What lack of care? You're making so many assumptions it's ridiculous. |
The dog was found 4 blocks from the house and was a yorkie. Do you think a yorkie outside at night is going to have a good chance of making it through the night? |
Of course lack of care. If you’re home come get your animal. Why should the dog be stressed out going to a strangers house and then to a shelter if not necessary. |
Stop being a martyr. If you chose to drive the dog home instead of to the shelter, your house, a local 24-hour vet, etc. YOU CHOSE. Quit with this nonsense about how you think other people "should" behave. You're "put off" by some resentments in your own head, and it's not a good look. |
| No. I’d scream maybe but if you saw me you could let the pet out and they’d be able to get back to the house if they’d strayed too far and got lost |
This. I'd take the dog home and take it to a vet the next day to see if it was chipped. Or take it to the police and have them return the animal. I'm not going to some rando's house at midnight. Sounds like a great way to get shot. |
This, at least wait a bit or try a neighbor. I might not have heard the door as our cameras are hit or miss but I’d know if my dog was missing. I’d call the police vs chase you but I have health issues and couldn’t chase a car. Be real. You like drama. |
This. Take it to the shelter or police. |
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No. How on earth is a human supposed to keep up with a car? You want this guy to trip in the dark? The more intelligent thing would have been to memorize the license plate, but I doubt he could see it in the dark.
Thank you for reuniting this dog with their owner, but you lose points for lack of common sense and being too critical of others. |
Sounds like you live in Baltimore |
| I think its seriously time to get over this experience and move on. |
No, but if some rando bangs on my door at midnight, I'm not opening it unarmed. I wouldn't assume differently of anyone else. |
| Aren't yorkies teeny tiny? I would have assumed he had been asleep, you woke him up, it took him a minute to get oriented and come to the door, and he didn't see the dog at all in your car in the dark. |
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I asked Gemini to rewrite OP in a readable exposition:
had a bizarre experience at midnight after finding a stray dog. His collar only listed an address—no phone number. When I picked him up, he hopped right into my car. I drove to the listed address and noticed the TV was on inside. I rang the doorbell three times and called out, "Are you missing a dog?" When nobody answered, I began to drive away, planning to take him to the humane society in the morning. As I reached the end of the street, I saw a man walk out of the house. I made a U-turn and successfully reunited him with his dog. However, it struck me as odd that he just stood there. If I saw a car driving away with my pet inside, I would be running and yelling for them to stop. You have no way of knowing if that person is trying to help or if you’ll ever see your dog again |
I'm curious what is the next step in your Rambo fantasy. You pick up your sidearm and open the door. Then what? If the visitor jumps you, you are too close to wield a gun effectively. |