I took part in a drill in Philadelphia when I a paramedic student. Major teaching hospital, they had absolutely no idea we were coming. The scenario was that we had been exposed to some sort of biological agent. We were assigned symptoms, some of us were unresponsive and transported by ambulance, some of us just wandered or ran to the ER. The response team was the only group to be notified, about eight minutes prior to the drill. They had the decon tent set up and immediately began putting us through, even taking it so far as wanting to strip us naked (the coordinator jumped in, said they could skip that 😂). Freezing cold water, I'll never forget that. The team did an amazing job. Very fast, chaotic, but they communicated well with us. Which is good because otherwise it is like being abducted by aliens, tossed around and hosed off. Intimidating with their suits. Some of us were assigned to breach security and contaminated the ER. That was a major failure for them. One security officer threatened to call the police, drill or no. Another barely flinched. All "patients" were taken to trauma bays in an active ER. Apart from the contamination, the ER staff also did a great job.
What was the reaction of the actual patients in the hospital? Some of them must have seen parts of this going down. Did anyone freak out thinking that a bio/chem incident had occured? Was this before or after the letter anthrax attacks?
@@ithinkimarealboy2402 we were all taken right to the trauma bays, which was about half of the ER along one wall right by the entrance (largely due to the number of walk in gunshots, tough neighborhood). That sort of chaos was fairly normal for anyone regular there, just not usually more than a couple of patients at a time. If I remember correctly, I was backboarded. Decontaminated and then basically given a rapid trauma assessment (thankfully no finger up the butt 😂). That's a flurry of activity and then pretty much nothing. That's when I got up and gave my report. The two or three that breached the ER without decon stopped making a fuss when they were in. So, from people in the ER, it was mainly us complaining of things like skin irritation and difficulty breathing - if we were conscious. Most of the theatrics happened outside of the ER entrance in a tent.
This was at Temple University Hospital in the early 2000s. Was not publicized, minimal planning - tried to be as real as possible to test response. And because it was bound to have a few issues, no media involved.
Last Drill I took part of I was still in College and the Scenario was a Structure Fire in one of the Dormitories, so instead of going in as an EMT I stayed "incognito" as a "Student Victim". Now im 6'2 and was 260 lbs at the time. Im also VERY good at playing deadweight. FOUR Firefighters found me on the Third Floor by a Vending Machine with "Electrical Burns", "Breathing but Unresponsive", and they couldn't lift or drag me and barely roll me. When they dropped me and audibly cracked my head on the floor (and I didn't make a sound) they Panicked and ran for a supervisor. XD Eventually the entire building was evacuated... except for me. XD The Cheifs and School Admin found me when they were doing thier final walk through and debrief, still lying there "not exactly dead" in the "burnt out" building. XD
GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD
As an Indian Army officer, i have trained in Hazmat but CBRN is another story for me. Indian Army launched a dedicated CBRN response Unit, the unit operators known as CBRN Specialist (No rank in use, I don't know why?) The operators are choosen from All around the Regiments of Indian Army and go through 8-12 months, they are trained to work with Regular Army and to attach with Special forces if need. Those guys are really awesome and as an Indian Army officer i know the real risk of their work, soo i really respect them.
Same here, CBRN is always trained alongside HAZMAT trainings. But is it just me or do I sweat everytime I look at a class A suit like I could still feel the weight of the SCBA 😂
Shout out to these guys, really. Treating these situations has to be a life-altering experience, not to mention they don't always know what they're dealing with.
Spent many years training. Had alot of good times at camp blanding, but definitely glad we never had to use any of that training in real life scenarios.
I do training like this multiple times a year, sometimes monthly. And it’s not as dramatic as displayed most the time, maybe during the big “test” we have in the summer it’s close but not quite.
