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I'd love to have one of the big breeds- Rottweiler, bull mastiff, or a Staffordshire, I know I don't have the energy to give them the exercise they need. They're gorgeous, but I know I won't be fair to the dog if I have one. I'll stick to the basset hounds- they're more my speed. :)
I think it's horrible to "blame the victim" of a dog attack. The only time I would concede that is if someone is actively taunting a dog. Then you spank the human and work with the dog. But most of the time, when you hear about a dog attack, the humans have not been out of line. The owners of the dogs have been, but the victims have been minding their own business. If you own a dog that is likely to bite, whether that's a Chihuahua or a German Shepherd, you'd better make sure you have that dog under control every second. That doesn't mean it has to be on a leash at your feet, just that you know where it is and what it's doing. Train the dog, socialize the dog, and be its pack leader so it knows it has to behave. Won't solve all problems, and this doesn't address the problem owners who *like* having a killer dog, but it will go a long way towards responsible dog ownership. |
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Having said that, there are lots of things that make neighbors nervous that are totally legal that are also outside their control. My neighbor's kids were afraid of any dog when they were younger. We had 4 dogs (a Lab, a Keeshond, 2 mutts), licensed and approved by the city. They were on my property, well behaved and frankly it was their problem, not mine. On the other hand, O's father lives in an apartment building where the guy above him smokes. If I think about it, it makes me nervous to think this guy could fall asleep smoking and start a fire which could injure my child, I deal with it. As to the bomb making scenario, society as a whole has decided that bomb making in one's home is so unsafe as to be illegal. If I knew someone was making bombs, I'd call the cops. Further, if one of my neighbors had a known vicious dogs, I'd call animal control. And frankly, a lot of times people don't even know what they're looking at. At one of our HOA meetings a few years ago, someone wanted to "warn" people that there was a pit in our neighborhood. The man who owned said "pit" was at the meeting. The dog was actually a Boxer/Lab mix and completely harmless. People get all in a tizzy over things they aren't really knowledgeable about, and for that matter aren't really the threat they perceive; your chances of getting struck by lightening are 5 times greater than being mauled by ANY dog. Unfortunately, the maulings make for much "jazzier" news stories. Quote:
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