Fear is crushing life and the truth

Posted December 17th, 2013 in Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

Yesterday at the latest Pasadena City Council meeting a woman pulled me aside and wanted to talk to me about Pit Bulls. She promised that she was a dog lover, but that Pit Bulls were different. She repeatedly told me that she was “scared” of them, and that she is always “hearing things” that clearly serve to fulfill her own mind’s accepted prophecy. I was being really nice to her, and it was actually quite a cordial conversation, but she wouldn’t give me an inch on the subject while repeatedly reverting back to what she’s “heard” instead.

She noted a personal friend’s experience with 1 dog from over 15 years ago and held onto it like it was evidence to condemn them all. I asked her if she’d at least acknowledge for me that there were millions of these dogs in and around the country. She said no, that she couldn’t. She told me that she fell out of an elevator years back and messed up her leg, and that the last thing she wants to worry about is having to be attacked by a Pit Bull. Coincidentally she was at this meeting to request a ban on leaf blowers. As she was telling me about her elevator story I was wondering to myself if she ever desired to ban elevators too.

She conceded that my dogs were probably nice, but that they were the exception. I tried to tell her that 1 visit to any shelter of her choice would prove that logic wrong, but she blew my point off, telling me yet again that what she’s “heard” is far too much to ever have her view change. She told me that she’s uninterested in meeting any Pit Bulls because she’s scared of them.

I’m still not quite sure why she pulled me aside, because she was so extraordinarily stuck in her ways and flatly opposed to some of my most basic points. It’s like she wanted to see if I had a magical answer to her astronomical fear, and when I suggested the obvious, that she just go meet a few, she immediately wrote me off as someone who just doesn’t get it. Maybe she was so oblivious to how her own position made her look that she genuinely thought her opinion would somehow serve to rub off on me instead? Could that have actually been it? I don’t know, but it was odd nonetheless.

The 2nd meeting started and our communication came to a close. I was so sad to see someone so terrified and living in literal fear over this notion that millions of dogs are bad, and further, that they are out to get her. What kind of life is that? And why does my dog have to be maligned because another person is out there being so closed-minded and fearful of the world around them? It’s quite depressing and ridiculous. The folks with their perspectives so tightly crafted in whatever corner of whatever world, with no desire to hear or even think on another point of view, are the same folks that refuse any kind of interaction or experiences that would possibly lend to shedding some of that irrational fear. Fear is so devastating to this world. It kills everything.

Discrimination is discrimination, and if it’s not then you are walking in circles

Posted December 4th, 2013 in Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

Here’s the thing. And this is just my opinion obviously, but something I deeply believe. To be an effective Pit Bull advocate you need to oppose discrimination. That goes for both dog discrimination and people discrimination. Why is this the case? Well first, because it’s wrong. But secondly, because you can’t be out asking people to not discriminate against a certain dog, while in the same sentence or paragraph you so readily discriminate against people, and on a mass scale. That discredits your intent. When people negatively speak in generalities about other people and cultures or statuses they are literally complaining about millions of individual people, but as a group, and in doing so giving the impression that they are all universally like (insert here). For example, you cannot cite the x-number of dog-related fatalities in 2013, which is under 30 nationwide, and blame it on all low-income people. When someone says “low-income people” they are quite easily speaking about tens of millions of people. You don’t know them. One may be fantastic while another may be the devil’s seed. Just as rich people carry the same individual attributes. My best guess optimistically says that most people who have pets are good people who love animals, and while they may not treat their pets exactly like you treat yours, or while they might not meet a certain standard that you feel you’d want to set, to unfairly alienate any endless amount of the country is hugely unhelpful and basically serves to criticize a lot of good homes run by people that do love and provide comfort to their animals. Does education and information or idea sharing make it better? For sure. Does communication amongst each other, and the viewing of one another as fellow human beings and not someone that you’re looking down on make it better? For sure. Does more access to choices and less intimidation from government make it better? For sure. Also, talking about people by what they visually look like is more discrimination, which is exactly how these dogs are vilified. It’s a circle and cycle of harm. Please oppose discrimination in all facets of your lives. Otherwise your inconsistency is going to be used against you by anyone paying attention.

Pasadena paves the way for breed-discriminatory legislation

Posted December 2nd, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

So last Monday, November 25th to be exact, the Pasadena City Council voted 6-1 to have their staff draft a “breed-specific” mandatory spay and neuter law against Pit Bulls. Only Councilwoman Jacque Robinson voted against the measure. Casting aside the fact that the name of this type of legislation is a total misnomer, as there’s hardly ever anything specific about any of it, it was still readily approved for creation and will now likely be defended by many people calling themselves “dog advocates.” Another misnomer apparently.

More disgusting than that, many “Pit Bull advocates” will publicly defend this idea (and the coming legislation) on its spaying and neutering components alone, while ignoring the fact that its established end is to legally phase out these types of dogs from communities while endlessly vilifying them in the process of attempting to do so. Worse, Councilman Steve Madison, who brought this newest idea to the Council, has publicly lobbied for a Pit Bull ban for at least 2 years.

Councilman Steve Madison, from 10/1/2012:

Time after time, a Pit Bull chews a kid to death somewhere, and I’m not going to let that happen in Pasadena. I would have no problem saying Pasadena’s a special place: If you want to live here, come, but don’t bring your Pit Bull.

