American XL bully dogs to be banned after attacks, Rishi Sunak says (news.sky.com)
from alphacyberranger@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 18:18
https://lemmy.world/post/5112128

#world

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autotldr@lemmings.world on 15 Sep 2023 18:20 next collapse

This is the best summary I could come up with:


A ban on American bully XL dogs was already being looked at after shocking footage emerged of an attack in Birmingham last weekend that left an 11-year-old girl with serious injuries.

South Yorkshire Police reported four separate dog attacks on children in two days, including one where a 15-year-old was taken to hospital after being savaged by an XL bully in Sheffield.

Any ban should be based on “robust evidence”, a spokeswoman for the coalition said - adding it was “deeply concerned” by the “lack of data behind this decision and its potential to prevent dog bites”.

But there is concern a move to prohibit the animal may not be practical due to the American XL bully not being recognised as a breed by the Kennel Club, which could mean any ban may inadvertently outlaw other kinds of dogs.

As head of the Merseyside force back in 2007, he had introduced such a measure following the death of five-year-old Ellie Lawrenson, who was mauled by a banned pitbull-type dog at her grandmother’s home in St Helens on New Year’s Day.

In a joint statement, Bully Watch, the Campaign for Evidence Based Regulation of Dangerous Dogs (CEBRDD) and Protect Our Pets claimed the breed was a “a clear and present threat to public health”.


The original article contains 976 words, the summary contains 213 words. Saved 78%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 18:59 next collapse

I’m not a dog breed expert, but…

The other day an agressive dog that looked like a pitbull, suddenly lunged at me barking loudly… It was about 10ft away from me but still scared the shit out of me

The owner yanked the dog back on its leash and i thought, “FML, the only thing that saved me from a deadly mauling was a 3/4 inch wide piece of nylon with a metal clip the guy bought off amazon for $5”

Seraph@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:04 next collapse

"But my little velvet hippo couldn't hurt anyone!"

snipgan@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:09 next collapse

To be fair most won’t, but they definitely can and do.

Especially when they are jaws on legs that are more inclined compared to other dogs.

Seraph@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:31 next collapse

The actual issue is that's it's a degenerative disease in dogs of similar breeds. At some point they get old and less able to recognize friend from foe. That might be ok if it weren't for the jaws you mentioned.

snipgan@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:36 next collapse

Exactly.

I'd go one step farther and even say if they even had the same amount of attacks as other dogs, had no possible mental diseases, and all want to caring homes I would still put restrictions/ban on them.

They are just too large to handle, too big of a bite to brush off, and end up in dog attacks a lot. That's enough for me.

Shadow@lemmy.ca on 15 Sep 2023 19:58 collapse

I’m gonna need a source on that.

Seraph@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:05 collapse

Cerebellar Cortical Disintegration or Degenerative Myelopathy could exacerbate a situation.

I unexpectedly found this on the genetic mapping of aggression which seemed interesting: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4977763/

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 00:10 collapse

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4977763/

That’s a great article…

However the only examples of aggression being related to breed is with Daschands and Yorkies, although the study says that’s likely just to that specific gene also making legs shorter.

While there is a genetic component to aggression, it’s variation is pretty standard amongst all dogs, except the tiny ones who may have accidentally been selected for it.

But someone asked you for a source for a cognitive thing and you just randomly linked an article about how breed doesn’t determine behavior?

Did you know what that article was about before you linked it?___

Seraph@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 01:17 collapse

However, it is also notable that a subset of large breeds carries the chrX reduced-fear/aggression and increased-size variants in perfect LD.

I know reading is hard, friend! I linked that as it was the most interesting thing I found while looking off there were other degenerative diseases common in pitbulls, while not being pitbull specific. Did you think me finding evidence contrary to my beliefs would result in me hiding it?

I'd give you snarky "let me Google that for you" on the degenerative diseases as they're genuinely interesting, but I guess you'll never know what they're about since you can type a comment but not use a search engine.

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 01:33 collapse

People were talking about pitbulls, they average 60lbs, they’re not a “subset of large breeds” like Rottweilers who average 120lbs…

You’re not being coherent, just trying to jump between “gotchas”.

Just randomly jumping all over

Seraph@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 01:41 collapse

You're right, pitbulls are medium not large, sorry. Nevertheless the study was interesting. Again, wasn't trying to make a point with it, it was the most genuinely interesting thing I found in my short search about the subject of aggression in dogs. Sorry you don't agree.

But since you're having so much fun chatting with me:
https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=Cerebellar+Cortical+Disintegration
https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=Degenerative+Myelopathy

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 02:33 collapse

So you still couldn’t find anything that agrees with you?

Sorry, not taking the time to help you.

Seraph@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 02:42 collapse

I did and put those in the original comment you are being replying to. You just refused to look up anything about them. I have no desire to do your research either, ignorance suits you.

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 02:56 collapse

I did and put those in the original comment you are being replying to.

You didn’t tho, you have that random article you didn’t read…

Although I don’t know why I’d be surprised you’re just making shit up now, that’s all you’ve done so far. I have no doubt you somehow think you’re “winning” whatever is you’re trying to do here either.

Have fun with whatever that is I guess.

Seraph@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 03:03 collapse

No one is "winning". When you wrestle with a pig you both get covered in shit, but the pig likes it.

Guess we'll both have our own perspective on that old saying.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 19:54 collapse

Yup. I’ve crunched the numbers before, and it’s something like 1 in 10,000 pit bulls will attack a human or other companion animal every year. It’s not likely for any given pit to attack a person (which I can anecdotally support–they’re obnoxiously friendly and loving in my experience), but it’s also like 10 times more than the next most vicious breed. In my opinion, it’s not worth euthanizing every member of the breed, but it is worth neutering every one. We don’t need dog breeds, especially ones responsible for over half of the violent attacks on people and other animals.

Of course, I’m in support of neutering all companion animals to reduce the stray population and ease the strain on shelters, regardless of breed or species. Breed specific laws are only one step towards fixing the larger problem.

Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:01 next collapse

Of course, I’m in support of neutering all companion animals to ease the stray population and the strain on shelters, regardless of breed or species. Breed specific laws are only one step towards fixing the larger problem.

Bob Barker is smiling down on you from heaven for this

workerONE@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 06:55 next collapse

Don’t you think that pit bull attacks are dangerous and cause medical trauma which leads to reporting of the attack? I think it’s likely that they don’t attack people more than any other dog breed. I was bit by a black lab mix. I didn’t report it to anyone. If it had been a pit bull I probably would have needed medical attention.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:10 collapse

It’s actually not the strongest bite. And not the only breed with a locking jaw. It is the breed with a reputation though…

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:06 collapse

A reputation of the most kills.

en.wikipedia.org/…/List_of_fatal_dog_attacks_in_t…

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:06 collapse

Yes. Built by shitty people doing shitty things to these dogs because they like that fact about them.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:12 next collapse

As you’ve pointed out the dogs are perfectly capable of being lovey couch potatoes. The problem isn’t the dog it’s the people. The breed has a reputation. And the people who like that are just going to move on to the next breed after this one is gone.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:55 collapse

You literally looked at the numbers they produced, ignored that and locked onto a tiny portion of their comment.

You, ma’am, are not arguing in good faith.

[deleted] on 16 Sep 2023 13:49 collapse
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Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:07 collapse

We can, by looking at their kill ratio.

Human serial killers get the same treatment.

en.wikipedia.org/…/List_of_fatal_dog_attacks_in_t…

Ataraxia@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 23:35 collapse

I must be unlucky because I have yet not run into one that didn’t try to kill me if not for the muzzle or them being a puppy or a fence.

silentdon@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:52 next collapse

That’s funny because hippos kill more people than dogs

herbertherzlos@feddit.de on 15 Sep 2023 20:11 next collapse

In total? Doubt it.

Seraph@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:54 collapse

13000 vs 500 a year. So not really close. But hippos are more dangerous than most people think!

jopepa@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 20:51 next collapse

Hippos are super aggressive, territorial, and will bite a crocodiles in half. It’s amazing that’s supposed to be a cute, disarming nickname for a breed notorious for the same traits.

