[Rabies]

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  • Опубліковано 8 кві 2017
  • Describes the characteristics and behavior of dogs with rabies, the symptoms, and the ways to prevent it. It explains that rabies is a virus that can be caught when bitten by another animal that is sick with rabies. It also explains that the saliva of a rabid dog is no longer dangerous after it has been exposed to open air for an hour. It advises people to report any strange behavior of an animal.
    We digitized and uploaded this film from the A/V Geeks 16mm Archive. Email us at footage@avgeeks.com if you have questions about the footage and are interested in using it in your project.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @ryanking6665
    @ryanking6665 3 роки тому +46795

    "But trixie has rabies." *60's dramatic noises*

    • @unplugcompany6752
      @unplugcompany6752 3 роки тому +2078

      That literally came out when I read that

    • @lucasjohnstone6419
      @lucasjohnstone6419 2 роки тому +750

      It’s the same sample in every old video

    • @LloOFFICIAL
      @LloOFFICIAL 2 роки тому +201

      😭😭😭

    • @sweetpea3134
      @sweetpea3134 2 роки тому +247

      TRIXIEEEE DIVAAAAAAAA
      i'll leave now

    • @LG-tx7pk
      @LG-tx7pk 2 роки тому +210

      @@lucasjohnstone6419 the narrator always sounds the same too. Glad I grew up with Morgan Freeman. His voice is so much better. Lol

  • @sorrowsmiles13
    @sorrowsmiles13 6 років тому +2658

    That poor dog chewing on the crate =(

    • @harryportfelikartakredytow8907
      @harryportfelikartakredytow8907 5 років тому +151

      Heartbreaking... Luckily his/her appearance in this video and his suffering has educated people on rabies enough to give their dogs shots and prevent them from this virus. I hope they euthanised him/her after filming this...

    • @kimmyfreak200
      @kimmyfreak200 5 років тому +122

      first time i ever saw a real dog with rabies my god that was very disturbing to see...clearly had rabies...needed to be put down.. it acted like he was dead already as if his brain was operating on some level but hardly at all... rabies is a real zombie disase...to boot my grandparents had a dalmation when i was a baby his name was rocky i just saw a dalmation the other day and got excited since they are kind of a rare breed now..so many dalmations are inbred.. the firefighters use to use them as like a mascott for firefighters

    • @otherpill7008
      @otherpill7008 5 років тому +4

      kimmyfreak200 maybe the dog had marijuana

    • @robocox9mil882
      @robocox9mil882 5 років тому +5

      Reefer madness!!! It's best to out them out of misery. Bullets quick and easy.

    • @m4dnezz402
      @m4dnezz402 3 роки тому +34

      Every animal in this video is dead. Maybe even the people. Its the 50's and 60's

  • @Ghostpopz
    @Ghostpopz Рік тому +1404

    Rabies will always be the #1 scariest thing to me. Literally the closest we'll ever get to a zombie apocalypse.

    • @JohnnyCab402
      @JohnnyCab402 10 місяців тому +25

      At least you hope it will be!

    • @leyte4639
      @leyte4639 9 місяців тому +72

      Its either rabies or dementia which will be the scariest thing to me.

    • @_Vi_nes
      @_Vi_nes 9 місяців тому +47

      Mad cow disease is also pretty scary, my friends grandma died of it.

    • @Ghostpopz
      @Ghostpopz 9 місяців тому

      @_Vi_nes How DOES mad cow disease work? Do you mean it was passed onto her or she was killed by a cow that had it?

    • @_Vi_nes
      @_Vi_nes 9 місяців тому

      Covid is less successful than rabies @@spanishflu187

  • @CharlieApples
    @CharlieApples Рік тому +4353

    I used to be a nanny, and I once got chased across a field with three toddlers by a rabid coyote. I picked up the smallest kid and told the other two to hold hands and run ahead of me. It followed us for nearly a mile, panting and snarling and biting at the tall grass. One of the scariest things I’ve ever seen.

    • @tammy_vip
      @tammy_vip Рік тому +357

      😳😳😳 bloody hell!! I cannot imagine how terrifying this would have been. It gave me chills just reading it. Pure nightmare fuel. I’m glad you all got away unscathed 🙏🏻

    • @hay_Z2021
      @hay_Z2021 Рік тому +49

      Yikes!! 😳

    • @rabid_cowboy
      @rabid_cowboy Рік тому +150

      that poor coyote was probably in so much pain too 😢

    • @fluffchilla1317
      @fluffchilla1317 Рік тому +117

      @@MayorMcheese12 😐

    • @SUGAR_XYLER
      @SUGAR_XYLER Рік тому +28

      ​@@MayorMcheese12 yeah, being a nanny would be scarier 😂

  • @shayshay7154
    @shayshay7154 5 років тому +12111

    Rabies is so scary. It's like a zombie virus.

    • @Latexlaila
      @Latexlaila 5 років тому +335

      Brains! Brains!
      *WALKS PAST YOU*

    • @vxnommm
      @vxnommm 3 роки тому +35

      Tenfour Dispatch stfu if you have nothing positive to say

    • @patstaysuckafreeboss8006
      @patstaysuckafreeboss8006 3 роки тому +105

      @@vxnommm negative negative negative negative negative

    • @vxnommm
      @vxnommm 3 роки тому +8

      Django Leo no oml

    • @ariyaturner3374
      @ariyaturner3374 3 роки тому +101

      Thankfully there’s less than 1,000 cases each year

  • @user-cu3ts8of8x
    @user-cu3ts8of8x 5 років тому +8418

    But trixie has rabies *DUH DUHH DUHHHHH*

    • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
      @MAGGOT_VOMIT 4 роки тому +52

      *I was hoping a Pick axe was coming next through the skull.*

    • @bigislander72
      @bigislander72 4 роки тому +57

      I like the old timey way he says " she's a normal puppy".

    • @pandagal9805
      @pandagal9805 3 роки тому +67

      *gasp* NOT TRIXY! NOOOOOOOOO

    • @NightRunner417
      @NightRunner417 3 роки тому +24

      Shit, I was just going to post this exact thing, dammit. I scrolled down just a bit and saw this and busted out laughing.

    • @reapanomin899
      @reapanomin899 3 роки тому +35

      But Trixie has rabies
      Then...
      *Abruptly inserts dramatic sound fx*

  • @Jamezontoast
    @Jamezontoast 10 місяців тому +385

    This is exactly how advice should be given. No biases, no sugar-coating and no private interest. We all deserve public access to emergency services & advice.

    • @wolfguy1234
      @wolfguy1234 9 місяців тому +24

      I have never ever seen anyone "sugarcoat" rabies

    • @drakesomerset129
      @drakesomerset129 2 місяці тому +9

      Looking for reasons to get mad.

  • @LadySamurai88
    @LadySamurai88 Рік тому +2063

    I love how they explain everything and how they also tells you respect the dog and take care of him.

    • @hay_Z2021
      @hay_Z2021 Рік тому +33

      Right?? It's so informative and proper!!

    • @LadySamurai88
      @LadySamurai88 Рік тому +9

      @@hay_Z2021 Yes straight to the point.

    • @johnbrooks6243
      @johnbrooks6243 Рік тому +1

      @@LadySamurai88 is your profile Aiden Pearce gf?

    • @LadySamurai88
      @LadySamurai88 Рік тому

      @@johnbrooks6243 No she was a friend of him. She helped him also out of guilt tho. Clara is her name

    • @johnbrooks6243
      @johnbrooks6243 Рік тому

      @@LadySamurai88 I mean, yeah but U can't deny that she was her gf figure if U know what I mean, he watched her die by his own eyes, and held her in his hands...

  • @captaintrips2980
    @captaintrips2980 4 роки тому +3279

    If you are forced to kill a suspected rabid animal, don't like shoot it in the head. The brain needs to be examined.

    • @trollololol7882
      @trollololol7882 3 роки тому +69

      Thx

    • @falloutforever88
      @falloutforever88 3 роки тому +215

      To be practical, that would make it easier to get grey matter provided the caliber is sufficient.

    • @floridianthrasher5426
      @floridianthrasher5426 3 роки тому +291

      Does it matter? If it's rabid shoot it immediately

    • @Rigiroony
      @Rigiroony 3 роки тому +29

      Ey that was in left 4 dead 2

    • @werexxwolfxxbaby
      @werexxwolfxxbaby 3 роки тому +99

      its actually the brain stem that needs to be examined.

  • @Troyphy
    @Troyphy Рік тому +7639

    'Don't hesitate to report the dog because of your love or sense of loyalty'
    'Don't allow fear or affection for your dog keep you from having your dog vaccinated, regularly.'
    *It's amazing how simple and sensible the messaging used to be*

    • @evangelicalsnever-lie9792
      @evangelicalsnever-lie9792 Рік тому +85

      How has the messaging changed when it comes to rabies?

    • @sporks3256
      @sporks3256 Рік тому

      ​@Bungie Crimes not really, doctors still push vaccines and give information the effects of disease without it. Don't act like everyone listened or even saw this. Remember that television wasnt in everyones household. This was for white suburbians.

    • @johnnytrigger300
      @johnnytrigger300 Рік тому

      ​@@evangelicalsnever-lie9792because people think that there is a magical wizard potion in vaccines now

    • @gvs6462
      @gvs6462 Рік тому

      Nowadays: “hur dur chemtrail vaccines cause people to become intergalactic pizzagate lizard shapeshifting communist marxist leninist leftist libtard SJW cyborgs who will turn the friggin frogs into homosexuals! I know this because I trust the tyrannical regime of Democrap deepstate has been exposed by our Lord and Savior/Jesus resurrected A.K.A. Donald J. Trump. The earth is flat! #MAGA2024 #SleepyJoe #CrookedHillary”

    • @benoliver5593
      @benoliver5593 Рік тому +126

      It's amazing if you replace the word dog with kids this would be something worth preaching to people.

  • @sankarjyotibora1539
    @sankarjyotibora1539 9 місяців тому +89

    Two years ago my beloved cat was bitten by a stray dog, after about 20 days my cat bit me and my brother in one morning. I thought she was being playful and went to work without thinking much of it. The next day she started showing rabies symptoms and thats when i looked into my wound, it was swelling and bite marks were filled with puss. Went to the hospital and took the vaccines, the cat ran off to a nearby jungle and died the next day. The next 30 days are the most horrific days of my life...each day thinking that the symptoms may show up and it would be the last week of my life. But thanks almighty I am still alive 😊

  • @Devziousis
    @Devziousis 9 місяців тому +117

    These old films are so intriguing to me. They’re informative and simple. But they also have a sense of creepiness and stillness- it almost kind of directs my attention to the film even more than I would any normal video or film, as if something might scare me if I don’t pay good enough attention.

