Pitbulls. Do they have a bad rep?

None of this counters the argument that a) some breeds are inherently more dangerous than others or b) pitbulls are one of these breeds.

Of course, and I agree with this (this is loaded language though, "dangerous"? everything is "dangerous", TV's, horses, pointy sticks, running with scissors)

But they are "one of". One of many, and any breed can be "dangerous" if bred and trained to be. Any dog for that matter.

This is why the "banning" of a breed won't work.

First and foremost, the actual pedigreed breeders aren't the problem. Who's going to spend $1000 on a fighting dog? Very few of the legitimate breeders are going to breed these dogs for aggression. It's the backyard breeders that cause the problem.

Banning the breed won't stop the backyard breeders from doing what they do. They just cross breed. 1 or 2 generations and you have a new fighting dog that can't be identified. Did you see what it cost London? $10 million dollars to house dogs they couldn't identify and can't destroy. That's just insane. They could have generated a positive cash flow by laying out a fine structure based on what we know about the fatalities that have occurred. Identify the problem breeds, increase fines accordingly. Your German Shepard or Pitbull get's off its leash? $250 for a first offense then double it every time thereafter. The dogs not fixed? Double the fine. No tags? Double the fine. Maybe consider a 3rd strike law.

You don't punish responsible people, you punish the ones that aren't. Banning the breed will just give a false sense of security and not address the real problem.
 
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GreNME said:
Anecdotes != data
Ironic, given how many personal anecdotes you've used to build your argument.

You just can't stop with the logical fallacies. Now you're trying to play a tu quoque. Feel free to point out which argument I've built on anecdotes. I've given personal examples when dismissing red herrings like the break bar, but my actual arguments as stated in my last post are based on the data and the glaring lack thereof on the BSL side of things.

Well I don't share your pessimism about the accuracy of media analyses. It's usually the investigating officer that identifies the breed for the media, rather than the victim, and so I imagine this would reduce some of the inability of teh report to properly identify the breed.

Bull crap. You need to qualify that kind of wild claim (an officer is the identifying party) if you expect me to take you seriously. I have never seen anyone make such a wild claim. The standard reporting of dog bites, to my knowledge, has always been the best guess of the victims involved unless the animal is captured, at which point it's the best guess of the animal control units. However, there is no standard level of reporting for all municipalities, which sort of blows your claim out of the water unless you have some form of evidence to back it up. This is pretty much the key flaw in all attempts to provide statistical analyses of dog bites, because there is a flawed underlying assumption that all municipalities have the same degree of evidential accuracy when it comes to reporting something like dog bites.

But hey, if you can back up this wild claim with some evidence I'd love to see it.

Here's one such media analysis of dog fatalities in the US:
http://www.dogsbite.org/reports/dogsbite-report-us-dog-bite-fatalities-2006-2008.pdf

It says pitbulls were responsible for more than half of the fatal attacks reported between 2006 and 2008.

Now, even if 75% of those pitbulls were actually german shepherds and were misidentified by the victims and the investigating officers, you'd still have pitbulls responsible for a disproportionate number of fatal dog attacks in the US.

This is why I call the types of arguments your making similar to Truther arguments. You keep citing a website whose goal is to promote breed-specific legislation and is quite open about it. Your constant reference to dogsbite.org is no different than Truthers referencing Infowars or Loose Change. Let's look at why this link is so horribly flawed in terms of any scientific credibility:

"Summary: Between January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2008, DogsBite.org recorded 88 U.S. fatal dog attacks. The data shows that pit bulls are responsible for 59% (52) of these attacks. The data also shows that pit bulls commit the vast majority of off-property attacks that result in death. Only 18% (16) of the attacks occurred off owner property, yet pit bulls were responsible for 81% (13).

Pit bulls are also more likely to kill an adult than a child. In the 3- year period, pit bulls killed more adults (ages 21 and over), 54%, than they did children (ages 11 and younger), 46%. In the age category of 21-54, pit bulls were responsible for 82% (14) of the deaths. Pit bulls do not only kill children and senior citizens, they kill men and women in their prime years: 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s.

