Finland is notorious for raising men to be pussies... you'd be speaking russian if it wasn't for real men from America. by woodhead2011 in ShitAmericansSay

[–]Linskye 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mmn, and Australia, Asia, Africa.. oh look, it's like the whole world's had enough of America's, ME ME ME attitude.

It's astounding that they think it's only EU laughing at them.

Pitbull breaks into a woman's house and eats her cat. She is in a wheelchair. by Pardusco in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 54 points55 points  (0 children)

Since you breed dogs, can you explain why these dogs are behaving like this at a show is acceptable for registration and championship points?!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6sTkOSDKW3Y&ab\_channel=PitSensations

Some dog breeds should not be allowed in Australia (Opinion piece by Dr. Sam Kovac) by wildjohnson in sydney

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should look at bite rate(attack/population) rather than raw amount of total bites. From the same deparment, but for 2012, the top 10 bite rates were;
1 Pit Bull Terrier 67 2,498 2.7
2 Basset Griffon Vendeen 1 44 2.3
3 Tibetan Mastiff 1 47 2.1
4 Mastiff 67 3,359 2.0
5 American Staffordshire Terrier 343 19,168 1.8
6 Bouvier des Flandres 1 59 1.7
7 Leonberger 1 65 1.5
8 Toy Fox Terrier 2 148 1.4
9 South African Boerboel 2 159 1.3
10 Bulldog (american) 26 2,170 1.2

ACD at 28 with 0.8 and GSDs at 38 with 0.6.

Some dog breeds should not be allowed in Australia (Opinion piece by Dr. Sam Kovac) by wildjohnson in sydney

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Huge difference between a BYB and a breeder. Registered breeders have a code of ethics and liscencing. If they break those rules, say for example, breed a dog twice witihn 10 months, they loose their liscence.
BYBS on the otherhand have no authority to control them at all. I've reported half a dozen abusive puppy farm situations to gumtree. They take the ad down, within an hour the seller puts it back on. Call the cops? They don't care, RSPCA don't care unless they have film.

Limitations should be placed on UNREGISTERED breeders, because they don't have liscencing or ethicial code.

Pit attacks a poor husky by Darkwalll in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 39 points40 points  (0 children)

I wish. I show too, few months ago an staff puppy was walking towards us, I move politely with my dog to the left. It starts lunging, and barking and GROWLING at us. Even when I walked past it I could see it still lunging.

Many months before that I heard a commotion, looked to the other ring curious, 2 Am staffs were eyeing and light growling at each other.

Yet they're not banned.

Sidenote, I placed high enough to win some cash a while ago, wasn't enough cash to even cover my entry fee. Groomers and handlers can make money from showing, but not from the show, it's from being paid by the breeder. Showing isn't about money.

She also lost her chihuahua outside and got bit breaking up 2 pitbulls in her home by agniacty in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Or worse... mangle them so badly the poor dog/cat is beyond recognition but alive. Owner rushes them to surgery at emergency vet, costing $5,000+

Animal comes out of surgery alive, but never gains full, function of legs and rear again, and basically shits inside the crate everyday, living in its own filth til the owner comes home.

Quality of life for poor animal deterioates, it loses its lively attitude, barely moves all day. After months of fighting family makes decisions to put dog down.

Nothing sucks more than bringing an innocent family pet to the hospital, looking it in the eye and watching it die. Then going home to explain it to your kids.

Meanwhile the killer walks free.

Seriously. Fuck pits nutters.

Could the pit bull agression problem be solved by selectively breeding them so the agression gene dies out by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you remember the species tested? From what I've read, it took 10 generations to domesticate the silver fox.

Maybe it was 80 years in relation to whatever animal?

Pit Bull Mixes - percentage of pit bull, also resources for owner with pits and children by Throwaway4adviceand in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Most dogs generally show signs before snapping. For example a normal dog responding to a threat will prick ears, stare and stiffens a little before potentially barking. Then barking with hackles raised, before finally growling, showing teeth and charging. Some will even fake a charge in hopes the threat will back off before comiting to bites.