    • @oslidd
      @oslidd 3 місяці тому +4

      Yes. I feel much more comfortable while watching these compared to newer media

    • @com.passionatebitch
      @com.passionatebitch Місяць тому

      I don't get that creepiness bit. What I get tho is that these older eras have been romanticized in horror pop culture, such as old songs or the "creepy" black and white films. But since I've watched a lot of media around the 70s, I've been appreciative of it more that new media.

  • @MattGodzilla2000
    @MattGodzilla2000 5 років тому +7771

    Rabies is a real zombie threat.

    • @justiceforsethrichwwg1wga160
      @justiceforsethrichwwg1wga160 5 років тому +225

      D. C.
      Yes. Virus’s change over time...it could become something similar to what you’d call a zombie disease.

    • @robertsaberniak007
      @robertsaberniak007 5 років тому +148

      Rabies is a zombie disease for sure

    • @Adam-qv2bd
      @Adam-qv2bd 5 років тому +24

      That's Burt said in Return of the living dead. Its like rabies only much faster.

    • @jslonkie3822
      @jslonkie3822 5 років тому +11

      Have you hurd of CWD yet😎

    • @ComptGeorges
      @ComptGeorges 4 роки тому +59

      Not really since a person with rabies is mostly completely aware of their state, that is before the central nerveous system gets completely destroyed and a poor soul falls into coma. They are unable to swollow liquids, and develop hydrophobia (fear of water), and get panic attacks in mare sight of water.

  • @blobbertmcblob4888
    @blobbertmcblob4888 5 років тому +19555

    When I was a kid, there was an outbreak of rabies among the local stray dogs in my town. I was walking home from school and this dog was slowly sauntering down the sidewalk. He stopped and started making this horrific wheezing sound. As I walked past, he turned his head and stared at me, but there was just nothing in his eyes, he was looking at me, but didn't see me.
    As I walked past, I heard the dog quietly growling, I shouldn't have, but I ran all the way home. I will never forget that sound.

    • @doublenaut443
      @doublenaut443 5 років тому +2645

      At least he didnt bite you.there really isn't a cure

    • @zoeylaird5618
      @zoeylaird5618 5 років тому +1453

      Thanks for sharing sweetly. That’s awful. I am getting goose bumps just thinking about it.

    • @delta2426
      @delta2426 5 років тому +380

      sounds aweful.

    • @bartgielingh2212
      @bartgielingh2212 4 роки тому +257

      That must be scarie .

    • @khanhvynguyen7858
      @khanhvynguyen7858 4 роки тому +240

      @@joshuatraffanstedt2695 no, even if you are vaccined before the symptoms manifest, there is high chance that your intelligence will be damaged due to the effect of rabid vaccines on your nervous system. Some of the effects that could be mentioned are shortened memory span, slow information processing and slow response to external factors. So you are alive, but you're not really a normal human anymore.

  • @christophermccutcheon2143
    @christophermccutcheon2143 Рік тому +577

    This is actually incredibly informative. I didn't know there was a type of rabies with less obvious symptoms. I also didn't know about all of the out behaviour like biting metal or sticking their entire head in water to drink

    • @155chipmunkz
      @155chipmunkz 10 місяців тому +11

      I saw a rabid raccoon in a video and he basically looked like he was having a seizure.

    • @ethanweeter2732
      @ethanweeter2732 4 місяці тому +13

      The water issue can also be manifested as what appears to be hydrophobia due to the throat paralysis.

    • @Stasiaa1212
      @Stasiaa1212 2 місяці тому

      If you get bit just go get the vaccine, even if you don’t think you have it. You can’t get that shit fixed once ur symptoms start showing up and stuff

  • @patsysolatzzo2962
    @patsysolatzzo2962 Рік тому +186

    I love the ending about loving and taking care of your dog and your health. Although the topic was sad, it was incredibly informative.

    • @toxi101yt5
      @toxi101yt5 7 місяців тому +1

      exactly- ngl the "love your dog" took me off guard but i started thinking about my past dog and felt really content

  • @SpaceKittyPrincess
    @SpaceKittyPrincess 3 роки тому +7977

    "But Trixie has rabies"
    Trixie: :P

  • @dokidany
    @dokidany 3 роки тому +11641

    I feel like they should still have informative ads like this some people don’t vaccinate their animals at all

    • @amandadonegan2137
      @amandadonegan2137 2 роки тому +128

      Look up vaccine adjuvan neurological disorders and you will find out why.

    • @incideria
      @incideria 2 роки тому +70

      rabies vaccines dont work too well

    • @veiserexab1428
      @veiserexab1428 2 роки тому +123

      Maybe vaccines are quite expensive
      Edit: to all asking questions about " if you can't afford one, you shouldn't own a pet?"
      "Thank you and I agree"

    • @dokidany
      @dokidany 2 роки тому +322

      @@veiserexab1428 not that bad and there are vaccine and spay neuter clinics that do affordable and sometimes free shots and alteration.

    • @shady8261
      @shady8261 2 роки тому +89

      @@dokidany he's got a point honestly they're often really expensive
      I only gave my cats rabies shots because that's what i could afford and i felt it was the most important vaccine

  • @829ikuzo
    @829ikuzo 11 місяців тому +71

    My dad did a lot of fear mongering when I was little, and one of the things he told us was if you got rabies you had to have a big needle to cure you. Then around age 6 or 7 I got scratched by our cat, enough to draw blood, and I remember hiding it because I was scared of having to get a needle.
    Luckily the cat was fine, but I think about it all the time how I could have ended up dead because my dad had scared me too much to go to him for help.

    • @Fruitytootsieroll
      @Fruitytootsieroll 21 день тому +5

      Cat scratches wouldn’t hurt you, it couldn’t have rabies. Cat-scratch fever is only contractable from outdoor cats with extremely dirty claws

  • @naturalnashuan
    @naturalnashuan Рік тому +235

    I had a Health Dept. job that included transporting animal heads and intact bats to a lab for testing. This film is perfect! Everything that was said in this 50's film is still completely accurate and appropriate. Nothing is outdated. I like the addition of "Don't stick your hand through a fence." From what I saw, most dog bites are from teasing a dog and/ or putting a hand through a fence. I forgot that a few years ago and reached over a fence to a neighbor's dog. The top of my hand is permanently scarred from having my skin torn off by the dog.

    • @155chipmunkz
      @155chipmunkz 10 місяців тому +2

      My first duck toller took a big chunk out of my arm once. He wasn’t rabid, it was some other kind of brain problem. We had him put down when he was 4. :(

    • @Nirrrina
      @Nirrrina 8 місяців тому +2

      I'm made very sure to teach my niece & nephew how to carefully make friends with a dog. How to keep your fingers tucked in & always allow the dog to approach you while watching them for signs they'll bite.
      I never did tell my mom my niece had made friends with the pitbull that lived next to her.
      But then again she did get my touch with animals & was good with them even when young. I'm just glad I was out of state when her hamster left orphaned babies that her mom had to carry around in a basket for feedings. I'd have probably done it though.
      That girl had the friendliest Syrian hamster I ever had the pleasure to meet. I bought her a fence thing so she could bring out & play with her hamster for Christmas. I think it was one of her favorites that year & her mom appreciated that I insured I got one with a mat underneath for any messes. 3:14

  • @jthor3097
    @jthor3097 3 роки тому +15782

    Rabies is so horrific.
    When I was a toddler in the early sixties we got a puppy. Within a week my parents wouldn’t let me touch it, then it disappeared. Years later I found out it had rabies.
    It was so sad.

    • @dorazlatar2553
      @dorazlatar2553 2 роки тому +413

      awh :( any idea how did the pup contract it? I assume it was too young for vaccines, if that was a thing back then

    • @jthor3097
      @jthor3097 2 роки тому +764

      @@dorazlatar2553
      I have no idea how a puppy would have gotten rabies. I don’t even know where my parents got him from.
      Back then rabies was pretty common and the rabies vaccine was something pretty new I think.

    • @dorazlatar2553
      @dorazlatar2553 2 роки тому +382

      @@jthor3097 maybe they found out its mama or another dog in the house had rabies. either way, it's all pretty sad. people are tirelessly working on a cure/vaccine for cancer, but I'm wholeheartedly hoping rabies will get a cure soon too. it's theoretically a horrible disease. modern zombies were 10/10 inspired by rabies..

    • @Poodleinacan
      @Poodleinacan 2 роки тому +103

      @@dorazlatar2553 I mean, the movie 28 Days Later with the virus "rage" is basically the French word for rabies.

    • @YesRidley
      @YesRidley 2 роки тому +37

      I’ve seen two. One possum and one armadillo. It was exactly as everyone says horrific heart wrenching and balled my eyes out I almost puked because it broke my heart so bad. Rabies is straight up evil and it’s a stupid virus it doesn’t even know how to keep it self alive long enough for it to become anything more than an evil virus it’s evil flat out evil the two creatures I’ve seen two separate occasions were doing circles in one spot completely unaware of how to get to me even though I was standing rather close to them it was horrible. They had no control of their own movements especially their heads. I made sure my ex put it down each if them down immediately. Later I alone saw an rabid skunk and even the vulture was skeezed out by it. I had to handle that one on my own and I know did the right thing but I am still troubled by it to this day. This was around 2012 and there was a major rabies outbreak in my small town of Greenwood. I even take stray dogs to get vaccinated if I am able to. Nothing should ever have to endure that.

  • @jeffw1267
    @jeffw1267 6 років тому +6696

    "If you see a dog with rabies, stay away from him." Great advice! I was going to give the dog a big hug instead.

    • @TheCorporateSerf
      @TheCorporateSerf 5 років тому +438

      And people STILL walk right up to rabid animals to record them.

    • @Spyrika
      @Spyrika 5 років тому +168

      Some however might not know what's wrong and could try to approach or help it. That's why they said that, so people who aren't educated yet could learn. This was new when it came out after all, maybe people were really stupid at the time?

    • @brushrolla8379
      @brushrolla8379 5 років тому +168

      @@Spyrika Not stupid, ignorant. Just not learned on the subject. No one is born knowing what rabies is.

    • @kimmyfreak200
      @kimmyfreak200 5 років тому +30

      reminds me of those educational beware of predators... "if u see a stranger in a car in a dark street and he has an evil grin do not get in the car!! run away and ask the police or trusted friend for help" lmao

    • @Spyrika
      @Spyrika 5 років тому +4

      @@brushrolla8379 Both words mean to lack knowledge, do the semantics really matter?

