It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
* The experts' professional opinions:
* "Pit bulls" are not inherently or genetically different than other breeds.
* The top 4 biters by breed are German Shepherds, Rottweillers, Cocker Spaniels, and Golden Retrievers.
* Bites by "pit bull" type dogs account for less than 5% of all serious bites in Canada.
* It is a myth that "pit bull" type dogs are unique in how they attack. Other breeds also have a bite and hold pattern.
* There is no qualitative difference between a serious attack by a "pit bull" and one by another breed of a comparable size.
* A bite and hold attack is not qualitatively more severe than a series of slashing bites typical for a breed like the German Shepherd.
* Dogs in attacks are regularly misidentified as "pit bulls". If "pit bull" attacks were qualitatively different then this confusion should not exist.
Originally posted by mishigas
This is Breaking Alternative News? ATS once had much stricter criteria for 'Breaking' category news stories. This seems to be a mere dogbite story; more suited for Local Boring News.
Now where is that LBN forum?
Lets change it up. "Dog possessed by Satan Mauls 30!"
How's that?
Originally posted by Magnivea
reply to post by Arbitrageur
Lab who will attack anyone or anything (excluding myself and my parents) if not muzzled when on a walk
Originally posted by Danbones
stafordshires make OK pets
but they will eat the next dog in a heart beat for no reason
8' fence with 3' of chicken wire buried underneath to keep animals out surrounding the house]
My poor dog just laid there while the kids opened his mouth, drove trucks across him, jumped off the bed and onto his sleeping back, hid things underneath of him, etc., etc. They are absolutely great dogs! Smart, tough, brave, and loyal, what else could you ask of a dog?
I don't doubt your anecdotes.
Originally posted by Magnivea
Just my experiences, though.
I'm trying to visualize this technique but I'm having difficulty imagining exact hand placement for this technique, have you got a link to a diagram which clarifies this?
Originally posted by Danbones
if a lab is trying to bite you
you grab his jaw at the base and squeeze his lips in over his teeth
end of dog human fight
Source?
Originally posted by getreadyalready
#1 Dog bite in the US is from Dalmations! Next is Chows!
I thought the same thing, I can understand one adult, but four? Something's wrong with this story.
Here, in the OP, we have a Golden Retriever injuring 4 grown persons? How is that even possible. If a 20 year old man can't control a dog, then it seems to be natural selection in play here.
Dogs can be dangerous. And they are more dangerous to children than to adults. But here's the reality. Dogs almost never kill people. A child is more likely to die choking on a marble or a balloon, and an adult is more likely to die in a bedroom slipper related accident. Your chances of being killed by a dog are roughly one in 18 million. You are five times more likely to be killed by a bolt of lightning.
The supposed epidemic numbers of dog bites splashed across the media are absurdly inflated by dubious research and by counting bites that don't actually hurt anyone. Even when dogs do injure people, the vast majority of injuries are at the Band-Aid level. Yet lawmakers, litigators, and insurers press for less dog ownership. This must stop. We must maintain perspective. Yes, dogs bite. But even party balloons and bedroom slippers are more dangerous.
From a story this week at CBSNews.com (the bolding is mine):
“A study performed by the American Veterinary Medical Association, the CDC, and the Humane Society of the United States, analyzed dog bite statistics from the last 20 years and found that the statistics don’t show that any breeds are inherently more dangerous than others. The study showed that the most popular large breed dogs at any one time were consistently on the list of breeds that bit fatally. There were a high number of fatal bites from Doberman pinschers in the 1970s, for example, because Dobermans were very popular at that time and there were more Dobermans around, and because Dobermans’ size makes their bites more dangerous. The number of fatal bites from pit bulls rose in the 1980s for the same reason, and the number of bites from Rottweilers in the 1990s. The study also noted that there are no reliable statistics for nonfatal dog bites, so there is no way to know how often smaller breeds are biting.”
The CDC report is right here:
Originally posted by getreadyalready
CDC calls reports unreliable
In other words, if pit bulls are 10% of the dogs and they account for 50% of the DBRF (Dog Bite Related Fatalities), that amounts to 5 times the average attack rate, but there may be another breed that's 0.3% of the dogs and accounts for 3% of the DBRF, so that's 10 times the average attack rate, so it would have an attack rate higher than the pit bulls.
Conclusions—Although fatal attacks on humans appear to be a breed-specific problem (pit bull-type dogs and Rottweilers), other breeds may bite and cause fatalities at higher rates.
So is that speculation accurate or not? It's certainly consistent with my personal experience having traveled to and lived in many different parts of the country. So that's the reason it's unreliable, is because that assertion that they can't PROVE that Rottweilers and pit bull-type dogs accounted for less than 67% of the dogs in the United States during that same period. From my perspective, even if they can't prove it, I'd say it's probably true.
the data indicate that Rottweilers and pit bull-type dogs accounted for 67% of human DBRF in the United States between 1997 and 1998. It is extremely unlikely that they accounted for anywhere near 60% of dogs in the United States during that same period and, thus, there appears to be a breed-specific problem with fatalities.