This documentary offers a riveting look into the pivotal role silver played in global trade and the shaping of history. The Opium Wars are a stark reminder of the lengths empires would go to control such a valuable resource. It's fascinating to see how the Chinese silver trade not only influenced economic policies but also international relations and cultural dynamics. A true testament to the power of precious metals in world history!" As for something useful from me, did you know that the Opium Wars not only changed trade policies but also had a lasting impact on international law? They led to the concept of "extraterritoriality," where foreigners in China were subject to their home country's laws rather than Chinese laws. This concept significantly affected diplomatic relations and is considered an early example of international law as we know it today. 💫💯
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Did he put ANY Citation or Scholars?
@darrenlesueur47857 ай бұрын
I would call it the infiltration of venice and central banking and their system of usary as debt slavery. once they were to get china to except silver as the only currency they began to cause wars so then they can loan money out with high interest rates. this forces China to go look for more silver. once china becomes tired of this they then push opium on them and create drug slavery and they can continue to bleed them dry .
The opium trade and wars really show how cunning and amoral the british empire was.
@noSirIDontLikeIt4 ай бұрын
*is
@muktarahmed66210 ай бұрын
How metals play such an integral part of human civiligations, it's simply astounding! Wonderfully created documentary, lots of gratitude.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@paulianas17825 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for such comprehensive historical information. My heart cried when the summer palace was burned down & looted. Such a precious historical artifact.
@thetwotravelers5469 ай бұрын
As a American this was very eye opening
@siroyiryuu9 ай бұрын
To be honest, the increasingly declining public education in the United States did not really teach children useful knowledge, and was far less meaningful than the grammar schools in Britain before World War II.
@lolilollolilol77738 ай бұрын
When I read all the sinophobic/racist views of China by the Americans Europeans, from reddit users to especially the US Congress, I know none of these people know ANYTHING whatsoever about today's China and even less about past China. Let alone the disgusting opium trade that led to the "century of humiliation".
@lawrence11358 ай бұрын
A Qing Dynasty official/ tea merchant, the richest man in the world in the early 19th century, financed America's Industrial Revolution....
@candycoatedcyanide32675 ай бұрын
When I was young they barely touched this in school,but I’m a history buff.. and I strongly believe in Karma. What comes around goes around. I’m sure this documentary is still leaving a lot out 💀
@kaushikvsmaniyan9 ай бұрын
20:05 - 20:29, 30:15 - 30:20 - perfect lesson on the principle of not allowing a country's money, critical commodities & infrastructure to be controlled by outsiders
@elenaadams50118 ай бұрын
The best history documentary show , I ever heard...Thanks to all the people who produced , intriguing history knowledge...Bravo to all of you ❤
@painmt6519 ай бұрын
The Portuguese and their trading cities are missing from this story. They had a monopoly in Japan for many years. They had huge influence in politics in the region. Another thing is that while opium is addictive, it was the smoking of tobacco, and the addition of opium to the pipe tobacco, which led to the smoking of opium by itself that made the drug more potent and therefore more addictive.
@silveriver910 ай бұрын
The Brtish empire was the world's biggest drug pusher. El Chap0 today has nothing on the Brtish empire.
@adrianainespena56549 ай бұрын
Even the worst cartel will not force us to buy their product at gunpoint.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
The British were legally selling opium to Chinese merchants; barely legally, but still legally. It was the Chinese merchants who imported it illegally into China and pushed it on the population, not the British. This is why the Qing government punished the Chinese merchants.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
@@adrianainespena5654 The British opium trade is only end at the treaty ports, it is the Chinese merchants who imported it illegally into China and pushed it on the population.
@siroyiryuu9 ай бұрын
@@vapaus831 Stop lying. After winning the First Opium War, Britain signed the Treaty of Nanjing. The treaty stipulates that the British government has taken away the management rights and taxes of the Chinese government over customs (which must be managed by British people, and the taxes of Chinese customs are also used by the British government), and must allow British people to freely sell any goods in China (especially high profit and addictive opium), while ceding seven Chinese ports to the UK. The Second Opium War ceded Hong Kong. During the two Opium Wars, the British government accumulated at least 60 million taels of silver reparations.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
@@siroyiryuu Please cite your source. "... stipulates that the British government has taken away the management rights and taxes of the Chinese government..." can you name which term in the treaty of Nanking?
