Culture The Bull Pit - Pitbull News Megathread - aka sperginity speds out agendaposting

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https://www.cheknews.ca/pit-bull-attack-near-nanaimo-injures-two-children-and-one-woman-450395/

Two 8-month-old pit bulls that were loose in Nanaimo attacked several children, severely injuring at least one. Other people that came to aid the children were also injured.

The children were playing in a yard at the house of one of their friends. The dogs were from somewhere else in the neighborhood and had been cited for being at large previously.

One of the owners of the dogs came and got the dogs but did not stick around. The news interviewed the other owner, a Dangerhair that looked to be in her late 40s or early 50s. While she was devastated at what her dogs had done, she said to the reporter, "People are saying, look at this from the prospective of a parent, well, these dogs are my kids, too," and then she broke down crying.

It was later reported both dogs were euthanized, as there have been other incidents prior to this one, and due to the severity of the injuries the one particular child sustained.

To the dangerhair dog owner I would have to say, "If these dogs were your KIDS, you did a lousy job of raising them. Thank heavens you didn't spawn any of your own."
 
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Man, I was just thinking about how the spay and neuter campaign essentially eliminated the American Mutt and let the pitbulls fill that void.

Coydogs are dangerous enough without the pitbull kill switch. It's essentially a travel sized wolf that doesn't fear humans and will go after dogs.
 
It's essentially a travel sized wolf that doesn't fear humans and will go after dogs.
On several occasions, these Shitbull coydogs have surrounded my yard with the intent to kill my Australian Shepherd and mate with the Blue Heeler. When she is in heat, these attacks become more frequent. Unlike normal coyotes, these things are massive, and they are not very afraid of me.

Also, they have killed innumerable numbers of my barn cats. When the corn around my property is tall, they prowl between the stalks and kill any cat or kitten they spot. Hell, they have attacked my cats during the day. I had three kittens go missing before 3:00 p.m., disappearing into the corn like apparitions. In a single year, I lost over a dozen barn cats to these beefed up coyotes.

(Yes, I have a lot of barn cats. They protect my assets from mice and rats, and I’m a huge cat person.) :)
 
The tiny white woman getting massive, vicious pitbulls "because they keep me safe!" (which thankfully occasionally ends with them being nannied by their own dog instead of an innocent animal or other person) is always the one that bothers me the most.

You can't psychologically control a pitbull. It would be like insisting on carrying a defective gun that can accidentally fire in a random direction in your purse for self defense.

I have a friend who still lives with his deranged parents. They insisted on adopting this dog from states away that appeared to be a pit-GS-motherfucking-Rhodesian-Ridgeback mix. The thing is absolutely terrifying, and constantly pulls hard on its lead in its desire to chase and kill all types of woodland creatures and neighborhood children. But they've had this dog for 10 years and its never hurt anything yet. Why? Because my friend is a good person, so he never takes it to dog parks, crosses the street if he's walking the dog to ensure it never gets near people or other dogs, he always locks it in a well armored crate if he has to leave it alone at home (which he avoids at all costs), he got the backyard completely fenced in and reinforced, and he ensures he is the only person who walks the dog, since he's 6'2" and 275 pounds, and is willing to sacrifice his shoulder sockets for the sake of making sure this dog never hurts anyone or anything.

That's the level of effort and sacrifice it takes. A tiny woman cannot physically control a shitbull, and physical control is the only thing that works on them. They're ticking timebombs, and yet so many people insist that a jar of nitroglycerin is the best self-defense weapon, and that everyone "gives it a bad rep".
That's the thing with dogs, they are still pack animals at heart. If there is no leader to keep them in line, they will step up to the role. You can be weaker than them, but you have to show dominance, and have some balls.

Pair that with the most aggressive breed imaginable, and someone scared of their own pet, and it's not going to end well.
 
That's the thing with dogs, they are still pack animals at heart. If there is no leader to keep them in line, they will step up to the role. You can be weaker than them, but you have to show dominance, and have some balls.
Last Christmas I had the pleasure of helping my friend do a charity photos with Santa, It was pretty fun until these two faggot twinks came in with a 240 pound St. Bernard. The dog was nice enough but could not be wrangler for a photo.

That dog is the alpha of his household.
 
Last Christmas I had the pleasure of helping my friend do a charity photos with Santa, It was pretty fun until these two faggot twinks came in with a 240 pound St. Bernard. The dog was nice enough but could not be wrangler for a photo.

