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UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45

XL Bully Dogs.........

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  • CHRISB50CHRISB50 Frets: 4001
    I saw someone with 2 of them a few weeks ago in Sutton High Street.

    They were more  like small cattle than a dog.

    Couldn't believe the size of them and how muscly they were. I wouldn't want to piss one off.

    I can't help about the shape I'm in, I can't sing I ain't pretty and my legs are thin

    But don't ask me what I think of you, I might not give the answer that you want me to

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  • Sassafras said:
    I love dogs but no-one needs one that can rip your throat out within seconds.
    Certainly no breeder should be allowed to genetically create a hybrid monster.
    In this case I'd say that it's the 'breeders' who are the monsters.
    I'll get a round to buying a 'real' guitar one day.
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  • OffsetOffset Frets: 9212
    Well we love our old girl. She's a rescue as I have pointed out here previously and we had her DNA tested when we got her. Some breeds in there you wouldn't go out to acquire. She's a lovely dog BUT as much as we love her and as gentle as she is with us, she never goes off the lead and we're wary of her with dogs and people we and she don't know. Other owners are not so mindful however - only  a couple of weeks ago a guy allowed his staffie to come racing up to us and snap and snarl at Pickle, who ignored it on the first two occasions. The third time however it got within striking distance and she managed to grab it.  She didn't do it any real damage but Mrs O was holding her at the time and was very upset.  

    It's the owners not the dogs. Never 100% trust your pet and act accordingly. If your dog doesn't have 100% recall  or isn't well-mannered with other dogs, keep it on a lead.

    That said these bullies aren't pets - they're status symbols for druggie chavs.
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  • Chalky said:
    Chalky said:
    Genetic changes have absolutely no effect in UK law, because the law doesn't decide the breed by genetics (in fact, as demonstrated by Belfast City Council, the law will actively dismiss DNA evidence of breed in favour of head measurements).

    And...it's been demonstrated time and time again that even those exact same dogs bred and trained for fighting can be rehabilitated. See the dogs rescued from Michael Vick's fighting ring - not one had a bite incident for the rest of their lives after they were taken.

    In the 80s, everybody was saying all of the exact same things about GSDs. In the 90s, it was Rottweilers. In the 2010s it was huskies, Malamutes and Akitas.

    I still maintain that the solution is not whack-a-mole banning breeds here and there according to the media's whims; it's prosecuting the owners exactly as though they committed the crime.
    So wait till the dog attacks a child, or mauls a child, or disfigures a child, or kills a child, and then prosecute the owners?  That's plain stupid.

    Prosecute the owners up front?  They'll just boast about that as if it is a badge of courage.

    Treat dangerous breeds like guns - ban them, do whatever you need to get them off the streets.
    Couldnt disagree more

    whats a " dangerous breed" ? if a cockapoo kills a child is that then a dangerous breed? more people are bit by collies every year than any bull breed , is that now a dangerous breed? its the OWNERS that need to be held responsible, any dog can be a twat, i have previously owned a staffie, 14 inches tall, 15kg, so not a big dog at all, the most placid, people loving dog i have ever met, yet i watched people cross the road because of his breed. 
    The status that these little fuckwits get from owning these big bully/molloser types is why they own them, lets put a fog licence back in place, any dog has to be registered to its owner, and if that dog attacks someone the OWNER is responsible, not the dog. 
    Same stupidity as earlier - wait till someone kid gets attacked and THEN take action?  Protect the dog at all costs, sacrifice the victim instead?

    And give up with "mine is so placid" nonsense.  Every owner says the same right up to the point where the dog attacks.  

    PS Yes, I've owned dogs for decades, coming from a family of dog owners.
    The law is, almost exclusively, reactive.

    However, ask yourself this: how successful has banning dog breeds been in the 30-odd years since breed-specific legislation was introduced?

    Even better, look up the statistics. In those three decades, there has either been no statistically significant change, or an increase.

    Wouldn't that suggest that a different approach might be required?
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  • JonathangusJonathangus Frets: 4080
    edited September 2023
    I'd not heard of these until the discussion on the Today programme this morning (skip to 2h 40m 30s):

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001qdlm

    The second speaker is quite clear that they are, to coin a phrase, a breed apart.

