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pitbull owners.

ttlpkg said:


Especially when you have or live near kids. It is irresponsible if not criminal.

You must own a gun and run around raping white girls, after all your black and that's what black people do. Who cares if you were raised up in a nice area with parents who cared about you and raised you right. Your black so your a killer.






PS I hope your actually black and I'm not blind.
 
Its scary how some of the people on this thread think, especially ttlpkge. And pits were not bred for "killing", some morons use them for fighting and use them as guard dogs.

Props to pittbullst, this guy knows his shit.

Also, that young girl killed in san fran last year, werent those great danes, "gentle giants"
 
His ancestors were brought to the Unites States in the mid - 1800's by Boston-Irish immigrants. Originally bred from a variety of bulldogs and terriers, American breeders increased his weight and gave him a more powerful head. A forbearer to the Staffordshire Bull Terrier, they were originally bred to be a fighting dog. Bull baiting was banned in England in 1835 and these dogs are no longer been bred to fights


http://www.bulldogbreeds.com/americanpitbullterrier.html
 
crew9 said:


You must own a gun and run around raping white girls, after all your black and that's what black people do. Who cares if you were raised up in a nice area with parents who cared about you and raised you right. Your black so your a killer.



Your analogy is invalid. We are talking about dogs, not humans. Why would anyone allow a dog capable of killing or mauling a child within seconds by provocation in their house? I like pets myself, I have a lab. But if he even looks at my kid funny, he's gone. Here is just the latest example of what occurs many times every year.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/774366.stm

You never know what can provoke a dog. A coworker of mine was visiting his fiance's family for Christmas, and their "harmless" pitbull was lying on the back porch in her favorite spot. My coworker went out back to grab a log for the fire, and the dog was startled and mauled his arm. Only the owner running to the comotion got her to finally let go. Can you imagine if that was a young child? What child can you count on never to provoke? Children are naturally curious, as they should be. It shouldn't cost them their arm, or their life.
 
You made a good point about if the lab looks at your kid wrong its gone. My whole point is that ANY dog can attack or hurt or kill a kid. There are certain things that make news and certain things that don't. Pitbull attacks are good news because everyone hates pitbulls and they're such "killers." You don't hear about the golden retrievers or the labs attacking people. Doesn't mean it's not happening. Your right dogs aren't like humans. Humans can overcome their environment. We have the power of the mind. Dogs do not. You raise them to be killers they will be killers. It's the same for any dog. You raise them up right and the chances of incidents happening are a lot less. Of course there will still be instances of attacks even in good environments. That's a risk you take with any dog but only really hear about with pitbulls.
 
While many circumstances may contribute to a fatal dog attack, the following three factors appear to play a critical role in the display of canine aggression towards humans;

Function of the dog - (Includes: dogs acquired for fighting, guarding/protection or image enhancement)


Owner responsibility - (Includes: dogs allowed to roam loose, chained dogs, dogs and/or children left unsupervised, dogs permitted or encouraged to behave aggressively, animal neglect and/or abuse)


Reproductive status of dog - (Includes: unaltered males dogs, bitches with puppies, children coming between male dog and female dog in estrus)
It is necessary to emphasize that a fatal dog attack is an exceptionally unusual event. Approximating 20 deaths per year in a dog population of 53 million yields an infinitesimal percent of the dog population (.0000004%) involved in a human fatality.

THE BREED FACTOR
Many communities and cities believe that the solution to prevent severe and fatal dog attacks is to label, restrict or ban certain breeds of dogs as potentially dangerous. If the breed of dog was the primary or sole determining factor in a fatal dog attack, it would necessarily stand to reason that since there are literally millions of Rottweilers, Pit Bulls and German Shepherd Dogs in the United States, there would have to be countless more than an approximate 20 human fatalities per year.

