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Well, none of us here can tell you what to do. Only offer advice based on our own reasoning, logic, and experience. If we all gave the same advice, BYC would be a very boring place. And while none of us can tell you what to do, your mother can and has!
As you grow up, you learn to make your own decisions. You can ask for advice and even if we all told you to do the same thing, it is still very much up to you to decide your course of action. Whether it is, to plead with your mother for this dog, or to pass them up and get a dog you all agree on. But know this, if you plead and beg your mother to get one of these puppies and she reluctantly relents, she WILL hold you solely responsible and it WILL be an uphill battle for as long as you live with your mother. Anytime the dog does ANYTHING wrong or questionable, she will pull the "I told you so". So, in my opinion, drop it and find something the whole family can agree on.
-Kim
A classic case of be careful what you ask for, you may get it.
Several things still come to mind, after tracking this thread all day:
It is your mother's house, and you should respect her wishes. When you start paying the bills in your own home you can do what you want.
Regular exercise and training takes 4 to 8 hours a day for a high energy dog. That's just what it takes for my Lab and my hound mix- EACH. It's a full-time job. And I still would NEVER trust them around a chicken or kitten. Prey drive is conditionable but not curable.
Can you throw a tennis ball as far as possible for 4 hours straight, without a break? Can you give up weekend and evening activities for training classes for you and the dog?
Do you have a strongly fenced yard? One that cannot be climbed, dug under or breached any other way?
Can you mother afford the rise in the homeowner's insurance premium? They WILL spot the dog and come to their own conclusions. Ours went up $500.00 a year because we had a husky mix and the guy heard it bark- once. He then wanted to see the dog or no insurance.
I'm not being mean, but I am awfully blunt when it comes to dogs. I have seen too many bad matches over the years, and it seems the dog always suffers the most. I just want you to really think through the situation.
Hopefully you will find a dog who feels right, not just cool.