Both Haz and CBRN can be interchangable if needed specifically when it comes to the roles. Not everything is the same and arguably Haz is much more in depth and complex. Either way, level A suits are a BITCH to wear man lol
Dude CBRN training suuucks, bunny suits are crazy hot, the drills are pretty cool but getting PT’d in gas masks and mop suits is rough as hell. Major props to anyone who goes far in the CBRN pipeline
Actually many Government and Military organizations DO go through "Zombie Apocalypse" drills, and even encourage Civilians to do so, because if you are ready for a "Zombie Apocalypse" then you are prepared for almost ANY Natural And ManMade Disaster, Small to Large. From Civil Unrest, Earthquake, Tornado, Hurricane, WildFire, Foreign Invasion, Power Plant Meltdown, Chemical Spill, etc etc. Almost every single Scenario is covered within the "Umbrella" of "Zombie" o.o
Bro they need to smear some baby shampoo on the insides of those suits and masks, will keep it from fogging up and fucking up visibility. Pro tip from when I did CBRN training!
@@XM8A1 2nd Lt at 981Sq of the Royal Netherlands Airforce. Involved in F-16 Parts Maintenance just around the time of the chrome-6 incident and we also had to be weary of hydrazene.
Dont forget us Plebs the first responders. We get the Kindergarten version of CBRN with our HAZ-MAT so that when we roll up as an EMT, Fire, Law Enforcement, etc we know what to look for to call you BIG BOIZ in on. Of course we dont get the fancy pants. Fire gets SCOT Packs, but us Meat Wagon Drivers and Cops just get an N95 and some Vinyl Gloves. O.o
2 роки тому+1
I have an urge to join those guys whos acting lol, ik its wrong but it looks cool and fun
I've worked in HAZMAT since 1990, and it is critical to be prepared for the unexpected. If you assume the information you've been given, if any, is correct, you set yourself up for failure. Accidental? Yes. Known hazard? Sometimes, or it may be "Not What You Think."
Then pay attention more in school. If you really care and try, it'll help you out for the rest of your life, whether you go to college or not. I promise.
@@Rockethead293 First of all, this isn't Reddit, so miss me with that woosh shit. Secondly, that's total bullshit. Maybe you're still a teenager and you have no idea how the world works, so let me explain something to you. School is critical to learning, you've just heard people on social media whining that "school doesn't teach real skills" just because they don't know how to do their taxes (literally just follow the instructions on the tax form, it's not hard). In school we learn to read and write, we learn social skills from other students, we learn history, mathematics, physics, psychology, government, etc. You didn't know any of that stuff before school, and can you imagine not knowing about ancient civilizations, or WWII, or how your body works, how to do complex math? You wouldn't even understand popular memes or jokes without that knowledge. If you tried to study engineering or physics in college without having taken high school math, you'd be screwed. Without school, you probably couldn't read this comment, and you would definitely grow up to be a useless idiot, maybe even a flat earther. There's no chance you would gain enough education on your own. Just try to appreciate the education you have, and try to get the most out of it, cuz you'll never have this opportunity ever again. The rest of life sucks ass, and it sucks even more if you have to spend your adult life catching up to other people who gave a shit early on.
@@Rockethead293 FR FR they dont teach Taxes or anything that will actually help in life. only thing that's Useful in public school is Math, Geograghy and History
I’ve acted in similar drills, definitely not as important as this but I did a few moc explosions for fire fighter training and a few at my highschool for the first responders class, very fun
Kinda sorta relates to this but. My dad was stationed on an aircraft carrier when he was in the navy and one day one of his guys gets an idea, there were brownies in the mess hall that day and they had portajohns on the flight deck, grand idea, mold a brownie into the shape of a turd. They sit up there and watch as people come by, are grossed out by the massive "turd" up in the portajohn and eventually they called up a guy in full hazmat suit, brand new private too, guy walks up to the private and says, "what? Just a little dookie" and takes a bite out of the brownie turd, private almost throws up, my dad and his guys are laughing their asses off. Love my dads deployment stories :)
Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my headGet out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my headGet out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head
Did that for high school but a plane crash had papers tied to us. I got broken leg they carried me on the stretcher and went on the ambulance all I remember was really high that trip.
