IAmLink wrote:Yes, but my point is that people who are like this just simmer in their hate for a breed and they don't do anything to try and overcome it. It's just like any prejudice, baised and all it does is spread more misunderstanding and fear. And it should matter that most dogs are nice...that's the whole point. But when you take a fear and use that as an excuse for violent and or unnecessary behavior, like Ostwyn pointed out in those examples, it becomes an issue.
ourpawprints wrote:and it becomes and issue if you spread the word, saying pit bulls are horrible dogs and after a few decades so many people think that.
ReadingIndigo wrote:The computer, car, slipper, and balloon are all inanimate objects. They're rather predictable. Horses, obviously are alive, but most people wear safety equipment when riding. Very few people wear safety equipment when playing with a dog.IAmLink wrote:Yes, but my point is that people who are like this just simmer in their hate for a breed and they don't do anything to try and overcome it. It's just like any prejudice, baised and all it does is spread more misunderstanding and fear. And it should matter that most dogs are nice...that's the whole point. But when you take a fear and use that as an excuse for violent and or unnecessary behavior, like Ostwyn pointed out in those examples, it becomes an issue.
I'm not trying to say it's an excuse for violence. But your definition of unecessary may be different than mine. Violence is unneccessary. Fear is not. That being said, I do think therapy is an excellent idea for people with trauma.
It should matter that dogs are nice, but it doesn't. I was helping my grandmother at a museum children's program, and I met a kid with zoophobia. He was on the verge of tears at the sight of the chickens. They were doing absolutely nothing to him. Not looking at him, approaching him, or even showing knowledge of any kind of his existence.





IAmLink wrote:ReadingIndigo wrote:The computer, car, slipper, and balloon are all inanimate objects. They're rather predictable. Horses, obviously are alive, but most people wear safety equipment when riding. Very few people wear safety equipment when playing with a dog.IAmLink wrote:Yes, but my point is that people who are like this just simmer in their hate for a breed and they don't do anything to try and overcome it. It's just like any prejudice, baised and all it does is spread more misunderstanding and fear. And it should matter that most dogs are nice...that's the whole point. But when you take a fear and use that as an excuse for violent and or unnecessary behavior, like Ostwyn pointed out in those examples, it becomes an issue.
I'm not trying to say it's an excuse for violence. But your definition of unecessary may be different than mine. Violence is unneccessary. Fear is not. That being said, I do think therapy is an excellent idea for people with trauma.
It should matter that dogs are nice, but it doesn't. I was helping my grandmother at a museum children's program, and I met a kid with zoophobia. He was on the verge of tears at the sight of the chickens. They were doing absolutely nothing to him. Not looking at him, approaching him, or even showing knowledge of any kind of his existence.
But this is exactly my point. People who have had traumatic incident should get help if they have an unreasonable fear...but most adults do not. They will choose instead to simply hate the animals. Plenty of people learn to get over their phobias (though I was not originally speaking about anything as dramatic as phobias), and they learn that their fears are unfounded.
And I am also speaking purely about adults. Of course a child may be afraid of something for absolutely no reason at all other than it seems scary to them. But it does matter when you are talking about adults who SHOULD be able to assess an incident and realize that not all dogs of a particular breed (or even dogs in general) are horrible monsters bent on ripping your face off. Or, you know, something less dramatic than that haha. But still...an unreasonable fear...
ReadingIndigo wrote:The computer, car, slipper, and balloon are all inanimate objects. They're rather predictable. Horses, obviously are alive, but most people wear safety equipment when riding. Very few people wear safety equipment when playing with a dog.
ReadingIndigo wrote:Ah, okay. I get you now. I thought you meant anybody with trauma. It seemed a bit insensitive to me to say that children should just "get over" unreasonable fears. But I see now that is not the case in any way, shape or, form.I fully agree that adults should get therapy. They need to possess a different level of independence than children.





Ostwyn wrote:There is honestly no reason to allow your phobia to get to the point where you try to bash a leashed, neutral dog's head in with your lawn chair just for sitting close to you. There's no reason to try to ram a cart into a dog that is ignoring you just because you're afraid. There is no reason to slate ALL of anything as bad because of one traumatic experience. And this is coming from someone who was attacked multiple times by different breeds of different sizes.
Ostwyn wrote:I wear no safety equipment when riding, aside from my riding clothes and boots. A t-shirt, straight-legged jeans, and riding boots hardly count as safety equipment. I ride for pleasure, not as a profession and certainly not anything fancy, and I haven't in a while (oh I will walk like a penguin), but never once a helmet or padding. My "safety net" when I was a beginner were my legs for English, and the horn for Western. I don't know if other beginners are taught differently (probably are), but that's been my experience. I've come and gone into horse riding with no more safety equipment than when I go into dog training.
Ostwyn wrote:Any dog over 50lbs is capable of killing or at least seriously maiming your average human. An adult male might take a 60-70lb dog to bring down. Bans and permits on all dog breeds medium-sized and up, then?
I still think ALL dogs should require a permit to handle, not just SOME.
Dakonic German Shepherds
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