    (EDIT: I'm not suggesting that it's nothing to do with the owners.)
    Trading feedback | How to embed images using Imgur

    As for "when am I ready?"  You'll never be ready.  It works in reverse, you become ready by doing it.  - pmbomb


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  • AlvinAlvin Frets: 372
    They have been bred to get around the pit bull ban , that in itself should ring enough alarm bells .
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  • PennPenn Frets: 351
    edited September 2023
    We had one of these bully things go for one of our dogs. It was off the lead and running around the park freely. Probably 9 months old, it wasn’t a full grown adult dog. 

    Our dog was on a lead as there were children around in the park. My Mrs grabbed our dog away as this thing decided to try to kill our dog. Ours is a Westie and she’s soft to say the least.  Our dog was panicking like mental. In the process our dog cut my Mrs Ps face with its claw which left her with a really nasty cut. The bully thing was completely out of control. 

    The owner of the bully decided the best course of action was to grab his dog and beat the living daylight out of it. He had young children with him. Luckily he got it before it did any more damage to my other half. 

    I guess the bully’s takeaway lesson was that it needs to run faster next time it wants to kill something or someone. 

    My Mrs should have phoned the police. 

    Dog breeds were created for various purposes. Terriers for vermin control, sheepdogs to herd, retrievers to bring stuff back etc. then there’s dogs breed for fighting and nothing more. 

    I think there needs to be serious repercussions for people who have dangerous dog and I really think Bully type dogs need to be banned. 

    You can’t trust any dog 100% but when they are big enough to do serious damage then they are a public safety issue. A pissed off Yorkie will give you a nasty bite. It’s physically unlikely to kill someone. Bullies  less so. It’s more like having a tame pet lion. 
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  • digitalscreamdigitalscream Frets: 25239
    edited September 2023
    Alvin said:
    They have been bred to get around the pit bull ban , that in itself should ring enough alarm bells .
    Yes, and it shows the fallacy of breed-specific legislation - if the 2000s have taught us anything, it's that if you make any law too specific then it's trivial for humans to game the system.

    Get rid of the BSL, make it illegal to breed any dog without a licence with no exceptions, and transfer all the liability to the dogs' owners. The market for these dogs and any like them will disappear within 5 years of the first manslaughter/murder prosecution and will never come back.

    Unlike banning specific breeds, it's a permanent solution.
    <space for hire>
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  • mikeyrob73mikeyrob73 Frets: 4537
    edited September 2023
    Alvin said:
    They have been bred to get around the pit bull ban , that in itself should ring enough alarm bells .
    Yes, and it shows the fallacy of breed-specific legislation - if the 2000s have taught us anything, it's that if you make any law too specific then it's trivial for humans to game the system.

    Get rid of the BSL, make it illegal to breed any dog without a licence with no exceptions, and transfer all the liability to the dogs' owners. The market for these dogs and any like them will disappear within 5 years of the first manslaughter/murder prosecution and will never come back.

    Unlike banning specific breeds, it's a permanent solution.
    This 100%

    the type of people that want to own these dogs will never socialise them, never train them, they are status symbols and as such they don,t actually give a fuck about the dog. Make the owner responsible for any damage done by the dog they own and suddenly owning one doesn't seem like such a good idea. if the dog has to be registered to the owner, chipped and registered, which will have a cost these fuckwits will suddenly think twice. 
    Any dog can be taught to be a well behaved companion, they take time and effort and work though, most of these twats do not want , or are incapable , of putting that work into the animal. 

    a blanket ban on breed will not work. 
     
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  • Chalky said:
    Chalky said:
    Genetic changes have absolutely no effect in UK law, because the law doesn't decide the breed by genetics (in fact, as demonstrated by Belfast City Council, the law will actively dismiss DNA evidence of breed in favour of head measurements).

    And...it's been demonstrated time and time again that even those exact same dogs bred and trained for fighting can be rehabilitated. See the dogs rescued from Michael Vick's fighting ring - not one had a bite incident for the rest of their lives after they were taken.