  • @20Nole09
    @20Nole09 10 місяців тому +41

    Rabies sounds like something that could be turned into a horror movie tbh..

    • @april_12340
      @april_12340 10 місяців тому +4

      Omg so true 😳 😅

    • @ariana5834
      @ariana5834 9 місяців тому +11

      cujo

    • @waspanimations7037
      @waspanimations7037 2 місяці тому

      A virus that turns things into aggressive monsters has been done before

    • @wisteria7961
      @wisteria7961 Місяць тому +2

      Mandela Catalogue vibes...

    • @drywall.8242
      @drywall.8242 15 днів тому

      Yeah it’s called cujo

  • @NotSoCrazyNinja
    @NotSoCrazyNinja 10 місяців тому +17

    We need modern versions of PSA videos like these. I have learned SO much from these kinds of old style educational videos. They are a very great resource. You can literally burn countless DVDs full of these educational videos and put it into a collection and that collection would be an amazing source of knowledge in an easy to digest format.

  • @Patrick-tf1ri
    @Patrick-tf1ri 3 роки тому +21537

    These old films are ALWAYS the MOST informative. Straight to the point.

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta 2 роки тому +939

      No opinions, just facts. I like it.

    • @raphaellavictoria01
      @raphaellavictoria01 2 роки тому +530

      i also find old videos kind of comforting, like, predictable, ordered, "homey". I was born in the 80s, so it's not exactly nostalgia...

    • @AarnavDasari
      @AarnavDasari 2 роки тому +296

      there's also no inspiring business presentation music playing too.

    • @rdred8693
      @rdred8693 2 роки тому +232

      @@raphaellavictoria01 Believe it or not, the news used to be like this.
      Very boring, no flashy music, etc

    • @McCurtainCounty888
      @McCurtainCounty888 2 роки тому +97

      Just like the skull and crossbones that used to be on poison, even a small child could understand it

  • @seraph9879
    @seraph9879 2 роки тому +2251

    i thought this was gonna be some weird creepy art project, turns out i am just learning about rabies and its effects

    • @theoperaghost6112
      @theoperaghost6112 2 роки тому +79

      I thought so too, but tbh I’m not upset this is still genuinely interesting

    • @sunflower8227
      @sunflower8227 2 роки тому +54

      i thought it was some creppy documentarry of someone diyng of rabies, or an ARG, turn out im just getting educated

    • @shadowman1754
      @shadowman1754 2 роки тому +20

      Same haha. Fooled into learning and I'm fine with that

    • @shadowman1754
      @shadowman1754 2 роки тому +2

      Same haha. Fooled into learning and I'm fine with that

    • @barrymayson2492
      @barrymayson2492 2 роки тому +7

      There are some videos on here about humans with rabies and some children it is horrible way to die. !! Best keep a lookout! Having said that I have picked up many stray dogs in Spain at least 30 !! But have a good eye for them and it is a rare virus here but not unknown.

  • @bugcatcher8989
    @bugcatcher8989 Рік тому +82

    The only thing as bad or worse for a family pet is Lyme Disease, we thought our dog had the shot but miscommunication led to it not happening and of course he got a tick. I’m still traumatized about how sick he got. We tried everything to help him to no avail. Do not mess around. Get your pets all the vaccines they need and keep it up to date yearly. Please.

    • @averycheesypotato
      @averycheesypotato Рік тому +20

      Lyme disease is bad, but not nearly as bad.
      Most people or animals who get Lyme can recover. Once symptoms start to show though, rabies is 100% fatal

    • @orektez
      @orektez 7 місяців тому

      i had lyme disease when i was little, my parents didn't realize what it was, the school nurse was the one to realize i had it, though coincidentally i was already on antibiotics for a tooth infection at the time, they just doubled the amount i had to take and i was fine, it didn't spread further then my left hand.

  • @Goat81093
    @Goat81093 Рік тому +49

    When I was a kid a lot of our neighbours died cause of rabid dog bites cause they ignored them claiming "they had tough skin" or "they were used to bites".
    It ain't no joke and I'm glad it's becoming less and less of a problem

    • @kilderok
      @kilderok 11 місяців тому

      lmao I know it sounds callous but they likely did the world a favor being that stupid.

    • @awkydrey
      @awkydrey Місяць тому +1

      Whoa, if you dont mind telling- where and when was this?

    • @Goat81093
      @Goat81093 Місяць тому +5

      @@awkydrey it was around the 90's and early 2000's in a country in north africa called Tunisia

    • @awkydrey
      @awkydrey Місяць тому

      @@Goat81093 thanks

  • @joshguye
    @joshguye 3 роки тому +2560

    "Under no circumstances should you kill or DESTROY THE DOG"

    • @arthureaterofworlds5176
      @arthureaterofworlds5176 2 роки тому +263

      How do you even destroy a dog? Is it like using a hammer and smashing every part of him?

    • @lilyfelicity5358
      @lilyfelicity5358 2 роки тому +274

      They said don’t bury or destroy the body so destroying it would be things like burning it, throwing it off a bridge, putting it through a wood chipper or cutting it up into pieces then putting the pieces into a garbage bag and then throwing it in the dumpster.

    • @LightingMouse
      @LightingMouse 2 роки тому +139

      @@lilyfelicity5358 like that's just Psychotic why would anyone do that

    • @TheRecklessBravery
      @TheRecklessBravery 2 роки тому +69

      @@LightingMouse maybe back then they do that things

    • @LightingMouse
      @LightingMouse 2 роки тому +6

      @@TheRecklessBravery yeah

  • @leogendary133
    @leogendary133 3 роки тому +14018

    Rest in peace 60's Doggos
    Edit:
    On a side note,
    On October 20, 2021
    I lost my boy Chihuahua of 14 years of age from heart failure and on October 12 I lost my good boy Cat that was hit by a car. The goodest and sweeties boys I have had. I had my dog and his sister since they were puppies. Both fitted in one hand and they grew up and fitted each on my arms and on top of each other. And my cat just arrived one day infront of my home. Since he was sick with FIV(I have cats inside) he couldn't come in until I completely cured him from other conditionshe had. I don't know what made him cross the street but his suffering stop that day but not how I would wanted it, I did as much I could for him but still feel I should have done more. For ever they will be my in my heart.

    • @danskrr
      @danskrr 3 роки тому +240

      I think this is the 50’s

    • @memyself898
      @memyself898 3 роки тому +289

      @@danskrr oh well then in that case fuck off 50's doggos

    • @user-ih4fd9sf8x
      @user-ih4fd9sf8x 3 роки тому +287

      Rest in peace 50s doggos

    • @_Arisupdates
      @_Arisupdates 3 роки тому +8

      @Maximilian Lockard I know. :(

    • @nightmareinaction629
      @nightmareinaction629 3 роки тому +34

      If you are over 20 years old every dog the lived when you were born is now dead

  • @jasonfallel8829
    @jasonfallel8829 Рік тому +85

    a breath of fresh air . Actual informative content and clear English with no slang. This is gold

    • @beedeepee9418
      @beedeepee9418 Рік тому +1

      Where u from??

    • @hezhekov2798
      @hezhekov2798 9 місяців тому

      @@beedeepee9418speak English. I’m pretty sure the guy isn’t too fond of your broken Ebonics

  • @Sea_Enjoyer
    @Sea_Enjoyer Рік тому +11

    Bring these 60s style films back. Far more informative and less patronising than anything we have today.

  • @musclemanmilk3935
    @musclemanmilk3935 3 роки тому +3140

    The old kind of videos like this add more of a creepy vibe to it.

    • @seanwilkinson8696
      @seanwilkinson8696 2 роки тому +44

      You got it. I half-expected to see original "Living Dead" shamblers parading in the streets, and more film damage and scratches.

    • @cliccclacc6561
      @cliccclacc6561 2 роки тому +127

      Modern culture has created a stigma of negativity/uneasiness surrounding old things.

    • @WOODENCHAIR64
      @WOODENCHAIR64 2 роки тому +28

      yea im afraid its gonna pull some local 58 shit every time he stops talking or gets cut off
      (edited due to me accidentally saying 59 instead)

    • @cruzaider5339
      @cruzaider5339 2 роки тому +5

      Take away the volume and this would have a different vibe to it

    • @user-cf6dn5tg4f
      @user-cf6dn5tg4f 2 роки тому +5

      @@cruzaider5339 looks like some nazi shit without audio

  • @kaninekodiak
    @kaninekodiak 2 роки тому +4211

    seeing all these dogs in such pain absolutely breaks my heart. that white dog with black speckles biting and clawing the cage wires, he looked so terrified and distressed. its awful.

    • @HuntressLilly
      @HuntressLilly 2 роки тому +223

      @@TakenByStormEquestrian I think this is an interesting argument. Science is important, but at the cost of other’s lives or well being? It’s interesting to think about whether or not that’s okay.

    • @deino.zweilous.hydreigon
      @deino.zweilous.hydreigon 2 роки тому +51

      Arnt the dogs pretty much brain dead? But I dont think its wrong

    • @j.r0d630
      @j.r0d630 2 роки тому +53

      @@TakenByStormEquestrian I’m sure they did right after the cameras stopped rolling

    • @sunflower8227
      @sunflower8227 2 роки тому +67

      @@TakenByStormEquestrian
      one has to suffer so none does

    • @cinnamonpuppi
      @cinnamonpuppi 2 роки тому +1

      @@deino.zweilous.hydreigon Yup, the rabies disease eats travels up the spinal cord and when it reaches the brain it starts eating it.

  • @Aiden_Muslim
    @Aiden_Muslim 10 місяців тому +23

    I really enjoy and appreciate how informative and helpful videos like these exist. It definitely saved the lives of many people and especially back then when they did not have internet.

  • @jaydencrimsoneverett6731
    @jaydencrimsoneverett6731 Рік тому +2

    Old informative films are always...The most enjoyable, its chill...and best of all, its informative, in the best way.

  • @stormyweraf7923
    @stormyweraf7923 3 роки тому +6140

    I remember one time when I was younger I was riding my bike and saw a hedgehog or something and on the ground and picked it up. It bit me immediately and I didn’t think anything of it. It didn’t have rabies but looking back, it could’ve and I wouldn’t be here to talk about it. Anyway, I’m telling my grandkids that bitch had rabies and I’m immune to rabies

    • @indigoangel339
      @indigoangel339 3 роки тому +472

      Hahaha better not cuz they may believe and think they are safe too.
      But yeah. Me too. I'm in loop watching things about rabies and I remember how one cat with foam in mouth been extra friendly to me and I let him touch my legs but then mother did call me home "I was kiddo" and I just went..... I could get into zombie and die the worst death ever!!!

