The Rethinking Our Relationship to Pit Bulls [View all]
As recently as 50 years ago, the pit bull was Americas favorite dog. Pit bulls were everywhere. They were popular in advertising and used to promote the joys of pet-and-human friendship. Nipper on the RCA Victor label, Pete the Pup in the Our Gang comedy short films, and the flag-wrapped dog on a classic World War I poster all were pit bulls.
With National Pit Bull Awareness Day celebrated on Oct. 26, its a fitting time to ask how these dogs came to be seen as a dangerous threat.
Starting around 1990, multiple features of American life converged to inspire widespread bans that made pit bulls outlaws, called four-legged guns or lethal weapons. The drivers included some dog attacks, excessive parental caution, fearful insurance companies and a tie to the sport of dog fighting.
As a professor of humanities and law, I have studied the legal history of slaves, vagrants, criminals, terror suspects and others deemed threats to civilized society. For my books The Law is a White Dog and With Dogs at the Edge of Life, I explored human-dog relationships and how laws and regulations can deny equal protection to entire classes of beings.
In my experience with these dogs including nearly 12 years living with Stella, the daughter of champion fighting dogs I have learned that pit bulls are not inherently dangerous. Like other dogs, they can become dangerous in certain situations, and at the hands of certain owners. But in my view, there is no defensible rationale for condemning not only all pit bulls, but any dog with a single pit bull gene, as some laws do.
https://www.counterpunch.org/2022/10/24/the-rethinking-our-relationship-to-pit-bulls/