What's A VERY Disturbing Facts ?

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  • Опубліковано 3 січ 2023
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @KnightSlasher
    @KnightSlasher Рік тому +1815

    Story 4: the baby fact is pretty disturbing and it's weird how doctors thought babies didn't feel pain and idk how they came up with that theroy in the first place

    • @ironical-tofu6
      @ironical-tofu6 Рік тому +116

      Probably because babies already cry a lot idk, i'm not a dumb-ass

    • @h3sh916
      @h3sh916 Рік тому +147

      Probably a doctor that didn't like babies that much

    • @matifati7585
      @matifati7585 Рік тому +50

      Humanity will always amaz you
      In all the ways possible....

    • @Skoopyghost
      @Skoopyghost Рік тому

      Schizophrenia has zero science behind it. They just have medication that they don't know they work.

    • @gljames24
      @gljames24 Рік тому +58

      Despite the fact that doctors should be prioritizing harm reduction, many doctors just go along with however a procedure is normally done without thinking about how it'll effect the patient. Thankfully this is getting better with, but this is still true with many older doctors and treatments and because of how the pharmaceutical industry works. If you want a modern example: the opiod crisis.

  • @MutteringCondolences
    @MutteringCondolences Рік тому +529

    First Fact: I was bitten on the arm by a drunk chick at a Cradle of Filth Concert back in 2018. She was trying to force her way past me when I was up at the barricade and I refused to let her take my spot. She thought biting me was a good idea. She got hauled out by security.
    Tetanus shot, wound cleaning, and a month worth of heavy duty anti-biotics and a month worth of anti-retrovirals in case of HIV transmission. Out of pocket was over $1000.

    • @GlaziolaNacht
      @GlaziolaNacht Рік тому +21

      Yeesh, well, was the concert any good? Just curious as a fellow Metalhead

    • @gabrielkawa3477
      @gabrielkawa3477 Рік тому +8

      Sorry to hear

    • @bradwolf07
      @bradwolf07 Рік тому +16

      I'm happy to hear your ok, not so happy to hear the price. But I have to admit to misreading your comment at first. I thought you typed "duck chick" and was confused by the rest of the paragraph. I had to go back to figure out my mistake

    • @MutteringCondolences
      @MutteringCondolences Рік тому

      @@GlaziolaNacht Concert was great! The security guard gave me some hand sanitizer to clean the bite (hurt like a motherfucker) and a big square bandage to cover it up for the show.

    • @btf_flotsam478
      @btf_flotsam478 Рік тому +3

      That sucks, I'm glad I don't have to deal with that.
      (By "that", I mean random bullshit Americans have to deal with.)

  • @zachcrawford5
    @zachcrawford5 Рік тому +418

    I was an infant in the 80's and had a to have a few surgeries done. Honestly, it wouldn't surprise me if I went through some of them fully conscious. It would explain a few things. I don't honestly believe that doctors thought infants don't feel pain. Anyone who has vaccinated a baby knows damn well that they feel pain. The real belief was probably that anastasia is a complicated and risky procedure (especially on someone that is so small) and babies can't really complain and probably won't remember the experience afterwards so it doesn't really matter if they are in pain or not if the end result is them getting better and the risk of anastasia isn't worth it. Now that anesthetizing infants is more routine and the risk is low enough, the medical community finds it more palatable to say "we simply didn't know" vs "yeah, we are going to subject you baby to unimaginable suffering that we don't even subject animals or POWs to, because it's easier".

    • @gopniksaurolophus6354
      @gopniksaurolophus6354 Рік тому +1

      POWs isn't a great example, since that's not how they're treated (nominally anyway); America got away with it in Iraq by calling the people they captured "terrorists", and since terrorists don't fall under the protections of any of the 3 Geneva Conventions, nothing was done about it.

    • @zachcrawford5
      @zachcrawford5 Рік тому +18

      @@gopniksaurolophus6354 Good point. POWs are subjected to a wide spectrum of how they are treated. From valuable POWs in europe sometime being treated even better than many of the "host's" own citizens all the way down to the POWs of ww2 japan that were treated in ways that would make the SAW franchise queasy.

    • @undecided3
      @undecided3 Рік тому +4

      Wouldn't the pain alone kill some babies though?

    • @zachcrawford5
      @zachcrawford5 Рік тому +21

      @@undecided3 Under normal circumstances it could. More precisely the distress from that much pain and fear can put the heart under enough stress that it could malfunction, leading to (hopefully just passing out but can also lead) to death. But they did give muscle relaxants that would have somewhat countered the effects of the adrenaline, shielding the heart (at least somewhat). Also, if the stress did kill the infant it would have just been written off as sudden cardiac failure due to an unknown congenital defect or the fragility of that particular infant.

    • @bloodymary9404
      @bloodymary9404 Рік тому +9

      I was a baby in the 80’s. Physiatrist thought children couldn’t develop memories if younger than 5. I was raped and witnessed a murder at 4 years old and never received any therapy for it because, they guaranteed that I would not remember it. I’m 39 and I still remember it.

  • @keeliekalayidol8876
    @keeliekalayidol8876 Рік тому +778

    Stories 1-60:
    0:04 Human bite
    0:37 Boob implants
    0:57 Lung cancer
    1:20 Babies & anesthesia
    2:18 Gamma ray burst
    3:35 Probable Superfund sites
    3:47 1st face re-plant
    4:35 Rogue planets
    4:49 Encephalitis Lethargy
    5:33 Rats fact
    5:42 Missing kids
    7:07 Non-avian dinosaurs
    7:31 Mushroom
    8:00 1 in 5 death
    8:09 Sarin gas
    9:47 Yellow stone caldera
    9:57 Solved murder %
    11:05 Owl fact
    11:17 Missing nukes
    11:52 Ant fact
    11:59 Teeth and our eyes
    12:28 Existing slaves
    12:34 Benihana
    13:23 Vitamin D & suicide
    13:49 Heart disease
    13:54 Avg life expectancy
    14:10 Biting force
    14:19 Galapagos vampire birds
    14:42 Human blood & baking; yum
    14:53 Torture by goats
    15:14 "Flipper"'s suicide
    15:24 Elevator death rate
    16:15 C.R.E. bacteria
    16:22 Moray eels
    16:43 Self cannibalistic turkeys
    16:55 Hidden Valley Ranch & bleach
    17:00 Sun vs Earth death
    17:24 Dentures
    17:32 Consuming dead people
    17:59 Universes life span
    19:21 Lotto truth
    19:29 Ukrainian princess & babies soft spots
    19:38 Bed bugs private parts
    19:50 Higest 'end life' profession
    19:55 Mt. Everest dead bodies
    20:24 Funny spiders
    20:37 Pigs & cannibalism
    20:45 Pharmaceutical Nazi gas
    20:57 U.S. Nuke
    21:12 Are we alone, or nah?
    21:28 Ocean exploration fact
    21:51 Dogs & their chew toys
    21:59 End of the universe
    22:17 Captive
    22:28 Furniture arousal
    22:39 Diamond fact
    22:48 A worst way to die
    22:58 Weight & pen*s size
    23:16 Someone just died
    23:21 Thomas Edison & an elephant

  • @Louise-mq8js
    @Louise-mq8js Рік тому +71

    I remember learning about story 4. I had multiple heart surgeries as a baby in the 80s and fortunatly the children's hospital I had them in did not agree with this belief and used anaesthetic. As a medical professional myself, my brain can't even comprehend how other medical professionals out there would believe this. Like you said, it's an easy theory to test.