Councilman Steve Madison, from 7/8/2013:

We read about it over and over and over how these Pit Bull breeds kill either small children or elderly people. It happened earlier this year in Antelope Valley, and it’s always happening, and I don’t want that to happen in Pasadena. I don’t think this ordinance is as effective as what I had hoped, which was a ban, but I think we have to do what we can.

Councilman Steve Madison, from 10/8/2013:

This is going to happen in Pasadena if we don’t do something about it. At least fifty percent of the fatal dog attacks on humans are caused by Pit Bull breeds. There’s no sound policy reason why a community like Pasadena shouldn’t be allowed to ban such dangerous animals. We should also keep pursuing in Sacramento a wake up call to state legislature so that local communities can decide whether or not they want to have these Pit Bulls that cause such a disproportionate share of fatal and severe injuries on humans.

Councilman Steve Madison, from 10/9/2013:

It’s only a matter of time until we have another attack in Pasadena. But, inexplicably, state law prohibits municipalities from adopting breed-specific legislation. So the spay and neuter ordinance is a tepid response to an urgent problem. At present, it’s all we can do, supposedly. We should change this state law and then immediately ban Pit Bulls from Pasadena before we have another attack that might cause death or severe injury to a kid or a senior.

I know these things because I am involved. I try to provide everyone with the proof, going so far as to provide video proof (in the cases of both Riverside County and City), and no one even watches it. I’ll now be criticized for daring to criticize anyone supporting this type of a law, and instead of hearing what I’m actually saying they’ll simply turn me off because I am putting their position under a spotlight.

This vote comes on the heels of 2 separate op-eds from the Pasadena Weekly, both of which I responded to but was not published, that flagrantly demonized millions of dogs while ignoring the consistent roots of each cited incident that they used as their evidence for demonization.

They treat us as if we are dumb, and many of you let them.

My written response was put out on my website on November 17th. I called the Pasadena Weekly the next day and asked how to go about getting it published on their website. They gave me the editor’s email. I emailed him and got no response. I also emailed the specific authors of the 2 hit-pieces, 1 being a secondary editor of the website, and got no response. I left my response in their comment sections. On November 26th, having no clue that the Council had already voted the day before, I sent my writeup to all 7 of the Council members. A field representative of Margaret McAustin was the only person to reply back to me, simply saying that she’d “pass it along.” My point in detailing all of these steps is to simply point out that no one even bothered to tell me that they were voting on 11/25.

In the end was my missing the meeting where they voted on whether to draft this law my own fault? I guess so. But it certainly wasn’t for lack of caring or trying to engage the participants. So if I, who runs this website and cares deeply about these issues, can’t even get a clear idea of when an actual vote was going to be taking place, how were the citizens of Pasadena made aware? They weren’t, of course, and now they have to work from the backwards position of already having the majority of the Council on board with wanting to draft more draconian legislation into existence.

This comes, even as the city of Pasadena already has a breed-neutral dangerous dog law on its books. I pointed this out to the City Council last year while giving a public comment during the meeting where this was originally being discussed. This also comes, even as the City Council claimed on October 7th that they were going to “hold off another six months before considering the issue again.” The “issue” being the mandatory spaying and neutering of ALL dogs. Yet they lied, and then hit their city with this vote 6 weeks later, and while also changing the rhetoric from “all dogs” to “Pit Bulls.” Nice. And you wonder why I missed the vote? Well, it’s because they said they were (again) putting it off! Guess not!

So here we are… I will be attending the next City Council meeting with the sole intention of giving a public comment about this issue. I hope you will join me. The next meeting, as far as I can tell, will be on December 9th. Coincidentally there was a meeting previously scheduled for today but according to their website it has been cancelled. In the mean time you can email the Council members at the addresses below. Keep in mind that Councilwoman Jacque Robinson was the only one to oppose this discriminatory legislation.

Pasadena City Council
100 N. Garfield Ave., Pasadena, CA 91109 at 6:30pm (they meet privately for an hour beforehand) in City Hall Council Chamber S249.
They potentially meet every Monday.
Next meeting: 12/9/2013.

Pasadena Public Safety Committee
100 N. Garfield Ave., Pasadena, CA 91109 at 4:15pm in City Hall Council Chamber S249.
They meet the 3rd Monday of every month.
Next meeting: 12/16/2013.

Pasadena Legislative Policy Committee
100 N. Garfield Ave., Pasadena, CA 91109 at 5:30pm in Fair Oaks Conference Room S039.
They meet the 4th Wednesday of every month.

I’ll close by asking the people that “have no problem” with this type of nonsense to please come out to the next meeting (where it’s actually on the agenda, could be a few months) and physically sit there and listen to them generically talk about all Pit Bulls in a general sense. See what you think then. Can you please do that? Listening to Councilman Steve Madison speak on this issue is literally like watching Colleen Lynn from a political bench. And some of you folks support it, which inevitably supports him and his ideas!? You need to wake up. I don’t mean to insult you, but you insult me by supporting legislation that unjustly vilifies my dogs. It’s ludicrous.

