How Geography Made The US Ridiculously OP

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RealLifeLore

RealLifeLore

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 19 000
@RealLifeLore
@RealLifeLore 2 жыл бұрын
I know this is a super long video, but there's really just too much to cover. I could've spent hours on this subject. Anyway, if you want to watch another 40-minute long video covering the entire US War in Afghanistan from beginning to end, you can check it out here on Nebula: bit.ly/3B05iUU. You can watch that one for free, and if you want to watch some of the other 15 episodes I have in the Modern Conflicts series, the best way to get access is just by signing up for the Nebula/CuriosityStream bundle for $14.79 a year here: curiositystream.com/?coupon=reallifelore New episodes in that series are releasing every single month on Nebula! Thanks, Joseph
@TryPie256
@TryPie256 2 жыл бұрын
I apologize for spamming in your former video. I am a disgraceful troll. I am a changed man now.
@carrotepic
@carrotepic 2 жыл бұрын
Would love to support you and sign up but no option for paypal. :(
@TheDudeOfLife1
@TheDudeOfLife1 2 жыл бұрын
Finally I Could Do Something For 40 MINUTES!
@footballcountries
@footballcountries 2 жыл бұрын
Hi 😁 ur vids are cool
@TheProtagonistDies
@TheProtagonistDies 2 жыл бұрын
but super good! thanks joseph
@jjohansen86
@jjohansen86 2 жыл бұрын
21:55 I remember someone once saying that, while the US has many great allies, their staunchest, most reliable allies are the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.
@christopherrosepink9290
@christopherrosepink9290 2 жыл бұрын
Great quote
@theax40
@theax40 2 жыл бұрын
In addition to that, Canada and Mexico. Canada is one of our greatest allies and while our relationship with Mexico isn't quite as stable, we really have no worries of being invaded by a foreign army through our northern or southern borders.
@overworlder
@overworlder 2 жыл бұрын
And the top allies from the US POV are the ones that act as bastions to guard the far shores of those oceans - NATO, Japan, Korea, Australia, dare I say Taiwan.
@chaost4544
@chaost4544 2 жыл бұрын
@@theax40 the geography of the north and southern borders would make it a logistical nightmare anyways.
@kaleb5926
@kaleb5926 2 жыл бұрын
@@theax40 Canada is the US's bitch. Not even worth calling an ally. Its basically wordplay to say theyre two different countries.
@GET1237
@GET1237 2 жыл бұрын
As a Canadian, I am incredibly thankful to border the USA. Despite its problems, I can't think of a better neighbour we could possibly have.
@email5023
@email5023 2 жыл бұрын
Soviet Canuckistan is a socialist hell.
@vyros.3234
@vyros.3234 2 жыл бұрын
Canada will be a future American territory. Same with Greenland.
@ThatColtGuy
@ThatColtGuy 2 жыл бұрын
@@sargonassarg4356 I hope your joking, Biden is an utter joke. You believe the news networks with their “MAGA extremists” push is pathetic. The US and the world are doing worse since Biden has taken office ffs.
@chendaforest
@chendaforest 2 жыл бұрын
The USA is also lucky to have a small, friendly, stable neighbour to the north.
@UniquelyCritical
@UniquelyCritical 2 жыл бұрын
Aww... Sad Denmark here.
@ashkumar375
@ashkumar375 2 жыл бұрын
It makes total sense that any downfall of the United States would not come because of an external threat owning to its geographic, geological or geopolitical strengths, but instead because of its domestic weaknesses. The Roman Empire collapsed from within.
@frenchonion4595
@frenchonion4595 2 жыл бұрын
We are a super spoiled society that has resorted to fighting each other out of boredom. Most we have ever been united was ww2 been going down hill ever since
@prabs1047
@prabs1047 2 жыл бұрын
@@frenchonion4595 yea I wouldn't be surprised if the people of the USA got manipulated into voting for an another country's leader.
@gilangp2011
@gilangp2011 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, i can see it very clear that American society is rotting and hard to make happy family.
@soccom8341576
@soccom8341576 2 жыл бұрын
The radical left, the Big pharma, industrial complexes, the Tiktok subversion, the destabilization by the CCP and Russia, are all threats that everyone needs to wake up to and ostracize.
@Racko.
@Racko. 2 жыл бұрын
@@frenchonion4595 Thank propaganda and the political parties that intentionally divided the ppl so they can be busy fighting each other as a distraction so the elites can get away with stuff like corruption and dishonesty
@CaptainOverLoad
@CaptainOverLoad Жыл бұрын
I have been to all 50 united states and over 6000 towns and cities and almost all of the nation parks. This country is crazy from a geography standpoint. It is absolutely amazing that we where able to cross that on foot, wagon and horse only a few centuries ago. It is very hard to believe.
@troyjusticecabrera7284
@troyjusticecabrera7284 Жыл бұрын
If I were to ask you, which state would you say has the best/most beautiful city? In your opinion. And which state is the best/most beautiful as well?
@CaptainOverLoad
@CaptainOverLoad Жыл бұрын
@@troyjusticecabrera7284 That is such a incredibly hard and complicated question. I'm actually not sure I could answer. I really like Florida but I've been here most of my life so my bais of Tampa FL is high. I think a better question would be what are you looking for in a city. How big do you want it. Do you want steeples for miles like new York, or something that isn't too grown. What night life's are you looking for. What laws are you concerned about exc.
@jrev2284
@jrev2284 Жыл бұрын
Recently went out to the midwest and I was in awe at the beauty and was wondering how tf did people cross these mountains on foot
@sfdko3291
@sfdko3291 Жыл бұрын
This is Eden
@JohnTovar-ks8dp
@JohnTovar-ks8dp Жыл бұрын
It'll be the same with the galaxy.
@oriontigley5089
@oriontigley5089 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, if you get an nearly an entire continent as your country, with only allies and oceans sorrounding you, your geography tends to be pretty OP *Edit:* to all those saying Australia, I'm not counting it because it doesn't nearly have as much variety in biomes and natural resources. It's more one big island than a real continent. The Americas have every natural resource in one self contained landmass.
@Ninja-eh4cu
@Ninja-eh4cu Жыл бұрын
yeah, especially having an equally as big country thats hard to invade due to the snowy terrain as your ally and the uk n stuff too
@JosieCote
@JosieCote Жыл бұрын
What does OP mean?
@oriontigley5089
@oriontigley5089 Жыл бұрын
@@JosieCote "OP" stands for "Over Powered" in this context, though it can also mean "Original Poster" on online forums.
@JosieCote
@JosieCote Жыл бұрын
@@oriontigley5089 thanks for the explanation. It’s kind of confusing because “over powered” means that something/someone is weak and less powerful than others. So maybe it means “overly powerful”? That would make a lot more sense to me, because USA is rather quite powerful 🤔
@oriontigley5089
@oriontigley5089 Жыл бұрын
@@JosieCote When used as a verb, sure. But in this case, it's used as an adjective. I've never heard of anyone associating "over powered" in descriptive contexts with weakness. I've always compared it to words like "over clocked" and "over charged" I believe the original etymology comes from Video Game slang, where a player character would be unfairly "overpowered", as in given too much power by devs in comparison to others, thus making the game unbalanced.
@TheElizondo88
@TheElizondo88 2 жыл бұрын
You could have also mentioned the easy access to vast deposits of coal, copper and iron in Appalachia and Great Lakes which allowed for the quick and early industrialization of the region. And that even the parts of the county without navigable rivers (i.e. the southwest) has a vast mineral wealth to make up for it.
