I’m so sick of dogs everywhere

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:I’m just going to jump in without reading anything and simply say - I told my daughter who is highly allergic to dogs that if she’s ever stuck beside one on a plane she has no obligation to cover her mouth as she sneezes the entire flight and feel free to turn her head towards the dog owner.

You bring your dog, you deal with peoples’ allergies.

Flame away.



DP, sorry, why wouldn't she just ask to move? the airline would likely accommodate... weird that your recommendation is to escalate the aggression, instead of finding a work around for everyone....


🙄 of course first step would be a request to move. I meant if she got stuck beside a dog.
A dog can only be in the cabin if it's small enough to fit in a crate under the seat or if it's a service dog. If you have a problem with the policy, take it up with the airline, not the dog owner. They are doing nothing wrong.


How is “service dog” defined?

No policy against sneezing. She’d also not be doing anything wrong. If the dog owner doesn’t like it, tough luck.
A dog that has been individually trained to perform tasks that mitigate the effects of a person's disability. These tasks must be directly related to the individual's disability.

My son went to college with a girl who had a service dog. Her dog was trained to alert her when her heart rate increased to a specific level.
Oh, and if somebody purposely sneezed in my face because they were mad that the airline allowed my dog on a plane, you'd be getting slapped in the face. And if you instructed your kid to do it, you would get cussed out.


You sound like a viral video of a toxic passenger waiting to happen.
I hate confrontation, and I hate arguing, I hate when people are upset with me. I'm mostly a people pleaser. If someone sneezed on me, on purpose, I would react. Did you know that purposely sneezing on someone could be considered assault? It's not OK to do that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m just going to jump in without reading anything and simply say - I told my daughter who is highly allergic to dogs that if she’s ever stuck beside one on a plane she has no obligation to cover her mouth as she sneezes the entire flight and feel free to turn her head towards the dog owner.

You bring your dog, you deal with peoples’ allergies.

Flame away.



DP, sorry, why wouldn't she just ask to move? the airline would likely accommodate... weird that your recommendation is to escalate the aggression, instead of finding a work around for everyone....


🙄 of course first step would be a request to move. I meant if she got stuck beside a dog.
A dog can only be in the cabin if it's small enough to fit in a crate under the seat or if it's a service dog. If you have a problem with the policy, take it up with the airline, not the dog owner. They are doing nothing wrong.


How is “service dog” defined?

No policy against sneezing. She’d also not be doing anything wrong. If the dog owner doesn’t like it, tough luck.
A dog that has been individually trained to perform tasks that mitigate the effects of a person's disability. These tasks must be directly related to the individual's disability.

My son went to college with a girl who had a service dog. Her dog was trained to alert her when her heart rate increased to a specific level.
Oh, and if somebody purposely sneezed in my face because they were mad that the airline allowed my dog on a plane, you'd be getting slapped in the face. And if you instructed your kid to do it, you would get cussed out.


You sound like a viral video of a toxic passenger waiting to happen.
I hate confrontation, and I hate arguing, I hate when people are upset with me. I'm mostly a people pleaser. If someone sneezed on me, on purpose, I would react. Did you know that purposely sneezing on someone could be considered assault? It's not OK to do that.


You go ahead and try to police internet virality. If you’re cursing out a child on an airplane or throwing hands, you’re going viral. Try to explain as much as you want. Good luck arguing with a million thoughtless shares.
Anonymous
Is there any thing to get done for a dog at a Motor Vehicle office? Get a doggie car seat or register them...anything? Why bring your dog to a frickin MVA/DMV?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Is there any thing to get done for a dog at a Motor Vehicle office? Get a doggie car seat or register them...anything? Why bring your dog to a frickin MVA/DMV?


Idiots bring them along like toddlers with a stuffy. It's their "emotional support animal" because the mva/dmv is boring and slightly stressful and they just can't handle life on life's terms without their ill-trained "therapy dog" alongside them.

I love dogs, truly, but most people with their dog in public don't deserve to have the dog at all, let alone burden the rest of society with it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Is there any thing to get done for a dog at a Motor Vehicle office? Get a doggie car seat or register them...anything? Why bring your dog to a frickin MVA/DMV?


Idiots bring them along like toddlers with a stuffy. It's their "emotional support animal" because the mva/dmv is boring and slightly stressful and they just can't handle life on life's terms without their ill-trained "therapy dog" alongside them.

I love dogs, truly, but most people with their dog in public don't deserve to have the dog at all, let alone burden the rest of society with it.


Ya dogs need walks humans need walks so they go outside walk each other around the block or on a trail. But at an administative office? Are the dogs even allowed inside those buildings? A security guard was outside but on his phone either didn't see it, didn't care, or dogs are allowed in the government buildings.
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