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Man Dies After Attack by Mixed-Breed Stray Dogs in Ubon Ratchathani


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19 hours ago, Gottfrid said:

Yeah, now we are starting to see the spread of the dangerous breeds like pit bull, and Rottweiler in the stray dog community. This is going to be only 1 death among many in the future if they do not deal with this problem now. The only way to get rid of the problem, is to kill off the evil breeds and mixed breeds, as well as totally ban them in Thailand with heavy fines for the ones who break the laws. If they do not proceed quickly with this, humanity will eventually become extinct in overpopulated areas of killer breeds.

Hmmm, there are no evil breeds, only evil breeders!

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21 hours ago, proton said:

Dogs being dogs, no surprise what the mixed breeds were, 2 of the worst. Always thought when Pitbull and Rottie genes get in to the soi dog pool that attacks would increase. Lets not have any no bad dogs nonsense or he must have provoked them. 

The usual insanity of not putting the killers down and pretending steps are being taken to prevent future attacks, like what?

 

Measuring their teeth? 😕

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19 hours ago, NativeBob said:

sure and after " the dogs removal operation" Thailand will become prosperous and truly well developed country..

 

generally speaking TH is the third world country and that is one of the reason why nobody cares about stray and feral mutts.

Also Thailand is a majority Buddhist country and that is why killing live animals is a taboo .  That is also why abortion is illegal and no self respecting doctor is willing to do the deed. 

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9 hours ago, Zack61 said:

These attacks seem to be happening more and more frequently. What a terrible way to die. Authorities need to act on this sooner rather than later. Put aside their Buddhist beliefs and start a culling campaign otherwise these sort of attacks will continue. It’s not just the roads that are deadly but the sois as well. 
I’ve been told (never tried) that the best way to disable or disperse of a dog in an attack is, if you can, grab both front legs and reef them outwardly apart as hard and as violently as you can. Hope I never have to find out if it works. 

well it sounds better than sticking a finger up its ar$e  maybe try both methods at the same time that should upset the dog lovers

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2 hours ago, Ctkong said:

Also Thailand is a majority Buddhist country and that is why killing live animals is a taboo .  That is also why abortion is illegal and no self respecting doctor is willing to do the deed. 

They are merely Buddhists of convenience   That is why they have billionair monks  and others become very wealthy during their membership of the cult.    It also guarantees even the lay people unlimited time off work in buddhist retreats I could go on and on

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These stray soi dogs are all over Thailand and even in posh cities so called, like Hua Hin. The authorities need to round up all these stray dogs once for all and chemically prevent them to reproduce. Same with all the snakes that can bite humains anyplace even in Bangkok or when you are sitting in the Toilet. Don't think it only happens to others. Just because it never happened to you does not mean it never will.

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16 hours ago, BadSpottedDog said:

I agree with you (except for the mass culling part) I've dealt with quite a few vicious dogs who were obviously not even close to a "bully" breed. Dogs will be aggressive when they're in pain or sick, or if they've been mistreated (which most have). Even nice dogs can become vicious if in a pack (pack mentality).
All strays should be rounded up and as many adopted out as possible. I'm also in favor of BE (behavior euthanasia), but the biggest factor to add would be mass sterilizations! There are many groups, including Soi Dog, that provide this service for FREE! I've helped with these efforts, and it is surprising to see how many locals AND foreigners were anti sterilization! WHAT?

Some thought it would kill the dog, and some just didn't believe in it for some weird, vague reasoning. It would be nice if the govt could form groups in every province to do this, and provide education to locals on how to properly care for a dog. Many Thais still see pets as livestock, while they should be treated like family members.

Sterilization and education is the only way.

Well I certainly agree with you if it's a pet, but if it's a soi dog who's nothing but a nuisance I have no issues at all with major culling. 

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13 hours ago, newnative said:

     We have at least 6 or 8 stray dogs in our housing project.  Nobody owns them.  A Thai lady who does not even live in the project sometimes comes and feeds them--which we have repeatedly asked her not to do.  Unfortunately, it is a new project with no gate security so she can just walk right in.

     Spouse called the local municipality and asked that the dogs be removed.  Instead, they sent somebody to round up the dogs and I think they were neutered and then brought back to the project.  Spouse argued to them that nobody owns the dogs and the project does not want the dogs back--to no avail.  Back they came.  Back they still are.   Madness.  

If I were in your position I would try insect spray, dogs have such an aversion to insect spray if you go out there with two cans of raid and spray down the whole street and the dogs, my guess is they'll never come back

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