You can't deny our patriotism. My Dad signed up on his 18th birthday and shipped off to WW II in Japan shortly after. There he met my Mom and she gave us the story from the other side. She told us about kicking fire bombs out of the house and how they were all starving because the ports were blockaded. She said the starvation is what drove them to bomb Pearl Harbor because it was the US blockading. She told about the young Kamikaze pilot that came to stay with them before taking his flight, his final journey. She told us about watching the atomic bombs go off. They had no idea what they were as nothing like that had ever happened before. She said it was as bright as daylight. She told us how her family was stripped of all possessions except their house. But the amazing thing about Japan is that they have never complained or played the sympathy card. As with all things, even defeat is taken with style, integrity, and grace. My Mom was proud to be an American.
@gregoriancatmonk690411 ай бұрын
I think a big reason is because we didn't get our infrastructure bombed out of existence in WWII, infact we ramped up production to help supply the war effort and then we continued even afterwards to help rebuild after. Manufacturing probably boosted our economy for the next ten to fifteen years after the wars end.
@markpukey810 ай бұрын
It was a huge factor in our offering rebuilding assistance to everyone else. We had the capacity to supply them... so we did. If we did not we'd probably have gone right back into "the Great Depression, Part II".
@MaryBruflat10 ай бұрын
As an American I know we may fight within in oun country about politics and 1st world issues. However, if another country attacks us, the entire population will fight as one.
@mikefreeman4430Ай бұрын
They would be going up against the most heavily armed mentally unstable population on the planet😂
@cletus1n311 ай бұрын
Just wanted to point out, the Marshall plan wasn't just for Western Europe, it was offered to Eastern Europe as well; but the Soviets did not allow the Eastern European countries to accept the assistance for political reasons.
@markpukey810 ай бұрын
Good point. And if they had... it would have killed the whole idea of the USSR decades sooner! It was genius of the US and allies to offer it to Eastern Europe, and it was smart (from their POV) for the USSR to pass on the deals we offered.
@tacgenesis235611 ай бұрын
It seems like the general theme of this video is that the US is the definition of "fuck around and find out"
@Candycane-Foxy-YT5 ай бұрын
You would be correct 😂
@LarryCambronАй бұрын
Look at all the battles in US military history there is a sense of FAFO theme about it...😮
@stevedietrich893611 ай бұрын
What James is describing about little actions altering the course of future events is called "The Butterfly Effect".
@silikon25 ай бұрын
What's ironic is he's referring to the attack on Pearl Harbor when he says "little things". That's generally considered one of the most defining events in world history.
@josephkondrat647811 ай бұрын
In World War 2, the U.S. Military was about 11 percent of the total population. At that scale today the Military would be about 35 million personnel.
@brocklanders696911 ай бұрын
China has three huge problems that will impact its rise. 1) Rapid demographic collapse; 2) Inability to produce enough food to feed its population; 3) Lack of internal fossil fuels to supply it's energy needs. These will combine to limit its ability to obtain and maintain true superpower status.
@seethe4211 ай бұрын
Those 3 reasons make it impossible for China to rise I agree. China's economy, population implosion, lack of resources, lag in technology... all lead to collapse, not superpower.
@nrrork11 ай бұрын
Limited access to the Pacific ocean, too. All their shipping lanes pass through choke points controlled by countries that don't like them very much. They tolerate them for trade, but if hostilities ever broke out, they'd be cut off.
@Minotaur9211 ай бұрын
Doesn't help that the population of China hates their government. Authoritarian governments always fail over time.
@conjumonblue645011 ай бұрын
I'd add a couple of other problems. 1) Internal debt for real estate, and 2) external loans to countries that have no realistic ability to replay that debt.
@adamskeans251511 ай бұрын
massive corruption will cause them some problems as well
@jeffreystanley788411 ай бұрын
Just as an example here in Maine, a Shipyard named Bath Iron Works which still makes Navy Ships today built 82 destroyers-one-fourth of the total ordered by the Navy-launching one on an average of every 17 days from Pearl Harbor to the end of the war. Only eight of the ships were sunk during the war which has led to the moniker "Bath Built is Best Built". As a member of a Navy family I can tell you sailors love being assigned to Bath built ships.