@animeturnMMD
@animeturnMMD 2 жыл бұрын
Also, the majority of the country is flat, making it easier to build roads, infrastructure and train rails. In a mountainous country, building this kind of transportation infrastructure can cost three or four times more, plus the seasonal weather causes less damage to infrastructures (this is an advantage of all countries with seasons). In an equatorial country, where one day can be sunny, another rainy, others cold or hot, these changes in weather and temperature severely punish the infrastructure, making it even more costly to build and maintain.
@matthewbostelman2487
@matthewbostelman2487 2 жыл бұрын
among us
@MsGazpugh
@MsGazpugh 2 жыл бұрын
among us
@eanmillerphotos
@eanmillerphotos 2 жыл бұрын
@@MsGazpugh among us
@zeffery101
@zeffery101 2 жыл бұрын
i swear the founding fathers made a deal w/ the devil or smthng. The US has vast amounts of every single profitable and essential resource like how?
@kennethwright5664
@kennethwright5664 Жыл бұрын
"Rivers are basically free to use." Every civil engineer hearing this immediately starts to twitch in disbelief.
@Go_40subscribers.
@Go_40subscribers. Жыл бұрын
@@viper2148 True 😂
@Go_40subscribers.
@Go_40subscribers. Жыл бұрын
@@kentuckyfan0619 I made one about Qatar Going to make more soon fam💯 it’s in the works
@Go_40subscribers.
@Go_40subscribers. Жыл бұрын
@@kentuckyfan0619 gotchu bro preciate it 💯
@OccidentalonPurpose
@OccidentalonPurpose Жыл бұрын
And every indigenous person when they heard "given to the United States."
@ProfJasonC
@ProfJasonC Жыл бұрын
What do you mean by that? Not challenging you at all, I have no expertise in this area, I am genuinely curious.
@Joooooooooooosh
@Joooooooooooosh 9 ай бұрын
Man I thought I loved America. This guy sounded thoroughly awestruck throughout this entire video.
@jeepmega629
@jeepmega629 2 жыл бұрын
We always talked about the importance of the Nile or the Danube in school, but we really should have been talking about the Mississippi this whole time.
@nole8923
@nole8923 2 жыл бұрын
Well, unlike the Nile the Mississippi doesn’t flow in the middle of a freaking desert and unlike the Danube it isn’t soaked in blood over thousands of years of international strife. Yes, the Mississippi may be the greatest river in terms of navigation and commerce, but its history other than the civil war is rather boring. Not too much drama to where the Nile and Danube have epic stories surrounding it.
@elliottparks8762
@elliottparks8762 2 жыл бұрын
@nole 89 eh, they're all three important, just for different reasons. U.S. education just frequently fails to teach economics beyond specific events.
@mrbisshie
@mrbisshie Жыл бұрын
Talking about the Mississippi river would involve hours of talking about Mosquitoes.
@bruzote
@bruzote Жыл бұрын
@@mrbisshie - And the Army Corps of Engineers.
@gwho
@gwho Жыл бұрын
History in us schools never cover Liberia. It's astounding that they do not, especially with so much race politics
@JDMB001
@JDMB001 2 жыл бұрын
I question if the civilisation start point in North America would still have inevitably turned into a global dominant super power (as you mentioned at the start of the video) if it were split into many countries like in Europe. I would argue that the geopolitical movement turning North America into the one nation is by far the greatest advantage.....complimented by a great piece of land.
@julioalvarez9650
@julioalvarez9650 2 жыл бұрын
Very doubtful, especially if it was split into different countries with different languages and cultures. That's what's baffling about people calling for secession nowadays: They don't realize how vulnerable a fractured USA would be and how many benefits of being one nation would go down the drain, but the US's enemies are very aware of it and like to stoke the flames of discord.
@FirebirdPrince
@FirebirdPrince 2 жыл бұрын
Changing the civilization start point would just dramatically change so much. But i can see one constant being a strong power or two centered around the Mississippi throwing around a lot of weight
@Simboiss
@Simboiss 2 жыл бұрын
@@julioalvarez9650 I think the exact opposite. For the sake of cultural coherency and less conflict, I think the USA (and Canada) should break up into 4-5 countries. Each country would have their own sovereignty but also their own cultures and specialization. One single administration for 325 million people is untenable.
@CleverAccountName303
@CleverAccountName303 2 жыл бұрын
@@Simboiss Generally speaking, a single administration over a larger amount of people is more stable than smaller divisions. It is more likely to be moderate in its social, political, and economic policies because it is harder for an extreme faction to dominate a larger population than a smaller one. It is also much less likely to be invaded and taken over by an outside power. The US government under its current constitution is at the top of the list for oldest continuous governments currently in existence, and if you look at longest uninterrupted forms of governments in historical times, most of them are the largest states/empires of their time.
@clarenceartman7487
@clarenceartman7487 2 жыл бұрын
I've seen videos talking about the various high speed rail systems in Europe and how they stop at the border and you have to use trams or local links to get from one contry's high speed to the next - it prevents them from having a continental world class high speed rail system which they could if they had a single regulatory agency and bidding/contracting system and funding mechanism/subsidies
@PlaneShaper2
@PlaneShaper2 2 жыл бұрын
Two things. 1) On the topic of agriculture: during the Cold War, after the development of imaging satellites, the USSR thought it was nigh impossible for a geographic place to have so much agriculture, as it was so unlike anywhere else in the world. They had a number of theories, but one that contributed to Soviet policies was that several farms and rural towns were deception, and were actually biological weapons research facilities. This caused the USSR to overspend on biological warfare research in order to outdo what they thought was a massive US advantage. When in reality, the Soviet bio-warfare program was quite a bit more advanced than the US's. 2) Even if a foreign military managed to land ground forces on US soil with millions of soldiers, the US has ~40% of the ~1 billion firearms in the world. ~70% of US adults have fired a gun, including more than half of those that have never even owned one. That's a bit beyond the geography topic of the video, but worth pointing out as an aside :p
@TheWontonsoup
@TheWontonsoup 2 жыл бұрын
YUP. even if they could wipe out our government and military, what followed would be the biggest, longest, bloodiest guerilla war of all time. Could you imagine? There’s actually declassified Soviet files that talk about this, and even they came to the conclusion that the US is unconquerable
@MrsBonniebarko
@MrsBonniebarko 2 жыл бұрын
Sadly most of the gun lunatic Americans are so vulnerable to misinformation they already support traitor trump and would support a joint Sino Russian invasion of America
@geordiejones5618
@geordiejones5618 2 жыл бұрын
When I was a teenager one of my first stories was about a Latin American Hannibal/Napoleon persona who unites a huge part of Central/South America and then invades the US with surprising success and asymmetric tactics. He relies on support from disaffected political groups within the US to maintain his lines of supply and threatens to take the Mississippi and Great Lakes, splitting the nation in two. Instead of pouring resources into those areas he gets bogged down in the South (trying to take Texas and Florida) and he fights a Pyrrhic retreat back to Mexico City. I still think effort would ultimately fail much like Hannibal's own, for much of the same reasons. US Navy and Air Force allows the US to give up a lot of territory and hit you in the flanks when you overstretch.
@andoletube
@andoletube 2 жыл бұрын
@@travelhog lol🤣
@gfred2622
@gfred2622 2 жыл бұрын
Not to mention that the geography of the US is extremely hostile to invading armies the Pacific Northwest is mostly forrests and mountains. The Southwest is mostly vast empty desert. The south is predominantly forrests and/ or swamps. The north east is fairly forrested, and the Appalachians in the area as well. Finally, the north is mostly wide open plains which means any potential invasion is not going to have anywhere to hide from the Air Force.
@benjaminstiles
@benjaminstiles Жыл бұрын
I’ve not seen many of your videos, but so far I’ve never seen you take a side, or demonize one side of a conflict, you simply give us the facts, and I thank you so much for that!
@Bob-te3le
@Bob-te3le 11 ай бұрын
He does a great job at making his videos. I've watched a bunch of his videos.
