Still another pit bull attack

Anonymous
If you bred Labrador retrievers to be fighting dogs, they might eat children too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saying that dogs bite because of people is victim blaming


But it is true. Just like the parents who buy their children guns knowing they have mental illness. If you raise you dog to be mean and tough


If I can find the article that backs the claim that nurture affects nature I will post.

You can’t nurture breeding out of a dog, something that people will acknowledge with every breed but pit bulls. Somehow pit bulls are supposed to be magically magic, despite being bred to fight and kill bears, bulls and then dogs.

So I say it again: you’re effectively advocating that these parents taught their dogs to kill their children. I mean that’s the only logical conclusion. So you must support the death penalty or life in prison for the kind of monsters who would nurture their dog to murder their kids.


I don't believe in the death penalty. I don't know what these people taught or didn't teach. The majority of dog bites are of children and people are famous for not reading the dog's communication.

It is a tragedy though when children die violently. My argument is the breed gets blamed fir every attack which isn't fair.

Show me where the poodles and the Schnauzers rip off a kid’s scalp. Show me where the Australian Shepherd tears ligaments in a kid’s neck. Show me where the chihuahua bites so much and so close to the brain that the dog has to be put down immediately to test for rabies. I am SICK of you ghouls blaming everyone and everything but the breed when it’s really only this one set of breeds that mauls people like this. You know what normal dogs do? They *sometimes* bite kids who don’t read their signals. Sometimes. Most times they just get up and mosey away.

Four year old girl Lillianna Stratman was mauled by her mother’s boyfriend’s pit bull in Omaha Tuesday, February 20th. She is in intensive care and will have to have multiple surgeries. https://www.ketv.com/article/omaha-dog-attack-sends-child-to-hospital-mom-boyfriend-arrested/46891309 https://www.gofundme.com/f/lilliana-stratmans-medical-bills


I find it interesting you are comparing small dogs to bigger dogs. Which I do not consider fair. The dogs you should compare that are same size or bigger German Shepherds, Doberman pinchers, Chows, Cane Corsos, Akita, Dogo Argentinos


You listed more dogs that have been bred to be aggressive or at least deeply protective, and even those dogs don’t maul to the same extent as pit bulls. They don’t generally rip out entire chunks of limbs, they don’t tear out necks, they don’t start eating their victims. There are large dogs that don’t bite much include Newfoundlands, Komondors, Irish Wolfhounds… Truly. It is pit bulls that are the menace here.
Anonymous
How do pit bulls compare to having a pet coyote or wolf?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saying that dogs bite because of people is victim blaming


But it is true. Just like the parents who buy their children guns knowing they have mental illness. If you raise you dog to be mean and tough


If I can find the article that backs the claim that nurture affects nature I will post.

You can’t nurture breeding out of a dog, something that people will acknowledge with every breed but pit bulls. Somehow pit bulls are supposed to be magically magic, despite being bred to fight and kill bears, bulls and then dogs.

So I say it again: you’re effectively advocating that these parents taught their dogs to kill their children. I mean that’s the only logical conclusion. So you must support the death penalty or life in prison for the kind of monsters who would nurture their dog to murder their kids.


I don't believe in the death penalty. I don't know what these people taught or didn't teach. The majority of dog bites are of children and people are famous for not reading the dog's communication.

It is a tragedy though when children die violently. My argument is the breed gets blamed fir every attack which isn't fair.

Show me where the poodles and the Schnauzers rip off a kid’s scalp. Show me where the Australian Shepherd tears ligaments in a kid’s neck. Show me where the chihuahua bites so much and so close to the brain that the dog has to be put down immediately to test for rabies. I am SICK of you ghouls blaming everyone and everything but the breed when it’s really only this one set of breeds that mauls people like this. You know what normal dogs do? They *sometimes* bite kids who don’t read their signals. Sometimes. Most times they just get up and mosey away.

