Oh, but it does exist today. Each year, there are about 10-20 cases in the USA alone. However, modern hygiene, public health and medicine keep the plague at bay. see: http://www.william-Shakespeare.info/bubonic-black-plague-modern-day.htm On a slightly different tack, & I can't back this up but, apparrently,had Pennicillin not been invented then the number of people to die in WW2 would have been double !
if Adolf Hitler were alive today he would be over 120 years old! He was a racist. And although many racists in the world are against people of African descent, his hatred was directed mostly at European Jews, Slavs, Gypsies, Bolsheviks, etc. So yes, black people would exist as well they should.
It would be controlled and stopped quickly because we have the medicine to cure it
:D
a disease
The Disease that caused the black death is still active all over the world. Fortunately medical science has progressed to the point it is a minor and easily treated disease today. So no the Black Death could not happen today
Yes, The black death is the bubonic plague. Though it is rare, there are still modern cases of the disease.
the black plague does still exist today, however it is a really rare disease
The black death is a Bacteria type disease that is transmitted primarily by fleas biting an animal or person Easily cured today with antibiotics.
Black Death is an old name for the Plague, which is still around. Antibotics are used very successfully.
no, Black Death has been seen many times in Europe. but on smaller scales.
you cant really cant something as harmful and leeful as the black death today.
Yes but there are loads of cures so it's nothing to worry about now
The fact that the disease that causes it exists today, but is just less common and we have the proper medical care to take care of it.
During the time of the Black Death, newspapers as we know them today did not exist. Instead, broadsheets and pamphlets were used to disseminate information. These would have contained notices about the disease, information on prevention measures, and announcements of deaths or quarantine measures.
The Black Death (AKA The Bubonic Plague, The plague) didn't really "start" or "end" on specific dates. There are some rare cases of The Bubonic plague today. The peak of the Black Death was around 1347- 1352