@VERITASPUREBLOOD10 ай бұрын
this documentary makes me want to buy even MORE physical silver🇺🇸
@henrylangstaff62410 ай бұрын
Ah if it weren't for people hawking silver and gold, there'd be nobody to fund the conspiracy websites. Thank you
@thesecondsilvereich78289 ай бұрын
Won't work as the population is to big to use anls currency
@VERITASPUREBLOOD9 ай бұрын
@@thesecondsilvereich7828 read a book
@Tiimeh9 ай бұрын
@@thesecondsilvereich7828 yes paper money is the only way to provide money to all!
@shawnpatrick47039 ай бұрын
Be careful when you go to sell that physical silver. It might not be so easy to do.
@rosaliesteward216010 ай бұрын
This documentary is full of interesting information, and is also engaging in a form of evasion of responsibility. The Chinese wish to trade in silver did not cause the Opium war, the British East India Company wouldn't 'take no for an answer'. This attitude of the British Empire and the Company - if they don't get what they want they will use any force to do so - is still ruling international relations today.
@williamwilliam50669 ай бұрын
I think you'll find it has ruled human relations forever and always will, only a child could not know that.
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
@@williamwilliam5066 There is huge difference between the west and east
@williamwilliam50669 ай бұрын
@@ddding9518 YOu mean one side is populated by human beings and the other not? I don't think so.
@SethMarchel9 ай бұрын
The British only used force after the Chinese destroyed their property and refused to pay for it. Sounds reasonable to me
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
@@SethMarchel You have the criminal mind. Chinese government had the right to confiscate illegal drug from smugglers
@thepokotbomaresort59110 ай бұрын
This is an awesome piece! The narrator deserves a big thumbs up. It also serves as a lullaby!
@neilca298710 ай бұрын
Served as one last night and again right now
@oysterman9629 ай бұрын
Physical silver has properties that do make you sleep. Truth.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@Marlaina10 ай бұрын
Is this the previous shows smacked together in a 3 hour video?
@mat426310 ай бұрын
yes
@cameronlang685810 ай бұрын
Yes, you can tell because the same audio is reused constantly. I thought I was accidentally scrubbing through the video, but nope, just an editor who thinks people can't fucking remember shit episode to episode. How many times do they need to mention the Century of Humiliation?
@donshuan884010 ай бұрын
Take it eeeeasy @@cameronlang6858
@Dokocat-z4x10 ай бұрын
Yes, I was so confused.
@garypuckettmuse10 ай бұрын
@@cameronlang6858 I was glad they were all put together. As for your f-ing fury about this, have you ever seen a network tv show where they repeat everything from one segment in the next segment? No one thinks you're stupid -- relax.
@almute26 күн бұрын
Great program but what terribly stressful music! Would be more enjoyable and easier to listen to with a calmer sound track
@chris.asi_romeo8 ай бұрын
Excellent series of documentaries 💯💯👏👏
@Tiimeh9 ай бұрын
That one drop about rothschilds tho
@ekesandras148115 күн бұрын
the fixation of some people towards the Rothschilds has turned from astonishing to boring.
@richlancaster833622 сағат бұрын
@@ekesandras1481 ha, seems you are either naive, ignorant, or well-informed and have an agenda. the rothschilds were massively influential worldwide throughout the period of the opium wars....
@SmartDumbNerdyCool10 ай бұрын
How is every history channel doing a piece on the Opium Wars right now?
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@willbass28699 ай бұрын
Part of AgitProp operation by CCP....show how evil The West was/is and how China, the center of the universe, was/is abused by "round eyes"
@darrenlesueur47857 ай бұрын
because it's a massive part of history that has been suppressed by the people that got rich off of opium 200 years ago. getting people addicted and controlling the price to make it extremely expensive. if people new the history there would be alot less addicts
@TiptronicSS6 ай бұрын
A new stage of propaganda, from the looks of it a chinese one, portraying them as poor victims who supposedly were "kings of the world", not really because of their military might, but it's international commerce for exotic and cheap stuff.
@tomsunwifi27673 ай бұрын
Historical parallel and hopes to avoid war this time
@Jeffrey-rq2gqАй бұрын
Would be an interesting documentary if it wasn't for the background sound antics. You don't need the audio junk to sell your product
@garypuckettmuse10 ай бұрын
This is fantastic for those who read the comments before watching!
