Glenn GreenwaldVerified account @ggreenwald 13 Jun 2021
This person with serious anxiety disorders and other emotional problems passed on her disorders to the "pandemic dog" she adopted as a lockdown toy, then killed her because she couldn't figure out how to fix the beagle's aggression. Monstrous:
Dogs react to the people they're around. They're extremely perceptive and sensitive, especially in a new and stressful situation like being taken by unknown people to a new home. Many, many most of, my dogs react differently to people based on how they behave.
Nick Cole@RealNickCole
A Window into how They think. A metaphor for what will be done about “dogs that bite.” They are Children. Horrible, murderous, Children. And they want to be absolved of all responsibility, and told they are gods. Buy guns.
https://archive.ph/kNO0H https:// slate. com/human-interest/2021/06/dog-bite-training-behavioral-euthanasia. html
When Bonnie Came Home
Just before Christmas, I adopted a 6-year-old beagle. She was adorable—and violent. I found a resolution many choose but few acknowledge.
BY MADELINE BILIS
Even if I did somehow find someone to take Bonnie, I wondered whether it would just exacerbate her already crippling anxieties. As the weeks went by and no new options appeared, I realized I had a choice: I could send her off with a stranger one day—someone she would certainly injure, and who would perhaps end up euthanizing her anyway—or I could allow her to leave this terrifying world peacefully with someone she loves.
Behavioral euthanasia is not a decision made out of convenience. Typically, it enters the conversation once the safety situation with a dog, cat, or other animal deteriorates beyond an acceptable level of risk, said Christopher Pachel, a veterinary behaviorist with Instinct Dog Behavior & Training. There isn’t a universal approach to every situation. Often, if the police aren’t involved, it’s up to a pet’s owner to decide what level of risk they can live with.
My heart rate slowed, and something clicked. Lady was a healthy dog. Clearly, Bonnie was not. I couldn’t possibly picture her acting so carefree. I miss Bonnie dearly—and desperately wish I could’ve watched her dart around my parents’ backyard—but there’s solace in knowing she isn’t afraid anymore.
Is this the endgame of "toxic masculinity"?
Most serial murderers started with animals.
Aren’t you always pulling out that “reducing the male population to 10%” quote?
I think that quote and references to it make up at least a quarter of what I say.
I'm not convinced that there is an actual conspiracy among leading women to reduce the male population to 10%...
But I AM scarily convinced that perhaps a majority of women would happily go along with such a genocide simply because they want to hurt men or have been brainwashed by feminism.
Why aren’t you convinced? There’s mainstream media outlets promoting it, the vast majority of female politicians hate us and their groups keep talking about a day where their power eclipses ours.
I’m also convinced of that. The longer they wait, the more of a blowout it’ll be, because only the boomers will vote to save us.
Yes, but we don't call it "behavioural euthanasia" when we put down a human that attacks people, we call it "capital punishment."
I’m not sure you understood my point.
I knew this would happen when I saw the phrase "pandemic pets". To be thrown away as soon as the "crisis" is over, and they go back to their normal lives of running about endlessly with their human friends, can't have something that puts a stumbling block into those endless vay-cay-cays overseas.
And the behavioural thing - but suggest to them that we put down fucking RETARDS because they'll never be normal and HURT PEOPLE ALL THE TIME, they'll fucking ree like those goddamn retards. But DOGS CAN BE RETAUGHT AND RETRAINED.
When a dog bites, there's usually a good reason (at least in the dog's mind, usually "I thought Master needed protecting") - when a retard throws a kid into a deadly river or pushes them in front of a car, it's just because they thought it was a "funny joke".
And when it comes to barking at people, I take my dog's side, since I know I'm terrible at judging people (considering all the shit friends I used to have). Her problem is bicycles, and I think it's because she thinks they steal people.
You should continue to trust your dog's judgement.
In my experience, 99% of the time bicycles means hipsters (who are nearly all leftists) or children.
From her point of view, it makes perfect sense.
She's fine if someone's walking a bike. She doesn't care much about a bike just sitting there (but she'll watch it). But someone gets ON a bike, and rides away? She freaks. She IS getting better this year (more bikes around). Also, she's a herder.
More specifically, I think she's afraid they'll steal ME.
How is she to know humans get on those crazy things voluntarily?
I've almost seen the opposite with people like you describe, they have dogs but I can't figure out why because all they do is bitch about how much trouble they are or having to spend a fortune to board it constantly while they ignore it. This is suburbia pre-WuFlu observations I'm talking about. Maybe different in the cramped city areas.
These same people will go on and on about how I should get a dog and I just can't figure out why they suggest that as much as they complain. I don't have interest in some weird little fluff mix dog, like what a Shih Tzu, Pomeranian, Poodle mix I could call a ShitPooPoo like the stuff they come up with. If I'm living on a proper piece of country land in the future, I'll get a proper dog when it can have adequate space to enjoy.
Only time I got bit I was handing our dog a treat and he jump up to get it and happened to get my finger too...
I don't own any pets myself, but I do enjoy nature. I've pet wild Canada Geese goslings, watched over by their momma. I've watched wild deer and elk walk right by in front of me (ain't petting those, though). I've had wild snakes drink water from my cupped hands. And many more.
I have been bitten by non-bug animals three times in my life. All three were "owned" pets. And all three were brushed off by the owners as "they do that all the time".
That's not to say the wild animals are "safer" by any means, of course, some have snapped at me and/or done fake-out charges, and I admittedly am a lot more cautious around wild animals than "tame" ones, but just throwing out there... It takes an owned animal to think it's safe to attack a human without repercussion. Humans train their animals to bite humans. They might not train them intentionally to do it, but they do train them to do it.
Mine accidentally bit me one time when I was reading. I had a blanket over my legs, which I kept wiggling while concentrating on my book. She thought it was some small animal, lol.
I encountered 1 dog that bit unprovoked, but that dog had a genetic defect that caused it. It attacked without any warning and the second after it, it behaved like it had no memory of that event. Its normal behaviour was that of an oversized puppy. Unfortunately it bit a kid one day and we had to put it down because of that.
No. That's exactly what it fucking is. It's you deciding you cant be arsed to put in the necessary time, care, and work to provide a good life for the being you decided to become responsible for. And the worst thing is, this bitch will continue to believe she did the right thing, not even out of some naive belief in the bullshit she gave as her excuse, but simply because she is too mentally weak to ever let herself admit she did something that was simply evil.
Calling her a monster would be too kind to monsters.
So you can't handle the dog. That's fine. Somebody had him before you. Somebody can take him after you. You get paid to write articles so I'm sure you could find a new home for him somewhere in your audience. You could've written a different story.
I'm not going to read her excuses but she probably rationalizes that away too.
This happens when you grow up being told you know best. She couldn't admit her own mistakes; that she fucked up picking the wrong dog, and she fucked up by not acting like a grown up and actually trying to help it.
That's it.
At least this time it was a Beagle and not a pit bull. Which are fine dogs, but every young bitch believes she can handle one. This specific one couldn't even do it with a Beagle.
"And so, I had Mrs. Feinberg put to sleep. It was the most humane thing to do for both of us. No more would she be in pain, no more would she be suffering, no more would she be a disgusting je..."
She adopted a six year old dog which was already aggressive from the day she got it. If you want to blame someone because a dog that attacks people got put down, blame whoever owned the dog for the first six years of her life.