Comments by "Johanna S. L. Brushane" (@johannas.l.brushane2518) on "The Odor Was BAD, But What We Found Inside Was EVEN WORSE..." video.

  1.  @RetardationAwareness  At one point I agree with you, on the flip side, animals who have been domesticided have potential to have a different spectrum of diseases, parasites etc than wild. That is especially if they have been kept in poor conditions like cramming in too many animals on a too small space, feeding them antibiotics constantly for precaution with consequence they develop infections that are difficult to cure. And the kinder way to the alternative of letting their hoofs rot because they have to stand in their own excrements without hygienic standard and often starving as well (which happens now and then with farmers who doesn't have the resources to manage the animals) would be to put them out of their misery as painless as possible. Dumping dead animals with diseases into the wild might uneccery spread harmful diseases into wild animals, which not may cause an imbalance in the biotopiary "content" of an area, which have high risk of problems coming back to humans and their domestic animals. Not only may your dog catch harmful parasites if sniffing and tasting mountaingoat poop and then spread it to kids in the household, a decimation of mountaingoats due to diseases may have carnivores like mountainlions becoming more aggressive and less shy to humans. The wrappings around these carcasses dumped are unfortunately also something that would have potential to have wild carnivores associate smell of humans with a fairly easily accessed "happy meal". The easily accessed happymeal could be ok if hunters are at a posture site to have wild problem animals of some kind shot (or sedated and removed if applicable).
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