@MrYabber11 ай бұрын
The thing about China… Mountains (33 percent), plateaus (26 percent) and hills (10 percent) account for nearly 70 percent of the country's land surface… this is NOT the case with the US. So, with that being said, 60% live on the coast of China. They can’t access their country like we can, which makes it much more expensive to grow food, sell food, and transport food, among many other things. Also…. China very nearly came to a water catastrophe last year. They cannot compete with us.
@jdwilmoth11 ай бұрын
We tried to mind our own business but Japan wouldn't let us and they paid dearly for it
@rg2032211 ай бұрын
That is a very simplistic view of why Japan reached out and attacked Hawaii, and why they militarized in the first place. Think about the US as an isolation nation, and Japan wanted the same prior to WW1, but they were taking a very different initiative during this period. They were a military state and grew and attacked prior to WW2 with China, Korea, and exploited these nations. The fact of the matter is Japan overreached and met their match. It's fortunate for Japan that the USSR at the time, on the doorstep, was pushed out. Most people do not realize that the USSR at the time was hoping to take Japan. Can you imagine what Japan would look like today?
@ooo_Kim_Chi_ooo11 ай бұрын
@@rg20322Japan attacked the US to try and divert them from intervening in Japan's invasion of the Indies. They thought Americans were weak and would back off. They were wrong.
@MrYabber11 ай бұрын
Oh yes they did.
@Tim7318-311 ай бұрын
@@ooo_Kim_Chi_oooiirc from my history classes the Japanese military heads knew that if they went into a head-on war with the USA then they wouldn’t be able to win a war of attrition since the US had vastly more men, resources and were not openly engaged in any conflict whereas Japan had already been engaged in their portion of WW2 for some time now which would basically be the equivalent of a new fighter entering the ring while the other fighter (Japan) had already gone several rounds beforehand. That’s why they thought that they could at least cripple the US navy port stationed closest to them, it was to buy them enough time so that they could expand their reach enough so that by the time the US military was able to mobilize they’d be ready to withstand the retaliation. It’s been a while since I’ve brushed up on WW2 stuff though so I could be misremembering the details so feel free to take what I said with a grain of salt.
@ooo_Kim_Chi_ooo11 ай бұрын
@@Tim7318-3 Yamamoto thought the entire plan to attack Pearl Harbor was a bad idea.
@LtNoTaco11 ай бұрын
It used to be any country would be considered a ‘Super Power’ if that country was able to fight at least 2 Wars anywhere simultaneously.
@lalida643211 ай бұрын
I’m reading ‘The Arsenal of Democracy’ by AJ Baime. It’s a fascinating look at how the Ford Motor Company and the Detroit Automotive Industry mobilized to play catch up and beat Germany in their production of bomber planes. It’s a fascinating read.
@quantum_cricket855510 ай бұрын
👍🏼👍🏼
@kokomo976411 ай бұрын
The vast majority of the US debt is not foreign debt. It is internal debt to other government agencies, civilians, and other investors. People go on and on about the debt, but it is not a huge problem. Of the 32 trillion in total debt, only 7.3 trillion, less than 3%, is owed to other countries. The reason is that other countries invest in the US because it is by far the safest place to invest. It isn't like the US is borrowing money to fund industry. The US is also one of the very few countries that can roll this debt over when it comes due. When bonds become due, they are simply replaced with new bonds, which countries readily accept. Japan is the largest investor in the US, China is second.
@danamarie871811 ай бұрын
LOL, you need to check your math!
@cherylfromkittery23866 ай бұрын
Also look at other countries debt ours is nothing
@bowillieman11 ай бұрын
Basically you can thank us for anime because Japans been drawing cartoons ever since the explosion.
@lalida643211 ай бұрын
Gen X was the last generation to remember the world divided in two between the US and USSR. It was a completely different world back then. In so many ways.
@peteg47511 ай бұрын
I believe the last year the US was not the world's number one economy was 1880.
@randyranderson69010 ай бұрын
Not just our resources but during WW2 the US had massive community led metal scrap gathering organizations used for the war machine. Even kids gathered scrap for the war effort
@lindaclark786811 ай бұрын
We have your back, UK!
