GreNME
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2007
- Messages
- 8,276
This is my perception as well. If Dog Breed X is seen as a macho status symbol breed, people who buy Dog Breed X may tend to be macho status symbol types. Those who buy dogs as status symbols are probably less likely to be conscientious dog owners.
This is really the key to it, and it doesn't matter the breed.
Dogs are not only highly capable of learning how to behave from the people and environment they're placed in, they require it in order to know how to act. Dogs not only crave human attention and direction, they need it in order to be right in the head. People-- and not just people looking for a status symbol, but people making impulse buys or trying to impress someone or purchasing for their kids for birthdays & christmas-- will get APBTs and other dogs with the expectation that the dog is immediately going to be a best friend who wants to stick by them through thick and thin... all of the dog cliches that we constantly have reinforced from TV, movies, and books. When that doesn't come immediately and the novelty of a new dog wears off (and responsibilities set in), kids become uninterested or adults start treating the dog like a chore, and all those wonderful expected behaviors don't come right away while the folks wonder if they got a "problem dog" for their purchase.
After a few months people will either turn these dogs in to a rescue or shelter, or they just keep them and do stuff like segregating them from the home or tying them up or keeping them boxed up instead of learning how to work with the dog to get the desired behavior, and before long there are two common outcomes: 1) a dog that doesn't know how to behave and is bitey or destructive, or 2) another dog in the unfortunate list of abandoned and unwanted animals in shelters and rescues. Less common (but still too often) is a dog that breaks out of the home or gets away from the owner, and the owner just doesn't bother following up on it, so the dog starts learning to try to fend for itself and usually to destructive and/or aggressive ends.
Getting rid of specific breeds won't stop these things from happening, and it's these things that are the largest contributors to dog attacks.