As an EMT we have Basic CBRN with our HAZ-MAT training because We, Fire, and Law Enforcement are going to be the FIRST on the SCENE 99.9% of the time, and then WE call in more Specialized Responders.
Imagine living your life normally and suddenly the CBRN team show up outta no where telling you to evacuate
👍
👍
👍
👍
That was in that stephen speilberg film ET
The images of the guys dripped out in the Chrome silver suits remind me like IRL clunky versions of the L4D2 Hazmat zombies.
yeah, they're called CEDA
U mean the CEDA emergency responders?
It reminds me of Among Us
CHEESEBURGER APOCALYPSE
Who the hell puts an evac station up 30 flights of goddamn stairs?!
PLEASE DON'T THINK IT DONT SAY IT, DON'T THINK IT DON'T SAY IT
_AMOGUS_
SUS?!?!!?!
BIG CHUMGUS?
AMOOGUS
Amogus
“This is not amo-“
Sus 👀🔥
It was red
@@sovietmario1606 Soviet Mario vented in front of me, vote me if you don't believe.
@@bug5654 Blue and I are clear, we were together the whole time
Where? I was in electrical.
When I saw thumbnail I thought those were biosuit zombies from RE.
AMOGUS
@@metro-v8 SUS
Resident Evil?
@@fxdes522 correct
E
I took part in a drill in Philadelphia when I a paramedic student. Major teaching hospital, they had absolutely no idea we were coming.
The scenario was that we had been exposed to some sort of biological agent. We were assigned symptoms, some of us were unresponsive and transported by ambulance, some of us just wandered or ran to the ER.
The response team was the only group to be notified, about eight minutes prior to the drill. They had the decon tent set up and immediately began putting us through, even taking it so far as wanting to strip us naked (the coordinator jumped in, said they could skip that 😂). Freezing cold water, I'll never forget that.
The team did an amazing job. Very fast, chaotic, but they communicated well with us. Which is good because otherwise it is like being abducted by aliens, tossed around and hosed off. Intimidating with their suits.
Some of us were assigned to breach security and contaminated the ER. That was a major failure for them. One security officer threatened to call the police, drill or no. Another barely flinched.
All "patients" were taken to trauma bays in an active ER. Apart from the contamination, the ER staff also did a great job.
What was the reaction of the actual patients in the hospital? Some of them must have seen parts of this going down. Did anyone freak out thinking that a bio/chem incident had occured?
Was this before or after the letter anthrax attacks?
@@ithinkimarealboy2402 we were all taken right to the trauma bays, which was about half of the ER along one wall right by the entrance (largely due to the number of walk in gunshots, tough neighborhood). That sort of chaos was fairly normal for anyone regular there, just not usually more than a couple of patients at a time.
If I remember correctly, I was backboarded. Decontaminated and then basically given a rapid trauma assessment (thankfully no finger up the butt 😂). That's a flurry of activity and then pretty much nothing. That's when I got up and gave my report.
The two or three that breached the ER without decon stopped making a fuss when they were in. So, from people in the ER, it was mainly us complaining of things like skin irritation and difficulty breathing - if we were conscious.
Most of the theatrics happened outside of the ER entrance in a tent.
This was at Temple University Hospital in the early 2000s. Was not publicized, minimal planning - tried to be as real as possible to test response. And because it was bound to have a few issues, no media involved.
Last Drill I took part of I was still in College and the Scenario was a Structure Fire in one of the Dormitories, so instead of going in as an EMT I stayed "incognito" as a "Student Victim".
Now im 6'2 and was 260 lbs at the time. Im also VERY good at playing deadweight.