_xDEADBEEF@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 07:28 collapse

It’s also the most deadliest land mammal, the hippo that is.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:05 collapse

Pretty sure that is technically humans, but hippos are definitely a second.

squiblet@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:59 collapse

It’s funny they call them hippos considering that hippos are extremely dangerous and vicious wild animals.

dingleberry@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Sep 2023 05:13 collapse

And hippos too are known to turn on their human caretakers out of nowhere.

slaacaa@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:10 next collapse

A shitbull owner using a leash, rare combination.

sturmblast@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:30 next collapse

blame the owner not the dog

Luvs2Spuj@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:43 next collapse

Blame both if the dog is a known dangerous breed.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:09 collapse

Blame the parents not the serial killer.

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 03:10 next collapse

not if that is sarcasm or not, but most likely there was no pitull in that that dog.

DauntingFlamingo@lemmy.ml on 16 Sep 2023 03:27 next collapse

Based on what?

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 03:31 collapse

many many studies have shown that people can breeds apart.

9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 04:46 collapse

not sarcasm at all…

regardless of breed, this dog looked like he was about to fuck up my whole day, so my point stands

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:01 collapse

as does my point.

gamer@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 12:12 collapse

I was walking my dog through my neighborhood once, and one of my stupid ass neighbors had his dog loose in his garage with the door open across the street. When it saw me, it charged at us, barking aggressively. It didn’t attack me, it just stood a few feet away baring its teeth and barking while his overweight owner waddled over to it armed with a sandle. I think it was a labrador.

If it was a pitbull though I’d likely be missing a limb or two today.

snipgan@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:06 next collapse

Unsurprising. Large “power breeds” like pit bulls I have always found questionable to have.

No restrictions or licenses? No muzzles at least?

A good thing they banned them.

Though I still dislike the outright malice and hate I see when a pit bull in a photo might be doing nothing but staring at a sunset. A bit hate crazy.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 20:00 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

1bluepixel@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:07 next collapse

People with access to verifiable data overlook the appearance of safety to express a legitimate concern about a breed that’s demonstrably more likely to kill? What dorks!

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 21:28 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

gears@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 23:07 collapse

My childhood pitbull bit me in the face and I have permanent face scarring from it. I had to get 60+ stitches to reconstruct my face.

It’s not a valid point to say “most don’t attack people” when the breed is much more likely to attack a person compared to other breeds. Then it’s made worse by the fact they’ve been bred to be extra good at attacking.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 04:53 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 10:04 next collapse

Just stop. You can’t even put a decent argument together and you aren’t helping anyone. Please, just stop.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 17:30 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:17 collapse

They have the most kills because they are more likely to attack than any other breed, and more dangerous when they do.

en.wikipedia.org/…/List_of_fatal_dog_attacks_in_t…

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 15 Sep 2023 21:14 collapse

If you’re a dog owner and you’re paying attention, then your personal experience should include the following truth: any dog can go postal. If you then combine this with the knowledge that pitbulls are much more deadly than other dogs when being agressive, then you must reach the conclusion that this breed should be banned, even though that is admittedly a sad conclusion.

sturmblast@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:29 next collapse

by that logic you would ban every dog on the planet

WldFyre@lemm.ee on 15 Sep 2023 22:44 collapse

Every dog on the planet is more aggressive than all other dogs on the planet?

Instigate@aussie.zone on 16 Sep 2023 00:51 next collapse

Well surely it’s a spectrum that people are advocating an arbitrary line be placed on. Once this breed is gone, what about the next most aggressive breed? They then become the most aggressive breed and there’ll be calls to weed them out too. Dogs kill more humans than any other non-human vertebrate in the world by a very long shot - getting rid of one breed isn’t going to reduce that number to zero.

To clarify, I’m not against the move of banning the breed at all, I’m just acutely aware that it’s making an arbitrary distinction.

Tavarin@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 04:32 next collapse

Pitbulls are deadlier than all other breeds combined. They are 10 times as deadly as the next most aggressive breed. You don’t need to pull out the slippery slope fallacy, when the line is very clearly at pitbulls.

Carlo@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 04:46 next collapse

Dogs kill more humans than any other non-human vertebrate in the world by a very long shot

I looked into this, based on some other comments. Turns out it’s snakes. Various sources list dogs at between 13,000 and 35,000 deaths per year, and snakes in a range of 75,000-100,000.

Edit: but if we’re talking one species, dogs might edge out the deadliest snake. Really hard to say, based on the data I was able to find.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:59 collapse

That is not a good argument, it is dishonest and disingenuous.

You’re actually using the same logic people used to try and avoid gay marriage.

[deleted] on 16 Sep 2023 13:52 collapse
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Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:15 collapse
crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 06:21 collapse

Each more similar than the last!

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 21:31 next collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

Tavarin@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 04:33 next collapse

I know a handful of pits who have bitten and severely injured people. For your positive anecdote there is a negative to match.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 04:50 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

aBundleOfFerrets@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 05:07 collapse

Technically it is disengenuous to say statistically and then make up a statistic

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 05:34 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 10:02 collapse

Assuming an average lifespan of roughly 10 years, there’s a roughly 1 in 1,000 chance that a given pit bull will ever attack a human or animal.

So 1 in every 1000 will attack a human? Is that actually a good argument for pit bulls?

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:14 collapse

Its like saying 95% of catholic priests have not molested a child, meaning 1 in 20 definitely have, lol.

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 06:35 next collapse

Can this possibly be true?
If a dog switches to aggressive mode and stops listening to commands, trying to attack (another dog, a cat, a deer, a bird, a human) that’s what I mean by “going postal”. In most cases they are restrained on leash. The outcome, and the target (for the sake of this argument) are not important. It is not possible to predict accurately when they will do this.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 06:48 collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 10:38 next collapse

I mean that’s fairly obvious from subtext. If you had, you would most likely be too traumatised to be defending them on an online forum.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:15 collapse

If you did you wouldn’t have been alive to say so.

en.wikipedia.org/…/List_of_fatal_dog_attacks_in_t…

originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com on 16 Sep 2023 00:39 collapse

i am a dog owner, and know many dog owners, and have personally known 2 neighbors who lost pets due to pits who went 'postal'

anecdotes gunna anecdote

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:32 collapse

Pitbulls are not the deadliest dog out there. Not by a long shot. They’re just the ones people like to make aggressive.

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 10:40 next collapse

Except they are, though. They’re bred to be as deadly as possible. This is a verifiable fact.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:20 collapse

There are dogs that are bred to help bring down bears. Some asshole breeding for noise and muscle does not make the most dangerous dog.

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 20:40 collapse

Pitbulls are the most deadly breed of dog, to humans. This is a solid concrete fact. There are reasons for this, and evidence to back it up. Your thing about bears is irrelevant, unless those dogs have been proven to be more dangerous to humans than pitbulls, which they haven’t.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 20:54 collapse

Sure, just ignore all context. Big number bad. Keep playing whack a mole wondering why the problem never gets fixed.

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 22:09 collapse

Problem is pitbulls. Fix with ban. Simple. Context is evidence. Context is bloodthirsty breeding program. Understand?

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 23:14 collapse

Except it isn’t. Pitbulls were already banned weren’t they? This is literally the next breed and just another brand. It’s happening before your eyes and you still can’t see it.

crapwittyname@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 23:18 collapse

What is happening please? Obviously am too simple to understand machinations of anti-killer-dog cabal.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:10 next collapse
starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 17:41 collapse

It’s important to understand what people mean when they say things. These people aren’t saying that pit bulls are more physically capable of killing people than any other breed, they’re saying that they’re responsible for more deaths than any other breed.

It’s a bit like saying the flu is deadler than ebola. Ebola may have a higher mortality rate, but it’s so much less likely to infect people that it has a much smaller kill count.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:00 collapse

Then they can say that.

slaacaa@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:11 next collapse

“Garbage dogs for garbage people”

Jonny@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:23 next collapse

I do wonder how much is the breed and how much is shitty owners being attracted to perceived scary breeds. My guess would be a bit of both.