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@sibylsibyl532310 ай бұрын
I remember that Britain gave Qianlong emperor a mechanic peacock clock with its ass exposed when working. Qianlong refused it cuz its so ugly and ridiculous
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff10 ай бұрын
Thank you
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@siroyiryuu9 ай бұрын
Professional production
@TheYah00netstar10 ай бұрын
FAKE NEWS! No...the Portuguese introduced silver to Asia...as a currency of trade...especially with the involvement of Japan...Mexico produced about 80% of the world's silver with 30% of it eventually ending up in China. In the late 16th and early 17th century, Japan was also exporting heavily into China and the foreign trade at large....The silver flow into China passed through two cycles: the Potosí /Japan Cycle, which lasted from the 1540s to the 1640s, and the Mexican Cycle, which began in the first half of the 1700s.As has been demonstrated...China dominated silver imports. China's huge demand of silver was caused by the failure of making paper money "Hong Wu Tong Bao" and "Da Ming Tong Bao Chao" and the difficulties when making copper coins. After various status changes in China history, silver played a more important role in the market and became a dominant currency in China in the 1540s.
@organexploder10 ай бұрын
dude, inside voice
@WATCHMYCLIPSZ10 ай бұрын
@@organexploder fr why did I scream his comment in my head 😂
@garypuckettmuse10 ай бұрын
Words matter -- no one said "introduced" except you. Furthermore, the rest of your rant sounds exactly like what the documentary put forth although you have added some details the makers of this program might have considered tangential to their themes and therefore left them unexplored. You don't know everything and no two hour program can say everything. Also, why so angry?
@johnmac409410 ай бұрын
@@garypuckettmuseperhaps anger is caused by distortion of known truth? You obviously have more belief/interest/faith in a well funded production.
@Mr0rris09 ай бұрын
Good comment and food for thought Cycles and percents... I need to look at all that and interpret it too
@WATCHMYCLIPSZ10 ай бұрын
*ABSOLUTE HISTORY!*
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@daily_uploader12610 ай бұрын
Nice
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
The British opium trade is only end at the treaty ports, it is the Chinese merchants who imported it illegally into China and pushed it on the population.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@MeiinUK9 ай бұрын
Beautiful pieces by the miao people....
@angieyang34428 ай бұрын
Miao, are also known as hmong people
@sebastianstanko36848 ай бұрын
it is the east india company also john company, the east indien company, VOC is the dutch one..
@chi-jenyang97529 ай бұрын
I wish that silver will worth more than gold again.
@Sovnarkom9 ай бұрын
why?
@walkerhaw54689 ай бұрын
It will and it's happening this year.
@skypieper9 ай бұрын
@@Sovnarkom he's a stacker.
@TXLionHeart8 ай бұрын
@walkerhaw5468 🤣
@Gold_Silver.4 ай бұрын
The mining ratio is around 7 to 1 so it wouldnt surprise me if it got close
@zhishenLu9 ай бұрын
good
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@gayu86957 ай бұрын
I'm the 3rd guy at 1:57:39 lmao
@subrotoxing821410 ай бұрын
when i was 9 year old indonesian boy i read the newspaper about a very dangerous most succesful wealthiest druglord ever in history and his name was pablo escobar. he was so wealthy and made it to the forbes list. 30 years later i learnt that it was untrue. The most succesful drug baron ever was william jardine. today pablo escobar children had to live in hiding except for juan pablo. today's descendant of william jardine lived a very honorable life off their great grandfather legacy that is jardine investments. How do i know that ? Indonesia's stock exchange largest weight is in one company owned by jardine investments that is astra international.
@johnmac409410 ай бұрын
They’re not nice people. To them we are like cattle in a field.
@Mr0rris09 ай бұрын
@@johnmac4094well we are And cows suck So I guess everyone should apologize
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
@@Mr0rris0 most of the Chinese op___ users were not add_cts.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
@@Mr0rris0 Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@Mr0rris09 ай бұрын
@@vapaus831 cool thanks. Helps because I'm trying to figure out "what's going to cause what" by sort of considering what had caused things in the past. It's a scooby mystery Like.... Is it all fun and games until "sterilization of inflows" takes its modern meaning "Evolution of monetary systems bank of canada" Should be an article. I'm not Canadian though
@gwilson66416 күн бұрын
Interesing how the fates and fortune of the Howqua and the Delano families differed over the years since.
