Previous video in the series - kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z5KnoKODhqt3hrM Hey everyone! As a reminder, this is a remaster of the original. New releases are still every Saturday at 11 am EST. Have a great week! - Sean
@HP_Burrito2 жыл бұрын
I'm listening at work and was like hey this all sounds so familiar lol.
@_Circus_Clapped_2 жыл бұрын
just a little feedback, but can you add timestamps to each fate?
@sayhey74822 жыл бұрын
these are new to me and WELL DONE ! of course MUCH unsavory stuff but QUE SERA ,we cant possibly ignore EVERYTHING thats HUMAN and speak of only HALF being the pleasent and other half IGNORED , all in all GREAT JOB
@anikajain5712 жыл бұрын
Hi Sean, always great to watch or even rewatch any vid of yours 👍 I'm wondering if you could please check out @Basgin, he's a kiwi making vids similar to yours, maybe you could give him a shout out in future vid? He's great and I'd love to see him and his channel grow like yours. 💕
@slamuri28012 жыл бұрын
Hey, no disrespect as I love your content. It really does interest me. I also create dark content, but on another platform, and it’s now starting to really shoot off. One thing I myself have had to work on is repeating words and finding other ways of saying things. I’ve noticed you repeat a few words here and there. And while it does not bother me, I’ve noticed, videos I do where I take the time to make sure I don’t do it as frequently do way better. I just figured I’d let you know, as it will only make your channel stronger. Again. I really do not mean that in a bad way. Best of wishes
@llxhs82 жыл бұрын
Rosemary’s biography is heartbreaking. She actually also outlived most of the Kennedy’s, she died a good age. Imagine the life she could have had if they hadn’t done that to her. She was a fabulous and beautiful woman.
@AlexandreG Жыл бұрын
For people who care about politicians, being filled with rage is just yet another day, it seems like. For the regular folks, they just appreciate the beautiful irony that a family that tried to hide a disabled child to keep appearances ended up being exposed after a surgery that made their daughter 10x more disabled than she ever was. Those are evil families that just care about appearances, making something evil to their own to keep appearances is kinda easy when you're used to do it to strangers on a daily basis
@semafreak Жыл бұрын
Intellect of a 5 year old bruh still no way way to live even if she didn't get the surgery. I would say the botched delivery fucked her life up
@voodoodummie2 жыл бұрын
the saddest part about Rosemary is how she was in a place where she was happy, a place where she could flourish, her own little paradise, only to later be brought later to a hell in her own flesh.
@Lawrence_Talbot2 жыл бұрын
Well the dad lost his job so what was he supposed to do? Leave Rose behind in England and hope she would just magically figure it out? Pretty sure if you had a disabled kid, you wouldn’t leave them in another country, you’d want to bring him or her back home with the family. He didn’t know she was going to regress to the point she became a violent monster that literally roamed the streets and was a threat to the general public.
@sethwiley78392 жыл бұрын
Yes its called the United States. People of power being able to do what they want. Don't let the rest of her family off the hook. When Joe came back JFK already had more power then his dad. I don't care what year it was, you don't try until you been President for years. None of the family could figure out she was where she was before in the US. JFK finally did get her out but the damage had been done
@rabbit0664 Жыл бұрын
Yeah that hits pretty hard.
@taitsmith8521 Жыл бұрын
No it isn't. The saddest part is that this same fate was the story of thousands of people who aren't remembered. And that the only thing that makes anybody give a shit, is that it happened to a rich white woman. And that peoplethink doctors or medicine has changed AT ALL !!!
@SyndicateOperative Жыл бұрын
@@taitsmith8521 Err... of course it happened to a white woman. Only white countries had modern medicine at that point in time, because, you know, they invented it. A.k.a. every single case happened to a white woman. What were you even thinking posting this?
@KaminoCloningOperations2 жыл бұрын
The Kennedy story always fills me with rage. They screwed her life up so bad with that surgery.
@jxn10562 жыл бұрын
Same here. It makes you wonder if they didn't bring a curse on themselves.
@jamesdillard39302 жыл бұрын
The surgery; they wrecked her life with the delivery!
@00jyjsarang2 жыл бұрын
Not just screwed up - stolen.
@theokspacecoaster10912 жыл бұрын
There is no curse that could equal the horror of what they did to her but that's not an excuse not to try.
@mhack30302 жыл бұрын
All because they wanted to protect their reputation...
@amberkat81472 жыл бұрын
What sort of maternity nurse thinks it's okay to PUSH the baby back in?! Did she get her nursing license from a Crackerjack box?
@catharinaeinarsson Жыл бұрын
That was very strange. I wonder if she was punished for it in some way? At least lost her license?
@consciousobserver629 Жыл бұрын
Was thinking the same thing. The baby was virtually already out. All they had to do was catch the damned baby!!
@susanbeemer4331 Жыл бұрын
I agree 💯 hearing that I literally said WTF I could hardly believe it if I were her and I was the one giving birth I would've pushed anyway and told that nurse to catch because she's coming!!!
@Viewher3 Жыл бұрын
Wasn't the nurses scope of practice to deliver...
@SyndicateOperative Жыл бұрын
You'd be surprised how common it is for medical "professionals" to lack skill/knowledge. I had an argument with a nurse a few years ago - she refused to believe resuscitation was real. She'd been using defibrillator paddles on people with irregular heartrates (often a benign symptom) and thought any adverse effects were just them "not working". I've heard so many horror stories when it comes to nurses, they're horrific. So many have the open mentality that they're the ones that "really know what's going on", actively going against doctor's/surgeon's orders.
@chickennugents47382 жыл бұрын
Rose's dad should never be called a father, he's a monster.
@garrisonnichols8072 жыл бұрын
He definitely was. All the Kennedys were. That family has so many skeletons in their closets you can fill up a cemetery in Boston with it.
@Lawrence_Talbot2 жыл бұрын
Not really? His daughter was more a monster. She wasn’t mentally sound, quickly regressed and was becoming violent. So he turned to the medical experts which at the time thought a lobotomy was a genuinely good treatment. Not his fault the lobotomy didn’t turn out well. If anything the only thing he did wrong was keeping her alive. Should’ve just asked for her to be euthanized when it was apparent she was now borderline vegetable
@drabnail7772 жыл бұрын
The worst person in all of this was the dumbass nurse that pushed her head into the birth canal
@iAmNothingness2 жыл бұрын
You just called him dad.
@irenemarano8241 Жыл бұрын
Wow 😳!!!! Scary 😱 and sad 😭 .
@Black-Sun_Kaiser2 жыл бұрын
Joe Kenedy is a monster. Special place in hell for him. That's so sick to have that done to your daughter and then even after you destroyed her and trapped her In a vessel you abandon her to strangers. God knows what else happened to her in those institutions that she couldn't tell anyone about. Rest her soul. God that makes me so angry he did that. 😤
@rachaelbeaver72852 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, all just to uphold a reputation!! Sick sick sick!!
