Remember this girl? She is now a charm school graduate, certified adoptable from a trainer who guarantees to take the pit bull out of a pit bull. She is available for adoption and will return to Maranatha Farm until she finds a home.
This entry was posted on December 16, 2010 at 7:39 pm and is filed under Rescue animals. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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5 Responses to “Sue Nami, the Charm School Graduate”
How come I yet have doubts about a pit bull? Humans have tinkered with other animal breeding for centuries. Cattle have been bred to give more milk. Is it possible to ask one suddenly to give less? Horses have been bred for strength. Can you suddenly train one to be weak? Cats have been bred into all sorts of ridiculous shapes and sizes. Can you readily ask them to change? Pit bulls have been bred to fight and be agressive. Can anyone change what is bred into them? I think not.
I have always understood that pit bulls are “trained” to be aggressive, and not “bred” that way. So therefore I believe it all depends on their raisin’, and not their genes. My friend at work declares her pit to be a babydoll, and I have no reason not to believe her.
Some of us have the tendency to be aggressive without training or breeding. It just seems to happen.
Most pit bulls I have met are charming, docile animals. Sue Nami was not aggressive. She loved cats, kids, and other dogs. She had an aggressive moment over a milk-bone that another dog was enjoying. Nobody got hurt, but that was the time to take action, not wait for a later moment.
December 17, 2010 at 4:44 pm |
How come I yet have doubts about a pit bull? Humans have tinkered with other animal breeding for centuries. Cattle have been bred to give more milk. Is it possible to ask one suddenly to give less? Horses have been bred for strength. Can you suddenly train one to be weak? Cats have been bred into all sorts of ridiculous shapes and sizes. Can you readily ask them to change? Pit bulls have been bred to fight and be agressive. Can anyone change what is bred into them? I think not.
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December 27, 2010 at 3:27 pm |
How many pit bulls do you actually know?
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December 30, 2010 at 5:07 pm |
So, is this what is known as attack the messenger?
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December 27, 2010 at 11:53 am |
I have always understood that pit bulls are “trained” to be aggressive, and not “bred” that way. So therefore I believe it all depends on their raisin’, and not their genes. My friend at work declares her pit to be a babydoll, and I have no reason not to believe her.
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December 27, 2010 at 3:30 pm |
Some of us have the tendency to be aggressive without training or breeding. It just seems to happen.
Most pit bulls I have met are charming, docile animals. Sue Nami was not aggressive. She loved cats, kids, and other dogs. She had an aggressive moment over a milk-bone that another dog was enjoying. Nobody got hurt, but that was the time to take action, not wait for a later moment.
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