DessertStorms@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 19:44 next collapse

You need to go one step further - why do people feel the need to own such dogs in the first place? Some people would say the dog is for protection (from who? And why are those people a threat? It's well known that lack of social and communal services lead to young people ending up involved with gangs and violence), others use it as a status symbol (don't even get me started on consumerism, and commodification of natural shit like animals), and in almost all cases there is a lot of toxic masculinity involved.

These are all deep rooted systemic issues that go far beyond both dogs and owners (don't get me wrong - I am not excusing bad dog ownership, and don't think people should be raising violent and aggressive dogs), and they all need addressing to actually resolve the problem, but it's much easier for those in charge to focus on the end result, and make it an individual issue, they don't care about making society better, they just want power and money.

Veilus@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:32 collapse

Not arguing here, all your points are correct, just sharing why I have a big scary dog. He’s half GSD, quarter american pit (not xl) and quarter American staffordshire. I got him for two reasons, 1) I have a first floor patio in a bad neighborhood and he’s got a great guard insinct, and 2) he’s a big baby and makes a great emotional support animal (ptsd anxiety and ASD). I don’t need protection, I just need a buddy to scare off the crackheads who have tried to walk into my appartment just because I wanted some fresh air and left the door open. He loves everyone, but oh boy if I don’t let you in myself you’re in for one hell of time. I’ve raised dogs all my life, knew what I wanted, and what I was getting into. That is unfortunately not the case 90% of the time and it pisses me off when I see it. Honestly I would love to require people get a liscense to own a dog (let alone have children)

barsoap@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 13:20 next collapse

Honestly I would love to require people get a liscense to own a dog

That’s the case in Germany, depending on state and breed. With what I heard about US dogs and their utter lack of training (e.g. not being able to lie under a table under a restaurant and chill) you should probably make it universal, though.

(let alone have children)

…that’s not going to happen. How about teaching pedagogy and developmental psychology in school, say ages 14 to 16, start of the “seeing kids as kids” age. Speaking of, domestic animal psychology is actually a great topic for biology, doesn’t need to go into depth but some fundamental stuff about cats and dogs so that people are less likely to misinterpret what they see should easily fit the curriculum.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 18:10 collapse

(let alone have children)

Who exactly would be in charge of approving those licenses, Herr Führer?

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:47 next collapse

It’s bit of both. These morons aren’t lining up to buy daschunds.

SinningStromgald@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:47 next collapse

In the case of decent owners probably 50/50. Bad owners more like 10/90 (dog/owner).

[deleted] on 15 Sep 2023 19:48 next collapse
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datavoid@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 2023 19:56 collapse

Pitbull?

jopepa@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 20:42 collapse

The article I found says border collie and red heeler.

Dog ejected from vehicle in Idaho crash found two days later herding sheep

Transcendant@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:48 next collapse

In the past I’d say it’s a bit of both, though moreso the type of shitheads attracted to ‘scary’ breeds is also as likely to be shit at training/ socialising them. There’s some good evidence though that this particular ‘XL’ breed has higher rates of inbreeding and has already been selected for agression (not to mention their increased size & power).

Think it’s a fair point some are making though that just banning the latest dangerous breed is missing the wood for the trees. There should be serious penalties from any dog attack, for the owner; treat it the same as possession of a dangerous weapon like a gun or zombie knife.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 20:04 next collapse

Literally all I’m saying is that the vast majority of pit bulls aren’t violent. I fucking said I’m in favor of spaying and neutering the breed out of existence because the few that do become violent are excessively dangerous.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:47 next collapse

Horses are fragile as fuck. Let’s talk about dogs that were bred to kill bears. Oh but wait they didn’t get a street rep and a million shitty owners abusing them. Alaskan Malamutes were bred to help with Polar Bears, they get to about 100 pounds, have a very strong bite, and a big independent streak making them harder to train. Oh yeah and they come with a warning about being around children.

What’s the difference in the actual breeds? The Malamute is giant fluffball. The Pitbull has many manly muscles.

kmkz_ninja@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:54 collapse

Ive seen people attack and kill buffalo. We should kill whichever breed of people do that.

JasSmith@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:40 next collapse

You don’t need to train a pointer puppy to point. They do it from birth. You don’t need to train a sheep dog to herd. They do it from the moment they can walk. You don’t need to teach a pit bull to latch and shake. They also do that from birth. Training can mitigate the risk, but they’re still very dangerous dogs.

constnt@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:28 next collapse

If that logic holds true than pure American pitbull terriers should actually be the safest dogs to own in regards to people. Pitbulls where bred for dog fighting, but even more specifically they were bred to not bite the handlers. As getting a dog to fight is just a matter of time and selection, but getting a dog to fight only dogs and not people is something much more difficult and valuable, at the time.

But, that was many, many years ago. And the breed has been bred and bred and inbred and bred again. An American pitbull terrier average weight is about 35 to 60 lbs. Average. 35 is no bigger than an average corgi. With 60 at the high end being a small golden or average chow.

These XL bully breeds aren’t pitbulls. Hell, even pitbulls now days aren’t pitbulls. They are a mix of staffy, mastiff, American bull dogs, English bulldogs, and random other terriers. And then sold as designer breeds like the American bully with no regard for behavior, temperament, or loyalty.

GBU_28@lemm.ee on 15 Sep 2023 22:44 collapse

They were trained for fighting. Hard stop.

Just so happens their normal sport was fighting dogs.

constnt@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 00:06 collapse

Literally no.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:37 collapse

Literally every breed with a prey drive does the death shake. And they aren’t the only ones with locking jaws either. This is very much a problem of shitty people who like the reputation.

Wahots@pawb.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:46 next collapse

The problem is that there’s no way to tell a bad owner from a good one, which is how we end up in situations like this. I’ve almost had my throat torn out as I made my way to the bus stop because a very submissive owner couldn’t control his dommy gshep, which was lunging and straining at the leash in order to kill me.

I love sheps and have met some extremely good owners, but they are few and far between compared to the jackasses who bring their Rottweilers into bars, where the dog goes absolutely ballistic and starts making kill noises at everyone until the owner has to leave the bar. And that happened last month, lol.

sturmblast@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:28 next collapse

most people that know how to train dogs have perfectly well behaved dogs, of course they’re always going to be animals at the end of the day but we shouldn’t be surprised when they act out either

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 03:24 collapse

oh oh I read a study answering that.

It depends on behavior. They found high correlation between breed and how many time they turned around before laying down. Certain common trip like sit or come. But not aggressive behavior. They highest correlation for that was back ground. Dog from the streets or abusive backgrounds. Followed by a small correlation with genetics, which is not the same as breed.

Breed did have anything to do with aggression. Also most people can’t tell a pitbull from other dogs, and studies that look at dog attacks only rely on the victim just saying what breed attacked them

[deleted] on 15 Sep 2023 19:29 next collapse
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GiantChickDicks@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 2023 19:34 next collapse

It’s really disheartening to see Reddit’s irrational pit bull venom is just as present here. Notice how rarely you see comments from animal industry professionals chiming in with these opinions. It’s not because professionals don’t have their own breed biases, and they don’t typically keep quiet about them, either. It’s that most people with a lot of day-to-day experience with dogs don’t share this opinion. Their experiences don’t match public perception.

Bite statistics and behavioral euthanasias both in private and public spheres are anything but transparent. They also often rely upon witness statement accuracy, which is not reliable nor scientific. There simply isn’t enough accurate information available to support such a vitriolic, knee-jerk reaction to a dog’s breed in and of itself. There are too many variables to consider to accept that mindset as rational.

I encourage anyone who cares about these issues and who loves animals and people to consider volunteering. There are a lot of opportunities out there that you might be surprised are available. It’s not just shelters who need volunteers, either, and you can find opportunities in an array of different settings and ways of helping. You might find that experience will give you a broader understanding of how complex these problems are, and how we can work to solve them.

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:46 next collapse

There simply isn’t enough accurate information available to support such a vitriolic, knee-jerk reaction to a dog’s breed in and of itself.

Of course there is. Not a week goes by in the UK without an attack by this breed. Some survive, many do not.

dublet@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 20:41 collapse

Not a week goes by in the UK without an attack by this breed. Some survive, many do not.

Can you please link some statistics on this?