@terrygore11511 ай бұрын
Love you guys. Great show! Keep'in comin"
@craigcox130910 ай бұрын
Being a superpower really comes down to 2 things… #1 it’s not as important that you have a large military or nuclear weapons, but rather it’s about "force projection". The US can project its military might anywhere in the world, in a short amount of time. Whether it’s in the air, under the sea, on land, even into space to some degree. #2. It’s not about GDP, it’s more about "Industrial might". In this area the US has fallen off its once high perch. Put both together and your a superpower. While China has a large Industrial base and a large military. They really can’t project their military anywhere in the world (yet). But China is getting close.
@jesseDelisle11 ай бұрын
I would say the only people that can actually have a definitive opinion on “ what a superpower is” are those who are actually a superpower. Most agree that it is the ability to project and sustain military strength and superiority anywhere in the world.
@seancompeau74111 ай бұрын
Don’t Poke the sleeping bear!!! Semper Fidelis
@Que68411 ай бұрын
Youre are a superpower if you are able to project that power around the world (example bases around the world)
@BrLoc11 ай бұрын
China has a small and insignificant Navy. They are essentially land locked. They cannot transport extreme large numbers of soldiers anywhere to be any threat outside of Asia. They can defend China and attack locally but that's about all. And Xi has many enemies inside China that are after his job. His ships seem to have a lot of "accidents".
@justicegaminginc11 ай бұрын
As an American I think we need to take a couple steps back from being a world influencer and just focus on our own country for a bit cause we struggling over here.
@markpukey810 ай бұрын
Pappy Bush saw the USSR fall apart and tried to get America to discuss the beauty of a post Soviet world. So we voted him right-the-fuck out of office. Clinton was fine with leaving most of the world alone. Shrub Bush tried to do this too. Idiot Al Queda attacked us and led to the US spending 20+ years trying to change the world. Obama tried to do this but had to deal with lingering Bush stupidity keeping us in Iraq and Afghanistan. He got us out of Iraq. Idiot Trump tried to get us out of Afghanistan but his tiny testicles meant he could only declare a withdrawal AFTER he left office. So Biden got us out. EVERY American President since 1989 has TRIED to get us to stop being a world influencer but outside effects keep us meddling! I don't understand why our enemies don't grasp that if they just let us... we would be DELIGHTED to leave them alone again! Most Americans would be very happy to let everyone else blow each other up and leave us alone. We don't need their money, we don't need their food, we don't need their oil... we don't even need their TV's, cell phones and other crap. Give us 2 - 5 years and we can work with Mexico to build EVERYTHING we need and won't build here!
@primal123311 ай бұрын
It's really interesting to see how the US became a superpower
@jeffferguson463711 ай бұрын
5:04 hello
@jeffferguson463711 ай бұрын
Sorry I missed ur message for 2 hours I was driving !
@jeffferguson463711 ай бұрын
Love ur channel
@n545ca19 ай бұрын
And all this today with an all volunteer force.
@strngenchantedgirl11 ай бұрын
The US entry into WWII was inevitable. With Japan allied with Germany and Japan determined to take US and UK territories in the Asia Pacific region. The US knew Japan would attack especially after they put sanctions on Japan. They just thought Japan would attack the Philippines or another base in that region. The US is also so involved in the international economy that it’s impossible to stay isolationist.
@SolTerran505011 ай бұрын
If you want to know the industrial capabilities of the U.S in WW2, there are You Tube videos entitled "War factories" of WW2
@BrianMiss11 ай бұрын
My one question is how much foreign debt is from foreign aid... What is that ratio?
@lockaby111 ай бұрын
Ijust went to google earth and looks like jersy town is more farm lands than anything
@rtth46510 ай бұрын
Superpower with Super Debts
@bnferguson98279 ай бұрын
Im an american and we do consider the UK our brothers & sisters and i'm very confident it will always stay that way. We have too much history between us.
