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Elementary School-Aged Kids
Reply to "Neighbor kid really really rough with his dog"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It’s cultural to an extent. Caucasians in America often treat dogs different than people from other cultural backgrounds. They see a higher value to the animal. Other cultures don’t value the animal in the same way, so seeing the dog be ridden on or jumped on, is not as large of an issue. What culture are the neighbors OP? Asking as a Sri Lankan with El Salvadorian neighbors and Nigerian in laws. Each of us has a different pattern of thought about the way animals are treated. [/quote] If we are now going to excuse the mistreatment of animals, a call to ASPCA to remove the dog will solve that pattern of thought.[/quote] It is really ok for people to treat dogs like animals, which is what they are. [/quote] +1 Being rough with a sensitive dog is not ideal but it's not abusive. [b]The child will learn over time[/b]. There's a lot of bizarre posts on this thread. Even more than usual.[/quote] Not all do. If you don't teach children right from wrong, they don't all figure it out as they get older. This is how we end up with people tying a dog to a tree and beating it with baseball bat, or sticking things up its orifice, or duct taping its mouth (or worse). These three are specific examples of dogs we have taken into rescue. Maybe you'll call that "being rough with a sensitive dog" too. [/quote] +1. These children who are never shown proper boundaries with animals (and consequences for violating those boundaries) are also less likely to respect boundaries with other vulnerable humans. This kid sounds like a bully in the making.[/quote]
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