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You really don't need to see the video to know what race would do this: "Instead of fleeing the scene after the car crashed and rolled on its side, one of the girls began looking for her cellphone that was in the vehicle — while walking nonchalantly past their victim’s body."

You really don't need to see the video to know what race would do this: "Instead of fleeing the scene after the car crashed and rolled on its side, one of the girls began looking for her cellphone that was in the vehicle — while walking nonchalantly past their victim’s body."

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[–] 0 pt

I may be wrong since I'm not real sure of wasp and hornet biology but I think as soon as they can fly they are all capable of defending the nest so such a device would be sort of lethal to the continuation of the nest. So long as the nest is there and the device is employed they will just keep attacking until all are dead.

With honey bees they go through stages of behavior. Newly hatched mope about a bit until their chitin gets dry and then go to work as cleaners and queen tenders or other domestic duties. They won't even bother to attack.

Then they become fanners, in that they actively just hang on to areas around the entrance and along the combs and fan their wings to dry the honey and regulate temperatures.

Then they become defenders. After that another switch will click in their brain and they become foragers. There's a couple other stages I skipped, like hauling out dead bees and other trash. So, you could employ such a device next to a bee hive entrance and all it would do is slowly weaken the hive. To wipe out a bee hive this way would take months if they have enough honey and pollen stored up. Eventually though they would run low on workers as the defenders were depleted. So long as there's food in the hive the queen will just keep pumping out more eggs.