@Pyrrhic.11 ай бұрын
The comment about national debt and trade deficit of the US is misleading. There is an economic paradox called triffin’s dilemma. It says that if a country is the holder of a world currency reserve (USD), then the country will run massive trade deficits, which is necessary to provide dollars to the world. Additionally, these dollars held outside of the US are invested into the US financial system, especially with treasury bonds. Hence you have federal deficit spending to inject dollars back into the US economy. So as long as the US dollar remains a reserve currency, the US national debt is just an accounting tool
@gracegibby256411 ай бұрын
The week before Pearl Harbor Japan had gifted us a friendship medal stating our nations were friends while having this attack planned months beforehand. Besides the fact it was a Sunday morning and everyone was watching sports or at church our guard was also down because of this. America wanted to prove to Japan that they were not as invincible as they think because of their distance from us so American soldiers volunteered to fly planes to Japan and bomb Tokyo knowing they most likely would die or become pow to china. There is actually a photo of them with the bombs they dropped on Tokyo, they had strapped that friendship medal to the bombs they dropped. I believe the photo is titled something like “returning the favor” or “sending the medal back home”. Even more bitter is after Japan surrendered we made them what to sign surrender (and lose their military) so that we could sail one of the few ships to survive Pearl Harbor to Japan and made them sign surrender to us on that ship. Also because of Pearl Harbor America switched factories over practically overnight, rationed all supplies to go to the war cause, and was the most the largest production of military equipment in such a short time. This is why today there remains a system in the government that when called upon factories can switch over to supply anything they need to quickly.
@gracegibby256411 ай бұрын
We made them wait* sorry😅
@MisterRoads11 ай бұрын
Thumbnails are looking a lot more intriguing. I’m liking the channel growth
@melissabill164011 ай бұрын
My god you can swim to France! 😀
@octaviusmorlock11 ай бұрын
For _defining_ a superpower, I'd say it's how much a country can effect global politics. One other note: President Woodrow Wilson wanted to be more involved with global affairs. The rest of the country _didn't._
@rcpainter302311 ай бұрын
The U.S. attitude is still a bit of the same today, I believe. We enjoy our country and just want to get on with living it with our family and friends and not bother with the rest of the world. Most of the fighting is internal and that's all we really care more about than worldly affairs. We just want to mind our own business until, of course, the rest of the world reminds us otherwise. I think many of us would rather not be so dominant and so involved in worldly affairs but at the same time we can't just sit by and not do what we can to assist where we can, if we can because even we realize the mess outside will eventually reach us and by then it may be too late to do much about it. But I also believe it's the American spirit, at least mostly, to aid our neighbors when we can. I mean, who likes a bully? That is something as an American I think we detest more than anything. The idea that someone or some organization feels they have the right to impose their will over another or other's. That's part of what we mean by Freedom here. I'm sure there are many out there who look at America as the world bully but we never really asked for this. I'm betting none of us ever wanted to be this involved but then the world decided to come crashing into our neighbors and friends house and we reluctantly had to drop the Xbox and Hotdogs and help em out if we could... and we're like "sigh", Not Again! 😆
@timesthree575711 ай бұрын
I think that is the reason we fight so hard. We are pissed that we can't just be left alone or leave our friends alone.
@DebiB534 ай бұрын
American's are not bullies and don't want war. But, when Japan bombed Hawaii, so many ran to sign up and fight, even underage citizens, my dad was one... We are not bullies, but we will not back down, we will fight, and win!! Thank you both for your awesome reactions. Love you Brits!!!
@alapaticornell43916 ай бұрын
S P. In their Dreans😢 Blessings to Taiwán & Ukraine. Luv u 2 Hong Kong❤
@vincentdarrah11 ай бұрын
Don't forget, one of the issues in the Declaration of Independence was a standing army, We haven't had a draft since the Vietnam war ended in 1973, and one reason also that we dont need a large number of people in our military is our National Guard and Reserves. These are part time or inactive military personell (in the case of the reserves), who are under the control of their state Governors. They report to 2 weeks of training once a year and are activated 1 weekend a month. In a National emergency they can be federalized. Also, after 9/11 for instance, many Americans signed up and went to Iraq and Afghanistan, so this idea we have a small military is just not true
@markpukey810 ай бұрын
For those in other nations... the US National Guard is not like most "home defense forces". Not only do they train 2 weeks a year, they also have MODERN US EQUIPMENT! Every state has its own National Guard detachment and every one of them has tanks, artillery and it's own small air force that has F16's and other equipment that any other nation would be DELIGHTED to consider their front line battle gear. They also train on the same comm equipment... so they can coordinate kicking your ass if you invade. It is unlikely any attacker could land a sizable attack force without the US Navy sinking most of them... but if they did... well over 2/3 of the US Military is stationed along our coasts or near our population centers... with their tanks, artillery, etc.... But if that failed to ruin the invaders day... any one of our coastal states could mount a massive defense and every other state would use our excellent interstate highways to move hundreds of pieces of military gear as well as fly their fighters to air fields close to our coasts to support each other. So yeah, anyone thinking our relatively small "official military" is all they have to worry about is very, very wrong.
