No, you said that "only the dominant force will actually pull you to it". This is wrong, even if we're defining "dominant" as the one exerting the force of greatest magnitude. You're obviously talking about situations where there may be many forces acting at once, and a number of smaller forces can easily overpower a greater force.
Thus making those 'number of smaller forces' the dominant force. The dominant force is the force that is pulling you dominantly.
Then you're effectively saying "the only force that acts on you is the net force, which should be obvious, and which isn't really one of the original forces anyway, even though my language is making it sound like it is".
That's what is sounds like you're saying. If not, you need to reword it.
No, that's not what I meant. The object can be pulled, but in a direction that isn't immediately toward either object attracting it. Force vectors, people. If you have one force pulling you northwest and another pulling you northeast, you'll be pulled north (assuming they're of equal magnitude; you get the gist).
I'm sorry, but I'm use to arguing with people who have a grasp on inferring meanings from sentences.
That sentence has a meaning that could very much be inferred as "either you'll go towards one source of gravity, toward the other source of gravity, or go nowhere at all", which isn't how reality works.