Well this conflicts with several websites dedicated to the breed and personal experience, I have seen Pitbulls maintain a grip, not on another dog but a toy. It also goes a long way to explaining the myth of "lock jaws".
The mountain of evidence is not in your favor. Again, a lot of hand waving but nothing to support your position. Did I miss a link?
A link for what? You want a scientific study on how pit bulls differ from other dogs in their bite? Really, what kind of link are you looking for?
If you want to talk about personal experience, I've swung schutzhund-trained Dobermans around from a sleeve and pulled a pit bull off another dog that it had attacked, and I can say that there is qualitatively no difference between the two. I've had to pull larger dogs with much stronger jaws than pit bulls have and done so just as successfully.
But you want links? Okay:
link 1,
link 2,
link 3, the latter of which points to
this study that is also cited in the first link, though both also cover other subject matter beyond that study.
Essentially, arguing that pit bulls have some form of inherently different bite because they hold on is completely based in hysteria because they're a bully breed-- which is a breed of dogs bred to hold on to a bull's ring regardless of thrashing. The reality is that the pit bull does not bite stronger than the average for dogs its size, that any dog can hold on just as strongly as a pit bull, and even a pit bull will try to get a better bite hold for the same reason any other dog would. The reality is that the pit bull
is a dog and unless someone can show otherwise there is no logical reason for me to address ridiculous accusations about supposed outlying prowess that the pit bull has that somehow is less or not present in other dogs. As Carl Sagan said, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and the only ones here claiming something extraordinary are those attributing to pit bulls qualities above and beyond other dog breeds.
Incorrect, you have nothing to support your position. All you did is demand ridiculous evidence for the effect of testosterone in male animals, as if you didn't know it is responsible for sex drive and the behaviour associated with seeking out a mate. Criticize the sample population, which is more than enough to establish a correlation, and question the effects in female dogs.
You also dodged the veterinarian report which unequivocally refutes your position.
You're floundering.
No, you're demanding I sit here and go point-by-point with the person who wrote that essay, who isn't here themselves and who you're using as a diversion to avoid addressing the points I've already brought up. The vet in your link hand-waves away studies on health risks, points out that there are some reproductive system related diseases that can be prevented with sterilization, and makes a few more appeals to disregard arguments citing studies that disagree with his conclusion but to heed studies that agree with his conclusion-- essentially asking the reader to engage in selection bias.
So how about you go ahead and try to make your own argument instead of demanding I engage someone who isn't here?