We Regulate Cars. We Regulate Guns. It’s Time to Regulate Dangerous Dogs.
A serious policy framework doesn’t require solving every implementation detail. It requires asking the right questions — and being honest about what the answers demand.
A policy perspective · Companion to “A Bear Trap in the Living Room”
Imagine two dogs standing side by side. Same size. Same build. Same breed label. One of them, if it decides to attack a child, will cause a serious injury. The other will cause a fatal one. From the outside, they are indistinguishable. Both are dangerous. The difference is degree — and degree is exactly what policy should care about.
We already accept, as a society, that some things are dangerous enough to require registration, licensing, and demonstrated responsibility before a private citizen can own or operate them. Cars. Firearms. Certain chemicals. Exotic animals in most jurisdictions. The logic is not that these things are evil or that their owners are bad people. The logic is that the consequences of failure are serious enough to warrant oversight — and that oversight creates accountability where none otherwise exists.

















