Posted on 05/10/2018 8:56:55 AM PDT by Kartographer
Terri Cosby, 54, was walking through a street in Oklahoma City when she was attacked by the four raging hounds for 40 minutes.
(Excerpt) Read more at thesun.co.uk ...
they need to be lunch for four pitbulls
Some animals attack and kill out of hunger. They feed on you. Scary. But dogs like this attack out of plain meanness. That’s even more scary in some ways.
Soooo...no one had a gun? Couldn’t run inside to get one? No one could stop them for 40 minutes? She is getting chewed on and people were helpless?
SURELY not...has to be more to it....
morally, yes.
But real responsibility hinges on Oklahoma laws, and I have no idea where they stand.
But what is glaring - many witnesses say these dogs have attacked other people and are a known menace in the neighborhood. WHY would police and even neighbors allow this?
When I am out and about - if a dog is a credible threat to me - I have no qualms drawing my handgun and putting it down. Self defense is a lawful use of a firearm in Arkansas.
Am am blown away at some of the testimony in this case - some guy was bashing one of the dogs with a baseball bat and it made ZERO difference... Seriously? Can you say “killing machine”?
A knife would have been handy and stopped the attack long before 40 minutes. A dog with a severed jugular bleeds out pretty quickly. She would still have been mauled, but not fighting for her life or faving amputated limbs.
Pit bulls arelike ticks, they just dont let go and you cannot make them let go once they lock their jaws. The best gpdefense is to insure they bleed out quicly or destrouy the brain. Cracking their skull with abat just makes them madder.
The original No Fear dogs.
Our local dog pound also. 85-90%.
Here is an very useful and informative video video on the pit bull problem. by Brittany Venti -
The Pit problem
She makes excellent points and covers the popular pro-pit talking points.
Warnings:
1) The videographer is attractive; it is easy to forget the very important things she is saying, ( I had to watch it twice) and
2)) There are a few seconds of graphic video at the beginning.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_lfquOq39Y
Thank you, Norski
No, but in the case of pit bull footage, it can take some effort to find the US news reports. Here is an update on this attack.
Police release body camera footage of vicious pit bull attack that critically injured woman
Truth be known - and after he matured and several vets concurred - we determined he was Pit Bull + Brittany Spaniel. His personality was almost entirely brittany. HE was a big baby - absolute adored ANYONE. He had no problem getting along with other dogs, and never showed ANY form of aggression towards anyone or anything...
BUT:
A couple of years ago, something happened. Not sure what, but we found him curled up in a corner of the dining room shaking like he was completely terrified. Nobody had been around and nothing had messed with him - we have no idea what happened. But from that day forward, we saw significant changes. While he was still incredibly affectionate - he first developed a total HATE of all things mechanical. Vacuum cleaner, lawnmower - using any would send him into a rampage of barking and trying to attack whatever the machine was. Figured out that it also was towards the ATV. If he was outside and I started the mower - he would quite literally go nuts and attack it. My ATV has holes in fenders from him attacking it - but it would only happen when running (or if you made motorcycle sounds and were sitting on it...that too would trigger him). Still no aggression towards people or other dogs/animals.
Then our big move started and he stayed with my father and step-mother while we prepared and moved. He was mostly outside and had several opportunities to go nuts at Grandpa's mower and my ATV.
We finally got moved early last Summer and brought him up. All seemed well... until we all left for work/school. Got home to the living room blinds shredded, stuff scattered all over the house, and the front door knob literally ripped off and chewed into metal pieces! Tried one more time - after adding a child-proof knob cover on the new door knob. He shredded it again. So he went to stay with friends with their two dogs (who he got along with). He began shredding things there as well... and then he finally completely snapped... one of their family members came to do some work on the house - and Konner tried to attack him. No provocation. Not even a word. Thankfully, he got away before he actually got hurt. That was the final straw.
There were no obvious health issues - and a vet checks had revealed nothing.
So we had to put him down. Still pains me to think about - but it is a reminder of how even the very best of dogs who show absolutely ZERO signs of trouble or aggression for YEARS - in one moment for no diagnosable reason - can snap and become a far different animal.
“Going through my local pound recently, at least 80% of the dogs available were either pit bulls or pit bull mixes (with the characteristic head).”
Less than a year ago I accompanied my friends to an animal shelter because they wanted to adopt a second dog. I couldnt help but notice that the vast majority of dogs they had were pit bulls. My friends got themselves a pit bull mix. Sweetest and friendliest dog ever. He couldnt have been happier to be adopted. Literally within seconds of meeting me for the first time just after he was adopted, he licked my face like crazy and continued to do so throughout the rest of the day. Whenever I come visiting, he doesnt hesitate to come running to greet me and lick my face like crazy all over again.
You are not alone.
Here is an article written by one of the editors of “Animals24-7”, Beth Clifton, a former mounted police officer, former veterinarian technician, and former pit bull advocate:
“Why Pit Bulls Will Break Your Heart”
http://www.animals24-7.org/2017/01/10/why-pit-bulls-will-break-your-heart/
Going through my local pound recently, at least 80% of the dogs available were either pit bulls or pit bull mixes (with the characteristic head).
(No shepherds, dachshunds, dalmations, poodles, etc.)
Makes me wonder why their owners abandoned them, or brought them in to the pound.
And how safe any new adopters would be...
I have noticed the same online looking at rescue shelters. So many pit bulls and pit bull cross breeds. Then on top of that these places want 2-400 dollars adoption fees.
Pay me 50 and Ill supply the bullets.
Code of Hammurabi (1792BC -1750BC)
"If an ox gores a man or a woman to death, the ox shall surely be stoned and its flesh shall not be eaten; but the owner of the ox shall go unpunished.
29"If, however, an ox was previously in the habit of goring and its owner has been warned, yet he does not confine it and it kills a man or a woman, the ox shall be stoned and its owner also shall be put to death." Isaiah 21: 28,29
You have to think when choosing a dog. Can I control the dog if it gets angry? If a Chihuahua gets angry you dont have a problem at all. If you have a Labrador you might but they are very trainable. Pit bulls are the most powerful breed of dog and were bred to fight. I think it is a big risk to own a pit bull.
“Can I control the dog if it gets angry?”
Part of my philosophy: “Never have a pet or girlfriend whose ass you cannot kick in an emergency.”
Yes, I’m still single.
Okay, first, I’m jealous of her rack. :-P
Second, she makes a lot of valid points about these creatures and their misguided owners.
The article mentions the word hounds, yet the title says pitbulls. What gives? Lack of journalistic knowledge?
I not a big fan of weaponized K9’s for pets. Weaponized K9s have their place and at this point in time I think anybody who has a weaponized dog should probably have some sort of a license or registration showing that THEY are capable of handling the animal and that the need existed for them to have a weaponized K9 in the first place. Chip the weaponized K9 and restrict ownership to the handler and only other certified and licensed Individuals. transfer the animal is a whole other subject that would need to be discussed.
This is why good women need a good, reliable gun.
Yes, yes, very beautiful.
But this is distracting, and makes it difficult to remember
what she said, which is important. I would like to see a transcript of the video.
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