Humans tend to be naturally afraid of things that have historically been shown to be deadly to humans. It's part of why snakes and s...

Humans tend to be naturally afraid of things that have historically been shown to be deadly to humans. It's part of why snakes and spiders are some top fears for people. However, with our "domestication" (and I use that term loosely) of such animals, the fear becomes a little less serious. There is the potential for any species to turn on humans, however, individual animals may prove to be perfectly fine. I'm not particularly scared of domestic snakes, however, get me around a wild rattler, or a king cobra It takes at least an entire minute of squeezing to kill a weak lunged baby. He's a snake handler, knows their behaviours, and even if he didn't catch it in time it would take much longer for the snake to hurt her than for him to stop it. Snakes are pretty docile, especially when raised around
credits : Barcroft TV
credits : Barcroft TV