I am expected to read about Africa because someone else need my data to be given for in depth African studies. I was beinf shown videos to manipulate me into searching for Africa. I know the games they expect me to be a part of a slave who has no choice or anyone to run to for help. Remember he has an army working for him. I understood when Africa started to appear in my recommendations..I was expected to study n research to provide data.
They're not exclusive. Off-topic, the Gates Foundation convinced the Oxford lab to collaborate with AstraZeneca instead of freely distributing the patent for its Covid vaccine, because Bill Gates loves private-public partnerships instead of just public ones. Not only did AZ's vaccine become more expensive for poorest countries, AZ made a mess of the testing and still hasn't gotten FDA approval, for instance. Another great thing Gates did was to spend half a billion dollars, that's a B, in the decade up to 2015 to develop a numerical rating system for teachers. While it was a complete failure, it'd already been widely adopted to shut down thousands of school nationwide, fire or harass untold number of teachers, and is still widely used today in teacher evaluations. Despite the bad economy, the teaching pipeline is seeing record low number of applicants, while every state is now short of teachers, which again in unprecedented. Thank you, Bill Gates. P.S. BTW, don't forget: Jeffrey Epstein.
In the end every form of farming is a risk (at a certain extent). Since the animals there are likely to become vectors of diseases between wild animals and us.
And the insane antibiotic use within most farms which is fuelling anti microbial drug resistant pathogens. People tend to think buying free range/organic avoids both cramming and AMR issues. It usually doesn't.
Google says: "Specifically, historians have speculated that the fleas on rats are responsible for the estimated 25 million plague deaths between 1347 and 1351. However, a new study suggests that rats weren't the main carriers of fleas and lice that spread the plague-it was humans." Looking further the most articles are about how a computer model simulating the spread with lice on humans is closer to the real life data than the program simulating transmission from fleas on rats to humans.
Title: Why Are Some Furry Creatures So Infectious? Me: Oooh a video about why we like cats and other cute furry animals so much over others Video: *Talks about infections and viruses* Me: My disappointment is immeasurable, and my day is ruined 😥
Bill Gates isn't a medical or public health policy professional, he's just a rich guy with no real expertise, so it's kinda wild to promote anything he has to say about pandemics or anything else for that matter..
hey bill gates, how about a waiver on patent rights for vaccines during covid? how about donating free vaccines to poorer countries? how about working with the experts at WHO instead of trying to strongarm them with your money/influence?
So how can you combat a problem like this effectively without just wiping out the infectious animal species? It can take a long time and resources for vaccines. As well as antibiotic resistance.
I would expect that with MRNA vaccines we can have vaccines quickly developed for the most likely possibilities, and then quickly modify them as needed when outbreaks start. They're much faster to develop and change than traditional vaccines.
well there's nothing we can really do to get rid of those species, but usually they aren't the main problem, because most infectious specie has either already transmitted its pathogens to humans (and therefore we are immune) or they are still able to live far from humans, that's why the destruction of their habitats is the reason there's more pandemics now so the solution would be to stop polluting and invading the natural habitats of these species, and obviously improve our worldwide healthcare and sanitation systems
It's a multifactorial problem. We need to come at it from all angles. In my opinion humans encroaching on these species habitats is one of the biggest problems, as is housing large scale (read factory farming) in areas that can amplify spillover from wild to domestic animals and then potentially humans. Humans are the problem, not the animals that are merely adapting to the conditions that are forced on them.
@@petahitchens5365 Exactly. Getting rid of the animals, even if successful, is completely useless. Another species will fill the void. That's how nature works. No niche will be left unexploited.
Or just maybe we could stop spreading on the last bits of wild areas on earth. Leave some space for the 99.9% of the other species might be a good way to avoid zoonosis.
That's never going to happen, seeing that "we" aren't a hive mind that collectively reaches a decision and follows through on it. Different people are doing different things and are affected by different things. You can't treat a group of people the same way you would a single person. Their characteristics and behaviors are completely different.
