03/17/2026
Melanieâs Speech from todayâs AQHA Membership Meeting:
âWe have all heard the whispers for years. People call this association a 'Good Ol' Boys' club. I always wanted to believe that wasn't true.
But after sitting through the Stud Book Committee yesterday, the veil hasn't just been lifted; itâs been torn down.
The 'integrity of the breed' was used yesterday as a convenient shield to protect the integrity of the status quo. We are being asked to defend a rule that is clearly failing its intended purpose, a fact supported by hard numbers and indisputable data.
So, what are we actually protecting? It appears we are protecting nothing more than the egos of the committee members who authored it.
We watched as two separate committee members stood up and requested a paper ballot. They asked for the right to vote their conscience without the looming threat of political retribution or professional bullying. They asked for the basic dignity of a private vote.
And the leadership flatly ignored them.
When a presiding body refuses a written ballot because they are afraid of what the members actually think when the lights are off, we are no longer a leadership body. We are a regime. If you have to force people to raise their hands so you can track their loyalty, you aren't leadingâyouâre intimidating
The committee spent hours talking about 'genetic diversity' and almost no time talking about the actual reality of the Two-Year Rule or the impact on deceased stallions.
But the most disappointing part wasn't the talk; it was the lack of transparency.
We were told ten times yesterday: 'No photos. No video. Do not share this data.'
Why?
If the data supports the rule, why keep it behind closed doors? If a policy is good for the breed, you should be celebrating it, not hiding it.
Since they wonât show you, I will tell you today.
They showed 'Breeding Reports' and used the term 'Mares Bred' over and over to scare you.
But that terminology is fundamentally wrong and a misrepresentation of the data. Since 2015, Embryo Transfers are up 250%. That is exactly what our AQHA core strategies say we should be doingâutilizing technology. Because of AQHAâs own rules, every single frozen embryo is a separate line on that report. When they show you a dead stallion with 178 'mares,' they aren't showing you 178 individual horses. They are counting lines, not lives, and it intentionally misrepresents the truth of our industry to justify an agenda.
Our mission statement pledges that this association exists to 'record and preserve' the pedigree of the American Quarter Horse, yet this rule does the exact oppositeâit mandates the intentional destruction of our most proven genetics and calls it 'preservation.
They want you to believe dead stallions are 'flooding' our market, but the market is the only honest regulator we have.
Look at the facts of natural market decline: a 98-million-dollar sire registered 208 foals at his peak; in 2024, he registered 39. A 56-million-dollar sire dropped from 178 foals to just 19. The all-time leading sire across all disciplines registered 137 foals in his prime; in 2024, he registered five. The market identifies quality and phases out what no longer worksâit doesnât need a committee with a 'regulatory axe' to kill off a legacy that is already naturally fading.
We do have a problem with 'Popular Sire Syndrome' and genetic diversity, but it isnât dead stallions. Let's look at the actual 2024 filed reports. There were 17,549 total stallions that filed reports.
Do you know how many were deceased?
One hundred and thirty-six.
1 3 6.
That is less than 1%.
Meanwhile, 1% of living stallions breed nearly 20% of our mares.
Just nine stallions account for nearly 5% of every foal in this industry.
If you are worried about diversity, look at the horses standing in the stalls today, not the ones in the ground.
By banning deceased outcrosses, you aren't protecting the gene poolâyou are funneling every breeder back into those same nine living horses. You are making the bottleneck worse, not better.
They spoke a lot yesterday about 'playing God' by using frozen semen to extend a stallion's legacy.
But I want to know: where does this committee draw that line? Is Embryo Transfer not playing God? Is ICSI not playing God? We have embraced every technological advancement that makes our business profitable, but suddenly, when a horse's heart stops beating, we find religion.
Stewardship isn't about letting greatness die; it's about using the tools God gave usâscience and technologyâto preserve it.
Yesterday, multiple committee members looked at the young people in the room and said, 'We are so glad you're here. We love the passion. We remember when we were the young kids in the back.'
But that 'love' felt a lot like a pat on the head.
Because after they said that, they looked at the hundreds of letters from members across this countryâletters from people at home foaling mares who couldn't be hereâand they essentially said: 'We hear you, but we don't care.'
They told us to wait for a Task Force to report back in 2027. To a young breeder, 2027 is a lifetime. It is the difference between staying in this business or walking away. You cannot tell us you're 'glad we're here' while you're busy legislating our future into the trash can.
You are asking the next generation to bet their livelihoods on ANOTHER delay, but you cannot expect us to stay and build a future in an association that treats our investment like a hobby and our presence like a footnote.
They described me yesterday as a âsocial media influencer,â and if thatâs the derogatory label they need to use to ignore the fact that I am a horsewoman, a businesswoman, and a breeder with skin in the game, then so be it.
But while they were busy categorizing me, they missed the most important part: I am a member who loves this horse, and Iâm not going anywhere.
To the young people in this room that I supposedly âinfluencedâ: I am proud of you.
Do not let the coldness of this process extinguish your fire.
This system is designed to be a gauntlet to see who will quit, but that is exactly why we need you to stay. Apply to be a director. Get involved. Do not let this vote make you walk awayâlet it make you come back twice as loud next year.
They spent all day yesterday insisting that stallions need to die and that there must be limits on everything to protect the future.
If thatâs the logic weâre using, then perhaps we should start discussing term limits for the committees making these decisions, because true genetic diversity in this association requires fresh blood and new ideas, not just new horses.
Time is a debt that no one escapes, and while you may control the room today, we are the ones who will be standing in it tomorrow. So to those who think they can keep controlling the narrative through secrecy and 'pat on the head' politics, don't worryâweâre just getting started, and we will be back.
We are the ones who will have to live with the consequences of this rule long after many in that committee room have gone.
We aren't here for a history lesson on the 'good ol' days' or stories about wagons and George Jetson.
We are here to ensure there is a breed left to lead.
We are here to demand a government that respects its members and trusts them with the data.
Do not let them kick this can down the road again. I urge you to vote for the membership, vote for common sense, and vote to repeal this rule."