Anonymous
ID: dh0t9QKD
6/28/2025, 8:16:15 AM No.508936428
>Pitbulls were bred to fight and kill other dogs. Contrary to the belief of fat rural boomers, pitbulls are not nanny or guard dogs.
>Due to their genetics, pitbulls are likely to become aggressive around other dogs once they reach maturity. Engaging in fights with other dogs can become fun for pitbulls, regardless of how they were raised.
>Just like how collies are "hard-wired" to track livestock visually, pitbulls are hard-wired to grab, bite, and shake when predatory behavioural patterns are triggered. Other dogs as well as small animals, children, and even adults can easily trigger this response in a pitbull, and it is this behaviour directed at the animal or person in question which results in many dog bite injuries and fatalities
>As a result of their breeding, pitbulls are physically and emotionally primed to inflict the maximum amount of damage in a fight, and are able to continue attacking relentlessly. It is quite difficult to stop a pitbull once it has started attacking, and animals and people are often severely injured in the process.
>Socializing and training a dog bred for dogfighting cannot magically erase their genetic predisposition for aggression. No amount of raising a pitbull well will be able to completely prevent these behavioural patterns from kicking in if the pitbull is triggered.
>Due to their genetics, pitbulls are likely to become aggressive around other dogs once they reach maturity. Engaging in fights with other dogs can become fun for pitbulls, regardless of how they were raised.
>Just like how collies are "hard-wired" to track livestock visually, pitbulls are hard-wired to grab, bite, and shake when predatory behavioural patterns are triggered. Other dogs as well as small animals, children, and even adults can easily trigger this response in a pitbull, and it is this behaviour directed at the animal or person in question which results in many dog bite injuries and fatalities
>As a result of their breeding, pitbulls are physically and emotionally primed to inflict the maximum amount of damage in a fight, and are able to continue attacking relentlessly. It is quite difficult to stop a pitbull once it has started attacking, and animals and people are often severely injured in the process.
>Socializing and training a dog bred for dogfighting cannot magically erase their genetic predisposition for aggression. No amount of raising a pitbull well will be able to completely prevent these behavioural patterns from kicking in if the pitbull is triggered.
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