@DUFFAL02
@DUFFAL02 9 ай бұрын
I feel like there’s a pretty obvious right and wrong. I’ll give you a hint, as an American, there is zero question why our country is so dominant. It’s the same reason monopolies become monopolies. The USA doesn’t care about anyone besides it’s own well-being and the pockets of the elites.
@the13gaming13
@the13gaming13 2 жыл бұрын
I work on the Mississippi River in Louisiana, they have a lot of traffic that comes through every day, it's just so remarkable to see so many ships and cargo moving along the big river.
@Mr_Careo
@Mr_Careo 2 жыл бұрын
First reply
@juzoli
@juzoli 2 жыл бұрын
It is much less important today than a hundred years ago.
@Racko.
@Racko. 2 жыл бұрын
The US geography is simply too good, it's so blessed with having the most arable land on the planet along with it's overall geography and access to bodies of water coast to coast making it almost impossible to attack
@jacob4920
@jacob4920 2 жыл бұрын
@@juzoli Is it, though? America's heartland is still basically the center of its' entire industrial base. And shipping by boat is infinitely cheaper than shipping by any other method in the world, as the video points out. The Mississippi will never NOT be important. How the hell was it more important a hundred years ago, at a time when shipping out our food and industrial resources to the entire world was not yet a thing?
@BlStein9
@BlStein9 2 жыл бұрын
Even better is how much traffic can go through Louisiana and how the corruption can make it so poor.
@shibasurfing
@shibasurfing 2 жыл бұрын
Incredible that people already have something to say about a 40 minute video 10 minutes after it was released
@Eagledelta3
@Eagledelta3 2 жыл бұрын
It was posted on Nebula yesterday. So many of us have already seen it and maybe they just want to comment on what they say yesterday?
@brightBoss
@brightBoss 2 жыл бұрын
That's crazy bro
@shibasurfing
@shibasurfing 2 жыл бұрын
@@Eagledelta3 Ah good to know about 👍
@TOM7952
@TOM7952 2 жыл бұрын
@@Eagledelta3 Possible but usually it's just people who want to immediately comment based on their initial perception of the video.
@CMVBrielman
@CMVBrielman 2 жыл бұрын
All us nebula subs just itching to comment.
@MayorBrownn
@MayorBrownn 2 жыл бұрын
I’d say North America In general is geographically incredible. Canada has 20% of the world fresh water and is rich in valuable minerals.
@pbinnj3250
@pbinnj3250 2 жыл бұрын
That stat is amazing. Also, I don’t know if fresh water was ever as important as it is now. So many are running out of it.
@user-df2uu3qp3y
@user-df2uu3qp3y 2 жыл бұрын
*only 5 percent is habitable. 95% is useless.*
@mangos2888
@mangos2888 2 жыл бұрын
🇨🇦 > 🇺🇸 always. And I'm not Canadian.
@saturn6563
@saturn6563 2 жыл бұрын
@@mangos2888 Pfft. I’m American and i’ve never even been to Canada, yet I like Canada more
@deletenow3276
@deletenow3276 2 жыл бұрын
@@saturn6563 Then go there
@stuartpearce694
@stuartpearce694 9 ай бұрын
Voice over guy is competing in a word-stress competition.
@jerrydefelice1196
@jerrydefelice1196 7 ай бұрын
Right?
@NigerianCrusader
@NigerianCrusader 5 ай бұрын
YEAH BUT WERE RUNNING OUT OF LAND WE NEED TO COLONIZE ANTARTICA BECSUSE OR WE WILL ALL BE PUSHED INTO THE OCEAN IF YOU MADE A KOWLOON WALLED CITY TO FIT 7 BILLION IT WOULD BE THE SIZE OF RHODE ISLAND
@NigerianCrusader
@NigerianCrusader 5 ай бұрын
NO YOU DELETED MY COMMENT
@magnol1a_
@magnol1a_ 5 ай бұрын
MILLIONS
@NigerianCrusader
@NigerianCrusader 5 ай бұрын
@@magnol1a_ MILLIONS WHAT
@qwderfendrick9493
@qwderfendrick9493 2 жыл бұрын
"The Americans are a very lucky people. They're bordered to the north and south by weak neighbors, and to the east and west by fish." - Otto Von Bismarck
@seanmcgrady8688
@seanmcgrady8688 2 жыл бұрын
@@Goober_80 Joke's on them-- America has the water stones.
@Kier_1
@Kier_1 2 жыл бұрын
@@seanmcgrady8688 the fish evolve at level 20 without water stones
@ThatColtGuy
@ThatColtGuy 2 жыл бұрын
I mean and we’re arguably pretty close with both despite what the divisive media makes it seem
@danielevans8910
@danielevans8910 2 жыл бұрын
That’s why they partnered with seals to protect their oceans. Of course, they often get thrashed around by orcas, but I heard that a team of them killed osama bin laden. That’s crazy. 🦭
@abvideos7572
@abvideos7572 2 жыл бұрын
@@Goober_80 Wait until Canada starts arming polar bears 😂
@Yora21
@Yora21 2 жыл бұрын
The North Sea coast in the Netherlands, Germany, and Denmark also has barrier islands similar to the US. Except that Long Island alone is three times larger than all the Frisian Islands combined.
@draphotube4315
@draphotube4315 2 жыл бұрын
And the Dutch once colonized it.
@Rytoast99
@Rytoast99 2 жыл бұрын
@@draphotube4315 uh cool no shit
@TheGecko213
@TheGecko213 2 жыл бұрын
Long Island ,NY , is bigger then most European Countries 😆
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheGecko213 No it's not. Belgium is 10 times bigger.
@reddragon100
@reddragon100 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheGecko213 67 times smaller than UK. 10 times smaller than Belgium
@PaulStewartAviation
@PaulStewartAviation 2 жыл бұрын
Just thinking out loud (and I'm Aussie)... maybe one of the reasons why the USA has done well is because it was a (mostly) united country? Europe also has great natural resources but they've just fought with each other the last thousands of years?
@sminturn1987
@sminturn1987 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah that's a pretty good point. All the power we have from the geography would be useless if we weren't so united. But at the same time that unity wouldn't be as impactful in a less geographically rich area. So, I guess it's which ever you find more valuable
@johngutwald8454
@johngutwald8454 2 жыл бұрын
Can you list all of these natural resources or make a list of the natural resources?
@carteranderson5907
@carteranderson5907 2 жыл бұрын
@@johngutwald8454 Talking from the Northern mid-west (North & South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin) point of view, we have a vast majority of everything you need. Lumber, Coal, Oil, Gold, Iron ore, and some of the best soil for farming on Earth, etc...
@Nyet-Zdyes
@Nyet-Zdyes 2 жыл бұрын
Oh yes... the (mostly) unified country aspect is every bit as important as the resources, Mississippi River basin, etc. So are other things... like NOT being communist/socialist.
@leskobrandon691
@leskobrandon691 2 жыл бұрын
There's no doubt it was instrumental to our nation's development. If it was divided, say France never sold the Louisiana purchase & it survived potential subsequent wars, they would own have owned from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains, partly controlling the river. This along with a portion of the oil & gas fields in parts of Texas & Oklahoma & that field located up along the Canadian border, plus all the great farmland in the west/upper midwest like Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, the Dakotas & part of Minnesota. That alone would have been a powerful country unto itself.
@LangstonKinderhook
@LangstonKinderhook Жыл бұрын
My main takeaway is that America is America's only threat. Our downfall only comes from within
@dampking
@dampking 5 ай бұрын
What’s going to happen?
@howell7136
@howell7136 Ай бұрын
Khruschev said the same thing.