FOUR Firefighters found me on the Third Floor by a Vending Machine with "Electrical Burns", "Breathing but Unresponsive", and they couldn't lift or drag me and barely roll me. When they dropped me and audibly cracked my head on the floor (and I didn't make a sound) they Panicked and ran for a supervisor. XD
Eventually the entire building was evacuated... except for me. XD
The Cheifs and School Admin found me when they were doing thier final walk through and debrief, still lying there "not exactly dead" in the "burnt out" building. XD
I was expecting an among us joke
and the fact we didn't get one is kinda sus ngl
Amogus
XD heehee amogus heehee XD
@@klepto._.maniac9874 amogus
❤️ ❤️ ❤️
❤️ ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
❤️❤️🏳️🏳️🏳️🏳️❤️
❤️❤️🏳️🏳️🏳️🏳️❤️
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
❤️❤️ ❤️❤️
❤️❤️ ❤️❤️
Somebody HAD to say that
GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD
Too late
SUS
*AMOGUS*
Too late 😸
@@binhduc1182 beat me to it
@@xavifores4599 AMONGUS
CBRN is so fascinating I’d love to see more on the topic
As an Indian Army officer, i have trained in Hazmat but CBRN is another story for me.
Indian Army launched a dedicated CBRN response Unit, the unit operators known as CBRN Specialist (No rank in use, I don't know why?)
The operators are choosen from All around the Regiments of Indian Army and go through 8-12 months, they are trained to work with Regular Army and to attach with Special forces if need.
Those guys are really awesome and as an Indian Army officer i know the real risk of their work, soo i really respect them.
That is definitely Hazmat/CBRN, those are Class A & B hazmat suits. I know this because im on a Hazmat response team.
yeah, they are kinde equivalent in some places
ITS AMOGUS
Exactly, this video is nonsense. Clickbait.
Same here, CBRN is always trained alongside HAZMAT trainings. But is it just me or do I sweat everytime I look at a class A suit like I could still feel the weight of the SCBA 😂
Mr lib veteran can you tell me hiw the field is and pays?
Shout out to these guys, really. Treating these situations has to be a life-altering experience, not to mention they don't always know what they're dealing with.
Dying people : **Dying sound**
Cameraman : hey look, dying people :0
Yeah...that not a hazmat suit... Thats clearly an amongus reference 💀
i love this shorts
The first two hazmats: when the impostor is sus (among us remix plays)
That guy in the end was wearing heavy anti bomb suit with his hands totally exposed kudos to that 🤣🤣
The reason why his hands are exposed is because the gloves are very large and he can't move his hands easily while doing things like defusing bombs
If you have gloves on then it’s more clumsy this leads to a higher chance of setting off the Bomb rather than defusing it
You can survive without your hands, that's the difference
I'm just guessing, but I think no hands is better than no head/torso... Just my 2c
@@JustADog4781 gud point sire
It's the back rooms people 💀
amo- amo- amongu- I CANT GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD
Thank you, this helps me understand my brothers job. He’s a CBRN for the Marines and he didn’t explain it to me that well
The first clips are from the African lion exercise in Morocco finally someone talks about it
Preparation is KEY.
amogus
SUS
SUSSY BAKA
teng deng deng deng deng deng deng, dededeng, tgsch tgsch
Sus
😐
Hats off to all CBRN and HAZMAT personnel. What they do is really underrated, and I think they should get an international holiday
make full length episodes 🙏🏿
he has full videos you check his channel out
We publish long videos every Friday. Check out our "#longs" playlist.
@@NotWhatYouThink no u lol
I absolutely hate CBRNE and HAZMAT training and drills with a passion. They are always conveniently held when it's 90°+ at noon without fail.
I can verify, it's alot worse when it's 120° outside.
Spent many years training. Had alot of good times at camp blanding, but definitely glad we never had to use any of that training in real life scenarios.
GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD 📮
Amogus
*amogus*
There might be an imposter among us
Me waiting him to bring up the backrooms
I litterally saw this on your tiktok 10 minutes ago and i open youtube to see this lol
These are the suits used to enter the backrooms
they're actually trying to find the imposter
This looks like the hazmat suit in the backrooms lol
So it’s like a radioactive bomb squad
Amogus
In real life
Not what you think is by far one of the best short channels
Sussy
I do training like this multiple times a year, sometimes monthly. And it’s not as dramatic as displayed most the time, maybe during the big “test” we have in the summer it’s close but not quite.