    • @abrahammesrajecorrea2349
      @abrahammesrajecorrea2349 Рік тому +4

      I mean, back in the day it was also super common to smoke inside hospitals and no one questioned it due to it being the norm and normal behavior at the time.
      I'd say it's less about "common sense" and more about "well, if everyone is doing it, it must be because it's normal". Who knows? Maybe we're currently doing something right now that seems totally ok but 50 years into the future will be seen as stupid and barbaric, with people being unable to understand how we were able to survive doing X thing.

  • @musso6775
    @musso6775 Рік тому +76

    Your eyes are not recognized by your immune system. This is mostly to perfect swelling from minor scratches (which is common) but also means that if an immune cell get in there you could easily go blind.

    • @sib3155
      @sib3155 Рік тому +15

      Also if you have a parasite or some other object in your brain the majoryty of the demage will come from your immune system

    • @Jediapologist
      @Jediapologist Рік тому +18

      The same is true of your whole brain and nervous system. It’s an immune cell free area.

    • @gabrielkawa3477
      @gabrielkawa3477 Рік тому +3

      Eeeh

  • @darklightmagus1222
    @darklightmagus1222 Рік тому +81

    Story 11:
    I'd say at age 18 is when you should no longer be able to track your child without consent. But be upfront of the tracker before then. My parents would always make me call them whenever I am about to or get to a new location so they know where I am in case they need to find me.
    I didn't have my own cell phone in highschool. I would usually go to church with a friend on Wednesdays. So I would have to call from my friend's phone to let them know when we were going to church, when we get to church, when we leave church to go to a restaurant, when we get to the restaurant, when we leave the restaurant to get back to friend's house, and then once again when we get to friend's house to get picked up from there.
    It's less about parents not wanting their children to go to certain places and more about them making sure the children are at a safe location and knowing where to find them in case anything comes up.

  • @mericawillis2338
    @mericawillis2338 Рік тому +95

    Thought #3 was a well known fact but the smokers just don’t care that they’re taking their loved ones out with them

    • @lucasmillerthelewderofloli9327
      @lucasmillerthelewderofloli9327 Рік тому +21

      My family of 5 had 3 chain smokers and 1 on and off smoker. I am the only one who had not smoked a single cigarette in my life. I was bullied for my clothes reeking of cigarettes. They didnt care. My mom was dying due to her heart disease that made it barely beat? Nope. Smokers really dont give a shit.

    • @okay4634
      @okay4634 Рік тому

      I guess smokers wanna kill people if they don't try to stop smoking.

    • @kuramasfoxyrose
      @kuramasfoxyrose Рік тому +9

      @@lucasmillerthelewderofloli9327 That'd be the addict brain.

    • @Liusila
      @Liusila Рік тому +9

      My mom would insist on smoking in the car whenever we’d drive anywhere together. I would open my window, put a scarf over my face, or just cough and complain, but it was always more important for her to “feel calm” smoking. Jesus Christ.

    • @abrahammesrajecorrea2349
      @abrahammesrajecorrea2349 Рік тому

      ​@@lucasmillerthelewderofloli9327you reminded me of me back in Elementary school where kids would ask me if I was a smoker since my uniform reeked of the smell of cigarattes. And I kid you not, for the longest time in my childhood and teenage years, my nose got so used to the smell of the Marlboro brand that I never knew what others meant when they said I smelled like cigarettes.
      At the time it was just me and my parents in this small house we still live on. My parents, trying to protect me from the smoke, told me to stay at my room while they smoked in the hallway (as if that actually helped). It was until my father passed away (not due to cigarattes, mind you) when I was 19, that the presence of cigaratte smoke declined so much that now I can actually detect the smell and be somewhat disgusted by it.
      Gotta say it's true that a smoker won't quit their addiction unless of other reasons beyond them. My dad in his last days smoked like a chimney until he was too weak to keep doing it. And thankfully I never developed the taste for it, I did try but I hated it right away which is good... or so I think.
      The good news is that at least I won't pick up a habit that may endenger someone else (not like I have someone else anyways). The bad news is I wouldn't be surprised if I died from lung cancer since my mom still smokes... but then again we do keep our distance and the smoke isn't that dense unlike back then when it was both of my parents.

  • @tinatheobald3412
    @tinatheobald3412 Рік тому +42

    When my oldest sister was born, (according to my mother) her head was in a weird position so a doctor had to adjust her head when she was coming out. When he did that, her collarbone broke without anybody realizing, and she cried nonstop for a few weeks until my mom when to the doctor's and got an x-ray. Imagine if that was in the 80s.

  • @apinkchameleon
    @apinkchameleon Рік тому +276

    To make you all feel better about the gamma ray bursts, the fact that a star could randomly go supernova and hit us dead on is really, *really* unlikely. Almost ridiculously so. As a result I would recommend worrying about things that are much more likely to happen lol
    EDIT: As someone pointed out in the replies, the reason for this is because space is actually very empty, and things are spaced rather far apart. As a result, it makes this very specific scenario highly unlikely.
    EDIT2: Plus we get hit by gamma rays all the time. The thing that's different about this scenario is that a star would have to go supernova close enough and also do it at the exact right angle to get a direct hit, and that combination would be incredibly difficult to achieve.

    • @13vatra
      @13vatra Рік тому +14

      To clarify why it's so unlikely, people drastically underestimate how vast space actually is. Even with new gamma ray bursts daily the likelihood that one is aimed directly at our tiny little pocket of space is minuscule.

    • @dmgroberts5471
      @dmgroberts5471 Рік тому +3

      A small chance doesn't mean it won't happen, though. I mean, something that has a one-in-a-million chance of happening could just happen the third time the conditions are tested.

    • @apinkchameleon
      @apinkchameleon Рік тому +6

      @@dmgroberts5471 Obviously, of course. But the chances are so low that it basically isn't going to happen, so it makes more sense to worry about other things that could suddenly afflict us is the point.

    • @tylerdurden8944
      @tylerdurden8944 Рік тому +5

      We're already getting hit by approximately one gamma ray burst per day, but they originate so far away that our atmosphere and the magnetic field of the earth shields us.

    • @aurorialgaming1935
      @aurorialgaming1935 Рік тому +5

      Very unlikely yes, but isnt earth just very lucky where its placed around the sun? Isnt humanity even existing a rare occurence? Lucky shots happen and with our luck lately I wouldn't put it past the universe lately. That being said this does make me feel better.

  • @momothebug
    @momothebug Рік тому +38

    I remember seeing Sandeep Kaur's face (not attached to her) in a Guinness Book of World Records when I was a child. It to her scalp, too. Pigtails and all.
    Disturbing as heck, but also absolutely amazing that she survived that, that the transplant was a success and that she's doing well and studying medicine.
    It's nice to hear what she's doing with her life and that she's succeeding after such a traumatic incident.