That dog is the alpha of his household.
I think the 'alpha' thing in wolves was disproved. Most of those packs tend to be a breeding pair and their adult pups, if I'm remembering correctly.
 
Link

Pit bull put down after attacking, killing Tucson woman​


By 13 News Staff and Raya Torres
Published: Jan. 24, 2025 at 2:57 PM CST|Updated: Jan. 24, 2025 at 11:36 PM CST

TUCSON, Ariz. (13 News) -- A Tucson woman was killed by a pit bull mix she was fostering earlier this week, 13 News has confirmed.

The Tucson Police Department told 13 News on Monday that there was a death investigation following an incident at a home in the 6800 block of East Via Arroyo the day before. The home is near South Kolb Road and Interstate 10.

Nearby resident Raj Sihota said he and his family were panicked the evening the incident unfolded and they saw police vehicles in the area.

After finding out more about the incident, he extends his condolences to the family.

“It’s sad and I pray for the family,” Sihota said. “It’s really sad and it’s really scary for the whole neighborhood. It’s devastating.”

On Friday, Jan. 24, the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner confirmed the death of 61-year-old Tina Weger was from the attack. The manner of death was accidental.

The dog, which Weger had been fostering for more than a year, was euthanized after the attack by the Pima Animal Care Center.

13 News spoke to Steve Kozachik, the interim director of PACC, who said this was a difficult but necessary decision.

“We don’t take euthanizing lightly out here,” Kozachik said. “But, when an incident like this happens, such a catastrophic incident. There was no way that we could justify putting a dog like that back out in the community.”

Weger was also a loving foster for pets in Tucson and volunteered for various rescues in Southern Arizona, including PACC.

The incident emotionally impacted the people involved and volunteering with the agency.

“We knew her, we respected her, and the staff and volunteers out here are really devastated by the incident,” Kozachik added.

Weger suffered puncture wounds and the attack is being investigated by the Tucson Police Department and Pima Animal Care Center, according to OME.

PACC said Weger got the dog from a local rescue.

Kozachik told 13 News that while the incident was indeed devastating, he hopes that this does not deter potential fosters and volunteers in helping PACC and the pets that need help.

There are about 800 PACC pets living in the Tucson community outside of their shelters. If you want to get involved, you can click here to sign up.

According to Weger’s Facebook page, she has been fostering dogs since at least 2023.

[Facebook post has since been deleted]

This was the second pit bull attack in southern Arizona in less than a month.

In December, there was an incident near North Carmichael Avenue and East Theater Drive in Sierra Vista.

Authorities said two pit bulls left their yard and attacked a man and the German shepherd he was walking. The dogs then attacked another man, who was attempting to break up the fight.

A passerby saw what was occurring and got out of his vehicle with a rifle. One of the dogs charged after him and then continued to attack the German shepherd. The man with the rifle fired one shot at the dog actively attacking the German shepherd, killing the dog instantly.
 
On several occasions, these Shitbull coydogs have surrounded my yard with the intent to kill my Australian Shepherd and mate with the Blue Heeler. When she is in heat, these attacks become more frequent. Unlike normal coyotes, these things are massive, and they are not very afraid of me.

Also, they have killed innumerable numbers of my barn cats. When the corn around my property is tall, they prowl between the stalks and kill any cat or kitten they spot. Hell, they have attacked my cats during the day. I had three kittens go missing before 3:00 p.m., disappearing into the corn like apparitions. In a single year, I lost over a dozen barn cats to these beefed up coyotes.

(Yes, I have a lot of barn cats. They protect my assets from mice and rats, and I’m a huge cat person.) :)
Have you made attempts at culling the pack of murder mutts? I'm sure some neighbors would be willing to assist.
 
That's the thing with dogs, they are still pack animals at heart. If there is no leader to keep them in line, they will step up to the role. You can be weaker than them, but you have to show dominance, and have some balls.
Reminds me of the gay redditor who posted about how his dog no longer respected him after seeing him getting fucked in the ass by another dude.
 
Have you made attempts at culling the pack of murder mutts? I'm sure some neighbors would be willing to assist.
I have attempted to exterminate the mongrels with sheer firepower, but they often take refuge in restricted, wooded areas where I cannot hunt them. Moreover, most of our neighbors do not own guns.

However, I have successfully killed a few dens through indirect means. Leaving poisoned meat in fields usually works. The mothers take the meat and feed it to their puppies, which die from a lethal dose. I tried this on one occasion, and coydogs in my area mysteriously disappeared for roughly two months.
 