Both Haz and CBRN can be interchangable if needed specifically when it comes to the roles. Not everything is the same and arguably Haz is much more in depth and complex. Either way, level A suits are a BITCH to wear man lol
Dude CBRN training suuucks, bunny suits are crazy hot, the drills are pretty cool but getting PT’d in gas masks and mop suits is rough as hell. Major props to anyone who goes far in the CBRN pipeline
Me trying so hard no to make an Among Us joke/meme/reference: 🫥
This honestly excites me for a CBRN cleansing and monitoring team course I have in a few months within my job in the military.
I though it was a training (just in case) for a zombie apocalypse LoL
Actually many Government and Military organizations DO go through "Zombie Apocalypse" drills, and even encourage Civilians to do so, because if you are ready for a "Zombie Apocalypse" then you are prepared for almost ANY Natural And ManMade Disaster, Small to Large.
From Civil Unrest, Earthquake, Tornado, Hurricane, WildFire, Foreign Invasion, Power Plant Meltdown, Chemical Spill, etc etc. Almost every single Scenario is covered within the "Umbrella" of "Zombie" o.o
Pov: u thought amogus, sighed and checked the comments
Bro they need to smear some baby shampoo on the insides of those suits and masks, will keep it from fogging up and fucking up visibility. Pro tip from when I did CBRN training!
What was ur MOS?
I'm stealing this for next time I get into the suit. Thanks. -USAF HAZMAT/CBRN
@@KamikazeeDolphin no need to smear that in the suit, you'll fuck it up. Just don't breathe heavily, and ur mask won't fog up.
- Former 74D, US Army
Does that work too in a foggy car when rain and the ac is dead?
@@XM8A1 2nd Lt at 981Sq of the Royal Netherlands Airforce. Involved in F-16 Parts Maintenance just around the time of the chrome-6 incident and we also had to be weary of hydrazene.
These guys are based. They walk directly into danger without knowing what exactly it is.
Get it out of my head
lemme guess amogus?
HAAAAAAANK! DONT PLAY THE GAME AMOGUS
Being a CBRN specialist it’s pretty cool actually seeing this though most of the clips are for mass casualty decontamination. Probably DECRF training.
Me: *AMONG US AMONG US*
CBRNE is under the HAZMAT umbrella.
It's additional training after Hazmat certification. At least in California
🤨🤨🤨🤨📮📮📮🤨🤨📮🤨🤨
Best military science channel ever
*_AMOGUS_*
If anyone is wondering what CBRN stands for it is
Chemical
Biological
Radiological
Nuclear
You cant bypass your Fear when this happens. its very hard
Sus
This is one of the first times I've seen someone talk about my job on youtube, CBRN is pretty cool
Dont forget us Plebs the first responders. We get the Kindergarten version of CBRN with our HAZ-MAT so that when we roll up as an EMT, Fire, Law Enforcement, etc we know what to look for to call you BIG BOIZ in on.
Of course we dont get the fancy pants. Fire gets SCOT Packs, but us Meat Wagon Drivers and Cops just get an N95 and some Vinyl Gloves. O.o
I have an urge to join those guys whos acting lol, ik its wrong but it looks cool and fun
Only the boys realize the music in the background man dude why can’t we just go back to the good old days😞
I've worked in HAZMAT since 1990, and it is critical to be prepared for the unexpected. If you assume the information you've been given, if any, is correct, you set yourself up for failure. Accidental? Yes. Known hazard? Sometimes, or it may be "Not What You Think."
i learnt more things here than in school
Then pay attention more in school. If you really care and try, it'll help you out for the rest of your life, whether you go to college or not. I promise.
@@OrionCrusader first of all, r/wooosh
second of all school doesnt teach you things you'll actually learn in life
@@Rockethead293 First of all, this isn't Reddit, so miss me with that woosh shit.