    • @wistolla
      @wistolla 3 роки тому +146

      Rabbies can lay dormant for decades buddy so yeah you aren't off the hook yet

    • @thegreatgamingkid8252
      @thegreatgamingkid8252 3 роки тому +286

      It can lay dormant for up to 2 years, not decades bruh

    • @heyboilaxer5911
      @heyboilaxer5911 3 роки тому +43

      Better not or they will tell other people and the word will keep spreading and spreading to the point that scientists are gonna start using your as a vaccine or something

    • @stormyweraf7923
      @stormyweraf7923 3 роки тому +119

      @@heyboilaxer5911 then when I'm famous I can say, "bro chill it's just a prank"

  • @Florida_954
    @Florida_954 3 роки тому +1365

    Rip all doggos in this vid 😢

    • @Florida_954
      @Florida_954 3 роки тому +16

      @@sallybutton6237 its just a diff way of saying dog ,imo if someone says doggo i know they love and take of dog

    • @_Arisupdates
      @_Arisupdates 3 роки тому +10

      Poor doggies

    • @KillerCrewmate2526
      @KillerCrewmate2526 2 роки тому +16

      Rabais or not they are all death now.

    • @imaninfantilekageroo3172
      @imaninfantilekageroo3172 2 роки тому +46

      @@KillerCrewmate2526 thanks for informing us! we definitely didn't know a dog from the 60s couldn't be alive in 2020

    • @TheDeadMeme27
      @TheDeadMeme27 2 роки тому +32

      Some people in this video are most likely also dead

  • @reneecarter6702
    @reneecarter6702 10 місяців тому +7

    I’m a cop and EMT in the state of Georgia, and I can say beyond a doubt that all of this information is still 100% relevant in 2023.

  • @ayushkumarjha9921
    @ayushkumarjha9921 11 місяців тому +2

    Old video ads are always straight to the point.

  • @robot_spider
    @robot_spider Рік тому +5540

    My son was bitten by a friend's dog. It barely broke the skin, but since they couldn't locate vaccination records for the dog, I insisted it be tested for rabies--which they can now do non-invasively (they don't have to kill the dog to do it). My wife and son were mortified, but I wasn't willing to risk my son's life because it was 'awkward'. Once you show symptoms, it's too late. As expected, the dog wasn't rabid, and after a few days' observation, it went home, and no harm was done. Don't mess around with rabies.

    • @schaefer76
      @schaefer76 Рік тому +298

      Good man. You did the right thing.

    • @anunknownentity5070
      @anunknownentity5070 Рік тому +234

      Definitely did the right thing, you don’t want to risk anything with rabies

    • @Noe_
      @Noe_ Рік тому

      I read this comment completely wrong the first time. Accidentally read that you have to kill the dog to get it tested for rabies!

    • @stilesthehuntindog2767
      @stilesthehuntindog2767 Рік тому

      The only 100% way Is dissecting the brain. Blood tests are more ethical but less accurate

    • @joanbaczek2575
      @joanbaczek2575 Рік тому

      Rabies doesn’t show up in the blood til late stage of the disease.!you are full of shyt there is no noninvasive way to test for rabies you nonce! Quit the lies. When a pet bites a person and rabies has to be ruled out they are quarantined for 1-2 weeks to watch for symptoms of the disease . It can take a week for symptoms to show up after exposure and 2 more weeks for it to die

  • @MajGibbons24
    @MajGibbons24 2 роки тому +10252

    It’s truly a shame that we don’t have a similar way of conveying accurate public health and safety information to our communities like we could with the 1960s era PSAs. These programs saved many peoples lives and were sources everyone could trust.

    • @littlebitofhope1489
      @littlebitofhope1489 2 роки тому +119

      1950's

    • @thanatoswaker2778
      @thanatoswaker2778 Рік тому

      Are you being sarcastic? Because we now have even more powerful communication mechanisms than then. Its just that people being dumb and evil people using them to missinform kind of ruined them. Think on how easy all about covid was informed...and then think on how much missinformation was about it later on. Like Trump's "medicine"...

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn Рік тому

      They will do one of these videos into some total political bulshit now. They would never just give you the facts today like they did back then.

    • @OceanSwimmer
      @OceanSwimmer Рік тому +277

      I agree. These public service announcements should be part of our television or cable service presentations.
      If companies sponsored films like this, I would be more inclined to support purchasing their products.
      These films are far more valuable to viewers than the awful commercials seem today.
      The dramatizations teach everyone from school age children to older folks how to stay safe and take actions to protect neighborhoods.
      There are countless topics possible for public service announcements.
      Bring this service back!

    • @idonotliveinparaguay.2361
      @idonotliveinparaguay.2361 Рік тому

      Except right wingers would say it is Government propaganda, or part of some "liberal agenda".

  • @goldenmeadows5046
    @goldenmeadows5046 Рік тому +20

    I think this Reddit post belongs here. Keep in mind I did not write what's inside the dashes.
    -----
    Rabies. It's exceptionally common, but people just don't run into the animals that carry it often. Skunks especially, and bats.
    Let me paint you a picture.
    You go camping, and at midday you decide to take a nap in a nice little hammock. While sleeping, a tiny brown bat, in the "rage" stages of infection is fidgeting in broad daylight, uncomfortable, and thirsty (due to the hydrophobia) and you snort, startling him. He goes into attack mode.
    Except you're asleep, and he's a little brown bat, so weighs around 6 grams. You don't even feel him land on your bare knee, and he starts to bite. His teeth are tiny. Hardly enough to even break the skin, but he does manage to give you the equivalent of a tiny scrape that goes completely unnoticed.
    Rabies does not travel in your blood. In fact, a blood test won't even tell you if you've got it. (Antibody tests may be done, but are useless if you've ever been vaccinated.)
    You wake up, none the wiser. If you notice anything at the bite site at all, you assume you just lightly scraped it on something.
    The bomb has been lit, and your nervous system is the wick. The rabies will multiply along your nervous system, doing virtually no damage, and completely undetectable. You literally have NO symptoms.
    It may be four days, it may be a year, but the camping trip is most likely long forgotten. Then one day your back starts to ache... Or maybe you get a slight headache?
    At this point, you're already dead. There is no cure.
    (The sole caveat to this is the Milwaukee Protocol, which leaves most patients dead anyway, and the survivors mentally disabled, and is seldom done).
    There's no treatment. It has a 100% kill rate.
    Absorb that. Not a single other virus on the planet has a 100% kill rate. Only rabies. And once you're symptomatic, it's over. You're dead.
    So what does that look like?
    Your headache turns into a fever, and a general feeling of being unwell. You're fidgety. Uncomfortable. And scared. As the virus that has taken its time getting into your brain finds a vast network of nerve endings, it begins to rapidly reproduce, starting at the base of your brain... Where your "pons" is located. This is the part of the brain that controls communication between the rest of the brain and body, as well as sleep cycles.
    Next you become anxious. You still think you have only a mild fever, but suddenly you find yourself becoming scared, even horrified, and it doesn't occur to you that you don't know why. This is because the rabies is chewing up your amygdala.
    As your cerebellum becomes hot with the virus, you begin to lose muscle coordination, and balance. You think maybe it's a good idea to go to the doctor now, but assuming a doctor is smart enough to even run the tests necessary in the few days you have left on the planet, odds are they'll only be able to tell your loved ones what you died of later.
    You're twitchy, shaking, and scared. You have the normal fear of not knowing what's going on, but with the virus really fucking the amygdala this is amplified a hundred fold. It's around this time the hydrophobia starts.
    You're horribly thirsty, you just want water. But you can't drink. Every time you do, your throat clamps shut and you vomit. This has become a legitimate, active fear of water. You're thirsty, but looking at a glass of water begins to make you gag, and shy back in fear. The contradiction is hard for your hot brain to see at this point. By now, the doctors will have to put you on IVs to keep you hydrated, but even that's futile. You were dead the second you had a headache.
    You begin hearing things, or not hearing at all as your thalamus goes. You taste sounds, you see smells, everything starts feeling like the most horrifying acid trip anyone has ever been on. With your hippocampus long under attack, you're having trouble remembering things, especially family.
    You're alone, hallucinating, thirsty, confused, and absolutely, undeniably terrified. Everything scares the literal shit out of you at this point. These strange people in lab coats. These strange people standing around your bed crying, who keep trying to get you "drink something" and crying. And it's only been about a week since that little headache that you've completely forgotten. Time means nothing to you anymore. Funny enough, you now know how the bat felt when he bit you.
    Eventually, you slip into the "dumb rabies" phase. Your brain has started the process of shutting down. Too much of it has been turned to liquid virus. Your face droops. You drool. You're all but unaware of what's around you. A sudden noise or light might startle you, but for the most part, it's all you can do to just stare at the ground. You haven't really slept for about 72 hours.
    Then you die. Always, you die.
    And there's not one... fucking... thing... anyone can do for you.
    Then there's the question of what to do with your corpse. I mean, sure, burying it is the right thing to do. But the fucking virus can survive in a corpse for years. You could kill every rabid animal on the planet today, and if two years from now, some moist, preserved, rotten hunk of used-to-be brain gets eaten by an animal, it starts all over.
    ------
    Rabies has an almost 100% mortality rate and there is no cure. Once you show symptoms, even just a slight fever, you will almost certainly die. There are approximately 59 thousand deaths annually worldwide and the family that contains the most common cause of rabies (Rabies lyssavirus) also contains at least fourteen other species of viruses that can potentially cause rabies. ANY warm-blooded mammal (including but not limited to skunks, bats, foxes, coyotes, racoons, and even herbivorous species such as deer and elk) is a possible carrier and if you are bitten should be treated as if it's confirmed to already be infected unless proven otherwise. It is MUCH better to get vaccinated and treated because you've assumed the animal is infected already than to be wrong and dead.
    Let me say this again. Rabies has an almost 100% mortality rate. For comparison, the Black Death (the same disease that killed about a third of the European population in 1347) has a mortality rate of just 10% with treatment. That means that if 1000 people got Rabies and 1000 people with the Plague were given treatment, only about 100 of the plague patients would die while every single Rabies patient would be dead, and most would die within the week that symptoms started.
    Get you and your pets vaccinated. Don't let your cats or dogs outside unsupervised without a fence. Make sure your dog has tags that can identify it, and for the love of God, go to the doctor if you get bitten by any warm-blooded mammal.
    Something else important: having no symptoms in the first 10 days since a bite won't make you safe. Rabies can incubate for YEARS before you ever show symptoms, and by that point, you're already dead. While rare, it's better to be safe than in the morgue.

