Sherry LaFace
COM 220: Research Writing
January 23, 2010
Erin Fagan
Dog fighting is a very cruel thing, and it is happening right under our noses. It is illegal to fight a dog in all fifty states. By being an observer at a dog fight, it is against the law in forty-seven states. So why do people continue this cruel practice? The answer seems to be money. Some people who breed dogs for fighting can sell their puppies for up to two thousand dollars. Even though fighting dogs is making money, it is cruel since pain is inflicted on the dogs; the ASPCA and the Humane Society are trying to prevent this with proper training. Some people might ask, “What is dog fighting?” The definition of dog fighting is: a prohibited fight in which two dogs, more often than not of a Pit Bull breed, are put into an enclosed pit for the sole intention of attacking and quite often killing each other. provided by Pitbullsontheweb These animals were the involuntary sufferers of mistreatment for blood games since early Roman times. These dogs fought against others in the Coliseum. The purpose of fighting dogs against other animals was nonstop through the medieval period in England, until it was banned in 1835. Thus, the Humane Act of 1835 became a law. Even though there are chronological accounts of dog fights going back to the 1750s, familiar goings-on emerged after the Civil War, with expert pits proliferating in the 1860s, regularly in the Northeast. Despite the fact that frequent laws were approved banning this horrific activity, dog fighting continues to increase throughout today. There is a remark that dogmen, or the men that fight dogs, use to describe a dog’s enthusiasm to fight, it is called “Gameness.” It is a trait that is for the most part all the rage in fighting dogs. Great consideration is paid to males and females that have the ambition to fight, and more