To contact the Pasadena City Council:

Mayor Bill Bogaard
bbogaard@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4311
Jacque Robinson, District 1
district1@cityofpasadena.net, jacquerobinson@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4444
Margaret McAustin, District 2
mmcaustin@cityofpasadena.net, mlmorales@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4742
John Kennedy, District 3
johnjkennedy@cityofpasadena.net, christiancruz@cityofpasadena.net, jwest@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4738
Gene Masuda, District 4
gmasuda@cityofpasadena.net, nsullivan@cityofpasadena.net
Victor Gordo, District 5
vgordo@cityofpasadena.net, vdelacuba@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4741, 626-831-8609
Steve Madison, District 6
smadison@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4739
Terry Tornek, District 7
ttornek@cityofpasadena.net
626-441-4802

Further contacts with the city:

City Manager Michael Beck
mbeck@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4333
Assistant City Manager Julie Gutierrez
jgutierrez@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4333
Assistant City Manager Steve Mermell
smermell@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4333
City Attorney Michele Beal Bagneris
mbagneris@cityofpasadena.net
626-744-4141
Director of Public Works Siobhan Foster
sfoster@cityofpasadena.net
Director of Public Health Eric Walsh
ewalsh@cityofpasadena.net

More perspective and things to consider regarding Riverside’s BSL

Posted November 28th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh


For further information read both here and here, and watch my debate with Riverside City Councilman Mike Gardner, either the full version or the condensed version.

A letter to Mike Gardner, a letter to California

Posted November 19th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Media, Prejudice by Josh

A few weeks ago I had the unique opportunity of actually debating a sitting Riverside City Councilman, Mike Gardner, over the issues of Pit Bulls and breed-specific legislation. A few days prior to our debate Mr. Gardner wrote an op-ed on the local government news website PublicCEO.com explaining his “rationale” for supporting the ordinance. With our debate now in the past, and now having met the man personally, I wanted to respond to his write-up.

First, let me give credit where credit is due and acknowledge that Mr. Gardner actually stepped up to the plate to have a hotly contested discussion in a fairly public medium. Most politicians would never do this, so for that he deserves credit. Secondly, I’d like to say that he came off to me as a nice guy. With that being said, Gardner still introduced the county law verbatim into the city side of proceedings, and is working in lockstep with both the Board of Supervisors and shelter director Robert Miller.

After sitting down, and before the cameras came on, Mr. Gardner asked me about losing Sway. I thought this was an interesting icebreaker, as we were both there to debate each other over the issue of dog discrimination, and Mr. Gardner was about to defend laws that aim to negatively target dogs that look like my dog Sway, who he is now asking me about. This communication was all friendly, and I didn’t take it negative, but it was interesting. It was then that he shared a personal sentiment about recently losing his own family dog, a Rhodesian Ridgeback.

As I’m sharing my condolences for his loss, I’m thinking to myself, how can this guy be here? How does he not understand the fallacies of targeting certain dogs based on their appearance and physical characteristics? A Rhodesian Ridgeback is a pretty hefty dog that, on average, weighs about 30 pounds more (and stands much taller) than an American Pit Bull Terrier. Rhodesian Ridgebacks were also bred to hunt Lions in South Africa.

I say none of this to criticize Ridgebacks in any way, as they are great dogs. Only that I’m not the one calling for, and/or attributing to, a witch hunt of any breed, type, or term of dog. That’s not me. That’s him, the rest of his Council, the Board of Supervisors, the tyrannical shelter director, and the majority of the media!

Anyways, Gardner starts his op-ed by noting that all breeds can (and do) bite people and other pets. But he follows that up with how seldom “you hear” of serious attacks on people or other pets by other breeds. He then admits that there are “some great Pit Bulls” and agrees that it’s “the owner, not the dog, who often creates problems.” He ends this thought by saying that there are “many more” bites by Pit Bulls than “other breeds and mixes.”

Before this goes any further, let’s flesh out a few points that are highly instrumental in any debate on this topic. It needs noted that what falls under the term “Pit Bull” is not any specific breed of dog. It’s rather the exact opposite, and this term is loosely thrown around by tagging any muscular dog, and usually at the total discretion of some individual who is not even qualified to make such a determination. Secondly, when the media reports that a “Pit Bull” has been involved in anything, there’s usually not any evidence or even an image of the alleged offending dog or dogs. This term still gets reported, and then parroted, around the news cycle (and now the internet) and is multiplied sometimes hundreds of times throughout different media platforms and outlets. Animal control officers have also told the ASPCA (per them) that when they contact the media about serious bites and attacks involving other types of dogs, this information mostly goes ignored, and that most media have “no interest” in reporting on incidents that do not involve Pit Bulls. This is important context because when you hear of all the offensive stats about human fatalities and serious attacks, this information is solely derived from media reports!

Now back to Mr. Gardner… His claim about “what you hear” is a total misnomer. How often is “what you hear” inaccurate? Why is “what you hear” driving this debate, when so many other things (discussed below) could (and should) drive it? Further, his claim about dog bites and what is or isn’t caused by a Pit Bull is a total fabrication. There is absolutely no database that keeps track of dog bites, at all, and especially not by breed. This doesn’t exist! So how can he make such a generalized claim? It’s either a total lie on his part, or more likely, something inaccurate that “he heard” from someone else. See how that goes?

