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To: Organic Panic

“ANY dog. They are hunting pack animals. They are ALL dangerous. “

That’s one of the dumbest, most ignorant, posts I’ve read on FR ever.


8 posted on 07/26/2024 3:11:48 PM PDT by CodeToad (Rule #1: The elites want you dead.)
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To: CodeToad

I get what they are saying. Dogs are animals and all have the potential to cause harm. A Chihuahua obviously won’t kill a person as it is small, but they can bite and certainly could harm a small child or a baby. I think that was the point.


14 posted on 07/26/2024 3:33:01 PM PDT by vivenne
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To: CodeToad

Sure thing boss. If you don’t believe dogs are hunting pack animals you need to study up on dog evolution.


30 posted on 07/26/2024 5:24:40 PM PDT by Organic Panic (Democrats. Memories as short as Joe Biden's eyes)
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To: CodeToad

Bfl


44 posted on 07/26/2024 7:16:49 PM PDT by rlmorel (J.D. Vance and The Legend of The MaMaw of The 19 Loaded Guns!)
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To: CodeToad

Agree!


47 posted on 07/26/2024 7:57:01 PM PDT by antceecee ( )
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To: CodeToad

“That’s one of the dumbest, most ignorant, posts I’ve read on FR ever.”

Thank YOU!


49 posted on 07/26/2024 8:01:08 PM PDT by DaiHuy (I support LGBTQ. (Lets Get Biden to Quit.))
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To: CodeToad; Organic Panic

CodeToad, organic panic may have said that poorly, but it is not wrong. I would suggest the poster should have said they are ALL potentially dangerous.

I have a personal experience which I believe indicates the accuracy of that.

I lived in Yokosuka, Japan when I was around 9, and took my brother’s spider bike out for a ride on some of the less traveled parts of that big Navy base there.

I rode down a deserted road with large hills on both sides covered with green vegetation. Stretching for hundreds of yards on either side of that two lane road were acres of chain link fence. In the fenced off areas there was a vast array of military equipment and machinery in various states of repair. There were fields of what must have been barrels for large naval guns. There were odd looking gray objects of all shape and condition that had been placed there and seemingly forgotten, rust spotting the paint, black hacked off cables protruding and laying on the ground. Launches and landing craft in long lines. Naval shells, 5”, 6”, 8” and even 16” shells.

As I pedaled along, I passed an area that was open all the way to the hills. I looked up, and saw a huge pack of dogs come running out of a cave, barking like mad, coming right at me from probably 100 yards away.

Those hills were honeycombed with tunnels. They had been meticulously boarded up by Seabees (I think) and walled off by large, stout, wooden structures with padlocked doors for access. They were impenetrable. I know this, because we tried. We were always trying to get into those caves. My brother and I almost got lost in one when we went inside with my dad’s spotlight that had an external battery you could carry on your shoulder, and you plugged the cigarette lighter connecter into it. We got a good way into that cave, and my brother dropped the light. Or I did...I don’t remember. But when that light hit the ground and went out, it was black. Completely, totally and absolutely black.

I remember, at that point, with a sharp pang of panic, that we did not have any backup light or matches. Nothing. My heart began to race as the panic rose up in me while we fumbled unsuccessfully in the pitch black to get the light going. I think we were both immediately convinced that the light had broken when it hit the ground, and we knew we were screwed. They would never, ever have found us. There were dozens and dozens of those tunnels, and we were hundreds of feet in.

My brother realized that when the light had fallen to the ground, the cigarette lighter connecter had jerked loose. He plugged it in, we got out, and never went back in any tunnels again.

Anyway, this tunnel on this more remote part of the base where I was riding my bike was either not sealed up or was open and had been inhabited by wild dogs. There were a good number of wild dogs, because military personnel had just left pets behind when they rotated out, and many of the animals became feral. At the time, I did not know this, and when this pack of dogs came running out of that cave towards me, I began pedaling with all my might to pick up speed.

However, the bike had a flaw that made it irritating in the best of times, and at this particular time, was particularly inopportune: when you really, REALLY pushed on the pedals to get going, sometimes the chain couldn’t stay on the sprocket, and it would come off, requiring you to stop whatever you were doing on the bike and put the chain back on. You know the drill. Get it completely on the small sprocket, part-way on the bigger sprocket, then you slowly turn the pedal and get it back on.

Well, when I put the pedal to the metal, you guessed it: the chain came off.

And then the dogs were immediately right on me.

As the first few dogs caught up, they began snapping at my legs, which I pulled up on the handlebars. This all took place in the space of about three seconds from the chain coming off.

I rapidly began to lose speed, and it was crystal clear to me that the bike was going to slow to a point, begin to wobble from side to side, and then fall over. And there was nothing I could do about it.

In a flash of inspiration, I realized my only option was the one I had to go for. I steered towards the nearest chain link fence and leaped off off the bike onto it. I clambered to the top and straddled the barbed wire across the top. It was really awkward, and I slid my bottom legs under the bottom strand and rested my torso on the top strand. (This wasn’t razor wire, it was the old style barbed wire)

The dogs milled wildly ten feet below me, standing on their hind legs as their front legs extended up the fence towards me. Later, my memory thinks there must have been fifty of those dogs, but I suspect it was a dozen or two at the most. I sat up on that fence for what seemed like an hour after the dogs left, I was too scared to come down.

When I did come down, I was terrified to take my eyes off the hill and put them on the bicycle chain to get it back on. I felt like if I even took my eyes away for a split second that when I looked up again, they would be rushing towards me again. When I did get the chain back on, I hightailed it out of there, sweating with panic the entire time.

I have to say that was probably the most frightened I have ever been in my life. I can’t say for sure what might have happened had they dragged me off that bicycle, but I can tell you, being pursued by a large number of growling, snarling, and barking dogs with bared teeth was a damned sketchy thing. But years later I found out why all those dogs were there from my mother, who apparently knew of the problem at the time. I was just an oblivious kid, but I swear those dogs meant business.


59 posted on 07/27/2024 8:59:08 PM PDT by rlmorel (J.D. Vance and The Legend of The MaMaw of The 19 Loaded Guns!)
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