bustrpoindextr

joined 1 year ago
[–] bustrpoindextr -4 points 10 months ago (2 children)
[–] bustrpoindextr 3 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Well your article isn't a study, it's a literary review from a very biased source of a Colleen Lynn

In fact if you want to read up on your source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogsbite.org

You can see that she complains about science and ignores expert opinions in the field because they disagree with her.

It's very telling when her literary review comes to very different conclusions than actual scientists performing studies in the field.

[–] bustrpoindextr 3 points 10 months ago (4 children)

Okay, because I saw you're a fan of banpitbull subreddit.

I need to ask a very simple question. Do you care about actual safety, or do you just want pitbulls banned? Like what is your goal?

Because all science in the last 5 years states people, not pitbulls, are the problem. Globally. That's the issue.

If you actually want "less harm and death done" then you need to listen to the scientific experts and stop pushing for BSL, and instead push for things that move towards the goal of less harm and death.

But okay let's address the rest now

Are you shitting me? https://financesonline.com/number-of-dogs-in-the-us/

You don't need to have a census to have a pretty damn good idea of how many there are. And you all keep telling me that I'm disingenuous.

You say that and then the link you provided did not give me a very good idea about per capita of the breeds... I have no idea how many of any breed there are.

This is a persons representation of a study. Not the study. but it links to here (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abk0639) So if breed has nothing to do with anything. How come there's qualities organized by breed by the study? You can't claim that behaviors aren't affected by breed, then show me a study that shows a bunch of behaviors organized by breed. And you all keep telling me that I'm disingenuous.

You are being disingenuous... Less than 9% difference across all breeds. A dog is a dog is a dog. Some howl, some don't. Some are more active. A dog is a dog is a dog.

Except this misses one big premise... Amount of cases can be exactly the same, but severity of each case can go down severely. Also amount of cases can be the same, but have less fatalities!

Well it was counting hospitalizations... So it's safe to say we're only talking about severe ones..

[–] bustrpoindextr 4 points 10 months ago

That combined with the pseudoscience that was spewed by Merritt Clifton, that everyone still quotes today, and you've got yourself some statistical issues.

In case people don't know who Merritt is

[–] bustrpoindextr 6 points 10 months ago (6 children)

So I'm not the other user but I'll go ahead and help you out.

AVMA quick summary of all the problems with trying to blame a set of breeds: https://www.avma.org/resources-tools/literature-reviews/dog-bite-risk-and-prevention-role-breed

Study that shows breed doesn't impact behavior in any substantial way: https://www.aaas.org/news/dogs-breed-doesnt-determine-its-behavior#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20findings%2C%20breed,exclusive%20to%20any%20one%20breed. Basically a dog is a dog is a dog and the main indicator of how a dog is going to act is how it was raised.

Study shows that BSL doesn't work: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0208393

Meaning if you remove pitbulls and other "aggressive" dogs, people still end up in the hospital at the same rate from dog bites.

All this points to the simple fact that if you give an asshole a dog, that dog will be dangerous.

Also as an aside any claim to "per capita" with regards to dogs is baseless. There has not ever been a dog census nor would we reasonably be able to do one, so we can't make any claims about "this breed has a higher percentage of biters" or anything to that effect.

[–] bustrpoindextr 3 points 10 months ago

Point of order: That's not an appeal to authority. The other user was pointing out organizations that have actual expertise in the field. "Appeal to authority" is if they said "Bill Gates said pitbulls are fine"

He's an authority figure, but not expertise in the matter.

Whereas the CDC, the humane society, the American veterinary association etc etc are actually experts in at least some part of the argument.

[–] bustrpoindextr 53 points 10 months ago

Yeah I have to agree with everyone else. If this is a question you're actually asking, it's probably a question for your doctor, because the actual answer should just be "just breathe dude"

[–] bustrpoindextr 1 points 11 months ago

I mean you attacked me because you didn't like a logical, obvious, critique of something. Which again, I never said it was bad, I just said it could be improved. And you said things that I just repeated back at you, and now you can't handle your own words?

Goodness me indeed.

[–] bustrpoindextr 1 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Of course the CEO equivalent exists in government. It's just a management position. Equivalent services will need equivalent management.

A CEO is not a manager. You're already embarrassing yourself here 😉

Perhaps you didn't read my comment. I've been a treasurer for a number of medium size charities. I know exactly how much money is needed to support the charities objectives.

I did read your comment, but I kinda assumed you either were lying or getting really defensive. There's a lot of waste that wouldn't exist if they were consolidated into the government.

Do you realize that there are multiple charities for the same thing, which just means more and more waste?

For example?

Yeah sure, since it's already been brought to. The red cross does blood donations, but they're only 35% of America's non profit blood donations, there's also America's blood centers and vitalent and more! So much overhead! If they were all one organization, you could eliminate much of the overhead and more effectively coordinate the blood donations.

Sorry mate, this is just an absurd thought bubble borne of naivety. Get involved in a charity and you'll understand why it exists.

Sorry mate, but you've got your head up your ass and you're getting defensive.

I have been involved in both charities and government.

[–] bustrpoindextr 1 points 11 months ago

I mean, you can look anywhere, whether it's upwards of 70% of medical donations not being used: https://academic.oup.com/inthealth/article/11/5/379/5420717?login=false#151492984

Also you can dive into the problems with definitions of "the cause" https://hbr.org/2009/06/beware-of-highly-efficient-cha

A charity can loosely define what counts as their cause which means they can tell you that 95 cents on the dollar go to the cause, even if it's only 20 cents.

Moreover it's really suspect that the rich keep getting richer even in the "nonprofit" sector: https://www.vox.com/the-big-idea/2017/4/24/15377056/big-charities-best-charities-evaluation-nonprofit

Furthermore, even from an innocent standing. When you have multiple charities working on the same thing, that's crazy inefficient.

Let's talk about the Red Cross, great organization. One of the things they do is blood donations. They're responsible for about 35% of the blood donations in the US, the rest come from other non profits.

That means there's competition among the non profit blood donation organizations to provide blood for emergencies. Whether they want to compete or not, they have to.

Just from a blanket statement, if you moved all of those blood donations under a single entity, you remove a lot of inefficiencies.

You don't need to advertise for multiple organizations, you don't need to coordinate with all those different organizations during a crisis, you don't have the same overhead for the same problems across multiple organizations. It's just by design, inefficient. It's not their fault.

[–] bustrpoindextr 1 points 11 months ago

So first off, you can totally volunteer for government things. I mean, I can volunteer at my local government library for instance, there's nothing about a government contract that removes the ability to volunteer.

But I wouldn't need to have volunteers if the red cross and all competing charities were swallowed up into one thing.

There are a bunch of organizations that do the same or part of what the red cross does. That's a lot of wasted time of resources, that would be better spent lumped together as a collective unit.

Charity is simply one of the places you absolutely don't want competition/capitalism. You want oversight and efficiency, that's the government.

[–] bustrpoindextr 1 points 11 months ago

That was the point of my comment.

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