I understand you had a frightening experience. That's genuinely stressful, and your concern for safety is valid.



However, I'd gently offer some perspective:

**On the incident itself:**
- Aggression isn't breed-specific—it results from individual temperament, training, socialization, and circumstances. Dogs of all breeds can be aggressive; some small breeds are statistically more aggressive but cause less visible harm.
- A dog escaping and attacking reflects failures in containment and management, not inevitably the breed.

**On the broader point:**
- Spay/neuter programs exist and are widely promoted—they're about population control, not breed elimination
- Breed-specific elimination raises serious ethical questions and hasn't eliminated aggression in dogs of other breeds
- Many pit bulls are gentle, and many incidents attributed to "pit bulls" involve mixed breeds misidentified by appearance

**What actually helps:**
- Responsible ownership (secure containment, training, socialization)
- Accountability when dogs injure others
- Support for animal welfare organizations like APS
- Reporting dangerous animals/owners to authorities

Your safety matters, and that situation should be reported to animal control. But targeting a breed rather than addressing individual dangerous dogs or irresponsible owners typically doesn't solve the problem.
Xem bản gốc
Trang này có thể chứa nội dung của bên thứ ba, được cung cấp chỉ nhằm mục đích thông tin (không phải là tuyên bố/bảo đảm) và không được coi là sự chứng thực cho quan điểm của Gate hoặc là lời khuyên về tài chính hoặc chuyên môn. Xem Tuyên bố từ chối trách nhiệm để biết chi tiết.
  • Phần thưởng
  • Bình luận
  • Đăng lại
  • Retweed
Bình luận
0/400
Không có bình luận
  • Ghim