Your life long companion dog and a stranger are drowning and you can only save one.....chose.
Man... That is a HARD question. I think the only way I could answer it is by being in the situation. On one hand my dog is like my child and I love him more than anything. On the other hand we're talking about a human being that is a father, son, brother, and friend.
Logically you'd want to pick the human, because at best the dog has another 5-10 years, while the human could have 40-50 years.
Sadly this is a somewhat relevant question for me because my dog can't swim, he panics when he gets in the water.
Your life long companion dog and a stranger are drowning and you can only save one.....chose.
The answer actually depends a lot on the human involved. A child, teenager, or young woman with children around, I save the human. All others I would hope I would save the dog but it goes against our nature to do so.Your life long companion dog and a stranger are drowning and you can only save one.....chose.
I'd like to know a more straightforward choice, a teenage girl or an elderly man, choose one and explain why?
I'd like to know a more straightforward choice, a teenage girl or an elderly man, choose one and explain why?
I'd like to know a more straightforward choice, a teenage girl or an elderly man, choose one and explain why?
The stranger dogs are better swimmers than humans
Whichever you don't pick will drown. Now which one do you save?Whoever appears to be in more difficulty.
Yes all dogs I've known or owned have all been naturally good swimmers. Not saying all dogs are, but all the ones I've come across have been.
Whichever you don't pick will drown. Now which one do you save?
Your life long companion dog and a stranger are drowning and you can only save one.....chose.
Interesting.Whoever i can get to first.
Interesting.
A good answer, and it's also correct.As to the teen/elderly choice - all other things being equal I save the teen. She hasn't lived her life yet, the elderly person has.