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Old 07-18-2007, 03:42 AM
kstar kstar is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: University of Oklahoma, Noman, Oklahoma
Posts: 848
Quote:
Originally Posted by AKA_Monet View Post
And the sad part is these animals cannot help themselves from fighting. They are bred to fight, generally.
Ah, the nature versus nurture argument. While the breed's original purpose was to breed for gameness and pit fighting characteristics, they still need training to fight.

My pittie and her littermates were rescued from a fighting house. Tasha is the sweetest thing and is submissive to every dog she meets, while a littermate of hers had to be adopted out to a home with no other dogs because she will try to kill ANY other animal she sees that is smaller or near her size. It was heartbreaking because Tasha wasn't taking to her training, so her original owner was starving her to make her mean, while her more aggressive littermates were getting steaks. Didn't work. Does this mean her littermate was born aggressive? No, it means that they were more open to the training and treatment of their former owner.

There are no bad dogs, only bad owners.
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