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by joanro on 22 September 2015 - 17:09

by Cutaway on 22 September 2015 - 18:09

by bubbabooboo on 22 September 2015 - 18:09

by bubbabooboo on 22 September 2015 - 18:09

by susie on 22 September 2015 - 18:09
Bubba, let´s try it different:
Sparkling wine = any car
French Champagne = a special kind of car ( maybe Renault )
Beringer ( out of Napa valley ) = a special kind of car ( maybe General Motors )
Both products are sparkling wines ( for you: cars ), but the first product is a " Champagne", the second is a "Beringer".
For me there is only one reason why anybody wants to use the brandname of someone else: He wants to make profit out of the name/quality someone else established - cheap advertising.
I visited the Napa Valley a lot of years ago. I really like the wine out of this region, I still buy their products over here. A producer should be proud of the product he produces, he should not try to copy someone else by using the same name, jumping on the bandwagon.
Same with dogs - the different breeds were created in different countries - in my opinion these "countries of origin " have the right to establish the standard, nobody else.
You don´t like the standard? Don´t breed or own the breed - It´s simple.

by bubbabooboo on 22 September 2015 - 18:09

by bubbabooboo on 22 September 2015 - 18:09
Susie the only standard that matters to me is the breeder's integrity and the dogs that the breeder produces which meet my needs .. As we have seen with VW recently the standards can be tampered with when it meets the profit and advertising goals of an organization or corporation. I prefer to base my choices on the breeder and the dogs that I see with my own eyes and not the titles and scores at some event run by the judges and membership beholding to an organization. I have seen too many SV dogs that were titled but not trained to get too excited about SV titles and pedigrees. Once more it depends on the buyer knowing what is wanted and needed rather than a buyer being told what they want and need. As we always said in the cattle business " the buyer who doesn't know what he wants and how much it is worth is the hardest buyer to satisfy" but not necessarily harder to sell to. There are a few breeders I would buy from sight unseen because I know their dogs and their philosophy .. it is not a matter of titles. Advertising and brands are about convincing us what it is we want. A lot of people say they want a fierce guard dog or police dog but almost all of them I advise "no you don't". Some in the past have said they want two of my high drive puppies so they can grow up and play together and I say "no you don't". When the Honda cars first came to the USA many including myself laughed but after several years of outstanding performance and reliability most Americans decided a Honda Accord was what they needed even if it was not what Ford, Chevy, and Chrysler advertising told us we wanted.

by Bundishep on 22 September 2015 - 19:09

by susie on 22 September 2015 - 19:09
By sticking to your own statements VW=car now everybody who calls his car a VW ( be it a VW or not ) will be affected...
That´s what it is about, a car is not always a VW, it´s a car, and the producer always should be proud of his own name, be it GM, Renault, or VW.
All of them are cars, but they are DIFFERENT, good or bad, doesn´t matter in this case.
Only as a sidenote, I am an employee in a car dealership, we are a "daughter" of the VW group, using the same engines...

by susie on 22 September 2015 - 19:09
Goldens are the better blind dogs,
Australians are the better agility dogs...
Our breed is not supposed to be "the best in one venue", there are always specialists in some parts of life, why not?
It´s up to our breeders to breed a good "allrounder", able to participate in every venue without loosing the working abilities written down in the standard of the breed - they don´t need to "win" against specialists, but they must be able to do the job.
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