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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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Why's that? You seem to defend people's concerns re: these dogs quite well, but you haven't changed my mind about them at all. |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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Education is the way, not a mass Kull or Ban of a certain Breed or to bring in something silly like BSL (Breed Specific Leglislation). Maybe Compulsary (SP) Age of 18 to own a dog, Compusary Id Chipping & Diesese Control + Compulsary Insurance would make owning a dog a bit more of a responsability and would only be undertaken by people who actually wanted dogs for the companion rather than an accessory. due to the high cost and hassle involved. |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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The Grandmother was hurt too, why did she allow the dog in her home if she knew it had violent tendencies. Why did her parents allow the child to stay in a house where there was a potentially dangerous dog? |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
Was the uncle at home when the death occurred? Was he aware of her death when he was laughing? Do we have more than heresay evidence that he was laughing?
If the answer to all 3 is yes, then he was surly a hypocrite putting flowers at the scene. However, nerves, shock, fear and grief affect people strangely too - not to mention drugs. Church Boy, you cannot instruct people regarding what they may or may not discuss on these forums. If you feel strongly about it then complain to the moderators. It's up to them what is or is not permitted here. |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
Church Boy, you cannot instruct people regarding what they may or may not discuss on these forums. If you feel strongly about it then complain to the moderators. It's up to them what is or is not permitted here.[/quote] That's fair enough,But I think these sort of emotional discussion's can become a bit to much tit for tat , & in the end, on your computer,all you are doing is peeing each other off. All I meant to suggest, was to discuss the topic without being judge,jury & executioner,which most probably you are saying that I am being. Church Boy |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
I thought this was quite a well balanced discussion/debate really, with people putting forward their different viewpoints. Back and forth reasoning is what debate is all about. Sometimes we learn something of the opposing point of view that we were unaware of or hadn't thought of which may or may not then influence our own opinions.
I learned something about the appearance of certain dogs for instance and how people mistake one breed for another. Mind you, some of them are so obviously not bull terriers but then again to other people they might look like it. |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
Police have, apparently, "rounded up" 6 pitbull-type dogs in Merseyside today. Footage on TV showed friendly, sociable dogs being bundled into a police van.
These are inbred, savage killers aren't they? Why weren't they ripping each other to pieces in the van? Why weren't they snarling at and biting the police who put them in there? You cannot condemn a dog out of hand because of its ancestry. It may have been bred to have a potentially more aggressive nature but Nurture has to play a part too. My elder daughter has a dog which is a Stafford Cross. He looks vaguely similar to a pitbull. He was neutered at a year old and is quiet, amiable and obedient. Travis is used to children, nephews and neices are always around my daughter's home as are neighbours' children, and he's used to lots of adults around. He's also used to cats as my daughter has 3 of them. He knows his place - he's at the bottom of the pack. He's a dog, he's got a dog's nature, he's trained and, most importantly, he's controlled. Merseyside Police would no doubt class him as looking like a dangerous dog with his broad head and chest and his strong jaws. In the wrong hands, perhaps, he could have become a dangerous dog. In reality he's a loveable family member. Knee-jerk reactions to breeds of dog will not solve this problem. We need to sort out the human owners first. |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
body language is crucial when confronted by an aggressive dog.
heres what to do if you are confronted: :: Do not make eye contact. Turn you head away slightly from the dog. :: Lick lips and yawn. :: Do not run or scream - "it will stimulate the dog's predatory instinct". :: Make yourself as small as possible. |
Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
I feel sorry for any dog owners whose innocent pets have been confiscated because they look similar to one which was a killer. I don't think that solves the problem. They should be looking at owners of aggressive dogs of all types rather than all dogs of a similar breed.
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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
I've been bitten twice in my lifetime. Once was a bullmastiff, nearly as tall as me, which clamped my upper arm in its jaws and caused tremendous swelling before it let go - and walked away as if nothing had happened. The other time, I had several sizeable punctures in my left ankle by a neurotic pekingese that didn't like the look of my dog (which was on a lead at the time). Which one was the more aggressive?
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Re: Yet another dog kills a child...
I think it's the owners of Pit Bulls who should be rounded up, and taken away in vans.
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