@giofrancotrain18essence8 ай бұрын
Interesting
@DomyTheMad42010 ай бұрын
"ugh another quick video on such a complex topic. hide video. wait, was that thing 3 hours?! UNDO! UNDO!"
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@Mr.KaganbYaltrk10 ай бұрын
Wining a war because of drugs totaly a british thing
@silveriver910 ай бұрын
The Brtish empire was the world's biggest drug pusher. El Chap0 today has nothing on the Brtish empire.
@limhan320910 ай бұрын
You say Britain, you mean elitists of London. Nothing to do with the majority of English/Irish/Welsh/Scottish folk ... Our ancestors suffered to the monarchy like millions of others ( a monarchy who's bloodline is a mixture of French/English/German and a couple of other Europeans I'm sure I'm forgetting...
@limhan320910 ай бұрын
Not to mention the Muslim moors who invaded us and enslaved us and the Romans and vikings and the Saxons....it is what it is, stop pointing fingers pretty much every nation has history they arnt proud of looking back, however it's called 'history' for a reason, let's leave it there or we are doomed to repeat it
@shortchanged.10 ай бұрын
And its extention AMERICA
@chadcowan691210 ай бұрын
@shortchanged. And the pharmaceutical industry
@saltymemesmith7 ай бұрын
Silver isn't lighter than Copper but very slightly more dense.
@j05184083 ай бұрын
是的 因为从交换角度来看白银更容易兑换 黄金是用来兑换大额的货品 白银更容易兑换日常用品
@Hanfrey89 ай бұрын
The next historical document for the coming generations will be the narration of western empire's demise.
@amazon47168 ай бұрын
China was wealthy and understood how to do business.
@eastsidaproduct9 ай бұрын
@Roadtoroota Bix was right!
@wizkdd85339 ай бұрын
Did the East Indian Trading Co. knew opium was banned in China and still traded it anyway? I'm not sure if got it correct or not....
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Yea, a big BUT, they are just leaving the stocks at the treaty port which is legal.
@wizkdd85339 ай бұрын
@@vapaus831 Imagine going to court with that excuse...
@SuperCool362jack9 ай бұрын
"Imagine going to court with that excuse..." My statement is a fact not a subjective view. The foreign involvement in the opium trade essentially ended at the treaty ports... Joyce Madancy, "Unearthing Popular Attitudes toward the Opium Trade and Opium Suppression in Late Qing and Early Republican Fujian," Modern China 27.4 (2001): 443
@SuperCool362jack9 ай бұрын
Is you said that "I'm not sure if got it correct or not", then I will answer your question.
@richlancaster833621 сағат бұрын
@vapaus831 that's like asking if colonial authorities in America and then Australia knew smallpox would wipe out indigenous populations, yeah....
@cathihargaden16088 ай бұрын
If you look at the architecture of the building by the customs house this is reminscient of the Liver Buildings in Liverpool UK. Glad I have an irish passport should get a heart reception then from the Chinese:))
@DD-rl4mj7 ай бұрын
Fascinating absolutely fascinating. As an American it really changes my thinking of China. All that Silver did it all. I do have to say it seems you British were diabolically genius. What happened to you? Weak nobody’s now.
@marilynmcconnell-twiss3046Ай бұрын
Probably your ancestors given that parts of all of the Americas were colonised by the British.
@richlancaster833622 сағат бұрын
America is falling off a cliff and you don't seem to understand that, which is quite typical. The fact you knew nothing about the history of Britain, China and Americans in the opium trade is a testament to just how relevant your opinion about anything is. Weak...you are a nobody....
@terryl77499 ай бұрын
The moral of this story is that British merchants & Scottish traders can't be trusted whereas the Irish are honest friends
@BigG9889 ай бұрын
yea they just did driveways and sold stolen tools
@siroyiryuu9 ай бұрын
LMAO
@mouloudzekar4685Ай бұрын
The entire ziowest cannot be trusted with anything. Once they have the upper hand they show their savagery to its fullest.
@michaelferriss45948 ай бұрын
If you are familiar with gold and modern day currency exchange, you can see the gold flows are all heading to China in our modern time. Some interesting similarities.