    • @afternoononthebeach6818
      @afternoononthebeach6818 Рік тому

      I just searched up her face with out the skin and now I cant unsee that sh*t for the rest of my life.

  • @rollotomasislawyer3405
    @rollotomasislawyer3405 Рік тому +46

    Worked in the Texas Medical Center for 25 years. The St. Joesph story about the Resident doctor’s decapitation, is even worse than it sounds. The elevator was stuck with about 18 inches of opening at the top. The doctor opened the inner doors and was attempting to crawl out on to the floor. He got his head out, and and at that exact moment the elevator went down to the next floor, severing his neck. The headless body fell back into the elevator car with a lone woman passenger. She was stuck in the elevator for 45 minutes with the body before the maintenance staff got her out.

    • @RaynmanPlays
      @RaynmanPlays Рік тому +11

      The lesson here is to never try to force your way out of an elevator if it's stuck.

    • @missyelysium
      @missyelysium Рік тому +4

      @@RaynmanPlaysand never go head first

    • @samanthaevans9467
      @samanthaevans9467 Рік тому +1

      I feel like this inspired that scene from the resident evil movie

  • @pancake6099
    @pancake6099 Рік тому +36

    im surprised that somebody who is a doctor probably the smartest in their class thought babies couldnt feel pain

  • @cheezpuffg0rawr
    @cheezpuffg0rawr Рік тому +32

    As someone who grew up in Minnesota, I have to remind you Duluth, MN is the farthest inland port with a direct access to the ocean. When you also factor in the iron range and how many metals are mined out of northern MN it would actually be an ideal spot to bomb to shut down trade in the US.

    • @minnmass
      @minnmass Рік тому +6

      Common wisdom is that Duluth is a tier-2 target because of that, the hundreds of thousands of tons of grain that flow through the ports, and the Air National Guard base. At least it'll be quick!

    • @kilderok
      @kilderok Рік тому

      @@minnmass The sexiest bombing spots are the more remote regions of lower population states though, that's where we store a lot of OUR nukes. They take out our retaliation capabilities first that way. Then get our higher pop areas and infrastructure. One of those nuke storage places is Montana, which puts a whole different spin on the recent spy balloon shot down that was caught scoping things out over the state recently.

  • @Trip_mania
    @Trip_mania Рік тому +14

    For the babies thing, I have heard that they didn't use anesthetics on babies primarily because until not so long ago, anesthetics were dangerous to babies and the chance that they would never wake up was too high. So it was easier to make yourself believe, more or less consciously, that babies don't feel pain so that it is easier for you.

    • @ELisa-qf2mw
      @ELisa-qf2mw 10 місяців тому +2

      OmG that makes sense. And, at least here in Italy, until insanely few years ago it was very common to see newborn or few months old girls with their ears pierced with ridiculous unnecessary earrings, because parents thought they couldn't feel pain and so they would be spared the pain of doing it afterwards.

  • @oliverthedum2129
    @oliverthedum2129 Рік тому +97

    This man possibly has the best background UA-cam videos of all time.

    • @UCvow2TUIH0d2Ax2vik9ILzg
      @UCvow2TUIH0d2Ax2vik9ILzg Рік тому

      I wish I knew all the games he plays in the background... I really want to play so many of them... Is there anywhere I could find them?

    • @joshsolomon4825
      @joshsolomon4825 Рік тому

      @@UCvow2TUIH0d2Ax2vik9ILzg You mean Minecraft?

    • @oliverthedum2129
      @oliverthedum2129 Рік тому +2

      @@UCvow2TUIH0d2Ax2vik9ILzg I’ve seen him play some Minecraft Parkour maps, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, and I THINK sea of thieves? Don’t quote me on that one though.

    • @rodi8266
      @rodi8266 Рік тому +3

      Iam fairly sure its stock footage or something
      The exact same videos play on other "lets read reddit threads" channels like his

    • @oliverthedum2129
      @oliverthedum2129 Рік тому +2

      @@rodi8266 I meant as in videos to play in the background of doing a task. Not the gameplay put in these videos

  • @marithietbrink3352
    @marithietbrink3352 Рік тому +72

    Story 15
    Yeah as someone who studies chemistry, there are way way worse things then "some acid that melts your skin away"
    Sure acid is painful, but there are things that'd go mostly unnoticed untill it's to late. Things that'd show up poorly on a tox-screen etc. Many ways to use chemicals as a weapon.... It's actually kinda scary to think about when you know that everyone who wants it can start a study in chemistry, and most information is available online nowadays. You just need to know how to combine information that makes it dangerous....

    • @Icalasari
      @Icalasari Рік тому +5

      FOOF being one. From what I remember, just a drop of Dioxygen Difluoride getting on you gives you enough time to call your loved ones and tell them you are dying and you love them as it starts to violently yank out all the calcium in your body

    • @JackieOwl94
      @JackieOwl94 Рік тому +8

      I’m remembering the story of that famous chemist who died after only a drop of mercury hit her gloved hand. She knew what it was but only after it was too late. Changed PPE and safety protocol forever.

    • @rollotomasislawyer3405
      @rollotomasislawyer3405 Рік тому +1

      Thallium is my favorite chemical weapon.

    • @iblisellis7114
      @iblisellis7114 Рік тому +5

      I knew about Chlorine gas but never knew how to make it until some time later.
      Queue my job as a cleaner and I'm now always wary of what I'm cleaning.
      Had to mop the science staff room and the linoleim started turning yellow. Called the manager and she said just leave it and report it; asked the Chemistry teacher what would've been dropped to create that. No idea but a fill-in definitely dropped something.
      Had to do some research myself. Pretty sure it's Iron oxide.

    • @kilderok
      @kilderok Рік тому +4

      @@JackieOwl94 It wasn't just mercury, it was dimethyl mercury. Dimethyl mercury scared me straight from chemistry. The dioxygen diflouride above us though is in the same category of horrifying.

  • @oliversmith6770
    @oliversmith6770 Рік тому +15

    14:43 "Around 17mL of human blood can substitute an egg in baking"
    That might be useful with egg prices going up

  • @a_vierli
    @a_vierli Рік тому +15

    I once had to explain to a “friend” that second hand smoking extremely dangerous is. He thought that the dangerous about smoking was that you get addicted to it, not that the smoking itself is literally self harm. He also wouldn’t get it after me and some friends explained it to him, more than once. But that guy also talked a lot of BS, so I didn’t wonder. We are no longer friends

  • @maddog9265
    @maddog9265 Рік тому +16

    story 24, yeah it’s called depression. vitamin D has significant impact on our body and mind. i started to look more into it after coming out of a depressive episode and realizing what really helped was going outside and eventually going on walks. open your curtains and get some sunlight.

  • @sidneyhasnohorses789
    @sidneyhasnohorses789 Рік тому +18

    Locators are good if the parents use them for the right reasons!! I had a friend who's parents were always keeping tabs on their daughter. The daughter told her parents of an app that let them look at her location in hopes they would trust her more. Instead they would call her individually asking her why she is in the location she is in and demand her home in a certain time frame.

  • @lesliechow1974
    @lesliechow1974 Рік тому +15

    Baby: Cries from the internal pain of needing to be burped.
    Docs: What is drugs?