Four year old girl Lillianna Stratman was mauled by her mother’s boyfriend’s pit bull in Omaha Tuesday, February 20th. She is in intensive care and will have to have multiple surgeries. https://www.ketv.com/article/omaha-dog-attack-sends-child-to-hospital-mom-boyfriend-arrested/46891309 https://www.gofundme.com/f/lilliana-stratmans-medical-bills


I find it interesting you are comparing small dogs to bigger dogs. Which I do not consider fair. The dogs you should compare that are same size or bigger German Shepherds, Doberman pinchers, Chows, Cane Corsos, Akita, Dogo Argentinos


You listed more dogs that have been bred to be aggressive or at least deeply protective, and even those dogs don’t maul to the same extent as pit bulls. They don’t generally rip out entire chunks of limbs, they don’t tear out necks, they don’t start eating their victims. There are large dogs that don’t bite much include Newfoundlands, Komondors, Irish Wolfhounds… Truly. It is pit bulls that are the menace here.


This is not so. I just read a story about a girl who was attacked by her grandmother's bull mastifs
They ate part of her leg.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:How do pit bulls compare to having a pet coyote or wolf?


They don't really - completely different.

One is a domesticated dog, the other two are wild animals. You can have them in captivity but not they are not "pets" in the same way as a dog.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you bred Labrador retrievers to be fighting dogs, they might eat children too.


They don’t have the same prey drive or jaw strength as a pit bull, so it’s unlikely that labs would, as a breed, become viscous killers of people.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you bred Labrador retrievers to be fighting dogs, they might eat children too.


They don’t have the same prey drive or jaw strength as a pit bull, so it’s unlikely that labs would, as a breed, become viscous killers of people.


Actually there are other dogs with hiher bite force
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you bred Labrador retrievers to be fighting dogs, they might eat children too.


They don’t have the same prey drive or jaw strength as a pit bull, so it’s unlikely that labs would, as a breed, become viscous killers of people.


Actually there are other dogs with hiher bite force

And how many people do those dogs routinely kill?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How do pit bulls compare to having a pet coyote or wolf?


They don't really - completely different.

One is a domesticated dog, the other two are wild animals. You can have them in captivity but not they are not "pets" in the same way as a dog.


A friendly wolf cub should be pretty much like a dog.
Anonymous
A 4 year old Alabama boy, Beau Clark, was killed Monday, February 26th by an “Olde English Bulldogge,” written in this article as “Old English Bulldog.” It’s basically a designer pit bull. Because what the world needed was more fighting dogs.

https://www.waff.com/2024/02/27/4-year-old-boy-identified-victim-morgan-county-dog-attack/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olde_English_Bulldogge
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:A 4 year old Alabama boy, Beau Clark, was killed Monday, February 26th by an “Olde English Bulldogge,” written in this article as “Old English Bulldog.” It’s basically a designer pit bull. Because what the world needed was more fighting dogs.

https://www.waff.com/2024/02/27/4-year-old-boy-identified-victim-morgan-county-dog-attack/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olde_English_Bulldogge

Awfully fancy way of saying pitbull.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:A 4 year old Alabama boy, Beau Clark, was killed Monday, February 26th by an “Olde English Bulldogge,” written in this article as “Old English Bulldog.” It’s basically a designer pit bull. Because what the world needed was more fighting dogs.

https://www.waff.com/2024/02/27/4-year-old-boy-identified-victim-morgan-county-dog-attack/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olde_English_Bulldogge

Awfully fancy way of saying pitbull.


Ye olde pitté boulle
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How do pit bulls compare to having a pet coyote or wolf?


They don't really - completely different.

One is a domesticated dog, the other two are wild animals. You can have them in captivity but not they are not "pets" in the same way as a dog.


A friendly wolf cub should be pretty much like a dog.


Yes, there's actually a bit of research on this - when they are very young they are/act quite a bit like domesticated dog puppies. But that doesn't last.

https://www.haaretz.com/science-and-health/2021-07-13/ty-article/study-shows-why-you-cant-have-wolves-as-pets/0000017f-dc6f-df9c-a17f-fe7ff5b40000
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How do pit bulls compare to having a pet coyote or wolf?


They don't really - completely different.

One is a domesticated dog, the other two are wild animals. You can have them in captivity but not they are not "pets" in the same way as a dog.


A friendly wolf cub should be pretty much like a dog.

Read the story of the doofus who raised a pet warthog. They were inseparable until Waylon gored his owner almost to death.
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