@SpaceCoffee700
@SpaceCoffee700 20 күн бұрын
Eh we're good thankfully our superstructure is robust to take on several nukes and recover while fighting a world war As for internal issues I don't see it really topping a brute force approach like a world war
@TilveranWrites
@TilveranWrites 2 жыл бұрын
Another enormous boon is how quickly the USA was established as a single united entity. If the USA's history had been as long as Europe's, it would be as divided and multilingual as Europe, fractured into a myriad of states unable to even speak to each other. Having a common language across the continent is a MASSIVE boon. When I first went to the USA from the UK, the first relief I had was that I could speak the language. It's a total nightmare going anywhere else.
@alanparsonsfan
@alanparsonsfan 2 жыл бұрын
@Tilveran Good overlooked point. Also, the system where states could have some of their own policies that made them less likely to break away. (civil war notwithstanding).
@Roxadus460
@Roxadus460 2 жыл бұрын
not excatly. the reason why Europe has so many language is because of its geography. linguistically speaking geography and isolation are what causes languages to develop and change. while at the same time in modern times the US is more diverse and multilingual. the US doesn't have an official language for a reason. and there's maps that show the 2nd and 3rd most spoken language in each state. and on another note majority of the world is bilingual or multilingual. so the odds that someone in another country speaks English or another language that you do are pretty fair. so to say that a united language is also what made the country what it is today is only partly true.
@randallturner9094
@randallturner9094 2 жыл бұрын
@@Roxadus460 re: “the US doesn’t have an official language for a reason.” Okay, sorry but the official language of the US is English. It’s required at the federal level for all government business. It’s also required for private citizens in order to function and prosper in American society. If you move here, learn it.
@NoneofYourBusiness667
@NoneofYourBusiness667 2 жыл бұрын
@@randallturner9094 OFFICIALLY the US does not list a national language. The CIA World Factbook and other government sources confirm this. English is the de facto language of the country, meaning it’s not official in a legal or legislative way, but in a “everyone just knows it” unofficial way.
@randallturner9094
@randallturner9094 2 жыл бұрын
@@NoneofYourBusiness667 re: “not official in a legal or legislative way” - are you serious? Oh, there’s just a bit of legislation involved. You’re required to learn English to become a US Citizen, comrade. “Officially”. For a reason, as you put it. 🙄 The CIA factbook and all those “other government sources” are REQUIRED, by law, to be in ENGLISH, gomer. Officially. Dude, you’re basically dishonest. “Does not list a national language.” You’re arguing semantics. You’re a liar. And worse, frankly, but that’s off-topic and it’s too much work to do a proper fisking.
@OmarTheDeadAziz
@OmarTheDeadAziz Жыл бұрын
i knew USA is amazingly diverse geography, & when i had small talk with a co-worker, i was like, "this country is massive", what i really meant was its got every climate, every geography, every everything, that other countries can dream of. what continents have, but not every countries have
@KountKristyl
@KountKristyl Жыл бұрын
edit: dear Americans. I get it, you have rainforests. I think at this point the entire population of the Mid-West has replied to tell me how wrong I am. For the record, and this is on me, I should have clarified that America doesn't have any *tropical* rainforests (like the Amazon, as an example). But I have learned there's more than one type of rainforest, so silver linings. hasn't got rainforests
@starlight4130
@starlight4130 Жыл бұрын
@@KountKristyl and soon nowhere will
@KountKristyl
@KountKristyl Жыл бұрын
@@starlight4130 Sadly true
@grtwhtbnr
@grtwhtbnr Жыл бұрын
The size of Western Europe with a population to match
@grtwhtbnr
@grtwhtbnr Жыл бұрын
​@@starlight4130 no, thankfully, contrary to belief rainforest soil actually is NOT fertile. Not for what we want to do with it our farmland
@IntelVoid
@IntelVoid 2 жыл бұрын
Basically the opposite of Australia. Our biggest river, the Murray, was only discovered in the 1800s and is so shallow at its mouth that ships can't enter from the sea.
@chungusmaximus526
@chungusmaximus526 2 жыл бұрын
Oh really, Murray? **SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC INTENSIFIES**
@slevinchannel7589
@slevinchannel7589 2 жыл бұрын
@@chungusmaximus526 Everything about USA is ridiculous. Part 2 to this video here: "How The US Should Have Spent The Afghanistan War Budget" by 'Second Thought'.
@brianlong2334
@brianlong2334 2 жыл бұрын
Australia still has some of the best geography and is effectly an island continent, and has large amount of almost every resource. Its location is probably arguably better moving forward past the 1900s and into the 2100s in the world. As mentioned a river system like the USAs is also a weakness, now at the moment/ in our life time's the usa is good, but things won't always be like they are now. Bad management can also effect a nation look at Argentina for an example.
@BasicLib
@BasicLib 2 жыл бұрын
@@brianlong2334 dude the US and Australia are on so fondamentally different planes this isn’t really an apt comparison I’d say the US has truly become one of the worlds great civilizational states. Over the course of their history they’ve built not just a state, but a country, not just a country, but a nation. And not just a nation but a civilization. Unmoored by ties of blood or faith or ancestry but bound by an Ideology, the most dominant political ideology of the Post enlightenment world. There’s an Americanism to the way the people of that continent live that makes them more comparable to say China than to most regular countries. Although I fear they might be tearing it apart.
@thomasgrabkowski8283
@thomasgrabkowski8283 2 жыл бұрын
That’s why the US managed to have 14 times Australia’s population in a similar land area
@VechsDavion
@VechsDavion 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for your purchase of: Interconnected River Basin! Players like you also purchased: Farmland Interconnection DLC, and New Petrochemical Discovery DLC!
@kosakukawajiri5007
@kosakukawajiri5007 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget about Alaska and Hawaii's importance for military, resources, and research: both states are considerably well placed far from the lower 48, but are also either gigantic landmasses naturally defended by extreme cold and mountainous terrain with tons of coal and gold in Alaska, or is isolated from the rest of the world in the heart of the Pacific Ocean in volcanic islands making for a perfectly placed Naval harbor or space research labs in Hawaii.
@seaneustace9838
@seaneustace9838 11 ай бұрын
It takes eight hours to fly from Fairbanks Alaska to Born Germany, over the pole as the condor airlines ad used to say. Alaska’s anchorage international airport was a major hub before the fall of the Soviet union, which led to the opening up of Soviet airspace.
@seaneustace9838
@seaneustace9838 11 ай бұрын
General purging said something to the effect of heating that controls Alaska controls the world. What he meant by this is that it’s location in the northern hemisphere, where most of the land is, makes it so you can go from a place like Fairbanks to almost anywhere quicker than you could across the Atlantic or pacific. By quicker I mean less mileage sorry flat earthers.
@DUFFAL02
@DUFFAL02 9 ай бұрын
Also you can’t forget the monopolistic corporations that took over and fucked our social systems leading us down an endless capitalist path!🔥💯👍
@j.dunlop8295
@j.dunlop8295 8 ай бұрын
Demographics for hard times that are coming, America and Canada have the energy, food and mostly the resources, but Europe is in trouble, Asia mostly China is going to be desperately challenged!😮 China, imports energy, food and most resources! Belligerent attacks on trading partners, zero sum game of Chinese CCP, that's not working?
@w8stral
@w8stral 8 ай бұрын
Alaska coal? ROFL. Yes, it has coal, technically. So? Compared to rest of USA it may as well not even be mentioned. Gold? Not worth mentioning. Yes, a pittance of gold. Copper, NG, and other minerals could be mentioned though.
@MrDeepwatermarine
@MrDeepwatermarine Жыл бұрын
I am a tugboat captain on the Mississippi and Intracoastal Waterway, so I’ve known this for a long time. The leaders of our industry are always baffled that more Americans don’t know how important our waterways are to our economy. Great video.