    • @The_Boomer_
      @The_Boomer_ Рік тому

      @@greatape5174 Lol same

    • @beingweirdisnormal1404
      @beingweirdisnormal1404 27 днів тому +2

      It bothers me that this doesn't have more likes. I feel like everyone should see this. Rabies is no joke, and like your comment says, more than half of the time it has a 100% mortality rate.

  • @TheJumpingJake
    @TheJumpingJake Рік тому +5

    So informative, no bullshit - a set guideline and how to deal with it. Shame social media is now a load of contrast ideas on the same topics.

  • @honeywasp7839
    @honeywasp7839 Рік тому +721

    "treat him like any close friend" i love that even back then abusing animals was frowned upon as much as it is today

    • @westernsavage2313
      @westernsavage2313 Рік тому +45

      We weren’t insensitive assholes in the past you know.

    • @honeywasp7839
      @honeywasp7839 Рік тому +79

      @@westernsavage2313 people where fine w circus animals who are famously abused for our own entertainment... dont even get me started on what zoos where like

    • @ArcaneEiro
      @ArcaneEiro 11 місяців тому +52

      God forbid they hurt an animal.
      But drag a black man behind a truck for an hour? Just another Sunday afternoon

    • @westernsavage2313
      @westernsavage2313 11 місяців тому +23

      @@honeywasp7839 No, they weren’t. There were people who definitely did not agree with circus animals. You keep putting everyone in one box. There were people who probably had the animal’s well-being in mind back then too.

    • @westernsavage2313
      @westernsavage2313 11 місяців тому +33

      @@ArcaneEiro Yeah, because race had everything to do with this subject.

  • @RedMushroom23
    @RedMushroom23 6 років тому +3428

    i like watching old shit like this...

    • @stevetheriault4164
      @stevetheriault4164 3 роки тому +29

      Dirt pool watch the movie called refer madness you'll laugh your ass off its old

    • @RedMushroom23
      @RedMushroom23 3 роки тому +38

      @@stevetheriault4164 i almost forgot this video.... thanks for replying....i still love watching old shit tho...

    • @yorusuyasoul69420
      @yorusuyasoul69420 3 роки тому +9

      Good shit

    • @Lost_Lola
      @Lost_Lola 3 роки тому +1

      Same

    • @pratikpatil8543
      @pratikpatil8543 3 роки тому +16

      old is gold shit bro

  • @Stone_624
    @Stone_624 3 місяці тому +3

    Wow, Watching this I'm kinda blown away by how informative and instructive these types of 1950's/60's videos were. It's pretty incredible how far society has fallen in the past 60-70 years.

  • @TheLillipuss
    @TheLillipuss Рік тому +3

    The world needs these knowledge accountability & behaviour videos back BADLY!!!

  • @SeeburgMusic
    @SeeburgMusic 5 років тому +3802

    I like how the "clean" dog is named "Lady" and the "diseased" dog is named "Trixie". I guess Trixie got around a bit in her day......

  • @dondena21
    @dondena21 6 років тому +2980

    And just to note, it's only mammals that get rabies. At least if our pet lizard or turtle bites we don't have to worry about it from them. (I don't mean a snapping turtle.) Though some people say opossums seem to be immune to rabies, but when defensive, they sure can act rabid.

    • @SilverScaleMA
      @SilverScaleMA 5 років тому +206

      dondena21 yeah, there are a few animals that just either don't contract or can't spread rabies. Possums are one of the few that are both. Some species of bats can get rabies but it is extremely rare that they spread it to humans. Deer can also contract rabies but it uncommon for them to spread it effectively. It really depends on how the specific immune system for that species works and how the species behaves, many prey animals can get rabies but don't really spread it but most predators can both get and spread it easy. Where I live the biggest rabies conserns are raccoons, coyotes, and foxes though there has been a rather high number of rabid skunks as well.

    • @TheSeerSacrifice
      @TheSeerSacrifice 5 років тому +105

      its because of the low body temp, if a possom gets sick and runs high body temp they are at risk of rabies.

    • @Spyrika
      @Spyrika 5 років тому +101

      You just gotta worry about salmonella! To everyone who reads this: remember to always wash your hands and don't handle them if you have open sores. They can develop the bacteria on their own without needing to contact it first. I had a turtle as a kid, her name was Chantelle ^-^

    • @ultimate_animal_showdown
      @ultimate_animal_showdown 5 років тому +17

      dondena21 opossums have a great immune system but still can get rabies but it would be extremely rare

    • @joshuatraffanstedt2695
      @joshuatraffanstedt2695 4 роки тому +50

      @@SilverScaleMA bats are one of the highest transmitters of rabies in the world. Raccoons are the highest in North America.

  • @Red_Spy-Original
    @Red_Spy-Original Рік тому +2

    Why is this kind of comforting for me, just the narrator and old styled graphics? This is... kind of nice.

  • @jameswhyte810
    @jameswhyte810 Рік тому +2

    Rabies is one of the saddest, most terrifying ways to die imaginable. Old videos of people dying of rabies are so incredibly sad.

  • @JARedwolf100
    @JARedwolf100 5 років тому +1889

    My great grandfather always called it “Hydrophobia” and I’ve picked up on the habit. For some reason the animal suffers a painful jolt when its visually stimulated by the sight of water and retreats. Hence why it’s called Hydrophobia.

    • @Bonniethebunny
      @Bonniethebunny 5 років тому +242

      JARedwolf100 hydrophobia is a symptom of rabies.

    • @JARedwolf100
      @JARedwolf100 5 років тому +221

      Bonnie the bunny I know, hence why it’s nickname back in the old days was hydrophobia and/or Water Madness.
      Most common telltale sign is walking in circles, convulsive fits, frothing at the mouth and struggling to swallow. Poor animal often chokes on its own spit and some even drown/suffocate due to the throat paralysis.

    • @KingDecahedron
      @KingDecahedron 5 років тому +45

      no - it can't swallow water - that's the issue

    • @JARedwolf100
      @JARedwolf100 5 років тому +192

      D. C. I’ve personally witnessed it in horses and cows. The very sight of water causes them to freak out and act terrified. In human cases the victim expresses an almost instinctive fear at the sight of water, also a painful jolting shock reaction also.
      Anyway, it’s truly a terrifying disease.

    • @KingDecahedron
      @KingDecahedron 5 років тому +24

      it is horrible but the swallowing muscles are paralyzed - i grew up with horses, they're great "Quarter horses" but you are slightly confused , you were quite young when you seen that.

  • @victoriasalter1701
    @victoriasalter1701 2 роки тому +3674

    RIP to all the dogs, cats, other animals and people (and any other creatures) who have ever died of rabies...
    I wish you all the best for your current and future lives, and I wish all the best to all whom you ever knew!

    • @drunkenmmamaster419
      @drunkenmmamaster419 Рік тому +37

      Cringe

    • @riev666
      @riev666 Рік тому

      ​@@drunkenmmamaster419 ky$

    • @NerkoVukovic
      @NerkoVukovic Рік тому +293

      @@drunkenmmamaster419 you're probably no older than 10

    • @IllHandleThis
      @IllHandleThis Рік тому

      @@drunkenmmamaster419Your videos are cringe. Also, dust off the tv stand you use. Looks filthy asf.

    • @nytophobiia5345
      @nytophobiia5345 Рік тому +60

      I mean, I know you mean well by saying "I wish you all the best for your current and future lives", but theyre kinda unalive

  • @pokefriend123
    @pokefriend123 11 місяців тому +6

    It’s amazing how much more complicated our safety procedures have gotten since this came out

  • @pipecleanermaster
    @pipecleanermaster Рік тому +12

    Rabies is scary. (Cursing is involved) [some information has changed since this copypasta was made but the basis is still the same]
    Rabies. It's exceptionally common, but people just don't run into the animals that carry it often. Skunks especially, and bats.
    Let me paint you a picture.
    You go camping, and at midday you decide to take a nap in a nice little hammock. While sleeping, a tiny brown bat, in the "rage" stages of infection is fidgeting in broad daylight, uncomfortable, and thirsty (due to the hydrophobia) and you snort, startling him. He goes into attack mode.
    Except you're asleep, and he's a little brown bat, so weighs around 6 grams. You don't even feel him land on your bare knee, and he starts to bite. His teeth are tiny. Hardly enough to even break the skin, but he does manage to give you the equivalent of a tiny scrape that goes completely unnoticed.
    Rabies does not travel in your blood. In fact, a blood test won't even tell you if you've got it. (Antibody tests may be done, but are useless if you've ever been vaccinated.)
    You wake up, none the wiser. If you notice anything at the bite site at all, you assume you just lightly scraped it on something.
    The bomb has been lit, and your nervous system is the wick. The rabies will multiply along your nervous system, doing virtually no damage, and completely undetectable. You literally have NO symptoms.
    It may be four days, it may be a year, but the camping trip is most likely long forgotten. Then one day your back starts to ache... Or maybe you get a slight headache?
    At this point, you're already dead. There is no cure.
    (The sole caveat to this is the Milwaukee Protocol, which leaves most patients dead anyway, and the survivors mentally disabled, and is seldom done).
    There's no treatment. It has a 100% kill rate.
    Absorb that. Not a single other virus on the planet has a 100% kill rate. Only rabies. And once you're symptomatic, it's over. You're dead.
    So what does that look like?
    Your headache turns into a fever, and a general feeling of being unwell. You're fidgety. Uncomfortable. And scared. As the virus that has taken its time getting into your brain finds a vast network of nerve endings, it begins to rapidly reproduce, starting at the base of your brain... Where your "pons" is located. This is the part of the brain that controls communication between the rest of the brain and body, as well as sleep cycles.
    Next you become anxious. You still think you have only a mild fever, but suddenly you find yourself becoming scared, even horrified, and it doesn't occur to you that you don't know why. This is because the rabies is chewing up your amygdala.
    As your cerebellum becomes hot with the virus, you begin to lose muscle coordination, and balance. You think maybe it's a good idea to go to the doctor now, but assuming a doctor is smart enough to even run the tests necessary in the few days you have left on the planet, odds are they'll only be able to tell your loved ones what you died of later.
    You're twitchy, shaking, and scared. You have the normal fear of not knowing what's going on, but with the virus really fucking the amygdala this is amplified a hundred fold. It's around this time the hydrophobia starts.
    You're horribly thirsty, you just want water. But you can't drink. Every time you do, your throat clamps shut and you vomit. This has become a legitimate, active fear of water. You're thirsty, but looking at a glass of water begins to make you gag, and shy back in fear. The contradiction is hard for your hot brain to see at this point. By now, the doctors will have to put you on IVs to keep you hydrated, but even that's futile. You were dead the second you had a headache.
    You begin hearing things, or not hearing at all as your thalamus goes. You taste sounds, you see smells, everything starts feeling like the most horrifying acid trip anyone has ever been on. With your hippocampus long under attack, you're having trouble remembering things, especially family.
    You're alone, hallucinating, thirsty, confused, and absolutely, undeniably terrified. Everything scares the literal shit out of you at this point. These strange people in lab coats. These strange people standing around your bed crying, who keep trying to get you "drink something" and crying. And it's only been about a week since that little headache that you've completely forgotten. Time means nothing to you anymore. Funny enough, you now know how the bat felt when he bit you.
    Eventually, you slip into the "dumb rabies" phase. Your brain has started the process of shutting down. Too much of it has been turned to liquid virus. Your face droops. You drool. You're all but unaware of what's around you. A sudden noise or light might startle you, but for the most part, it's all you can do to just stare at the ground. You haven't really slept for about 72 hours.
    Then you die. Always, you die.
    And there's not one... fucking... thing... anyone can do for you.
    Then there's the question of what to do with your corpse. I mean, sure, burying it is the right thing to do. But the fucking virus can survive in a corpse for years. You could kill every rabid animal on the planet today, and if two years from now, some moist, preserved, rotten hunk of used-to-be brain gets eaten by an animal, it starts all over.
    So yeah, rabies scares the shit out of me. And it's fucking EVERYWHERE.