Gardner’s next paragraph about spaying and neutering is relevant to all dogs of any breed or type. Whether you agree totally with his specific claims here is irrelevant. What’s much more relevant is the fact that he is talking about issues that pertain to all dogs, not just dogs deemed by him to be Pit Bulls. I’m all for the spaying and neutering of dogs and cats, my own dogs certainly are. But I’m against mandating it from government because it’s shown time and time again not to work at addressing any of the issues that the legislators claim to want to address (shelter killing, dog bites, actions of reckless owners). These laws also hit low-income communities hardest, which I get into further if you actually watch our debate.

When Mike Gardner mentions how many “Pit Bulls” Riverside kills in their shelters, he fails to even remotely realize that on many levels this is an utter failure by shelter director Robert Miller. Like I stated to both the Riverside County Board of Supervisors and to Mr. Gardner himself, the main Riverside shelter has 3 buildings that are off limits to the public. Here they are. The dogs that they store in these buildings are primarily dogs that they’ve deemed to be Pit Bull-type dogs. These dogs do not sit there for a few days prior to being moved to the publicly viewable adoption floor. These dogs are stashed away from public view and then killed without ever being made available for adoption or acknowledged by anyone.

That’s not to say that there aren’t any selected Pit Bulls out in the public buildings, because there are. But Robert Miller cannot with any speck of a straight face proclaim that “they are never adopted out,” or any other reworking of such a defeatist lie, while also having such control over their ultimate fate. This type of disingenuousness simply takes his massive failures as a shelter manager and packages them into little talking points that aim to universally blame the public, and worse, the dogs themselves, for a predicament that he has full control over!

Make no mistake about it, Robert Miller is being paid over $300,000 a year to relentlessly kill dogs. So don’t you dare, Mr. Gardner or any other politician, bring “intake” and “kill” numbers to the public as if they justify further criminalization of these innocent animals. That is such a horrendous thing to do. This is what hate groups like DogsBite.org, a website where most of the anti-Pit Bull propaganda originates from, are out consistently trying to do. It’s cowardly and it’s a brutally evasive attempt at using language to achieve an ultimate goal. To state that it’s “not fair to the dog,” while criminalizing millions of innocent dogs (Pit Bulls) in your process, is the definition of a sham. If Mr. Gardner takes away anything from our debate then I hope he takes away that.

Mandatory sterilization of Pit Bulls, or of any dog, does not reduce attacks on people or pets. What does is the enforcement of actual laws (many times already existing but rarely enforced) that focus on the individual behavior of both the animal itself, and more importantly, its owner. Enforcing the leash laws, the anti-chaining law, and the “dangerous dog” law would go a long way in addressing issues that could possibly manifest into something more severe. Mandating the sterilization of any dog caught running loose would also be a worthy idea. These are all concepts that are based around responsibility. Human fatalities are always preceded by an utter lack thereof.

When we are talking about human fatalities attributed to any dog of any breed or type then we are talking almost exclusively about either a roaming at large dog or dogs, or chained and tethered resident dogs who are not members of anyone’s family. When you add in the non-supervision of little children this almost runs the entire gamut. Oftentimes when looking in the rearview of a fatality there are prior incidents and citations attributed to the attacking dog, and yet no enforcement or follow-up at any level. Look for yourself.

Inexplicably the city of Riverside already has a mandatory spay and neuter law for all dogs and this law goes totally unenforced. What? Why would any municipality pass a breed-specific sterilization law when they have a sterilization law for all breeds already in place? On top of that, both city and county have the prior mentioned “dangerous dog” law that is exclusively meant to deal with dogs of all breeds who have individually shown a propensity for causing incidents. It, too, goes ignored.

Mr. Gardner will be quick to point out that the mandatory spay and neuter law for all dogs in the city of Riverside is a “secondary enforcement” law, but in the debate I actually pointed that out before he did. We all know that it’s a secondary enforcement, which means that it goes unenforced unless a dog comes into their department with another violation, but it doesn’t have to be! The very City Council, which Mike Gardner sits on, has the ability to change the enforcement level of this already existing law at any time. Thoughts on the effectiveness of such a law aside, it already exists for all dogs in the city! Pit Bulls are dogs, they fall under the law. If it is so good then simply enforce it. This is common sense.

Here lies the truth… This isn’t about spay and neuter, or saving shelter dogs, or decreasing killing, or increasing public safety, or being in any way genuine. This is about targeting the “Pit Bull” by singling them out and branding them as “bad,” both in the minds of their constituents, and more broadly, in the minds of the public in general.

In closing… What I’d say to Mike, and also to any other politician around the country who may be considering this type of legislation: Educate, reach out to the communities, make them a part of the process and show your genuine care and concern by explaining the need to be more responsible. Enforce your existing laws. Shun breed discrimination. Shun grandstanding on the opportunity to provide a false sense of security. Shun exploitation, fear-mongering and hate. Look at the individual incidents, look at the roots of the problem, don’t embrace the philosophy of scapegoating an entire group of anything. That is unjust. Think on that rule in the context of anything else. Is that okay? Breed-specific legislation is fundamentally the opposite of what it states. It’s a con-game that targets dogs that can’t even be scientifically identified, driven by unverified media mentions that then get parroted back as statistics meant solely to vilify millions of innocent dogs. Further, dogs are property. And the United States Constitution allows for due process of law. The due process failures in these ordinances are often times off the charts. Shifting the burden of proof, which is actually written into the Riverside law, is the most un-American thing that you could ever do.

