Pit Bulls

imdeafsowhat

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Fighters, not Lovers.


Quit fighting and start loving.

To tame a pit bull is to put it on chains.
 
The Pit Bull Placebo: The Media, Myths and Politics of Canine Aggression

“Falsehood flies and the truth comes limping after, so that when men come to be undeceived, it is too late: the jest is over, and the tale has had its effect.” - Jonathan Swift

First it was the Bloodhound, sensationalized in the dramatizations of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Then it was the Doberman Pinscher, symbol of the Nazi menace for a nation at war. Today, it is the Pit bull that is vilified for the depravity of his master.

At perhaps no time in history has mankind been as ignorant of natural canine behavior as we find ourselves at the beginning of the 21st century. The human/dog bond—the most complex and profound inter-species relationship in the history of mankind—has now been reduced to a simple axiom: Breed of dog = degree of dangerousness.

Today, police chase down fleeing Pit bulls in the street, firing dozens of wild shots in response to media-fed rumors of supernatural Pit bull abilities. Politicians coach and nurture this fear with their own brand of rhetoric used to assist in the passing of quick and ineffective legislation created to pacify communities ignorant of the real cause for dog attacks. Hundreds of animal shelters throughout the country kill all unclaimed Pit bull-looking dogs, as they are deemed "unadoptable" solely on their physical appearance.

In a society unparalleled in its access to information and ability to control our natural environment, we now claim that we are unable to master our dogs. Unwilling to assume responsibility for the control and care of our canine companions, we instead hang entire breeds of dogs in effigy for the sins of their owners. Society now accepts this “solution to the dog bite problem” because we have been placated by a Pit Bull Placebo.

Like the pharmacologically inactive sugar pill dispensed to pacify a patient who supposes it to be medicine, eradication of the Pit bull is heralded as the cure for severe dog attacks. However, a placebo is administered solely to appease a person's mental duress. In the present day climate of fear and misinformation about Pit bulls and dog attacks, eradication of the Pit bull is the placebo administered to ease the public's mental anxiety. This, of course, does not address the underlying causes of why dogs attack and how they have been allowed access to their victims.

The book, The Pit Bull Placebo: The Media, Myths and Politics of Canine Aggression, explores and reveals how our views and beliefs about canine aggression have changed over the last 150 years and how our perceptions about the nature and behavior of dogs has been influenced and shaped by persons and organizations who often times disseminate information about dog attacks which is tailored to further an agenda unrelated to the improvement of the human/dog bond.

We have come to be in the midst of a social hysteria about Pit bulls because we have abandoned centuries-old common sense and reasoning and have been duped by inaccurate reporting from a media that thrives on sensationalism and by politicians who traffic in rumors, myths and pseudoscience in their efforts to pass legislation that demonizes dogs while exonerating criminal and abusive owners.

Despite the intense media, political and public interest in dog attacks, there is a disturbing scarcity of accurate information and investigation done on the real causes and reasons for these incidents.

If we truly believe that the extremely rare cases of fatal dog attacks merit extreme measures in the management of dogs—if our concern and shock is genuine—then we must be equally genuine and sincere in seeking out and addressing the real causes for these incidents.

Whether our goal is community safety, understanding canine behavior, furtherance of humane treatment towards dogs, or the advancement of the human-dog bond, it is critical that we examine all the details available about dog attacks.

The Pit Bull Placebo examines actual cases of severe dog attacks during the last 150 years—the circumstances, the individual dogs involved, the victims, and our interpretations of these events—in an attempt to offer a reasoned and balanced perspective on the behavior of dogs and the critical role humans play in the management and treatment of our canine companions.

Only by stepping back from the swirl of present-day hysteria surrounding isolated cases of severe canine aggression and examining the problem from a broader and more objective perspective can we hope to understand and effectively address the human and canine behaviors which have contributed to these incidents.
 
Irresponsible owners, not dogs.

