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View Article  OUT IN THE OPEN: BSL = BIGOTRY
Well, I guess maybe those of us who have been saying for a long time that breed-based programs are just back-door racism aren't as crazy as everybody thought.

They're right out in the open now:


In addition to both Spanish and English newspaper and radio ads, the ASPCA sponsored wall-sized ads with graffiti-inspired artwork featuring a man and his canine sidekick on the sides of buildings in Harlem and the Bronx. The "wallscapes" target low-income black and Latino men, the largest demographic of owners of pit bulls – the breed that, more than any other, fills shelters and is euthanized. Although many dog lovers maintain the breed can make friendly companions, they also can be dangerous when neglected or raised for aggression – leading overwhelmed owners to give them up. The ASPCA estimates that eight out of 10 dogs put down in New York City each year are pit bulls. So the group is trying to reduce the number of unintended canine pregnancies.

Let's fisk this.

Who says black and hispanic people are the largest demographic of 'pit bull' owners?   Source?

Note the use of the word "maintain", as in claim - in other words the truth of this statement is in doubt.

Name one other breed that isn't dangerous when neglected or trained to be aggressive - just one.

Now, let me get this straight.  People are supposedly handing over 'pit bulls' they've made aggressive because they don't want aggressive dogs.  Yet, we are concerned about dogs delivering litters of puppies.  Does anybody else notice a slight break in the logic chain there?  Unless, of course, your real goal is to make it hard for certain people to get dogs, in which case it makes perfect sense.

Here's how the excerpted paragraph reads to me:


We're using graffiti-inspired artwork to try to break through the hip-hop barrier.. That's because we don't want black and Latino men to own or breed 'pit bulls'.  'Pit bulls' aren't a breed, so we can say that they fill shelters and are put to death by us in large numbers because nobody can prove us wrong. Besides, nobody cares thanks to our propaganda campaign.  Dog lovers keep insisting that bully breeds are good pets but we know they are  dangerous when black or hispanic people have them.  Owners give 'pit bulls' up the most, but not because it's the most common shape of dog in the US - it's because they're aggressive. The ASPCA estimates - which means you can't hold us to the number - that eight out of 10 dogs put down in New York City each year are 'pit bulls' - again, easy to say since 'pit bull' isn't a breed. So we figure if we can get all the 'pit bulls' sterilized, there won't be any more of them.  This will result in all problems of inexperienced or negligent dog ownership disappearing  because only brown people are lousy dog owners.

Am I right?



View Article  BREED-SPECIFIC LEGISLATION & THE APBT: ARE THE LAWS JUSTIFIED?
Well, I think most of us could answer that question quite easily with a resounding 'No'.

But why listen to us?

Here's a paper from the Journal of Veterinary Behaviour by Stephen Collier that presents data and an analysis which reaches the same conclusion.

The abstract:


After more than a century as an uncontroversial dog (Jessup, 1975), the American pit bull terrier has developed a notorious reputation as a dangerous breed since 1980, with consequent restrictions placed upon it by jurisdictions in Australia and elsewhere. Studies in the United States have indicated that the “pit bull” is responsible for a significant number of human fatalities resulting from dog attack, but the data on which such studies are based are flawed by methodological shortcomings. Using absolute numbers of dog attacks by breed in Australia, data on attacks on human beings reveal the pit bull terrier to be exceeded by several other breeds. Regardless, the primary problem is that reliable data do not exist for the number of attacks relative to breed population. Of 19 human fatalities in Australia over the past two decades, none has involved a dog verified to be an American pit bull terrier. The evidence does not sustain the view that this is a uniquely dangerous breed, and breed-specific laws aimed to control it have not been demonstrated by authorities to be justified by its attack record.


And the best part?

The entire paper is available at no cost here.

View Article  NEED A GIFT FOR A LOYAL DOG OWNER?
Look no further. 

Barb Haywood's groundbreaking e-Book, the Dog Owner's Guide to Breed Specific Legislation is available right here at Caveat!

There's a click-through on my left sidebar.

For a good review, visit Pet Defense - it explains why every dog owner should buy this book.


View Article  PANIC POLICY MAKING: CANINE BREED BANS IN CANADA & THE US

I see that Susan Hunter and Richard Brisbin have made the results of their research into BSL available. 

