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What happens to the Presidential pardoned Thanksgiving Turkey?
turkey earning his pardon
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The turkey pardoning is a tradition that started with President Truman, and
every president since has followed his lead. What happens to the turkeys?
"By virtue of the presidential pardon," Bush told the cameras and children
who assembled on the White House lawn, "Stars will live out his days there
at Kidwell Farm in Virginia."
And Stars seemed pretty happy with Bush's decision in front of the cameras
this week.
The thought that Stars will be cared for at a farm and petting zoo makes
everybody feel good. But what exactly does a pardon mean for the turkey?
The day I visited Kidwell Farm (it was a long flight from Rome!), the children didn't get to see the
presidential birds. I couldn't find them either. I couldn't find the Bush
birds or the Clinton turkeys or Reagan's or any of the pardoned birds.
Farmer Marlo Acock took me to the turkey pen, but it was empty.
Why?
Because the turkeys don't last long.
"We usually just find 'em and they're, they're dead," Acock told me.
Most of the turkeys last only months. One died in one day.
It seems these presidential birds, bred to be eaten, are just too fat to
live much longer.
Acock said, "Their flesh has grown so fast and their heart and their bones
and their other organs can't catch up."
Wild turkeys are much thinner. They can fly. But the presidential birds
can't. Two birds pardoned by President Clinton could barely walk. One
presidential turkey died in one day. The whole idea that the president is
"saving" a for retirement to the petting zoo is, well, a turkey.
Joe sometimes channels John Stossel. Thus Stossel's experience becomes Joe's in this story.
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Content & Photos © 2004 Laura Laytham, laura@girlsaresmarter.com.
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