  • @Arkasha-Z
    @Arkasha-Z Рік тому +9

    The reason the veterinary nurses have such a high suicide rate isn't because they have to deal with dying pets and pets getting put down..... Its because they have to give families the news that their beloved pet is suffering and the treatment is very expensive but their insurance won't cover it so they have to watch the family make the decision to let their pet suffer or let them go. And the hardest is seeing the people bring them home where they'll die a slow and painful death.

    • @shashie2158
      @shashie2158 Рік тому

      NOMV ❤

    • @jadeguevarez15
      @jadeguevarez15 Рік тому

      I still remember when I had to put my dog down. It happened only 2 years ago and I'm currently 26 and it's easily THE hardest decision I ever had to make in my life. It didn't have to do with money, my dog was 15 years old and had late stage kidney disease with organ failure. He was in pain and nothing we could do could help him get better. But had him for all those 15 years since I was a kid. He literally wasn't just a pet but a family member. Thinking back now, the vet who gave the euthanasia definitely looked almost as sad as my family and I.

    • @rilindshehu2458
      @rilindshehu2458 Рік тому

      My sister is a vet and now I'm scared

  • @AnnabethChase532
    @AnnabethChase532 Рік тому +16

    U missed one. Anxiety attacks. I have had one so bad that every couple seconds my body would shake violently and uncontrolably, it was terrifying. You can’r stop it, you feel like your going crazy. So so terrifying

    • @dartanion9706
      @dartanion9706 Рік тому +1

      Having lived with anxiety my whole life, I didn't know what a panic attack was. Until I learned that panic attacks can also cause the symptom "feeling of impending doom".
      Bonus fact! I have a weird response to that symptom. I will find a quiet place to lay down and die, maybe grab some paper and a pen if it's really unnerving me, and begin writing my last will and testament. Somehow, rising that out, makes me feel better, and I come out of the panic attack feeling like I just took a 20 minutes nap, with bad dreams.

    • @rositchi5889
      @rositchi5889 10 місяців тому +1

      I had really bad panic attacks a few months after my car accident. I still believe something was damaged and left unchecked in my body and it "recovered" on it's own over time. I haven't had any serious attacks for a while now. I also don't have anxiety, but that feeling like you're having a heart attack and no everyone sees that you're fine after tests come back negative is so traumatic.

    • @AnnabethChase532
      @AnnabethChase532 10 місяців тому +1

      @@rositchi5889 i’m so sorry you had to go through that! Sending wishes

    • @rositchi5889
      @rositchi5889 10 місяців тому

      @@AnnabethChase532 Thank you and I hope that you and yours are doing well!

  • @CYBER_5KU11
    @CYBER_5KU11 Рік тому +18

    I think the missing kid thing about when to get rid of the locator, I'd say about age 16-18 especially, they'd probably question why you want them to keep the locator app on their phone around age 12-15 but if you give them the details in the story then they might be reasonable enough to keep it

  • @michaelparham1328
    @michaelparham1328 Рік тому +7

    Story 4. It's because infants won't remember the procedure, which is partially the reason for using anesthesia in the first place.
    In modern medicine, we use anesthesia to render us unconscious, because a conscious person couldn't tolerate the level of pain a surgery would induce. But what if there's a mistake, and you wake up during the surgery? Pretty traumatizing, right? Because of this, there's another drug used that causes amnesia. Just incase you wake up in the middle of the procedure. If you can't remember the pain, it's like it never happened.
    The same principle is happening to Babies, just in reverse. Adults can remember the pain thus we use anesthesia to negate this. Since babies can't remember that far back, there's less reason to use anesthesia

  • @megannason3649
    @megannason3649 Рік тому +9

    The baby thing is totally real and they finally realized that babies who needed surgery and were actually given anesthesia or even local (like lidocaine) did better during surgery and were less likely to die during or shortly after the surgery. Huh wonder why guys!

  • @J4MMUS
    @J4MMUS Рік тому +33

    One disturbing fact is that one if the textures in the original DOOM contains images of the real corpses of a man and woman executed by being shot, hung upside down and stoned (the texture was made by taking the bottom half of the man and then merging it with the top of the lady). have a nice day... (:

    • @Xx_DoctorSex_xX
      @Xx_DoctorSex_xX Рік тому +5

      wait dude how do you know this

    • @J4MMUS
      @J4MMUS Рік тому +2

      @@Xx_DoctorSex_xX I know, see and hear everything

    • @J4MMUS
      @J4MMUS Рік тому

      @@Xx_DoctorSex_xX jk
      I learnt it from the disturbing doom iceburg by midnight

    • @gljames24
      @gljames24 Рік тому

      Same with half-life

    • @gabrielkawa3477
      @gabrielkawa3477 Рік тому

      You're lyingggggg

  • @lupkin1
    @lupkin1 Рік тому +11

    The missing kids one really bothers me, specifically the part about most missing kids being special needs. I have two boys, ages 5 and 3. My 5 year old was recently diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and the specialist said that she's about 90% sure his brother is also on the spectrum. She also said that its very likely my eldest boy also has ADHD but we can't be sure until he's a few years older. This means I have two special needs children and I can tell you from experience that it only takes a moment of distraction...

  • @PeachJaguar7597
    @PeachJaguar7597 Рік тому +8

    Ive always found the Cordyceps and other fungi like that really interesting. Over time, we've seen it being able to control larger and larger insects, like tarantulas moths, and butterflies. Humans don't have anything to worry about, our body temperatures are too warm for the cordyceps tp survive. Although, in a few thousand years, its possible for it to evolve to at least smaller mammals.
    Its also pretty cool how that concept has actually been taken into popular horror games, such as Last of Us and Choo-choo Charles

  • @jonathanjoestar__
    @jonathanjoestar__ Рік тому +5

    We could have an aneurysm at literally any moment and die without warning. As unlikely as it is, that thought sits in the back of my mind

  • @sw309
    @sw309 Рік тому +4

    First time I did CPR ever on a real patient I immediately broke their ribs. It's normal and necessary to do so while doing compressions but you only ever learn on rubber dummies at first and nothing ever prepared me for that first crack I felt.

    • @rositchi5889
      @rositchi5889 10 місяців тому

      Means you did it right though. Was taught this in CPR.

  • @dommyboysmith
    @dommyboysmith Рік тому +74

    Doctors: "slap the baby when it's born to see if it can feel pain"
    Also Doctors: "babies can't feel pain before 19 months"
    🤦‍♂️
    As my father used to say, having a degree doesn't make you smart...

    • @nanaa6322
      @nanaa6322 Рік тому

      This is true. The thing is nowadays so much ppl ready to bribe to get into college. Especially the 'high class' major such as medical studies etc. So, I don't surprise much if there's doctor who are stupid but got a job as a doctor in a hospital. sometimes other medical staff have more knowledge than the doctor itself like the laboratory technician.

    • @collymonster
      @collymonster Рік тому +5

      actually slapping the baby's bum when it's born was supposed to shock it into breathing if it didnt immediately do so upon being outside the womb it had nothing to do with seeing if the baby could feel pain (they most definitely can and i can't believe they thought otherwise up until so recently)

    • @user-us1ce9cs3s
      @user-us1ce9cs3s Рік тому

      I mean the slap isn't necessarily to inflict pain

  • @LukeTheDukeYT
    @LukeTheDukeYT Рік тому +6

    I've known that doctors thought that babies couldn't feel pain. It still shakes me to the core after a month.