Panic Policy Making: Canine Breed Bans in Canada and the United States

Although dogs have bitten humans for millennia, in recent years state, provincial, and local governments have responded to incidents of dog bites with legislation or administrative rules that ban the ownership of dog breeds such as American Staffordshire Terriers, Rottweilers, and American Pit Bulls. In this paper we examine if a framework of “panic policymaking” can explain the passage of breed bans. The paper first develops a framework to explain panic policymaking that builds upon and modifies psychological theories of decision making, the sociological literature on moral panics, the analytical and case study literature about critical junctures in policy paths, behavioral economic studies of responses to risks, and the empirical studies of punctuated policy equilibria. Using data from a survey of the Canadian and U.S. public and interviews with interest group activists and public officials in locales that considered and defeated or passed breed bans, we then assess the predictive value of the concept of panic policymaking. Finally, we consider how breed bans indicate the scope and limits of the concept of animal rights.

Here's a link to the paper (PDF) some of which is still in draft format (minor typos here and there). 

http://www.polsci.wvu.edu/faculty/BRISBIN/Papers/2007.%20Panic%20Policy%20Making.pdf

 

And here's an excerpt from the section about Ontario to pique your interest:

Ontario

Although the record of events in Ontario is difficult to construct because of behind-closed-doors decisions that respondents would not describe to us, the fate of breed ban legislation in the province evidences a specific version of panic policy making.

Recognition

Although a few publicized violent dog attacks had transpired in Ontario in the decade prior to 2005, including attacks that resulted in the death of a child and assaults on police, these attacks produced no immediate public outcry or media demands for the control of dangerous dogs.

However, in August 2004 the media had covered how Toronto police had to fire more than a dozen bullets to kill two pit bulls who had turned on the man walking them and how a pit bull had attacked a man in London, Ontario who tried to protect a puppy from the pit bull’s attack (CBC News 2004). In late August 2004 the Ontario

Liberal Party’s Attorney General, Michael Bryant, decided to legislate a ban on the ownership of pit bulls. Critics of the Liberals–the majority party in the Legislative Assembly or “the government”--havesuggested that the ban was a tactic manufactured by the Liberals to deflect criticism of the growth of crime and gang activity, especially in Toronto (confidential Interviews). Opposition Progressive Conservative and New Democrat legislators also thought that he proposed the ban to deflect media attention from other issues and unpopular policies bedeviling the Liberal government. In their eyes, the identification of the pit bull problem was “all political.” It was a manufactured intrusive event.

Soon Bryant held news conferences to tout the proposed ban and link it, by inference, to criminals, outlaw bikers, and urban gangs–groups with members often drawn from ethnic minorities.  Although a reporter showed Bryant a photo array of dogs and he was unable to identify a pit bull, his party nonetheless pushed ahead in its promotion of what became a series of amendments to the Dog Owners’ Liability Act. It held a series of “consultations” with police, animal law enforcement officers, humane societies, and what it called a “broad spectrum of stakeholders” that it selected (Ontario 2005: 929). Therefore, the government had engaged in the construction of the intrusive event. However, as supported by our survey data, no evidence exists that the event created a contagion of fear of pit bulls and a moral panic. Also, no emotional assessment of alternatives appears to have generated an unwillingness for the general public to consider other policies, such as the effective dangerous dog law of Calgary (Calgary 2004) supported by national animal interest groups.

Characterization

The Liberal government used press releases and media interviews with Attorney General Bryant in an attempt to orchestrate public support for a pit bull ban. Bryant characterized the dogs as a “menace” and a “loaded weapon.” Press releases cited municipal officials, including the Mayor of Toronto, the Chief of the Toronto Police Service, the Mayor of Kitchener, and the Mayor of Wawa, as supporters of the ban. The government also arranged for press statements from victims of attacks about the extent of their injuries and the Animal Services Agency of Winnipeg about the effectiveness of their ban.   These comments and releases emphasized the danger pit bulls posed for children and conveyed horror stories of their behavior (author’s observations on media reportage).

[snip]

View Article  HSUS ZERO FOR TWO; PUPS KILLED EN MASSE IN TEXAS
Saving dogs by killing them - it's the Animal Rights way!   more »