@janniesneed4511
@janniesneed4511 Жыл бұрын
damn, tugboat captain, that sounds like a pretty nice job
@xxxBradTxxx
@xxxBradTxxx Жыл бұрын
They don’t teach it in school, I learned all this from this video at the age of 27. I also live in Arizona, so we don’t really think about rivers that much here.
@armadillolover99
@armadillolover99 Жыл бұрын
I always knew how historically important the river system was to our economy, but I wasn’t aware of the sheer scale (I always assumed the coastal ports, railways and interstate systems were the main factor in the modern day) or how relevant it still is until this day. As a “coastal elite” surrounded by business people I always hear about coastal ports when it comes to logistics and rarely, if ever, about the Midwest and when I do it’s mostly in reference to trains and trucking.
@greghannigan4702
@greghannigan4702 Жыл бұрын
Also, The Great Lakes contribute to the US being a powerhouse also. It is the largest freshwater system on the planet.
@Weird04Life
@Weird04Life Жыл бұрын
​@@xxxBradTxxxya learn in AP US history
@Skaggs666
@Skaggs666 Жыл бұрын
I’m an American, my wife and I live on a 60’ sailboat. We sailed from Cincinnati, OH to the Mississippi delta during COVID and ended up just continuing on up the coast and into the intercoastal waterway back to the Great Lakes. It’s a trip called the Great Loop. It was the most interesting trip we’ve ever made. I was blown away by all the infrastructure. We’ve sailed the Med and Caribbean and the Loop was easily the most logistically simple trip we’ve ever done.
@censored4christ162
@censored4christ162 Жыл бұрын
I want to do the great loop. Its craczy how nautical our land nation is. Way nore than places like mongolia. Plus we have alaska and hawaii so if you leave from the west coast you have entirely different options its a wholleee lotta freedom i can go to all thes eplaces without showing a passport or even an ID unless I get caught in violation of a law. If yiu try to go from britain to spain thsyre going to ID you. Its a whole different world. Theyll just search you for no reason just because. Im usa i can go from arizona to michigan to florida to texas and no one bats an eye
@Skaggs666
@Skaggs666 Жыл бұрын
@@censored4christ162 We are leaving for Hawaii (and then onto Nuku Hiva and Hiva Oa) from San Diego on Friday. But it is a much more difficult passage logistically. You should definitely do the Loop. Its an absolute blast.
@PappyNet01
@PappyNet01 Жыл бұрын
You are very fortunate. Good for you. Boating is very expensive; consequently, those who own boat and decide to live on the boat is because it is very expensive to own a boat in addition to owning a house. Ownership of most big durable items requires insurance and maintenance; thus, it becomes a lifestyle and a owner needs to develop maintenance skills unless one is very, very wealthy. However, I wish I could at least once in my life travel the United States riverways and coastal-ways and the Great Lakes.
@AndrewHeller-jn7dx
@AndrewHeller-jn7dx Жыл бұрын
@censored4christ162 Please Note: A, Partial Listing of: your copious Typo Errata: 1.: *crazy;... 2.: *more;... 3.: *Mongolia;... 4.: *Alaska;... 5.: *Hawaii;... 6.: *options.It's;... 8.: *freedom.I;... 10.: *these places;... 11.: *you;... 12.: *Britain;... 13.:*Spain;... 14.: *they're;... 15.: *they'll;... 16.: *In the U.S.A.;... 17.: *I can go from;... 18.: *Arizona;... 19.: *Michigan;... 20.: *Florida;... 21.: *Texas;...
@itstept
@itstept Жыл бұрын
Dude, that's incredible! I'm honestly quite jealous! 😂 Happy for you though. Keep livin' the good life!
@MatAK49
@MatAK49 Жыл бұрын
This video showing the vast waterways within the continental US should have been made decades ago and shown in the US schools. There are too many of us here in the US who have zero knowledge of the river systems and their strategic importance. Well done putting this video together.
@christigoth
@christigoth 7 ай бұрын
LOL speak for yourself.
@courierwalkthewastelandduc4700
@courierwalkthewastelandduc4700 Жыл бұрын
This was my entire 8th grade history class condensed into around 40 minutes with a better step by step explanation
@happybobjr1
@happybobjr1 Жыл бұрын
I can tell you were not paying attention in class.
@fernandosapiens3871
@fernandosapiens3871 Жыл бұрын
@Iosinyhrhalways someone else’s fault mentality
@iplxel7888
@iplxel7888 Жыл бұрын
​@@fernandosapiens3871knowing the American education system, it might as well be true
@overbuiltlimited
@overbuiltlimited Жыл бұрын
Kudos to your 8th grade history teacher. I shudder to think what most kids are being taught in history classes today.
@suntoyfull64
@suntoyfull64 Жыл бұрын
I concur with your insight and add the observation of what a waste of time and money is modern education.
@pixeldragon6387
@pixeldragon6387 2 жыл бұрын
I remember moving cross country from west to east as a kid. I was absolutely *floored* by the sheer size of the Mississippi River. It is *insanely* wide
@moe4meswtdg
@moe4meswtdg 2 жыл бұрын
Yes me too! Never seen anything like it.
@johnbainbridge9034
@johnbainbridge9034 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up next to it. The Rio Grande was not so grand in my estimation. It's a large stream.
@31webseries
@31webseries 2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to drive across country and see it someday. Check out the Great Lakes to. Even more so after this.
@matthewneddeau7993
@matthewneddeau7993 2 жыл бұрын
@@johnbainbridge9034 the Rio Grande is hardly a river anymore. It sometimes goes completely dry by the time it reaches El Paso
@DaInfamous0ne
@DaInfamous0ne 2 жыл бұрын
I live in Memphis so... yea it is a big ass river.
@friskyjesus
@friskyjesus 2 жыл бұрын
Logged in to Nebula about an hour ago to see if there were any new uploads to Modern Conflicts and was pleasantly surprised to see the latest video. After watching that I jumped over to KZbin to see if there was anything new here and got to enjoy even more great content! Thank you for your amazing work!
@robertbones326
@robertbones326 2 жыл бұрын
Jumping into Nebula isn't wise, no oxygen or water. Amazing you survived
@spiderman20088
@spiderman20088 2 жыл бұрын
@@robertbones326 bro mightve just saved me my friends convinced me to go nebula diving later today 💀
@tehok
@tehok 2 жыл бұрын
@@robertbones326 damn that's my weekend ruined
@ken_9359
@ken_9359 Жыл бұрын
My father told me this fact. America's real longest war was the conflict against Indigenous Americans, called the American Indian Wars, which most historians characterize as beginning in 1609 and ending in 1924 or 313 years, mainly over land control.
@wolvesetc
@wolvesetc 9 ай бұрын
Thats like a hundred separate conflicts against a hundred separate foes spread out over hundreds of years with lots of stops and starts and a lot of other things going on. Its really not accurate to call that one continuous conflict, although you might lump it together as a planned genocide
@christigoth
@christigoth 7 ай бұрын
little by little , one or two tribes at a time. some we bought land from , made friends with, married them, made truces, made treaties, and some kept thousands or millions of acres of land... now are citizens of our nation as well a s keep thier sovereign tribal nations. they are still great warriors fighting for this country in the military. this land is their Mother, so they say. it's ours too if we've been here for many generations. we admire them and thier arts, wisdom, etc , they were a worthy foe back in the day. Glad we are at peace now all of us including all those tribes with each other. We are just their white brother, they are our red brother. i heard one of their sages say we need to keep our tech in check. i know that's true.
@christigoth
@christigoth 7 ай бұрын
@McFish-ts5jj 😂😂😂
@Marthyboy88
@Marthyboy88 Жыл бұрын
I randomly started looking at the waterways in America... It's honestly broken af from a infrastructure standpoint. We can get goods basically anywhere with these systems. Crazy. Also, imagine what would happen if we found a huge cobalt area.
