BrazosDog02 said:astros4545 said:May want to get more coverage for theft with statements like thatBrazosDog02 said:
As far as insurnace is concerned, I have no weapons and my dogs are "mixed breeds". They can f- right off.
I have no idea what that even means but ok. My point is people need to be a lot more tight lipped with insurance and doctors. Just stfu and be cool, don't tell your Gd insurance company you have a pit…not full…not part….nothing. You have a mixed Breed. WTH is wrong with people.
HarleySpoon said:Not an issue until you file the claim, they point out your violation of the terms of the policy……and you wind up losing everything except what is protected by the Texas Homestead Act. Then, you get to file personal bankruptcy in order to get rid of the judgment and not lose what you might get in the future. Of course, if you don't have a pot to pee in or don't plan to have anything in the future….then you can't lose what you don't have.BrazosDog02 said:astros4545 said:May want to get more coverage for theft with statements like thatBrazosDog02 said:
As far as insurnace is concerned, I have no weapons and my dogs are "mixed breeds". They can f- right off.
I have no idea what that even means but ok. My point is people need to be a lot more tight lipped with insurance and doctors. Just stfu and be cool, don't tell your Gd insurance company you have a pit…not full…not part….nothing. You have a mixed Breed. WTH is wrong with people.
This is Texas.tehmackdaddy said:
I have already agreed that irresponsible dog owners should be treated like irresponsible gun owners.
Quote:
Lillian's Law - Texas State Dangerous Dog Law Link
Austin, TX - Lillian's Law (HB 1355) is the new Texas State dangerous dog law. Under the law, the owner of a loose dog that causes injury or death can be prosecuted if the owner is found to be "criminally negligent" in failing to prevent the dog from escaping. The third-degree felony charge can bring a sentence of 2 to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. If the victim dies, a dog owner can be charged with a second-degree felony, bringing up to 20 years in prison.
Lillian's Law stems from the brutal attack of 76-year old Lillian Stiles, who was killed by a pack of loose pit bull-rottweiler mixes while mowing her front lawn. Lillian's family was shocked to learn after her death that Texas laws do not, in most cases, hold the dog owner responsible for injuries caused by their dogs even when death results. Lillian's family formed a group, Texas Families Against Dangerous Dogs, and succeeded in helping the new legislation get passed.
aggie4christ22 said:
Any dog with teeth has the capability to kill or maim a human. As a vet I've encountered thousands of dogs in 11 years as a vet, and another 10 as a tech prior. Also worked at a breeding clinic that did a lot of bully breeds. 99% are fine. I've been lunged at by chihuahuas, labs, one golden (who later bit the child in the family after I warned them a growling Golden was a ticking time bomb), bull terrier (who was wearing a service dog vest for a guy in a wheelchair so thought it was legit), rotties, heelers, tons of German shepherds…. GSDs and rotties/chows are probably the worst. I've seen a lot of dog aggressive pits but not many people aggressive ones. Several mean Springers, English bulldogs and frenchies too.
Edited to mention Cane corsos - awful dogs, never met a nice one and the owners are always somebody who shouldn't own a dog. They got them cause they look scary.
That all being said, any dog can turn anytime. Some are more prone to it than others, but regulating breeds by banning them is just more government overreach. Same as banning certain kinds of guns. More home insurance required on certain breeds? Sure. People learning to read animals better would probably reduce the number of bites each year. And any dog that bites without a really worthy cause is cause for consideration to put them down. We put down one of our own dogs after she growled at our kids (after a lengthy history of dog aggressiveness and fights even on meds). She was a mutt from the shelter. It can happen to anyone. Some dogs just aren't right in the head, same as people.
Banning pits isn't the answer. More educated and responsible dog owners is. However with the way society is trending, I don't see that happening anytime soon.
Bigfoot Is Real said:
Have any of you that adopted rescue 'pit mixes' done the genetic testing? I've seen some people get the testing done where the results come back with zero pit in them.
Anyone who would own a dog bred to fight and die in pits around kids must do some mental gymnastics to justify the decision, and here it is writ largetehmackdaddy said:
Yes, pits are genetically dangerous animals. But the problems arise from their ignorant owners.
Yellerjacket said:
I will never own an animal that is capable of killing me or my children and I don't understand people who do.