  • @autistadolinux5336
    @autistadolinux5336 Рік тому +30

    There's one for you: Testicular torsion (and ovarian torsion, there's a woman version as well).
    Can happen at any time for any reason, hurts as hell (like a kick right on that place and the pain never stops) and make you monoball.
    Oh, and most of cases occurs on the sleep.
    Good Night, friends. :)

  • @AnnaK101
    @AnnaK101 Рік тому +6

    Story 7: wow, you can google her and they have pics of her face skin separate to her head missing said skin. I think the doctors put her own face back on and wow - brilliant work.
    Story 45: They should make climbers going back DOWN Everest pick up a small amount of trash. If they make everyone do it, then that should clean up the current mess.

  • @somebody7495
    @somebody7495 Рік тому +6

    21:34 As someone who is a marine biologist, some of you guys have a reason to be scared of the ocean. There is a very high chance that there is still at least one megalodon out there somewhere very deep in the ocean or something almost as big as it. You should be more scared of giant squids than sharks. Both are harmless to humans tho

    • @jadeguevarez15
      @jadeguevarez15 Рік тому

      As someone who has thalassaphobia, why do you think that? What is your reasoning? I'm curious.

    • @venus4724
      @venus4724 10 місяців тому

      Haven't researchers already said that it was highly unlikely to have a megalodon hidden in the depths of today's oceans? If I remember correctly, they weren't built to withstand that temperature or level of pressure, and if they really did still exist, we would have seen them. Not to mention, the amount of food that it takes to feed a megalodon is huge and we would have observed patterns like that by now. I don't think their species still alive.

  • @averyskyes9409
    @averyskyes9409 Рік тому +4

    Love when you guys post!! Makes my day

  • @Candy4Bullets
    @Candy4Bullets Рік тому +2

    A Disturbing Prison fact: I know people who work in our Canadian Prison system. Some disturbing facts is 1) a large part of prison population are Indigenous peoples
    2) the main reasons is their upbringings. Many come from extremely traumatic backgrounds and have cognitive disorders from lack of nurturing during early childhood years and/or harmful practices during pregnancy.
    3) A HUGE number of incarcerated men, (including non-indigenous)have history of sexual abuse in their childhoods, with some reporting multiple abusers.
    That’s 800+ individuals per prison.
    It’s really sad and disturbing knowing that most of incarcerated individuals are just kids in adult bodies. Even more disturbing to me personally, that pedophillia is more common than you think. Of course I always knew, but when you work among vulnerable populations, the numbers are hard to wrap your head around….

  • @jahimuddin2306
    @jahimuddin2306 Рік тому +8

    Story Five: So basically the Deathstar is a naturally occurring force.

  • @wadecookston1605
    @wadecookston1605 Рік тому +10

    I like this channel bc I like hearing the stories, but the voice doesn’t sound computer generated. If it is, then it’s at least much better than the others lol

  • @RandomCarrot2806
    @RandomCarrot2806 Рік тому +4

    On the murder solve rate one, the average rate is dragged down massively by high crime areas. Basically, once you hit middle class or above, your murder is getting solved and if you are a woman, it was your husband or boyfriend that did it.

  • @Icalasari
    @Icalasari Рік тому +11

    Fun additional fact for the Human Bite in Story 1:
    Apparently our teeth have a CRAP ton of these bacteria trapped in them. So if our teeth break off in something we bite, it's as good as dead. It's probably an adaptation - We are a social animal, so one dying from not being able to eat meaning the entire village lives because that lion rapidly gets ill and dies = survival of the group

  • @FlyingSpaghettiMonster
    @FlyingSpaghettiMonster Рік тому +2

    _Disclaimer - I am not a nuclear expert or historian._
    *The Man Who Took 83 Days to Die*
    *Tokaimura, Japan*
    Thursday, 30th September, 1999 - The accident occurred as three workers, Hisashi Ouchi, Masato Shinohara, and Yutaka Yokokawa, were preparing a small batch of fuel for the Jōyō experimental fast breeder reactor, using uranium enriched to 18.8% with the fissile radionuclide (radioisotope) U‑235 (with the remainder being the fertile U‑238). It was JCO's first batch of fuel for that reactor in three years, and no proper qualification and training requirements appear to have been established to prepare those workers for the job. At around 10:35, a precipitation tank reached critical mass when its fill level, containing about 16 kilograms (35 pounds) of uranium, reached about 40 liters (11 U.S. gallons).
    The workers bypassed the buffer tanks entirely, opting to pour the uranyl nitrate directly into the precipitation tank with a stainless steel bucket. The additional solution contained 16 kg of uranium, thus exceeding the tank's uranium limit of 2.4 kg. An uncontrolled nuclear fission began immediately.
    The precipitation tank, in contrast to the buffer tank, had not been designed to hold unlimited quantities of this type of solution as its wide cylindrical shape made it very favorable to criticality (spherical being the most favorable shape).
    Criticality was reached upon the technicians adding a seventh bucket of an aqueous uranyl nitrate solution to the tank. The nuclear fission chain reaction became self-sustaining and began emitting intense gamma and neutron radiation. At the time of the event, Ouchi had his body draped over the tank while Shinohara stood on a platform to pour the solution into it; Yokokawa was sitting at a desk four meters away. All three technicians observed a blue flash (possibly Cherenkov radiation) and gamma-radiation alarms sounded.
    Technicians Ouchi and Shinohara immediately experienced pain, nausea, difficulty breathing, and other symptoms. Ouchi then began to vomit in the decontamination room a few minutes later and lost consciousness shortly after. Fission products such as yttrium‑94 and barium‑140 began contaminating the building.
    Being a wet process with an intended liquid result, the water sustained the chain reaction by serving as a neutron moderator, whereby neutrons emitted from fissioned nuclei are slowed so they are more readily absorbed by neighboring nuclei, inducing them to fission in turn. The criticality continued intermittently for about 20 hours. As the solution boiled vigorously, steam bubbles attenuated the liquid water's action as a neutron moderator (see Void coefficient) and the solution lost criticality. However, the reaction resumed as the solution cooled and the voids disappeared.
    The following morning, workers permanently stopped the reaction by draining water from a cooling jacket surrounding the precipitation tank. The water was serving as a neutron reflector. A boric acid solution (boron selected for its neutron absorption properties) was then added to the tank to ensure that the contents remained subcritical.
    Under correct operating procedure, uranyl nitrate would be stored inside a buffer tank and gradually pumped into the precipitation tank in 2.4 kg increments. The buffer tank's tall, narrow geometry was designed to hold the solution safely and to prevent criticality.
    The workers bypassed the buffer tanks entirely, opting to pour the uranyl nitrate directly into the precipitation tank with a stainless steel bucket. The additional solution contained 16 kg of uranium, thus exceeding the tank's uranium limit of 2.4 kg. An uncontrolled nuclear fission began immediately.
    The precipitation tank, in contrast to the buffer tank, had not been designed to hold unlimited quantities of this type of solution as its wide cylindrical shape made it very favorable to criticality (spherical being the most favorable shape).
    Five hours after the start of the criticality, evacuation commenced of some 161 people from 39 households within a 350-meter radius from the conversion building. Residents were allowed home two days later with sandbags and other shielding to protect from residual gamma radiation. Twelve hours after the start of the incident, residents within 10 km were asked to stay indoors as a precautionary measure. This restriction was lifted the following afternoon.
    Dozens of emergency workers and nearby residents were hospitalized and hundreds of thousands of others were forced to remain indoors for 24 hours; 39 of the workers were exposed to the radiation. At least 667 workers, emergency responders, and nearby residents were exposed to excess radiation as a result of the accident.
    Hisashi Ouchi took 83 days to die. The chromosomes in his cells deteriorated to pieces. He was unable to make new cells. He had no immune systems, nearly zero white blood cells. He was leaking fluids, his heart kept arresting. His family kept insisting the doctors continue treatment, even as Hisashi begged to die. Hisashi finally dies on Dec. 21, 1999. Masato Shinohara spent 7 months fighting for his life before, he too, succumbed on April 27, 2000. Yutaka Yokokawa ufferd minor radiation sickness and survived, he was charged with criminal charges of negligence in October 2000.