The only source I could find says:

Six of the 10 fatal dog attacks in the UK last year were linked to XL bullies, and at least three of the seven this year.

theguardian.com/…/why-are-american-xl-bullies-bei…

That’s too many deaths, of course, but hardly one a week.

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 20:52 next collapse

Saturday: www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-birmingham-66256193

Wednesday: dailymail.co.uk/…/Shocking-moment-dog-mauls-boy-f…

Thursday: theguardian.com/…/man-dies-after-dog-attack-in-we…

That’s 3 in 6 days.

dublet@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:34 collapse

Wednesday: dailymail.co.uk/…/Shocking-moment-dog-mauls-boy-f…

That one is a Staffordshire bull terrier, not the breed being banned for these attacks.

That’s 3 in 6 days.

You didn’t actually respond to my comment about a request for statistics, rather posting some individual stories. So since I posted I found this article from the BBC. It states that:

In 2022, there were 8,819 admissions to hospital in England with dog bites.

So that’s actually 24 dog attacks per day, so the problem is even more severe than you suggest, though the claim of only “some survive” then is misleading at best.

In 2022, there were 482 sentences given to owners of dangerously out of control dogs which resulted in an injury to a person in public

Out of all those hospital admissions, there’s 24 attacks a day being deemed criminal by our justice system. That data suggests that this problem is by no means limited to the XL bully breed.

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 19:30 collapse

That one is a Staffordshire bull terrier, not the breed being banned for these attacks.

Two attacks in six days rather than three then. Does this somehow make it acceptable?

They’re a dangerous breed and should be banned. No amount of pedantry or weasel words can change that.

PM_me_your_vagina_thanks@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:55 next collapse

Mostly cause we, y'know, ban the dangerous breeds, so we have a lot fewer dangerous dogs attacking people.

dublet@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:54 collapse

482 dog attacks in 2022 resulting in criminal action but a fraction are caused by this particular breed.

In one recent study, researchers compared behavioural tendencies such as impulsivity and sensitivity to positive and negative stimuli – known to trigger aggressive responses – between eight dog breeds that are legislated against (including pit bull types), and 17 breeds that are not. This suggested that breed alone was a poor predictor of individual behavioural tendencies, including those related to aggression.

theguardian.com/…/banning-some-dog-breeds-in-the-…

squiblet@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:56 next collapse

That’s 6 of 10 fatal dog attacks. Though it surely disappoints them, not all attacks by pit bulls are fatal.

dublet@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:25 collapse

Apparently requesting to have a fact based discussion is offensive. I merely asked for actual data for some rather extraordinary claims.

squiblet@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 11:32 collapse

I don’t think I seemed offended. I pointed out that the fact you refuted wasn’t what the person you replied to was asserting.

I see the statistics you cite come up as the first result on searches. Did you look at anything else? “Dog attacks in UK annually” has a lot of results for me.

Here’s a BBC article for example:
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-64798162
which states

Last year, there were nearly 22,000 cases of out-of-control dogs causing injury. In 2018, there were just over 16,000.

as far as info on which breeds are involved, I’m sure it’s out there.

dublet@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:46 collapse

I pointed out that the fact you refuted wasn’t what the person you replied to was asserting.

There were two claims asserted:

  • “Not a week goes by in the UK without an attack by this breed.”
  • Some survive, many do not.”

(Emphasis mine) The first is not something I can find evidence for as there seems to be no break down easily availably by breed. And as for the second, most survive , 0.1% do not.

The down votes being given for asking for data seems like I’m offending some. 🤷

as far as info on which breeds are involved, I’m sure it’s out there.

Does not seem to be as you have also failed to find it. There is aggregate data for all dogs, which yes, is easily found actually refused some of the assertions that the person made.

Banning based on breed seems like a knee jerk reaction based on anecdotes.

squiblet@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 11:54 collapse

True, “many” seems to be an overstatement. Being mauled by a dog isn’t great, either.

Does not seem to be as you have also failed to find it.

That’s a function of how much time I spent looking. You seem to be more engaged in this topic than I am, so perhaps you could find the data.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:27 collapse

These stats are American, and only the ones that got in the news:

en.wikipedia.org/…/List_of_fatal_dog_attacks_in_t…

JasSmith@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:35 next collapse

The statistics are unequivocal. There is a reason we don’t usually allow people to own lions and leopards as house pets. No amount of obedience training is going to make them safe. Here is a list of all fatal dog attacks in the UK. Pit bull breeds are far over-represented. I just don’t see how you can look at this data and think, “everything is fine!”

GiantChickDicks@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 2023 20:59 next collapse

As I said, dog bite and behavioral euthanasia reports are murky at best, and rely upon nonexpert information. I’m sorry, but a picture graph with no information on how the information was obtained, what verification was involved, etc. is no better than a Facebook share. That’s my point. Information is hard to qualify, quantify, and assess. Trying to oversimplify such a complicated issue is not going to get to the root of the problem.

slaacaa@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 05:33 collapse

yawn

DrMario@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:00 collapse

I genuinely can’t grasp why anyone would die on the hill of defending pit bulls. There are countless other dog breeds to choose from, why can’t we just ban pit bulls entirely when they’re demonstrably dangerous?

slaacaa@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 05:32 next collapse

In some old reddit threads this was talked about a lot, some interesting ideas came up. Of course many people keep these because they are assholes and enjoy scaring others (e.g. drug dealers, gangsta wannabes), but those are also not the ones arguing about statistics online.

The most interesting view in my opinion: these owners are having some kind of victim/martyr complex, enjoy picking the hated breed, so they can be a pit mamma, and show the world, etc. It becomes a part of their personality, so they are special and not like others. When they feel attacked, they are very defensive about it - I used to get abusive “suicide reports” many times I posted or commented smg anti-shitbull.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:58 next collapse

Because shitheads are just going to move on to the next breed. That’s already effectively what happened with the XL Bully. The dogs are nowhere near the hardest to train and socialize. They just have the street rep.

DrMario@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 14:34 collapse

I don’t understand your point. Are you saying if we ban pit bulls people will choose other violent dog breeds, and those people are shitheads? Or are you saying people who want to ban pit bulls are shitheads and banning pits will open the door to banning more violent breeds?

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:09 collapse

The owners who buy these animals specifically because of their street rep will just choose another breed. We need laws about breeding and training.

starman2112@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 18:00 collapse

One reason is that many people see these arguments against the breed as arguments against their own pet. It’s easy to see why someone would ignore the statistics when they’ve had pit bulls that were all sweeter than any other dog they’ve owned. When you start bombarding people like that with statistics and news stories it doesn’t convince them that good old Velma is actually a ticking time bomb, it convinces them that people on the internet just hate their dog for no reason. After all, while pit bulls do attack people and animals disproportionately often, Velma has lived with a chihuahua and a cat for ten years without ever so much as growling, as do the majority of pits.

Then there are comments like “garbage dogs for garbage owners,” and arguments against the breed become arguments against the owner. Do you expect someone to just not say anything when someone insults them?

bkmps3@aussie.zone on 15 Sep 2023 23:11 next collapse

Here ya go. I spent 7 years in the military as a dog handler with two different malinois during that time.

I then got out and worked for a government agency investigating dog attacks.

One of the first jobs across my desk was… an American Bully XL. Almost killed another dog and sent a male person to the hospital. The dog was from an upper class family and was around little children daily.

We had 7 dogs that we had confiscated, pending court hearing regarding attacks.

7 out of 7 dogs were bully breed dogs.

In my experience I will not trust a bully breed dog in any circumstance. I’d take a malinois any day over a bully breed dog.

squiblet@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 11:56 collapse

It’s not really about reddit, unless you think the UK government also got their attitude from reddit. Personally while I have not been attacked by a Pitt, and have known people with some that are nice and some that are insane, I have been threatened by Pitts in public and I did not enjoy it.

Reverendender@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 19:37 next collapse

This is definitely the highest priority action item in the U.K. Right now.

/s

PM_me_your_vagina_thanks@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:45 collapse

I fuckin' hate the tories, but you do realise governments can do more than one thing at once, right?

saltesc@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 19:42 next collapse

Dog breeds all exist for a purpose either still relevant or now redundant.

Before you get a dog, understand what that breed exists for. Even the best obedience training may not overcome generations of refined and selected natural instincts.