@jayliu60768 ай бұрын
This time it's a bit different. Holding USD would be akin to having your balls in the hands of the U.S. The Russians learned it the hard way as their USD was "confiscated". Gold is safer than USD in this sense. I do sense some similarities though. Specifically, the desire to replicate opium war to "readjust trade balances". Ofc, China has nukes today, so perhaps not everything would play out the same.
@saim4you7 ай бұрын
@@jayliu6076”replicate the opium war” ? How so ? Cause it seems Fentanyl( Kind of modern day equivalent of Opium) is flowing from China to West unlike the Opium.
Silver is the best electrical conductor, but it oxidizes.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@AJ-ox8xy9 ай бұрын
It does oxidize but there are several factors that play into it. It has far more resistance to tarnish than Cooper or other base metals done.
@Romulus707 ай бұрын
Why not subtitle in Romanian, or in all dialects ? It's a shame ,you have interesting posts and you could have many more subscribers and visitors !
@P.ilhaformosatherium2 ай бұрын
Ubi est Argentum!?
@silvipcbi7 ай бұрын
If you come across this comment, please send your prayers for my recovery. Thank you for your positive energy.
@gwilson66416 күн бұрын
Being only 300 years ago, the thread of this tale is stll being played out globally.
@RasAile8 ай бұрын
When your self get precious Metal sell it to yourself first.
@yuluoxianjun8 ай бұрын
who owns the rare things,who owns the world
@bapi66436 ай бұрын
Printing worthless paper money is nothing new
@LslandButterfly8 ай бұрын
I love silver ❤ God money 💰
@sebastianb.19267 ай бұрын
Colonial England joining the war on drugs on the side of drugs.
@F_And8 ай бұрын
Why is the narrator & most of the people in this video pronouncing silver like “silva” ?
@tripac33929 ай бұрын
Just count how many times they say global
@TiptronicSS6 ай бұрын
What is up with all the repeating chunks of video? So annoying! Next chapter can't just be a copy paste of half the previous chapter! Documentary itself is pretty interesting. It gives a perspective into the chinese mentality. Which is based on so much self deception, it's insane. You can also already see them thinking of future 'world dominance', because (as always) it was the fault of the foreigners things went bad, but they were 'great'. These guys today still live with medieval mentality. And that's gonna end up with the same disaster for them. But meanwhile, I wonder whatelse will happen while history keeps repeating itself.
@ekesandras148115 күн бұрын
that's due to the demands of trash TV.
@AKBABELP5 ай бұрын
Why won’t Howqa’s descendent migrate to the USA? He has after all invested a lot of money in the United States?
@gwilson66416 күн бұрын
It's rare that you get descedants of wealthy fanilies admitting the criminal or nefarious origins in drug smuggling and murder, it's a common occurrence in history but a rare admissonary telling on film.
@AnthonyStJohn17 ай бұрын
The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness
@shawnpatrick47039 ай бұрын
Does this really need to be 3 hours????
@iKerby8 ай бұрын
3 hours is not enough to condense 250 years of Britain China relations
@ianbynoe65156 ай бұрын
China was the richest, is rich and will be the richest. And no one can stop China 😅
@AnthonyStJohn17 ай бұрын
The Anatomy of Human Destruct
@RichardKing-sx6xc8 ай бұрын
45:30
@Mrgolden117410 ай бұрын
Lord Elgin needs to be publicly shamed
@johnmac409410 ай бұрын
Why stop there? Humans are shameful.
@SuperCool362jack9 ай бұрын
😂😂
@verablexitasap858Ай бұрын
This is every empires are punished by God
@randomdude1899 ай бұрын
Good and silver are a sign of how primitive the concept of currency is. Things we need daily are the cheapest somehow?
@barbaratavis26786 ай бұрын
Watch this if you like commercials every 3 minutes. Horrible, horrible, horrible! The people who post this are making $$$$$$$$$
@Heothbremel10 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Dikötter et al. also make two important points about the opium smoking in China. Firstly, they observe that local Chinese opium had a much lower morphine content than Indian opium, so Chinese users of domestic opium were much less likely to become addicted anyway,
@dgonthehill10 ай бұрын
wow everything being exposed in last days
@Snarkyhippie10 ай бұрын
This isn't new information
@dgonthehill10 ай бұрын
@@Snarkyhippie it is NEW for me
@Snarkyhippie10 ай бұрын
Exposed suggests it's new information. This is ancient history and nothing shocking to the world. Nothing has been "exposed", you're personally just learning a new thing. Welcome to the internet, it's full of information.