Information for this report was gathered through media accounts that were available at the time of the attack or found through Internet archives, including: Google News Archive and AccessMyLibrary. The history of each fatality studied for this report (a copy of each news article) is available in the "Bite Statistics > Fatality Citations" section of the DogsBite.org website."​

In case you missed it, I highlighted the flaw in your "analysis" report. It's using media reporting instead of anything close to a reliable accounting. Eyewitness testimony-- the most common form in these reports-- happens to be notoriously flawed (despite the fact that much weight is given to it), and eyewitness testimony becomes even more flawed when the eyewitness is not skilled in identifying dog breeds, particularly different bully breeds or mixed breeds of non-common types (which is the majority of people). While the average person can tell a German shepherd from a Labrador, the likelihood of correctly drops significantly when dealing with non-common breeds, which tends to get breeds like the Staffordshire terrier lumped in with pit bulls automatically, and pretty much any mutt that even looks like it has a bully breed in its mix tends to get the label "pit mix" (link [pdf]).

In other words, Captain.Sassy, you've made an irrational claim on reporting accuracy (that officers do the identification) and cited an analysis using news reports in support of the irrational claim, essentially shooting your own assertion in the foot. Of course, the NCRC link I provided pages ago already points this flaw out, in that there has not ever been consistent reporting sufficient for statistical accuracy. Of course, you're going to continue to try to beat that drum no matter how much it's pointed out how your evidence is lacking and flawed.

Here's a paper (argues against BSL, though I disagree with how this conclusion is reached) which cites data from Calgary, which the authors say actually has pretty good data on attacks and incidents by breed:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2834488/pdf/16187720.pdf

"In 2003, Calgary reported
that 0.84% of German shepherds and their crosses
bit a human, compared with 1.14% of rottweilers
and their crosses, and 3.86% of pit bulls. When
considering total aggressive incidents (bites, chase/
threats, damage to property, damage to other animals,
human injury), 1.9% of German shepherd dogs
and their crosses were involved, compared with 4.8%
of rottweiler and their crosses, and 14.88% of the pit
bulls (7)"


There are other statistics in there and some arguments against BSL and its effectiveness. If you wish to defend any of the arguments the paper makes, please feel free to- I am just using the article as a source of some figures and do not fully agree with its conclusions (though it's interesting to me to see that the article refers to pitbulls as 'fighting breed'.)

I don't know what you want me to argue against. The paper cites Calgary animal control statistics, but doesn't give any explanation on how the city gathers such statistics. Since I've already pointed out (pages ago) that cities don't all provide statistics with any standard of accuracy, there's no way to discern the reliability of the data when the sources could be self-reported from the victims or fall into the recursive logic of "if it attacked it must be a pit bull, and thus attacked because it was a pit bull" that's confirmed regularly in news reporting (as is evidenced by your "media analysis").

Of course, since you're not offering any clear argument of your own and tossing rhetorical spaghetti on the wall, I see no reason to take your bait and start making arguments against others when you can't provide a clear argument yourself. That tends to fall under "red herring."

GreNME said:
I would say that JRs weren't "bred to bite things" and that's an inaccurate description.
k so how else were they supposed to kill whatever it was they were bred to kill?

You're misunderstanding what I'm saying, so I'll be clear: all dogs bite. Saying that a dog was "bred to bite" is like saying that they were "bred to see." It's inaccurate because it's a general term that applies to all dogs. Some dogs have been bred to bite in a different manner than others, but in the case of Jack Russel terriers that manner is consistent with pretty much all terriers, which isn't anything special in its own right (and again not accurate).

This is an example of why I recommended Jean Donaldson's book ("Culture Clash") in a previous post. Such statements (like "bred to bite") are examples of the inaccuracies in how people, particularly people who do not deal directly with dog behavior, see in the way dogs behave and in their histories.

You're clearly getting offended, or were. Maybe you've calmed down a bit since, but I know the biggest insult you can level at someone on here is 'truther', and you've thrown that one around a couple of times :P

Do everyone here a favor and please try to refrain from trying to read minds. I'm pointing out that your logic is consistent with that of the most egregious similar case of the type of flawed logic you're using, which happens to consist of a great deal of confirmation bias, selection bias, misapplication or misunderstanding of actual information/data, and when challenged personal attack (which you're doing now). Since you've also cited the fraudulent Clifton Report I could also liken the logic you're using to that of creationists, but since you've dropped that one in lieu of the confirmation bias route I'm sticking to the similar consistency.