@jking62102 жыл бұрын
That's right exactly like the parents now a days who are chopping their mentally ill kids up, setting them up for all sorts of pain and sadness later in life. Fucking monsters
@stunytsuR2 жыл бұрын
Yea that shit is fucked up.
@PoweredByAudio2 жыл бұрын
@@rachaelbeaver7285 He ended up having a stroke and lived to see JFK turn into a jack in the box. It evens out
@Boo-dawg.2 жыл бұрын
He's also the main reason for the stock market crash that set off the great depression. His crooked ways affected everyone but the Kennedys
@beccad93382 жыл бұрын
I'm actually a surgical Technologist and you would not believe, even with our strict count policy, this happens so easily and has happened many many times..if you have staff that does not do the counts the right way, this WILL AND DOES happen..it's all about having a surgical team that takes people's lives very very seriously..and yes, after 25 years, I do and it's never happened with any of my teams!! Thankful to know this man recovered after such a senseless mistakes! Great video S, as always!!! Look forward to all of them🙂
@MsMichigan2 жыл бұрын
If I ever have surgery, I want you and your team to do it! You care very much 👏
@winterevans63332 жыл бұрын
You’re so right! I’m also a ST, and I will not count my final count as complete until all instruments are in sight on my back table and/or mayo, and the incision is completely closed.
@forloco65082 жыл бұрын
i’m confused did you see it happen or do u have a good team
@beccad93382 жыл бұрын
@@MsMichigan aww, thank you. I do take the responsibility of someone's life seriously 🙂
@Kiyannepeppers2 жыл бұрын
I just started school yesterday for Sterile Processing! I can't wait to be apart of a surgical team, even if its just to kill the microorganisms on instruments :D
@Chris119.2 жыл бұрын
That second story about Hisashi... radiation poisoning is like this: Normally you die then you rot, but with radiation poisoning you rot then you die. His DNA was destroyed the moment that happened. He may have looked fairly OK at first but he was a dead man walking. Every cell in his body was going to die, and normally this is a good thing because the cells regenerate. All cells replace themselves over time on a cycle, some more sensitive tissues replace more frequently than others. But because his DNA throughout his whole body was shattered into fragments by this gamma ray burst, there were no instructions for the new cells to regenerate properly. The body he had was literally rotting, there was nothing that could have been done from that moment on. The first few hours it was almost unnoticeable, but as days and weeks went on he disintegrated.
@EggthedregАй бұрын
The thing about this video is dislike is the whole his family and doctors are so evil grrr, like no. He WANTED to stay alive for his family. It bugs me to no end the way it gets twisted. I reccomend wendigoons video on this case, he handles it better than anything else ive seen
@agnessiaasianb.4123Ай бұрын
@@EggthedregIirc the reason he was "kept alive" is because the family insisted they continue with treatment even when the doctors explained several times that Hisashi has basically 0% survival chance and due to that the medical team are legally mandated to keep him alive by any means possible. The family only relented after the doctors showed how bad his condition was via a windowed room. So many misinfo talked abt how the medical teams kept him alive for experimentation when there were interviews with his doctors and nurses that showed how traumatized they were from witnessing his suffering
@joshuagauntlett8724Ай бұрын
@@agnessiaasianb.4123 The doctors did not express this. He was used as a lab rat, after the bone marrow biopsy was conducted, and the condition of the DNA found within was seen there was no hope for him. Despite this they were trying to restart and heal his digestive tract while it was effectively dead. They knew he had no chance to live, and put him through weeks of torture for the sake of experimentation. They gave false hope to the family which is just as disgusting.
@littlemissgwendolen1466 Жыл бұрын
Poor Rosemary. She was so beautiful and smart and clearly capable of living a full and happy life in England. Her family’s ego and fear of losing their reputation ruined her life.
@felixthecleaner88432 жыл бұрын
wow - the account of the Kennedy girl is really quite something and well disturbing. They say there's nothing worse than the secrets that go on in some households - the poor woman had a terrible existence....nice to know she finished her life better than it had been. Some more great work 'Scary!
@virginiadare15872 жыл бұрын
Those 2 schools were pretty much the only ones (with some credit to JFK) who did something positive for her in her life.
@dangerousdays20522 жыл бұрын
Always collect dirt on your family members. You never know when you might need it.
@GuntWastelander Жыл бұрын
Why the apostrophe before Scary?
@mercury-king2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your accurate coverage about the horrible case of Hisashi Ouchi. So many channels want to demonize the doctors that cared for him & claim they were experimenting on him … the reality is that no one understood radiation sickness, especially not his family who thought he could recover. Very tragic.
@bloodyvqlentine2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it definitely wasn't the doctors fault. In Japan, if it's requested by the family, they had to do everything they could to keep him alive.. it's unfortunate they couldn't just let him go.
@Lawrence_Talbot2 жыл бұрын
This is not true at all. We had known about radiation before WW2, and had gained a wealth of knowledge in this area throughout the 50s and 60s. There was no excuse for what he went through, but that’s Japan for you. Very twisted country
@Blobloxpromaster2 жыл бұрын
@@Lawrence_Talbot pretty sure that doctors have to keep on the treatment if the family requests it, that might be the actual reason behind it
@killerzer0x742 жыл бұрын
STILL YOU FUCKING LISTEN TO THE PATIENT NOT THE FAMILY!!!
@robbiirvine10382 жыл бұрын
@@Lawrence_Talbot he didn't sign a DNR before going unconscious. His family didn't sign a DNR because they thought he was "treatable," even though the doctors were trying to convince them they couldn't save him. Therefore, the doctors were LEGALLY obligated to do everything they could to keep him alive. The doctors did experimental treatments on him, but those "experimental" treatments are things are are more common now days like a stem cell donation from his sister, and constant skin grafts. The issue isn't with "Japan being a twisted country," his FAMILY wasn't educated enough on the hazards of nuclear radiation. This video isn't even completely 100% accurate. He was unconscious within a week, he never begged or pleaded or called himself a guinea pig for experiments. That euphemism doesn't even exist in Japanese. It was 100% all on his family who wouldn't let him die because of their lack of understanding of the severity of the situation.
@aliciahoverson2 жыл бұрын
Hisashi's story always makes me furious. Also, Rosemary's story is quite maddening 😖 I hadn't heard of the first story, very interesting.
