Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dog was terrified of and aggressive toward men. All men - but especially men with beards.
We had to slowly socialize him that men can be nice. Haven't really worked out the beard thing yet but slow positive low threat exposure seems like it would work.
Our trainer said that many dogs are scared of men bc they are like bears--big, furry esp with beards, and have a voice that sounds like a growl. They are instinctively afraid of bears so I guess this combo of traits doesn't help
Right because black men are super growly anf furry? So you're saying the combo of dark skin color and being male is bear like and more scary? Do you see your inherint bias here? Your inherint racism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dog was terrified of and aggressive toward men. All men - but especially men with beards.
We had to slowly socialize him that men can be nice. Haven't really worked out the beard thing yet but slow positive low threat exposure seems like it would work.
Our trainer said that many dogs are scared of men bc they are like bears--big, furry esp with beards, and have a voice that sounds like a growl. They are instinctively afraid of bears so I guess this combo of traits doesn't help
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hate to say it, OP, but they could be picking up on your tension. At this point, you are expecting your dogs to go nuts and so you tense up, inadvertently triggering the very reaction you want to avoid.
+1. OP, you’re the racist, and your dog is really just exposing it. Re-educate yourself.
Oh please. That’s not what the pp said at all.
Maybe not. The point still stands. The dog has learned to distinguish between races, which was obviously taught somehow. They aren’t born knowing that distinction.
They certainly are born recognizing distinctions, particularly in smell.
They totally are born recognizing that different things look different. Beards, hats, skin color, larger people, people on bikes, etc. Different things set dogs off.
One of my dogs is afraid of bikes and scooters. I've had fosters that were terrified of trash cans, but not people. One of my dogs loves all people and the other is set off by men with darker skin (but strangely, not if they are bald).
Anonymous wrote:OP here - I am not a troll. I am a pet owner who genuinely is looking for advice on how to stop by dogs from barking aggressively at Black people. Our neighborhood and our social circle is unfortunately not very diverse. So there aren’t a lot of darker conplected people the dogs come across on a regular basis. I agree that desensitization (ie having black peoples give them treats) might help. But given that we don’t know a lot of black people, it seems strange to ask the few that we do know to give our dogs treats. Especially now, during Covid, when we are really not having close interactions with anyone outside the household.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dog is racist because you don't socialize with black folks. Plain and simple.
Eye roll.
OP your dog is not woke enough for DCUM. Might I suggest you read him some Kendi?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hate to say it, OP, but they could be picking up on your tension. At this point, you are expecting your dogs to go nuts and so you tense up, inadvertently triggering the very reaction you want to avoid.
+1. OP, you’re the racist, and your dog is really just exposing it. Re-educate yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Hire a Black trainer.