What 'authoritative sources'... the UKC history of the APBT? The one that didn't specifically say the APBT was bred for fighting, but merely implied it and glossed it over? You DO know the UKC was set up because the AKC wouldn't recognise the APBT because of its association with dogfighting? Do you think this might in any way influence their official standard for the breed?

Despite your assertions of having "implied it and glossed it over," you're now suggesting a reasoning for the UKC having recognized it before their American counterparts without providing evidence (or context). The APBT is not an AKC-recognized breed, nor has it ever been. However, claiming that it's the AKC who is behind this is assuming a lot (and conflating the APBT history with the British Staffordshire bull terrier, which was recognized in 1974) in terms of motivations. The reason the APBT was not ever recognized has more to do with the politics between the UKC and the AKC than your simplistic account. The AKC protested to both the bull-baiting and the fighting (both of which had been banned in Britain but immigrated to the US), while the UKC folks intended to keep the APBT out of AKC registration to avoid breeders breeding the dog to meet confirmation guidelines for competition (the judges look over the dog and judge according to certain "types") as opposed to having them compete in "purpose driven" competitions (pulling sleds and holding on to ropes and other physical competitions). Eventually the AKC relented to some groups of APBT owners who wanted to compete in confirmation, but to avoid "dual registration" with the UKC they required a different registration name and also have a stipulation that a UKC-registered APBT cannot be registered as an AKC American Staffordshire terrier. The politics aren't difficult to understand, particularly because the AKC tended to be more "upper class" while the UKC more "working class" in terms of membership, but there's a lot more to the story of why the APBT isn't a registered breed than to simply say that the AKC was against dog fighting (thus implying that this was all the APBT was being used for). This link goes into some of the history, and while I'm not exactly impressed with the amateurish and hyperbole-laden verbiage of that page it does provide a number of names, dates, and location references if you're interested in actually going through and verifying the history instead of just constantly dealing in readers-digest versions of everything.

here we go again...

and again...

When you stop arguing in the same manner, making the same mistakes in logic and ridiculous, evidence-lacking assertions, then you won't have to worry about me likening your argument tactics with Truthers. As of now, though, you're still playing from the same strategy cards they do.

I also notice you've completely failed to provide evidence, which in the second statement you quoted was the criticism being levied. Great job in avoiding the actual criticism of your argument without even pretending to actually back your assertions up.

once again with the UKC breed standard... pretty flimsy rickshaw there.

Ahh, more arguing from incredulity. Why don't you actually try to provide even a shred of substance to your flimsy denials instead of just assuming that everyone reading should take your claims for granted.

Anyways, I'll get to the rest of your novel later.

Try to refrain from all the personal attacks; you're better than that.

Name a personal attack, because I'm attacking your arguments and the only attacks aimed at an individual so far have been coming from you.
 
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I found this amusing .. ( While following some links from the " Pit Bull Placebo " sales pitch ...

http://nationalcanineresearchcouncil.com/dog-bites/



No shhhh !

Think that could have anything to do with the declining number of mail carriers who actually walk their routes ? :rolleyes:

Some real science going on there ...

More argument from incredulity.

In case you were unaware, there are two groups of mail carriers who do most of the walking: city mail carriers and rural mail carriers. Suburban carriers have gone to driving those funny white vehicles you associate with mail carriers since the 1960's, but even with them there can still be a fair amount of walking or time out of the vehicle when dealing with some housing projects or apartment complexes in suburban areas.

However, oddly enough your argument from incredulity fails to point out this link which shows the rate of dog bites for mail carriers going up between 1963 and 1983, then down between 1983 and 2003. So, since you're suggesting that it's the number of mail carriers who no longer walk their routes as opposed to something else, perhaps you could explain why the years between 1963 and 1983 saw an increase?

Yeah, I didn't think so. And unsurprising since you completely avoided addressing the entire rest of that page or the "real science" of studies like this one referenced on that page.
 
Also, I'd like to say kudos to Toke for actually taking the time to actually read the free book I linked. If anyone else is reading it and would like to support the author, the book is also available on Amazon.
 
... some breeds are inherently more dangerous than others...

All you have to do is provide a shred of evidence to be taken any more seriously than pretty much all of the other woo-promoters who have come to this forum, and so far you've failed. The only argument you have that could be construed as accurate so far is that pit bulls are bigger than some dogs and thus more dangerous, which considering there are dozens of breeds that are bigger, stronger, and faster than pit bulls would pretty much mean all of them are equally "inherently dangerous" and yet you've already made excuses to not include some of them.
 
