this post was submitted on 01 Sep 2025
81 points (74.8% liked)

Ban PitBulls

134 readers
2 users here now

Dog bite severity varies by the breed of dog, and studies have found that pit bull–type dogs have both a high rate of reported bites and a high rate of severe injuries, compared to other non–pit bull–type dogs.

Pit bull–type dogs are extensively used in the United States for dogfighting, a practice that has continued despite being outlawed. Several nations and jurisdictions restrict the ownership of pit bull–type dogs through breed-specific legislation.

The sole goal for this comm is to ban pit bulls from every jurisdiction and to treat the remaining ones with respect while every caretaker follows the required safety precautions to keep everyone safe. Dog breeds with documented health issues should also be prevented from being forcibly bred into this world.

Rules:

  1. Keep it civil.

  2. No advocating for violence.

  3. No pit bull advocate gaslighting. Though good faith debates are allowed.

Links:

Dogsbite.org is routinely slandered by the pro-pit lobby, but the site is informative and its data collection procedures are transparent and well-documented.

Pit Nutter Bingo Cliched excuses and problematic arguments pit nutters use.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

A pitbull which mauled its owner was shot dead by its owner’s neighbour on Wednesday night.

The dog’s owner, aged 61 years old, was reportedly sitting in his garden in the Nicosia suburb of Ayios Dhometios at around 8pm when the dog launched an attack.

The man’s neighbour, a 78-year-old man, then attempted to intervene, first spraying water from a hose at the dog in an attempt to make it go away.

When that failed, he pulled out a shotgun, and shot the dog dead.

The dog’s owner is currently being treated for injuries to his left arm at the Nicosia general hospital.

The police’s investigation into the matter is ongoing.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Screen_Shatter@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago

Agreed. I think theres a lot that can be done to mitigate risk, and if you really want it bad enough then go through that extra effort to prove you're deserving of the responsibility.

A friend of mine used to have a pit that I really loved, but it was an extremely well trained animal. She used both voice commands and hand signals to train him, and I never saw him hesitate to obey when commanded. It was pretty neat really, and I had a lot of respect for that. She really put in the work, always had him leashed in public, always under control, and in return he made her feel much safer. Unfortunately that seems to be the exception to the trend. I would not recommend it to the average person.