wouldn't agree with that at all. Pups eat FIRST (they would not survive otherwise), so many adults will even stand back and allow a puppy to take their food -up to a certain age. It's known as the "puppy license" and I've seen it many times.
The "puppy license" is a myth as it doesn't work with dogs outside the pups' closer knitted social environment.
Try place your puppy amongst a strange group of dogs and watch what happens when it displays a similar
show of disrespect it would show to the dogs used to him.
Being at the bottom of the pecking order doesn't mean they will starve. It just means they have to observe
the set rules and guidelines of dogs amongst themselves.
It is true however that pups
up to a certain agewill enjoy a certain type of protection from overly
bolshy adults; the older a puppy gets though, the less protection is available for the puppy, the less is
their bolshy behaviour tolerated even by their parents or other dogs they live with.
In my humble experience (I have raised about 100 pups here over the past 9 years, some with their mothers,
some with their mothers would couldn't nourish them, some as orphans, some handraised but all growing up
amongst a group of dogs previously unknown to them) the "puppy license" fades away at a max age of 10
weeks. Now, most breeders would sell their pups at age 8 weeks and cannot monitor their progress as closely
as they would up to the point of sale. BUT - I have a funny feeling the puppy protection thing goes along with
- or maybe is directly linked - the phenomen we know as "puppy breath". The puppy breath is strongest at the
youngest age and slowly fades away. It is only a theory but I reckon the intensity of the puppy breath signals
to the adults how much correction a puppy is able to take.