It’s never the dogs fault. It is always your fault.

leaskovski@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 20:16 next collapse

Oh my springer will be sad. There are 4 dogs in our area that brings him out of his shell from being very careful and cautious, to a raving loon that sends him to loony town... it would be a shame if these two frisky buddies couldn't play.

steebo_jack@kbin.social on 15 Sep 2023 21:10 next collapse

This probably wont be the last breed they ban...

turmacar@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:19 next collapse

Part of the problem is it isn’t a breed.

Part of the order (request? whatever it is) is to define the breed first. Which makes the rest seem pretty reactionary. Not far off from saying “ban dogs I find scary”.

kale@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 09:31 collapse

A lot of that is selective breeding. Humans add a ton of extra stuff to breed, but groups of breeds are not as arbitrary. Pointers have been bred for bird hunting, shepherds for livestock, retrievers for waterfowl, terriers for small game hunting. Bulldogs were bred for 150+ years to attack bulls, bears, and other dogs (until animal welfare laws banned dog fighting). Further division of breeds (like rat terrier vs feist) is arbitrary and doesn’t represent anything meaningful genetically.

My opinion is that bulldog / terrier mixes (like the pit) represent a greater risk to humans than the average dog. I don’t think it’s anything unique to the pit, which has a lot of media hysteria. The data look so bad for pits because they are so popular. If Staffordshires were more popular in America, they’d show up in the stars more.

The name “pit bull terrier” did originate from bull terriers used in professional dog fighting. Dogs would fight in a pit. Until animal cruelty laws became a thing.

Just being upfront: I wouldn’t own a pit due to the number of instances of friends having a pit that is the “nicest dog ever” and it randomly attacked them one day. I also extend this to Persian cats, btw. But we can’t ban particular breeds. Punish bad owners, continue selectively breeding dogs to reduce aggression.

Extreme example: Adults who were abused as children are more likely to be child abusers themselves. Should we ban people who were beaten by their parents from being teachers? They are statistically more likely to abuse children.

turmacar@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:29 collapse

I think we agree? Breeds have tenancies towards certain behaviors and pits tend to be singled out in part because they’re popular, so there are more incidents, and in part because they’re strong, so the incidents tend to be more serious.

But that doesn’t make the order less arbitrary.

If Huskies/Akitas/Malamutes were more common and in the news a lot and they decided to ban “wolf-like dogs” or somesuch that would also be questionable.

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 23:05 next collapse

It won’t be.

People that want an aggressive dog, buy the dog with the reputation to be the most aggressive, then they raise them to be aggressive.

Ban pitbulls, and they’ll go back to buying rottweilers, which are usually bigger and stronger too.

muddybulldog@mylemmy.win on 15 Sep 2023 23:22 next collapse

As a pitbull owner, I may take my chances trying to subdue an aggressive PB. An agressive Rot, I’m climbing trees.

BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 23:34 next collapse

I have a rottie. If someone told me she bit them, I’d want to know what the hell they did to make her bite them. She’s never shown any aggression.

muddybulldog@mylemmy.win on 15 Sep 2023 23:43 next collapse

Not knocking Rots, as a breed. Beautiful animals with a lot of love to give.

coco@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 00:01 next collapse

My old doggo mastiff/ unknow race mix doesnt like to be patted upon i earned peiple not doing that b4 getting closer to my doggo

She doesnt bite but give some kind of soft bite to warn

I wont tell the amount of people thinking my doggo is petable whose beeen bitten off including careless childrens at dog park

To each their behavior

Surelly blast me but my doggo is my bodyguard for some reason

Smartboystupid@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:31 collapse

Idiot

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 00:52 next collapse

Because the only time breed is correlated for aggression is tiny terriers, but that was likely due to the same gene making legs shorter. It’s really hard to breed for/against aggression, but it’s easy to breed for stuff like stubby legs.

The difference is size. A 120lb aggressive dog is more dangerous than a 60lb aggressive dog

barsoap@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 13:51 collapse

Rottweilers are chill as fuck with a very high anger threshold but also have a very strong protective streak and the build to back it up. That can go haywire if the owner is an idiot, paranoid, or such. If she recognises you as pack leader and you’re not then there’s not really much to worry, though some German states require character tests for all Rottweilers or they have to wear muzzles. If something like that is available where you are I’d definitely recommend it, they’re a working breed consider it vocational training.

And they can growl like fucking Cerberus. Why bite when a little intimidation does the trick.

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 23:39 collapse

Growing up a neighbor had three Rottweilers that they let run free.

They mostly stayed on their property, but every once and a while they’d come down to my house. Usually because they were following a deer’s trail, so their prey drive was in full gear by the time they’d see me and my sister playing outside.

Rotts get up to like 120lbs on average, but some are even bigger. So out of nowhere we’d have these three massive dogs that were bigger than us, sprinting at us barking their heads off.

We weren’t good tree climbers, so we got one of those wooden playhouse things you had to climb a ladder to get in.

I still don’t think we should ban them, but I think most people agree dogs shouldn’t be free roam.

kale@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 09:16 collapse

Barking is a performative aggression. It’s meant to intimidate. Predatory attacks frequently don’t have warning barks. It’s quiet staring then a lunge.

The behavior you described sounds dangerous, but it’s a known thing (that doesn’t make it less dangerous, but does give opportunity to blame the owner that they should have known they had an aggressive dog). Terrible owners don’t correct this behavior and have dogs that are dangerous to people. But there are many dogs that show zero aggression before attacking. There’s a bunch of biased sources but I think there is some truth to it, nearly half of dogs that kill have not shown aggression towards humans before.

Side note: Rottweilers are the #2 killer dog breed in America. They average about 10% of all fatal attacks. Pits are the #1 killer dog breed. The past couple of years they’ve been 65%+ of fatal attacks.

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:45 collapse

My dream is everyone eventually learns what “per capital” means and how important it is compared to total numbers…

steebo_jack@kbin.social on 16 Sep 2023 00:28 next collapse

Just wait till they get to Malinois...five years ago you never saw them outside of law enforcement and military...now im starting to see them in shelters...

kale@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 08:24 collapse

It’s becoming more common to see police departments ban Malligators. Less predictable than GSD.

Any dog can be aggressive, yes. Most pits have great personalities, sure. But I’ve known a few pits that weren’t aggressive towards people. Until they were.

The owner problem is a real factor (owners who are likely to raise aggressive dogs are more likely to get pits), but there’s an extra layer to pits. They are raised to be muscular with very strong jaws. If a Yorkie turns on it’s owner, someone’s getting bloody ankles. A pit (and chow, and Rottweiler) can really hurt people.

On top of this, there’s two types of aggression in dogs: performative aggression with barking and short charges, and prey drive which is quiet staring and sudden lunges towards the throat of another dog or animal. I was under the impression for a long time that dangerous dogs had terrible tempers and were “grouchy”. No, dangerous dogs are social creatures like most dogs and many show affection to other pets and humans, until something triggers their prey instinct. The website I cite below has a statement that pits are less likely to act aggressive before an attack.

There were a string of dog deaths in my city last year. All pits. Two were family pets that both attacked their toddler playing in the family’s yard. The mom ran to help and the dogs attacked her and their infant. Both children died and the mom was hospitalized. And a friend of mine had to mace a dog doing his job last year for the first time, it was a pit. Anecdotal, I know, but it’s changed my mind on pits.

This group says 69% of dogs involved in fatal attacks in 2019 were pits: dogsbite.org/dog-bite-statistics-fatalities-2019.…

One 2019 fatality was from 8 different breeds. This means that if you flip that statistic around to “percentage of fatal attacks involving pits”, that number is even higher.

Pits are estimated to be 6.5% of American dogs.

kmkz_ninja@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:56 collapse

If you lumped every retriver into a single group, they’d have a lot more bites.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:20 collapse

If rottweilers were better fighters, they would have the reputation pitbulls have.

reverendsteveii@lemm.ee on 15 Sep 2023 23:10 collapse

They’re just gonna keep playing whack a mole with whatever breed is popular among people who like to abuse dogs until they’re aggressive. You can breed for temperament but you can’t eliminate bad temperament by banning breeds. The bully xl is itself a hybrid of a breed that was already banned in the UK for aggression.