@dgonthehill10 ай бұрын
@@Snarkyhippie we learn everyday, had idea but didnt know WHOLE story, this what viet name over, the drug triangle of opium
@danieldewoeste10 ай бұрын
Silver will be nr one soon ;}
@williamwilliam50669 ай бұрын
Look at the amzing thing Britain built on that tiny barren rock off China
@thetwotravelers5469 ай бұрын
Yes now owned by China
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
By Chinese people and Chinese money
@jorgeargudo377424 күн бұрын
China will attempt to become the 1st global economy in the world. The U.S. must study their actions today and become self sufficient...Trump's tarriffs may not be bad after all. The U.S. challenge is internal, its name is political corruption. America needs to rebuild its character and go back to God. Make America blessed again, and great again. 1:57:52
@angloland45399 ай бұрын
❤
@pandadaggy23832 ай бұрын
And yet they are fighting for human rights round the global 😂😂😂
@jacktran70242 ай бұрын
its funny now usa eng and france n germany are scare if fhina bysinesss
@BodegaButtons10 ай бұрын
China numba 1
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
1:34:43 The British opium trade is only end at the treaty ports, it is the Chinese merchants who imported it illegally into China and pushed it on the population.
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
Can not believe there's still something trying to white wash British opium war
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
@@ddding9518 I am not whitewashing, because I am just stating the facts with source. Also, I suspect there is something wrong with your logic as well, because e.g. I amid that opium trade is legal, but this doesn't mean I amid that is justice. You most likely think that legality in the law equals justice.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
The foreign involvement in the opium trade essentially ended at the treaty ports... Joyce Madancy, "Unearthing Popular Attitudes toward the Opium Trade and Opium Suppression in Late Qing and Early Republican Fujian," Modern China 27.4 (2001): 443
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
@@vapaus831 You quote something far from clear. If you claim opium is legal, then you didn't need a war
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
@@ddding9518 I just think that the British are legally legal, but it is up to the Qing Dynasty to decide how they want to judge.
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Panicked observers guessed that China's wealth had been reduced by 50% - the reality was probably around the 19%. Despite this perception, it is far from clear that opium was exclusively to blame for the silver famine. Julia Lovell, The Opium War (Pan Macmillan Australia, 2011)
@LarryLaird-if6sc9 ай бұрын
Britain was a land conquering county until it finally decided that it wasn't worth it and let it's conquered countries go there own way 😅
@howardmoss75228 ай бұрын
And what a waste of lives young men fighting old man's war family's plunge into depression wounded soldiers. And amputees Just left to go there The owne way Because. The british Government didn't want to spend money on then. Shame on The union jack 👀🤷
@michaelferriss45948 ай бұрын
Not really, Britian conquered for two main reasons. To control trade, or to denie territory to rivals. You can see it on the map even today, formal British colonies are centered around trade ports and rivers compared to say former French colonies that controlled large areas of land but with no value.
@mvg758 ай бұрын
U telling a false history blacks of all the nations were of that nation, America Black of all did the most traveling and trade and inventions.
