Protect 1st & 2nd Amendment, Protect Children, Save America, Let Freedom Ring, United We Stand, We The People
Radical Florida libtards are targeting puppies in puppy mills because they want to force people to go to animal shelters and be forced to get a mixed pit bulls, which is what is left right now to adopt, and bad for children's safety.
Parents want smaller dogs that are cuddly and not likely to chew off their child's face in a dog attack, and dog activists do not care about lying to the public about whether a puppy is part pitbull to get them to take the dog.
My family member went through this about 5 months ago, and when the vet told her it was a mixed pit, she returned the dog to the shelter as a very pissed off parent of small children. The pit was biting her ankles around the house, which is what make her suspicious.
People will get in their car and drive to Georgia for dogs if this is passed by Desnatis, so he needs to say no to libtard dog activists pushing pit bulls.
i adopted a 10 month old male pitbull/pitbull xl. needed him for security, but what i found, is that he is a nanny dog to the baby. He has spent the entire year at her side...tugs her pants to get her down from somewhere he deems dangerous, never takes his eyes off of her...all night long...when shes sick. He plays tag and they roughhouse, albeit, gently. its sad that pitbulls got that stigma. in the early 1900s they were considered nanny dogs. We find this to be an accurate description of him. its not so much about the type of dog, but about the love they receive from their owners and traumas theyve suffered.
Protect 1st & 2nd Amendment, Protect Children, Save America, Let Freedom Ring, United We Stand, We The People
I am so glad it worked out for you.
But last year my neighbor's pit bull attacked my 3 month old puppy while we were out walking in our neighborhood, and bit her over a dozen times while she yelped and cried, and while we tried to stop it. The pit was not on a leash, and we were walking completely down the street, on the corner, and the neighbor's dog came running for us because it was crazy. The owner could not stop it, and my spouse got bit. It took 4 adults to pry the dog to stop, and finally they carried it away.
Our vet said she survived the attack because she was a pup, and her skin was loose, and so the pit could not rip open her stomach. So we were lucky.
Then they refused to tell us if the dog was vaccinated for rabies or not, so we had to have animal control help us. We found out that the same dog attacked at least 3 other neighbors).
This is just one example I have come across with a pit. None of them have been a good experience.