Letter #5
Notes: Please copy and RETYPE on your own
paper prior to sending, being sure to insert personal information
as needed. If you type this with a 10 point font it will fit on
one page.
(date)
(TO:..insert name here)
(address)
(city, state,zip)
(FROM:..Your name)
(Your address)
(your city, state, zip)
(your area code and phone number)
Dear (insert name here):
Breed-specific legislation punishes certain breeds or classifications
of dogs and their owners while overlooking bad behavior in other
breeds. While it is true that a few individuals of these so-called
"dangerous" dog breeds have done an astonishing amount
of damage when they bite, statistically very few have ever bitten
a person. Punishing the "pit bulls" and their owners because
of their potential for greater damage than a Poodle is like banning
all buses in favor of passenger cars. There are advantages and disadvantages
to either mode of transportation but we can not expect a car to
serve the same purpose as the bus.
We find it horrifying when a person is maimed or killed by a dog,
especially when the person is a child. However we rationalize our
reaction to the incident, we must remain rational enough to place
the responsibility for the tragedy directly on the people involved,
not on the animal itself. The circumstances that make a dog bite
a person vary with the situation, training, and/or environment which
the dog encounters or lives in. This stark fact remains: all breeds
and varieties of dogs can, will, and do bite.
The problem lies with the people breeding, owning, or training
dogs for purposes for which were not intended. Pit Bulls and their
kin were designed and bred to fight each other, not people. Due
to the tenacity and physicality of the Bull and Terrier breeds,
people have decided to make them one of the primary representations
of a bad dog. People use the dog to compensate for their own insecurity
and to promote a macho image. These people and their dogs should
be avoided. Backyard breeders have caught on to the popularity of
these kinds of dogs and are now turning out litter after litter
of ill-tempered mongrels just to make a quick buck. The wise buyer
avoids these dogs at all costs.
Ignorant, dangerous owners and breeders are attempting to turn
the pit bull breeds into vicious guard dogs. The breed standard,
however, considers human-aggression in these breeds to be a serious
fault. The pit bull that aggresses against a person is not a true
representative of the breed. It is entirely the owner's fault if
their mongrel has the chance to bite or attack someone. Responsible
owners and breeders work hard to uphold the standard of loyalty
and affection that should be present in the bulldog breeds.
Any Bull and Terrier breed that threatens, attacks, bites, or even
shows aggression toward a person, other than in defense of its own
people, should be neutered at the very least or, preferably, should
be destroyed. The danger in owning or being in contact with such
animal cannot be over emphasized. If, however, a Teacup Poodle exhibits
the same behavior it should receive the same treatment. Aggression
toward humans is not a behavior that should be tolerated in any
dog. Dachshunds and Chihuahuas, however small, are still capable
of inflicting serious wounds, and even killing a baby or child.
Similarly, owners who permit their dog to aggress, bite, or attack
any person should pay for it. Breed-specific legislation does nothing
to deal with the entire problem of dog attacks. It only focuses
on a dog's appearance, without regard to individual temperament
or owner responsibility.
Sincerely,
(signature)
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