@flash_flood_area2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, these were hard to hear, because of that element
@Itried20takennames2 жыл бұрын
It was terrible that Hisashi had the accident, but the medical part of the story often isn’t quite accurate, compared to in depth versions here on YT that debunk some of the myths and look at translations of staff interview. This version is a bit better than others, noting that family asked for treatment, with the usual version being “evil medical staff wanted to experiment.” The experiment part is silly because 1. Radiation damage is already well understood, with many cases in Japan and even the US (the “demon core” cases.where US physicists had massive radiation doses). 2. We have nothing in medicine today that comes even close to fixing this level of chromosome damage, and certainly not 25-plus years ago. The reality from interviews was that staff were absolutely aghast by his situation and hated it, but just legally couldn’t “kill him” or even withhold care if the family asked for it, as this is a huge ethical slippery slope for medical staff (helping a terminal patients choice to die earlier with less pain can be twisted into to “euthanizing” the severely disabled,” as done Nazi Germany). I think this was changed in Japan and is very different in the US, where staff very much want people to complete advance directives telling their preferences for end-of-life care (do or don’t resuscitate if heart stops beating, do or don’t want a ventilator is your respiratory status declines, etc).
@chadcuckproducer10372 жыл бұрын
Or as done today by Canadians as a suggested treatment for depression and ptsd.
@paremyoutube2 жыл бұрын
There was a ton of errors in the Hisashi story in this video, the medical staff did not use him as a guinee pig, they were trying the only possibly procedures that could save his life, the doctors told the family that it was not going to work, but the family kept egging the doctors on to keep him alive for months.
@Topdoggie7 Жыл бұрын
@@Itried20takennamesWendigoon covers it best. They really tried to save him.
@quinbatcheller58052 жыл бұрын
The Rosemary Kennedy story is just horrific.... every time I hear or read it recounted it just seems unbelievable to me.... if I had lived in that time people in my family and friends of mine who struggle with mental health could have had a similar fate. It just blows my mind how irresponsible and callous some medical professionals were in the past. I don't know.... this one really hits me in a deep place because of the abuse I've seen family and friends face in the mental health system in the present day. We still have a long way to go with our approach to the mentally disabled, even if the type of horrific abuse Rosemary faced is in the past. People in the mental health system still face abuse, stigma, and often inadequate treatment options.
@Nick-zp8wk2 жыл бұрын
In the past? Do you know what surgeons do to the genitals of children and the drugs they pump them full of right now?
@112chapters32 жыл бұрын
Wait till the telekenetic people start revealing
@raz25482 жыл бұрын
You'd be surprised to see how many irresponsible and callous medical professionals exist even today. It's horrifying.
@sosmooth132 жыл бұрын
Medical procedure of that time seemed like the Wild West of medical care. I always hear about some of the funkiest procedures that happened only 50-60 years ago. Some of it wasn’t even just because we didn’t know better, but because it was just common practice at the time. I work with students with disabilities both mental and physical and it’s humbled me. My heart hurts for this woman. All just to cover ups some stupid shame and live up to the dumbest standards society had at the time.
@awkwardautistic2 жыл бұрын
And always will.
@mistresscalytrix2 жыл бұрын
They punished the girl for literally trying to live. People were so cruel back then…. I bet there are still people now who would do this to their children or partner.
@rodneystanger16512 жыл бұрын
They're just as cruel now.
@garrisonnichols8072 жыл бұрын
It's the Kennedys!
@drayphoenix1172 жыл бұрын
I tell u as a person with autism,,, it still happens today every day suicide and mental health is hand in hand from things like this,,, still happening
@taylermuilenburg50292 жыл бұрын
We’ve always been cruel.
@doxasophosmoros Жыл бұрын
Middle East and India aren't different, worse , far worse. Obviously you forgot those places
@105C092 жыл бұрын
I worked for 7 years in the O.R. as an RN, starting way back in 1984. We ALWAYS counted retracters. The hospital bought him out on the cheap.
@kelm1022 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. They leave a foot long metal instrument inside a person, don't bother checking into it during his post-op check-up, and he gets less than $100,000. I was thinking he was going to sue them into the ground for that.
@toreadoress2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I was like what .. not even 100k when this should've been at least few million $ for such neglect on their part?
@GoatzombieBubba2 жыл бұрын
@@kelm102 Even if he sued and win the lawyers fees and court fees...he would be lucky to walk away with 5 grand.
@cd5433 Жыл бұрын
@@GoatzombieBubba no way , a lawyer gets a percentage of the amount not a flat fee so it would never take more than 30% of whatever the award is . The only way he gets 5k is it the award is 25k or something . But the hospital offered him 100 so he’d get wY more with a jury trial .
@blindbrad4719 Жыл бұрын
One, two, miss a few, 99, 100! Ready or not I'm sewing up!
@Myster-Man-Channel2 жыл бұрын
The 2nd story is heart breaking. I would never put a family member through that hell. Some fates are worse than death.
@ThatGiggleshitter2 жыл бұрын
The pictures of how he looks like a mummy lying in bed with skin grafts over 100% of his body is terrible
@Isaiah420692 жыл бұрын
and with a last name like ouchi.
@adventureswithfrodo27212 жыл бұрын
You need to pay attention this was not the second story.
@M-Myrtle-R2 жыл бұрын
how I heard the story went it wasn't his family but the government want to keep him alive a long as possible so they could study the effects of radiation
@yourlocalhuman35262 жыл бұрын
@@adventureswithfrodo2721 it was technically
@lizgross5632 жыл бұрын
Just a note about the comment regarding keeping her legs closed, preventing oxygen. Oxygen is supplied through the umbilical cord until the baby is delivered and placenta is delivered. Therefore keeping her legs wouldn’t have kept oxygen out. However, preventing a crowning baby from delivering will definitely endanger the life of the baby! They are not meant to stay trapped in the pelvis that way, and it can also increase the likelihood of compression on the cord leading to lack of oxygen and potential brain damage. Super sad situation and that nurse was incredibly negligent to not delivering the baby.
@nolsee1176 Жыл бұрын
The story of Rosemary has actually made me feel nauseous from sheer pity and anger at the suffering of someone who had zero agency in their circumstances, even from before her own birth. I've never felt more sorry for someone in my life.
@stellabari24610 ай бұрын
About hisashi ooshi, he was the one that asked the doctors to get him better before he was intubated. The doctors were also the ones who asked the family if they would allow hisashi to be put to rest after his first heart attack, and the family immediately said yes. It was sensational media writing that made the family and the doctors the bad guys.
@chrissibersky46172 жыл бұрын
Sadly I've heard of all of these before but still it was a pleasure to have it narrated by this man.
@SpacecowboiKilu2 жыл бұрын
I was like why have I seen this same video like a couple weeks ago? This creator definitely recycled segments from their past videos
@tropicaldog4302 жыл бұрын
@@SpacecowboiKilu It is remastered version
@SpacecowboiKilu2 жыл бұрын
@@tropicaldog430 OK
@visassess86072 жыл бұрын
@blueeuphoria The description calls this a reupload so maybe you've watched this video before.
