Flofocus,May 16 2006, 12:47 PM Wrote:http://www.fataldogattacks.com/
Quote:Examination of newspaper archival records dating back to the 1950âs and 1960âs reveal the same types of severe and fatal attacks occurring then as today. The only difference is the breed of dog responsible for these events. A random study of 74 severe and fatal attacks reported in the Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia, PA) from 1964-1968, show no severe or fatal attacks by Rottweilers and only one attack attributed to a Pit-Bull-type dog. The dogs involved in most of these incidents were the breeds that were popular at the time.
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This excerpt tends to prove what Iâve been saying about the inherently dangerous nature of large dogs, and it tends to prove it is not a new problem. Nobody is claiming that only pit bulls are deadly.
But you are also being very selective about what you quote. Hereâs a couple of other quotes from your source that puts things into a different perspective. And since this is your source I hope you wonât now call this "media BS." I added the emphasis and the conclusions.
Karen Delise Wrote:THE STATISTICS - FATAL DOG ATTACKS IN THE U.S. FROM 1965 - 2001 *
The study covers 431 documented human fatalities from a dog attack.[Thatâs a lot of dead people â and it is a statistically significant number]
Location of Attack
25% of all fatal attacks were inflicted by chained dogs
25% resulted from dogs loose in their yard
23% occurred inside the home
17% resulted from attacks by dogs roaming off their property
10% involved leashed dogs or miscellaneous circumstances
[Conclusion: statistically the most dangerous situations are a dog on a leash or a dog in its yard - this is clearly not about bad ownership practices and criminal records arenât a factor.]
Victim Profile
79% of all fatal attacks were on children under the age of 12
12% of the victims were the elderly, aged 65 - 94
9% of the victims were 13 - 64 years old
[Conclusion: the vast majority of victims were children and the elderly â the two groups in our society we typically acknowledge deserve greater protection â I plan on being part of the solution â how about you?]
Breeds Involved
Pit Bull and Pit-bull-type dogs (21%), Mixed breed dogs (16%), Rottweilers (13%), German Shepherd Dogs (9%), Wolf Dogs (5%), Siberian Huskies (5%), Malamutes (4%), Great Danes (3%), St. Bernards (3%), Chow Chows (3%), Doberman Pinschers (3%), other breeds & non-specified breeds (15%).
[Conclusion: assuming that pit bulls exist in exactly the same numbers as these other breeds (unlikely), they still represent the single largest deadly threat to humans. Additionally, 16% mixed breed and 15% non-specified breeds could very well include dogs that are essentially pit bulls. My guess is that there are a lot more mixed breed dogs, a lot more german shepherds and possibly even more dobermans than pit bulls ⦠and if so, then that 21% represents an even greater statistical threat by pit bulls]
Right now there is a pet overpopulation problem in the U.S. and probably Canada, that is resulting in millions upon millions of animals being put down every year. I certainly donât wish this on any animal; but you canât âput downâ those causing the irresponsible breeding and ownership of pets, so the animal pays the price. If pit bull puppies have to be put down because of the irresponsibility of owners/breeders, the onus is on them and not on those of us advocating safety for kids and seniors.
I acknowledge that banning pit bulls is an incomplete solution to the wider problem of fatal dog attacks on people. But dog breeders, dog owners, legislators and the judiciary have let the situation get out of hand and the backlash is natural and understandable.
The way I see it, dog breeders and dog owners have the choice to be part of the solution or be part of the problem; and the choices they make will dictate just how far the rest of society chooses to go to eliminate the problem.
Frankly ⦠if youâve chosen to not muzzle your pit bull in clear violation of the law â then youâve chosen to be part of the problem because all youâre doing is pointing a big fat âdangerâ sign right at your dogâs head; proof to some that even reasonable pit bull owners canât be trusted to do the lawful and responsible thing.
All I hear from the pro pit bull group is about their ârightsâ as pet owners (no such right exists) and about how wonderful pit bulls are. What I donât hear from dog breeders and owners is just how they plan to end a problem that has been around for a long time. And if they canât, or wonât, then itâs up to the rest of society to make it happen.
Hopefully the breeders and owners of dobermans and rottweilers are paying attention and are making plans now to make sure their breeds arenât ever again involved in a fatal attack â because if they donât, theyâre next.
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