    In the 80s, everybody was saying all of the exact same things about GSDs. In the 90s, it was Rottweilers. In the 2010s it was huskies, Malamutes and Akitas.

    I still maintain that the solution is not whack-a-mole banning breeds here and there according to the media's whims; it's prosecuting the owners exactly as though they committed the crime.
    So wait till the dog attacks a child, or mauls a child, or disfigures a child, or kills a child, and then prosecute the owners?  That's plain stupid.

    Prosecute the owners up front?  They'll just boast about that as if it is a badge of courage.

    Treat dangerous breeds like guns - ban them, do whatever you need to get them off the streets.
    Couldnt disagree more

    whats a " dangerous breed" ? if a cockapoo kills a child is that then a dangerous breed? more people are bit by collies every year than any bull breed , is that now a dangerous breed? its the OWNERS that need to be held responsible, any dog can be a twat, i have previously owned a staffie, 14 inches tall, 15kg, so not a big dog at all, the most placid, people loving dog i have ever met, yet i watched people cross the road because of his breed. 
    The status that these little fuckwits get from owning these big bully/molloser types is why they own them, lets put a fog licence back in place, any dog has to be registered to its owner, and if that dog attacks someone the OWNER is responsible, not the dog. 
    Same stupidity as earlier - wait till someone kid gets attacked and THEN take action?  Protect the dog at all costs, sacrifice the victim instead?

    And give up with "mine is so placid" nonsense.  Every owner says the same right up to the point where the dog attacks.  

    PS Yes, I've owned dogs for decades, coming from a family of dog owners.
    And give up with "mine is so placid" nonsense.  Every owner says the same right up to the point where the dog attacks.  

    absolute sensationalist horseshit your talking there @Chalky ;;
    i knew that dog better than my own family, i had 100% recall with him and trusted him , and if we were ever in a situation where there was any danger , to him or any other dog , i would remove him from that situation straight away. 

    your classing every dog of a certain type as a killer, and that is just fucking ridiculous. Dogs, probably more than any other animal are a product of their environment, teach them well, bring them up to respect and behave in the way you expect them to and you will have a good loyal friend for life, teach them to be twats and they will be , specially these Bully breeds, who are generally in my experience , more people dogs than dog dogs.

    Hence why hold the owner responsible, not the dog, and certainly not the BREED of the dog.  

    oh and this is my current dog
    100% recall at 9 month old, walks to heel and listens to every word i say, because i have put the time and effort in to make her that way


    We were in Le Treport on the French coast in June and got talking to an English family after their French Bulldog and Cheddar started sniffing each other's butts. The woman told me how surprised she had been to see French Bulldogs there. I didn't know what to say. 

    See a few Belgian Malinois around now and in the shelters. I don't think anyone is buying those for a cuddle on the sofa.
     And I hate those Instagram pictures of babies with dogs 'look how gentle our pit bull is with our baby.' 

    In Spain they have Potentially Dangerous Dogs legislation which is more about characteristics than breeds, I've no idea if it's more successful than the UK legislation. In France they list quite a lot of breeds under their act but they just seem to move onto the next big breed to snarl at every passer by and protect their maison. 
    I’ll handle this Violet, you take your three hour break. 
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  • euaneuan Frets: 1051
    Shall we anoint the sacrificial child?
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  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    ^ It's been done. Didn't work.

    And it came to pass after these things, that God did tempt Abraham, and said unto him, Abraham: and he said, Behold, here I am.
    And he said, Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.
    And Abraham rose up early in the morning, and saddled his ass, and took two of his young men with him, and Isaac his son, and clave the wood for the burnt offering, and rose up, and went unto the place of which God had told him.


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  • SnagsSnags Frets: 4987
    I don't think anyone* is advocating waiting until someone of any age gets hurt before taking action.

    The issue is what is the effective action to take. And banning breeds simply doesn't work, because any dog from any breed can be brought up to be violent, aggressive and dangerous (or may just have an aberration that makes it so), and pretty much any breed can largely be trained to be responsible citizens when handled correctly.