Yeah, why spread out? Just keep cramming more and more into already overcrowded cities. It's not like there are any negative effects from that approach...
@@RosheenQuynhWhen I was little I saw rats babies and I have not forgotten that scene..there were too many rat babies that I saw upclose and cudnt stand that feeling of seeing something reddish wettish thing. I cannot see a fresh new flesh uncovered n without a cloth..it makes me feel very I cant explain n stand kind of feeling..I have never liked rats after that. My mother killed rats bravely and I feared them all my life.
Apologies if this is a stupid question, have we ever tried to find a way to give these infecious creatures stronger immune systems? Like distributing a vaccine so when they have babies there's fewer carriers being added to the gene pool of that species? Or is it much much more complex than that...
Only some antibodies get carried through genetics, so it would be very inefficient, and also, there is a small chance that the animals with such a simple immune system develop an immunity by a vaccine.
I am not educated on the matter. But if I understand this correctly a vaccine would not work at all. This is because a vaccine is used to train your immune system to learn to identify and respond to a virus or similar virus. If your immune system however isn't even capable of responding to the virus than it will not work because it is simply incapable of doing it. Vaccines themselves are not some kind of anti-biotic or virus killer. It simply helps train your immune system to better and more efficiently respond to a virus.
The country that Bill lives in, and has the most political sway over, also had the worst pandemic response of any developed nation, and has the highest death toll of any nation on Earth.
bill gates making a book like that when he advised against opening vaccine patents is infuriating and you promoting that book is very disappointing. im unsubbing now.
At least there's Corbevax now, an open-source vaccine developed at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston. Entirely funded by charity and private investment by drug companies in poorer nations. It's now the number one vaccine in India and Indonesia. I'd love to have a dose, but it's not approved in the US even though some of the trials were done here. Elana Bottazzi and Peter Hotez have a bit of Nobel Prize buzz around them.
Podrían usar manipulación genética para estos animales tener un mejor sistema inmune y prevenir enfermedades entre especies, además estos virus indican cierta biocompatibilidad entre humanos y estos animales.
2:15 - Pity that if this sort of research is conducted, and an outbreak happens, there will be a certain sort easily manipulated into undermining any response because of it.
I think a badass rebel biker gang of mice with the slogan, "live fast, proliferate, and die young" is my new favorite animal depiction. I seriously want that picture and slogan on a patch or sticker.
One possible future pandemic cause is the Lassa fever, which is spread by rats in west Africa. The reason I say this is that Nigeria which is in west Africa will (if current trends continue) surpass the US in population by 2050 which will lead to a very dense and poor region also lots of countries are trading with Africa letting it spread from Nigeria to West Africa and then globally. Also, the disease has a high amount of asymptomatic people at 80%, and if covid has taught us anything very important to let a disease spread.
Not in vegeterian countries. Rats are however common in countries like India. Still they dont cause much trouble except to create holes where life once existed. Huge rats are found in India. Some are big like smaller rabbits or large squirrels..
...Rats were part of human society long before deforestation. You just commented the animals adapt and spread rapidly... but couldn't work out that means they'll fill human biomes regardless of available habitat?
like puppies? love is infectious. are you capable of not worrying? of not knowing you are your fears? or are you not capable of happiness? of knowing you aren't your thoughts about whatever...etc your future hopes? bc you're in MY life. this video is in MY life. you'll get every bit what you give, gave, and are giving, back. "...we can hopefully put the brakes on..."
One time, someone told me that Turkey kept so many cats to avoid rats..as if cats wont carry any diseases. That doesnt seem to me a nice way to keep something at bay by having some opponent closer. We can do that with people not animals..like keep closer the enemy of the enemy to make easier the hop to real enemy or create a safe barrier from real enemy.
COVID was/is not deadly enough for it to be taken serious by the world. I think this will hurt a future pandamic in a big way, since "The last one wasn't that deadly, why should this one suddenly be?"
@@LimeyLassen IIRC Ebola was wide spread in Africa, but didn't really effect the rest of the world. And let's be honest: Nobody gives a rats ass about Africa if they can't either enslave them or exploit them.