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 03:15 collapse

They’re just gonna keep playing whack a mole with whatever breed is popular among people who like to abuse dogs until they’re aggressive. You can breed for temperament but you can’t eliminate bad temperament by banning breeds.

True,

sturmblast@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:27 next collapse

yeah don’t blame the owner, blame the dog, morons

BakedGoods@sh.itjust.works on 15 Sep 2023 21:31 collapse

Hey it’s like I always said. Not all pitbulls are bad dogs, but all pitbull owners are bad owners.

sturmblast@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 21:31 collapse

that’s just stupid

charlytune@mander.xyz on 15 Sep 2023 22:26 next collapse

This article was interesting, and suggested that there could be a specific issue with the breeding lines of the XLs in the UK. Worth a read for anyone who’s actually interested in reading further than a headline.

theguardian.com/…/the-alarming-rise-of-american-b…

Hazdaz@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 22:43 next collapse

Good. Too bad more countries aren’t doing this.

stepan@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 07:15 next collapse

We regulate cars pretty heavily, we regulate guns decently.

When it comes to dogs, across the entire world, literally crickets chirping. No government does anything.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:02 next collapse

There’s a whole bunch of countries where they wouldn’t even think of regulating them as pets because dogs are purely working animals or feral.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:51 collapse

There’s a whole bunch of countries where they wouldn’t even think of regulating them as pets because dogs are purely working animals or feral.

Don’t stop there, champ. Which countries?

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:30 collapse

Large parts of the global south see dogs as unclean.

Hazdaz@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:18 collapse

I think there are some strict laws in Germany when it comes to dog ownership.

farsinuce@feddit.dk on 16 Sep 2023 13:48 collapse

13 dog breeds and mixed breeds are banned in Denmark: https://en.foedevarestyrelsen.dk/animals/animal-welfare/danish-legislation-on-dogs as one example.

Nurgle@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 22:54 next collapse

Whoa grab some popcorn folks cause this comment section is a dumpster fire. Do we have a lemmy drama community yet?

dingleberry@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Sep 2023 05:14 collapse

How is it a dumpster fire? I don’t see anyone defending the breed.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:07 next collapse

That’s because this isn’t a breed specific problem. Unless that breed is Human. Humans can fuck up any dog on purpose or not and the shitbags who like this breed specifically because it has a reputation will just choose a new breed to fuck up after you ban this one. This has been the pattern of Breed Specific Legislation everywhere it’s been introduced. You can do all of the same aggressive training with a Golden Retriever. And the list of dogs known to have a protective streak is as long as my arm.

slaacaa@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:07 next collapse

“Golden Retriever Mauls 5 In Huge Victory For Pitbull Apologists“

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:16 collapse

That is hilarious. But there is a real problem here. It’s like we just transferred systemic racism to dogs. We create the problem in the stats and then blame the dogs that were abused to do it.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:46 next collapse

It’s like we just transferred systemic racism to dogs.

I actually saved this into a list of ignorant comments I keep. Is easily top ten material. Comparing the banning of pit bulls to the result of the slave trade is a hell of a comment. Congratulations?

Pogbom@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:09 next collapse

Not to say I agree with him but he didn’t compare those two things at all. He said it’s the same mentality that underlies racism and ‘breedism’ for lack of a better word.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 22:37 collapse

Comparing people to dogs is fucked up. Asian, latinos, etc aren’t “breeds”. There’s also the implication of certain races being more prone to committing crimes. Honestly, both of you stink like racists.

Pogbom@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 23:04 collapse

You’re completely missing the point of an analogy. No one is comparing humans to animals. What’s similar is the thought process behind arriving at both conclusions. We could be talking about humans, animals, cars… the subject doesn’t matter, it’s the thought process that’s the same.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:04 collapse

I’m sorry, you think systemic racism stopped when we outlawed most slavery?

Screw the dogs, tell me more about this utopia you live in without modern day systemic racism.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 22:21 collapse

You just compared black people to breeds of dog.

Sit down.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 23:13 collapse

Nope. Compared people hating on specific dog breeds to racists though. Maybe go back and read that again?

gamer@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 12:04 next collapse

I have a dream where Pitbulls and Chihuahuas can play in the same dog park together.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:12 collapse

Dude Chihuahuas are never going to be welcome in the big dog part of the park.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 16:49 collapse

Dog breeds are not comparable to human races. You might as well compare your woodshed to London.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:03 collapse

Whoosh. The point is we enable these shitty owners who encourage aggressive behavior then we blame the dog when we set the system up that way.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:19 next collapse

Whoosh. The dog was bred for a long time to be mean and cause a lot of damage when it was angry.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:21 collapse

They were bred for showing off muscles. Doing damage when angry is a trait of all wildlife.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:22 next collapse

My guinea pigs cause few injuries when they are upset.

foo@programming.dev on 16 Sep 2023 23:44 collapse

My greyhound looks like it has had a constant supply of steroids for the last 5 years. You don’t need to buy a death machine for muscles

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 17 Sep 2023 00:10 collapse

Greyhounds are closer to death machines than they are family pets. They are literally bred to chase things down and kill them. A badly trained or abused Greyhound is a nightmare.

foo@programming.dev on 16 Sep 2023 23:43 collapse

I mean ban shitty owners from owning another animal, put them in jail for animal abuse, fuck do both. But there is a huge difference in damage between a pitbull attack and say a greyhound.

naqahdah@my.lserver.dev on 16 Sep 2023 17:50 collapse

Not sure why people downvote this, it’s objectively correct. We bred these dogs to be what they are, we can absolutely breed something else to take its place. This is really basic evolution and trait selection.

I think they’re great looking dogs, but I also think they need a similar ban in the US, barring a few highly specialized breeders, who can essentially reverse what was done to them over a period of generations. I don’t want to see them go away entirely, I’d just like them controlled until we can breed out what we’ve bred in.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 20:59 collapse

It’s not even that’s much to do with the breeding. They are very trainable dogs with a prey drive. They just get shit owners who encourage the aggressive behavior because of the street rep. They’ll do the same thing with Boxers, Dobermans, Rottweilers, and generally any short haired breed that looks muscular.

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Sep 2023 11:10 next collapse

You summoned one!

kmkz_ninja@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:48 collapse

I think we should genocide every dog because any dog is more dangerous than no dogs.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:02 collapse

Agreed, but lets start with pitbulls

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 23:00 next collapse

“Genetics matter, but genetics are a nudge in a given direction. They’re not a destiny,” Evan MacLean, the director of the Arizona Canine Cognition Center at the University of Arizona, who was not involved in the research, tells NPR. “We’ve known that for a long time in human studies, and this paper really suggests that the same is true for dogs.”

www.npr.org/2022/04/…/dog-breeds-behavior-study

I’ve noticed once someone starts talking about “breed determines behavior, it’s in their genes!!!”. It doesn’t take much more for them to start saying the same about other animals, like humans.

someguy3@lemmy.ca on 15 Sep 2023 23:19 next collapse

owner survey

*For anyone else, breed was tested genetically, behavior was an owner survey. GIGO.

givesomefucks@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 2023 23:26 collapse

RESULTS We surveyed owners of 18,385 dogs (49% purebred) and sequenced the DNA of 2155 dogs. Most behavioral traits are heritable [heritability (h2) > 25%], but behavior only subtly differentiates breeds. Breed offers little predictive value for individuals, explaining just 9% of variation in behavior. For more heritable, more breed-differentiated traits, like biddability (responsiveness to direction and commands), knowing breed ancestry can make behavioral predictions somewhat more accurate (see the figure). For less heritable, less breed-differentiated traits, like agonistic threshold (how easily a dog is provoked by frightening or uncomfortable stimuli), breed is almost uninformative. We used dogs of mixed breed ancestry to test the genetic effect of breed ancestry on behavior and compared that to survey responses from purebred dog owners. For some traits, like biddability and border collie ancestry, we confirm a genetic effect of breed that aligns with survey responses. For others, like human sociability and Labrador retriever ancestry, we found no significant effect. Through genome-wide association, we found 11 regions that are significantly associated with behavior, including howling frequency and human sociability, and 136 suggestive regions. Regions associated with aesthetic traits are unusually differentiated in breeds, consistent with a history of selection, but those associated with behavior are not.

