While Ezra was taking a nap in his crib, the family’s Husky that they owned for eight years attacked out of nowhere.

“And to just bring awareness that it could be any dog at any time. Completely unprovoked, no matter what the history is,” Chloe said.

  • The Assman
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    8320 days ago

    Same thing could have happened to us, except we kept our 90 lbs GSD the fuck away from our newborn. “It could be any dog at any time” uh… no shit? Genetically it’s a fucking wolf. Use your fucking brains people.

    If this sounds insensitive, well it is. A license should be required to possess both dogs and children.

    • @Obi@sopuli.xyz
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      1820 days ago

      Yeah I love dogs and I really miss having some, but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t glad we didn’t have one when the kid was born. Not only for the safety aspect and not having to deal with making sure the dog and baby were safe, but also one less layer of having to care for another being.

    • @Bosht@lemmy.world
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      420 days ago

      I have both and agree with your statement. I had a paragraph typed up but it’s a lot to edit and it’s late. Call me lazy. The tl;dr version is supporting evidence for the dogs portion, and outlines that people need to have access to abortion, and/or screening on if they’re responsible enough to have kids. And now it’s a paragraph again. Ugh.

  • Drusas
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    5920 days ago

    It may seem like no reason to us, but the dog had some reason.

    It could be something as easily overlooked as suddenly diverting your attention and energy from the dog to the new child. Dog doesn’t understand, so the child becomes competition.

      • @Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Like 95% of these “studies” the results are completely useless.

        Exactly like studies dealing with everything else, unless it is normalized “per 1000” etc. Comparing extremely popular dog breeds to rare ones needs to take that into account…

      • @Zannsolo@lemmy.world
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        319 days ago

        Kinda surprised Australian cattle dogs weren’t in the list. Mine is great with our 5mo but we wouldn’t leave him alone with her and we always pay close attention when she gets close to him. He ignores stuff she does that would cause him to warn us off.

        • Australian cattle dogs are temperamental but also a somewhat rare breed ive got two and while I trust one with my life and the other to mind her own business im still iffy about the one who would try to save me. Mainly cause hes completely neurotic love the boy though.

    • @pulaskiwasright@lemmy.ml
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      3019 days ago

      Most people don’t consider this to be a danger because it’s such a rare situation that it’s newsworthy when it happens.

      • @Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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        2719 days ago

        It’s not actually that rare. I mean, the death part is more unusual, but Dogs bite kids for no good reason all the damn time. Dogs should not be allowed around children unsupervised, period. It doesn’t matter how many times “it’s been fine” - all it takes is once.

        • @cmbabul@lemmy.world
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          919 days ago

          Nothing with free will that isn’t another human is a potential danger to a baby. There are obviously tons of pets that don’t and having watched a lot of animals be interact with children under extremely strict supervision and controlled conditions I do think most pets do understand what the baby is and wouldn’t hurt it you can never know how they will react. Huskies are really smart and temperamental from what i understand, it’s insane to leave one near a baby

          • @Halosheep@lemm.ee
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            518 days ago

            I have a husky, he’s a giant lovable teddy bear made of fluff who is a giant coward in front of any sort of adversity. It’s hard to imagine him hurting anything intentionally. He plays with my 2 cats and hasn’t intentionally harmed them in any way.

            But then, I’ve also seen him catch a squirrel and crush it’s skull right in front of me, just because.

            Dogs are still animals, and the bigger ones can still be dangerous even if they seem friendly and safe with the right conditions.

          • femtech
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            -219 days ago

            Even humans as well. No unsupervised access to any babies. every move must be monitored. /S

            • TheHarpyEagle
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              18 days ago

              Being a good pet owner and/or parent means understanding that animals can be unpredictable. It’s not a slight to the animal, it’s reality. .

              • femtech
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                18 days ago

                Up to a point, I’m not going to be a helicopter mom and not let my kid be constantly under surveillance. Like I’m going to see how and teach my kid as I have already done how to interact with animals. I let her get scratched by a farm cat as I told her to leave it alone and it was done with pets. She now teaches other kids how to handle animals, be gentle, and understand body language. On the other side, with my great Dane mix I introduced him to my kid and let him know she was fragile from the hospital. He has only hurt her once and that was because she went outside by herself when I told her not to(I was showing )and played ball with him. Was running with the ball and he knocked her down. She learned 2 lessons, to not go outside without me being ready and to not run with the ball.

                I grew up with my moms friend that raised mastiffs and I would explore the open land she had with 6-10 giant dogs from 3rd to 5th grade unsupervised. Just go to her house after school and feed/play with the dogs until my mom came after work. Now I’m not some boomer saying back in my day, but coming from a millennial seeing adults of helicopter parents struggle with being on their own.

                And there is a difference between a kid and a babie, my first comment was more directed at them saying anything with free will, other than a human. Not like humans are any better. I trust an unknown dog over a human, I can read them better and react accordingly.

            • @Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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              819 days ago

              We joke, but then I think about someone I know and their piece of shit oldest son. He was clearly psychopathic around the age of four wanting to hurt babies and dogs. It never went away, and he frequently beats his younger siblings and strangles his youngest sibling. Parents don’t do shit about it, can’t hurt his feelings.

              • @Zannsolo@lemmy.world
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                619 days ago

                Sounds like a killer in the making, just watched a doc about a kid like that that went on to shoot up a mall.

            • @Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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              318 days ago

              You were absolutely right up until the “/s”…

              Humans pose as great if not more of a risk than animals to babies.

              • femtech
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                118 days ago

                I mean yeah, but I wrote the s to say I’m not pro surveillance.

        • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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          619 days ago

          I wonder if it was an unfixed male. It’s not uncommon in the animal world for other males to kill young they didn’t sire.

  • @Zorque@lemmy.world
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    3620 days ago

    “And to just bring awareness that it could be any dog at any time. Completely unprovoked, no matter what the history is,” Chloe said.

    Reminds me of that Onion article that pops up every time there’s a mass shooting in the US: “There’s no possible way we could have prevented this, says only country where this routinely happens”.

    Dogs have co-existed with humans longer than just about any other domesticated animal. They don’t do things for no reason. If the parents didn’t see any signs, it’s because they weren’t looking hard enough.

    Dogs can absolutely be dangerous. They’re often bred and trained to be dangerous. They don’t just spontaneously decide to be dangerous, especially after eight fucking years.

    • @ArbiterXero@lemmy.world
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      3720 days ago

      Even people sometimes just wake up day and snap for reasons beyond our control.

      Now you’re generally right, most of these cases there’s some meaningful details missing and the “no history of attacks” is a lie.

      We just can’t broadly apply that because we don’t know which one isn’t a lie.

    • @ChexMax@lemmy.world
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      2820 days ago

      Sometimes the thing that sets a dog off is just that they’re older and confused. Dogs do sometimes just snap with no warnings, same as humans.

    • @Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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      1819 days ago

      Yes they do. Any dog can have a trigger you simply have not seen yet. I literally had my rescue dog bite me after 7ish years because I startled him once. Absolutely zero signs of aggression prior to that. Every dog has a line and it is impossible to know what that like is or if it has changed.

    • TheHarpyEagle
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      1018 days ago

      I think this is actually a more dangerous mindset. Any animal can be unpredictable, can do something you’ve never seen them do before. Maybe there were signs, but maybe there weren’t. Either way, it’s dangerous to wait for a “sign” before you start to set boundaries on how your pet interacts with any person.

            • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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              -319 days ago

              So it’s more like a semantics(what words mean) thing tripping you up.

              Got it.

              If you stand on your head, then pyramids look like ice cream cones.

              Totally.

              • @the_crotch@sh.itjust.works
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                419 days ago

                “there was no reason, but here’s the reason” isn’t semantics. It’s just you contradicting yourself one sentence later.

                • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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                  -1019 days ago

                  Yes, semantics, I get it.

                  You need things strictly defined for you but aren’t willing to provide parameters or ask questions.

                  You built a sand castle and then knocked it down all by yourself.

                  Very impressive.

  • @iheartneopets@lemm.ee
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    3519 days ago

    Christ, my heart goes out to these parents. I cannot imagine the hell they’re living right now, makes me sick thinking about my own 6 week old. I’ll definitely be rethinking leaving him alone with our border collies from now on. It was so big of them to decide on organ donation; they’re basically using their loss to save other families.

    • TheHarpyEagle
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      1318 days ago

      Yes, as much as I love dogs, unfortunately they can be unpredictable even if we’ve had them for years. Whether it’s aggression (possibly around food or toys), prey drive, playing too rough, or just pure accident, they can cause a lot of harm to small bodies. I would not leave any dog unattended when an infant.

  • Yeah, dogs have a prey drive, and babies are unfortunately right in that “looks like prey” zone. Because, ya know, babies are prey. Your dog will fuck up a baby for the same reason that they’ll fuck up a squirrel or a cat.

    • @Luvs2Spuj@lemmy.world
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      318 days ago

      Husky (the dog in this incident) prey drive is ridiculous too. I could imagine new parents might also be unable to give that sort of dog the stimulation it needs to be less likely to misbehave. * I am aware of how misbehaving is a massive understatement in this context. *

    • andyburke
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      20 days ago

      Well, have an internet one from me - I’m just gonna take this as the prompt to close the tab without clicking through and be done on the net for the night. Thanks, buddy.

  • @inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world
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    Dogs are dangerous. Every goddamn time I got bit while working delivery the onwer would say "Oh he never bites! He is a good boy!" all the way up until a client dog attack required surgery, forever changed how I walk and keeps me in constant pain 24/7.

    I fucking hate dogs, but I hate even more how dog owners make excuses for their dogs that put other people in danger.

  • @Matriks404@lemmy.world
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    718 days ago

    I am always fucking nervous when somebody leaves a child for a minute near me and my dog. And let me tell you: My dog is even more nervous. Just don’t.

    • @Matriks404@lemmy.world
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      718 days ago

      I wouldn’t. But of course I wouldn’t want to see that dog ever again, no matter how much “good boy” he was.

    • @Luvs2Spuj@lemmy.world
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      418 days ago

      Vengeance is a disgusting trait in people, just saying.

      It’s also not the dogs fault, as controversial as that might seem to some people without further explanation or a bit of reflection.

      • @JigglySackles@lemmy.world
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        117 days ago

        Maybe, but I have lines I won’t have crossed and killing my family is one of those. Instinct or not that dog is not getting the chance to do that again.

        • @Luvs2Spuj@lemmy.world
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          117 days ago

          In this scenario you’ve imagined here though, the rage you feel towards the dog is actually caused by your own negligence. Reflect on that if you like, or don’t. Either way I won’t return to this post because it’s a depressing subject I would rather move on from.

          • @JigglySackles@lemmy.world
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            116 days ago

            You’re really leaving it? Because you sure love judging others for it. This wouldn’t happen in my situation because I have had 3 kids and a dog the whole time and they’ve all lived. But let’s assume I had been negligent. I’d still kill the fuckin dog. Because any dog with that kind of problems doesn’t need to go to a pound to do it to someone else.