All you have to do is provide a shred of evidence to be taken any more seriously than pretty much all of the other woo-promoters who have come to this forum, and so far you've failed. The only argument you have that could be construed as accurate so far is that pit bulls are bigger than some dogs and thus more dangerous, which considering there are dozens of breeds that are bigger, stronger, and faster than pit bulls would pretty much mean all of them are equally "inherently dangerous" and yet you've already made excuses to not include some of them.

You should look at the paper the link cited yourself.

Unless this study on a sample of dogs from various breeds doesn't count as "evidence".

In which case, no, I'm not going to go buy a bunch of dogs and do the test myself.
 
Ingrid Newkirk is the head of PETA in the United States, and was the head of animal shelters in in United States before that with many years of experience. Do you believe that Ingrid Newkirk should be considered an expert on how dogs and cats should be taken care of?



Anecdotes != data. Honestly, all I can say is you're doing it wrong. I could offer you suggestions in getting your dog less bitey (and possibly not bitey at all), but I'm not going to derail the thread for your anecdote.

The vet couldn't do any better, he had to held down by two of them and made a huge racket.
 
You should look at the paper the link cited yourself.

Unless this study on a sample of dogs from various breeds doesn't count as "evidence".

In which case, no, I'm not going to go buy a bunch of dogs and do the test myself.

Which study are you referring to?

Again, diversion noted.
 
Which study are you referring to?

Again, diversion noted.

The study where they experimentally tested samples of various dog breeds for aggression. It was cited in the paper I linked.

I'm fascinated how my replying to your demand for evidence is a 'diversion'.


ETA: Studies.

To avoid this problem, some studies have evaluated
aggression within clearly defined samples of
dogs in order to make direct comparisons. Although
this approach has demonstrated breed differences in
aggressiveness (15–17), some of the limitations of
these f indings are that: a) pit bulls are rarely
included, b) very few studies have been conducted
on Canadian dog populations, and c) older studies
may no longer represent the characteristics of breeds
that have since undergone selection for specific
personality traits.
 
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I'll ask again, which link?

You see, you're the one making the claim of something being inherent, so you're the one who has to provide the evidence. You say you've posted some link that cites some paper that has some evidence, but you seem to be completely incapable of providing that evidence yourself and are instead demanding that I go seek out your evidence for you.

So, by all means, feel free to put up.
 
I'm fascinated how my replying to your demand for evidence is a 'diversion'.

It's a diversion because your "evidence" isn't evidence at all, but indeed a lack thereof.

I'll show you using your own quote:
ETA: Studies.

To avoid this problem, some studies have evaluated
aggression within clearly defined samples of
dogs in order to make direct comparisons. Although
this approach has demonstrated breed differences in
aggressiveness (15–17), some of the limitations of these f indings are that: a) pit bulls are rarely included, b) very few studies have been conducted on Canadian dog populations, and c) older studies may no longer represent the characteristics of breeds that have since undergone selection for specific personality traits.

So, your "evidence" is essentially studies that don't usually include pit bulls, and consist of studies that the link you're citing is even providing caveats where, hey, these studies might not exactly be all that accurate, but here they are anyway just in case you're willing to take them for granted.

Present the actual evidence, Captain.Sassy, not someone referencing the possibility of evidence. You're the one making the claim, so the onus of evidence is on you.
 
Also, I'd like to say kudos to Toke for actually taking the time to actually read the free book I linked. If anyone else is reading it and would like to support the author, the book is also available on Amazon.

I read a lot of the book .. I'm sure there is some valid and factual information there, but it reads like it was ghosted by Kevin Trudeau..i.e.

" The Truth About Pit Bulls That The Government Doesn't Want You To Know "

The woman is clearly on a mission to un-demonize these dogs, but to what end ?

Talk about Truthers ..

I personally don't think the breed should be exterminated, but I don't think it would be any great loss..

I agree that this breed does not behave any differently than most other dogs in the same situations that these dogs often find themselves in; but at present a disproportionate number of them are put in that position ..


Society will always have its innocent witches, and the masses who react to bad information ...