What alternative kind of study do you think would be better?

And if one exists that comes to a different conclusion, can you link it?

exohuman@programming.dev on 16 Sep 2023 00:39 next collapse

Interestingly, the same people who pushed the whole dog breed thing were pushing the white supremacy thing last century. Now, they are just idiots pushing an easy issue when all they need to do is look at actual studies.

dingleberry@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Sep 2023 05:16 next collapse

“Banning pitbull? Just a step away from banning races!”

barsoap@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 13:54 collapse

The whole human population has less genetic diversity than a random troupe of chimps, much less domestic dogs as a whole. We’re absurdly uniform.

evanuggetpi@lemmy.nz on 16 Sep 2023 04:03 next collapse

I used to have a Pitbull, such a beautiful girl, who one day chased and killed one of our cats she’d grown up with. My friend had her brother, such a beautiful boy, who one day chased and killed one of their cats.

Last week, on my lifestyle block, two Pitbulls appeared and killed my chickens before I could stop them. I chased the fuckers off but haven’t found where they came from.

That is all.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 08:01 next collapse

That’s not just Pitbull behavior though. That’s called prey drive and a lot of breeds have that. Some everyone expects like Greyhounds and Bulldogs. But it’s also present in breeds like Golden Retrievers, Bassett Hounds, and Irish Setters. Are we going to ban Golden’s next? They can also feature the fun perk, protectiveness, where they go after anyone who gets close to their human. And any dog can become reactive.

Daikusa@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 09:59 next collapse

I’ll take the dogs that are less prone to “prey drive” thank you very much. You don’t really see Goldens or Bassetts mauling small creatures or humans.

Redredme@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:32 collapse

Tbh amstaffs are quite low on the prey drive. Small terriers, dachshunds, schnauzers, pointers, setters and dalmatians on the other hand have a very big prey drive.

I mean, they are not called hunting dogs, retriever, setter or pointers for nothing. And small terriers have for centuries been bred to kill every rat, mice and what have you in their vincinity.

But yeah, in the end all dogs are predators. And if you let them go unchecked bad things will happen. Especially when you have a powerful breed.

Cats do the same BTW. But for some reason we’re OK with dead mice and birds around the house.

All in all its the same discussion as with guns (and cars): guns don’t kill people, people kill people. And with dogs it’s more or less the same: bad or owners who are Inattentive will Allmost always result in big problems.

And while I do love amstaffs, they can be such chill and fun hunks of love, I can’t deny that they do real damage, more damage when left unchecked and we should probably regulate ownership like with guns and cars.

I do not think outright banning a breed is the solution. Because other breeds are just as susceptible to bad ownership. It will not solve it. The problem will just move away from amstaffs back too rottweilers and dobermans. Or another big powerful breed.

Like with guns we should make it harder for the assholes to acquire one. And like with cars you should prove yourself to be able to take care of one.

aport@programming.dev on 16 Sep 2023 14:49 next collapse

How many people have been mauled to death by Bassett hounds?

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:41 next collapse

More than you think. Go have a Google.

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:01 collapse

I did, basset hounds kill a whole lot less people than pitbulls

en.wikipedia.org/…/List_of_fatal_dog_attacks_in_t…

adaveinthelife@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 16:10 collapse

How many Basset Hound owners are wannabe tough guys? Not trying to excuse the behaviour, but there is definitely at least a correlation between behaviour of the dogs and that of their owners.

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 22:16 collapse

Man fuck off with this dumb bullshit, like half of the attacks are from family dogs where the family insists it was perfectly nice, not some biker.

Wirrvogel@feddit.de on 16 Sep 2023 17:22 collapse

And any dog can become reactive.

Any cat can give you a scratch or a bite, it’s just worse if the cat is a tiger. That’s why most places do allow a small pet cat and not a tiger.

Sausage dogs are extremely tough dogs with a lot of prey drive, because they were bred to hunt alone for example a dodger badger underground defending its home. They bite often, are often (pro-)reactive but if someone dies through them it is an old lady stumbling over the leash and breaking her neck, not the dog ripping her guts out.

VentraSqwal@links.dartboard.social on 16 Sep 2023 18:10 next collapse

What is a dodger? When I Google it all I get is the baseball team. Like an animal that is dodging the dog?

Wirrvogel@feddit.de on 16 Sep 2023 19:18 collapse

dodger

badger, my bad, English is not my first language

VentraSqwal@links.dartboard.social on 16 Sep 2023 20:45 collapse

No problem! Just wanted to understand.

Maggoty@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 21:01 collapse

With that line of thinking we shouldn’t have any dogs above toy size.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 16:42 next collapse

The thing I have noticed about pitballs is that they have like this beast mode where they seem to just lose it with rage. Also because of their jaw strength when they do lose it whatever they do is much worse than regular dogs.

Jarix@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 22:46 collapse

What is a lifestyle block? Is that a new way of saying neighbourhood?

JTskulk@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 05:17 next collapse

Every couple of weeks I feed mine a toddler, it seems to keep the violent tendencies away.

solstice@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 07:28 next collapse

My neighbor has a pit mix and it snarled at me gnashing its teeth once as she walked by. I was just standing there by my car minding my own business barely even acknowledging them. I jump and yell Jesus wtf lady omg. She just made pathetic excuses, he keeps me safe, never does that, it’s fiiiiine etc. Ive told her numerous times she needs to train it at the bare minimum, preferably destroy it. I’ve observed it doing the same to other people as they walk past. I bought pepper spray and look out for them very carefully whenever I go to my car now. I bet it’s just a matter of time before someone gets mauled and I hope it’s not me. Fucking hate those things.

vivadanang@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 09:14 next collapse

sorry you experienced that, it’s a poor owner, not a bad breed. we have a staffy mix that’s an adorable mutt, great dog.

lightsecond@programming.dev on 16 Sep 2023 10:15 next collapse

This is exactly what they are complaining about 😛

EnglishMobster@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:21 next collapse

Do you agree that retrievers are bred to retrieve things?

Do you agree that herding dogs are bred to herd things?

Do you agree that pointer dogs are bred to find things?

Surely you’ve been around these kinds of dogs before. It’s not something that they learn; they are specifically bred to do a job and they will do that job even without training. You’ve seen or heard of how a sheepdog will herd small children, I’m sure. It’s why the breed exists; they are specifically bred to do a certain thing and genetically their instinct is to do the thing that they were bred for over the course of thousands of years. You can remove them from their mom and not give them any training and they will naturally do the thing that they were bred to do. You don’t have to train a golden to bring you back a ball.

So is it a surprise that a dog bred to kill things will want to kill things?

That’s not simply because of “a poor owner”, although the fact that people refuse to train their killer dogs to not be killers is part of it. It’s because their dogs are genetically predisposed to kill, just like a pointer dog is genetically predisposed to find things.

It is absolutely a bad breed. Killer dogs should be banned worldwide. Every single pitbull, rottweiler, etc. should be spayed/neutered and the breed should end. They’re too dangerous and dumb owners have proven that you can’t rely on humans to keep them under control.

It’s not the dogs’ fault, mind - it’s their instinct. But that doesn’t mean that future generations should have to deal with it.

barsoap@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 12:25 next collapse

They’re too dangerous and dumb owners have proven that you can’t rely on humans to keep them under control.

That’s why we have laws in Germany that say that if dogs of certain breeds don’t pass character tests they have to be muzzled, and you might need a license (as in driving license) and a certificate of conduct.

States tend to put American Staffordshire-Terriers (and therefore Bullies) in the harshest category, Rottweilers get off way easier.

Those two breeds are nowhere close to comparable when it comes to aggressiveness. Rottweilers aren’t inherently aggressive, on the contrary they’re exceptionally chill and have a high anger threshold. But they’re also protective and if you aren’t chill yourself they will quickly become to think of themselves as the pack leader.

Rottweilers are about as easy or hard to mess up a German Shepherds, it’s just that messing up passively becomes more dangerous as they’ll become overprotective, see imagined threats because you imagine them, suchlike. If you want to see a breed with inherent anger issues that’d be the Chihuahua.