Irresponsible ignoring of the facts. Pit bulls are implicated int he majority of dog attacks in the U.S. Does this mean that the majority of Pit Bull owners are irresponsible?
 
Irresponsible ignoring of the facts. Pit bulls are implicated int he majority of dog attacks in the U.S. Does this mean that the majority of Pit Bull owners are irresponsible?

yes. most of them are not aware of pit bull's daily needs - but so do other working/hunting dogs. some of them improperly raised pit bulls because pit bulls represent a certain image aka stereotype image - see MTV video music.
 
Dog Bite Statistics

Facts & Stats about Dog Bites & Dog Aggression
40% of American dog owners acquired pets primarily for protection-including German shepherds, Rottweilers, mastiffs and Doberman pinschers. (Source: New York Times, 2/26/01)

Mixed breeds and not pure bred dogs are the type of dog most often involved in inflicting bites to people. The pure-bred dogs most often involved are German shepherds and Chow chows.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention document that a chained dog is 2.8 times more likely to bite than an unchained dog. Click here for a news story about a mauling of a 4 year old child by a chained pit bull

Canines not spayed or neutered are three times more likely to bite than sterilized ones.

From 1979 to 1996, dog attacks resulted in more than 300 human dog bite related deaths in the United States. Most of the victims were children.

The breeds most often involved in fatal attacks are Rottweilers and Pit bulls.

In the United States, pit bulls make up one to three per cent of the overall dog population and cause more than 50 per cent of serious attacks.

Special Report: Breeds of dogs involved in fatal human attacks in the United States between 1979 and 1998 by Vet Metd Today


Conclusion - IRRESPONSIBLE owners
 
Boston Terrier for myself. And a Boston Terrier, like any other dog, can be raised to be aggressive or docile.
 
Does pitbull is good to you?

No. I don't like Pit bulls. I have to respect to owner of Pit bulls. I was almost victim by 3 pit bulls attempt to attack on me and my friend when I was 14. My friend's dad kicked 3 dogs away from us. It was happened in the dark. The owner was drunk and irresponsible to supervision for his own dogs. If I get attack by them. I would fill out sue on owner. But Thank god! I am so lucky. Whew!
 
No. I don't like Pit bulls. I have to respect to owner of Pit bulls. I was almost victim by 3 pit bulls attempt to attack on me and my friend when I was 14. My friend's dad kicked 3 dogs away from us. It was happened in the dark. The owner was drunk and irresponsible to supervision for his own dogs. If I get attack by them. I would fill out sue on owner. But Thank god! I am so lucky. Whew!

There you go! IRRESPONSIBLE OWNERS!
 
No. I don't like Pit bulls. I have to respect to owner of Pit bulls. I was almost victim by 3 pit bulls attempt to attack on me and my friend when I was 14. My friend's dad kicked 3 dogs away from us. It was happened in the dark. The owner was drunk and irresponsible to supervision for his own dogs. If I get attack by them. I would fill out sue on owner. But Thank god! I am so lucky. Whew!

sorry to hear about that! but there you go.... you just proved my point. it's the IRRESPONSIBLE owner.

BLAME THE DEED, NOT BREED!
 
No. I don't like Pit bulls. I have to respect to owner of Pit bulls. I was almost victim by 3 pit bulls attempt to attack on me and my friend when I was 14. My friend's dad kicked 3 dogs away from us. It was happened in the dark. The owner was drunk and irresponsible to supervision for his own dogs. If I get attack by them. I would fill out sue on owner. But Thank god! I am so lucky. Whew!

Ok, got it, I'm sorry about what happened to you.

I was previously blamed on pitbull itself until I found some of research that was blame to owner who is irresponsible to care of pitbull.
 
I am against dogsfighting. It's illegal! I am support Animal Right.
 
Boston Terrier for myself. And a Boston Terrier, like any other dog, can be raised to be aggressive or docile.

One thing I like about Boston Terrier is its quirky humor. My best friend loves it and hopes to own one soon. His wife is terrified of dogs... yuck. She'll overcome her fear of dogs
 
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