Sometimes it's over-priced yogurt that improves regularity, where they neglect to point out the undesired side effects , in this case it's a breed of dog with an un-deserved reputation..



Thread title:

" Pitbulls. Do they have a bad rep?"

Yes they do ..
 
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It's a diversion because your "evidence" isn't evidence at all, but indeed a lack thereof.

I'll show you using your own quote:


So, your "evidence" is essentially studies that don't usually include pit bulls, and consist of studies that the link you're citing is even providing caveats where, hey, these studies might not exactly be all that accurate, but here they are anyway just in case you're willing to take them for granted.

Present the actual evidence, Captain.Sassy, not someone referencing the possibility of evidence. You're the one making the claim, so the onus of evidence is on you.

Okay

Step back

take a breath

congratulate yourself for trying, and re-read exactly what this was presented as evidence of

It was actually in response to your request that I support my assertion that some dog breeds were inherently more dangerous than others.

Not necessarily pit bulls, just that this is something that can exist in dogs and vary by breed.
 
I read a lot of the book .. I'm sure there is some valid and factual information there, but it reads like it was ghosted by Kevin Trudeau..i.e.

" The Truth About Pit Bulls That The Government Doesn't Want You To Know "

It's not specifically about pit bulls, and it has nothing to do with the government, so what you're doing there is creating a strawman. The issue with pit bulls is that they are a scapegoat to the problem of dog bites, and removing them from the population won't be effective. The Denver, CO metro area is actually a good case study of the ineffectiveness of BSL: if you go by Denver AC stats alone the ban seems to have worked, but when you look at the surrounding area (also affected by the ban) or look at the total reporting of breed (which is reported by victims), the numbers show no significant decreases in addressing dog bites (and in some areas dog bites have gone up in number). That is the kind of thing that should have critical thinkers raising eyebrows when it comes to conversations like this, but because there's so much assumed "conventional wisdom" about breeds like the pit bull allegedly having some kind of inherent danger people all too often are just working from confirmation of those assumptions and not bothering to criticize the selective and misleading statistics provided from sources promoting breed bans.

The woman is clearly on a mission to un-demonize these dogs, but to what end ?

The NCRC is "on a mission" to provide a critical examination of hyperbolic reporting to dog attacks and the use of such reports by those promoting breed-specific legislation. Karen Delise, the woman you're referring to, isn't specifically on a mission to remove demonization of pit bulls but is trying provide research-- she discusses some of what she does here, which is far more in-depth and with more due diligence than any methodology I've ever found in statistical analyses-- that works with other contributors to provide a more critical examination of why so many bite incidents happen and what can be done for providing a safer environment to prevent attacks. Her thesis is essentially that choosing specific breeds and wiping them out is not going to actually address the problem, and she put together the NCRC to collect, store, and provide to the public the reams of data she's been putting together for the last 20 years that shows how skewed common reporting on dog bites actually is.

I personally don't think the breed should be exterminated, but I don't think it would be any great loss..

I agree that this breed does not behave any differently than most other dogs in the same situations that these dogs often find themselves in; but at present a disproportionate number of them are put in that position ..

Hey, this is progress compared to others. I'll agree that the positions some dogs are put in can be a huge contributing factor. However, this is so if what you're talking about is dog fighting rings. If you're talking about attacks I refer back to my earlier criticism about the lack of reliable data identifying one dog breed over others. But you do absolutely have a point that there is a problem of people placing dogs (and not just pit bulls) in unfortunate positions, which lead often enough to tragic consequences.

Society will always have its innocent witches, and the masses who react to bad information ...

Sometimes it's over-priced yogurt that improves regularity, where they neglect to point out the undesired side effects , in this case it's a breed of dog with an un-deserved reputation..

Yeah, but with the yogurt we aren't wiping out a dog breed while not actually addressing the problem the bans are supposed to be addressing. If nothing else, opponents of ridiculous and useless legislation would be up in arms over the inefficacy of breed-specific legislation.
 
Okay

Step back

take a breath

congratulate yourself for trying, and re-read exactly what this was presented as evidence of

It was actually in response to your request that I support my assertion that some dog breeds were inherently more dangerous than others.

Not necessarily pit bulls, just that this is something that can exist in dogs and vary by breed.