@TheSpecialJ11
@TheSpecialJ11 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately our current government policies make this harder than need be. If only we got rid of the Jones Act and made a continental version of Conrail.
@PakoDriver
@PakoDriver Жыл бұрын
@@TheSpecialJ11 What's the jones act?
@bynomial3542
@bynomial3542 Жыл бұрын
There is in Minnesota but has been protected from mining as its part of millions of acres of national forest/ recreational canoe water lands
@PakoDriver
@PakoDriver Жыл бұрын
@@TigerWave01 Thanks!
@TravisJones812
@TravisJones812 Жыл бұрын
@@TigerWave01 Most of the people who gripe about the Jones Act are Hawaiians. 🏖
@johnshort5830
@johnshort5830 2 жыл бұрын
Your content is some of the rare stuff that makes me excited to have the internet again, like when it was newer when we were younger. This is quite literally, the content I signed up for(your work as a whole, not just this particular video). Thank you for bringing some joy and knowledge into my life.
@realdreamerschangetheworld7470
@realdreamerschangetheworld7470 2 жыл бұрын
Beautifully said
@irBribe
@irBribe 2 жыл бұрын
Definitely one of the rare youtubers where you watch every single thing they put out because it's all so high quality.
@Racko.
@Racko. 2 жыл бұрын
Well said
@lbradshaw316
@lbradshaw316 Жыл бұрын
This video has done more to help me understand American history and politics than any one source of information ever has. Thank you for helping put the pieces together. Wonderful video.
@hukphin740
@hukphin740 Жыл бұрын
Did this video help you understand why Biden's energy policies are historically stupid? Do you see a correlation between what is happening to the American economy today and the economy during the 70's oil embargo? It's like the democrats, and every voter who voted for him, have never read a history book🤓
@l.w.paradis2108
@l.w.paradis2108 Жыл бұрын
This is propaganda.
@ESkog
@ESkog Жыл бұрын
@@l.w.paradis2108u jealous?
@l.w.paradis2108
@l.w.paradis2108 Жыл бұрын
@@ESkog Why? Is the producer married to someone I'm in love with?
@basketcaseface813
@basketcaseface813 Жыл бұрын
@@l.w.paradis2108YES
@romanator30
@romanator30 9 ай бұрын
I'm from America and I approve this video. Quite an epic production. Keep at it
@tomscott1159
@tomscott1159 2 жыл бұрын
140 years ago, Mark Twain wrote extensively about the history of the Mississippi basin and how it was utilized and developed via emerging technologies of the time.
@kidfox3971
@kidfox3971 2 жыл бұрын
That is the most boring thing I have ever read in my entire life
@diane9247
@diane9247 2 жыл бұрын
And, what better reading could there be about this than Twain? 😊
@TrevorD19
@TrevorD19 2 жыл бұрын
If you go up to Minnesota you can walk across it. I forgot the place
@diane9247
@diane9247 2 жыл бұрын
@@kidfox3971 You mean about Twain, or about where to walk across?
@kidfox3971
@kidfox3971 2 жыл бұрын
@@diane9247 Everything, I unironically killed myself while reading the above comment.
@JMurph2015
@JMurph2015 2 жыл бұрын
The thing that made me truly appreciate that North American geography is absurdly favorable was the metric for steel production capacity immediately before World War 2: if I remember correctly it was vastly in the lead, potentially as much as every other combatant combined. And so long as the US keeps control of the Western Hemisphere, there is essentially no power on Earth that could win a war of conquest over the USA (which doesn't involve reducing the continent to rubble first).
@donaldduck9233
@donaldduck9233 2 жыл бұрын
I believe the majority of the steel was produced in the Hoover mason trestle located in Pennsylvania. It located right by the Appalachian mountains and on the Lehigh river.
@chaost4544
@chaost4544 2 жыл бұрын
There's a time after WWII where the US literally produced half of everything in the world. It's production capacity is insane when it's needed to be.
@LunaticTheCat
@LunaticTheCat 2 жыл бұрын
I don't it's possible for another to "win" by turning North America into dust, as by doing so they themselves would certainly also get obliterated.
@Evanderj
@Evanderj 2 жыл бұрын
It’s been modeled that the US could fight conventionally against the rest of the world, simultaneously, on many fronts, and still win. It was demonstrated that logistics, the Navy, overseas bases/ballistics, surveillance, & self reliance on resources are the pillars of modern warfare. By surgically crippling adversarial capacity to wage war through disruption of fuel and supply chains to deployed militaries & their homelands, the only option is to sue for peace. The US has a lot of vulnerabilities, but all out conventional warfare isn’t one.
@luftwaffle3766
@luftwaffle3766 2 жыл бұрын
“Vastly in the lead”
@EnriqueHernandez-zk7qc
@EnriqueHernandez-zk7qc Жыл бұрын
I can't thank you enough for making this video on American geography, Real Life Lore. It's currently my favorite thing on KZbin and should be required viewing in every American high school. Great job!
@Bob-te3le
@Bob-te3le 11 ай бұрын
Facts.
@tonics7121
@tonics7121 9 ай бұрын
Incredibly factual, and conclusions as fair and reasonable as any I've read or heard. Thank you so much. We are all starved for this kind of reporting.
@GalaxyFur
@GalaxyFur 2 жыл бұрын
*Another thing not mentioned besides the United States river system* is the fact that the U.S. has the world's largest road and rail network of any country on Earth. The United States has 4 million miles of roads that span across it today. And it has 140,000 miles of freight railroad track that spans across it as well. So you have the world's largest road system, the world's largest navigational river system, the world's largest railroad system, and the world's largest airplane and airport industry to move goods all across the U.S. and abroad. It's a whole ecosystem of transportation that the U.S has. 🙂
@cripple9860
@cripple9860 2 жыл бұрын
Forreal, while U.S. passenger trains leave much to be desired, our freight train system is unmatched.
@anitablades6033
@anitablades6033 2 жыл бұрын
All the reason we are so perfect to be, is the main reason China has been trying to steal America from with in !!!! Why we need to guard our Backs !!!
@BAPK1602
@BAPK1602 2 жыл бұрын
@@cripple9860 Go look up the dynamics of passenger/freight rails -- they are directly competing with each other. The reason for passenger rails being no good is because they use the same rails as freight trains and freight takes priority over passenger rails. And often, there is only a small window of time allotted to passenger trains to run so when the time is up -- no more rides for the day. Only freight.
@triconehead
@triconehead 2 жыл бұрын
Road and rail systems are not mentioned because this video focuses on natural geographic features contributing to the USA's strategic and economic strengths.
@AsianDudeX01
@AsianDudeX01 2 жыл бұрын
@@BAPK1602 It's a trade off between freight or passenger rail. The existing infrastructure works so well with freight that we might as well stick with it. In order to have high speed rail, you'll need completely new infrastructure to support it. Which is simply not justifiable considering there's not a big enough population density except for very certain parts of the country; the east coast, parts of the Midwest, a Texas triangle, and the Pacific Coast? Most of the country is just too big and empty for high speed passenger rail. Once you hit that 500 mile mark, you might as well fly. If you look at places with efficient passenger rail networks, you'll see that odds are, they're very densely populated.
@JFabric500
@JFabric500 2 жыл бұрын
Getting me hyped about geography is hard to do but wow. The amount of positive fun facts in this video is unmatched.
@roysmith3767
@roysmith3767 2 жыл бұрын
Search . ' The Geopolitics of World War 3 . '
@niveklor1456
@niveklor1456 2 жыл бұрын
Really governments can be bought and traded just like modern-day slave trade
@paulbabcock2428
@paulbabcock2428 2 жыл бұрын
Check out Atlas Pro. Everything he produces is based on geography basically and most is his vids are facinating.