  • @babybug6462
    @babybug6462 2 роки тому +1191

    I remember when I was 5 years old I saw a raccoon on our front poarch. I told my dad and he told me to go upstairs. My Dad tried to feed it, but it didn't move. I will never forget the look it gave me. It's eyes were glazed over. As if it wasn't there. It just stared at me up the stairs. I knew something was wrong with it by the way it didn't move. It was thin and sickly.

    • @friendlyowl9985
      @friendlyowl9985 2 роки тому +85

      That could have been a form of distemper, it can disorient them.

    • @wormhole331
      @wormhole331 2 роки тому +49

      Thin and sickly isn’t rabies since rabies kills within days once symptoms appear.

    • @dr.altoclef9255
      @dr.altoclef9255 Рік тому +79

      @@wormhole331 Rabies starts with a ‘prodromal’ phase with mostly flu like symptoms that lasts 2-10 days on average. Then you have 2-10 (on average) for the acute neurological disease. Those symptoms may be ‘furious’ (the classic stuff), ‘paralytic’ (sometimes called ‘dumb, causes paralysis and weakness) or a combination (‘atypical’ usually from bat bites.)
      In the prodromal phase they lose interest in eating and become quite exhausted.

    • @PavelTayTay
      @PavelTayTay Рік тому +37

      Had something very similar happen to me when I was a little kid. Raccoon walking back and forth on the porch in the middle of the day. I was so heartbroken when I saw my papaw shoot it in the head with a .22 but now I understand. Whatever bit of him was still there was suffering incredibly.

    • @drunkenmmamaster419
      @drunkenmmamaster419 Рік тому

      And than your dad put a .38 caliber bullet in his skull 😂

  • @IamAwsomeYouAreNot
    @IamAwsomeYouAreNot 3 роки тому +910

    Was bitten by the neighbours dog and later he told me that the dog hated kids which was the reason of it's malicious attack. I didn't get injured, but it hurt as hell. I told my mother about it, she hinted the thought of rabies, but since it is Norway it's quite rare for a dog to have it. Still, always be aware.

    • @fabplays6559
      @fabplays6559 2 роки тому +35

      Since you’re still alive, I assume it wasn’t rabies?

    • @IamAwsomeYouAreNot
      @IamAwsomeYouAreNot 2 роки тому +121

      @@fabplays6559 Nah, just a mad dog that hated kids around the area. I am alive and well xD. That happened when I was around 6 or 7 years old. I am 26 so obviously. I survived. :D

    • @oliwolikqkrigkgieogovowowk1605
      @oliwolikqkrigkgieogovowowk1605 2 роки тому +51

      plot twist: the dog did have rabies and youre just immune to it

    • @alpha_alex7253
      @alpha_alex7253 2 роки тому +33

      @@oliwolikqkrigkgieogovowowk1605 plot twist to the plot twist:The dog transmitted his brain to the kid and is now living in his body

    • @pickleddolphinmeatwithhors677
      @pickleddolphinmeatwithhors677 2 роки тому +42

      Rabies can remain dormant for a few months or even years. Considering it's been 20 years you're probably all good, but it's still a good idea to get a bite checked out.

  • @damnedifidonut
    @damnedifidonut Рік тому +11

    My neighbor died of rabies
    May he rest in peace

    • @AnOrdinaryDude13
      @AnOrdinaryDude13 Рік тому

      Really?

    • @zuo
      @zuo Рік тому

      American moment lmao doesn't happen anywhere else in the world not even Africa

    • @tewtiyy
      @tewtiyy 3 місяці тому +1

      U could get rabies if you touched saliva

    • @wisteria7961
      @wisteria7961 Місяць тому +1

      @@zuoit happens in India wtf r u on abt
      Also there are cases of rabies in America, its just rare because there are less stray dogs here (depending on where you live) and we have vaccines

    • @zuo
      @zuo Місяць тому

      @@wisteria7961 India is the same Shii hole like America 😂 getting bit by a rabies animal is one thing but dying from it is just mental 💀

  • @puneetmaheshwari
    @puneetmaheshwari Рік тому +2

    This is actually really informative for me thanks

  • @ruthieharrison2609
    @ruthieharrison2609 3 роки тому +905

    Poor old Yeller my you rest in peace😭

  • @tannerv3420
    @tannerv3420 3 роки тому +659

    Makes me feel so sad for them, I love my dog so much and can't imagine the pain these dogs went through.

    • @captainngoose
      @captainngoose 2 роки тому +3

      If it helps, animals with rabies experience no pain at all.

    • @a2thek914
      @a2thek914 2 роки тому +1

      @@captainngoose Bullshit

    • @bobbulgi880
      @bobbulgi880 2 роки тому +22

      @@captainngoose Duude? I wish

    • @dr.altoclef9255
      @dr.altoclef9255 Рік тому +26

      @@captainngoose I don’t know. I mean we can’t exactly ask them how they’re feeling, but part of the whole ‘fear of water’ seems to come from the fact that they experience spasms and pain when they try to swallow it. (This inability to swallow is why some may ‘foam’ at the mouth; they can’t swallow their own spit so it just gets frothed up and drools out-).

    • @teacoon6399
      @teacoon6399 Рік тому +26

      @@captainngoose Incorrect: Rabies is painful as fuck.

  • @dzinypinydoroviny
    @dzinypinydoroviny 11 місяців тому +1

    If I'm not mistaken, amazingly all the information is still pretty much up to date.

  • @usmh
    @usmh Рік тому +2

    I appreciate the sincerity of the time. You don't get that kind of communication nowadays.

  • @monmon-hy5ql
    @monmon-hy5ql 2 роки тому +362

    I actually saw a rabid cat before. It was drooling with foam and then it just walked straight with its mouth open and the drool all over its face and body. It's very sad.

    • @Wh40kFinatic
      @Wh40kFinatic Рік тому +45

      Another reason to always keep cats indoors unless they are supervised on a harness or contained.

    • @hanac5586
      @hanac5586 Рік тому +25

      ​@@Wh40kFinatic and vaccinate them

    • @Wh40kFinatic
      @Wh40kFinatic Рік тому +9

      @Hana c Yes. Just in case they do manage to escape, or while supervised they are attacked.

    • @JannetFenix
      @JannetFenix Рік тому

      @@Wh40kFinatic do remember to neuter your cats!

  • @nonplayerzealot4
    @nonplayerzealot4 3 роки тому +592

    A St. Bernard named Cujo might trap you and your diabetic son in a Ford Pinto for days while it slams its head into the car door every time it hears the phone ring inside the house..... (This warning wasn't known until 1983, they didn't know about Cujo at the time of this documentary).

    • @iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981
      @iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981 3 роки тому +32

      Bruhhhhhh that mess had me messed up as a kid

    • @nonplayerzealot4
      @nonplayerzealot4 3 роки тому +36

      @@iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981 Remember the part where the Sun was about to come up and Dee Wallace opened her eyes and the yard was still and quiet. She looked for the dog only to see that it was right at her left hand window staring and growling at her even as she slept.

    • @fricka4798
      @fricka4798 2 роки тому +7

      r u talking about a movie or sum

    • @iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981
      @iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981 2 роки тому +31

      @@fricka4798 It's called Cujo a book/film by Stephen King

    • @iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981
      @iwantmyfriescrispynotburnt3981 2 роки тому +3

      @@nonplayerzealot4 Hell yeah... especially when it slept on the roof of the car.

  • @Lucifer_Summons
    @Lucifer_Summons Рік тому +2

    Informative, interesting and captivating. Surprisingly good video on dangers no fear mongering or otherwise useless information very well done stood the test of time in my opinion

  • @kidbrary
    @kidbrary Рік тому +5

    Additional fact, any mammal and ONLY a mammal can contract rabies, so be cautious when around any wild/stray animal. If you have been bitten by a reptile, such as a lizard or non venomous snake, rabies isn’t a concern. After you have been bitten, rinse the wound and pat dry. Then clean the wound with hydrogen peroxide and apply a sterile bandaid.

  • @reapanomin899
    @reapanomin899 3 роки тому +320

    "But if a dog is sick with rabies,he will die in 11 days"
    I'm getting the Plague Inc vibes from hearing this.

    • @worldwidestuff5567
      @worldwidestuff5567 Рік тому +3

      A better way to say it would be "a dog with rabies will die from the disease within 11 days" in real life they usually only make it 3 days once they start showing symptoms.

  • @juli3359
    @juli3359 5 років тому +1041

    "You shouldn't kill or destroy the dog" LMAO

    • @BonnieAngel141
      @BonnieAngel141 4 роки тому +4

      Julian Ibañez what?

    • @forestdenizen6497
      @forestdenizen6497 4 роки тому +122

      In these days most people had a gun and a problem dog would just be taken out back and euthanised with a shot to the head. Even today this is normal in rural communities.
      Believe it or not, you don't need to pay someone else to do every little thing.