Instead of posting nonsense like "take a breath" why don't you actually post the evidence you think they're citing. The link you gave even caveats those citations, and yet you're expecting me to take it as if you've provided proof. Show the proof. You seem to think that the citations you mention are that proof, but you've done nothing to show how they are.

All you have to do is actually explain what it is that is "inherent" in certain breeds that isn't in others. The citations you point out are referring to aggression, which is a catch-all term that doesn't explain any inherent danger. "Aggression" can mean anything from food guarding to territorial behaviors to dog aggression to human (stranger) aggression to strong prey drive-- all of which are behaviorally exhibitions of different types of things and none of which have been proven to be "inherent" to specific breeds. "Inherent" is the key here, Captain.Sassy: you need to provide proof of inherent conditions that don't rely on other factors.

Good luck with that. When you do, you should probably present that evidence to the AVMA because they'd love to have something like that to publish (if it passes peer scrutiny).
 
You just can't stop with the logical fallacies. Now you're trying to play a tu quoque. Feel free to point out which argument I've built on anecdotes. I've given personal examples when dismissing red herrings like the break bar, but my actual arguments as stated in my last post are based on the data and the glaring lack thereof on the BSL side of things.

You actually never 'dismissed' the break bar nor addressed it in any way; you merely chose to post doodles of scarecrows instead.


Bull crap. You need to qualify that kind of wild claim (an officer is the identifying party) if you expect me to take you seriously.

I read through a dozen reports of dog attacks after googling 'dog attack'. In nearly every one of them where the dog was identified, the identity of the dog was made by police or animal control officers. Pretty crappy sample size, sure, but I got better things to do.

I have never seen anyone make such a wild claim. The standard reporting of dog bites, to my knowledge, has always been the best guess of the victims involved unless the animal is captured, at which point it's the best guess of the animal control units.

In most of the articles I looked at, the dog was subsequently captured or killed.

However, there is no standard level of reporting for all municipalities, which sort of blows your claim out of the water unless you have some form of evidence to back it up.
This is pretty much the key flaw in all attempts to provide statistical analyses of dog bites, because there is a flawed underlying assumption that all municipalities have the same degree of evidential accuracy when it comes to reporting something like dog bites.

This is a massive fail in terms of basic statistics unless you can demonstrate that there is a reporting bias that is consistent across all municipalities and news outlets and police forces and animal control divisions which consistently over-reports pitbull attacks and under-reports attacks by other breeds of dogs. Furthermore, you have to demonstrate that the magnitude of this bias is sufficient to overcome the massively disproportionate number of such attacks reported to be by pitbulls.



This is why I call the types of arguments your making similar to Truther arguments. You keep citing a website whose goal is to promote breed-specific legislation and is quite open about it.

Actually, I've cited that website once, and I've cited the Clifton report zero times. Which is all the funnier in that you've accused me of citing that report numerous times. Furthermore, you dismiss any evidence from a website based on that website's support of BSL, and yet most of the sources you have cited are decidedly anti-BSL / pro-pitbull.

That is hypocritical.

Your constant reference to dogsbite.org is no different than Truthers referencing Infowars or Loose Change. Let's look at why this link is so horribly flawed in terms of any scientific credibility:

Again, fascinating that you think this referencing is 'constant'.

BTW, just because you start acting as if I've cited the same sources over and over, does not invalidate these sources.

"Summary: Between January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2008, DogsBite.org recorded 88 U.S. fatal dog attacks. The data shows that pit bulls are responsible for 59% (52) of these attacks. The data also shows that pit bulls commit the vast majority of off-property attacks that result in death. Only 18% (16) of the attacks occurred off owner property, yet pit bulls were responsible for 81% (13).

Pit bulls are also more likely to kill an adult than a child. In the 3- year period, pit bulls killed more adults (ages 21 and over), 54%, than they did children (ages 11 and younger), 46%. In the age category of 21-54, pit bulls were responsible for 82% (14) of the deaths. Pit bulls do not only kill children and senior citizens, they kill men and women in their prime years: 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s.

Information for this report was gathered through media accounts that were available at the time of the attack or found through Internet archives, including: Google News Archive and AccessMyLibrary. The history of each fatality studied for this report (a copy of each news article) is available in the "Bite Statistics > Fatality Citations" section of the DogsBite.org website."​

In case you missed it, I highlighted the flaw in your "analysis" report. It's using media reporting instead of anything close to a reliable accounting.