    So you need to legislate against owners, not breeds. That's all. It's not difficult, and it shouldn't be that hard to comprehend. The "if it saves one child's life brigade" ought to be getting behind it, because it's a lot more likely to save multiple children's lives than it is if you just ban breeds.

    It is, however, harder to accomplish. But better to go for the difficult but effective thing, rather than the simple but ineffective piece of legislative theatre.



    *Well, anyone sane
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  • KilgoreKilgore Frets: 8107


    Get rid of the BSL, make it illegal to breed any dog without a licence with no exceptions, and transfer all the liability to the dogs' owners. The market for these dogs and any like them will disappear within 5 years of the first manslaughter/murder prosecution and will never come back.

    Unlike banning specific breeds, it's a permanent solution.


     Do you not think that making an owner liable for GBH or manslaughter (I don't think murder is likely) might be fraught with legal difficulties?

    I'm not saying you can't put in place legal penalties.

    And as you've alluded to, it could possibly discourage responsible people from dog ownership.

    I'm not convinced that those who own some of these breeds for 'status' etc will be discouraged. I don't believe they're the type of people to consider 'consequences'. 

    Of course you would have to put in place the licensing bureaucracy in place and ensure that it is enforced to make any of this work.


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  • Kilgore said:


    Get rid of the BSL, make it illegal to breed any dog without a licence with no exceptions, and transfer all the liability to the dogs' owners. The market for these dogs and any like them will disappear within 5 years of the first manslaughter/murder prosecution and will never come back.

    Unlike banning specific breeds, it's a permanent solution.


     Do you not think that making an owner liable for GBH or manslaughter (I don't think murder is likely) might be fraught with legal difficulties?

    I don't think so, they've already made a half-hearted attempt at it recently, but the enforcement is lacking because the law seems to be too woolly. Tighten that up, and make the liability both explicit and automatic, and there's no reason I can see that it wouldn't work.
    Kilgore said:

    I'm not convinced that those who own some of these breeds for 'status' etc will be discouraged. I don't believe they're the type of people to consider 'consequences'. 

    That's true, but that also hasn't stopped us legislating against dealing drugs, violence, murder etc - the sort of people who're likely to commit those crimes will similarly not be completely discouraged, but getting them out of society does also solve the problem of future crimes they might commit if they were free.

    And, honestly, there are lots of people who are dangerous as dog owners who aren't that status-dog type of person - I'm thinking the middle-class inattentive owners, for example, who think shouting from a distance will stop their off-lead dog attacking a dog or person, or the oblivious parents who walk out of the room to take a phone call and leave their 2yr old pulling the family dog's ears because "he's always put up with it before". Those people are also a big part of the problem.
    Kilgore said:

    Of course you would have to put in place the licensing bureaucracy in place and ensure that it is enforced to make any of this work.
    Would you really, though? I don't think there's ever been a case where the ownership of the dog has been in doubt (could be wrong on that).
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  • S56035S56035 Frets: 833

    Would you really, though? I don't think there's ever been a case where the ownership of the dog has been in doubt (could be wrong on that).
    Haven't had a dog long enough to know about this but what happens if I sell my dog down the pub (mine's a Cavapoo so it will actually be down the cocktail bar drinking a Lambrini based cocktail!), am I still the legal owner when the inevitable chip change doesn't happen?
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  • the_jaffathe_jaffa Frets: 1572
    edited September 2023
    Surely it need not be a one or the other option though. Would it not make some sense to ban the breeding/ownership of these specific dogs* that have been bred purely as a fighter/ danger as an extension to the bans already in place as well as more restrictions of dog ownership and legislating against the owners as if they had used any other sort of weapon.

    A combination of all three things would seem to be an effective all round solution.

    * as far as can be seen, these XL bullys are bred purely to be a threatening/fighting breed that gets round the pitbull ban and hence they don't serve any beneficial service.
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  • the_jaffa said:
    Surely it need not be a one or the other option though. Would it not make some sense to ban the breeding/ownership of these specific dogs* that have been bred purely as a fighter/ danger as an extension to the bans already in place as well as more restrictions of dog ownership and legislating against the owners as if they had used any other sort of weapon.

