Talk:Dog attack

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This article seems very biased. For example, the legality of shooting an attacking dog. The right to self defense exists in every jurisdiction. If you are in fear of of your life or person from a cat, dog, man or woman, you can shoot it. Of course you can't shoot and then lie that you were being attacked nor can you shoot if your fear is entirely unreasonable. Even the section concerning the behavior of dogs seems biased. This is more apparent if you compare it to the articles concerning bear attacks and cougar attacks. Unlike bears and cougars, dogs are (usually) owned by someone and that someone is fully responsible for their actions. There are articles that seem to keep the factual sections away from the subjective sections. Maybe this article would be better if it presented the facts concerning the law, insurance and the legal responsibilities and liabilities of the owners, then the tips on avoiding or defending against an attack. Including gouging the dogs eyes out if that works. And finally a small, and I mean small, criticism section. That seems to be the pattern that works best for other articles. I meant to simply rate the article but did not see much in way of rating the nature (biased) of the article. In any event, I like dogs, but at the same time there is an already long and rich legal precedent that can be talked about factually. The only portion related to "dog attacks" that I see as having much room for subjective criticism is the banning of certain breeds. Even that topic should be approached with facts first (there is already a growing legal precedent) followed by the small subjective section allowing the reader to follow leads to articles written more in the tone of a discussion (like this) rather than an encyclopedia.Syscore 05:38, 4 February 2007 (UTC)

194.130.163.67 14:00, 25 September 2006 (UTC)I don't like the conclusion drawn by the Legal Issues section. Neither of the two links support the conclusion that you are legally unable to defend yourself with a gun against a dog attack, since the dog wasn't behaving aggressively toward humans in either case. They just show you can't shoot a nonthreatening dog that's on your property. Does anyone know of any articles about people prosecuted for shooting an attacking dog? TurboCamel 00:25, 28 January 2006 (UTC)

I'm with you. Elf | Talk 00:40, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
I remember some but I don't know where to get them. I think it is at least easy to find the whole you can't fire a gun in city limits rule. The other two I have heard of also, but I don't know where to find articles. Any ideas on how to do good google news searches because I'm stumped. I believe these are accurate, though and I have seen entire articles with no references at all so maybe we should look for them together. Has anyone else heard of them? DyslexicEditor 06:39, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
Here's an idea. I own a shotgun (I do). I have a neighbor who owns two vicious pitbulls. They approach me barking and charging at me (they do reguarly but have not bitten me so they city will not do anything). What happens if I shoot the dogs as they are running at me with a shotgun? Could I get away with it? This is your basis for if it's legal to defend yourself with a gun. If someone can find proof that I can (whereas I've read I can't) then get me some proof good enough to pass a court test and I won't have to worry about my safety anymore. DyslexicEditor 06:42, 28 January 2006 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Golden Retriever maulings

Can someone please cite this: "In 1999, more child maulings by dogs were as a result of a child being left alone with a Golden Retriever than with any other breed of do". It's a bold claim that I haven't been able to confirm with a google search.

Huh, me neither. I'm going to remove it. It came from the Dog article when I copied huge chunks here wholesale, and the history on that page is so humongous because of all the ongoing vandalism that it would take a tremendous amount of work to figure out who added that info to ask for citations. Someone could proabaly do it, though, with a bit of patience. Elf | Talk 17:29, 3 February 2006 (UTC)
I don't know if this would fit into the article but one of the safest defenses I know of is a simple spray bottle with water. It used to work for me when I was jogging. Seemed every loose dog in the neighborhood wanted to chase me, and yes they can overtake a human. I got jumped upon a couple of times and a quick spray ended that. If it doesn't fit in it is still a non violent alternative in most cases.--Dakota ~ ° 07:07, 19 February 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Breed-specific attacks

The pseudo-science that is used - in an attempt to disprove that Rottweilers are inherently aggressive (which they are - and that's why people keep them) - is fundamentally flawed, and just another example of an author using statistics wrongly to 'prove' whatever point they want. A one one-hundredth percent risk of fatal attack by a Rottweiler is in fact (in terms of risk of fatality such as car accident, murder, lightning strike, etc.) fairly significant. And that is for the average US citizen: I, for example, haven't even seen a Rottweiler in about three years. Compare my average risk with that of a child who lives with a Rottweiler in the house, or in a street where one resides. That child runs a risk much higher than the national average. Similarly the author makes the mistake of calculating the risk by dividing the number of fatal attacks per year by the population of Rottweilers; this is wrong because a dog will live for roughly 15 years, in each of which it is approximately equally as likely to assault someone fatally. The risk is therefore about fifteen times what the author suggests (the figure of one one-hundredths of a percent only holds true if each dog is only capable of attack in one year of its lifespan. All-in-all, I believe that the author is erroneously using statistics to try to disprove what is a widely accepted view: that Rottweilers are more likely to kill people than pooches are. 194.130.163.67 14:00, 25 September 2006 (UTC) England_the_Great 14:09, 25 September 2006 (UTC)

It doesn't read particulairly encyclopediacly either.

[edit] Some Logical Fallacies

Statistics wouldn't suggest anything except the number of attacks. The aggressiveness of a particular breed couldn't be determined based on number of attacks alone. Some attacks can go unreported, and accessability of humans to unfamiliar dogs would be needed to be taken into account, etc.


A growing population of a certain breed does not necessarily correlate with an increase of attacks with that breed. Also the CDC published statistics note that the ratio of a certain breed's attacks with its population isn't accurate because there are no accurate census of dog breeds.

Nevertheless, statistics would be useful, to suggest # of attacks.

[edit] What to do once they attack?

There is lots of advice on prevention but what if you have messed up and some crazy dog is attacking you what is the best way to stop them? Is there a punch them on the nose type defence as there is with sharks (or is that bears I forget)? Schnizzle 16:09, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

[edit] advice

some of this article comes across as advice, which is not consistant with the tone of most wikipedia articles. instead of "Approach dogs from the front. They could be startled if approached from behind and at the least may knock you over.", it should say something like "many dogs are startled when approached from behind, causing aggression" and then allow the reader to make a sensible decision of what to do. -anon