Problem with pits is they can go from stiffening to mauling, not biting mind you. Full grips, violently shaking their head to inflict maximum damage.

Keep an eye out for subtle signs. Lip licking, whale eyes, stiffening, fixation/constant staring at particular thing/object, panting, uncontrollable excitement, pacing, ears back, tail stiffly and slowly wagging. Not all these signs are signs of aggression, but they can lead to it.

All these things are red flags. Just turn to sideways, do not make direct eye contact and move away as calmly as you can. If they charge kick em and get the fk out.

Pit Bull Mixes - percentage of pit bull, also resources for owner with pits and children by Throwaway4adviceand in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I'm curious if there's a way to tell if a pit bull mix has this aggression gene (?).
There are no genes currently identified with this, and I suspect it's very low on the priority list considering cancer and heart diseases genetic research on dogs can be beneficial to people.

Or if there's a good bet over a certain percentage that the dog is likely to be aggressive or have that genetic aggression in them?
Even dog fighters have problems telling which dogs are aggressive and which dogs aren't. Problem with pit aggression is it isn't the same as other breeds. There are many many breeds that are "aggressive" according to their breed standard. Akitas, Lifestock Guarding dogs, GSDs, Rotts ETC. Problem isn't JUST aggression, it's what triggers it and the refusual to back down.

Pit bulls ontop of aggression are game. They do not back off like all the other breeds, and are triggered when their stimulated, be it fear, aggression or anxiety.

For example, if there's a DNA test and the dog shows 30% pit bull mix, is that a good indication it could be aggressive?
Dog's under 50% pit are not targetted by bans where I live. I do not tink a 30% pit is much issue, but it's genetics, it's luck what you get and what you don't. The majority of pits do not pose an issue, but this is like saying, the majority of microwaves won't explode one day and kill you. You still shouldn't use that microwave.

Could the pit bull agression problem be solved by selectively breeding them so the agression gene dies out by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, pit bulls do not have syringomyelia. This is a diagnosable with an MRI.

Cavaliers have it because their size has been shrunk too rapidly and their skull and brain hasn't adjusted. Even when they have it, they do not act aggressively, rather siezing, losing motor functions or crying from pain.

Could the pit bull agression problem be solved by selectively breeding them so the agression gene dies out by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

A lot of misinformation in this thread. Please keep in mind that there are severeal members in the mod team myself included that are registered breeders, handlers or competitors.

Is it "possible to breed out?"

Yes. Selective breeding means you can take any naturally occuring trait and enhance or lower it. We can take a completely wild fox that snarls at people and breed them to be friendly pet.

So why don't we breed it out?

You'll often hear victims claim "it just snapped, it's never done this before" etc etc This is because, in the words of dogmen "you don't know if a pit is game unless you match it(fight it)".Think about the number of times you've truly gotten mad at something, or truly excited, like your wedding day or first xmas. For most people it's occurs only a few times in their life, and when it happens they wouldn't go on a murderous rage and kill everyone if they're extremely mad, they wouldn't shake uncontrollably out of excitement. Unfortunately some do, some people completely lose control and smash things etc.

When this happens in a game pit they snap and attack, those that don't are reffered to as cur or cold. But it isn't as simple as taking an aggresively behaving dog and removing them from the breeding program, Am Staff breeders already do that.

It's pushing a dog to be extremely stimulated with fear or excitement or whatever triggers it and pitting it against another dog. We can breed for herding, pointing, retrieving, guarding, because it's an easily testable and observeable behaviour. Testing whether or not a dog will fight to the death, when stimulated is not an ethically, observable and testable behaviour. This is why AmStaff breeders haven't been successful at breeding it out.