    A combination of all three things would seem to be an effective all round solution.

    * as far as can be seen, these XL bullys are bred purely to be a threatening/fighting breed that gets round the pitbull ban and hence they don't serve any beneficial service.
    Except...breed bans a) are proven not to have any positive effect whatsoever, and b) kill a lot of innocent dogs that aren't even genetically related to the banned breed and have never posed a threat to anyone.

    All that a breed ban achieves is make it look like something's being done to satisfy the "Something must be done right now!" crowd. And aside from that, the very point of this particular type of dog is that it's not of any recognised breed, and therefore cannot fall under any breed-specific legislation anyway.
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  • DominicDominic Frets: 15285
    Look......what some of you ,all making a busy with what law and what charges etc ,are not getting is the ownership profile of 85 % of these people is .......
    They don't care about Laws
    They are not Law abiding
    they deal drugs and run in gangs for a living
    they are not scared of Prison.....or very much else
    if the dog doesn't maul their target they will stab them anyway
    They don't queue at Post Offices for dog licenses or get busy on-line

    Getting a life sentence doesn't stop them carrying knives ,why would a similar threat stop them getting a vicious dog ?
    Tough on the 15% (although they can only be mildly sane ) fanciers of the breed but just get them banned .
     You would allow people to walk around with hand-grenades no matter what sentence they get for setting one off on purpose or by accident.It is an object of no good purpose or intent with a huge risk factor ..........Same applies ;
    Why do the public and their adored pets have to play Russian Roulette with these monstrosities ?
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  • euaneuan Frets: 1051
    Recent stats have show that the Bully XL is 270 times more deadly than the rest of the dog population. 

    The deaths have included dog handlers, trainers and specialists in abused dogs. 
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  • mikeyrob73mikeyrob73 Frets: 4537
    edited September 2023
    "They don't queue at Post Offices for dog licenses or get busy on-line"

    Then the dog is taken and destroyed , simples 

    If you have a dog registration system, and that dog is not registered, then the dog is gone. 

    Banning a breed of dog does not work, that has been proven.It needs to go further, dog is registered and chipped, you own that dog, if that dog causes damage YOU are responsible and YOU will do the time for it. 

    Banning a breed or type of dog will never change the situation, they will just move onto a different breed or type. It was Rotties, it was Dobermen, It was Staffies  before the XL Bully 

    we cant keep blaming the dog, or dog breed because people cant or wont train them, we have to start blaming the owners and holding them to account 
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  • digitalscreamdigitalscream Frets: 25239
    edited September 2023
    Dominic said:
    Look......what some of you ,all making a busy with what law and what charges etc ,are not getting is the ownership profile of 85 % of these people is .......
    They don't care about Laws
    They are not Law abiding
    they deal drugs and run in gangs for a living
    they are not scared of Prison.....or very much else
    if the dog doesn't maul their target they will stab them anyway
    They don't queue at Post Offices for dog licenses or get busy on-line

    Getting a life sentence doesn't stop them carrying knives ,why would a similar threat stop them getting a vicious dog ?
    Tough on the 15% (although they can only be mildly sane ) fanciers of the breed but just get them banned .
     You would allow people to walk around with hand-grenades no matter what sentence they get for setting one off on purpose or by accident.It is an object of no good purpose or intent with a huge risk factor ..........Same applies ;
    Why do the public and their adored pets have to play Russian Roulette with these monstrosities ?
    So...what? You'd rather they ban the breed (even though it's not actually a breed at all), which is proven to have zero positive effect on the very thing that you want to stop, instead of thinking about it and doing something that actually will have the effect of stopping the thing you want to stop by making them not exist in the first place?

