I’m sorry. I’m sure I must have misunderstood you. Because the way I’m reading your post it sounds as if you are saying that if the kid had been moving fast, running or screaming in his own driveway you’d be saying the human did something “stupid” and be defending the dog.
I’m quite sure you didn’t mean to post anything so utterly, mind-bogglingly Og damned moronic, so perhaps you might care to clarify.
My kids grew up running, biking, shouting, playing in a neighborhood with many dogs. Never once did any of those dogs stalk, bite and try to drag off one of the children. It’s not what dogs do instinctively.
Of course I’m not saying that would justify an attack. Someone up-thread said (or implied at any rate) that the dog was provoked because the kid was on a bike and it triggered the dog’s natural chase instinct. I pointed out that actually, no, the kid wasn’t moving fast or doing anything to trigger a chase.
Many dogs will chase fast moving things. Very few dogs will grab a kid off a bike and do the death shake, and those dogs need to be euthanized.
Forgive me for not posting a Supreme Court ready statement, it was 5 am and I was working on 4 hrs sleep and 1/2 a cup of tea [old rolley-eye guy]
I think it was obvious the cat recognised the urgency of the situation by how fast he responded. My 14 year old cat did something almost identical when a pit bull jumped on my neighbors golden retriever. She liked the retriever. She has also taken the side of my chihuahua when he has gotten into it with neighborhood cats my cat is normaly friendly with. My cat and chihuahua can’t stand each other but do recognise one another as family members.
After the cat chases off the dog, she returned to the child’s side. Watch the point when mom heads out of the picture to check for the dog(and was also bitten), you can see the cat next to the child when he runs in the house.
The cat was said to be very bonded with the boy(slept in his crib when he was a baby) and the boy is mildly autistic.
Plenty of stories of family pets who are extra protective of a disabled child.
This point was made by Neil deGrasse Tyson in the rebooted Cosmos series earlier this year. “Domestication,” is in large part a genetic concept. Dogs are different from wolves, and the difference is the result of evolution: specifically, selective breeding. Dogs that attacked humans were killed, and didn’t pass on their genes. Wolf cubs can be socialized with humans if taken at an early age, but they are never as reliably safe as dogs.
it’s not clear whether the earliest wolf-dogs self-selected for their willingness to get close to humans and reap the obvious advantages of more regular food supply, or whether our 30,000 year old ancestors sought them out, but the end result is the same.
Uh, yeah, it is. They are hunters. Ever seen a dog chase a cat or a squirrel? They are hunters. That we should expect them to somehow magically understand that small humans are off-limits is ridiculous, we wouldn’t expect that from any other kind of animal. I’m not saying that makes it okay for dogs with high prey drives to go wandering around neighborhoods accosting little boys, but I am saying that it was the owner’s fault, not the dog’s.
And I can agree with that point of view too, but in the hands of a responsible owner this incident would never have occurred. Again, the owners are 100% to blame here for not keeping their dog contained, especially when they knew that it had a problem.
Sure it is. I’ve had dogs for 15 years. Not once has one ever gotten out/loose. Because, you know, I’m responsible and pay attention to where the damn dog is before I open the door. And I regularly walk my fence line to make sure I don’t have a digger on my hands.
And yes, because this dog is a puppy, it very well could be rehabilitated by a competent trainer who knows what the fuck he or she is doing. Chows are notoriously aggressive and this dog was clearly in stalking prey mode – the owners were obviously incompetent trainers. That said, I wouldn’t have anything to do with this dog and I agree it should be put down. I also think there should be some sort of black list for proven irresponsible owners of pets – those people should never be allowed to own a dog, ever. They clearly cannot handle it.
How many other animals have been the subject of a twenty thousand year long breeding program to remove hostility to humans? I don’t know about you, but I’ve owned a few dogs in my life, and I never had to specifically train any of them not to attack humans. This does, in fact, seem to be something most domesticated canines “magically” understand.
Also, ever seen a dog catch a cat? They generally do not tear into it and try and drag it away, like that dog did to that kid.
So what? It’s still a vicious animal, and the safety of the neighborhood should not be predicated on this family’s ability to keep it restrained.
I’d need to know a lot more about the situation before i attached any significant blame to the owners. How long had they owned the dog before this happened? What sort of aggressive behavior had he displayed before this? From what I’ve read, the owners weren’t just letting him roam free - he’d escaped from his home. While I’ve never owned a vicious dog, I have owned some escape artists. Even a responsible owner can miss a potential escape route, or get distracted trying to get into the house with an armload of groceries. It’s possible that the owners were taking every reasonable precaution for controlling their dog, and this still happened.
That’s right. These are not wolves were talking about, but domesticated dogs. My dog (a sheltie) never stalks and hunts- her instinct is to herd. Other dogs have digging instincts, pointing, etc.
He didn’t accost the child, he gave him a nasty bite, if the cat hadn’t stepped in it could have been a pretty horrific mauling. Any responsible dog owner would have that dog put down immediately.
There is a BIG difference between chasing a squirrel or a cat because it runs and actively stalking a Not Running large (in comparison to the dog) child, grabbing it, and shaking it like it was prey to be killed.
My Lab and the terrier mix will chase the squirrels and outside critters, but I’m not entirely sure they’d know what to do if they actually caught something. What I do know is that they live in with a houseful of cats who run and play right under their noses, and they don’t bat an eye. They’ll chase me if I run, but I’m not remotely worried that they’ll drag me down and savage me. My neighbors have small children who run and shriek and ride bikes, but my dogs ignore them.
A dog who “doesn’t like children” is almost always one who is actually afraid of them, and has threatened to bite or actually bitten when confronted by a child with no means of retreat. That situation is trainable and it is indeed up to the owner to make it 100% safe for both kid and dog. Again, watch the video - this dog wasn’t scared of the kid, he was HUNTING a quiet child. That’s absolutely NOT OK no matter what. Maybe it was something in the poor dog’s past, and yes it probably is a result of poor socialization. It’s still not ok and the dog has to go.
I think in the end it’s kinder for the dog. If he were to live he’d have to be kept essentially under lockdown and muzzled, and that’s not fair to him either. Quality of life over quantity, every time.
You underestimate a dogs intelligence. They understand very well that a human is not a prey animal. I raised bird dogs for years yet I had no concern over them attacking my chickens or even my pen raised quail. When the quail were brought to the field for training they understould it was ok to stalk and point them. Animals have useful brains.
It is interesting that cats can recognize - and make allowances for - kids in the household, despite lacking a “pack instinct” like dogs.
When we had our baby, I was concerned about the cat. Our cat is lovely, but she doesn’t put up with people taking liberties with her. I was worried that the baby would grab the cat, and the cat would scratch or bite.
Nope. Didn’t happen. The cat put up with stuff from the baby it would never have taken from an adult - it obviously recognized the baby as a baby. Once, I caught the kid actually chewing on the cat’s tail - the cat (a big powerful beast, the terror of other cats and indeed some dogs) was just sitting there stoically enduring this abuse until I rescued her.
I think people forget how territorial cats are, too. The dog was attacking her child, and that wasn’t okay, but the dog was also ON THE CAT’S YARD, and that definitely wasn’t okay. Any dog runs into my cat’s back yard, and as old and sick as she is, she’ll still take a running leap at it - I’d put money on it.