Definitely from Pikachu. It'll spread like lightning
oh my
@@MinuteEarth Surprised pikachu face
Pikachu?
This was funny, and I did laugh.
GOTTA CATCH'EM ALL POKEMON
good thing im introverted haha
Turkish subtitles please
well not to worry vaccines will come asap since computation is fast af now
HIV, over 30 million deaths. No vaccine yet. Vaccines are not the solution, just a bandaid.
Great video
Def from the government when they need another distraction
👍👍Bill Gates
I am expected to read about Africa because someone else need my data to be given for in depth African studies. I was beinf shown videos to manipulate me into searching for Africa. I know the games they expect me to be a part of a slave who has no choice or anyone to run to for help. Remember he has an army working for him. I understood when Africa started to appear in my recommendations..I was expected to study n research to provide data.
Baby mouse in a chopper bike is the best thing I have seen on this channel. I forgive you for the sponsored shorts.
That’s supposed to be a big wheel. You know: One of those mostly-plastic toy tricycle things.
@@emmettturner9452 looks like the biker mice from mars :)
@@DeithW When I read the OP’s comment I expected to see a reference to Beverly Cleary’s book “The Mouse and the Motorcycle.” ;)
@@emmettturner9452 My brain saw Easy Rider motorcycles. Primed by the hot rod car.
They could be Big Wheels. Or fancy European scooters.
Wow, this turned out to be a logical problem rather than a biological one. That definitely took me by surprise.
They're not exclusive.
Off-topic, the Gates Foundation convinced the Oxford lab to collaborate with AstraZeneca instead of freely distributing the patent for its Covid vaccine, because Bill Gates loves private-public partnerships instead of just public ones. Not only did AZ's vaccine become more expensive for poorest countries, AZ made a mess of the testing and still hasn't gotten FDA approval, for instance.
Another great thing Gates did was to spend half a billion dollars, that's a B, in the decade up to 2015 to develop a numerical rating system for teachers. While it was a complete failure, it'd already been widely adopted to shut down thousands of school nationwide, fire or harass untold number of teachers, and is still widely used today in teacher evaluations. Despite the bad economy, the teaching pipeline is seeing record low number of applicants, while every state is now short of teachers, which again in unprecedented.
Thank you, Bill Gates.
P.S. BTW, don't forget: Jeffrey Epstein.
bioLOGICAL.
@@anthonybenci9035 😂😂😂
How so?
@@anthonybenci9035 💀
also worth mentioning the infectious diseases via the animal crammings that happen in factory farming
factory farming is literally satan...
In the end every form of farming is a risk (at a certain extent). Since the animals there are likely to become vectors of diseases between wild animals and us.
And the insane antibiotic use within most farms which is fuelling anti microbial drug resistant pathogens.
People tend to think buying free range/organic avoids both cramming and AMR issues. It usually doesn't.
But the infections do not start there. They are infected by the mice and the rats etc first.
@@qqleq Don't think that's true for spanish flu, bird flu, equine flu and swine flu, which all seem to have originated in those farmed animals.
This confirms furries are very infectious people
That doesn't even make sense.
@Serenity Klein nooo >w< not the pawthogen.
1:58 Wasn't the Black Death caused by the fleas carried by rodents, not the mice themselves?
I was thinking the same thing.
neither. The spread of the bubonic plague was not caused or exacerbated by rats, it's just a myth.
@@gilgabro420 what was it caused by?
@@gilgabro420 Yeah, like Livi asked, if that's a myth, where did it come from? 🤨
Google says: "Specifically, historians have speculated that the fleas on rats are responsible for the estimated 25 million plague deaths between 1347 and 1351. However, a new study suggests that rats weren't the main carriers of fleas and lice that spread the plague-it was humans."
Looking further the most articles are about how a computer model simulating the spread with lice on humans is closer to the real life data than the program simulating transmission from fleas on rats to humans.
Title: Why Are Some Furry Creatures So Infectious?
