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[C'mon your all singing 'sock it to me, sock it to me' now aren't you!]
> So I alpha rolled her in an assertive, not attacking way and she immediately submitted and calmed down.
> I took her out in the back yard just the two of us and did a dominance test on her (which I have done occasionally throughout the years) and gently lifted her front two legs off the ground by wrapping my arms under her chest. This is a very submissive position for a dominant dog to be put into, somewhat like an alpha roll and in my experience has worked well to make sure the rank order is still understood. Anyway, when I put her down she growled and gave a nibble to my arm. So I alpha rolled her in an assertive, not attacking way and she immediately submitted and calmed down.
> I won't be on this site again
> Any aggression toward a human requires a very serious correction
> I thought I would get articulate and knowledgable answers or thoughts but you all focused on one aspect (my alpha roll)
> No where in that article is there any "scientific proof" of the authors theories
> The reason I speculuate that my pup has no intention of being beta is because he already starting mounting her weeks ago. Obviously this is not sexual as he is too young for this drive to develop which leads only one thing, him trying to assert dominance over her.
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