I have attempted to exterminate the mongrels with sheer firepower, but they often take refuge in restricted, wooded areas where I cannot hunt them. Moreover, most of our neighbors do not own guns.

However, I have successfully killed a few dens through indirect means. Leaving poisoned meat in fields usually works. The mothers take the meat and feed it to their puppies, which die from a lethal dose. I tried this on one occasion, and coydogs in my area mysteriously disappeared for roughly two months.
See, the opposite is true for me. Almost everyone around here is armed with everything from Remington 700s and Mossberg 590s for hunting season to tricked out AR-15s and AKs for self defense, and as long as you keep any relevant parties informed, we don't really care if you shoot up coyotes, hogs, or nigbulls. If it gets really bad, we will (and have!) form a posse to cull their numbers since more than a few of my neighbors are farmers by profession and almost everyone has a chicken coop in the backyard. It's just that the nigbulls seem to be strays coming from Charlotte and its suburbs, so we'll never really get rid of them for good, but we make sure they don't stay a problem for long!
 
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I have attempted to exterminate the mongrels with sheer firepower, but they often take refuge in restricted, wooded areas where I cannot hunt them. Moreover, most of our neighbors do not own guns.

However, I have successfully killed a few dens through indirect means. Leaving poisoned meat in fields usually works. The mothers take the meat and feed it to their puppies, which die from a lethal dose. I tried this on one occasion, and coydogs in my area mysteriously disappeared for roughly two months.
I'm glad you're giving it your best effort. There aren't many pitbulls in my area that I know of (bobcats sleeping on roofs are more common and that'sa completely different issue) but a lot of my neighbors have firearms and tend to deal with any problems themselves. Im sorry about your cats.
 
I think the 'alpha' thing in wolves was disproved. Most of those packs tend to be a breeding pair and their adult pups, if I'm remembering correctly.
The "alpha" is the alpha in the same way your dad and mom are supposed to have authority over their adolescent children. Because wolf packs are family units. A lot of animals most certainly do operate off of hierarchy, though. Horses are another example. It's also good to keep in mind that dogs are a different animal to wolves and often have to be put in with other dogs inorganically (yes, closely related but still with marked differences in behavior). Just like with horses if things go naturally than the "daddy" (with horses there will also be a lead mare) is the "alpha" but things have to be worked out when mixed with other animals in unnatural ways due to domesticated life. Because wolf packs are smaller family like units which don't have many other adults tagging along it's just not as obvious and sort of flows from how naturally the older and mature ones are the only ones there to look after things.

The only thing untrue is that said hierarchy is something done aggressively and needs to be violent or bullying. Which is not the case. This only happened because the wolves from the aforementioned flawed initial studies were all mixed together with strange wolves in a closed setting that was unnatural to them. But this setting is how a lot of dogs are expected to live if you have multiples of them, so it does apply more often than not.

With horses it's always the most athletic if the rest of the horses are young and inexperienced because that's the one able to get his way by being more physical. Experience wins out over athleticism, however, because such things are ultimately about structure and safety in good leadership. A horse with both athleticism and experience is usually top dog all the time. Just swap the colloquialism of alpha with leader and it's much more apt.

People can dress it up all they like but at the end of the day dogs can tell who is timid and hesitant, they get an understanding that you can't actually hold on to the leash. You become a irrelevant to their decisions (such as they are) when this happens. And far too many people with dogs are in this situation. It doesn't matter that you don't believe there is a pecking order wrt to any of this because the dog does. It's way it's spectacularly stupid for hand wringing old ladies to "adopt" something like a pit bull or really any active breed.
 
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Pit bull put down after attacking, killing Tucson woman​


By 13 News Staff and Raya Torres
Published: Jan. 24, 2025 at 2:57 PM CST|Updated: Jan. 24, 2025 at 11:36 PM CST

TUCSON, Ariz. (13 News) -- A Tucson woman was killed by a pit bull mix she was fostering earlier this week, 13 News has confirmed.

The Tucson Police Department told 13 News on Monday that there was a death investigation following an incident at a home in the 6800 block of East Via Arroyo the day before. The home is near South Kolb Road and Interstate 10.

Nearby resident Raj Sihota said he and his family were panicked the evening the incident unfolded and they saw police vehicles in the area.

After finding out more about the incident, he extends his condolences to the family.

“It’s sad and I pray for the family,” Sihota said. “It’s really sad and it’s really scary for the whole neighborhood. It’s devastating.”

On Friday, Jan. 24, the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner confirmed the death of 61-year-old Tina Weger was from the attack. The manner of death was accidental.

