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heres a few facts http://www.austinlostpets.com/kidskorne ... itbull.htm
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
mr.72 wrote:I am sorry to break it to all of you dog lovers but many of us have very good reason to suspect your pit bull is a dangerous animal regardless of your rosy view of its history. So if you don't want to be burying your pit bull then you had better keep it solidly chained, on a leash, and under absolute control while it is around my family. I'm not giving the dog the benefit of the doubt. Any action that looks like it might be threatening is too much risk for me.
Got it first try.xpur3l0g1cx wrote:http://www.pitbullsontheweb.com/petbull/findpit.html
I could care less if it was a "pitbull", if it was a large enough dog that i felt i could not handle with my hands or feet, i would also shoot it.alphonso wrote:I'm with the shooter on this one. If an unknown to me and unleashed pit bull gets too close to me or mine I consider it a serious threat. Google pit bull attacks if you need some convincing.
For the gentleman who compared (above) a pit bull to a poodle or beagle I suggest please that you also Google poodle and/or beagle attacks to gain some perspective. All dog breeds are not alike in their capacity to kill or maim.
I shot a pit bull on our property last year. I didn't know where it came from, but it growled at my wife on our rural property and that was enough for me. Enough for the police also. I got a pat on the head (lots of cops hate pit bulls) and the owner, who lived 1/2 mile away got a citation.
flintknapper wrote:TxRVer wrote:He said the dog ran up to his kids growling and snarling.
Seems unlikely given the account from other witnesses:
Brianna Reyes, the owner of the pit bull, and another girl were with the dogs. Reyes admitted the dogs were running loose and playing in the water, but said they were not acting aggressive toward anyone. Witnesses in the park at the time of the shooting backed up Reyes’ claim.
“I see those girls in the park every day around this time,” said Jody Caudle, a witness. “I come to the park on my lunch breaks to practice guitar and I see them. The same girls are always walking them without leashes and the dogs are always well-behaved.”
It really doesnt matter if the dog would have actually attacked the children. The unleashed dog came at the guys kids, at least one eye witness says one of the dogs was closer than the rest. So the officer decided that he wasnt going to wait to see if the dog would attack his children or not, he didnt want to take the chance that maybe some of you would with your kids.KBCraig wrote:Statistically speaking, there was most likely only one person there that day with a gun. Isn't it odd, then, how the dogs weren't a threat to anyone except that person's kids?
http://www.politickermd.com/robtornoe/3 ... ges-police
I don't know if the shooting was justified. But I am certain that the official police response would be quite different if the shooter was Joe CHL, or Joe Unlicensed. Justification is justification regardless of the shooter's legal status, but you can bet the official response would be different.
Great Link KB!KBCraig wrote:Same here. I've encountered dozens of them over the years, what with my wife being a groomer and both of us generally being "dog people".flintknapper wrote:And just to clear things up... in case anyone is wondering: I do not own any pit-bulls, never have and never will, but not because I believe them to be the "devil dogs" that some here espouse.
The biggest kick I get out of people's visceral reaction to "pit bulls", is that the majority of the time they couldn't identify a pit if their life depended on it. Any time a stocky short-hair dog bites someone, it's attributed as a "pit bull attack", even when it's just a mutt.
See if you can spot the pit bull:
http://understand-a-bull.com/Findthebul ... ll_v3.html
BigBlueDodge wrote:I googled "poodle attacks" and came up with 632000 hits. I say we shoot threatening poodles too!!
Also, I googled "goose attack" and it came back with 2,050,000 results, so it appears as though geese are more dangerous than pit pulls. Next goose that starts eyeing me down is gonna have lead chasing him!!
One of my relatives got a couple of broken hand bones from a goose attack; they have extremely strong wing muscles.03Lightningrocks wrote:Most of us can fend off a crazed goose without the aid of a firearm.