    • @PrismaticCS
      @PrismaticCS 3 роки тому +14

      Well people do use the word Destroy especially when it's a disclaimer from an animal shelter. But I get what you're saying.

    • @TrenElZombie
      @TrenElZombie 3 роки тому +18

      Yeeeah.... Im not sure blowing the head of the animal will stop the disease to spread, i mean... Blood is a fluid? Duh

    • @sitdowndogbreath
      @sitdowndogbreath 3 роки тому +33

      @@TrenElZombie if you shoot in the head you destroy the evidence to test for rabies

  • @eeeeeehhmm
    @eeeeeehhmm Рік тому +4

    I was about 4 when the neighbor's dog bit me. I didn't tease him, he just went off the chain and had a bad temper. No one told me about rabies, and I thought that the worst thing that could happen is that I would be scolded and i hid the bite... Thank God there was no virus, so now I have both cats and dogs who receive the necessary veterinary care and do not sit tied to a pipe all their lives. It's terrible how people endanger themselves and others

  • @marcashi7555
    @marcashi7555 Рік тому +1

    Informative video and banger song in the end instead of an annoying song. 10/10

  • @rogerramjet6429
    @rogerramjet6429 2 роки тому +912

    For anyone in Australia claiming that there's no Rabies in Australia.
    This may be true for dogs and cats, but flying foxes and other bats do carry a very similar version to the American type of rabies, and all it takes is a scratch from an infected animal.
    Symptoms often won't show till months later, but by that time, you'd better start making plans.
    It's to late once symptoms show.

    • @jlinus7251
      @jlinus7251 Рік тому +4

      but who's ever heard of someone getting scratched by a flying fox or a bat?

    • @OrchidJayne
      @OrchidJayne Рік тому +66

      @@jlinus7251 It's more common then you think they fly in open chimney at dusk and often get into attic spaces too. Educate yourself. It's not uncommon

    • @chaeferl
      @chaeferl Рік тому +68

      @@OrchidJayne It happened in the US.. A homeless man got bitten by a bat in the night and didn’t get a vaccine. He was admitted to hospital with what seemed like drug withdrawal, he died shortly after. His organs where donated and rabies was passed on to numerous amounts of people which inevitably died.

    • @Krejii05
      @Krejii05 Рік тому +11

      Im Australian and i had to do an assessment on bats as a kid and how some kid got rabies from one

    • @OrchidJayne
      @OrchidJayne Рік тому +14

      @@chaeferl A man in Oregon was camping and their is video of him playing guitar. When a bat swooped down and scratched him and it wasn't until he read about the bat going after other people did he get checked out 😔

  • @-msssrhmdy88-72
    @-msssrhmdy88-72 5 років тому +503

    I love the way public broadcasting announcements used to sound compared to them now a days!

    • @-msssrhmdy88-72
      @-msssrhmdy88-72 5 років тому +13

      Heavy Sharkski Yes. I love the sound. Even the music's cooler!

    • @seanwilkinson8696
      @seanwilkinson8696 2 роки тому +9

      I even enjoyed getting inadvertently jumpscared at the beginning and end from the loud, jarring transitions and wear & tear on the original celluloid. It gave the proceedings a neat touch of grindhouse atmosphere.
      "Coming soon to this cinema - AAAHHHH!! - the first and only horror chiller - IIIEEEEE!! - Made Specifically For Canines of All Ages - GAAAAAAHH!!
      It's the real-life plague that descends yearly upon Man's - Woman's - Children's Best Friend! Fear its name! Tremble as its spreads with insidious intent! Observe...frozen with terror...as a loving and beloved pet is thrust into sickness...spirals into insanity...and meets its doom from the only sure cure to full-blown suffering - a rifle bullet or shotgun shell! This is your chance to see a most important, unique piece of cinema - a lifesaving thriller! You'll scream... you'll learn... and you'll be prepared, as will your family, and even your dearest doggos, against the hordes of those godless Commu-...whoops, I appear to have mixed my scripts...bear with me...okay, I've got it - against the unthinking, unfeeling, insatiable monster, named..."
      (::loud orchestral horror sting::) - D W A A A N N N G !
      (::echoing low, as if in an empty columbarium::) *R A A A A B I E E E S*
      "It's a fight! - against a bite! - so hold Rover's lead tight! - with all your might!"
      (::a much different and speedier voice::)
      "Rabies", playing at the Triviolli 42nd St. daily at 1, 3, 5, 8, Saturdays at 2, 5, 7, and as a midnight triple feature with "Andy Hardy's Caligula" and "Dodge Daytona or Death '68" with Steve McQueen, Stephen King, Nat King Cole, King Crimson, the Fabulous Rodeo Drive Grease Pit Rollerettes, and the Republican Committee for a Nuclear-Armed Citizenry & Protons for Tots. Features are MPAA rated XXR-79 with the purchase of any two medium pizzas from Box Office Czar's Cheesy Crustamonium Cavern, next door.

    • @Lundy.Fastnet.Irish_Sea
      @Lundy.Fastnet.Irish_Sea Рік тому +2

      I like how there's no music for the most part

  • @TheQewlkid
    @TheQewlkid 9 місяців тому +5

    7:55 I forgot cellphones weren’t a thing back then

  • @CrossbredManiac
    @CrossbredManiac 10 місяців тому +6

    I've learned more about rabies in this one video than I have with 12+ years of insistent fascination.

  • @sarahmayer8539
    @sarahmayer8539 6 років тому +616

    I know the people shown are experts on that matter but I can't help but shudder when I see them handling them with short sleeves and only a glove ._.

    • @Amy_the_Lizard
      @Amy_the_Lizard 3 роки тому +65

      They were probably already vaccinated, for what that's worth

    • @long_chin_man
      @long_chin_man 2 роки тому +9

      dudes knew they'd die from smoking, asbestos, chromium, naphthalene, classic petrochems, lead, copper, teflon, the flu and polio before rabies could even blink

    • @TakenByStormEquestrian
      @TakenByStormEquestrian 2 роки тому +2

      Screw them. They should of put the dogs out of their misery instead of making them suffer

    • @sarahmayer8539
      @sarahmayer8539 2 роки тому +61

      @@TakenByStormEquestrian studying these animals will create material that will help save thousands. It seems almost absurd that you tell these people to screw them while our (and your) consumption of animals products kills billions of animals every years in a much more cruel and humiliating way.

    • @TakenByStormEquestrian
      @TakenByStormEquestrian 2 роки тому +5

      Sarah Mayer I disagree with you highly as I eat free roam animals so please don’t pump me on with the masses.

  • @cabbagelettuce3340
    @cabbagelettuce3340 6 років тому +1641

    How old is this video? I miss this style!

    • @youarerightboss
      @youarerightboss 5 років тому +233

      June of 1956.

    • @milkimimi427
      @milkimimi427 5 років тому +54

      Looks like the 50's

    • @ssportiff2973
      @ssportiff2973 5 років тому +33

      Ww2 days

    • @dano5814
      @dano5814 5 років тому +33

      Heavy Sharkski: agreed, none of this motormouth crap that's going around. people must be in a speed talking contest.

    • @damian9303
      @damian9303 5 років тому +11

      Roughly between the 40's-50's from the looks of it

  • @rhob2422
    @rhob2422 9 місяців тому

    Thanks, Unit 731, for the useful information

  • @christopherreynolds4506
    @christopherreynolds4506 8 місяців тому +2

    Well this showed up in my feed today. Nice to see that even back then they had this loke this mostly figured out.

  • @StinkyPoopyMcFartFace
    @StinkyPoopyMcFartFace 6 років тому +962

    It’s odd how this is still rather accurate.....

    • @PrivateSchemers1
      @PrivateSchemers1 5 років тому +217

      Just because something is old does not always make it outdated.

    • @seratheeducatedfeline4227
      @seratheeducatedfeline4227 4 роки тому +51

      I think it’s sad that the message about how the rabies vaccine isn’t dangerous is still really relevant.

    • @sitdowndogbreath
      @sitdowndogbreath 3 роки тому +23

      @@seratheeducatedfeline4227 the vaccine has gotten slightly better then the stomach shots.

    • @jfranklin9549
      @jfranklin9549 3 роки тому +2

      That’s because it’s not Covid.

    • @zippyducky1704
      @zippyducky1704 3 роки тому +54

      @@seratheeducatedfeline4227 How is the Vaccine dangerous? Rabies has nearly a 100% death rate, and the only way to prevent it once bitten is the vaccine within 3 days of the bite. I'd rather take the risk of whatever antivax bs over DYING any day. I'd know too, I got bit by a cat suspected of rabies almost 20 years ago and took a series of 18 shots initially, and then one a week for 3 months and I turned out fine...I also didn't die.

  • @joeblow8593
    @joeblow8593 5 років тому +468

    This was filmed in St. Louis at 6:13 .The 'Health Division Rabies Control' truck has an address of 2120 Gasconade Ave. A quick Google search says 2120 Gasconade Ave is the location of the "Gasconade Animal Control Center" . So they've been at the same location for a very long time...

    • @pickles3128
      @pickles3128 5 років тому +36

      Wow, great eye! I'm very surprised this documentary focuses on dogs. Here in Missouri, our rabies cases are almost all bats, and a few skunks. St. Louis tends to have 4 or so cases a year that test positive (mostly bats) but I think that's just because there's more people around to notice sick animals and to get them tested, versus a rural area like most of our other counties. I've taken to telling neighborhood children that all bats have rabies, just because if they're slow enough to be caught by a little one they probably do -- and those shots HURT! (Former wildlife rehab volunteer who's learned that firsthand!) We haven't had a case since 2008, and that was the first one since the 50's. Some guy kept a sick bat as a pet (in a county with a bad reputation for its outbreaks) and nursed it back to health, but it bit him on the ear and he never sought treatment. Of course he died. I suppose it must've been much more common when this film was shot, as most people still didn't vaccinate. You don't even need a shot every year to stay immune, that's just how most vets make the most money, and of course the vaccine industry would push it, too.
      I've stopped even going to the animal shelter on Gasconade. Over 99% of the cats get euthanized and I can't keep any more, it hurts my heart too much to look them in the eyes...

    • @infiltr80r
      @infiltr80r 4 роки тому +2

      Long time in American terms.