Since only an infinitesimal number of any breed is implicated in a human fatality, it is not only unreasonable to characterize this as a specific breed behavior by which judge an entire population of dogs, it also does little to prevent fatal or severe dog attacks as the real causes and events that contribute to a fatal attack are masked by the issue of breed and not seriously addressed.

Pit Bulls in particular have been in a firestorm of bad publicity, and throughout the country Pit Bulls often bear the brunt of breed specific legislation. One severe or fatal attack can result in either restrictions or outright banning of this breed (and other breeds) in a community. While any severe or fatal attack on a person is tragic, there is often a tragic loss of perspective as to degree of dangerousness associated with this breed in reaction to a fatality. Virtually any breed of dog can be implicated in a human fatality.

From 1965 - 2001, there have been at least 36 different breeds/types of dog that have been involved in a fatal attack in the United States. (This number rises to at least 52 breeds/types when surveying fatal attacks worldwide). We are increasingly becoming a society that has less and less tolerance and understanding of natural canine behaviors. Breed specific behaviors that have been respected and selected for over the centuries are now often viewed as unnatural or dangerous. Dogs have throughout the centuries served as protectors and guardians of our property, possessions and families. Dogs have also been used for thousands of years to track, chase and hunt both large and small animals. These natural and selected-for canine behaviors seem to now eliciting fear, shock and a sense of distrust among many people.

There seems to be an ever growing expectation of a "behaviorally homogenized" dog - "Benji" in the shape of a Rottweiler. Breeds of dogs with greater protection instincts or an elevated prey-drive are often unfairly viewed as "aggressive or dangerous". No breed of dog is inherently vicious, as all breeds of dogs were created and are maintained exclusively to serve and co-exist with humans. The problem exists not within the breed of dog, but rather within the owners that fail to control, supervise, maintain and properly train the breed of dog they choose to keep.

CANINE AGGRESSION - AN OVERVIEW
It is important to emphasize that dogs bite today for the same reasons that they did one hundred or one thousand years ago. Dogs are no more dangerous today than they were a century or millennium ago. They only difference is a shift in human perception of what is and is not natural canine behavior and/or aggression and the breed of dog involved.

Examination of newspaper archival records dating back to the 1950’s and 1960’s reveal the same types of severe and fatal attacks occurring then as today. The only difference is the breed of dog responsible for these events. A random study of 74 severe and fatal attacks reported in the Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia, PA) from 1964-1968, show no severe or fatal attacks by Rottweilers and only one attack attributed to a Pit-Bull-type dog. The dogs involved in most of these incidents were the breeds that were popular at the time.

Over two thousand years ago, Plato extolled a basic understanding of canine behavior when he wrote "the disposition of noble dogs is to be gentle with people they know and the opposite with those they don’t know...." Recently, this fundamental principal of canine behavior seems to elude many people as parents allow their children to be unsupervised with unfamiliar dogs and lawmakers clamor to declare certain dogs as dangerous in response to an attack.

Any dog, regardless of breed, is only as dangerous as his/her owner allows it to be.

Addressing the issue of severe and fatal dog attacks as a breed specific problem is akin to treating the symptom and not the disease. Severe and fatal attacks will continue until we come to the realization that allowing a toddler to wander off to a chained dog is more of a critical factor in a fatal dog attack than which breed of dog is at the end of the chain.


Sorry for the long post but some people are interested so...
 
All dogs have the potential to go off on some idiot or something that scares it.
If it is raised properly, there should be no problems. They can be like kids though, so you just can't forget about them.
Mine is also a big baby.

Besides don't beware the dog, beware the owner.
 
People are scared of my boxers too. Who be scared of these Babies!!!!!!

lennyandtie.jpg
 
not sure if anyone else mentioned this but labs have the highest bite rate out of any dog,its total media bullshit ,these dogs got a bad wrap by most owners who deal drugs etc and use them as attack dogs, when infact most good hardworking people own pits and they are good dogs. the media just has a way to blow things out of proportion and only print the bad
 
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