I know what this is, we should all know what this is. This is a circumvention of state anti-BSL law, out masquerading as discriminatory spay and neuter. These people who are pushing these laws are people with an eventual banning-agenda. It’s patently obvious. Maybe Mike Gardner is not. Maybe he is being used. But plenty of them–John Tavaglione, Jeff Stone, Marion Ashley, Steve Adams, Steve Madison, amongst others–have a banning-agenda. This stuff creates precedent, which will then likely lead to an attempt at a statewide mandatory sterilization law for all Pit Bulls, which will then likely lead to an attempt at rescinding the current language in the California state law that prohibits the banning of dogs by breed. Please wake up California. This is so obvious.

Aurora columnist Dave Perry is a fool

Posted November 18th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Media, Prejudice by Josh

While Aurora, Colorado considers getting rid of their discriminatory ban that has done nothing to assist in the concept of public safety, local columnist Dave Perry wants everyone to know that any dog that he deems to be a Pit Bull is probably hiding behind a tree ready to kill you. His latest column in the Aurora Sentinel is chock-full of hate, vagueness, fear, doublespeak and outright deception.

Here is just a few responses to his most asinine claims:

“Well-organized lobby”?
No one needs a “lobby” when the absolute truth shows that millions and millions of these animals are completely innocent and have done nothing negative to anyone. The “lobby” portion of this debate are people like yourself, promoting statistics from hate groups like DogsBite.org (another “lobby”), in an effort to criminalize millions of dogs through legislation for the actions of 0.0000000001% of the same dogs that are visually identified (by you) to fit the determination of a “Pit Bull.”

“The evidence is unwavering and indisputable”?
Again, total opposite day hogwash. Actually, evidence shows that 99.9 infinity 9 percent of these dogs are innocent. You want to talk about evidence? Evidence actually shows that any dog who has ever fatally killed a person almost exclusively is a roaming or a chained dog that is acting under not a lick of supervision from its owner. That’s evidence. The “evidence” that you use against Pit Bulls is cherry-picked nonsense that hardly ever gets verified on any level.

“Pit Bull owners have conspired to perpetuate a host of myths”?
This sounds like what you are doing, by typecasting entire groups of literal millions as one. That’s common sense. I know it hurts to be called out.

It’s quite ironic that the people that soak themselves in doublespeak all too often end up accusing others of the exact acts that they routinely carry out. They are folks without mirrors, and without a shred of conscience or ability for self-examination. They are folks who scoff at questioning, and only want to pay attention to the bits and pieces of information that (in their minds) confirm what they already think.

Finally, you claimed that people who adopt Pit Bulls are “misguided.” Really? Listen to yourself. Listen to how extraordinarily judgmental you sound. I’m not even going to provide other contextually relevant versions of that statement, people are certainly smart enough to do that on their own.

Dave Perry, for all intents and purposes, you are a fool. So with that, I’m not going to bother with calling such a flagrantly arrogant and ignorant person anything but a fool. Fool.

If you’d like to reach the fool you can call him at 303-750-7555 or email him at dperry@aurorasentinel.com.

A call for common sense in Pasadena

Posted November 17th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

In October of this year the Pasadena Weekly published dual articles, a week apart, which took aim at Pit Bulls. One began by talking about a mandatory spay and neuter law for all dogs, which then quickly led the author (Andre Coleman) down a path of repeatedly vilifying Pit Bulls. The other, written by John Grula, was far more egregious and erroneous than the first, which was also egregious and erroneous enough.

They both had a central character, Pasadena City Councilman Steve Madison, who routinely drives this type of a conversation into the proverbial ditch. Mr. Madison began publicly announcing his desire to ban Pit Bulls from the city a little over a year ago. Although state law prohibits this, he repeatedly put out statements noting his desire to accomplish this idea. This quickly shifted to a breed-specific mandatory spay and neuter plan once he realized that that was legally his only option. Citizens of the community, myself included, went in November of 2012 and gave public comments to the City Council in an effort to confront Madison’s witch hunt mentality and give proper perspective to this multifaceted issue. The rest of the Council tended to agree with common sense, and tabled Madison’s proposal altogether. It was stated that they would reconvene at a later time to discuss a breed-neutral law, whatever it would be, that didn’t target specific breeds or types of dogs.

Fast forward a year and I’m coincidentally made aware of these discriminatory write-ups while out on a massive pack walk at the Rose Bowl (also in Pasadena) that took place on National Pit Bull Awareness Day. This walk included well over 100 dogs and their owners and came off without a hitch. Imagine that.

Mr. Coleman’s article quickly went off the rails and into a pseudo-profiling regurgitation of cherry-picked information taken from Pit Bull hate group DogsBite.org. Within this article he actually quotes Councilman Madison, who is still out on his banning crusade, by quoting him quoting DogsBite.org. Nice. Madison then references Riverside County’s new unconstitutional law, while also exploiting the death of a Colton boy and the serious injuries of a Corona boy. He quickly attributes both incidents to “Pit Bulls” and then fearmongers the readers by stating that it’s “only a matter of time” until a Pasadena citizen is killed. Madison wraps up his discriminatory rubbish with another call to “change state law” and “immediately ban Pit Bulls from Pasadena.”