@michealdrake3421
@michealdrake3421 2 жыл бұрын
5:30 Don't forget economies of scale! Ships are one if the few modes of transportation that becomes more efficient the bigger it gets. The more stuff you can put on a boat, the cheaper it is to ship per unit. Whereas work land based transportation, the bigger it gets, the more engineering problems you encounter and the more expensive they get to fix, a bigger ship mostly just means spreading the operating costs out over more cargo. Physics is actually on our side on this one.
@milesdunstan-daams4855
@milesdunstan-daams4855 2 жыл бұрын
trains also work that way. it could be that all forms of transport do if they are in a line.
@andrewjensen7454
@andrewjensen7454 2 жыл бұрын
Not only does a larger volume mean cheaper per unit shipping costs, but the longer (bigger) a ship is the faster it can go before the wake it produces starts to really create a lot of drag, so they can either use less fuel or can move the goods faster. The economies of scale benefits just compound and compound with ships.
@michealdrake3421
@michealdrake3421 2 жыл бұрын
@@andrewjensen7454 That I didn't know, but makes a lot of sense. Thanks!
@vladimirmomperousse4340
@vladimirmomperousse4340 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing
@jaraza323
@jaraza323 2 жыл бұрын
I learned a lot from your statement.
@DOCTOR_SANITY
@DOCTOR_SANITY 8 ай бұрын
Simply the best educational video I've ever seen on KZbin. Incredibly amazing!
@nestortomaselli6372
@nestortomaselli6372 2 жыл бұрын
As an immigrant to the US, I have to say this land is a miracle to exist in every sense of the word. Not just geographically, but it is very rare to have had such a brilliant group of founding fathers fight and win one of the very few successful revolutions in history, and established such a well-rounded republic on top of it (and yes, I know they owned slaves and yada, yada, just like everyone else in that era- it still doesn’t detract from there accomplishments). That said, I hope this wonderful nation of cultural diversity is able to get over its political, culture, gender, and ideological wars going on at the moment. Perhaps this country was so blessed with good geography that over time people lost there sense of appreciation for the land they were born in, and begun to fight over useless arguments. Too much of that can lead even the most powerful empires down a hole - I just hope we come back to our senses before it happens here.
@eugene5153
@eugene5153 2 жыл бұрын
Couldnt agree more, I think that the reason for all these ideological problems is directly from just how good americans have it. First world problems, gotta have something to be mad about
@imdarling17
@imdarling17 2 жыл бұрын
I’m so glad you love it here. It’s great to see someone born outside the US that doesn’t hate it just for the stereotypes. It is the greatest country in the world, and I’m glad you’re here with us🇺🇸
@danielevans8910
@danielevans8910 2 жыл бұрын
Well said. Absolutely well said.
@angelxxsin
@angelxxsin 2 жыл бұрын
@@imdarling17 American exceptionalism strikes again, an empire sustained on the oppression, interventionism and bloodshed provoked against the global south. You live in a bubble, no wonder the rest of the world largely regards Americans as exceptionally ignorant, including Europe.
@imdarling17
@imdarling17 2 жыл бұрын
@@angelxxsin I’m showing patriotism towards my fellow Americans, you obviously watch CNN too much
@Sam-kq4zt
@Sam-kq4zt Жыл бұрын
Awesome video. I majored in economics and always felt like geography was overlooked. It truly sets the stage for evolution & adaptation.
@chideraesinaulo4095
@chideraesinaulo4095 Жыл бұрын
Honestly
@bgorg1
@bgorg1 Жыл бұрын
So does culture. The culture the USA inherited from GB, Netherlands, and Ancient Greece/Rome allowed it to loosely yet cohesively aggregate this land into a protected economy. I also think way too much direct links between Iraq and the the attack on the US by Al-Qaeda. There is far more complexity than that linkage and the thought that the US brought that on its own house is hyperbolic to outright untrue. And to us in the USA the disaster of the withdrawal from Afghanistan, rather than our military actions, is the nightmare
@brucearterbury1856
@brucearterbury1856 Жыл бұрын
Speaking of sea ports and their economic impact. I’m fascinated with a proposed Gulf of California to Laguna Salada to Salton Sea canal. Mexico’s president said that there isn’t enough benefit to Mexico to follow through with the bi-National agreement he signed. Maybe if the Laguna Salada project was expanded into sea port infrastructure it would get done. Btw. The Laguna Salada is below sea level for dozens of miles and the Gulf of California tides are 9 feet high where the proposed canal begins.
@anon2427
@anon2427 Жыл бұрын
Geography shapes a people more than anything else. And people shape the places they live. In this way, the quality of a society is largely dependent on the quality of it’s people
@hollykm
@hollykm Жыл бұрын
Me too, just graduated. I think a course titled Economics of Geography would be really really interesting and useful general knowledge.
@What_Makes_Climate_Tick
@What_Makes_Climate_Tick 2 жыл бұрын
When discussing the Great Lakes as a transportation route, there was simpler engineering at an earlier time that provided a large portion of present-day capabilities. The Erie Canal was completed in 1825 and connected eastern Lakes Erie to the Hudson River, and thus the port of New York City and the navigable connections between Lakes Erie, Huron, and Michigan. The first version of the "Soo" Locks were completed in 1855, adding access to Lake Superior
@carlcushmanhybels8159
@carlcushmanhybels8159 2 жыл бұрын
And there's the Great Lakes' route through to the St. Lawrence Seaway and VS. So, e.g., Chicago has a water route to the Atlantic. And all the betweens and links such as the Ohio river to Mississippi River.
@bruzote
@bruzote 2 жыл бұрын
Not to forget the canals linking the Chesapeake to the Delaware and the Delaware to the Hudson, which of course led to the Erie Canal and the Great Lakes! Of course, one could also continue north from the Hudson entrance to the Erie canal, heading upstream the Hudson River to the Champlain canal, then heading across Lake Champlain and downstream to the St Lawrence Seaway. One could travel from Duluth to Norfolk VA via Albany NY, then head north to Montreal without ever facing an open sea. Those canals sure changed things. A lot of iron ore moved from the upper Midwest to smelters, foundries, and plants throughout the eastern US, helping the US economy to boom. I suspect you know that, but other readers might not know that. :-)
@weirdo4959
@weirdo4959 Жыл бұрын
This is the longest I have actually watched a video without skipping any part, I always loved history and this is amazing! Edit: watched got corrected to watered for context
@butter7734
@butter7734 7 ай бұрын
I love watering videos.
@Ulaanbasaar
@Ulaanbasaar 7 ай бұрын
@@butter7734remember to fertilize that subscribe button
@Andres.Duran.J
@Andres.Duran.J 6 ай бұрын
Ah yes, my favorite pastime, watering videos
@brandoncole5533
@brandoncole5533 5 ай бұрын
Same
@MattBellzminion
@MattBellzminion 2 жыл бұрын
I'm embarrassed to admit that this video taught me a shit ton of facts I didn't know about my own country... and I've seen a lot of these coastlines, too.
@pdcdesign9632
@pdcdesign9632 2 жыл бұрын
Welcome to America dude. It's huge.
@advancetotabletop5328
@advancetotabletop5328 2 жыл бұрын
And welcome to the American school system. It‘s lacking.
@HR-td8iw
@HR-td8iw 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe if you didnt have to worry about getting shot in class then the teaching quality would be better, not so great america anymore
@Sophistry0001
@Sophistry0001 2 жыл бұрын
I live on the Chesapeake, and I still have a hard time wrapping my mind around the idea that it has more coast line than India. Like I straight up called BS when I first heard that.
