>A typically bite/saliva borne deadly illness >Bats are one of the leading spreaders>Bats are the only flying mammals, very good flyers too>Bats also tend to be rather small and fragile>Bats tend to fight off diseases like rabies quite well>A fragile, flying, immunity sound, animal is somehow a rabies siperspreader>Why? Just cause broFor tho, I thought about how suspicious this is. Bats are agile fliers, typically even more so than most birds. So how would a rabid animal catch one? Plus if it did somehow, very unlikely it would get away do to their fragility and the attackers literal rabid feralness. Plus, bats are typically good at fighting off diseases, so I doubt it would have originated from them.What does this mean, is rabies a labmade virus? Or maybe bats are are being injected with it. Are bats just being made scapegoats for some nefarious reason?Thanks in advance as always!
I'm not familiar with this claim, except if you see a bat or other nocturnal mammal out during the day it is said they probably have rabies because that's the only disease that makes them do that. Raccoons especially, bats too though.Good logic, what you are missing is their diet. They eat bugs, especially I think mosquitos which are disease carrier/spreaders. And this claim and yours might speak to bats being resistant carriers. Natural or man made otherwise.As for what is lab cooked, looking up patents helps. This is telling with Ebola and SARS, and also rumored about Lyme disease and ticks from Monsanto / that island off Long Island. I'm not clear on patenting natural diseases to then weaponize them or work on vaccines. I am sus on their logic and practices, due to the one ScienceDaily article I once read about .... using E. Coli as the base to build a nanotech spliced medical delivery "system". I hope it is somehow not diseasey when cyborged but I raise eyebrow hard to this.That is also what is made public. Tuskegee Experiment wasn't for a long time and numerous other similar test-on-your-people unethical practices go with plausible deniability ops.Lastly, I know vampire bats drink blood of animals to also be susceptible however no others I know of have that diet. And also the UK had at least one incident of disease being sprayed over areas as an experiment. So manually injecting Patient Zeros is feasible but so is a dirty chem trail, or similar tech. Or tainting lower in the food chain, such as Zika mosquitos.
>>42363729>They eat bugs, especially I think mosquitos which are disease carrier/spreadersTrue, but mosquitos cannot spread it afaik.
i still might touch one.
There's no such thing as Rabies. There are symptoms of Rabies, yes, but nobody knows what causes it.If you read on it, you will find out that there have been old cases where people who were never bitten or scratched by anything exhibited rabies. You will read about some dude who read about rabies and due to the psychological terror, he started showing symptoms of rabies. There are cases when one was scratched or bitten by a supposedly rabied animal and did not exhibit anything
>>42365696>If you read on it, you will find out that there have been old cases where people who were never bitten or scratched by anything exhibited rabies.the thing can incubate for years before symptoms appear so if the original exposure was trivial it doesn't get remembered.>psychological terror, he started showing symptoms of rabies.yes, psychosomatic illness is a thing>There are cases when one was scratched or bitten by a supposedly rabied animal and did not exhibit anythingbecause not every exposure means you get infected. the exposure/infection ratio is actually pretty low.
>>42365696>there have been old cases where people who were never bitten or scratched by anything exhibited rabiesI have, some got it from being around a ton of rabid bats. I never heard of this particular one tho. Sounds like the fictional disease I invented.
>>42362674>So how would a rabid animal catch one?doesn't need to because the bat population is the reservoir from where rabies originates. they can carry it for their entire lives and never feel a thing and, if they have a flair up its a nothing burger for them. They still spread it in their bodily excretions though.think of it as something akin to a person who has a coldsore on their lip - they carry the virus their whole lives and only rarely does it actually erupt for a short time during which the person can feel a bit ill, have the blister, and perhaps spread it via the infectious fluid which comes out of it. Then, the virus goes dormant again.there, your question is answered.
>>42366453Zamn, posted only seconds before mine. TF!?!
>>42365696>If you read on it, you will find out that there have been old cases where people who were never bitten or scratched by anything exhibited rabies.it can be caught from infected bat saliva getting into your mouth, nose, eyes or an open cut. rare but does happen. thats why people who work in close proximity to bats are generally getting the vaccine every year or two.
>>42366465spooky. its a fair point that he makes but the answer is that many exposures go unnoticed. its how a lot of little kids get rabies - they play with some little kitten or puppy that gives them a little nip with their pinprick size teeth (which is enough) and after 5 minutes they've forgotten about it and dont tell anyone.next thing they are sick and die from rabies. happens all the time in india.
>>42365696>>42366453>>42366455rabied glow
If we can't even touch a bat how could we ever possibly make contact with biological aliens unless they aren't in fact biological or native to this world
>>42368072you can touch bats just fine. ensure they dont bite you, that you dont have any open wounds, and that you wash your hands with hot soapy water afterwards (and before touching yourself).
>>42367942Lol
>>42362674>very good flyersNo they arent, they claw themselves through the air, and their flying pattern is gennerally>go straight>hear thing in front of me, turnWe had bats get into a gym once and it took fucking FOREVER to get them out because they were too stupid and blind to find the doors, so they just kept flying right past it depending on echolocation, which kept saying >wall in front of you
>>42372176
>>42372452>AI told meHave you ever really seen a bat flying?Exceedingly clumsy compared to other flyers.
dude bats are know reservoirs for all kinds of diseases not just rabies. no conspiracy here. just a thing about this type of animal. viruses & fungal infections, things like ebola and marburg, nipah, other hemorrhagic fevers, SARs, and obviously rabies. look into what a reservoir of a disease is, it just means many of that animal carry it, can transmit it, but don’t get as sick, or sick at all themselves, unlike other species who aren’t reservoirs which are then very affected. called zoonotic transfer when to humans. bats, mice and rats are common reservoirs for many viruses and bacteria, and makes sense in a way, bats are like flying cave rats even tho different order or mammal, am over simplifying, but in behavior they are similar, living in clusters etc. the living in clusters means they piss and shit all over, which dries into spores or gets on them and then ingest it while cleaning or eating with dirty little claws. no need for bites, just need a population of carriers of said disease and natural immunity or low reaction to it; the virus or whatever can then live indefinitely with them, through them. if rabies interests you, you might like the Chuck Palahniuck book Rant. maybe now lyme and alpha gal syndrome, ticks in general, now there is a real conspiracy, as we know the us government has used ticks and dropped them on places before. yall see how people have been finding boxes full of ticks like they were air dropped basically. like thousands of ticks in a box in some random backyard. then again those also are born of big egg clusters so perhaps random boxes as trash are just favorable places for mama tick to lay a million eggs and they are hatching from them due to the season starting, but seems suspicious to me.
>>42372487It depends on species, but from the info I found and my seeing of bat flight in person, it is true. The 'clumsy' flight is most likely the bat doing looptyloops and barrelrolls in order to catch flying insects.
>>42372729>The 'clumsy' flight is most likely the bat doing looptyloops and barrelrolls in order to catch flying insects.Inside a daytime gym?They dont fly well at all, especially compared to other flyers.
>>42372746When is the last time you saw a bird moving how a bat does in flight?