Talk:Buster (Lady and the Tramp)/@comment-31633345-20170531174530

Well immediately after description of Buster  I can easily see a lot of young people misunderstand why he's trying to teach Scamp. Checking Scamp's strength that's not to be mean that's to be sure he can do things like catch the quiet motion of a sneaking theif because there is garbage that can be dangerous.

Tramp's thinking the junkyard job is too boring for his son Scamp to even start doing so he shares his disagreements and with the ways Tramp replies to Buster he's loses Buster's trust, which breaks their friendship.

Buster later isn't wanting to be mean to Tramp but he's wanting to help Scamp find his place in the world and Scamp seems to like outdoor stuff better than staying in the house so Buster thinks he fits the junkyard job. But Tramp misunderstands what sort thing Buster's trying to help Scamp with and so he loses hope and feels like his son was stolen. And Buster kicking Angel out isn't him being mean it's him understanding her wish to have a family but showing it silently. So mostly when you're explaining dog attitude Buster doesn't do what he does to be mean, but even when he picks someone he finds trustworthy he looks at his wish more than the consequence and that's when Scamp learns his lesson. He's one who tries to find solutions quickly but Buster's a dog who does his personal problem solving silently.