I should have said "pets" instead of "animals". No, I wouldn't own a Lab or any other large dog. My two dogs now are a Yorkie and Pomeranian. My kids can just kick the crap out of them if they get stupid.chickencoupe16 said:Yellerjacket said:
I will never own an animal that is capable of killing me or my children and I don't understand people who do.
Would you own a Labrador? Would you own a horse? Cattle? Do you understand people who do?
Not trying to be pedantic and I think I know what you mean, but plenty of animals can kill you. The focus should be on not owning animals solely bred to kill things unless you want them to kill things.
fixer said:
College student who was disfigured in vicious attack by dogs reveals her face (nypost.com)
Similar attack in Coppell Texas.
Woman survived.
Be warned about the link
fixer said:
College student who was disfigured in vicious attack by dogs reveals her face (nypost.com)
Similar attack in Coppell Texas.
Woman survived.
Be warned about the link
chickencoupe16 said:fixer said:
College student who was disfigured in vicious attack by dogs reveals her face (nypost.com)
Similar attack in Coppell Texas.
Woman survived.
Be warned about the link
First responders took 30 minutes from arrival to rescue. Someone help me understand this. I get assessing the situation to make sure you know your surroundings, but after 5 minutes of making sure you know where the victim is why not lure the dogs to a good backstop and then shoot them?
AgBandsman said:
90% of the dogs owned by my low-income neighbors are breeds that have been mentioned here as too violent to exist. What makes these vicious breeds so appealing to low-income groups?
In addition, these people do not have adequate housing/fencing for their breeds. The dogs are kept in small trailer houses and as soon as the front door is opened, they sprint out and run onto my property.
schwack schwack said:
Timely post for us. Daily neighborhood walk yesterday but down a street we don't usually walk. We were walking in the middle of the road - not close to the house or yard. A giant female pit charged toward us barking like crazy, teeth showing, etc. Very, very aggressive - really crazed. We couldn't go forward and as we backed up, it pushed forward. The house it came from had a window open (nice day here) and there was another one in the house going crazy. No one from the house ever came outside that we saw.
We called 911 for police but our animal control does not work weekends.... we plan to follow up today with at least a report.
Mr. Schwack was armed and had his hand on his gun the whole time, so we were prepared - I guess - but a child would not have been.
RDV-1992 said:AgBandsman said:
90% of the dogs owned by my low-income neighbors are breeds that have been mentioned here as too violent to exist. What makes these vicious breeds so appealing to low-income groups?
In addition, these people do not have adequate housing/fencing for their breeds. The dogs are kept in small trailer houses and as soon as the front door is opened, they sprint out and run onto my property.
This is just an observation, but it may be due to what dogs are available at the pound, and what the pound tells them.
I got my pit mix from the pound. I'd say that the vast majority of the dogs at the pound have some pit in them. But the pound told us she was a "lab-pei" (a mix between a shar-pei and a lab). So, the pound wasn't fully truthful, and there were almost no non-pit mixes that were available.
My brother has 3 pure bred labs. The cheapest of his dogs cost $2500. He can afford them. And that's what he wants, so good for him. But poor people probably don't have that kind of money to spend on a puppy.
Since most have prior felonies, they get these dogs because they cannot legally own guns anymore.Ol_Ag_02 said:
Or….. it's much more likely that low income people make poor life decisions. Owning a pit is a poor life decision.
Another pit bull attack. Another child who lost her face in the attack.
— Marina Medvin 🇺🇸 (@MarinaMedvin) February 27, 2023
This breed should be banned by your local government. https://t.co/lLD7itgpR1
This was posted *in favor* of the breed pic.twitter.com/6JQK39Hmon
— Kiwi Bear (@WojteksGrandson) February 27, 2023
Nanomachines son said:Martin Cash said:So far.RDV-1992 said:
I have a pit mix. She's a good good girl.
I never take these posts or comments seriously anymore and just assume the person is a naive idiot. The amount of stories of pits turning on owners are immense.
Quote:
called animal control
jagvocate said:Anyone who would own a dog bred to fight and die in pits around kids must do some mental gymnastics to justify the decision, and here it is writ largetehmackdaddy said:
Yes, pits are genetically dangerous animals. But the problems arise from their ignorant owners.