"This is the biggest scam in the world.
They buy cardboard boxes at rock bottom prices
and turn them into expensive dog food.
Unaware customers rush to buy it
because of its tasty flavor.
Every morning in shady hidden factories,
truckloads of raw materials arrive.
Recycled discarded cardboard boxes.
Their surfaces are yellowed, damp, moldy,
sometimes mixed with plastic tape and fungus.
To them, what should be trash for the landfill
is a treasure for making dog food.
First, the cardboard is ground into tiny pieces
by roaring shredders, then dumped into a mixing pool
with large amounts of water to form pulp.
The smell is sour and foul, enough to make a person gag.
But to make it taste like meat,
workers pour in artificial flavors and colorings.
Beef, chicken, milk, whatever flavor they want, they create.
Once mixed, the pulp is pushed into high temperature driers.
Moisture evaporates quickly and the pulp is baked
until it's hard and brittle.
Then cut into uniform small pellets.
They look like premium baked dog food,
but feel like dried cardboard.
In the final step, the fake dog food
is packed into colorful bags with reassuring brand names
and ingredient lists, placed in pet stores or sold online,
suddenly becoming high priced quality dog food.
You may wonder why dogs eat it so happily.
That flavor is all thanks to the chemicals.
But over time, the cardboard fibers can't be digested.
There's no nutrition, causing constipation,
digestive damage, and even slow poisoning.
The worst part, dogs can't speak.
Owners don't see their pain
and think their pets simply enjoy it.
So don't be fooled by packaging and promises.
If you truly care for your pet, read the ingredient list
and check the source.
Don't let your love become a lifetime of harm."
Video to text transcript:
"This is the biggest scam in the world. They buy cardboard boxes at rock bottom prices and turn them into expensive dog food. Unaware customers rush to buy it because of its tasty flavor. Every morning in shady hidden factories, truckloads of raw materials arrive. Recycled discarded cardboard boxes. Their surfaces are yellowed, damp, moldy, sometimes mixed with plastic tape and fungus. To them, what should be trash for the landfill is a treasure for making dog food. First, the cardboard is ground into tiny pieces by roaring shredders, then dumped into a mixing pool with large amounts of water to form pulp. The smell is sour and foul, enough to make a person gag. But to make it taste like meat, workers pour in artificial flavors and colorings. Beef, chicken, milk, whatever flavor they want, they create. Once mixed, the pulp is pushed into high temperature driers. Moisture evaporates quickly and the pulp is baked until it's hard and brittle. Then cut into uniform small pellets. They look like premium baked dog food, but feel like dried cardboard. In the final step, the fake dog food is packed into colorful bags with reassuring brand names and ingredient lists, placed in pet stores or sold online, suddenly becoming high priced quality dog food. You may wonder why dogs eat it so happily. That flavor is all thanks to the chemicals. But over time, the cardboard fibers can't be digested. There's no nutrition, causing constipation, digestive damage, and even slow poisoning. The worst part, dogs can't speak. Owners don't see their pain and think their pets simply enjoy it. So don't be fooled by packaging and promises. If you truly care for your pet, read the ingredient list and check the source. Don't let your love become a lifetime of harm."
Thank you. Can't stand that default AI voice.