@jackguess7622 жыл бұрын
I truly think the worst medical disaster was a story mr. Ballen told of a man who had surgery. I don’t remember the exact surgery but it was a surgery where his belly was cut open and organs were removed. They gave him the drugs that paralyzed you but the anesthesiologist forgot to give him the anesthesia so he was fully conscious of everything they were doing to him but the only thing he could do was move his eyes. Eventually one of the nurses saw him staring back at her with horrified eyes and she quickly realized something was wrong and that she did not give him the correct drugs. They then gave him the anesthesia and a drug that would make him forget everything. When he woke up from surgery he acted very strange and knew something was wrong but couldn’t pin point it. Finally At home he was sitting in his chair with his wife in the room and he just starting screaming at the top of his lungs almost in a trans like state while remembering what happened to him. He killed himself not long after. One of the scariest and worst ways to die in my opinion. Being operated on without being able to move and feeling every cut/ organs being removed. I absolutely can’t imagine what he went through
@Magumbo589 ай бұрын
oh yes i remember that story from the Ballen channel
@aliciahoverson2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Brother 🌹
@ScaryInteresting2 жыл бұрын
Hi Alicia! My pleasure. Thank you for watching and supporting the channel!
@Isaiah420692 жыл бұрын
Rosemary was also kept it was is known as a "Disappointment Room" like a hidden room in the back of an attic. people still find them to this day in some big old houses.
@gregorymiller51132 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@ScaryInteresting2 жыл бұрын
Hey Gregory! Thank you for watching and thank you for supporting the channel!
@JMazzaTaz2 жыл бұрын
I gotta say…. the story about Rosemary is truly heartbreaking
@Sephicard132 жыл бұрын
I love your videos man, I've watched them all. You handle these horrifying situations so well and treat the people with respect- as real people, not just a story- some documentaries/true crime channels don't seem to remember that.
@jenniferdnoseworthy23482 жыл бұрын
I never realized how horrible that family was and the extent they went to to ensure the sons did well. Just terrible. 😢
@markup63942 жыл бұрын
I think the story of Rosemary is the most appaling of the three... To have your own father do this to you and then, when it failes, praktically erasing you from family life... That noone really bothered to check on her is also really strange. I realise that medicine and medical procedures of the time seem crude and horrible compared to today's standards - and before that, things were worse and so on... We need to experiment to learn, its the cruelest form of trial and error you could imaging. The only "good" thing that came of this (and many, *many* more) failed procedure is that many people today profit of the gained wisdom. Would that it was possible without it.
@FlexedNoose2 жыл бұрын
Well they couldn’t visit her since the father was very much still alive and not even his wife knew where she was
@markup63942 жыл бұрын
@@FlexedNoose You're right, it would be difficult; and back then, you didnt go against a fathers wishes/orders. Still... if they would've wanted to, they could've found her. We're talking about over 20 years here. Makes me wonder if they bothered that much...
@FlexedNoose2 жыл бұрын
@@markup6394 well the brothers were having a career in politics so they really couldn’t make time to find her but sure the rest of the family should’ve looked for her (I doubt people spend 20 years on abroad studies.) But at least she didn’t live the rest of her life without her family knowing. Unfortunately, we will never truly know why they didn’t find her sooner.
@markup63942 жыл бұрын
@@FlexedNoose True that
@KFA8piece2 жыл бұрын
Your last few sentences are so true. It’s almost scary to think how behind we would be compared to where we are now otherwise if you really think about it. At the time we didn’t know any better so looking back we are rightfully horrified. But back then they really thought they were or could be helping. In another 100 years will people be saying the same about some of the procedures tried today?
@lashawnjones72042 жыл бұрын
This is one of my favorite series on KZbin please keep them coming!
@MsMichigan2 жыл бұрын
Joe Kennedy was notorious for being a HUGE jerk. He was really, very hard on his kids. Plus, he made all of his money through bootlegging and insider trading. Not an upstanding man of character. 🙄😡
@McZachary442 жыл бұрын
He’s you’re typical democrat.
@MsMichigan2 жыл бұрын
@@McZachary44 😆👍
@Mastealth Жыл бұрын
@McZachary or every politician on either side, look into literally any federal politician not in their first term and you'll find out they have a high net worth despite their jobs, insider trading is common from both sides and honestly the idea of one party being corrupt and the other not is just ridiculous.
@MsMichigan Жыл бұрын
@@Mastealth spot ON! Look at their net worth going into office, and then with so many years in. I've never seen, heard, or otherwise, a poor politician.... or even one that has only a couple hundred thousand to their name. It's SICK
@Eye_Of_Odin978 Жыл бұрын
So he's your average Democrat? Makes sense, he's a Kennedy, after all. His own son stole the election. (Not a joke, JFK is a fraud. Cope harder.)
@ChewyTwee Жыл бұрын
Rosemary’s story is a cautionary tale of how removing a persons autonomy is disastrous. The Kennedy’s didn’t make her undergo a lobotomy for *her* benefit it was for *their* benefit. Rosemary’s life was ruined before it ever began, she’s a dead woman walking because the *Kennedy’s* thought she was a problem for their image. Developmentally disabled people are capable of making decisions in their own best interest and we need to give more weight to disabled voices when we have conversations about ableism.
@ToddTheMadDog2 жыл бұрын
Medical malpractice isn't talked about enough
@CYMotorsport Жыл бұрын
18:20 it’s a horrific story. Reporting fluctuates wildly. And no point getting worked up about Joe’s decisions but I’ve also looked into this a great deal and Kathleen confirmed was reported to have dug into the procedure and told their mother it was a very bad idea. Additionally one thing that seems true is Rosemary was more than just recoiling, she was quite aggressive upon 1st reuniting with her mother. Understandably so. As evident by the family’s actions which do seem Genuine later, I don’t think they would defend their actions jn good faith. She understood she was abandoned. That’s such a long time to know and live with that as your family moves on prominently in the public eye. It’s impossible to rationalize what in the world Joe could have been thinking . Just awful.
@soniarodriguez64332 жыл бұрын
Each story is so unique, but all of them are so heartbreaking. It makes you wonder why some people have to suffer so much.
@empressmarowynn2 жыл бұрын
When I was a teen I had to have my wisdom teeth cut out. Even a week later my gums were still extremely painful. I went back to the oral surgeon to have them checked and he literally dug his finger into one asking if it hurt while I was screaming. I just went home and dealt with the pain. Then I ended up with a severe sinus infection that wouldn't go away for an entire year. My mouth and face hurt tremendously 24/7. I'd take antibiotics and it would leave for about a week or two and then come raging back. After a year I was getting a check up by my regular dentist and he found that one of my molars had been split completely in half from the oral surgeon. It was split all the way to the root and was infected, hence why my sinus infection wouldn't go away and why I was in so much pain. He removed it and I was finally free from pain and infection. I was pissed that my parents didn't do anything about the surgeon being so negligent and I was a teen so there wasn't anything I could legally do. I later found out I wasn't the only one to have issues with him but he was the only oral surgeon for miles and miles around so unless someone wanted to drive several hours away he was the only option. I'll be honest that I wasn't exactly saddened when he suddenly died from a heart attack just a few years later.
