I dunno... Ebola is pretty damn bad. But, Ebola has a "cure", whereas Rabies is nearly always fatal if not immediately addressed. Imagine trying to gulp water but immediately retching and choking half to death the second it hits your mouth, all the while your entire nervous system is going into overdrive and constricting itself. It's like choking to death and being electrocuted at the same time, all in slow motion.
Depends on your definition. Once symptoms occur, yes, it's basically always fatal. But there's a vaccine against it. Which completely goes against this entire post.
Uh...where are you getting that? Rabies accounts for about 59,000 deaths each year, on average, you only see around two deaths in the U.S. per year from rabies.
Oddly enough, more people die of rabies everyday, than the wuflu.
I dunno... Ebola is pretty damn bad. But, Ebola has a "cure", whereas Rabies is nearly always fatal if not immediately addressed. Imagine trying to gulp water but immediately retching and choking half to death the second it hits your mouth, all the while your entire nervous system is going into overdrive and constricting itself. It's like choking to death and being electrocuted at the same time, all in slow motion.
Depends on your definition. Once symptoms occur, yes, it's basically always fatal. But there's a vaccine against it. Which completely goes against this entire post.
Uh...where are you getting that? Rabies accounts for about 59,000 deaths each year, on average, you only see around two deaths in the U.S. per year from rabies.