Sure, he’s not dangerous
to his owner!
Pit Bulls were originally bred to fight other dogs in a ring and to be safe for their handlers to grab and pull apart mid-fight. That means they were selected for animal aggression, not human aggression. The catch is that modern breeding is a mixed bag. While some breeders have worked hard to make the breed more stable and social, others, like the kind selling dogs in parking lots, where most people get Pit Bulls from, don’t care about bloodline, temperament, or training.
So no, not every Pit Bull is dangerous, but when a powerful dog with a fighting heritage is poorly bred, poorly socialized, or handled by someone who thinks “it’s all about how you raise them,” you’re sitting on a ticking time bomb, and pretending otherwise is reckless. Reputations are earned.