You may have a point here but they are a 'prohibited' breed here so I think nature as well as nurture has a lot to do with it. To own one of these dogs you have to get an exemption order :
http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-pets/pets/dangerous/
See my above post. They're so not born aggressiveI've seen hundreds of puppies in my life time and you rarely get any aggressive dogs. If anything, it's the same with humans - different personalities that start from birth. Most baby animals are dependent, not vicious - if they were vicious (biting the hand that feeds you) then they're dooming themselves to death. It all depends on upbringing, and a Rottweiler or a Pit Bull is only vicious if brought up badly.
Someone mentioned man being vicious from the start. I've never seen a baby being put down for causing GBH, attempting to stab someone, biting with the intent to cause serious harm - play biting is popular amongst all of God's/Buddha's creatures, lion cubs play bite and immediately know they've done wrong if you react. it's part of training, if they witness pain then they know they've done wrong.
You may have a point here but they are a 'prohibited' breed here so I think nature as well as nurture has a lot to do with it. To own one of these dogs you have to get an exemption order :
http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-pets/pets/dangerous/
Last edited by Catzsy; 26-01-2011 at 04:03 PM.
"Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak because a baby can't chew it" ~ mark twain.
pit bulls are actually some of the nicest dogs i've ever met. they're just very strong, thus sometimes trained to be attack dogs. if pitt bulls were banned, people who train dogs to be vicious would just use the next strongest dog, it wouldn't solve a single thing.
if this was a muslim woman and the dog chewed her koran, i'm sure this thread would have been a lot different.
Last edited by RedStratocas; 26-01-2011 at 04:58 PM.
Indeed, I remember when they were added to the list. It was a very strange year last year for pit bull terriers, hundreds of children were being attacked and killed, as well as members of the public, yet they were kinda unheard before it. I think the legislation was put through because of the increase of "dangerous dog" incidents that involved them. However, to get an exemption order isn't too difficult anyway. The main problem is breeding them and having to put up with knowing that there are people out there that would strongly believe this type of dog is dangerous because it appeared in the newspaper and on TV a handful of times, even thought a handful of dogs is nothing compared to the huge majority that are perfectly good animals.You may have a point here but they are a 'prohibited' breed here so I think nature as well as nurture has a lot to do with it. To own one of these dogs you have to get an exemption order :
http://www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-pets/pets/dangerous/
EDIT: Oh, just seen the date of the Act. I'm sure there were more recent changes to the Act. Maybe they were just ideas to put forward towards a change :/
Last edited by GommeInc; 26-01-2011 at 05:32 PM.
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for a book? Surely putting the dog down would be better than burning it, then hanging it?