Solo
Did you ever find the data showing Labs kill just as many as misunterstood Pit Bulls?
Thanks for showing concern for other people's dogs. It must be conflicting to be an activist for a breed developed and selected for killing dogs, yet professing to be a dog lover.
Now where are all these Lab deaths occurring?
Wow, you tend to be proving my points without me having to do anything.
If you had actually bothered to read my post, you would have found that I never said Labs kill as many as "pit bull type". I said that all the retriever type dogs get their own breed spot when the CDC did their counts, but if you lump them all together as retrievers, of course they're going to look more dangerous.
If there's labs, goldens, and chespeake bay retrievers on the list of dogs that have killed a person it only stands to reason that those breeds are responsible for at least one death each. But they didn't get lumped together. That's only three breeds. But when you look at the "pit bull type", this is a combination of at least seven different breeds, but more likely around twelve to fifteen.
Break the number of deaths down by the actual breed of "bully" and you find that NONE of them are any more dangerous than any other breed of dog; in fact, to the contrary. They blend in with the rest that way, but then we wouldn't have a monster to blame for our stupidity, would we? We would have to keep track of our children and pets and be responsible, the exact thing we want "dem pittbull owners" to do.
Let's do the math. Of the last 40 years, according to the CDC, there have been about 70 "pit bull type" deaths. The term "pit bull type" refers to the AmStaff, the Staffy Bull, the American Pit Bull Terrier, the Bull Terrier, the Miniature Bull Terrier, the American Bulldog, the bandog, or any mix of these dogs, or any dog that looks decidedly like these dogs or mixes.
Break that down to breed, and let's say that each of the breeds gets an equal number of deaths. That means for every breed, there are ten deaths every forty years. That equates to one every four years for each breed. That is eerily the same amount as any normal large, strong breed, except for german shepherds and rottweilers. They have more. But who's to say they aren't mixes as well, as I know for a fact that no one bothered to check these dogs to make sure they were registered purebreds. Maybe we should just all have ankle biters instead.
If I have to repeat myself one more time it will only prove that you have some kind of attention disorder.