Quote:
Originally Posted by FoulRon
Point is, it's in every animal's nature to be aggressive when necessary. Unfortunately, we've bred into some dogs breed the inability to distinguish the appropriate moment.
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It's a dog. It doesn't have higher order thoughts like humans. It doesn't have introspective moments like we do. It doesn't have the *capability* to distinguish an "appropriate moment". It has to be *trained* to be able to do it!
A dog is an animal. It will react
as it's instincts and training tell it to.
Granted, there may be some of these dogs that have built in behavior problems but I guarantee you that very few of those dogs "just snap". 99 times out of a hundred, you, as an owner, know your dog.
If you don't, then you shouldn't be an owner.
If you own a breed that has a reputation for having strong aggressive instincts, then the responsibility is on you, *as the owner* to make smart choices for the animal and *train* it to behave. Why?
Because the dog cannot make smart choices for itself. This is an animal that regularly eats it's own poop and vomit, for heaven's sake!
The smartest dog on record had the intelligence of your *average* four year old child. I don't know about you, but the four-year-old kids I have met haven't been that bright.
Would you leave a four year old child in a room full of hazardous materials and choking hazards? Who would you blame if you heard hat a child had died in such circumstances? The kid? The parent?
The owner damn well knows if his or her dog doesn't like strangers or is overly aggressive, and as a result, the owner is the one responsible for putting the dog in a situation where it's bad behavior can get out of hand.
If I had a dog that I knew for a fact had a problem, I wouldn't leave it unsupervised where it might interact with others, period.
Now if my dog bites your ass while you are in my house without my permission (far more likely to lick you to death, but whatever), then he'll get a "Good boy!" from me because he's doing his job.
If on the other hand, I take him for a walk, and we happen to bump into each other, and I don't stop you from petting him and he bites your hand, then that is 100%
*my fault*.
If he gets loose from the yard somehow, and bites a kid or eats a cat? Also
*my fault* for not securing him better.
If you don't think being responsible for your animals is fair, then *don't get one*. Being a responsible pet owner is part of the damn deal.
You don't get to go out and bring home a pitbull, raise it for 7 years and then say "oh the dog was a bad seed, it was totally violent, had the violence in it from birth, but I never saw this coming..." when it bites someone.
Either it's bad from birth, and you should have known better than to leave it unsupervised, or the dog ever showed a sign of violence and you didn't train it for the situation, and shouldn't have left it unsupervised because you, as the owner, know it isn't trained for it.
Blaming the dogs for these events always drives me nuts.