@perhapsme9889 ай бұрын
Chinese should NOT blame others all the time. The Ming dynasty produced quite a few useless emperors. So much so corruption in officialdom and military became entrenched and it has continued even to today in modern China. There were perfectly ok minted coins and noted used in China as currency back to early first century AD. The Qing or last imperial dynasty had the opportunity to conduct reform brining in western technologies. But the dowager empress and most of the mandarins didn't want to change the status quo. Of course deep corruption practices drained significant resources from any initiatives. The long military campaign in Central Asia in late 1,700 that was not needed paved for the corruption in the military weakening the military further. Their additions of western technologies were mostly not fully implemented due to corrupted practices and outright embellishments. The 15 years of TaiPing Rebellion from 1850 exposed the uselessness of the imperial troops. Without the local militia and the anti-Christianity of average Chinese, the dynasty would've been toppled. (TaiPing leader claimed himself as the brother of Christ. He forced all those his troops conquered to convert to Christianity or otherwise which included deaths.) Rebellions in China happen in regularity. Every of dynasties suffered from it. Why? The backgrounds of the founding emperor of several significant dynasties. The First Emperor was the very last with royal blood or from noble background that founded a dynasty of Han Chinese control. The dynasty after that, Han dynasty, was founded by a semi-illiterate peasant. He didn't even own a piece of land and lived off his parents and brothers. His mates that helped him win the empire were mostly like him, uneducated and commoners in background. That dynasty lasted for over 400 years. The next significant Han Chinese ruled dynasty was Song dynasty. It was founded by 2 twin brothers of poor background. They were raised by their farmer grandfather since baby. The Song dynasty lasted over 300 years. The next Han Chinese ruled dynasty was Ming dynasty. It was founded by a person who till 26 years old was a serf and totally illiterate. He was only educated in a Buddhist temple after he joined the temple as a monk when the drought killed his first family. The Ming dynasty lasted just under 300 years. Han, Song and Ming dynasties among them lasted over 1,000 years of the about 2,100 years of the imperial time till 1911. The other significant dynasties (non-Han Chinese royal families) were all founded by members of royal families or of high noble class. Everyone of them with no exception. That is, the great majority of Han Chinese (92% of Chinese population) understand that they don't have to be blue blooded to win empire. Hence since the Han Dynasty time, China has suffered regular rebellions. China was ruled by non-Han Chinese groups for about half of the 2,100 years of imperial time till 1911. From mid 300's to mid 900's, China were ruled in full or mostly by people of Inner Mongolian royal families. This includes the famed Tang dynasty. In late 1,100, the ancestors of Manchu took big chunk of northern China. Then Genghis Khan defeated them. His grandson then took all China. The last imperial dynasty, Qing, was Manchu. They were in control of China for about 260 years. Hence to be invaded by outsiders is also the norm for China. It is rubbish for China to claim that they had not been invaded by outsiders. I will also add these. The first members of the royal families of Zhou and the first emperor likely didn't come from the then China. Both groups came from regions west of the province for which XiAn (where the Terracotta warriors are) is the capital. These regions, at the time of the appearance in record for the first known leaders of the state of Zhou and that of the first emperor, were NOT part of the then known China. Zhou dynasty lasted about 800 years. The first emperor had huge impact though his dynasty lasted only not even 15 years. That is when China and Chinese accuse of the west for shaming them in the so called 100 Years of Humiliation, they need to look at their own history closely. At least, in the 100 Years of Humiliation, China did not get conquered altogether. The threats for China are not from the west or Japan or Taiwan. The threats are within in China and among its minorities groups. Indeed, by taking Tibet and Xinjiang both offer natural barriers against invasion into China proper, China attracts new types of threats from Central Asia and even Pakistan, eg. Because by land, it's the easiest way to invade China not via sea... History has proven this right many a times for China..
@bunnyfreakz9 ай бұрын
tl:dr China Qing Dynasty was in peace for so long and unprepared for foreign invasion. Similar to France pre WW2. A nation with long history of military might crushed because they unprepared for big confrontation which sadly really determined their place in modern era.
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
It is British to be blamed
@gsyoou8 ай бұрын
oriental culture should first learn about the position of China and discuss what is the Central Plains Dynasty and Chinalocation of China and discuss what is the Central Plains Dynasty and China.
@PatriciaBaughman-k4n3 ай бұрын
Miller Michelle Johnson Scott Harris Daniel
@Whatahell965 ай бұрын
😅 c😮😮 c😅
@markladley29349 ай бұрын
Was this CCP funded?😂
@famouschappi9 ай бұрын
Pathetic scrotum.😂
@vapaus8319 ай бұрын
Absolutely
@ddding95189 ай бұрын
Truth hurts. If you can't face the fact, it musted be alternatively smeared
@jayliu60768 ай бұрын
Are you brainwashed? Yes.
@j05184083 ай бұрын
Ya trump is funded too Obama was funded. You seems got lost
@patrickgeyer92399 ай бұрын
Just a reminder to own unseizable bitcoin for the next hyperinflation
@thetwotravelers5469 ай бұрын
Hell you all gave that control up when it was allowed to become a ETF, so good luck on that and besides Bitcoin down 5,000 this week.