
Somewhat similar to my thing yesterday with the young toy breed pup which people wanted to push on its back etc etc as it growled over its food.
Views in general DO vary a lot between the countries. Although I think to a large extent it is Joe Public's views that differ, there are still nice, normal, responsible dog owners in the US of course. :) But if you look at pet keeping in GENERAL, just look at what is seemed as perfectly acceptable over there, such as neutering 8 week old pups, de-barking dogs, de-clawing cats, ear cropping, lots more are sold in pet shops, the puppy farms have auctions when they need to sell of their stock that is no longer any use for breeding, etc etc, I could go on.
When I had a BF in the US and stayed there quite a bit there was a lot that really upset me, such as going down to the supermarket to shop and finding people in the supermarket car park selling Dalmatian puppies from their car boot. They handed out leaflets to the shoppers saying something like "Dalmatian pups, pedigreed, priced to sell!!!" And nobody thought anything of it, in fact all I kept hearing was "Oh it happens all the time, it's how we got our dog/cat".
Now with my breed Malinois things get even worse, as over there the majority of people see them as a dog who is only measured by how hard it can bite. A good dog is a dog with a good BITE. And you cannot possibly train a Malinois without being hard -some people use not one but TWO electric collars on them, then get REALLY angry if you dare to say that is not right and there ARE other ways.....
I could go on for hours and hours about differences. It's largely cultural differences, what you have got used to. I know my views often are different to people here as I am Swedish and grew up with Swedish values, which for instance included never to neuter dogs (it used to be illegal) and never crate them and most dog owners live in flats.