Secondly, that's total bullshit. Maybe you're still a teenager and you have no idea how the world works, so let me explain something to you. School is critical to learning, you've just heard people on social media whining that "school doesn't teach real skills" just because they don't know how to do their taxes (literally just follow the instructions on the tax form, it's not hard). In school we learn to read and write, we learn social skills from other students, we learn history, mathematics, physics, psychology, government, etc. You didn't know any of that stuff before school, and can you imagine not knowing about ancient civilizations, or WWII, or how your body works, how to do complex math? You wouldn't even understand popular memes or jokes without that knowledge. If you tried to study engineering or physics in college without having taken high school math, you'd be screwed. Without school, you probably couldn't read this comment, and you would definitely grow up to be a useless idiot, maybe even a flat earther. There's no chance you would gain enough education on your own.
Just try to appreciate the education you have, and try to get the most out of it, cuz you'll never have this opportunity ever again. The rest of life sucks ass, and it sucks even more if you have to spend your adult life catching up to other people who gave a shit early on.
@@Rockethead293 FR FR they dont teach Taxes or anything that will actually help in life. only thing that's Useful in public school is Math, Geograghy and History
@@OrionCrusader Jesus man it was a joke
I’ve acted in similar drills, definitely not as important as this but I did a few moc explosions for fire fighter training and a few at my highschool for the first responders class, very fun
Not gonna lie but I thought this was about to be the back rooms video🤣
They also have drones that detect any movement, and nanomachines that boost your stats
among us
r/sus
Kinda sorta relates to this but. My dad was stationed on an aircraft carrier when he was in the navy and one day one of his guys gets an idea, there were brownies in the mess hall that day and they had portajohns on the flight deck, grand idea, mold a brownie into the shape of a turd. They sit up there and watch as people come by, are grossed out by the massive "turd" up in the portajohn and eventually they called up a guy in full hazmat suit, brand new private too, guy walks up to the private and says, "what? Just a little dookie" and takes a bite out of the brownie turd, private almost throws up, my dad and his guys are laughing their asses off. Love my dads deployment stories :)
They look like their from
Brain "don't say it"
Among us, yes I know a cringe game
Dude with the bomb suit picked up and said bricc
‘Bout to open a backrooms portal
Its litterally M.E.G suit but diif colors lmao
@@dsm9263 true
This is not a movie set. Its an AMONG US incident.
amongus :DDDDDD
These feel like the real life version of scp mobile task forces
Second?
🏆
Fourth! You still got a trophy
@@Rockethead293 ok thanks. Sometimes the other comments don’t load
Let's be real, the CBRN guys just chill in the hazmat cage all day for their whole contract.
Had to learn this at BMT
this guy couldn’t be anymore wrong about this
That suits look cool.
imagine the heat that those aluminum armors must have
AMONGUS CHARACTERS
Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my headGet out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my headGet out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head Get out of my head get out of my head
I have that training. Fun classes. The big fear after class was anyone checking your search history. Because out of context, it doesn't look good.
I miss the full orange hazmat suits
Omg, real life crew mate
"This is NOT HAZMAT--- it's amongus
Did that for high school but a plane crash had papers tied to us. I got broken leg they carried me on the stretcher and went on the ambulance all I remember was really high that trip.
Welcome to another show of "things that look like amongus"
The notes from the piano made me think this had bo2 menu music
PLAYING AMONG US IN REAL LIFE
Imagine if the people in the among us in real life song used these suits instead
they're not hazmats, they're Crewmates
among us nuclear drip 🥶
They look like real Life among us crew doing a task
Those hazmat suits
Gives me some backroom vibes
As an EMT we have Basic CBRN with our HAZ-MAT training because We, Fire, and Law Enforcement are going to be the FIRST on the SCENE 99.9% of the time, and then WE call in more Specialized Responders.
Huge respect
i want a suit like dat. they pretty expensive tho
I too thought of the astronaut game in space where theres an imposter who kills
Love you vids
🥈
This video: tells about CBRN
comment section: *AMOGUS!*