What Councilman Steve Madison repeatedly fails to ever mention though is the quite relevant circumstances behind almost every fatality ever attributed to any type of dog. Roughly there are about 30 of these horrible incidents a year in the United States. The 2 instances that were referenced above by Madison non-suprisingly fit the 2 most common scenarios that are almost always behind any human fatality (or serious attack) involving a dog. These are preventable circumstances being undoubtedly created by reckless individual owners, but pushers of breed-specific legislation never want to look at the real issues.

In the case of the Colton boy, this was a 2-year-old who somehow crawled out of a screenless window and ended up in a backyard where 7 resident dogs (media claimed that 4 of them were Pit Bulls) were chained and fenced. These were not family pets. There was no adult supervision whatsoever. With the Corona boy, he was out riding his bicycle when he was attacked by 2 roaming at large “Australian Shepherd-Pit Bull mixes” who had escaped their owner’s property. Never does Madison, or Coleman, notate the recklessness of these 2 individual owners. It’s common to see this go ignored by the factions that consistently push for discriminatory laws targeting these types of dogs. So how they can get away with claiming to genuinely care about public safety is beyond me.

Coleman then describes 4 other instances of people being menaced by dogs alleged to be “Pit Bulls,” and in all 4 instances the dogs in question were out roaming freely and without any leash or supervision. Incredible.

This article is wrapped up by noting the mandatory spay and neuter law in Los Angeles, yet it goes unmentioned that this law isn’t even being enforced. The city of Riverside, following the actions of Riverside County, recently enacted breed-specific mandatory spaying and neutering of all dogs deemed to be Pit Bulls. Inexplicably they already have a mandatory spay and neuter law for all dogs and that law goes totally unenforced. Why would any municipality pass a breed-specific sterilization law when they have a sterilization law for all breeds already in place? On top of that, they also have a “dangerous dog” law that is meant to deal with dogs of all breeds who have individually shown a propensity for causing incidents. Pasadena has this same law!

John Grula’s article from October 16th was far worse, if that was possible.

Mr. Grula starts his piece by detailing an attack and then comes right out with an admittal that the attacking “Pit Bull” was completely loose and unsupervised. He details how the Pit Bull bit his friend “several times,” impressing upon the reader that the dog was at some point attacking a person. What he was really describing was a loose dog that was attacking another dog. His friend, trying to stop the fight between the dogs with his hands, was likely accidentally bitten. Still terrible, but more context. And even though Grula described the Pit Bull as having the side of the other dog’s “head and throat in its jaws,” this dog’s injuries were fortunately “relatively minor.” Grula’s friend was bitten however, and he ended up in the emergency room.

All of this was written in a clear effort to demonize all Pit Bulls, yet it all could have been avoided if that dog’s reckless owner was not allowing his dog to freely roam the streets!

Grula then also mentions the Colton boy, claiming that he was killed by “family pets.” A total lie and misrepresentation. He was actually killed by 1, or up to 7, of the tethered yard dogs that were all residing in the backyard of the home that this unsupervised 2-year-old boy found himself in. He follows that up with exploiting the death of the lady who was attacked while out jogging in Littlerock, which again, was done by up to 4 roaming at large dogs described as “Pit Bull mixes” by the media. I say “up to” because witnesses saw 4 dogs running in a pack and 1 that was actively attacking when the police showed up. They all ran off and then were supposedly tracked back to a home where their owner was charged with murder. This owner’s specific dogs had numerous prior violations and routinely ran loose.

Mr. Grula then predictably quotes hate group DogsBite.org, the completely unscientific and irrational website whose blatant goal is to exterminate all dogs deemed by them to be Pit Bulls by any means necessary. He regurgitates unverifiable statistics promoted by this website, and then calls millions of dogs “aggressive” and “violent.” Grula then alleges that he is a geneticist, and claims that Pit Bulls have “a predisposition for aggression and viciousness in their DNA.” This can absolutely not be proved, at all, and other geneticists would refute out of hand this ridiculous assertion. Grula’s claim also pays no mind to the utter fact that there is little to no scientific basis for even identifying the dogs as “Pit Bulls” in the first place. Animal control workers can’t even properly visually identify their own impounded dogs. Numerous studies (Victoria Voith, Kristopher Irizarry, Kimberly Olson, Julie Levy) illustrate this quite clearly.

He wraps up his pathetic rant by applauding Councilman Madison for calling for an “outright ban” on Pit Bulls and then suggests changing state law to achieve it. This comes after cheering L.A. County for having a mandatory spay and neuter law for all pets, although he clearly has no idea that this law now goes unenforced.

I find this type of reactionary profiling embarrassing, and quite shocking, coming from any civilized human being. Discrimination concerns aside, look at the identification process, or lack thereof, and look at the due process from a property rights standpoint, or lack thereof. You want to talk about public safety? How about we talk about the actual enforcement of already existing laws? Enforcing the leash laws, and the already existing breed-neutral “dangerous dog” law. Create an anti-chaining law. Mandate a sterilization policy for any dog caught running loose. These are all concepts that are based around responsibility. Human fatalities are preceded by an utter lack thereof. Educate, reach out to the communities, make them a part of the process and show your genuine care and concern by explaining the need to be more responsible. Shun breed discrimination. Shun grandstanding on the opportunity to provide a false sense of security. Shun exploitation, fear-mongering and hate.

