The History of Dog Discrimination

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Have you ever discriminated a dog because of it known to be mean and aggressive? Certain dog breeds have been stereotyped as vicious and dangerous, such as Pit Bulls and Rottweilers. In order to counteract these incidents, people have been enacting specific laws to ban these breeds. People look to mass media for what is a danger to society and bully breeds have become a target. These breeds have gotten a bad rap and have been discriminated because of mass media and opinions made from people against these breeds. Dog breed discrimination is a big problem in today’s society that needs to be stopped because, most known bully dog breeds are not what most people think they are; they are amazing dogs that only act different by how they are trained.
Dog discrimination dates back into the beginning of the 19th century. It all started mainly because of mass media. Mass media prejudism on dogs have made people to believe that certain breeds are portrayed as savage, bloodthirsty, man-killing beasts. For instance, in the production of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the movie has made Bloodhounds to be known as that kind of dog but in fact, Bloodhounds were used to help criminals escape and hunt down slaves who ran away. In newspapers, articles were published on Northern breeds, such as Malamutes and Huskies. These breeds were made known to be equivalent to wolves where they were known to roam freely in packs and ravenously eat children when found. These Northern breeds sometime later were forgotten and replaced by German Shepherds of WWI as a demonic dog. A TV series called “RIN TIN TIN” held back this discrimination and made this breed out to be known as an amazing helper and protector for humans. Rottweilers and Dobermans were next to being known as a...

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...ut these breeds without doing more research based on one individual dog, a whole breed of dogs would not be discriminated; every dog may be the same biologically, but they are different mentally based on education and training. Most people, who are against breed-specific discrimination in the United States and around the world, including President Barack Obama, love and support all dog breeds. If Obama can convince everyone to not be prejudiced against dogs, just like Martin Luther King Jr stopped the prejudism of all human races against each other, than it can be achieved. The decision that should be considered the most reasonable by those in debate of dog discrimination is to oppose it. All dogs should be allowed to live anywhere in the United States and every dog should be loved and cared for, just like any human wants to be treated and have a place to call home.

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