Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Finding The Reality To The Debate How Dangerous Are Pitbulls

By Carrie Peterson


The truth to the question how dangerous are Pitbulls lies somewhere in between the usual answers. Advocates claim they are just like every other dog and the other side claims they are loaded guns waiting to go off. The truth is not siding with either of those answers. People who are looking for facts usually end up in the middle of the road. The heated debate has done more than tear families apart, it has also opened up a new avenue of exploitation for dog fighters.

There is no such thing as a Pitbull as a recognized breed. Record on bites are completely illegitimate because it is too hard to determine what is and is not a pit. Considering the high stress of any incident involving a dog and the inability to define what constitutes a pit means that there are no accurate records that reflect real data. Most dogs that are over thirty pounds and have a tail are identified as pits during and after an incident when they are not.

Without accurate data there is no way to be able to account for how many bites belong to the bullies. The human element is more than just an coincidence in the matter. Pits, by nature, will do anything to please their human. They are one of the easiest dogs to train which is what led to their exploitation in the first place. Breeding bullies without any kind of recorded lineage is another problem, although that does not doom any puppy to grow up into a biter. Any dog can bite and any dog can not bite.

Pits are usually owned by people who have multiple bullies. In order for this to work that owner needs to be aware of how pack mentality develops as well as understand things like fence guarding. Running the fence is a step toward aggression. There is no doubt that the media capitalizes on incidents. There have been stories run that use the word "attack" when there are no actual bites and no medical treatment was sought. This is a lead into hysteria.

Pits and bullies should not be running loose or tied in the backyard. They should not be unattended outside. It is too easy to blame the bullies for things that they may not have done. When incidents happen that actually do involve bullies, it is almost always an intact male, a group, or a chained pit.

The truth is that most bullies live normal lives and never cause a problem. If you choose to have one or more, it is up to you to be ultra aware. Your bully should never run loose. It causes fear reactions that end up with someone shooting your dog and determining that his playful charge was actually the prelude to a violent attack. It is reported in the media and you have one more strike that is not actually reality. While the argument about pits rolls on the fighting rings have moved onto some rather inventive mixed breed dogs selected for their general dislike of humans and dogs.

The public is quite busy arguing about the answer to the question how dangerous are Pitbulls while the breeding of a new breed of lethal dog is being born. Most pits are wonderful, loving pups that want to please you so badly they can be trained to do anything. Of course, even pit owners do not actually have pits, as the identification of the classification is so hard that even the advocates tend to lump them all into one group.




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