ANY dog can be vicious. Provoked or not. Trained or not.
A pit bull can just do more damage then most of them. Personally, I detest rottweilers and german shepherds for the very same reason. Where we live, they are the majority of attacks reported, but since only pit bulls make the news, nobody knows.
And for the PP that said they are bred for their "MEANNESS"- you're wrong. They are bred for their strength and the way they are built. Do your research.
While you're at it- look at how pit bulls are treated. They are often kept short-leashed, outside, 4 seasons out of the year. They are given very little human contact, and the human contact they ARE given,, is usually with baiting or to be beaten. It's tragic and sad and terrible, and for people to "hate" them is terrible.
Other animals kill, maim, harm other people or animals, but the ones that sell newspapers and make it on the news are what catches your eye. Pit bulls are the money makers in that one. Even those who do not "participate" in dog fighting still support it through these stereotypes.
I work in a physician's office and we see dog bites all the time. I've worked in healthcare for 3 years in a metro city of 175,000 and I've actually never encountered a pit bull bite in any of our practices.
How proliferant dog fighting is in your neck of the woods could be a major contributer to what you are all seeing in your papers and emergency rooms.
I own a ****-zu and a pitbull. The ****-zu is mean, protective of me, my family, and our home. He is mean to and snaps at the pitbull. The pitbull is the sweetest, most well-behaved, friendliest dog you would ever meet in your life.
But I guarantee you that if my ****-zu bit you in the ankle- it wouldn't make the nightly news. If my pit did? Oh yea- the news, the papers, the radio.
Responsible pet ownership. Fences, leashes, socialization, and TLC.
I won't be revisiting this thread but I'm just throwing in my two-cents.