@vincentdarrah10 ай бұрын
@@markpukey8 you forgot our satellite defense system
@markpukey810 ай бұрын
@@vincentdarrahTrue. There is zero chance we won't see you coming long before you get close enough to invade.
@brianblair524811 ай бұрын
I love watching yall and glad to see yall still together yall are great im from ohatchee AL and hope yall check all out on your next trip to the us
@Safelink-t2k11 ай бұрын
We love the England we are brothers for life
@christopherstephenjenksbsg494411 ай бұрын
As an American in my mid 60s, I remember the Cold War with the Soviets very well. It was scary. We had the Cuban Missile Crisis and duck and cover drills at school. We had PSAs on TV describing what to do if you see the dreaded bright flash of a nuclear bomb. These were aired during children's cartoon shows! In New York City, we had the air raid sirens tested at noon every day. Add to this the ongoing Vietnam War, with its compulsory draft, and I seriously thought that I would never make it to adulthood. All empires in human history fall, and being a "superpower" is similar to being an empire. We may not have direct political control over our allies, like the British Empire had over its coloneys, but we have a great deal of influence. Unless the countries of the world figure out a fundamentally different way of interacting with one another, the continuous rise and fall of empires or super powers will continue.
@claudiaclark616211 ай бұрын
Me too! If you see the dreaded bright flash it is already too late to worry about it.
@JustMe-gn6yf11 ай бұрын
I'm 63 and remember it all too well because I was born on a Navy base my dad was in the Navy and served 20 years and spent the first 16 years of my life living on or near a Navy base all during the Cold war and Vietnam , we had duck and cover drills and some base schools had bomb shelters
@JPMadden11 ай бұрын
I'm 53 and had a very different experience in school in the 1980s. There were no more "duck and cover" drills. I saw the films "WarGames" and "The Day After" in 1983. There was the 1985 song "Russians" by Sting, with the lyrics "I hope the Russians love their children too" and "There's no such thing as a winnable war, it's a lie we don't believe any more." Both sides had accumulated many thousands of nuclear weapons by then. Few if any people still talked about surviving a nuclear war. We had come to understand that it would be the end of humanity. I remember having a class discussion in 1986 or 1987 about what we would do if we heard the USSR had launched its missiles. The consensus was that the most sensible course of action would be to immediately drive toward the likely-targeted Air National Guard base nearby to ensure we could not suffer the horrors of radiation sickness and nuclear winter. But this discussion had the feel of gallows humor rather than genuine fear. We were laughing. Relations with the USSR were improving. The idea of an intentional nuclear exchange was too absurd to take seriously.
@christopherstephenjenksbsg494411 ай бұрын
@@JPMadden I remember gallows humor aspect of this very well. I was already well into adulthood by 1986, but I do remember a friend responding to the missile launch question with the remark, "I would run to ground zero and catch the bomb." In other words, he wanted to be instantly incinerated.
@userrrrrxx13511 ай бұрын
For eg. your duck and drill was created because of your own paranoia. Us people were always mentally ill.
@jeffferguson463711 ай бұрын
The. USA says fuck with us ur fucking with the best bring it on y’all
@MA-jd4ui11 ай бұрын
Great video is always a hope all 3 are doing well Stay safe and may God bless all 3 ❤
@MaryBruflat10 ай бұрын
Japan awoke a sleeping giant. BTW my family and I love you guys.