@ClickClack_Bam2 жыл бұрын
I had something similar happen to me in Pittsburgh, PA when I was a kid. I had a baby tooth still in my mouth with the adult tooth down in my jaw. This needed to come out they said because the adult tooth wasn't going to come up at this point & it could deteriorate in my jaw & cause all sorts of bad things. So I had the surgery. It was bad. This asshole killed 2 of my adult teeth while removing my impacted tooth. He kept playing it off like this was normal. When my mother didn't buy it one day he stopped answering the phone. Then we went to his office to confront him. He was gone. This bastard WASN'T licensed to do surgery like he was doing & what he did to me was illegal. When he thought he was going to get in trouble he moved out of the area. I was 8 so I couldn't do anything to help myself, but my mother didn't call the fuckin Police to get them in this situation. The 2 teeth are on the bottom & the 2 most front teeth in my smile.
@GemstonePhilosophy2 жыл бұрын
I had a dentist who suddenly declared half my teeth to have cavities at about 8 years old, and proceeded to drill and fill them. 20 years later, every one of those teeth have become necrotic and are either removed or going to be removed shortly, leaving me with only my front teeth and canines. The kicker, I had zero cavities according to the dentist I went to 6 months prior, who even commented that I had perfect teeth. I've wondered if this dentist just used my teeth as a quick money grab, whereas that dentist did not stay in the area for very long.
@ClickClack_Bam2 жыл бұрын
@@GemstonePhilosophy The shame with your situation is that they're called "insurance bangers". My father had the best dental coverage for my family when we was kids. These bastard dentists aren't about to let the best dental coverage walk into & out of their office WITHOUT maxing out the insurance coverage. So they invent that you have cavities & bang your insurance for all that it's worth. Besides my post I made above, somehow I always had 5 cavities in my mouth too. I was too young at the time to know what I do now. I always brushed my teeth & never had cavities bothering me. I even went into my father's profession & had that same exact coverage myself! A filling from when I was a kid fell out & needed replaced. The dentist I went to saw me & looked at my coverage & WITHOUT even looking in my mouth declared, "Oh you need a root canal & that's all covered with your insurance so you don't need to worry about a thing out of pocket". I said "Yea buddy you haven't even looked in my mouth yet to know what I need. In fact I'm here to get a filling so that's what's happening today." Always be weary of having good insurance because the insurance bangers are EVERYWHERE.
@empressmarowynn2 жыл бұрын
@@GemstonePhilosophy I'm not sure how long they've been around but Aspen Dental is notorious for doing things like that. They specifically prey upon lower income people because they'll have cheaper prices than some other places so people think they're getting a great deal. Meanwhile they'll insist half of a kid's teeth have cavities, even a baby tooth that should be falling out within six months. I have a friend who is a dentist and she's told me so many horror stories about what her patients experienced when they went to Aspen prior to finding her.
@GemstonePhilosophy2 жыл бұрын
@@empressmarowynn it's a cruel monopoly on our health. They mess up our teeth to the point we need more dental work, often resulting in expensive root canals, dentures or implants, and all the while, we suffer like stuck pigs for years battling necrosis in our damn heads. I think these dentists need to be held accountable for the suffering they have caused.
@thexxit2 жыл бұрын
I feel for the man with radiation poisoning. I know how difficult it is to lose a family member but god... having him suffer like that isn't worth the life he would live after. I wonder if his family knew how much pain he was in.
@Outofrealman9 ай бұрын
They dont care. Only their own feelings matter to them.
@kathryncumberland2 жыл бұрын
There's a KZbin video about Hisachi Ouchi that describes his ordeal in detail titled something like "He lived in a dead body for 83 days. His family watched." Pretty fitting title.
@laboy77282 жыл бұрын
Your content is amazing! You definitely have a narration gift. You should use “The Veryovkina Cave Incidents” background “sound” more when you narrate. It’s my favorite!
@flash_flood_area2 жыл бұрын
Now I have to go and listen to that episode again
@paulperole2 жыл бұрын
heyy stranger from the internet! I too am super attached to that sound, but I cannot see it working on anything else but caves/underwater caves/mountains stories! it has that atmospheric effect that wouldn't be the same without the claustrophobia those videos bring. hence my petition to only use it there. Sean knows this I think haha
@flash_flood_area2 жыл бұрын
What I really like on every episode is the channel's little bit of theme music, or title intro
@crieverytim2 жыл бұрын
this channel came out of nowhere and we're all here for it
@thatradicalextremist97182 жыл бұрын
Thank you for always lulling me to sleep. Perfect time to play this at 12am after a days work
@tristanstrain97512 жыл бұрын
It's so neat how such seemingly specific uses for media can be so widely adopted. I similarly listen to these late at night. Probably not difficult to figure out why (he does have a calming voice) but its interesting!
@biggestfan.2 жыл бұрын
Time zones are so strange. It's 11 am here.
@aliciahoverson2 жыл бұрын
I do the same! It's my bedtime list lol
@foxarror2 жыл бұрын
@@biggestfan. it’s 12:46 here atm. in Florida
@purselmer59312 жыл бұрын
If I catch myself watching these at night, I force myself to switch to an inane comedy so I won't have nightmares, lol. You guys are tougher than this old broad!
@rachelstratman14052 жыл бұрын
Excellent job presenting a complex situation in such a short amount of time. I was familiar with Rosemary's story but still learned something new from your presentation: I didn't know the family wasn't aware of where she was or what her condition was for so long. Truly piteous......
@cam.bart32 жыл бұрын
As soon as i click your videos and hear the ominous music playing soo lightly, i already know the video will be scary and interesting. I love your videos man, keep working at them, they are truly well made and put together. Have a great evening whoever may be reading :)
@themayorofmayonnaise45332 жыл бұрын
Why are you reuploading stories?
@luvlols4462 Жыл бұрын
Immediately knew what happened to the first guy because it's horrifically common. Surgeons have left their damn wrist watches inside of people. Sometimes I think we've way over hyped how much medicine has actually progressed over the century.
@coleh5912 жыл бұрын
Hisachi story so sad knowing his family literally tortured him knowing he just wanted it to end
@FHBStudio2 жыл бұрын
The Fukushima incident was terrible luck. The plant was built to withstand an earthquake of like, 9.5 and the earthquake that hit was 9.6. Something like that. There's a plant in development in Denmark that takes in nuclear waste and puts out clean materials and clean energy. It's amazing technology and it saddens me people are so frightened of it.
@flash_flood_area2 жыл бұрын
Luck? It's not like we don't know that many currently existing nuclear plants are aging and vulnerable to earthquakes and tsunamis. That's negligence.
@FHBStudio2 жыл бұрын
@@flash_flood_area Just looked it up, and I thought it was newer than it actually was. For me there's also the question of how wise it is to build a nuclear power plant (or something else important) on the coast of a volcanic island.
