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• #84352
XL Bullys kill a bunch of people,
There's calls to ban that specific breed,
Person claims breeds don't matter because any dog can attack.How is that not a defence of the breed? They're saying it's not special in any way yet is the only one causing problems.
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• #84353
If you ban breeding "from" banned breeds you avoid new breeds popping up?
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• #84354
*and those crisp breads you get in italy
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• #84355
They're saying it's not special in any way
Mate, you keep saying this, but she doesn't say that. We're going round in circles, probably from misunderstanding each other, let's leave it there.
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• #84356
Fortunately I don't remember the last time I went to a Yates's or if I've ever been to a Slug and Lettuce.
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• #84357
Why don't they just call it Happy Hour and have a discount in not-peak? Seems to be the more normal way and doesn't upset people quite so much.
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• #84358
In the interview she said anyone who claims its the owner and not the dog is wrong and that breed plays a significant factor. Or are you saying she said something else somewhere else?
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• #84359
Neither TeamDog, nor TeamCat here.
Probably on reflection TeamWildBird, (rather than caged bird).No mention of muzzles for dogs in public spaces?
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• #84360
No mention of muzzles for dogs in public spaces?
Not sure about muzzles on all dogs, but leads should be absolutely mandatory in my eyes except when in a field or something. And not those shit retractable ones that you can't see..
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• #84361
The word ‘aggressive’ might be problematic when talking about dog breeds. I’ve skimmed a bit of the researcher’s work and didn’t see how she weighted aggressive behaviours. A dog breed that barks a lot and bites occasionally is much less dangerous than a breed that doesn’t display signs of aggression but also is infamous for unexplainably going into full-on murder mode.
Perhaps erratic tendencies or instability should be taken into account. Is it problematic to ‘stereotype’ dog breeds like that? Yes, but we do it for other traits like energetic or nervous.
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• #84362
In that article she downplays the significance of breed significantly and puts all emphasis on the specific genetics of the individual dog e.g. not from a puppy farm and nurture. But it's a theme through anything if you search "Carri Westgarth breed"
"Westgarth, whose book The Happy Dog Owner is out this month, says that even dog trainers often share the commonly held view that some attacks are inevitable and associated with certain breeds – and certain types of owners. Yet fatal attacks remain extremely rare; there were fewer than three a year, on average, from 1981 to 2015. While attacks by “dangerous” breeds such as pit bulls make front pages, Tulloch says there is no good data on breeds and bites. Any breed can bite, Westgarth adds."
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• #84363
All dogs should have to wear high vis, helmets and have number plates
Yes. This has got ridiculously Daily Mail cyclist in here. Licenses, muzzles, dna testing?
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• #84364
All dogs should have to wear high vis, helmets and have number plates
Stolen
Don't know enough about dog breeds to add anything here. But there are some wannabe toughguy dickheads near us who take two similar dogs for walks past my daughters' school most mornings. And they send their 8/9 year old kid out with the pair of them when they are feeling too lazy. No way they could control them if anything happened, let alone the kid.
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• #84365
I don't think anyone is saying licences for all dogs. The suggestion is that where someone owns a dog which is so powerful that a large strong human would struggle to control it, then there should be a control mechanism for ownership.
In the same way that not everyone can own a shotgun. Also don't most responsible dog owners have chipped dogs now?
As for muzzles, I'm never sure what the issue is with that.
I do think some of the comments about leashes in any open space are a bit much.
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• #84366
Surely licenses are redundant if, as will many other things this government does, there is no appetite to implement properly or enforce them and it's just a bit of headline grabbing before the by-elections (my cynicism is showing here, sorry).
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• #84367
Yeah. This reminds me of being in the park with my 4yo who fucking loves a stick.
Some young teens were walking a status dog thinking they were cool and then the dog went for the stick. Obviously my kid didn't understand or have the presence of mind to immediately put their stick down. It took a couple of them straining with all their might to hold it while I got rid of the stick.
I mean that is a perfect e.g. of dickhead owners letting their kids either own or take the dog out unsupervised. However, it does go back to the problem of people owning animals that are too powerful to control.
On the point of licences, obviously you need an enforcement mechanism. But without a law in the first place then there is nothing to enforce. The general pain of it may also make people think twice about what they buy.
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• #84368
I don't think anyone is saying licences for all dogs.
I am but not because dogs bite people. I'd like to be able to send a sample of dog shit from the pavement to a lab where the DNA of the producing dog is identified, traced and the dog confiscated from the owner for 1 week on first offence, 2 weeks on second, 4 weeks on third etc.
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• #84369
Brief interlude to the dog bashing, horrendous flooding in Libya with 10k missing
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/12/libya-floods-death-toll-dams-burst? -
• #84370
Same storm that killed people in Greece, Turkey, and Egypt.
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• #84371
I presume you are part of the team working on behalf of Richie Sunak's wife to set up the national estate of dog pounds required for your proposal?
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• #84372
Sounds ideal, so I let my dog shit on the pavement before I go away on holiday?
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• #84373
Peak time uplift pricing the honest drinking people out:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-66785823C'mon the 'Spoon!
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• #84374
^ Michael O'Leary school of free advertising there.
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• #84375
The other side of dog licensing is it could stop shits owning dogs and mistreating them.
Presumably breeders will get themselves some DNA tests and select for the ones that don't have whatever gene is banned if you go for that approach.