing media — heavily aligned with the industry — has chosen to highlight him in glowing tone, focusing on “exciting plans” and “big opportunities,” encouraging the public to cheer for a comeback story when the reality is far more disturbing.
WHY GLORIFICATION MATTERS
When a sport uncritically spotlights someone whose regulatory history includes allegations of electric shocks, cocaine-positive horses, prohibited substances and fraud investigations, it sends a message loud and clear:
Animal welfare isn’t the priority — image management is.
Consequences are temporary — reputational restoration is permanent.
The industry protects its own — not the horses.
And that’s exactly how racing continues to operate.
A PR-polished world, where every scandal is rebranded as a sun-drenched comeback story, where accountability is temporary, and where people with deeply concerning records are never truly removed from the system — just re-introduced with a new coat of paint.
Call it spin.
Call it marketing.
Call it illusion.
Whatever it is, it’s not honesty.
WHEN THE BEST EXAMPLE IS THE WORSE EXAMPLE
Instead of using Ben Currie as a cautionary tale — as evidence for why animal protection, testing standards, and independent oversight must be strengthened — the industry turns him into a feel-good headline about resilience and growth.
That is not oversight.
That is not transparency.
That is not reform.
It is image protection masquerading as progress.
It is PR gloss splashed over cruelty, doping and corruption.
AND THE HORSES?
THIS IS WHY RACING CAN’T BE TRUSTED
If the racing world can elevate someone with this record while still refusing to grant him a licence, then the message is simple:
Ethical standards are optional.
Public relations outweigh animal welfare.
Accountability ends the moment a PR headline begins.
Until transparency is real — not scripted — until animal safety comes before gambling revenue, until someone like Currie is not celebrated but removed permanently, the racing industry does not deserve public trust.
And no amount of polish can change that.
They can spin it.
They can shine it.
They can wrap it in warm PR language.
But the truth remains:
A sport that glorifies the disgraced cannot call itself ethical.
And that’s why Meet Our Horse Meat will never stop pulling the shine off the rot beneath.
IF YOU CARE ABOUT HORSES – SPEAK UP
Help us raise awareness.
Boycott horse racing – including saying #nuptothecup.
Support our sanctuaries – they are filled with off the track horses.
What do YOU think?
Join the conversation on our Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/@NoAussieHorseSlaughter
#MOHM THREATENED?
We’ve been threatened by those in the horse racing industry and those who benefit from horse slaughter more times than we can count.
But we are not going away.
We are going to persist until horse slaughter no longer exists for any purpose within Australia -- and until the horse racing industry makes drastic changes.
We are going to continue our hands-on work to offer lifelong sanctuary to as many horses as possible. We generally have 20 at just one of our locations - at any given time.
We have the acreage to take on more horses as financial support allows.
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