The dog, which Weger had been fostering for more than a year, was euthanized after the attack by the Pima Animal Care Center.

13 News spoke to Steve Kozachik, the interim director of PACC, who said this was a difficult but necessary decision.

“We don’t take euthanizing lightly out here,” Kozachik said. “But, when an incident like this happens, such a catastrophic incident. There was no way that we could justify putting a dog like that back out in the community.”

Weger was also a loving foster for pets in Tucson and volunteered for various rescues in Southern Arizona, including PACC.

The incident emotionally impacted the people involved and volunteering with the agency.

“We knew her, we respected her, and the staff and volunteers out here are really devastated by the incident,” Kozachik added.

Weger suffered puncture wounds and the attack is being investigated by the Tucson Police Department and Pima Animal Care Center, according to OME.

PACC said Weger got the dog from a local rescue.

Kozachik told 13 News that while the incident was indeed devastating, he hopes that this does not deter potential fosters and volunteers in helping PACC and the pets that need help.

There are about 800 PACC pets living in the Tucson community outside of their shelters. If you want to get involved, you can click here to sign up.

According to Weger’s Facebook page, she has been fostering dogs since at least 2023.

[Facebook post has since been deleted]

This was the second pit bull attack in southern Arizona in less than a month.

In December, there was an incident near North Carmichael Avenue and East Theater Drive in Sierra Vista.

Authorities said two pit bulls left their yard and attacked a man and the German shepherd he was walking. The dogs then attacked another man, who was attempting to break up the fight.

A passerby saw what was occurring and got out of his vehicle with a rifle. One of the dogs charged after him and then continued to attack the German shepherd. The man with the rifle fired one shot at the dog actively attacking the German shepherd, killing the dog instantly.
Own a pit, get bit. At least a pitwit got nannied and not some kid or somebody's pet.
 
Man, I was just thinking about how the spay and neuter campaign essentially eliminated the American Mutt and let the pitbulls fill that void.
Is it just me or is "spay abort" only ever used on cats brought to shelters and never dogs? Not just pits, but all dogs?

There's no shortage of cats around sure but there's also no shortage of dogs. I know puppies (and kittens to an extent) make more money for shelters but it's not like puppies don't end up at the shelter every day. I saw on our favorite subreddit a post from a shelter asking for someone to foster a very heavily pregnant "expecting mama" shitbull. I know it's not fun to abort puppies that are full-term and otherwise healthy but why aren't we spay aborting?
 
Kozachik told 13 News that while the incident was indeed devastating, he hopes that this does not deter potential fosters and volunteers in helping PACC and the pets that need help.
Nah, fuck that noise. Everybody knows that's the majority type of dog an any given shelter these days. I'd prefer people be safe than precious feral dogs get "forever homes". You need to be responsible for your own safety and that of anyone living with you first.

I love animals but they're dirty and they CAN hurt you. People need to stop living in fantasy.
 
Is it just me or is "spay abort" only ever used on cats brought to shelters and never dogs? Not just pits, but all dogs?

There's no shortage of cats around sure but there's also no shortage of dogs. I know puppies (and kittens to an extent) make more money for shelters but it's not like puppies don't end up at the shelter every day. I saw on our favorite subreddit a post from a shelter asking for someone to foster a very heavily pregnant "expecting mama" shitbull. I know it's not fun to abort puppies that are full-term and otherwise healthy but why aren't we spay aborting?
I know of a few spay-aborts when it comes to dogs personally (mostly mothers from backyard breeders where the bitch either got out and was picked up or was abandoned). I think it's because people are a lot softer towards dogs than cats, if someone talked about torturing a dog in detail people would be horrified but less so if the victim is a cat. I know people that have called cats "useless pets" and that it's more beneficial to have a dog instead.

Cat gestation is often roughly 2 months long so if mama cat is close to being due, they'll just allow the cat to give birth (though there are shelters that are willing to euthanize pregnant cats; learned that after questioning why there was a large pickle jar filled with preserved kitten fetuses in my high school biology classroom, apparently part of the AP Anatomy & Physiology course they would dissect cats and the teacher would try to get at least 1 pregnant cat for the project per class).
 
>Tucson

I’m locking comments because the conversation has become toxic.
Just watched my neighbor lose control of his two beautiful pit bulls, one dragging a leash and the other unleashed. They ran a few houses down to right across the street from me, and his three children ran after while this douche went inside his house. When he finally came out I watched this asshole punch one of the dogs SEVERAL times and then drag and lift the dog by his collar (choking him) into the car, with the kids.
 
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