Clara Versailles
You guys all understand that it has to do with the owners, right?
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Exactly my sweet Clara.
I am the owner of a chihuahua, one of the very most difficult dog to train. This said without exaggeration, this is well known.
And I had several dogs in my life before that adoption from my childrenhood, even very specialized working dogs. And they were all very much bigger, but very most easier too.
My family even adopted a doberman that someone did not want anymore, and, it appears that's the one who bite a child neighbour when a female dog was in her time reproduction, it did not want the child to come closer to the female dog. It could have killed the child, it snapped directly the belly, and almost open it, that was a case of emergency of course. So, my father on the instant, almost killed the dog with a shovel, and finish to get rid of it (I don't know how, but I can imagine. That's few decades of that, very old story, please don't call SPCA for nothing)
And, back to my chihuahua, she is under my authority at, let's say, only at 97%. She can't refrain to stop barking in some circumstances
(made great improvements, but still. She's 4 now. What a hard headed one. She's even making me swear)
I think there is, sadly, a certain kind of profile of people who want to be proudly owners of pitbulls.
There is a kind of psychologic personal projection in the choice of the breed we are appeal to have. And this, for all the breeds.
My appeal for a chihuahua was that I wanted to have a very small friendly canine friend able to follow me everywhere easily.
To tell you the truth, I would have chosen otherwise, because she cannot follow me because of her uncontrolled barking. So now, it cost me dog sitting then.
But I love her still. I will keep her until her end. When we adopt, is for their life.
I'm sure that's not the same when we choose a pitbull. Obviously.
I don't say that everybody are having the same reasons, but we know that people who wants big strong dogs of that kind are looking for security, protection, maybe the "aura" of that dog that matches to their style of life? So, those dogs are having the "bad boy look" some are looking for. Let's be honest here.
I'm sorry that, as individuals living in a society, we still need those kind of regulation to simplify things, because of some owners who did not done their job carefully with their dogs. We have to all convince that if "stupid laws" are voted, it is because there is "stupid people" out there who could put others in danger with their innocence/ignorance/bad behaviours toward their dogs. That's sad, but that's how it is to live in society. And I am feeling very sorry for the very good owners who are now paying for the "non-conscient ones"