DV8@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:31 collapse

Yeah Rottweilers are herding dogs, they herd children too and just love leaning into you. Herd dogs also protect their pack so they do need training and an owner who knows what they’re doing on top of extensive socialising.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 16:37 next collapse

I had a retriever, she liked chasing ducks. Sometimes she would run to duck and then run back to me with this look on her face of “there is a step missing”.

vivadanang@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 22:54 collapse

Do you agree humans are made to shitpost? Because your demonstration is revealing.

No one bred staffies or pits to kill. Cute though. Bet you’re a wonderful human being.

qdJzXuisAndVQb2@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 13:32 next collapse

Bullshit. You think shitbulls got their reputation from thin air? Shit dogs for shit owners.

kmkz_ninja@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:46 next collapse

Hey look, someone with a shitty troll username making shitty troll comments.

qdJzXuisAndVQb2@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 13:47 next collapse

Not at all a troll username - it is a new account, but I don’t like making up usernames so I just keyboard mash. I stand by everything I say though.

Edit. I looked through your comment history. Bit hypocritical to accuse others of trolling with comments like that.

Copy pasted comments that are totally in good faith:

If only we could use statistics to cull people, too.

I think we should genocide every dog because any dog is more dangerous than no dogs.

kmkz_ninja@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:58 collapse

I just think we should be consistant. If we’re using statistics to cull creatures, racists are going to have a field day.

themajesticdodo@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 22:27 collapse

If we’re using statistics to cull creatures, racists are going to have a field day.

Did you just insinuate black people commit more crime?

Comparing other races to dogs is pretty fucked up to start with.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 16:33 collapse

Why not defend your argument instead of attacking another person? It might be more effective and useful, you know unlike your vicious pitbull

vivadanang@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 22:59 collapse

well with that airtight argument you’ll go far! you should work for the GOP with these kind of ideas, they’ll fit right into that shit show

masterspace@lemmy.ca on 16 Sep 2023 22:14 collapse

Aren’t like 70% of fatal dog attacks from pits or pit mixes?

vivadanang@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 22:53 collapse

I think 70% of your statistics are bullshit. Citation requested.

Aagje_D_Vogel@lemdro.id on 16 Sep 2023 23:27 collapse

I found this

Quick graph:

<img alt="" src="https://lemdro.id/pictrs/image/344460b6-9be2-406b-8df3-f6aa1de04d17.jpeg">

Edit: spacing.

bufordt@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 12:12 next collapse

After watching my cop neighbor try to drive a dog away with pepper spray, it’s not going to help much. Even direct hits to the eyes didn’t seem to affect the dog much.

solstice@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 13:26 collapse

Oof, noted, thanks. I figured it’s a decent last resort but I guess not. Vigilance and avoidance are the best bet as usual. I’m not quite ready to buy a handgun over this.

ArianaGrande@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 16:04 collapse

When a pit latches on, the only thing you can do is choke it out. Strangle it until it sleeps. Nothing else will make it let go. It doesn’t feel pain, doesn’t notice knife stabs or bat beatings or anything at all. Just hope it has a collar you can pull with all your might.

solstice@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 17:06 collapse

Maybe I’ll buy that handgun after all. Really pisses me off that I’m forced to consider this option because people are too stupid and stubborn to realize they themselves owned walking untrained lethal weapons.

[deleted] on 16 Sep 2023 12:30 collapse
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[deleted] on 16 Sep 2023 13:27 next collapse
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qdJzXuisAndVQb2@lemm.ee on 16 Sep 2023 13:31 next collapse

Hahahaha troll better, loser

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 15:55 next collapse

That is like blaming the parents of a serial killer for the murders.

Brocken40@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 17:25 collapse

I agree, we should blame the parents. they should have raised their kids better, and in the case of the mentally unwell helped them get the necessary treatments.

Wirrvogel@feddit.de on 16 Sep 2023 17:10 collapse

You are not completely wrong, but you are wrong enough to be voted down.

It’s the owners’ fault for not accepting that they have an extremely dangerous animal on a leash and that they haven’t done the minimum necessary to control it. They make excuses until shit happens and that shit could happen to them and their own family as easily as it could happen to a stranger.

On top of that, these breeds are far more dangerous than others. Even if another breed bites as often or more, the damage they do is less. This breed will bite and not let go, they ignore pain completely, their jaws make large wounds and with their muscular necks they can rip out large chunks of flesh. I do not care if Sausage Dogs bite more often and are rarely well trained, they do not manage to kill anyone, except an old lady who stumbles over the leash and breaks her neck.

Even the best-trained American XL bully dog is a weapon that can shoot itself, and once it starts it is unstoppable except by a bullet or being choked into unconsciousness. The breed was bred for this, it is in them like a sausage dog was bred to hunt alone under ground and chase a badger defending its home. They are tough as hell and bite attacks are common, usually ending in a small scar on someone’s lip or a torn trouser. If you keep your finger, your eye, your face or your life with an American XL bully dog you got lucky.

[deleted] on 16 Sep 2023 18:13 collapse
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Wirrvogel@feddit.de on 16 Sep 2023 19:23 collapse

Insulting people who take their time to explain why people downvote you doesn’t make you any different than the worst of Reddit. Also you seem to not have an argument against what I wrote so that’s settled then. Have a nice day!

[deleted] on 16 Sep 2023 19:38 collapse
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Widowmaker_Best_Girl@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 10:31 next collapse

I’ve got an Am Staff/German Shepherd mix and she is literally a baby. Whenever I’m on the couch she wants up and cuddles. If I go to bed she wants to sleep next to me. Even insists on making sure I touch her paw while she sleeps. Raise your dog right, socialise them, train them, and they won’t be a problem.

Thank fuck I don’t live in the UK. It’s disgusting how they can go into your home and “destroy” a member of your family even if there are no complaints from anyone and never once been an incident. I hate violence, but I would absolutely become violent if the state tried to murder a member of my family without any just cause.

Frogbert@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 10:38 collapse

Hope this isn’t you one day.

Widowmaker_Best_Girl@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 10:43 collapse

Won’t happen. I actually train my dogs. Also, go fuck yourself for the implication.

jws_shadotak@sh.itjust.works on 16 Sep 2023 11:10 next collapse

So is it just a crazy coincidence that they’re responsible for 60% of all dog attacks involving hospitalization? They’re the highest fatality causing breed in the world. It’s not just the owners.

Frogbert@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 11:21 collapse

That’s what every one of those families thought too. (⁠☞⁠ ͡⁠°⁠ ͜⁠ʖ⁠ ͡⁠°⁠)⁠☞¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯

MonkderZweite@feddit.ch on 16 Sep 2023 10:36 next collapse

They are poor misbreeds anyway.

wokehobbit@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 12:33 next collapse

Holy fuck these comments. Y’all are pieces of animal hating shit and need to burn. Fucking horrible human beings across this entire site.

Maalus@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 12:55 next collapse

K

Honytawk@lemmy.zip on 16 Sep 2023 16:24 collapse
Pieresqi@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 15:46 next collapse

Pity, teachers should have a good pitbulls to stop the bad ones.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 16:31 collapse

This isn’t the time to discuss pitbull control.

collegefurtrader@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Sep 2023 17:12 next collapse

ITT: bleeding hearts who don’t understand the difference between animal species and dog breeds.

30mag@lemmy.world on 16 Sep 2023 19:18 collapse

"It is not currently a breed defined in law, so this vital first step must happen fast.

"We will then ban the breed under the Dangerous Dogs Act and new laws will be in place by the end of the year.

Meanwhile, Downing Street denied the government had taken too long to ban American XL bully dogs.

Asked whether ministers had “dragged their heels” on outlawing the breed, the prime minister’s official spokesman said: "I wouldn’t accept that.

“Clearly this breed of dog isn’t defined in law so it’s right to take the time to consider the best way to put an end to these horrendous attacks that we’re seeing.”

But there is concern a move to prohibit the animal may not be practical due to the American XL bully not being recognised as a breed by the Kennel Club, which could mean any ban may inadvertently outlaw other kinds of dogs.

How do you determine whether a dog is a specific breed of dog without anyone defining the breed standards?