Me: Oooh a video about why we like cats and other cute furry animals so much over others
Video: *Talks about infections and viruses*
Me: My disappointment is immeasurable, and my day is ruined 😥
It was originally "Where will the next pandemic come from".
Absolutely awesome description! This should be broadcasted in schools.
Bill Gates isn't a medical or public health policy professional, he's just a rich guy with no real expertise, so it's kinda wild to promote anything he has to say about pandemics or anything else for that matter..
Completely agree! Billionaire philanthropy is just a public image ploy.
I'd trust Bill Gates to fix my laptop, but not to dictate policy.
I'd not trust him if he was working alone. He pays for a lot of people in order to do what he wants to: stop plagues and such.
@@XXCoder you mean cause them?
hey bill gates, how about a waiver on patent rights for vaccines during covid? how about donating free vaccines to poorer countries? how about working with the experts at WHO instead of trying to strongarm them with your money/influence?
So how can you combat a problem like this effectively without just wiping out the infectious animal species? It can take a long time and resources for vaccines. As well as antibiotic resistance.
We could get rid of the scientists that infect the animals in the first place.
I would expect that with MRNA vaccines we can have vaccines quickly developed for the most likely possibilities, and then quickly modify them as needed when outbreaks start. They're much faster to develop and change than traditional vaccines.
well there's nothing we can really do to get rid of those species, but usually they aren't the main problem, because most infectious specie has either already transmitted its pathogens to humans (and therefore we are immune) or they are still able to live far from humans, that's why the destruction of their habitats is the reason there's more pandemics now
so the solution would be to stop polluting and invading the natural habitats of these species, and obviously improve our worldwide healthcare and sanitation systems
It's a multifactorial problem. We need to come at it from all angles. In my opinion humans encroaching on these species habitats is one of the biggest problems, as is housing large scale (read factory farming) in areas that can amplify spillover from wild to domestic animals and then potentially humans. Humans are the problem, not the animals that are merely adapting to the conditions that are forced on them.
@@petahitchens5365 Exactly. Getting rid of the animals, even if successful, is completely useless. Another species will fill the void. That's how nature works. No niche will be left unexploited.
Can’t wait to see how quickly the comments get turned off
Or just change the title of the video I guess Lolololol
Or just maybe we could stop spreading on the last bits of wild areas on earth. Leave some space for the 99.9% of the other species might be a good way to avoid zoonosis.
Tough sell to the people in mostly developing countries who are likely to want those areas useable for at least some kind of human activity.
That's never going to happen, seeing that "we" aren't a hive mind that collectively reaches a decision and follows through on it. Different people are doing different things and are affected by different things. You can't treat a group of people the same way you would a single person. Their characteristics and behaviors are completely different.
Yeah, why spread out? Just keep cramming more and more into already overcrowded cities. It's not like there are any negative effects from that approach...
I wonder what furrys are - but now I know them now!
Note: odd1sout
Edit: we live slow, die old. Death is sold.
Hey me
No idea why at 0:48 I imagined a whale with glasses, a labcoat and clipboard giving another whale a prostate check
The animal drawings look fantastic!
ehhh 7/10 not fuckable
We need to vaccinate the rats. We need to take of the health of all animals, if we want to stay healthy ourselfs!
I was just thinking this!
@@RosheenQuynhWhen I was little I saw rats babies and I have not forgotten that scene..there were too many rat babies that I saw upclose and cudnt stand that feeling of seeing something reddish wettish thing. I cannot see a fresh new flesh uncovered n without a cloth..it makes me feel very I cant explain n stand kind of feeling..I have never liked rats after that. My mother killed rats bravely and I feared them all my life.
Man, I've learned so much biology thanks to minuteearth!
Apologies if this is a stupid question, have we ever tried to find a way to give these infecious creatures stronger immune systems? Like distributing a vaccine so when they have babies there's fewer carriers being added to the gene pool of that species? Or is it much much more complex than that...
Rabies has been almost eradicated from central Europe thanks to bait laced with rabies vaccine for foxes, who are a keystone carrier.