I'm insulted that you could suggest that I missed this aspect of the methodology. I deliberately drew attention to it and have actually taken a position which, while not claiming that media analyses are without their faults, is one that supports the use of this methodology in this context

Eyewitness testimony-- the most common form in these reports-- happens to be (despite the fact that [url=http://psy2.ucsd.edu/~hflowe/eyetest.htm]much weight is given to it),


Provide evidence that eyewitness testimony alone, i.e. without later corroboration by police or animal control or veterinary authorities, is the most common way attacking dogs get identified in these reports.


While the average person can tell a German shepherd from a Labrador, the likelihood of correctly drops significantly when dealing with non-common breeds, which tends to get breeds like the Staffordshire terrier lumped in with pit bulls automatically, and pretty much any mutt that even looks like it has a bully breed in its mix tends to get the label "pit mix" (link [pdf]).

Do you think 50% of the dogs in the United States are Staffordshire terriers, American Pit Bull Terriers and Pit Bull mixes?

If not, then these dogs getting unfairly lumped together by eyewitnesses (assuming that all attacks by these dogs are labelled 'pitbull' attacks) still doesn't alter the fact that these dogs are disproportionately dangerous.




In other words, Captain.Sassy, you've made an irrational claim on reporting accuracy (that officers do the identification) and cited an analysis using news reports in support of the irrational claim, essentially shooting your own assertion in the foot.

Wow italics around nouns you don't like. I'm convinced. :P




I don't know what you want me to argue against. The paper cites Calgary animal control statistics, but doesn't give any explanation on how the city gathers such statistics. Since I've already pointed out (pages ago) that cities don't all provide statistics with any standard of accuracy, there's no way to discern the reliability of the data when the sources could be self-reported from the victims or fall into the recursive logic of "if it attacked it must be a pit bull, and thus attacked because it was a pit bull" that's confirmed regularly in news reporting (as is evidenced by your "media analysis").

Stats are based on reports to the city, which are all investigated by the city's staff.

The problem you raised was for inter-city evaluations, i.e. impossibility of aggregating between municipalities- not within them.


You're misunderstanding what I'm saying, so I'll be clear: all dogs bite. Saying that a dog was "bred to bite" is like saying that they were "bred to see." It's inaccurate because it's a general term that applies to all dogs. Some dogs have been bred to bite in a different manner than others, but in the case of Jack Russel terriers that manner is consistent with pretty much all terriers, which isn't anything special in its own right (and again not accurate).

yes, all dogs bite
that is how dogs kill things
Terriers of all sorts have been bred to kill things
Therefore they have been bred to bite




Since you've also cited the fraudulent Clifton Report I could also liken the logic you're using to that of creationists, but since you've dropped that one in lieu of the confirmation bias route I'm sticking to the similar consistency.

Is this one of those math tricks where like you do something to zero and it becomes an actual number? Like if you claim I've cited Clifton an infinite number of times, eventually I will actually have cited it?


The reason the APBT was not ever recognized has more to do with the politics between the UKC and the AKC than your simplistic account. The AKC protested to both the bull-baiting and the fighting (both of which had been banned in Britain but immigrated to the US), while the UKC folks intended to keep the APBT out of AKC registration to avoid breeders breeding the dog to meet confirmation guidelines for competition (the judges look over the dog and judge according to certain "types") as opposed to having them compete in "purpose driven" competitions (pulling sleds and holding on to ropes and other physical competitions)

lol

jokes

So I say 'UKC was started cause AKC didn't want anything to do with fighting'

then your response is to call my explanation simplistic
and then

start your account of the history with the sentence:
"The AKC protested to both the bull-baiting and the fighting "

too good

hey GrenME

So
The UKC wanted a breed that was good at:

"pulling sleds and holding on to ropes and other physical competitions"

What kinds of 'other physical competitions'

licking contests?
belly rubs marathons?

You yourself are glossing over the breed's history in a most disingenuous manner.


Name a personal attack, because I'm attacking your arguments and the only attacks aimed at an individual so far have been coming from you.

Actually the whole tone in this thread was far more civil before you came in with your insults, laughing dogs and scarecrow doodles.
 
