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DreamerTheresa
06-28-2005, 10:28 AM
How a Breed Gets Banned



This is a Fictional Scenario:

Big Time Gangsta Rapper uses rugged looking dogs in many of his videos. Every fan of his just has to get this breed. Popularity begins to soar. Breeders are afraid of the backlash this music star's latest video is going to bring. Yes, the breed looks tough and needs an experienced owner, but in the right environment, it a very sweet pet. They become very protective of the breed. Sadly, a few breeders end up selling to the wrong people, or a couple dogs get stolen. A new group of bad breeders start up. They push for aggressive dogs and breed only those who they feel are the toughest out there. They do not care to whom the pups go. They sell the pups as great protectors and status symbols. Gangs are starting to pick up on certain colors of this dog. One gang is known to prefer brindles, another fawns, and another prefers black. The dogs are turning up in drug houses and guarding stashes. John X down the street is a big fan of BTGR and gets a dog. He wants the image. He already drives a car very much like BTGR, dresses and talks like his idol. John X is not unknown to the police for petty theft, minor drug violations and a few assaults. John X goes to one of his dealing buddies and gets a pup.

Pup is left chained during the day and isolated except when John X goes out for his daily toughening routine. He has big hopes for this pup. At night, it is brought inside, but the pup being a pup, played a bit rough with John X's daughter. Pup now lives outside. Better anyhow as the pup can warn of anyone trying to come on the property. John X spends a lot of time yelling at the pup to shut up, stop whining and barking. His young kids goes out with their friends to torment the pup. They throw rocks and sticks at it. The pup grows and one day decides not to tolerate the kids. He bites one after being hit in the head. One time he jumped the four-foot fence in order to escape the kids. John X beat the young dog for escaping and chains him to a rickety doghouse. Now the pup cannot escape. Every couple days he throws out an open bag of dog food and lets rain water fill the bowls. If there is no rain, he fills the water every few days. Sometimes the dog goes for a few days without water or food if John X has been arrested. His girlfriend will have nothing to do with the dog. Kids keep tormenting it. The dog is now turning nasty. He lunges and snarls at anyone walking by the fence. He has learned to fear humans. Humans are bad. John X sometimes walks him – when he had buddies to impress and maybe a dogfight to bet on. Dog shows several battle scars. If the dog snaps at him, he beats the dog down.

One day, the kids are tormenting the now adult dog. The dog is big, strong, and very distrustful. The dog starts lunging at the kids. The chain tethering him to the doghouse gets pulled free. The dog manages to jump the fence. Dog tears after the kids. One is bitten seriously. John X comes out and the dog takes off. Over the next few days, the dog injures many people. The police finally shoot the dog. Across town, actually, several places in town, similar scenarios are playing out. Some dogs are the same breed as John X's dog was, some are not, but share similar traits.

The media gets wind of the trouble and start printing stories about killer dogs. One breed, the type owned by BTGR, is mentioned over and over. But it is not always this breed causing the trouble. Yet because it sells papers, any dog resembling what BTGR owners is called this breed. No one bothers to talk to responsible owners of this breed. No one bothers to learn the truth behind the breed. The general public and local legislation begin to fear this breed. According to the people, something needs to be done. The council decides to get rid of the dogs. No more of this breed and the problem will stop. A program to restrict ownership of and eventually eliminate the dog from the program is started.



John X gets a few more dogs. He does not care about the new law banning the breed. He just hides his dogs in the basement and takes them out after dark. Sometimes one escapes and gets shot. So what? John X can always get another. Finally, his home is raided and all his dogs taken. No big deal, this breed is becoming passé. BTGR is losing favor with his fans. A New Star is rising. His dogs are bigger, rougher and could eat BTGR's for lunch according to the rumors on the street. New Star's breed becomes the new choice. Concerned breeders and owners try to keep the dogs out of the general public, but a few bad people get them and start breeding.

The problem of dangerous dogs never goes away. The town council kept promising that once a breed a banned, the attacks would stop. The dangerous dogs would be gone. But every time one breed is all but eliminated, another takes its place. Several years have passed; John X is now on his fifth breed. Punishments for owners like him are nothing. He pays a small fine and gets another dog or another breed. Finally, his new girlfriend comes home with a breed assumed to be a great dog for kids. John X is angry that she came home with this wimpy piece of crap. The kids continue to torment this dog. But the kids are older and the torment is worse. John X gets fed up and shoots it with a pellet gun. The hurt dog eventually gets loose. One of his kids corners the dog and charges it. The dog panics and the child ends up seriously injured. Doctors are not sure if the kid will make it. The dog is caught. But because of its breed, a local rehabilitation group is called to evaluate it.

Sadly, they recommend the dog be put down. The damage was done. John X had created yet another menace. This time, people are outraged at a bad owner. But it is too late.

This is how breed bans get started: the wrong people getting a breed of dog for the wrong reasons, or, an irresponsible person getting a dog. The dog reflects the human and becomes what the human makes it. When the dog ends up a problem in the neighborhood, it is the one blamed – not the human. Eventually, there is enough bad press and problems because of a very small minority of dog owners and the result is more often a call for a restriction of the breed. Instead, the restriction needs to be placed on the owners like John X who create the real danger.

Written by Karen Peak

This may be reproduced in its entirety for those fighting BSL. Please reference it back to West Wind Dog Training www.WestWindDogTraining.com

Nittanys1
06-28-2005, 02:36 PM
lotof reading but thats sad.....

MSTANGSALEEN
06-28-2005, 04:05 PM
Sad thing is pits used to be considered a GREAT family dog like a lab or something. I had one and it was great got along with everyone and all dogs.

DreamerTheresa
06-28-2005, 08:01 PM
The dog from the original Little Rascals was an American Pit Bull Terrier.

Jaimecbr900
06-28-2005, 09:23 PM
The scary thing is that due to unethical breeding, it's hard to find a dog that hasn't got a bad blood line sometimes. The owners are definetly what makes the biggest difference.

DreamerTheresa
06-28-2005, 10:09 PM
True dat.


Check out the Breedists? NO! community on livejournal:

http://www.livejournal.com/community/breedists_no

Dragonfly5338
06-29-2005, 02:08 AM
The scary thing is that due to unethical breeding, it's hard to find a dog that hasn't got a bad blood line sometimes. The owners are definetly what makes the biggest difference.

That is SO true, Jamie. And great post, Theresa. :goodjob: +1 for you!

I know labs, shephards and most of the popular breeds are so ruined by horrible breeders that it's hard to find a pup without problems without doing some heavy research and often travelling out of state. I have two shiba inus, and they're getting popular because they are fiesty dogs in a small package, good for apt living. In Japan they're an extremely healthy, almost feral breed - now thanks to US backyard breeders, shibas are starting to have hip, knee and eye problems.

Gotta love worthless fucks who breed to get a quick buck, never thinking about what they're doing to the breed. If you need a purebred dog - please PLEASE consider a rescue (both of my shibas were puppy mill rescues), and if not, find a breeder that genuinely cares about the welfare of the breed - most will show the breed as well, and will be quite particular about who gets their puppies, require a spay/neuter contract, and guarentee their pups.

Okay, I'm off my soapbox - I'm an animal rights activist, can you tell? LoL!

Jaimecbr900
06-29-2005, 02:17 PM
German Shepperds had always been my first love for dogs. I've had a couple since I was like 3. We also had a Great Dane. Cool dog.

My very best one was Kristine, my German Shepp girl. She was awesome. Super intelligent, loyal, awesome with kids, would absolutely tear up somebody on command, awesome guard dog, she was just plain awesome. We had her for 12 yrs. Cancer got her. I literally carried her into the vet's office and kissed her as she was being put down. Best dog in the world. I miss her a lot. Getting misty eyed just thinking about her.

We now have rescued mutts. They are awesome too, just wusses though. Big fat wusses. Gina, my black lab mix, is about 100 lbs and Roscoe, also black lab mix, is only about 45 lbs. We also have a Schnauzer indoor sissy dog named Cody, and my daughter's cat named Selena. All rescued animals. They are great. Not one single problem with them at all. I would not ever hesitate and actively promote to people to adopt a pet rather than go thru puppy mills and backyard shaddy dealers.

All puppies look cute and healthy. What's sad is when they get to be in their silver years and they are so pityful. It's sad.

Dragonfly5338
06-29-2005, 04:35 PM
German Shepperds had always been my first love for dogs. I've had a couple since I was like 3. We also had a Great Dane. Cool dog.

My very best one was Kristine, my German Shepp girl. She was awesome. Super intelligent, loyal, awesome with kids, would absolutely tear up somebody on command, awesome guard dog, she was just plain awesome. We had her for 12 yrs. Cancer got her. I literally carried her into the vet's office and kissed her as she was being put down. Best dog in the world. I miss her a lot. Getting misty eyed just thinking about her.

We now have rescued mutts. They are awesome too, just wusses though. Big fat wusses. Gina, my black lab mix, is about 100 lbs and Roscoe, also black lab mix, is only about 45 lbs. We also have a Schnauzer indoor sissy dog named Cody, and my daughter's cat named Selena. All rescued animals. They are great. Not one single problem with them at all. I would not ever hesitate and actively promote to people to adopt a pet rather than go thru puppy mills and backyard shaddy dealers.

All puppies look cute and healthy. What's sad is when they get to be in their silver years and they are so pityful. It's sad.

LOL!! My mom's mutt is a wussy too. 75lbs shephard/lab/chow something mix. And my two dogs (25lbs and 18lbs respectively) beat the shit out of him. He's scared of them, hahaa.

The Golden Child
07-29-2005, 12:20 PM
yea its sad how people can mistreat these dogs ..
i have a 8 month pit blue white chest and shes nice ..
http://forums.importatlanta.com/showthread.php?t=14674
sometimes she gets on my nerves she acts like a cat and walks under my legs and brushes against me .. lol
but anyway people need to stop mistreating pits ..