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If its running towards me aggressively, its going down. Breed plays no part. You don't think a poodle can be vicious?
No...you've pointed that out....not "we."We've already pointed out that raw numbers mean nothing without examining cause. I'll repost an important bit from another major study that appears to condemn pits until you actually read all of it.
Didn't answer the questionIf its running towards me aggressively, its going down. Breed plays no part. You don't think a poodle can be vicious?

That study just shows fatalities, not dog bites or attacks in general. So again I ask, do you have any factual evidence to prove that one breed of dog is prone to be more violent than another because of the breed?
He never said otherwise. Certain dog breeds are more likely to be violent and aggressive compared to other breeds, even when the upbringing is the same. You're just the king of straw man arguments today huh
If pit bulls aren't more prone to violence then why are they the preferred breed for dog fighters? There are certainly bigger and/or smarter dogs out there that would be better suited if there weren't something else at play.
Animals are incapable of behavior outside the scope of their training?
So if a poodle, pit bull, lab and border collie all had an abusive owner, in what order would you prefer for your children to come across one that is running wild in the street? Rank them from your most preferred to least preferred breed to run across in that situation.