If you thought Republicans were hard to vaccinate, wait til you try to get a brown rat to show up to a CVS appointment.
Only some antibodies get carried through genetics, so it would be very inefficient, and also, there is a small chance that the animals with such a simple immune system develop an immunity by a vaccine.
I am not educated on the matter.
But if I understand this correctly a vaccine would not work at all.
This is because a vaccine is used to train your immune system to learn to identify and respond to a virus or similar virus.
If your immune system however isn't even capable of responding to the virus than it will not work because it is simply incapable of doing it. Vaccines themselves are not some kind of anti-biotic or virus killer. It simply helps train your immune system to better and more efficiently respond to a virus.
We could genetically modify animals, but not a lot of people are in favour for that..
The country that Bill lives in, and has the most political sway over, also had the worst pandemic response of any developed nation, and has the highest death toll of any nation on Earth.
That was the goal n expected.
Imagine we get the next plague from a pokemon hiding in the thumbnail
bill gates making a book like that when he advised against opening vaccine patents is infuriating and you promoting that book is very disappointing. im unsubbing now.
At least there's Corbevax now, an open-source vaccine developed at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston. Entirely funded by charity and private investment by drug companies in poorer nations. It's now the number one vaccine in India and Indonesia. I'd love to have a dose, but it's not approved in the US even though some of the trials were done here. Elana Bottazzi and Peter Hotez have a bit of Nobel Prize buzz around them.
When I saw the thumbnail, I thought it would be the breakup of Hungary after WW1.
I'll be damned if we get a pandemic because of Pikachu
Ok, very interesting video, I learned a lot, but why is the title about furry animals with a chicken on the thumbnail? 😂
Oh they changed it :(
Why do all of y'all's videos have two titles? The former one always being a bit more clickbaity
Podrían usar manipulación genética para estos animales tener un mejor sistema inmune y prevenir enfermedades entre especies, además estos virus indican cierta biocompatibilidad entre humanos y estos animales.
What's Pikachu doing on the video cover? 😂😂
2:15 - Pity that if this sort of research is conducted, and an outbreak happens, there will be a certain sort easily manipulated into undermining any response because of it.
Whoever guessed 'monkeys' is right🥴
So cool! Great Video.
I'm suddenly a little less defensive of Remy the rat's chef dreams.
Next pandemic comes from deez
stop ruining my e621 sessions!
I think a badass rebel biker gang of mice with the slogan, "live fast, proliferate, and die young" is my new favorite animal depiction. I seriously want that picture and slogan on a patch or sticker.
I think its gonna spread like jehendnudnuebuabjsuneubdynudniainuabydb𝕧𝕖𝕙𝕖𝕪𝕟𝕤𝕦𝕟𝕒𝕟
Definitely not a cradily infecting people
Thanks for referencing my research and very entertainingly explained!
2120
Because
1720: Marseile Plague
1820: Cholerra in Asia
1920: flu
2020: sars cov 19
But is it rue pandemic happwns every 100 years?
second
One possible future pandemic cause is the Lassa fever, which is spread by rats in west Africa. The reason I say this is that Nigeria which is in west Africa will (if current trends continue) surpass the US in population by 2050 which will lead to a very dense and poor region also lots of countries are trading with Africa letting it spread from Nigeria to West Africa and then globally. Also, the disease has a high amount of asymptomatic people at 80%, and if covid has taught us anything very important to let a disease spread.
We should nuke them. Not like there's anyone of any value there.
it will come from a place that does not have clean standards.
Like a Chinese bio lab
Like 95% of the farms on the planet.
hmm, interesting, but ill syay more concerned about the gain-of-funtion/biological weapons research that csused the last pandemic.
Imagine someone from 2119 watching this and thinking "damn, they really knew"
A virus that could come from Pikachu that’s interesting.😳
for a pandemic... you need a panda
We didnt want to be accused of pandering...
He said an important point- destroying the natural habitat of any species brings disasters not just of animals that live fast and live less.