@warrenbfeagins8 ай бұрын
We ain't playing around. 🇺🇲❤️🪖
@scottdemus961411 ай бұрын
And thats why the sun rose on japan 2x xd
@josephharrison563911 ай бұрын
As an American born post 9/11 I find the amount of history that occurred in the past 100 years insane
@InstrucTube11 ай бұрын
I was pre 9/11 but yeah, in any measurable metric the last century has been insane. Population, wars, technology, etc. It has all exploded, sometimes literally.
@jonadabtheunsightly11 ай бұрын
To me, "superpower" means two things. First, you are the most powerful nation in your own immediate vicinity. Second, you can exert *more* influence on a typical country outside your immediate vicinity, than the powers that are closer to them can exert. This definition has some wiggle room, but it's a good starting point. The way I see it, the previous superpower (before WWII) was England; which was the most powerful nation in Europe and exerted more power and influence on, say, India, than nearby powers like China and Japan were able to do. The _first_ superpower in recorded history, was Egypt, but that was a long time ago. (Apart from external dominating powers like the Greeks and Romans and British, no government of Egypt has exerted significant power outside their own immediate vicinity for over two and a half millennia.) There usually aren't three superpowers in the world at once. Sometimes there aren't really any (e.g., during the diadochi). For most of the Cold War era there were two, and then after the curtain came down, just one for a while.
@uneasingcoma565211 ай бұрын
Guys need to get a better camera, almost 200k viewers good job lads
@jeffreystanley788411 ай бұрын
On China... they have a couple major issues. First the "One Child Mandate" has caused their demographic population tree to be an upside down triangle which means they dont have enough young people to grow their country and support the massive older generations who have retired. (Over-simplified but you get the point) China cant feed its own population without importing the raw materials and they cant fuel their industry without Oil and Natural Gas from Russia or the Middle East where the US could supply all of our needs for oil and Gas for over a century if we had to and coukd feed our people without help from other countries if needed as we have some of the most fertile farm land in the world.
@tainorican7411 ай бұрын
no to mention many of us in America are Gun owners not all but many are. American civilians own 46% (approximately 393.3 million) of the world's 857 million civilian-use firearms. Montana has the highest amount of gun owners (66.3%). Wyoming has the most guns per capita, with 245.8 firearms for every 1,000 residents.
@KBos7211 ай бұрын
It's interesting, because, as an old(er) person, it's weird to think there are younger people who never saw the USSR.
@carleryk11 ай бұрын
Just to clarify something. Many of the countries that 'appeared' after Soviet Union's collapse were independent before. Like my home country Estonia These countries were occupied and annexed by Soviet Union and suffered greatly. Genocide of local nations, deportations, Russification (including mass immigration/colonization of Russians), to name a few. The consequences are still here even in the fact that most of the world sees Estonia as eastern or ex-soviet when in reality we consider ourselves Northern since we are closest nation to Finland linguistically, culturally and genetically.
@chetgoodenough874911 ай бұрын
Thank god im to old for selective services now. Im sure if it got bad enought tho.
@FuzzyMarineVet11 ай бұрын
The reason the United Nations Alliance won WWII was that they were the masters of logistics. And the one member nation that was overall best at logistics was the United States of America. After the war the United States expanded that logistics mastery to allow us to project power anywhere in the world in a short period of time.
@billholemo251811 ай бұрын
Beeleys, Do you all Think, America Will Ever stop, Pushing the World toward Freedom? NO.😂 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Lemondrop15711 ай бұрын
What?
@TheIceman56710 ай бұрын
same as well born in '86 never knew the cold war was to young when it ended
@jacenjustice11 ай бұрын
I hit the subscribe button twice!
@2strokinit52711 ай бұрын
Poking the bear is never a good idea. This is also FAFO!
@sammydabull31810 ай бұрын
I am sure people have said this but what if the archduke did not get assassinated in 1914 and there was no WWI how would the world look today?
@121Corey12111 ай бұрын
Subscribe to these two! Of course he is more into it than her, but they still are a great joy! 👍
@jasoncordial473011 ай бұрын
I don't know how the cold War was there, but growing up in the US we had bomb drills in school. Much like fire drills. We were told to get under our desks and cover our heads.