  • @zotaninoron3548
    @zotaninoron3548 Рік тому +9

    I've seen a lot of people misspell rogue as rouge, but I've never seen someone mispronounce rouge as rogue. Big belly laugh from me.

  • @canadianexplores115
    @canadianexplores115 Рік тому +4

    1. The same jaw force used to bite thow a carrot is the same force you will need to bite off a finger.
    2. Water boarding drops. Drop every 30 seconds.

  • @SewardWriter
    @SewardWriter Рік тому +3

    It's been proved, IIRC, that pain is learned within hours of birth. A foetus doesn't feel pain, but an infant absolutely does.

  • @anabelle7763
    @anabelle7763 Рік тому +2

    My grandfather always smokes in the house. Literally there is so much smoke in there I can't even imagine how can they breath inside. Once my grandparents and my aunt went to check their lungs, it turned out my grandmother's and my aunt's lungs were in a much worse shape than my grandfather's due to second-hand smoking.

  • @onepunchtocelebrate670
    @onepunchtocelebrate670 Рік тому +6

    I looked up a toddlers skull after this. Idk why the question never formed, how and when do adult teeth form. Interesting stuff

  • @erawebt
    @erawebt Рік тому +24

    that one about having a human bite a dog made me laugh

    • @dmgroberts5471
      @dmgroberts5471 Рік тому +1

      Man bites dog. Dog successfully sues man's dog to have man put down.

  • @dianadoraen7864
    @dianadoraen7864 Рік тому +2

    I'm a med student. I haven't witnessed many cases yet, but my first one was a man with a hand abscess. He got into a fight, punched his opponent in the teeth and three days latter was in the ER with high fever fever and pronounced inflammatory process.

  • @hill2hell
    @hill2hell Рік тому +2

    Another disturbing fact. If a person suffers from an emergency situation in a well populated area that person will not be helped until they already suffered near fatal damage. This is the bystander effect, the more people present the more it discourages others to help because they're thinking that someone else will help, in turn no one will help until the person is in a dire situation or already dead.

  • @ionadavies1621
    @ionadavies1621 Рік тому +3

    If a toy in toy story dies, the toys will mourn the death, but the child will keep on playing with the corpse-

  • @nerdiwolverine
    @nerdiwolverine Рік тому +25

    Story 4 reminded me of a convo I had with someone a while back:
    I was talking with a few of my friends one day and we got on the topic of weird medical history. I mentioned the fact about babies not being given anesthesia and me and 2 of my friends all agreed that was really weird, then the 3rd friend of mine that was at the table with us said "yeah that's strange, but I dint see a problem with it. The babies are too young to remember it, so it doesn't matter if it hurts or not"
    Me and my other 2 friends looked at each other than looked at him and we all kind of just did an awkward laugh until the third friend said "what's so funny?" and then we stopped laughing and one of us asked him if he was joking or jot and he said "no I'm not joking. The babies are too little to remember the pain of surgery without anesthesia, so it doesn't matter if they feel the pain"
    Yall this man was dead serious when he said it was okay to not give babies anesthesia during surgery because they are too little to remember the pain. Me and the other 2 friends spent like 5 minutes trying to convince him that how wrong that is but he wouldn't budge. I am no longer friends with that guy (for unrelated reasons) but holy crap that was an awkward conversation

    • @funlover163
      @funlover163 Рік тому

      Well yeah, that must have been what the doctors thought as well. So your friend isn't that strange

    • @Ayshlei
      @Ayshlei Рік тому

      I’m sorry if this comes off as apathetic, but doesn’t he have a point in some way or another? All humans go through being children and being completely honest, I don’t remember anything before the age of 4. I know babies who I love and I understand they would feel pain, but can you explain to me why it’s so morally wrong?

    • @JustLetMeFly94
      @JustLetMeFly94 11 місяців тому

      ​@@Ayshlei It's wrong because at that moment during the surgery and recovery they feel pain! Probably for days. So would you go into surgery now if the doctors told you you won't remember it? Those babies were in agony for days.

    • @Ayshlei
      @Ayshlei 11 місяців тому

      @@JustLetMeFly94 that’s reasonable. I was just trying to see this from another viewpoint. Thank you for answering and sharing your perspective.

  • @TheDharmaDogs
    @TheDharmaDogs Рік тому +1

    When grass is cut, it sends out a distress signal. That nice fresh-cut grass smell is your lawn screaming.

  • @colinmoore7460
    @colinmoore7460 Рік тому +2

    The British entertainer Roy Castle died from lung cancer caused by second hand smoke. (Before he got famous, he played a cornet or trumpet in working men's clubs, taking massive lungfuls of smoke laden air.) He was in the first Peter Cushing Dr Who and the Daleks movie.

  • @Samthekneemuncher
    @Samthekneemuncher Рік тому +4

    The comments of immortality coming from the mainly facts guy explains why he’s had so many jobs.

  • @NathanTheAutisticDRIPKING
    @NathanTheAutisticDRIPKING Рік тому +4

    Fastest time I clicked a Mainly Fact video

  • @asurasyn
    @asurasyn Рік тому +1

    2:00
    My earliest memory is actually being held down by nurses, shrieking, while a doctor stitched a cut on my face closed.
    This was around 1983/84.

  • @meloney
    @meloney Рік тому +19

    The gamma ray fact is true, except the "Vaporizing" thing. It would propably not contain a lot of heat, but it would definitely strip us from our ozone layer and destroy the atmosphere. But it wouldnt immediatly vaporize us, which makes it much, much worse as it would be a fast, but not instantanious end most likely. It would be horrible. But the chance is pretty slim, might only have happened at one point already though at one mass extinction.

  • @JWHSHK
    @JWHSHK Рік тому +4

    I was born in 1994 I had a heart surgery at 3 days old, no anesthesia. (was told this from my mother) While I don't have any detailed memories, my pain scaling is different then most because of it, and a scar on my back almost as old as I am.

    • @jadeguevarez15
      @jadeguevarez15 Рік тому

      How is it different? Just wondering.