@flash_flood_area2 жыл бұрын
@@FHBStudio Yes, is it Diablo Canyon in southern California that has a vulnerable old plant? I hear that there are multiple ones that are very concerning, but nothing much is being done
@Pailers2 жыл бұрын
I like the extra information and backstory you give to help give more context to the situations! Great work
@j.griffin2 жыл бұрын
Joe Sr. discussed the procedure with Rose, who asked their daughter Kathleen to look into it. Kathleen spoke with a reporter, John White, investigating mental illness and treatments. White told Kathleen that the effects of lobotomies were “no good." Clifford Larson writes that Kathleen immediately reported back to her mother: "Oh, Mother,No- that’s nothing we want done for Rosie." Twenty years after the barbaric procedure that derailed Rosemary's life, the next Kennedys began to fight in her memory. Rosemary's sister, Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded the Special Olympics in 1968 and became a leading advocate for disability rights. “Let me win, but if I cannot win then Let me be brave in the attempt.” It’s a simple motto. A phrase that, more than 50 years ago, Mrs. Shriver uttered to kick off the inaugural Special Olympics in Chicago. Today that motto lives on and so does Shriver’s legacy- regardless of the cynicism and pessimism of some, Eunice Kennedy Shriver was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1984 by President Ronald Reagan in recognition of her tireless efforts to improve and enhance the lives of people with intellectual disabilities and she actually received a papal knighthood from Pope Benedict XVI in 2006. Her son,Anthony Shriver, (Rosemary's nephew) became an activist for people with developmental disabilities and founded the non-profit Best Buddies International. Rosemary's older brother John F. Kennedy, who became the 35th president of the United States, signed the Maternal and Child Health and Mental Retardation Planning Amendment to the Social Security Act, the first major legislation to provide for and protect all those who suffer from mental illness and retardation, in 1963. It was a precusor to the American's with Disabilities Act, which Rosemary's little brother Ted, who served as a Democratic Senator for Massachusetts from 1962 until his death in 2009, had championed. It was eventually made law in 1990. Ted Kennedy also sat on the board of the American Association of People with Disabilities. In his book Fully Alive, Timothy Shriver, son of Eunice, wrote that Rosemary's story inspired the entire family to take on a life of service, noting: "Her role is a powerful part of my life." I’m not interested in politics and I am not a big fan of the Kennedy clan but I’m going to say that this horrible decision was probably autocratic, not democratic. Maybe it was just guilt or ego that caused the rest of them to do these things but all things considered… on a human level I am going to give the rest of the family the benefit of the doubt.
@davidbarnett3422 жыл бұрын
Families not truly caring for each other is the most common cruelty I have ever seen. Hisashi and Kennedy both were betrayed by those that were closest to them. Family comes first is the biggest con bad people have sold good people. Don't trust them just because you're stuck with them.
@jetblackjoy10 ай бұрын
Some animals stop feeding their young who are too weak to push their siblings aside to get to food, to support the strongest. The same type of behavior here.
@bradballard20682 жыл бұрын
The gentleman that had the surgical instrument left inside of him. Received 97,000 Lawyers 33 and 1/3% Taxes 32% Doesn't seem like a whole lot left over for the gentleman that went through the excruciating pain
@shanenice5380 Жыл бұрын
I could be many years
@GrislyAtoms127 ай бұрын
I don't think damage awards are taxable.
@lerdog10 ай бұрын
Imagine having to suffer immense pain for WEEKS because medical professionals just refuse to listen to you.
@ЛейлаДаудМансори7 ай бұрын
And because your family loves you so much they are willing to prolong your ordeal.
@chrissyweikoop79312 жыл бұрын
aaah okay. so, if the person stops talking and are pretty much a vegetable, thats when you have cut enough of the brain tissue. great tip!
@australien66112 жыл бұрын
ill bet thats all they wanted was for the "patients" to be quiet , 😬
@SoTiredOfYourBS2 жыл бұрын
Your voice 🥰🥰🥰💜💜 I LOVE it! 💜💜🥰🥰🥰. Smooth, clear, you enunciate as you speak, we can't hear you breathing, you don't run your sentences together.. PERFECT! 💜💜💜💜 Don't you have another channel? All about cave diving disasters? Or is this the same channel? Lolol I can't remember ☺️
@paulperole2 жыл бұрын
same channel :))
@SoTiredOfYourBS2 жыл бұрын
@@paulperole thank you! ☺️💜💯
@melodyclark43472 жыл бұрын
I knew there was a Rosemary, but not what happened to her. So tragic and cruel. And she probably remembered her life before the lobotomy. R.I.P. sweet Rose.
@Lisali812 жыл бұрын
I’m literally loving this channel. Been binge watching for the past day and half. Soooo glad this channel found me. Thank u
@rosykindbunny1313 Жыл бұрын
I've heard many disturbing nonfiction stories, but none of them disturb me as much as what happened to Rosemary
@jonathanhodges875210 ай бұрын
For anyone looking for more details about the Ouchi case, I encourage you to check out Wendigoon's video on him. Many of the more popular beliefs about his treatment are inaccurate; from what I can gather, the doctors and his family both had hopes during the entire ordeal that he would be able to pull through with new treatments. They didn't see him as a guinea pig or some kind of test subject. They wanted him to survive just as much as his family did. He was also comatose for much of his later treatment, so thankfully, he didn't suffer for the entire 80 odd days. Still a horrifying ordeal for everyone involved, but it has been sensationalized without a doubt.
@brittanys19972 жыл бұрын
Rosemary Kennedy's biography is heartbreaking. If you want to really learn about how messed up the Kennedy's are, give it a read.
@barneyronnie2 жыл бұрын
She was an ebullient and enthusiastic young lady destroyed by pervert, Joe.
@coffeecrimegal59682 жыл бұрын
“Happy families are all alike. Unhappy families are unhappy all in their own ways.” Tolstoy
@rosykindbunny1313 Жыл бұрын
What's the title?
@marthasilva89609 ай бұрын
I actually dont wanna know because this is by far demon level
@sanjicook083 ай бұрын
Oh please, you don't really give a sh*t
@KiwiPoku Жыл бұрын
I deeply enjoy your content, I always watch whenever there's a new upload from ya. I've been lookin back on some older uploads and the part about hisachi's death is innaccurate: I've watched an extensive video on hisashi's death, and it's not as cruel as people often make it out to be. It's often framed that the family was selfish and that the doctors were torturing him, but in reality the doctors were doing all they could to keep him alive. Hisashi did say he wasn't a Guinea pig, but that was before his wife had come to visit him in the hospital. Since that point forward he gained a determined resolve to live on for the sake of his wife. It was when the doctors told the family he wouldn't be able to make another resuscitation attempt that the family said they understood. In addition, one of the craziests details was that when they opened him up for an autopsy, his heart was completely unscathed, whereas all his other organs were practically liquefied. I heavily suggest watching wendigoon's video on hisachi. it covers his entire ordeal in extensive detail and clears up tons of misconceptions.