@jasoncordial473011 ай бұрын
About what?
@t0mahawkj0nes10 ай бұрын
You should watch the butterfly effect good movie.
@davidburns537411 ай бұрын
No other country in the history of the world has amassed so much power and used it for good. We Americans are among the most peaceful people in the world but that doesn't mean we won't come together and annihilate anyone foolish enough to threaten us.
@sector98611 ай бұрын
I was born when the Soviet Union was still around. 😂
@chazf88311 ай бұрын
Hello James and Millie from Tulsa😊 it's cool and rainy here. But my cowboys won tonight and I'm ready for a good video from you guys. Here we go.... Wait, I wanted to say I hope things with little Archie are going well and that is nice and healthy. You guys are such a great couple I hope for nothing but the best for you guys.
@-JA-11 ай бұрын
❤️🇬🇧🇺🇸❤️
@Bryan3161711 ай бұрын
Lol i watched the golf war on tv in 1990/1991 on tve as a 5/6 yr old
@missnerdlady9390Ай бұрын
History is interesting had Japan not assumed we were about to attack we probably wouldn’t have joined the war, we had zero interest before hand, and it was during that time we boomed. So Japan kinda shot itself in the foot there. But hey we’re friendly now :)
@Kovitlac6 ай бұрын
Sadly, it doesn't feel like the US is very unified anymore. I'm not sure if people have ever been SO intensely divided over so many issues, before. I absolutely love my country, and I want to see things turn around. As horrific as it was (and I'm not saying I want something like this happen again AT ALL), the time period immediately following 9/11 might have been the most unified I've ever seen my country.
@williambranch428311 ай бұрын
Geography, resources, people.
@InstrucTube11 ай бұрын
Surprisingly enough, the atomic bombs actually killed less people than the firebombing did, or at least that's what I've been told by what I would consider reputable sources. I was around when the Soviets collapsed, but I was still young enough I don't really remember it. I was born in 88.
@markphillips931111 ай бұрын
Same here I was born in 89
@LarryCambron27 күн бұрын
Don't mess with our boats..👿
@ericsierra-franco780210 ай бұрын
WWI was so cataclysmic to Europe that it helped accelerate the rise of the US as a hegemonic power.
@zzkeokizz11 ай бұрын
I’ve been to Pearl Harbor.
@AndyMcGehee5 ай бұрын
All great nation-states eventually decline. By the end of this century, I suspect that the US and the UK will be like two old men having a pint down at the pub and talking about the “good old days”, viewed through rose-colored glasses, of course.
@417jumps311 ай бұрын
War doesn’t determine a winner or loser but who’s left…
@tofargone1611 ай бұрын
If Pearl Harbor had never happened; you would be speaking German. Instead of, Blimey!, it would be, Blod!
@jamescrouchet128311 ай бұрын
The atomic bomb ending the war was a myth that served both the US and Japan. In truth, the previous firebomb attacks killed cities just as dead as an A bomb. The real reason for the Japanese surrender to the US is that Japan was collapsing and the Soviets were staging an invasion. They would have killed every single Japanese noble as well as, obviously, the emperor. Probably most Japanese officers as well, and conducted progroms against anyone who did not fall in line with the communist agenda. They had done exactly that against their own people in the communist revolution and would have conducted the same terror campaign inside Japan. The US, by contrast, didn't purge the nobles or officers and even allowed them to keep their emperor through without meaningful political power.
@jeffashley551211 ай бұрын
China is facing more than economic problems. They are facing a population problem due to the one child policy. Their population is unbalanced between the old and young. I've seen estimates that within 50 years they will collapse from economic contraction and population decline. Side Note: I was born in 1968 and know the cold war well and personally you young'uns are younger than my children but are close enough in age to think of you as I would my children. 😁
@usmc24thmeu3611 ай бұрын
China is gradually sliding backwards.
@nesseihtgnay941910 ай бұрын
Debt is what makes the world go round, the US lives off debt
@jaylo-ov9fj10 ай бұрын
It's funny how America is always being underestimated in the world stage. But we should never do the same with the rest of the world as well
@briandaugherty868111 ай бұрын
More sports reactions
@GilaMonster97111 ай бұрын
The US needs to go back to being isolationists. The world and our own people would be better off.
