110 Piece Copper Washer Assortment Reviews

110 Piece Copper Washer Assortment

Pit Bull tool – click on the image below for more information.

Pit Bull tool

UPC: 794685156793

Use in electrical applications to assure maximum conductivity.

Contents:
1/4″x30pcs , 5/16″x25pcs , 3/8″x20pcs , 7/16″x15pcs , 1/2″x10pcs , 5/8″x10pcs.

110 Piece Copper Washer Assortment

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Pit Bull  tool
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Pit Bull (pitbull) Terrier Dog Guide
Affiliates Earn A Whopping 75% Selling The Complete Guide To Owning, Raising, And Caring For Pit Bull (pitbull) Terriers!
Pit Bull (pitbull) Terrier Dog Guide

Tips and Tricks:

Hi,I did the following:
Add your own answer in the comments!

Question by »Bullieve We Are Lovabull For Pits’ Sake«: All American Pit Bull Terrier owners should own…. True or false question..?
All American Pit Bull Terrier owners should own AT LEAST one Break Stick, true or false? Why or why not?

Personally, i keep 11 inch Ground Stakes near by at ALL times for a ‘just in case’ tool instead of Break Sticks, as Ground Stakes are legal to carry in my area, Break Sticks are not. Ground Stakes work just as well as break sticks so at least i have something on hand if need be..
See that is the thing, my American Pit Bull Terrier is a well trained dog. BUT, American Pit Bull Terriers do have high prey drives/animal aggression by nature, you may be able to curb that drive but you can’t diminish it. It’s genetics. If another canine happens to roam around freely/attack your APBT and your dogs GENETICS/defensive mode kick in, you either have a Break Stick/Ground Stake on hand or you suffer the consequences of the opposing canine being severely injured.
or death before you are able to release your APBT from the opposing canine.
EXACTLY my point Launi. Thank you. I *know* what my American Pit Bull Terrier IS capable of, and that is exactly why i bring Ground Stakes every where with me, and keep two Break Sticks within my home.
I’ve witnessed this first hand. A young lady was walking her two American Pit Bull Terriers, i watched for a moment and i immediately noticed the two canines becoming overly anxious then within a two second span the two dogs began fighting. They both clamped their jowls shut on each other and the lady began to scream like a maniac, i reached for my break stick and calmly approached the lady calmly that was now hysterically crying. I gave her directions on how to properly use the break stick and within a second the two dogs were departed and their were only a few puncture wounds on each canine, no severe damage done. The lady kindly thanked me and i said “Keep it”, i handed over the break stick to her. These two canines have never fought before but they did that day because something caused them to become overly excited. If it wasn’t for that Break Stick, i am sure those two dogs would have been badly injured, if not dead.

Best answer:

Answer by President of the US LOVES raw meat!
False. Not everyone owns an ill trained, aggressive dog. Obedience training can work wonders.

Edit: I don’t believe in *all* of any group of people being *required* to do anything. Government is way too much involved in personal lives as it is.

Edit: If the dogs are that bad, then maybe it’s best they be the only dogs in the home? I know I wouldn’t always be able to be home to stop that.

Tame Your Angry Child with This Power Tool!

Article by Jean Tracy, MSS

Do you have an angry child? Does he growl like a pit-bull to get his way? Look inside for 5 parenting tips. They’ll give you a power tool for turning your angry kid into a rational child.

To get what they want, kids learn to holler at an early age. Babies cry. Toddlers scream, bite, and kick. Older children use these behaviors and add pouts, sarcasm, and arguments to get their way.

As parents, our job is to tame them for the real world. But how do you get your angry kid to become a rational child?

Imagine a ruler that measures anger. This ruler numbers from zero to twelve. Zero is never angry. Twelve is pistol-ready to fire at any moment.

To help your child become rational you need to use your parenting skills. You need to show him pull how to remove his finger from the trigger, lay down his anger, and use his head.

To become rational he’ll need to move his anger from 12 on the ruler to the frustration zone between 4 and 8. In this area he can begin to act rationally. Here’s how:

5 Parenting Tips for Taming Your Angry Child ~

1. Use or draw a ruler with numbers from zero to twelve. Color the area between 4 and 8 to make it special. That’s the frustration zone.

2. Talk about the ruler with your child. Discuss how twelve is ready to explode at any moment like a pit bull protecting his bone. We’re not dogs. We’re humans. As human beings we have the power to think before we act. To do this we need to use our power tools, a thinking mind with thoughtful choices.

3. Show Zero on the ruler. Discuss how zero represents no feelings. Rocks are at zero because they don’t have feelings. People do. Our task is to bring our anger down from 12 to the frustration zone, the area between 4 and 8.

4. Ask your child to pick a time in the past when he exploded with anger. Tell him to close his eyes and feel the emotion he had at the time. Then tell him not to open his eyes until he brings his emotion down to the frustration zone between 4 and 8. When he opens his eyes, ask him how he did it. If he says, “I don’t know,” tell him to guess.

Listen to his answers. I know they’ll be fascinating. Tell him to practice this technique whenever he’s upset. This is his power tool.

5. Practice the technique above. Pick out several more situations when he acted with anger. With each situation tell him to feel the anger he had at the time. Then work with him to bring his emotion down to the frustration zone.

Discuss how he can use this power tool any time he needs it. It’s within his mind. It’s his gift of reason.

Conclusion for Taming Your Angry Child:

Use the above parenting tips. Display the ruler on the refrigerator. Discuss it often.

Be your child’s model. Tell your child how you used your power tool to bring your emotion into the frustration zone.

Praise your child when he tells you how he used his power tool to control his anger. If you do, you’ll be taming your angry child and you’ll be building his rational character too.

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