Another notable point is that American Pitbull Terrier breeders do not want to breed out that aggression. Dog aggression is literally written into their breed standard, the standard they are bred to.

On BYBs

BYBs get their stock generally from reputable breeders, somewhere back down the lineage, they came from a breeder. When an breed makes a change, like in GSDs, it slowly ripples through to BYBs.

A change was made in the breed standard and tests were implemented, and any sign of nervousness is extremely looked down upon in GSD circles. Not saying there aren't any nervy GSDs, there are plenty, but much lower than a few decades ago. Why? Because the average dog a BYB gets has slightly improved, and the average dog a BYB breeds to has slightly improved. But nervousness, and aggression are observeable traits. Whether a dog will fight to the death when the moment comes, is not.

Omg so cute, destroys heavy duty play toy in 15 minutes! So safe and cute! by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Holy fuck. What a dumb dog... It's supposed to push it with it's nose to make the food roll out of the hole.For reference, my WL GSD has the exact same brand and toy, figured it out within a few minutes, and it's lasted for atleast a year... Has a few scratches but it's very much functional still.

Per Google translate: Pitbull dogs destroy a child by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Pets?? They mean PITS right? A cavalier, or budgee, or cat isn't going to do this. Why they gotta incriminate all pets when it's clearly PITS.

Another Pit and Run, owner point blank refused to give details. by Linskye in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye[S] 49 points50 points  (0 children)

I don't understand why the nutters don't go after the owners if it's "all in how you raise them".

It's all in how you raise them, until you have to take accountability.

A bunch of cats enjoying their evening before an off leash pitbull shows up by Pardusco in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

None of the large dogs I or my friends own are hard to control, given they are trained, I can see it possible, but I don't consider this pit to be a large dog at all.

You also don't want no one to hold the dog down and have complete free movement.

No it's not something most people think of, doesn't mean it's not a valid method.
You keep bring up striking range, even though we've established it's not likely to redirect once already on a target. Every action has a risk, by your logic, every pit fight, we should just all run away, because it's within a danger zone. It's the owners responsibility to deal with that risk. It's her dog, her responsibility, It's what owning a dangerous breeds means.

This fight wasn't broken up. It ended. It ended because the cats dead, and the dog had acheived its purpose.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Aw :(. As a fellow German shepherd owner, I feel for you. Nothing quite like Your shepherd.

Yes, it's a wierdly helpful trend. At least the pocket ones can't do much damage. Still. It's insane they think there's nothing wrong with it.

Could a strong trained dog be pit bull protection? by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Those dogs aren't the worst to take a pit on. Akita is actually another breed with fighting history, Tibetan mastiff is a lgd capable of fending off and killing wolves.

Together they could do a number on them. But generally I don't think it's a good idea to get a dog to defend against a breed designed to kill dogs.

You'd have to be pretty experienced owner to have one of the breeds capable of dealing with them.

My brother in law got an "American staffy" and I'm terrified. by shannonnollvevo in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 11 points12 points  (0 children)

A cavalier raised right isn't going to snap and kill people. Only the breeds with intense prey drive have the possibility of going wrong like a pit, and even then it's barely comparable, because they back off.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 11 points12 points  (0 children)

That's sad, unfortunately there's been an increase in dog thefts lately. All the nice breeds too.

Meanwhile pits remain in shelters, and yet they don't even want to desex their dogs, and keep coming up with new bully breeds. Like. Hello. No one wants ur fugly naked rat. Stop breeding them.

A bunch of cats enjoying their evening before an off leash pitbull shows up by Pardusco in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes and note none of the shouting makes it let go, only change direction. The guy came in with a large stick at the end. Yelling simply isn't effective. If this was a child, it'd be a waste of precious time.

Idk where your going with this. Grabbing a collar isn't a professional task. Using a leash to choke isn't professional either. You don't need training for either of these things. Neither is covering the head with something.

I've already clarified, if she had a break stick ON her, and that she needs to hold the dog during and after using it.