    • @JWHSHK
      @JWHSHK Рік тому

      @@jadeguevarez15 this is in regards to the question at the doctors, "How bad does it hurt?" Because I have a point of reference that is my heart surgery as worst pain ever as a ten, things that most people would say are a six on their own scale would be a two on mine.

  • @Jherick5954
    @Jherick5954 Рік тому +4

    1:10 I'm so glad my mom quit smoking. It's such a gross habit. Everyone in my inner family has smoked or does. My mom was really bad. Not only would she be coughing all night every night (so bad I could always hear it, and actually brought it to her attention cause I was getting scared, I mean what if she's unconsciously choking on spit or something) but the most embarrassing moment was when my mom drove me to school one morning. Her car wreaked of cigarette smell so bad it got on my clothes, and when my teacher passed by me she asked me if I smoke in front of the whole class. She didn't believe me until I told her it's my mom. I don't think she believed me

    • @thisbagisnotatoy9639
      @thisbagisnotatoy9639 Рік тому

      I worked at a Stride Rite- the kids shoe store- in college. Once I went up to measure a toddler’s feet and he smelled like he reeked of cigarettes as if he had been smoking himself. It was infuriating. My grandmother died from lung cancer from smoking when my mom was 18. I’m very anti- cigarette. It took a lot of willpower not to say anything to her. Now I regret not loudly making a “joke” to shame his parents about him cutting back on the smokes. I still think about that poor kid.

  • @gabrielsalahi3656
    @gabrielsalahi3656 Рік тому +2

    The first story is slightly exaggerated. Just think about the sheer number of times you’ve say- cut your finger and put that same finger in your mouth
    So while it is perfectly possible to get horribly sick from the bacteria in your mouth and you probably should still try going to the hospital if you get bitten. Do try not to worry about it too much, you’re WAY more likely to be perfectly fine

  • @littleantukins4415
    @littleantukins4415 Рік тому +2

    The fact that you will never see your own face with your very own eyes since we only rely on reflection too see our own faces

  • @rosetheresa6168
    @rosetheresa6168 Рік тому +3

    i say this whenever it pops up but its important: i don't know about out of the US but in the states, *there is no rule that states you have to wait before filing a missing persons report*

    • @rositchi5889
      @rositchi5889 10 місяців тому

      It's because movies are really misleading. People don't know that you can file before 48 hours and police don't jump into action unless the person is a danger to themselves. So if someone goes missing, tell police they have a mental disorder and they will actually do something (for adults). I think children are always priority. I know this from experience.

  • @bend4455
    @bend4455 Рік тому +4

    Yeah, about the human bite, thing. Crazy when it comes to zombies in the walking dead. The bite doesn't infect you. The fever kills you & you come back as zombie. Since everyone comes regardless of how they die

    • @dmgroberts5471
      @dmgroberts5471 Рік тому

      I think it was the same in the George Romero films too, you die because a rotting corpse dribbled it's rotting corpse juice into your wound, not because of any virus.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 Рік тому

      I remember an episode of Beavis and Butt-Head where the boys decided to let a homeless man bite them because they wanted to become werewolves. They ended up in the hospital with hepatitis and who knows what else!

  • @shiya777
    @shiya777 Рік тому +2

    i searched up story 7 and bro the girl's face along with her scalp and pigtails looked like a mask.
    hard to believe someone went through that and survived.

  • @GlaziolaNacht
    @GlaziolaNacht Рік тому +6

    Story 24: I’ve also got Vitamin D deficiency, but I’m not $uicidal anymore, I did attempt it when I lived in Florida, but now that I live in my home state of Maryland? That’s no longer a problem, guess it was just the insanity and heat of Florida that made me wanna self-terminate

    • @Icalasari
      @Icalasari Рік тому +1

      To be fair, Florida is practically an SCP in and of itself

    • @GlaziolaNacht
      @GlaziolaNacht Рік тому

      @@Icalasari ok, we need to make a petition for Florida to become an *ACTUAL* SCP! Cause yes, just yes

    • @rositchi5889
      @rositchi5889 10 місяців тому

      Shout out to Maryland!

  • @Coira2
    @Coira2 Рік тому +3

    Story 39, there was actually a theory in corpse medicine that a violent death of a young man would make their blood or flesh more potent, which was one of the draws of public executions, if I remember correctly.

  • @wiewio8035
    @wiewio8035 Рік тому +2

    "Ignorance is bliss" some could say

  • @ivyg6178
    @ivyg6178 Рік тому +2

    The human bite theory is crap, as a teenager I was bitten by a teacher's kid and nothing happened, and that brat was unhygenic as hell.

  • @amberkat8147
    @amberkat8147 Рік тому +5

    In my Mom's hometown they had a "suicide" where the victim supposedly stabbed herself in the back then tied her hands together and hung herself. The prime suspect was the police chief's son. And a couple was murdered, cut up, and thrown in a lake/pond. I don't believe that murder was ever solved.

  • @gtgodbear6320
    @gtgodbear6320 Рік тому +3

    When you choose to pull the plug on a relative in the hospital they euthanize that patient with sedatives. I didn't know that until my uncle died.

  • @TellyKNetic
    @TellyKNetic 5 місяців тому

    My great-grandfather actually died in an elevator-related incident. He was in a service elevator with a bunch of heavy equipment when the cables snapped. The heavy equipment fell on him, and the company he was working for was more concerned with covering up the accident than getting him to a hospital. This happened in the 1940s, so safety regulations were a lot worse then.

  • @ELisa-qf2mw
    @ELisa-qf2mw 10 місяців тому

    Italy here. During war and starvation times, eating cats (passed off as rabbits or hares, or not) was a common practice. People from one of last parts of my country being involved in the economic boom are still nicknamed "cat eaters" nowadays. Not more than a couple of years ago a famous TV showman was fired for "jokingly" introducing a recipe for cooking cat meat in a popular cooking tv show.

  • @Xnoob545
    @Xnoob545 Рік тому +3

    What is a superfund site

    • @ghostnebula8805
      @ghostnebula8805 Рік тому

      An area that has been biologically or chemically contaminated (usually by industry) and is in the process of being cleaned up by the US government. These areas are usually too expansive and expensive for local governments to handle.

    • @gabrielkawa3477
      @gabrielkawa3477 Рік тому

      @@ghostnebula8805 Nah, governments love making excuses

    • @Xnoob545
      @Xnoob545 Рік тому

      @@ghostnebula8805 ah yes, i love pollution
      (why)

  • @SlinkyDragon
    @SlinkyDragon Рік тому +3

    Omg, you usually expect a lil bit of clickbait with a video titled 'very disturbing facts' but this one really delivered. The baby one disturbs/hurts me to my core

  • @chalkwarrior5542
    @chalkwarrior5542 Рік тому +1

    about fact 52: i remember talking to a lady in a pet store about squeaky toys and, being the weird 11-year-old i was, i brought up that fact. she looked down at her pomeranian and said "my dog doesn't like squeaky toys because she's scared she's hurting it." i wonder how she and her dog are doing now

  • @starchildofthesun
    @starchildofthesun 10 місяців тому +1

    I have two:
    1) That the uncanny valley, due to being a subconscious feeling that all humans possess and we are made to avoid or view it as a threat, suggests that it is an evolutionary factor. Which means at one point and time, in human evolutionary history, we had to fight off a threat that was almost human but not quite human. And since we've only explored about 5% of the world's oceans and 10% of the world's forest, that means that not-quite-human threat may still be out there.
    & 2) If you are to be murdered, you are most likely to have known or at least MET your murderer. Rather it be a close friend or family member or that guy you met at the local Boba tea shop, there is a 68% chance that you will have known or at least met your killer. So you are more likely to have known your killer than you are to die in a car accident.

