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Are we our own worst enemy? "Instead
of kennel owners fighting laws and complaining to each other...."
Registering
Commercial Breeders
Why not buy from a pet shop?
"people don't care about royal bloodlines or pedigrees going back
centuries. They want a puppy for the kids."
Prescription
Inserts
Got action! In
less than a week Pfizer's scanners had picked it up from
TDP.
Responsibility
For Dangerous Dogs
"never heard one single dog person
... accept the fact that some dogs might be more inclined to bite than
others,"
Responsibility
For Dangerous Dogs Take Two
"..unless
and until you change that perception these breeds will continue to get
legislated."
Responsibility
For Dangerous Dogs (Again)
Facts
About Pit Bulls
by Cindy Cooke, V.P.
Dog Events
UNITED KENNEL CLUB
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Responsibility
for Dangerous Dogs
I don't know about the rest
of the country, and I'm not a Pit Bull breeder, but here in Florida dog
fighting still goes on all the time, all over the state, and guess what
the top dog is? It ain't Cocker Spaniels. Or Labradors. It is the dog that
was bred to fight, and exists for no other reason. If I'm wrong, correct
me. Was it bred to exterminate rats? Or herd cows? Protect children?
Pocket plaything for the rich? Pull a sled? Nope, for generations it was
selected for one reason only, to enhance its' ability to fight.
Before I get too wound up,
let me take another tack. Everybody knows somebody who has a cat. Annoying
creatures, hate the neighbor's cat tracks on my car in the morning, but we
see them as basically harmless. That's because at some point someone had
the good sense to realize that not all cats are equal. You need a permit
to have 'dangerous' cats. You may love your pet mountain lion, but I would
be very uncomfortable having one as a neighbor. It's one thing to have
Persian kitty tracks on my hood. It is a different matter entirely to have
a bobcat perched on my fence in the morning when my kids are going to
school. So there are restrictions. That's all that people are asking for
with 'dangerous' dogs. If you wish to raise dogs that have been
specifically bred for generations to be aggressive and are praised for
their bite strength and tenacity, show some responsibility.
I'm probably a little
touchy about this because of the timing. Last night another dog fighting
ring was broken up and four people arrested, 23 dogs impounded, not 30
miles from home. Guess what, not a single Cocker Spaniel! Then tonight my
wife and I go out for drinks. We go to our favorite place, a wonderful bar
on the Intracoastal Waterway, caters mostly to the boating crowd. Hardly a
redneck kinda' bar. And there sits some idiot with a Pit Bull on his lap.
He's trying to make the dog drink some beer, which the dog is having no
part of. And why this moronic behavior? Because it is cool to have a
'fighting' dog. It’s a play for attention.
I can say this, if I was
breeding Pit Bulls, I would want to do anything I could to distance myself
from idiots like this. I would not feel like it was 'violating my rights'
for me to show a little responsibility. I would be proud of something that
distinguished me as a professional, or an educated hobbyist, rather that a
low-life boozer or pit fighter.
The thing that bugs me the
most, and is the source of my ire, is that I have never once, ever, heard
one single dog person stand up and accept responsibility. Or accept the
fact that some dogs might be more inclined to bite than others, and that
some are capable of inflicting more damage than others. Forget the 'Cocker
Spaniels bite, too' and the 'I have a Pit Bull that's great with kids'
stuff. If you went to pick up your kids from daycare a saw a couple of
Chihuahuas running around, would you get upset? Would you pull your kids
out, raising hell? Would you call the cops?
What if they were Presa
Canarios? Now what if you weren't some highly evolved, breeding for fifty
years kinda dog person? Would you worry? Or would you actually think like
the rest of us? I see my kid with a Chihuahua or a Pit Bull, I'm thinking
the Pit Bull just might be a problem.
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