@the_mang0slice2 жыл бұрын
How could anyone do that to their own daughter?
@rachaelbeaver72852 жыл бұрын
I am really enjoying your channel, keep up the fantastic work! Cheers from Portland Oregon!!
@ZombieGuy24012 жыл бұрын
Honestly Isashi’s family really irritated me with how they kept bringing him back. Like I get that he’s their blood but holy shit the man was suffering so bad, and every time peace was in grasp they ripped him back for 2 weeks. I cant imagine the pain.
@MightyInHiding Жыл бұрын
That isn’t what happened, it’s not that simple. There are more in depth videos on the entire situation like one by Wendigoon.
@urlocal.antisocial Жыл бұрын
the second one is the worst ive heard about ever. I watched a one hour+ video from wendigoons yt channel explaning in detail all the brutalities that hisashi had to face, from all his skin coming off to his insides turning into mush and him having to live for 80+ days while he was living in his body that was basically decaying.
@thejudgmentalcat2 жыл бұрын
The story of Ouchi is so tragic. His family were so naive. It has most ironic name too
@barneyronnie2 жыл бұрын
I was an American physician doing a residency in Japan; unfortunately, I was on Ouchi's treatment team...
@Kai............2 жыл бұрын
His name isn’t pronounced “ouchie” this guy just horribly botched it
@ChristStopper2 жыл бұрын
@@barneyronnie and I'm JFK. Cool story champ!
@barneyronnie2 жыл бұрын
@@ChristStopper You're right, JFK. A LOT of physicians rotate with other countries. I didn't say that I treated him, but was a resident member of the team. It was a valuable learning experience. I do consider myself a ' champ.' Dr. Reinhold Von Treffencaunbowz, MBBS ( I did my medical training in Ireland, hence the MBBS degree.) Wake up: There are a lot of physicians, nuclear physicists, career criminals AND JERKS, among others out here in cyberspace😉
@robertsolomito3189 Жыл бұрын
Love your storytelling.
@GSR94352 жыл бұрын
Now the Rosemary Kennedy story is just utterly heartbreaking and unforgivable. But like the saying goes, "What goes around , comes around."
@TheThora17 Жыл бұрын
The story of the nuclear incident victim, Ouchi is SO much more tragic than was covered here. He suffered through incredibly horrific gruesome failures of his body, and it was a nightmare for his family. Truly a sad sad accident.
@axle.australian.patriot2 жыл бұрын
I am always horrified by this story and the wider story of lobotomies. What I find even more distressing is that events like this are still occurring even to this modern day.
@mosmall907110 ай бұрын
Hishashi was not kept alive against his will, before he was induced he himself wanted to to stay alive for his family. he chose to do that and when the doctors said no more the family agreed and let him pass the next time he died
@pakde80022 жыл бұрын
Joe Kennedy was a horrible sob. Behind every immensely wealthy family is a criminal and his criminal enterprises are well known but nothing compares to how he treated his own daughter. But once they make a pact with the devil there's no touching them through the law but in the end he lost everything he was so proud of. One in war and two by assassination. His last words were probably karma is a bitch.
@coffeecrimegal59682 жыл бұрын
I very much enjoy your content. The work you put into the editing is matched only by your detailed narration. Thanks 😊
@MK-hh1vo2 жыл бұрын
🤔 So Rose Kennedy previously gave birth to 2 healthy children yet couldn't give the 3rd birth because the doctor wasn't present? And she + the "nurse" thought it was a good idea to *push the baby back into the birth canal* for 2 hours??? How is that even possible??? Any mothers care to explain? I knew Rosemary was disabled but never knew why. That's your horror story right there! The 1st story is definitely the scariest because that one could actually happen to me!
@lenibeni7421 Жыл бұрын
Exactly! It sounds so super weird…. People have given birth for hundreds of years on their own… at home! And most of them were just fine… so why was it that big of a problem for this mother of 2 to do so? Especially in a hospital with a nurse?! I understand it might be difficult but come on… nothing is worse than "pushing it back inside" or whatever they did… not to mention that must have been HELL for that poor woman…!! The medical field in that time was HELL in of itself anyway! I would eben dare to say than I some cases it was even much more backwards than in medieval times!
@moustachemoe6 ай бұрын
Hishasi’s story is maddening because his family just wouldn’t let him die. I understand wanting to try to save someone you love but when they are resuscitating him while he is begging them to just let him go, it’s not for them anymore. They prolonged a man’s suffering for their own benefit.
@dangannon99702 жыл бұрын
Love these stories! Very interesting, thanks!
@RebinRed212 жыл бұрын
You are slowly becoming my favourite channel, your quality is spot on.
@Mandy-nt2cs Жыл бұрын
97k ? Nah.. I want 97k for each Surgeon & Surgical Assistant.. a 13 inch retractor? He's insanely lucky it didn't kill him or cause irreparable damage.
@melodydantalionmellowastar19902 жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking the nurses rammed the baby back inside 🤮
@pembrokelove Жыл бұрын
I was immediately like “wtf did they leave inside of him” in the first story. The fact that no one accounted for a missing retractor is insane, and the way the doctors ignored his concerns is atrocious.
@mittens15092 жыл бұрын
Take solace in knowing that the Kennedy fathers reputation was tanked so horribly by his actions alone that he sullied the entire family name. Take solace in knowing the man's burning in hell for the torture he caused his DAUGHTER
@anonymouspersonontheinternet11 ай бұрын
Rosemary's story is obviously sad but Hisashi Ouchi's story is terrifying. Imagine being conscious when your body is already dead while being forced to stay alive. He didn't even get to die peacefully.
@PsychoDuckee2 жыл бұрын
Every time I hear about that poor Japanese man, I get so irritated, imagine keeping someone alive that in immense pain just because of curiosity. 🙄
@barneyronnie2 жыл бұрын
No amount of opiates could end his pain, not even oxymorphone or sufentanyl.
@PsychoDuckee2 жыл бұрын
@@barneyronnie they wrong for that. That's all I gotta say. Heart aches for em♡
@bloodyvqlentine2 жыл бұрын
@@PsychoDuckee It wasn't the doctors fault. For some reason, his story has been twisted around by a lot of people. In Japan, if it was requested by the family to keep him alive, the doctors had no choice but to do what they said. In all likelihood, they probably knew he would never make it, but because his family was so keen on him surviving, they just had to do everything in their power to keep him alive, despite his suffering. It's unfortunate they couldn't just let him go..
@PsychoDuckee2 жыл бұрын
@@bloodyvqlentine oml. That's so cruel :( ty for tellin me.
@ЛейлаДаудМансори7 ай бұрын
Where did you get the idea it was curiosity? The narrator states explicitly it was due to "family love".
