The Guardian Australia

I love you Taylor Swift, but please don't perform at the cruel Melbourne Cup

- Dejan Jotanovic

Dear Taylor Swift, You’ve done something bad. Last year I took the plunge and publicly outed myself as knowing the lyrics to every single one of your songs, adamant that you deserved a Pulitzer for All Too Well.

I’ve been to every one of your shows. At my first I threw a plush-toy koala at your feet while you performed in a blue dress and cowboy boots. At another your publicist gave me a pit pass in congratula­tions of my shoddily made sign (“I love Andrea” – your mum is a sweetheart).

In 2018 you decided it was your time to speak now, putting your weight behind the two Democrat candidates from your home state of Tennessee for

the midterms: Phil Bredesen and Jim Cooper. You didn’t care about how this would affect your reputation­with your largely redbase.

Now, in 2019, you’re fearlessin publicly championin­g the Equality Act, a legislativ­e protection for LGBTQ which is looking to go before the Senate floor.

But if you’re wanting to position yourself as an overtly political artist – one who wears a firm set of beliefs and, more than this, marches them into action – then you must reconsider your decision to perform at the 2019 Melbourne Cup.

This is not something I can remain calm about. Six horses have died as a direct result of injuries sustained from the Melbourne Cup since 2013. Six horses in six years. Last year The Cliffsofmo­her, was euthanised on the race track after fracturing his right shoulder.

These animals are forced to race against one another at devastatin­g speeds while being whipped by their saddlemate­s and jeered from crowds of onlookers who fashion stupid flowers on their heads and smell like overpriced lukewarm sparkling wine.

This event feeds directly off the exploitati­on, injury and death of what it supposedly prizes: horses. Animal welfare organisati­ons – Peta, RSPCA Australia and Animals Australia – have spoken openly about their disgust and disdain for how we, as a state, ritualise and celebrate this cruelty.

Who profits? Australia’s robust and dominant gambling industry, which has skilfully managed to infest a toxic gambling appetite into our national culture. In 2016-17 we as a nation bet $209bn. We are regarded as the world’s worst gamblers.

We are the only country in the world to immortalis­e gambling through our national image in the name of a public holiday.

Who loses? Australian­s lose more than $1,200 a year per capita from betting, more than double that of the second worst offenders, Singapore ($600).

But if there’s one thing that Australia is routinely good at, it’s celebratin­g the wrong things at the wrong times. It’s an absolute shame that we choose to revere animal abuse and a

toxic gambling culture through public celebratio­n. It’s also an absolute disappoint­ment that you’ve chosen to put your brand and values behind our cultural shame.

But I don’t think you want to be associated with cruelty, exploitati­on or even stupid floral Cinderella’s stepsister headpieces.

I don’t want any more blood to spill. I don’t want any bad blood.

To revamp a lyric from your 2008 Grammy award-winning album Fearless: Please, Taylor Swift, do not perform at the 2019 Melbourne Cup.

• Dejan Jotanovic is a freelance writer based in Melbourne.

 ?? Photograph: John Shearer/
Getty Images ?? “I am adamant that you deserved a Pulitzer for All Too Well.”
Photograph: John Shearer/ Getty Images “I am adamant that you deserved a Pulitzer for All Too Well.”

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