Live fast die young. Sounds like the Rockstar lifestyle
Essa oms não fez nada para conter o vírus kkk até minimizou ele no começo
We need to be better at managing our resources a
Another pandemic would not be mice (nice)
You didn't give us a geeky pun so I did 😂
didn't ask
I love the new minute Earth intro
Another lab, I'd imagine.
Yes
Fort Detrick is where 👑🦠 really came from.
Bird flu 🐓--. . or Monkeypox 🙊-- 😷
🏃
Aren't rats often eaten in asain countries?
not really
Not in vegeterian countries. Rats are however common in countries like India. Still they dont cause much trouble except to create holes where life once existed. Huge rats are found in India. Some are big like smaller rabbits or large squirrels..
Florida man is gonna eat some alligator sushi, and spread some shit.
"live fast die young species" i spat my drink
This pandemic isn't over yet! I don't want to hear about another one.
Bill Gates sponsored the video?😂
damn? this video is only about 1/6th ad?
The 🧫 .. that's where the next pandemic will come from.
Uranus.
how come i feel like the videos are different?
Not being nice enough to animals in my opinion
It'll come from a disease.
I remember when Minute Earth was actually 1 minute long…
Thank fully they didnt use 2 minutes Earth.
sponsored by Bill Gates LOL
At least they didn't try to hide their sponsor 🤣
As dumb as their audience is, why would they need to.
Just don't eat them...
*i c e*
[Softly]
Don't.
...Rats were part of human society long before deforestation. You just commented the animals adapt and spread rapidly... but couldn't work out that means they'll fill human biomes regardless of available habitat?
Even covid looks cute in minute earth videos 🥰
like puppies? love is infectious. are you capable of not worrying? of not knowing you are your fears? or are you not capable of happiness? of knowing you aren't your thoughts about whatever...etc your future hopes? bc you're in MY life. this video is in MY life. you'll get every bit what you give, gave, and are giving, back. "...we can hopefully put the brakes on..."
Well-Done
The fact that we saw pikachu first on the thumbnail picture made me think- so pikachu has diseases? Well. I bet it'll attack pikachu's enemies first.
Mad King:- "Kill them All..!!!"
China reports human H5N6 avian influenza case in Sichuan Province
- hope this isn't what the headline indicates it is
Not me getting infected with a bad case of M.I.A. - Bad Girls from this video.
Rat then bat… cat? Around 2120-2130 putting 5 bucks on the Sportsbet
Crows may do that too. I see many crows whereever I go.
One time, someone told me that Turkey kept so many cats to avoid rats..as if cats wont carry any diseases. That doesnt seem to me a nice way to keep something at bay by having some opponent closer. We can do that with people not animals..like keep closer the enemy of the enemy to make easier the hop to real enemy or create a safe barrier from real enemy.
Mongoose were kept close to keep snakes away but what cud be the reason to have stray dogs or cats? What kind of pandemic or epidemic they avoid?
You need to make some videos aboat speculative evolucion. That's how you get views.
Damn I haven't been on RUclips for a long time..
Wow… to cope with the next (hyped) pandem we need to read the book of the dude who funded the last pandem. How much did they pay you?
Has anyone looked into diseases that infect deer and the potential for humans to infected by them?
COVID was/is not deadly enough for it to be taken serious by the world. I think this will hurt a future pandamic in a big way, since "The last one wasn't that deadly, why should this one suddenly be?"
For real. Ebola wasn't that long ago,.
@@LimeyLassen IIRC Ebola was wide spread in Africa, but didn't really effect the rest of the world. And let's be honest: Nobody gives a rats ass about Africa if they can't either enslave them or exploit them.
sorry most rodent become fur animal in the industrie.
I noticed the title change so I think you want me to watch this today and not another day. :-)
Yet one more reason to hate raccoons. They’re evil.
Humans be like: Ohhh, nice forest... Let's destroy it! ..... Also humans: Aaaah! The nature is attacking us!! Stop it!!
Thanks!
Probably china again
We all know its gonna be Umbrella Corp
1:38 Biker Mice From Mars
Coz they're furry, duh! LOL
Bill Gates ?
A lab, again.