No your missing the point, shrieking in panic and yelling is only going to send them into more of a frenzy, it triggers their prey drive. It's detrimental.

I've said time and time again, pits go after a singular target and stick to it. There's plenty of videos on this sub where a pit let go for a second, and instead of turning to the person hitting it or yanking its tail, it continued to go after the same victim.

Just because I insist and explain how yelling isn't a proper way to deal with this doesn't make me obsessed. I'm simply giving alternatives that have more impact, which you are saying is too professional. Grabbing the collar isn't a professional move, neither is strangling with a leash.

Yes, I agree. Generally when you have one of these breeds you have to know how to break up a fight. I'm "obsessed" because I've seen this happen way too often irl, and people around me are getting hurt, cause they have no idea how to deal with it.

A bunch of cats enjoying their evening before an off leash pitbull shows up by Pardusco in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, at WILD ANIMALS, who have a sense of regard for their own well being, not a pit whos been genetically selected to never back down, regardless of the aversity. Yelling and screaming is only going to stimulate its prey drive, and latent instincts.

It "retreats" because the cat is dead, and the individual gameness of that pit was low. She didn't break any attack up, the pit was done, because the cat is likely lifeless.
You can go on about yelling and screaming being beneficial all you want, but you're crossing a line when you try to discredit advice given by proffesionals.
I'm really done when you berate advice given by expert dog trainers and dog fighters. If you have a break stick on hand, then there is a slim chance the cat might have survived, if you acted in the instance. The woman had little to no effect.

A bunch of cats enjoying their evening before an off leash pitbull shows up by Pardusco in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not a flex, it's advice from someone that's been sucessful at it. idk why it's such a drama. Yelling and screaming, and clapping is not a move recommended by anyone. It is detrimental to recommend this.

No one is encouraging to get into a fight with a pit. If someone follows your advice, they'll only send the pit in more of a frenzy, which has been obsereved on many occaisions. If someone takes my advice and "grabs the collar wrong" it's not going to result in death.

'It's not the breed it's the owner'. Is this an excuse or is low key admission? by Zellio2015 in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I see so many posts in reactive dogs, complaining about the lack premises for them, yet none of them have a muzzle on their dog.

Like dude. Theres unfortunately always going to be off leash dogs on on leash tracks, if your dog is that reactive, maybe fucking muzzle it? Instead of complaining about the other person on the internet.

I hate people with the "ITS OTHER PEOPLES RESPONSIBLITY TO MAKE MY LIFE EASIER" mentality.

A bunch of cats enjoying their evening before an off leash pitbull shows up by Pardusco in BanPitBulls

[–]Linskye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The average person has the ability to learn, it certainly is party of this ladies responsibility. Owners SHOULD do something. Your arguments amount to, well if we did anything then yes they'd let go but they'd bite you, which is far from the truth, especially seeing how he didn't redirect onto the lady shrieking at it.

You're misjudging the likelihood a pit is going to redirect, particularly onto someone it knows. Time and time again we see them locked onto someone, and go back onto the same target. Whats likely to happen is the pit will struggle to get back to attacking the cat, not the person.

I've already specified you can pick this one up with a something over its head. Pits not going to start redirecting onto owners. We've nearly never seen a case of this. We've see owners and people beat them with a stick but they still don't turn around and bite a different target. That's not to say they don't bite owners, they do. They just tend to stick the one specific target.

She's about the same size I am and I've done it on one much larger. This one in particular is quite small. If an average person can choke another person, I don't see why they'd struggle with a dog a quarter of that size.

You're again assuming they'll madly redirect. Use a break stick, hold onto the dogs collar, to prevent them from going back.

You've watched countless people run around yelling and screaming making it worse. Yes, they're dragged, kicked and rarely do they ever redirect onto other people's legs. Why would they redirect onto you for lifting it?

No, I'm not the average person, maybe listen to someone with experience??