Some perspective might be useful here:

There are some 50 million dogs in the United States

Approximately 5 million dog bites are reported annually in the US.

Of those 5 million bites, all but a handful (literally) are fatal...the average dog bite fatality count per year is around 20.

Of the dog bite fatalities, half are caused by Rottweilers . One third are caused by pitbulls. The rest break up between other breeds--including HUSKIES and German Shepherds. (I have owned all these breeds, and currently have a pit mix and a Siberian Husky. Cue creepy music...)

The CDC does NOT independently verify the breed of dog involved in the attack, so it is likely that the self reported nature of these incidents causes "pit bull" to show up more readily than the breed might otherwise, because they are notoriously hard to identify.

The site Mad City Pit Stop has a great interactive on just how hard it is to identify the "pit bull" as a breed. Even I can't tell all the time, and I own a pit mix.

It's also important to remember that as breed popularity changes, so will the breeds involved in fatal dog bites . In the 1970s, Dobermans and German Shepherds topped the list of breeds most likely to cause fatal attacks. Huskies and Pit bulls didn't even rank.

Incidently, dogs on the loose are NOT the main culprit in dog attacks. 80-90% of all dog attacks are from dogs known to the victim. Additionally, a CHAINED dog is 2.8 times more likely to attack than an unchained dog. Unaltered male dogs are 3 times more likely to attack.

But I digress.

My main point is: 50 million dogs. 5 million bites. 20 fatalities. 7 caused by pits. That is .00014 percent of all dog bites are fatal and caused by (so-called) pit bulls. The chance of dying in a dog attack are slim to none--and dying from a pitbull attack? Even slimmer.

PLEASE keep the (ill-conceived) laws off the dog breeds, and direct them where they belong: irresponsible owners.