Saturday, January 29, 2011

One of My "Pet Peeves"

If next week, threatening/menacing/posing, "urban/gangsta/thugsta/(need I say) Black" media figures who have used the dogs to exaggerate their menace, started brandishing Bichon-Frises or dachshunds along with their glocks and gold teeth, insted of pitbulls and rotties, there'd be bichon-attack stories in the Enquirer in a week, children mauled by doxies...And breed laws would follow.

Via
The Military's Dishonorable Discharge of Pit Bulls

Pit bulls and the U.S. military have a long history together. On propaganda posters for World War One and Two,(an American Pit Bull Terrier represented the spirit of the American people), with slogans like, "Neutral, but not afraid of any of them" and "We're not looking for trouble, but we're ready for it."

Sergeant Stubby, a pit bull, is known as the most decorated war dog to have served the U.S. military. In the first World War, he warned his troops of incoming attacks. He captured a German spy all on his own. While recovering from injuries in the line of duty, he kept morale up among the injured soldiers and eventually returned to the trenches.

Today, it seems as though Stubby's service to his country has been forgotten, as pit bulls became the target of new military housing pet policies and were evicted from bases.

Early last year, the Pentagon approved the new pet policy that banned pit bulls, Rottweilers, Dobermans, Chows, and wolf hybrids from military housing. A number of Air Force and Navy bases followed suit. Then, last fall, the Marine Corps issued a worldwide breed ban policy. In theory, some of these policies allowed dogs already living on bases to be grandfathered in, but in practice, dogs were evicted by local enforcement or as soon as the families were relocated.

Like most breed specific legislation, this policy appeared to have been a knee-jerk reaction to dog attacks that took place on military bases. But just like civilian situations, the dog attacks were rare and the result of human irresponsibility, not any particular breed. Due to the ineffectiveness of breed specific legislation, the American Veterinary Medical Association, the American Kennel Club, the ASPCA, the Humane Society of the United States, and several other organizations have taken a position against breed bans.

Being forced to give up family pets isn't good for the morale of our troops. The Obama Administration needs to reverse the breed specific pet policy to keep military families together and restore these loyal dogs to their former, well-earned position of respect.
O'Bama's got trouble enough with BlueDawgs, he's not gonna get involved in that...

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