  • @lizard-breathOG
    @lizard-breathOG Рік тому +4

    As someone who has a down syndrome brother and who works with children who have disabilities, those trackers are lifesavers. I think it depends on the child’s mental age and how often they run off to figure out when to remove the tracker, if ever. My little brother has run away probably 30 times, even after childproofing windows, doors, putting alarms in. Somehow he finds a way to escape. Thankfully he hasn’t run off in like 4 years.

  • @Mia-dt3gl
    @Mia-dt3gl Рік тому +3

    Cleopatra had 4 great-grandparents and 6 great-great-grandparents. An average person has 8 great-grandparents and _16_ great-great-grandparents.

    • @DrFranklynAnderson
      @DrFranklynAnderson Рік тому +1

      Just shows how subjective the definition of “beauty” has been over the centuries.

  • @user-sz6bb5hb5y
    @user-sz6bb5hb5y 6 місяців тому

    *Trigger warning: child abuse, sexual exploitation and neglect
    As a child who was in the foster care system in America, I have personal experience of how horrible it is; and the stats are even worse than I ever knew before researching.
    Around half a million children are currently in the fostercare system in the US, and over 100,000 children have gone missing from the foster care system (on top of the department of Health and human services 2023 case study finding that over 46 states, state agencies failed to report around 34,800 cases unreported). That's around 55 children going missing each day and estimated 60% of those children missing being sexually exploited with black and native American children make up a disproportionate number of the missing children.
    The care system is riddled with fraud, abuse and sex trafficking; an estimated 90% of children being exposed to trauma and a reported average of 25% being abused while in the care system. Though the government spends approximately $10 billion a year to help states maintain the child welfare system (fun fact: about the equivalent amount spent per MONTH on the war in Afghanistan) In Georgia, nearly 1,800 children in state care went missing between 2018 and 2022, according to a new analysis conducted by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children as part of a U.S. Senate panel’s ongoing probe into Georgia’s child welfare system. More than 20% of those were likely trafficked.
    From the remaining children, more than 23,000 will age out of the system; 50% of never even graduate high school (and only 3% earn a college degree), 40% will have gainful employment and 20% will end up homeless.

  • @RobertoDeMundo
    @RobertoDeMundo Рік тому +1

    They slowly get less disturbing and more interesting

  • @Xnoob545
    @Xnoob545 Рік тому +3

    1sr

  • @cartwrightworm1317
    @cartwrightworm1317 11 місяців тому +1

    In Germany and France, there is still undetonated chemical weapons from the First World War in the ground and there is no safe way to dispose of them. In France, 16,000,000 acres of land had to be cordoned off after the war due to unexploded ordnance.

  • @tsarfox3462
    @tsarfox3462 Рік тому +2

    I'm pretty sure doctors just made up the "babies don't feel pain" one for some reason. Maybe knocking someone out for surgery is too dangerous on someone that young. It could be just to comfort the parents. It could also just be because insurance companies are monsters and want to save money and it's not like the infant can say what happened.

  • @chillinwithmason4480
    @chillinwithmason4480 Рік тому +1

    Imma be honest, the dude constantly failing in the background is what pissed me off the most 😂

  • @hotdog.B.gamer256
    @hotdog.B.gamer256 10 місяців тому +1

    "Found rick grimes" got me dying😂

  • @hykalia7650
    @hykalia7650 Рік тому

    Thank you for telling me about superfund sites my guy, the more you know!

  • @courtcox7075
    @courtcox7075 Рік тому

    Yooo the end of story 5 has me absolutely weak. Lmaooo not everyday 😩😩😂

  • @katx9697
    @katx9697 10 місяців тому +1

    That's why my biggest fear is the heat death of the universe. This theory makes me so claustrophobic, the first time I began to comprehend the enormity of its implications. I wailed as if I was screaming into to the void, it didn't help that I was drunk and little high at the time. But that fear never left me. What was sad though, my Mum found me in that state and because I didn't have the language to explain it properly. I sounded like a screaming paranoid mess. Luckily she did what any loving mother would do and did her best to assure that everything was going to be o.k. and took my whimpering twenty-five year old butt back toward our carivan so I can sleep it off with out dying of exposure, which I hadn't realised was beginning to take affect at the time.

  • @GymbalLock
    @GymbalLock Рік тому +1

    9:31 and this is the reason we went into Iraq. There are also many Iraq war veterans with symptoms of chemical weapon exposure who were denied treatment because "Iraq never had WMDs"

  • @talesfromthetrip
    @talesfromthetrip Рік тому

    I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard these facts 😂😂

  • @charisobsessedwithkittys
    @charisobsessedwithkittys 11 місяців тому

    also doctors just figured out in 2020 what anesthesia actually does someone. they say that you’re actually conscious during surgery, but you’re temporarily paralyzed and you can feel everything that’s happening but you can’t tell them bc ur temporarily paralyzed. but there’s a chemical in it that makes you forget what happens after the surgery. creepy right?

  • @julietteoscaralphanovember2223

    My newborn son was rushed to a specialty children's hospital scheduled for surgery when they told me that they don't give newborn babies anesthesia, I freaked out. Ended up he didn't need surgery thank goodness. This was in 1987. It was suppose to be throat and chest surgery

  • @karif.3784
    @karif.3784 11 місяців тому

    AWESOME addition to story #31😊 Wonder how many people caught on to it

  • @ECjj33
    @ECjj33 Рік тому

    I’ve learned that if you’re different in any way physically, mentally, emotionally, etc then most people won’t be accepting of you.

    • @johnnyrocket1685
      @johnnyrocket1685 Рік тому

      That’s not really uncommon. That’s a pervasive fact that’s existed for as long as humans have existed. The Holy Crusades? Genghis Khan? Psych Wards and Looney Bins during the 1800s and early 1900s?
      The fact that religious individuals have always and still to this day hate homosexuals? The fact that racism is still a huge problem everywhere? The fact that slavery is the 1 number way our products are produced even in 2023? It might not exist in western countries, but western countries aren’t producing most of their own products they sell in stores and online.

  • @xenoumbre3010
    @xenoumbre3010 Рік тому +1

    Story 24: Yeah, makes sense. I rarely go outside lmaoo

  • @treefrog0826
    @treefrog0826 Рік тому +1

    FACT: Most families are narcissistic with a few highly narcissistic members and the shocking part is their is a scapegoat who has no idea they are the scapegoat who is blamed for everything

  • @stonecoldracing6
    @stonecoldracing6 Рік тому +1

    For story 49, there’s actually another nuke stuck in the ground!! It’s around 5 miles from Goldsboro, NC!