@elijones14535 ай бұрын
My great grandfather went into the hospital for cataracts in his eyes. While he was there, he commented to the doctor about quite a bit of pain he had been having in his leg as well. The doctors attitude was "you are here for your eyes, not your leg. I'm not worried about that right now." Turns out he had a blood clot in his leg that resulted in amputation, and then he passed away due to the complications of that. I never met the man, he was gone before my time but that story enrages me every time I think about it.
@Timoshemperoni5 ай бұрын
I'm sorry to hear about that. My uncle died of a brain aneurysm but the hospital staff took him off of life support without any family being present. One moment he's squeezing our hands and the next, he was gone. It still hurts to this day and I'll never understand why they wouldn't wait for us to say goodbye.
@into_the_void2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for feeding my existential dread ... 🙂
@pakde80022 жыл бұрын
I know right. About 15 years ago I had my gall bladder removed and ever since I've had the feeling the surgeon left something in there but I'm too chicken to get it checked.
@princessskennnyy2 жыл бұрын
I didn’t mean to respond to you but I’m gonna leave it
@bizichyld Жыл бұрын
Let’s not forget the case of 40 year old father of 2, Al Bundy. The surgeon was supposed to make a circular incision, but mistakenly gave him a circumcision.
@kennghost2 жыл бұрын
ahhh nothing like botched surgery stories to go with my breakfast!
@AltClev37 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been binging on your videos lately. I feel like I need a hug after all of these 😞
@nachgeben2 жыл бұрын
The Kennedy story is why it infuriates me with this 'rich kids evil' diatribe. Those kids go through hell a lot of the time. If they're abused, no one believes them because their parents are rich, so they must be just spoiled. If they act out, they're just spoiled. If they're depressed, it's just because they don't understand adversity. Sorry, but a lot of wealthy families are there because someone was likely a sociopath. A lot of wealthy executives fit the bill of sociopathy. Even if they didn't, old money families and royal families see problem children as a blight. The monarchy of England had two sisters locked in an insane asylum for their entire lives. They died, and not a single member of the family went to their funerals. In the end, whenever someone acts like rich kids have no problems, it convinces me they're middle class. Abuse in the middle class exists, but is far more often punished. No one cares about the poor kids and the rich kids. Everyone assumes poor kids are abused all over, and will sometimes strip them away from good and loving homes, even if those homes might be struggling. They don't listen to them. They assume no rich kids are abused, so they're left with their abusers and maligned by the public. Only middle classers are looked at with any level of clarity.
@yup_pea2 жыл бұрын
This channel is awesome 👌 love every video and narration! Love this type of video..
@WindexDrinker-j6v2 жыл бұрын
Imagine your family allowing you to live even though you beg to die with multiple heart attacks a day. What horrifically selfish behavior, sickening honestly
@ЛейлаДаудМансори7 ай бұрын
Not allowing, forcing.
@sibyl5132 жыл бұрын
I swear hearing the Rosemary part made my head physically uncomfortable imagining that surgery.. the history of science is truly horror
@aguy7848Ай бұрын
Lobotomies...up there with blood letting and the theory of miasma in terms of being a dangerous, worthless, medical practice that was around way too long.
@prodbytarantino2 жыл бұрын
Respect to the family for bringing her back in once they realized what had really happened to her. They could’ve easily just left it alone to continue to protect their reputation🫡
@laurelmatthews5082 жыл бұрын
Love your channel I listen to you all the time!
@Presca12 жыл бұрын
I heard the story of Rosemary before and it makes me so sad. What a piece of shit her father Joseph was. And to keep her from the rest of the family just because of their 'image' is disgusting. But then that family has had a lot of controversy.
@young0cidy9 ай бұрын
We have a say in my country that when you see bad luck follow a family. Its usually because what some of their members did in the shadows. I've always wondered why the Kennedys had such bad luck. It seems that Joe was a cruel man and I can only imagine how his father before him was. Nothing in this world happen without a reason.
@artemisnectar72 жыл бұрын
#SI ✌🏾 awesome content! I've heard about the Kennedy daughter😏. Also there is an urban legend that a curse was placed on the Elder Kennedys who owned several tenements in lower Manhattan. They were considered as "slumlords". Deplorable living conditions & the like🙆🏽♀️. I'm a retired educator trained in the Montessori philosophy 😆, funny when u mentioned it!
@inkish30742 жыл бұрын
why the smirk emoji.. her father was a monster
@BG-nk9pm2 жыл бұрын
Great videos. My only feedback is that when you talk about things in kilometers that you translate that to feet and miles. It will help your story's immensely
@Rufusthered1862 жыл бұрын
When I was young I had the unfortunate experience of arriving at a truck accident with my father not long after it happened. With only one other car there at the time consisting of an old couple in their 70's. My father and I quickly raced to help the trapped driver. But before we could even get a few steps we heard a big whooshing noise and everything erupted into flames. There was no way we could to get to the driver as my father said. "Well by the Iook of that cab I don't think he would have survived anyway mate?" Words that still haunt me today cause no longer had they fell from his lips we heard it. Something no one should hear. Even though it only lasted no more than 30 seconds or so it never fades. So from that day on at the age of around 12 I've always carried a very sharp knife on my person just in case I ever end up in that position. Or get trapped in a cave? I'll go my way thank you. And hopefully I'll be lucky enough to go in grace and happy float away. Hey Lordy May?
@barneyronnie2 жыл бұрын
Have you used smack?
@Rufusthered1862 жыл бұрын
@@barneyronnie prefer the other
@unicornglitterfart52012 жыл бұрын
I know most people will never need to know this, but it's still a neat factoid. When exposed to radiation, the big question that needs an immediate answer is how much did the person receive. It's sometimes difficult to determine this, especially considering that one person can be absolutely blasted while someone else only a few feet away only receives a small amount. It's not like a poison gas which will affect everyone in the immediate vicinity almost equally. So if you find yourself in a situation where an unsafe amount of radiation has been emitted, you can gauge it pretty accurately by how quickly nausea, vomiting, and headache set in and how severe they are. If you have a manageable headache and very minor nausea/vomiting, say, 8 hours after the event, you didn't receive a lethal dose. If those 3 symptoms set in within minutes to an hour, they will be severe and you will die. When I was in nursing school, I had the chart of how to do a rough estimation of sieverts received based on timetables of onset and severity of symptoms memorized, but that was a long time ago lol. These guidelines are correct about 99.9% of the time.
@MisplacedTexan2 жыл бұрын
If I was the victim in the first story, I’d haunt my family for that. Not a gentle, sweet haunting. I’m talking The Grudge meets The Exorcist.
@millers3888 Жыл бұрын
What’s so sad about Rosemary Kennedy is that she really loved her father. Her mother, Rose, was always distant. For her father to have her lobotomized is crushing.