"Aggression" can mean anything from food guarding to territorial behaviors to dog aggression to human (stranger) aggression to strong prey drive-- all of which are behaviorally exhibitions of different types of things and none of which have been proven to be "inherent" to specific breeds. "Inherent" is the key here, Captain.Sassy: you need to provide proof of inherent conditions that don't rely on other factors.

Okay so I like how the problem you have with the paper has now changed from one of 'they didn't include pitbulls, this says nothing about pitbulls' to 'I don't like the methodology cause I don't know what it is'.

Anyways, like I said, I am not going to personally run experiments on samples of dogs of different breeds. For me, it is sufficient to cite peer reviewed literature that has.
 
If you ban pitbulls someone will just cross two licit breeds to produce a new fighting dog


This is an interesting point that you made earlier.

I'd like to see what the stats are for Germany in terms of bites per capita/bites per dog population / fatal incidents per population. They seem to have had a fairly longstanding breed ban.



First and foremost, the actual pedigreed breeders aren't the problem. Who's going to spend $1000 on a fighting dog? Very few of the legitimate breeders are going to breed these dogs for aggression. It's the backyard breeders that cause the problem.

Debatable. I think that people would probably pay good coin for a dog of top notch fighting lineage.

you can check for yourself- there are plenty of registered pitbull breeders online that trace the lineage of their dogs to fighting champions.
 
I hate to jump back into this discussion since it has turned into a 2-3 person debate, but I thought i'd post two things that I don't believe have yet been posted, regarding the AVMA.

AVMA policy
Dangerous Animal Legislation
(Oversight: CHAB; EB 03/88; Revised 11/01; Reaffirmed 11/05, 04/2010)
The AVMA supports dangerous animal legislation by state, county, or municipal governments provided that legislation does not refer to specific breeds or classes of animals. This legislation should be directed at fostering safety and protection of the general public from animals classified as dangerous.
http://www.avma.org/issues/policy/dangerous_animal_legislation.asp

This following excerpted letter was evidently sent to people requesting reprints of a Special report published in 2000 in JAVMA about fatal human attacks:

In contrast to what has been reported in the news media, the data contained
within this report CANNOT be used to infer any breed-specific risk for dog
bite fatalities (e.g., neither pit bull-type dogs nor Rottweilers can be said to be more “dangerous” than any other breed based on the contents of this report).
To obtain such risk information it would be necessary to know the numbers of each breed currently residing in the United States. Such information is not available.

Fatal attacks represent a small proportion of dog bite injuries to humans and,
therefore, should not be the primary factor driving public policy concerning
dangerous dogs.

Strategies that can be used in an effort to prevent dog bites include enforcement of generic, non-breed-specific dangerous dog laws, with an emphasis on chronically irresponsible owners; enforcement of animal control ordinances such as leash laws; prohibition of dog fighting; encouraging neutering; and school-based and adult education programs that teach pet selection strategies, pet care and responsibility, and bite prevention.
http://www.avma.org/advocacy/state/issues/javma_000915_fatalattacks.pdf

We now return you to your regularly scheduled debate.
 
I hate to jump back into this discussion since it has turned into a 2-3 person debate, but I thought i'd post two things that I don't believe have yet been posted, regarding the AVMA.


http://www.avma.org/issues/policy/dangerous_animal_legislation.asp

This following excerpted letter was evidently sent to people requesting reprints of a Special report published in 2000 in JAVMA about fatal human attacks:


http://www.avma.org/advocacy/state/issues/javma_000915_fatalattacks.pdf

We now return you to your regularly scheduled debate.


That's what I said. I hate the internet, you can't have an original thought on the internet. :)

This is a proactive stance, that generates positive cash flow and addresses the problem based on all the information we know.

We pay less for dog licenses if the dog is fixed, but I'd like to see the cost increased for dogs that aren't fixed. That money can then go back into reducing the cost to fix other animals. This is the largest contributing factor in dog attacks. There's no excuse not to have a dog altered unless you are breeding the dog. You really shouldn't have a dog if you can't afford to fix it, but I understand people may not be able to afford it and the money is well spent. If not for the temperament benefits at least in terms of population control.

Mail carriers should be aware of dogs on their route and dogs without tags should be reported and the owners fined. Obviously if these measures were implemented the bad owners would try to hide their dogs from authorities. This would be an effective way to ensure compliance.

This is the logical way to address the problem. Banning a breed does nothing.
 

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