07-10-2011, 12:03 AM | #11 |
Sent to the cornfield
Join Date: Feb 2008
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You'd be much safer just keeping Charlie Sheen as a pet.
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07-10-2011, 12:08 AM | #12 |
Stop the hate
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A Little boy on my block was mauled by a pair of Loose pitbulls this month. He's currently in critical condition. People who don't take care of their pets and look after them responsibly piss me the fuck off beyond belief
That said. I own a rottweiler a so called "Vicious" breed and I'm beginning to worry very much about both the safety of my little puppy while left alone in our yard whilst me and the roomate are at work and the general level of persecution I'm probably going to face in the coming months raising her. Animals respond to the stimulus you give them, bad pet-owners make bad pets.
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07-10-2011, 12:41 AM | #13 |
Feelin' Super!
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A few weeks ago, a friend and I found a parakeet fluttering around my backyard. We tried to get it to calm down so we could grab it, but it just flew a few blocks away. We lost track of it. Poor bird is probably dead. Admittedly, it wasn't dangerous towards us, but I've heard some stories of parrots and their ilk being dangerous birds in certain circumstances.
edit: we have little terriers running around, and they aren't physically dangerous, but the older one is just damn manipulative. Last edited by Bard The 5th LW; 07-10-2011 at 12:45 AM. |
07-10-2011, 12:46 AM | #14 | |
The Straightest Shota
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Quote:
They have a reputation for being vicious because they were bred to be guard dogs. That means that when the breed was first created there were personality traits that were selected for in breeding as well as strength. Amongst those were a strong desire to protect its territory and a 'vicious' attitude in a fight. Loyalty was ALSO amongst them, but when a dog starts going senile, or losing hearing and sight with age, welp. I mean, yes, the people who have said that if they raise a pet properly it will probably be fine are completely correct, but on the other hand there is a reason you don't hear of many people raising wolves even from puppies that don't end with 'and then it mauled a child'. Personality traits can be given a higher incidence through breeding, and while proper nurturing can repress them it's not a 100% thing and if you have a dog like a pitbull or a rottweiler you should be cognizant of that fact and treat it appropriately. Which is to say keep it leashed or fenced in places, don't let it play with small children (who are likely to yank on its tail/ears/do other things to provoke it--even the most mild mannered dogs and cats can react with violence to this, regardless of breed), and definitely don't let it run around your neighborhood where children play. Just because they act nice and kind to you that doesn't mean they're going to be 'sweethearts' to anyone else who comes near. Especially if they decide to be protective of their 'pack'. Edit: P.S. Trained attack dogs are also 'sweethearts' with their handlers, but you better believe they will rip a bitch's throat out if they're provoked in the wrong way. Edit2: Really even ignoring that they are more likely to be mean to people who they don't recognize through selective breeding, they have ridiculously powerful jaws and are basically murder machines. They are weapons in living form, and you shouldn't ignore that fact just because you think they are cute or they have never acted out before. They are capable of killing someone very quickly.
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Last edited by Krylo; 07-10-2011 at 12:51 AM. |
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07-10-2011, 01:12 AM | #15 |
Just sleeping
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I counter your well-reasoned arguments, Krylo, with my anecdote about the pitbull and her owner that I met in my alley. I have never been sober around this dog. Never ever. Why would I be sober in a freaking alley? Anyway, she's adorable, her owner reported the hole where the sewer collapsed in the alley, and I felt genuine concern when I saw posters of a similar missing pitbull until I saw her again. That dog is awesome.
Anecdotes! Off to the writing thread!
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07-10-2011, 02:07 AM | #16 |
Keeper of the new
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At least none of us are trapped indoors at night by packs of de-domesticated dogs roaming the streets. That happens in some places you know.
I've always said I like cats and dogs in equal measure, but when you think about it cats kill and maim a whole lot less people. Even though they spend a lot more time unsupervised and unleashed. It might be time to give up that "man's best friend" title, dogs.
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Hope insistent, trust implicit, love inherent, life immersed |
07-10-2011, 03:47 AM | #17 | |||||||||
Stop the hate
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Whereas Rottweilers were bred as herd and work dogs(pulling carts and the like) In a sense they can be considered "Guard Dog" breeds since I'm sure they were often used to protect owners from strange animals, but they aren't necessarily naturally human-aggressive. Quote:
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Both animals were bred for physical strength for their respective duties, and an enhanced prey instinct towards animals in particular and loyalty to humans. Basically these dogs were trained to be aggressive(Kinda) to other animals first and foremost. More often than not aggression can be curtailed to an extreme degree when only around humans, though improper socialization can lead to the presence of other animals flipping that switch, so don't keep them isolated from other dogs.
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07-10-2011, 04:49 AM | #18 | ||
The Straightest Shota
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The only real difference between wolves and domesticated dogs are a few thousand years of living around humans and breeding/domestication.
So it's not really. It's the same thing. Aggression and territorial instincts weren't slowly bred out of wild wolves. This makes them much more dangerous even when raised from pups. In the same way aggression was bred into various fighting dogs, which makes them much more dangerous than non-fighting dogs. Not to the same level, but the comparison is there. Quote:
Depending on how much exposure the dog has to people other than its immediate family (and how those people treat it/its family) 'animal-aggression' can very quickly turn into 'aggression toward any humans I don't recognize' because, again, humans are animals. Quote:
Edit: I mean really, how often do you hear of a golden retriever mauling people? Compared to a pitbull or rott? There's a reason for this, guys.
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Last edited by Krylo; 07-10-2011 at 04:56 AM. |
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07-10-2011, 05:13 AM | #19 |
Stop the hate
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Drank |
07-10-2011, 06:21 AM | #20 |
Sent to the cornfield
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Fuck dogs and their owners.
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