Truth is that dogs are incredibly safe. Truth is that there are 72+ million of them in this country alone. Truth is that there is well over 300 million people in this same country. Think about how many daily interactions that creates. No, seriously. Take a moment. Dogs are incredibly safe. Pit Bulls are dogs. There are millions and millions of Pit Bulls in this country. Throw whatever cherry-picked, unverified, media-reported statistic out at me that you want… 99.9999999999999% of all dogs, of all Pit Bulls, and no matter the breakdown–by breed or type or city or county or state–have never done anything to anyone. That is a stat that no one can refute.

Fortunately the truth will always shine through, and further, the truth will repeatedly lay waste to those aiming to criminalize millions of completely innocent dogs, or groups of anything else, who have been generically and unfairly deemed to universally fit some negative connotation as a whole. That is fundamentally wrong on every level. People are individuals, and so are dogs. If you treat them in the opposite ways then you not only discriminate wildly but also resoundingly fail to even attempt to address the problems associated with the individual incidents or “attacks” that have jump-started these debates in the first place.

Press-Enterprise video goes down, other madness

Posted November 16th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

What was originally a fairly sketchy link to our debate video has now completely stopped working altogether. If you now try to view the debate off of the Press-Enterprise website you will receive this message: “An error occured, please try again later.” Never fear, here it is for eternity… Both the full debate and a condensed, quicker-moving version.

Predictably I was poo-poo’d by the sockpuppet army that represents hate group DogsBite.org. Colleen Lynn, founder of the bullshit, called the debate “lame.” Yeah, lame because you were unable to overrun the dialogue with vitriolic talking points that aimed to demonize the American Pit Bull Terrier as a devil dog. Lame because the Councilman actually conceded many of my arguments! Lame because Mr. Gardner actually didn’t go up there and act like a stinking tyrant, but rather a respectable person who was essentially trying to defend poor legislation. So sorry Colleen. But anytime that you want to debate me so that you can fill the “hate vacuum” to your liking, by all means, please just let me know. I’d gladly debate the hell out of you. Slaying vampires is something I don’t shy away from.

Other accusations that have been thrown my way since this debate:

That I’m in the “financial pocket” of Pit Bull breeders.
Answer) Um, nope. I’m actually not in anyone’s pocket, and certainly not breeders. The work that I do goes unpaid and it’s all in memory of my dog Sway and the millions of dogs that die in silence due to poor sheltering practices, human carelessness, and blatant societal discrimination.

That I’m a dog fighter.
A) About as offensive as it gets.

That I’m a supporter of dog fighting.
A) Ridiculous. Goes to show how very little these androids know about me. Saying anything, no matter how idiotic, is clearly their style. All sense to the wind.

That I think “those who value public safety are racists.”
A) Actually I’m one of the people constantly trying to outline the many circumstances that are tied to 95% of all dog fatalities, no matter the breed. Does that sound like someone who truly wants to disparage people genuinely concerned with public safety?

That I think that it’s a “waste of money” to protect your safety.
A) Utterly absurd. Show me 1 speck of evidence in 3+ years of public advocating where I’ve even remotely uttered that.

That I don’t enunciate.
A) Lol.

That I don’t wear my hat “in the proper manner.”
A) Typical attacking of the messenger. These folks sure do love to stereotype anything and everything, including my hats and how I wear a hat.

That I don’t wear my waistband “in the proper manner.”
A) ^See above.

That I’m playing the “race card.”
A) Not quite. Total simplistic nonsense. It’s called pointing out a philosophy, an ideology, a reactionary way of responding and thinking towards groups instead of individuals. The comparison is wholeheartedly relevant on numerous levels.

That I’m “offending people” by playing the race card.
A) ^See above. I’m playing no card. It’s completely relevant and this is a baseless attempt to refute the comparison, by claiming that I’m “being offensive” or “playing down” the importance of race-related issues and dynamics. Quite the opposite! The funny part about this is that the people that make these claims, because they have nothing to refute the comparison, are usually all white. Every black person that I’ve ever spoken to about this issue sees the parallels quite clearly. It’s obvious.

And that I’ve not been able to win an argument with any logic.
A) Did they watch the same debate? It seems the definition of “logic” doesn’t apply unless it agrees with what they want to hear. What is illogical about pointing out the constant link to fatalities and either roaming dogs or chained dogs, and then unsupervision? What is illogical about pointing out that 99.9% of all dogs are innocent, regardless of statistical breakdown? What is illogical about asking policy-makers to enforce the already existing laws? What is illogical about not wanting already existing laws repeated? What is illogical about pointing out the disingenuousness of a shelter manager who repeatedly parrots how Pit Bulls are never adopted, yet makes it his shelter’s practice to hide, stash, and kill Pit Bulls without ever making them available or even viewable? What is illogical about pointing out the failures of breed identification? What is illogical about noting the lack of due process, and thus the unconstitutionality of the law? And on, and on, and on. Yeah.

Finally, here’s Colleen Lynn masking the fact that she’s a vile human being that wants all Pit Bulls dead by any means necessary. This is done by repeatedly making statements about the 1 million euthanized shelter Pit Bulls per year, implying that people that love them actually don’t care, and as if she actually does care. Orwellian. Total disingenuousness. Jesus Christ, she is such a fraud.

dogsbiteorg2

Also, her questions already have answers but she asks them anyways… Why would any responsible Pit Bull owner ignore 1 million shelter deaths annually? I don’t. Tons of people don’t. Read my website. It’s all about shelter reform! She also repeatedly calls the Pit Bulls here “unwanted,” much like Robert Miller continued to do at the ordinance hearings, even though he’s the shelter manager who stashes them away from public view and then kills 95% of them without even making them available for public adoption. Yeah. Unwanted my ass.