    OK then. Interesting approach.
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  • DominicDominic Frets: 15285
    As much as I'm against them(bullies) ..............I'm even more against STATS 
    270 times more deadly ??????? How do they figure that ?
    If half the dogs they sampled were miniature Yorkies then they could have said 20,000 times more lethal
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  • euaneuan Frets: 1051
    Dominic said:
    As much as I'm against them(bullies) ..............I'm even more against STATS 
    270 times more deadly ??????? How do they figure that ?
    If half the dogs they sampled were miniature Yorkies then they could have said 20,000 times more lethal
    Full yer boots

    https://bullywatch.link/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Aug-2023-Breed-Specific-Violence-and-the-American-Bully.pdf
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  • guitars4youguitars4you Frets: 12794
    tFB Trader
    Offset said:
    Well we love our old girl. She's a rescue as I have pointed out here previously and we had her DNA tested when we got her. Some breeds in there you wouldn't go out to acquire. She's a lovely dog BUT as much as we love her and as gentle as she is with us, she never goes off the lead and we're wary of her with dogs and people we and she don't know. Other owners are not so mindful however - only  a couple of weeks ago a guy allowed his staffie to come racing up to us and snap and snarl at Pickle, who ignored it on the first two occasions. The third time however it got within striking distance and she managed to grab it.  She didn't do it any real damage but Mrs O was holding her at the time and was very upset.  

    It's the owners not the dogs. Never 100% trust your pet and act accordingly. If your dog doesn't have 100% recall  or isn't well-mannered with other dogs, keep it on a lead.

    That said these bullies aren't pets - they're status symbols for druggie chavs.
    I think I've read all posts on this and my first thought was this and I think you are the only to mention it - Not just for the chavs but the gang dealers/bosses etc and they are there for a reason - Not sure it is just about status but protection and creating fear
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  • axisusaxisus Frets: 27656
    A few years ago I would see a guy walking what I assumed was one of those dogs when I would go out running. It was massive and incredibly muscular, when I saw it I actually thought 'that dog could kill me!'. The first time I ran past the owner, the dog went for me aggressively. He was a big guy, but he looked in his 70s and he could barely hold it back. I remember it well as he had a MASSIVE chain instead of a dog lead. That moment scare the **** out of me, if I ever saw them in the distance I turned and went a different way. 

    If someone owns a violent dog and it attacks someone PUT THEM IN PRISON! 
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  • crunchmancrunchman Frets: 10961
    the XL Bully is just the latest dog to be blamed for everything, Staffies, Rotties, GSD etc have all been classed as " devil dogs" previously. 
    The owners need to held responsible as its a status symbol, lets start prosecuting the owners, your dog attacks someone, the owner gets an assault /attempted manslaughter charge.  Start dealing with these scrotes properly 
    Would need to be proportionate.

    I once got bitten by a Jack Russell when I was cycling through a park.  A manslaughter charge for the owner would have been a bit over the top.

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  • mikeyrob73mikeyrob73 Frets: 4537
    edited September 2023
    It wouldn’t be a manslaughter charge for that, but would be an assault charge. If you can’t control your dog that’s your fault not the dogs , Is how would  I look at it. 

    If you don’t have 100% recall at anytime your dog shouldn’t be loose in public 
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  • KittyfriskKittyfrisk Frets: 16332
    edited September 2023
    I'm not for simply choosing sides in polarised debates. As has been repeatedly stated, it isn't the individual dogs fault, nor the breed, it is the owners. Full stop, every time.
    'Weapon dog' owners tend to be from social backgrounds or life experiences, that reinforces the macho possession of and aggressive training of the dogs. The owners generally do not give a flying fuck about rightness, fairness, law, others upset, empathy etc. They just need to be 'Top Dog'...
    Fixing this will take far more real political effort than simply demonizing the dogs. 
    Incidentally, the only dog that ever bit me was an evil little shit of a miniature Yorkshire terrier that I was trying to prise out of the mouth of my mongrel, that had been tormented for years by the yappy little bastard that lived two doors down...
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  • euan said:
    Dominic said:
    As much as I'm against them(bullies) ..............I'm even more against STATS 
    270 times more deadly ??????? How do they figure that ?
    If half the dogs they sampled were miniature Yorkies then they could have said 20,000 times more lethal
    Full yer boots

    https://bullywatch.link/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Aug-2023-Breed-Specific-Violence-and-the-American-Bully.pdf
    Very useful. Ta. 
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