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Friday, April 12, 2013

The pits

I'm just sayin':

If ya'all have a dog that is THAT fragile ('it's 99% on how the dog is raised"), if ya'all would stop looking at that large, naked Emperor who, in fact, still ain't wearin' no clothes, you would admit that such an animal is still a **HUGE** risk.

Run this through your heads a few times before you hit me back:

Go on the internet NOW, and find me ANY report of a "viscous Pug" attacking a helpless old lady - or worse - an innocent child that accidentally stumbled into the wrong territory. No matter how deep you are in denial (and a lot of you are in up to your ears!), you will never, ever find such a report. Why not? It doesn't matter HOW a pug is raised, the 'attack' gene has never, ever been a part of this dog's genetic lineage (and I'm using a pug as one of many available examples.) You can damned near ring a pug's neck, and he won't fight back. Can't say the same for your pits, eh?

A slightly different story applies to the English Bulldog. More education:

An English Bulldog once had a reputation that is far worse than any Pitbull you have ever known and ever WILL know.

In the 1835, Bullbaiting was outlawed in England.

They wanted to preserve this dog, BUT WITHOUT THE AGGRESSIVE GENE!

(They didn't have trailer park trash in those days that choose to use these dogs as weapons, and thankfully, an English Bulldog was rare enough - then - and expensive enough that the 'trailer park trash' of the day couldn't afford them. So.... only the blue bloods could afford an English Bulldog. The folk with money, mind you, knew how to behave. If they wanted a weapon, they used a gun. They knew that this valuable, precious breed would rapidly go extinct because they no longer had a job: Bullbaiting. They were also smart enough (no so these days, eh?) to know that if they maintained the aggressive nature of this dog, that they would, in fact, go extinct. SO.... The English Bulldog was PURPOSEFULLY bred for a better - and better - temperament. Because of these efforts, the English Bulldog will never, ever see headlines as a 'vicious attack dog'.

If you need me to, I can quickly pull up internet news reports - probably on a daily basis - of pitbulls attacking.

(Sorry, folk. I don't live with my head stuck in my bum, and truth is the best policy.) :

Keep these dogs out of the hands of cheap, under-educated trash, and you might have a breed that - one day - will have a better reputation. Until then: Not so much.

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