These people are scum. The antithesis to the word “reputable.”

Dear Mr. Solesky

Posted November 15th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

I read your op-ed from yesterday’s Baltimore Sun and sadly was not surprised by this new level that you’re willing to stoop. Fluidly passing blame onto endless dogs that you’ll never know or care to know is nothing new, but trying to tie the rescue community into your attacks by aiming to delegitimize that process in general is no less harsh than any action that you’ve taken since 2007. Readers of your commentary may unfortunately leave with a stronger fear towards shelter dogs and of the process that goes into saving one, and that’s a shame, since wonderful dogs of all breeds are routinely killed in these facilities every year.

Honestly, it was a horrendous thing that happened to your son Dominic. That’s something we can all agree on. Any human being with an ounce of empathy in their body never wants to see another human being hurt, in any fashion, ever. Dog attack or otherwise, most people are fully capable of recognizing a tragedy. What your family experienced was a tragedy on many levels. As a Pit Bull owner myself, I have no reservations with immediately stating as much. I am so sorry that this happened to your family. Truly.

We all want safe communities for everyone–those that we love, those that we know, those that we don’t know. Safety is of the utmost importance to anyone that has a genuine care for people and for animals alike. But with that, my dog is not to blame. And further, pointing out that Dominic’s attacker was a loose dog who was out running at large, which directly correlates to the recklessness of its owner, is not “minimizing” what happened to your child. That’s simply a real and apparent dynamic that sadly allows any individual dog, with whatever level of bad temperament, to act freely and without any level of supervision. To dismiss focus on that is to do a massive disservice to both your community and all of the law-abiding dog owners (of all breeds and types) across the country.

It’s also routinely shocking to me how much you constantly go out of your way to state how so-and-so is not a “dog expert.” May I ask you a question? What then makes you one? You somehow harnessed this energy into a 70-some page e-book that spends much of its space on propagandizing against literally millions of dogs based solely on the way that they look. You’ve also been a central character in passing one of the most egregious and discriminatory pieces of legislation, one that institutes precrime as policy, and yet you are always so quick to eliminate anyone else from the discussion who dare have a differing opinion to yours. Why? Just ironic is all.

Killing millions of dogs that you and you alone deem unsuitable for life on earth will not take back what happened to your son.

Thankfully Dominic is alive, and I wish him nothing but the best. He was a victim of a senseless and preventable incident. I say all of this, even as you are out wishing that my dogs be dead. Even as you are out perpetuating stereotypes that will surely result in the further abandonment and mistreatment of these dogs. Even as you are out trying to create precedent for taking away housing, and for relentlessly fear-mongering behind the notion of liability. And lastly, even as roaming dogs, chained and tethered dogs, and the non-supervision of children are consistently the common denominators in almost every single dog-related fatality that you can pull up from any random calendar year.

I’d argue that from a “public safety” standpoint the covering up of that information, the ignoring of it (both the information and the reckless owners themselves), is the biggest crime of all.

Those paying attention know that your vague and all-encompassing language is cheered and reprinted by individuals like Colleen Lynn, head representative of DogsBite.org, a website that poses as a balanced public safety resource but in reality is nothing more than a Pit Bull hate group. You even noted her, and her evidence-free “stats,” in your op-ed. Ms. Lynn had a 2007 incident with a “Pit Bull” in Seattle, one whose details she keeps revising over time, and has been on a crusade to vilify them into extermination ever since. If that’s what you call a “rational” and “reputable” source for anything then we undoubtedly read from different dictionaries.

Fortunately the truth will always shine through, and further, the truth will repeatedly lay waste to those aiming to criminalize millions of completely innocent dogs, or groups of anything else, who have been generically and unfairly deemed to universally fit some negative connotation as a whole. That is fundamentally wrong on every level. People are individuals, and so are dogs. If you treat them in the opposite ways then you not only discriminate wildly but also resoundingly fail to even attempt to address the problems associated with the individual incidents or “attacks” that have jump-started these debates in the first place.

Truth is that dogs are incredibly safe. Truth is that there are 72+ million of them in this country alone. Truth is that there is well over 300 million people in this same country. Think about how many daily interactions that creates. No, seriously. Take a moment. Dogs are incredibly safe. Pit Bulls are dogs. Throw whatever cherry-picked, unverified, media-reported statistic out at me that you want… 99.9999999999999% of all dogs, of all Pit Bulls, and no matter the breakdown–by breed or type or city or county or state–have never done anything to anyone. That is a stat that you cannot refute. And if you continue trying to make monsters out of these individual creatures, dogs that you have no business in the world speaking on (for many reasons, one being that you’ve never met them), well, it just solidifies the utter fact that you are fusing your life’s work and energy towards adding to the wrong side of history. That is not exactly something to be proud of.

Josh Liddy debates Councilman Mike Gardner over breed-discriminatory legislation

Posted November 11th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Prejudice by Josh

Thanks to the Press-Enterprise for wanting to include me in the discussion.

*Update*

Working links: