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Old 06-24-2005, 02:44 PM  
Mr. Jim
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 4,372
Quote:
Originally Posted by eroswebmaster
Yes compare an adult's choice to use marital aids to leaving a dangerous breed of dog in the hands of incompetent owners.

ROFL

You can say whatever the fuck you want but it's been proven that pits and rotts lead the nation when it comes to dogs that committ serious injuries when attacking.
Do you know what breed of dog is responsible for more dog bites requiring treatment than any other?

Here are what Dog experts and actual research has shown.....not that it holds a candle to an opinonated adult webmaster who has very little if any at all education on the matter.

About 4.7 million people are bitten by dogs each year. One million of those need medical attention. About 750,000 children are bitten by dogs each year; in most cases, these bites are from "familiar dogs" -- not strays. Approximately 12 people die each year from dog bites

All dogs can be provoked to bite. There is really no such thing as a "bad breed." Most (if not all) dogs can be properly trained and socialized to be gentle and tolerant. Your dog should be trained to obey basic commands: sit, stay, come, and down. This alone could prevent many dog-biting incidents.

Potentially aggressive breeds:

Llasa Apso: can be cranky with kids

Toy poodles: bite out of self defense

Dachsunds: not very patient

Rhodesian Ridgebacks: very dominant breed

Miniature Pinschers: "big dog" mindset in little body

Pekinese: intolerant

Chihuahuas: prefer adults, not tolerant of kids

Chow Chow: one-person dogs, bite without warning

Giant Schnauzers: very dominant breed, will even challenge adults

Old English Sheep Dog: very protective of owner

Cocker Spaniel: very protective of owner

Rottweilers: very protective
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