@blafonovision434211 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@timothyrenar549811 ай бұрын
@@blafonovision4342 U.S. citizen here. If that's the case then why do many countries ask or demand foreign aid from the U.S. if the rest of the world could hold it's own. Also without the help of the U.S. there is a good possibility that Hitler would have had different plans for everyone who is making comments here. Personally I would prefer the U.S. being isolationists but we have a crap load of people coming here from other countries so you can't have your cake and eat it to. Live with it.
@blafonovision434211 ай бұрын
@@timothyrenar5498 First, I really don’t care about Hitler. He was Europe’s problem, not ours. Why should we care if the rest of the world can or can’t hold its own? Not in the Western Hemisphere? Not our business. There is a hard limit to the number of people who can make it here from Central and South America. The rest, we can shoot down planes, and sink boats. So don’t worry about illegal immigration.
@ssjwes11 ай бұрын
Funny
@iDeagles11 ай бұрын
@@timothyrenar5498 Countries keep asking/demanding because we give it to them. It's like having $100 of your own but asking your friend for a $20 because then you'll have $120. That's their mentality. They'll usually do it under the guise of 'I'll pay you back' but that day never seems to come. To this day, Russia owes us for WWII equipment. Of course we'll never see that. Aside from the obvious conflict at hand, everyone just treats American tax dollars like a charity. They always have. It was only a matter of time before we decided enough was enough. That's why the isolationist pendulum is coming back........ and hard. Side note, you ever notice how everyone talks 💩about America on basically any topic? It's like an abusive relationship but we keep going back, giving them more money and saying sorry for something we didn't do.🤣
@nacy5511 ай бұрын
If I may I'd like to suggest watching the series called band of Brothers.. it is very good.
@ryanlaymon232911 ай бұрын
They have You can find it on their page
@Longhauler8511 ай бұрын
They reacted to the whole series 😉
@Kovitlac6 ай бұрын
At this point, I wish we weren't SO into all the world's affairs... I'm not saying we should be complete isolationists, and I do believe multiple countries can be stronger when they work together and that the US should be a world leader. But at this point, politicians care more about flashing US tax dollars around the whole world and making friend abroad while Americans ourselves are financially struggling. I wish we would withdraw, just some, and refocus efforts on improving the issues WE have. Sorry, just felt like leaving 2 comments, lol.
@raymondascencio437911 ай бұрын
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@Lemondrop15711 ай бұрын
🦅🦅🦅
@marksmith489211 ай бұрын
Ah, no, that is not accurate to say we created a Government in Japan for the purpose of being favorable to the U.S. All we did was replicate our own Constitutional model and provide defense because we outlawed them from building their military back up and attacking us again, obviously. The fact is the Japanese emperor himself thanked us for helping them rebuild the economy and create a system based on civil rights. They have flourished as a society ever since. We did not abuse or oppress them after the surrender. We simply gave them our own model rebuilt their infrastructure and withdrew. We did the same thing in Germany and look at the western half. It was prosperous and free while the communist side lived under total surveillance and privation.
@cshubs11 ай бұрын
The US fire bombed scores of Japan's cities. The 2 atomic bombs get the headlines, but the fire bombings killed far more people.
@mitchellmiller2493 ай бұрын
I'm american and I think we should of taken China, Britain, Japan, Germany, Russia, ex for our own since Britain for example and China are so ungrateful even though us Americans saved them all from extinction.
@jonathanlindsey46310 ай бұрын
did u actually say trying to become a corrupt superpower??? around the 8:30 time of the video?
@jonathanfreedom1st11 ай бұрын
You try to bring the war to us, you just brought "the" wrath of hell down on yourself. 🇺🇲 "Somebody" 🤷🏽♂️
@JILL0704USA10 ай бұрын
US economy has been in trouble since January 2021 and it's getting worse. Inflation skyrocketed. We became, once again, dependent on foreign oil. We had been oil independent from approximately January 2016 until January 21st 2021.
@marksmith489211 ай бұрын
We really are homebodies. We dominate the planet but don't want to leave the house lol