    • @Amy_the_Lizard
      @Amy_the_Lizard 3 роки тому +7

      @@pickles3128 At the time period this was made, dogs were actually the species most likely to transmit rabies to humans. While it's true that immunity from the yearly vaccine does usually last more than a year, the exact duration varies and it's safer to operate on the assumption that the immunity will last for the shortest length possible so that no animal is unfortunate enough to not have immunity because it's system can't remember a pathogen quite as long as most of the others can - not because vets are greedy. Also, they recently altered the human rabies vaccine, and I've heard the new one hurts less for what that's worth, though I haven't tried it myself yet. (I'd like to do work in wildlife conservation, so I'll probably get the vaccine eventually.)

    • @OceanSwimmer
      @OceanSwimmer 3 роки тому +5

      Joe -- Love this kind of information.
      I don't know what it is, but there's a certain type of comfort knowing cities have kept some landmarks in place, though I know Animal Control isn't a 'landmark' per se.

    • @loyaltonotredame2160
      @loyaltonotredame2160 3 роки тому +2

      i live in saint louis!!

  • @frbrbrgrblgrr7777
    @frbrbrgrblgrr7777 8 місяців тому +1

    We need these played in school. This is just straight up life advice some parents never think to tell their kids or just don't find it important.

  • @MauricioKarren
    @MauricioKarren 7 місяців тому

    SUPER, como informaban antes super bien. Me Fascinan sus Videos

  • @mercoro
    @mercoro Рік тому +773

    I've lost a relative to rabies here in northeast brazil, he caught it from a stray cat that he tried to take off of the streets, and the cat had bitten him. He take the vaccine almost 3 hours after he got bitten. He thought he was cured and completely ok, but a month later he started having the symptons and died. The last time i saw him, he was in a catatonic state, he didn't looked at me, he was just staring at the ceiling and when he tried to drink something, even though he was thirsty, he could not drink it, it was like his body was preventing him from doing so. That was one of the saddest things i've seen in my life, and that memory sticks with me from that moment to this day. Now everytime i see a cat or a dog, doesn't matter how cute or defenseless it looks, i don't get near them and get really anxious next to one of them, it's like seeing my relative slowly die that terrible death, has unlocked a inner fear inside of my brain.
    Take care people, i know some animals look cute, and you may see them in a bad situation and could create lots of empathy, but you can't go near animals if you don't know if he has a disease. We can't forget that animals, are wild after all, and the fact that they live near us, don't change that.

    • @mommmycat
      @mommmycat Рік тому +56

      Omg 😢😮 that’s crazy how the vaccine didn’t work?! What the hell! I’m so sorry for your loss! 😢

    • @someweirdoguy6633
      @someweirdoguy6633 Рік тому +7

      Very well stated.

    • @genzi78514
      @genzi78514 Рік тому +63

      My mom is from the same place. When she was a child, she get attacked by a dog with rabies, but luckily, she received the right treatment inmediatly and didn't suffer nothing. It's a scary disease!

    • @TheInsultInvestor
      @TheInsultInvestor Рік тому +15

      "animals are wild" what does that even mean? Do you think people think every animal is a cute toy? EVERYTHING ALIVE IS WILD

    • @walmert4354
      @walmert4354 Рік тому +31

      Not every animal is wild. Pets are considered Domesticated, meaning they've been bread with generations of animals that didn't show much fear towards humams, but showed companionship towards them.

  • @heathero.7643
    @heathero.7643 2 роки тому +1012

    I’m a Health Dept employee in Tennessee and honestly we still recite this same thing to all of our animal bite cases. I wish I could just email this to everyone who lives in my county!

    • @supme7558
      @supme7558 Рік тому +5

      Sad they havnt advanced in that long

    • @heathero.7643
      @heathero.7643 Рік тому

      @@supme7558 Well, the only further advancement we could do would involve irradiation of the virus or genetic engineering of all host species at this point. The rabies prophylaxis stops the virus in your system so long as you seek treatment before the symptoms start. In most cases, that gives you a 6-12 month window to go seek treatment if you’re concerned the animal that bit you was rabid. It is illegal in most states to not have your cats and dogs vaccinated, and wildlife resource officers mass drop vaccine cookies for wild animals in state parks to keep it down as much as we can. Unfortunately, rabies is transmissible between all mammalian carnivores, except American opossums, so it’s virtually impossible to irradiate rabies. Even some herbivores can contract it, such as deer, horses, cows, and donkeys. Rabies research is still being done, but we know just about everything there is to know about this virus. If it was only transmissible amongst humans, you could expect it to have gone the way of Smallpox long ago.

    • @Voltomess
      @Voltomess Рік тому

      @@supme7558 in 1885 Dr. Louis Pasteur injects a series of a new rabies vaccine into a boy who had been bitten by a rabid dog. The boy survives. This is the first vaccine to protect against rabies in people. That was 138 years ago and yet after over a century they still don't have something better than that because if you got rabies and go to doctor too late you die and no vaccine is going to help you. In Canada not long ago a guy was bitten by a tiny bat , bat was so tiny that he didn't even know he was bitten when he started to feel weird a week later they diagnosed rabies but it was too late for the vaccine.

    • @user-pz4jk9tb7d
      @user-pz4jk9tb7d Рік тому +1

      So you know the rabies statistics for your state then right? You don’t just recite this with no backing information correct?

    • @heathero.7643
      @heathero.7643 Рік тому +2

      @@user-pz4jk9tb7d not necessarily for the whole state but my territory counties have not seen rabies in 10+ years. Most states post a “rabies map” online for the public to review.

  • @Account_0093
    @Account_0093 4 місяці тому +1

    These old films are so accurate but also kinda disturbing sometimes 💀

  • @chauncieextreme8514
    @chauncieextreme8514 Рік тому +44

    my grandma got rabies, but it turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to her. she was on the local news and when the piece aired it was so compelling, it got picked up my the AP because she was so charming and charismatic….all the while, frothing at the mouth with the rabies coursing thru thru her veins. she gained widespread notoriety, won a NAPSAR (National Association of People Struggling Against Rabies) pie eating competition, and even authored a NYT best selling book called “Me & My Rabies”. she still holds a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for being the sweetest, chill old lady to die from rabies. RIP Nanna!

    • @BLUE_OCTOBER-TRIX
      @BLUE_OCTOBER-TRIX Рік тому +5

      😂😂😂

    • @Njordin2010
      @Njordin2010 11 місяців тому +2

      Whats the name? How can i find the interview?

    • @chauncieextreme8514
      @chauncieextreme8514 10 місяців тому +8

      @@Njordin2010 is that supposed to be funny, she died from rabies man

    • @Njordin2010
      @Njordin2010 10 місяців тому +2

      @@chauncieextreme8514 huh. Did i say something wrong? Just asked for the name of the old interview.

    • @MistyFalls-uo2xq
      @MistyFalls-uo2xq 10 місяців тому +4

      @@Njordin2010They most likely meant to comment the person above your comment.

  • @loujosephtabajen4919
    @loujosephtabajen4919 2 роки тому +481

    This was randomly in my recommended and reading the comments really gets me thinking of how much the disease still affects us today. Stay safe y’all.

  • @brisingarinstaridavis7084
    @brisingarinstaridavis7084 3 роки тому +342

    VIDEO DIDNT HAVE ALL SYMPTOMS OF RABIES WHICH IS BELOW
    (1) Numbness in limbs
    (2)Headaches
    (3)Fever
    (4)Lack of Cordination/ Falling
    (5) Hallucinations
    (6) Uncontrolable Irrability
    (7) Uncontrolable Over Excitement
    (8) Uncontrolable Insomnia (Lack of sleep)
    (9) Strong Seizures/Shaking
    (10) Excessive Drooling
    (11)Fear Water (Hydrophobia)
    (12)Fear Air(Aerophobia)
    (13) Fear of Light (Heliophobia)
    (14)Body Paralysis
    (Body Stiffness)
    (15)Choking
    (10)Coma
    (11)Death

    • @countercuIture
      @countercuIture 3 роки тому +5

      Thank you I was wondering what this sickness was

    • @luriddream
      @luriddream Рік тому +25

      Thanks now people can expect rabies if they are bitten and died so they can get treated afterwards

    • @GodzillaTheLast
      @GodzillaTheLast Рік тому +7

      and aggression

    • @stupidmango4036
      @stupidmango4036 Рік тому +6

      ​​​@@GodzillaTheLast that's what irritability is, but I also find the fact "death" is a symptom, no it's caused by the rabies, not a symptom, and if it was... they did say that. Oh yeah, they did mention Shaking and seizures.
      And mentioned choking. You really didn't listen to the video-

    • @esila9b
      @esila9b Рік тому

      Its day day?

  • @finessagee3737
    @finessagee3737 10 місяців тому +3

    All this good information about not only rabies but also just being kind to the dog. Don't tease, put your hands though the fence, let them eat in peace. Man, I wish this was broadcasted everywhere today. People need to learn how to respect animals all over again.

  • @AgentSixNine69
    @AgentSixNine69 Рік тому +10

    3:02 the big reveal
    HITLER

  • @ButchBirdie
    @ButchBirdie 3 роки тому +63

    1:19 That is a fruity ass way to stand

  • @bruhm4571
    @bruhm4571 2 роки тому +85

    "Never put your hands through a fence to pet a dog"
    Kid: I'll fucking do it again

    • @a.al.l7923
      @a.al.l7923 2 роки тому +3

      Also kid: Dies after rabies symptoms

  • @free-stylersteam3241
    @free-stylersteam3241 Рік тому +1

    One thing I liked very much about this was how to the point all the things were no bs nothing literally to the point amazing

  • @splatmeme9732
    @splatmeme9732 Рік тому +1

    when i was a kid animal planet had an episode about dogs and rabies and it scared the hell out of me

  • @superpacocaalado7215
    @superpacocaalado7215 2 роки тому +138

    I was afraid of vaccines when i was a child, until I watched a program on Discovery Channel talking about the effects of rabies on the human body when I was 5, I stopped having that fear immediately.

  • @ohno862
    @ohno862 2 роки тому +54

    5:14 “never try to treat any dog bi- [REDACTED]”

  • @nicholasdiehl7368
    @nicholasdiehl7368 Рік тому +1

    I think i learn more through this videos than the new one

  • @almightybogza
    @almightybogza Рік тому +1

    These old films convey information very well. They are also creepy as hell imo.. they could make one about anything and I would still find it eerie

    • @maxine3587
      @maxine3587 Рік тому +1

      There used to be one for kids, about not going off with anyone who wasn't your mummy or daddy.
      That put the wind up us!

    • @xtdycxtfuv9353
      @xtdycxtfuv9353 Рік тому

      I don’t think this is creepy at all