@nohandsman8475
@nohandsman8475 2 жыл бұрын
😐
@marcello7781
@marcello7781 2 жыл бұрын
This brings me back so many memories of the geopolitics lessons I used to attend. Sometimes it's not just the size of the territory but also where it is located, which reminds me of the strategic locations the British Empire used to own during its maximum expansion.
@czdaniel1
@czdaniel1 2 жыл бұрын
Lol...Wuz this USED 2 OWN, English? Falklands, Gibraltar, Diego Garcia, Ascension...You may not have the Suez, A.T.M. but British bases are sitting upon a large swath of Cyprus nearby the Suez. You just need to own Singapore again and U instantly win at Super-Strategic Tiny Island BINGO
@yodorob
@yodorob 2 жыл бұрын
@@czdaniel1 Montevideo could easily have been yet another such strategic point. It was captured and occupied by the British in 1807. Would have been a South American version of Halifax!
@paulmckean4583
@paulmckean4583 Жыл бұрын
You need to highlight the Panama Canal as well. This marval even though no longer under US control allows free shipping between the Atlantic and the Pacific effectively increasing the ease of trade from the Mississippi basin & intercoastal to the Western coast.
@Kaiserboo1871
@Kaiserboo1871 Жыл бұрын
It wouldn’t exactly be difficult to take over the Panama Canal by force if necessary. I still think Carter made a mistake turning it over. I’d be ok with Panama and America co-owning it together.
@Captainaceguy00
@Captainaceguy00 Жыл бұрын
Panama and Suez Canal are by far the biggest man made structures to improve global trade. I agree that it should have been covered
@donaldmiller8629
@donaldmiller8629 Жыл бұрын
@@Kaiserboo1871 , You have to remember that Carter is a Socialist Liberal Democrat. The ONLY aim of that Party is to gain political and social power. If it comes at the expense of the United States , well.....
@AndrewHeller-jn7dx
@AndrewHeller-jn7dx Жыл бұрын
@@Captainaceguy00 *covered.
@AndrewHeller-jn7dx
@AndrewHeller-jn7dx Жыл бұрын
@Kaiserboo1871 You may be right, but, what you think or feel "OK about" the issue, is: totally -->>irrelevant; since, who are you; anyhow-???? When you talk like that you communicate 1 thing: disgusting arrogance!!!. Why do you think that you are so darn important-????!!!!!!!!!!.
@kevinsayes
@kevinsayes 7 ай бұрын
Cool video. I can’t do the hyperbole/delivery of it, but it was an informative video for sure.
@M.J.R.
@M.J.R. Жыл бұрын
i immigrated to the USA year 1987, im now a naturalized US citizen. i will always love this country. its the land of opportunity as long as you're not lazy
@justicebrown1077
@justicebrown1077 Жыл бұрын
Or a marginalized group. See the other comment for reference.
@gokuformanvsfood
@gokuformanvsfood Жыл бұрын
​@@justicebrown1077wow they really did just give you an exhibit A right there😂
@justicebrown1077
@justicebrown1077 Жыл бұрын
@@gokuformanvsfood And its literally any non cis het white people. Its fucked. This country is (supposed to be) for everyone who wants equal opportunity. OP immigrated legally, and is a legal citizen. Yet people like Jimmy will still scream "REEE YoU DoNt BeLoNg HeRe, gO hOmE" as if this isnt their home. BTW, I hope you're enjoying being an America @M.J.R.
@201hastings
@201hastings Жыл бұрын
@@justicebrown1077 that person is obviously trolling. You gonna cry?
@dingle37
@dingle37 Жыл бұрын
@@justicebrown1077you can be successful in a marginalized group if you don’t let it be an excuse.
@dennishowell6430
@dennishowell6430 2 жыл бұрын
Ok, major historical oversight about the opening of the Great Lakes to global commerce. While it is true that the St. Lawrence Seaway, which was completed in the 1950s, opened the Great Lakes to trans-oceanic commerce, the lakes themselves have been opened to global shipping since the 1850s. This development was made possible thanks to the completion of the following projects: The Erie Canal in the 1820s (Albany to Buffalo), The Illinois and Michigan Canal (connected Lake Michigan with the Illinois River via Chicago) completed in 1848, and the Soo Locks (Connecting Lake Superior to Lakes Huron and Michigan) in 1855.
@omadoutlaw4868
@omadoutlaw4868 2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking something more like the 1850's!
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 2 жыл бұрын
And even without the full Seaway trade was still possible, just using smaller vessels and either older canals or offloading cargo to bypass rapids. And after the seaway a ton of hydroelectric power became available to both the US and Canada. (The Moses-Sounders dam in Massena/Cornwall has 2 separate generation plants that combine to about 2GW of installed capacity) I assume the rest of the greatlakes region also have several GW of capacity from dams along the watershed (like how much of the niagra river doesn't go over the falls, only enough to be pretty as a tourist destination/heritage site).
@otm646
@otm646 2 жыл бұрын
As an additional note sailing vessels stayed in commercial service longer on the Great Lakes than basically anywhere else in US because the lakes were so navigable. Steam tugboats were used to get these sailing vessels up the Detroit River across the St Clair flats and up the St Clair River.
@Racko.
@Racko. 2 жыл бұрын
The great lakes and Erie Canal paved another way for great trade
@j2174
@j2174 2 жыл бұрын
It’s important to note that the US has two friendly neighbours.
@KyleP133
@KyleP133 2 жыл бұрын
I think its key for Americans who are intent on amplifying our internal differences to understand how weak we are when we are split apart. Our strength comes from our unity and connectedness across the continent. Our differences are not that important, our prosperity is assured and we can have a century of prosperity and peace if we just remember how important we are to each other. Consider how much our dissolution as a nation would benefit our mutual enemies, and you start to reconsider the motivations and allegiances of those who openly call for these things.
@AICW
@AICW 2 жыл бұрын
How about FUCK NO. Any American who calls himself a Socialist can go to hell.
@jdbb3gotskills
@jdbb3gotskills 2 жыл бұрын
No wonder the global elites want to divide and conquer us. We the people need to stand as one.
@robwaters8848
@robwaters8848 2 жыл бұрын
It feels like a monumental uphill battle when so many of our elites in power appear to be compromised.
@HowIsAsh
@HowIsAsh 2 жыл бұрын
Would be nice for the US to continuesly stay in power and dictate world politics huh. Because yall definitely are good with politics and not being evil.
@destroytheboxes
@destroytheboxes 2 жыл бұрын
@@HowIsAsh if you did not intend sarcasm, I read it in anyways as it should be. The US isnt evil. MAN IS EVIL. power corrupts completely. Whoever has it, will follow in US steps. No question.
@davidkley5242
@davidkley5242 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the great video. The music in this was fire.
@gifibaka3076
@gifibaka3076 Жыл бұрын
Do you know the name of the music?
@theobserver9131
@theobserver9131 2 жыл бұрын
Wow. I've never looked at the world through this lens before. This is like the Rosetta Stone to geopolitics. Thank you for this well made and enlightening documentary.
@nickconner2101
@nickconner2101 2 жыл бұрын
Read “The Accidental Superpower” by Peter Zeihan
@blackshard641
@blackshard641 2 жыл бұрын
Read "Guns Germs and Steel." It goes a long way in explaining why the world's most powerful nations developed where they did.
@endergrad42
@endergrad42 2 жыл бұрын
Yay, 128th like!
@Mooshm79
@Mooshm79 2 жыл бұрын
If you enjoyed this look up Peter zeihan he is a geopolitical analyst the information he puts out is extremely important and informative
@geoffreybrockmeier9218
@geoffreybrockmeier9218 2 жыл бұрын
I studied ancient history at university. I had something of an epiphany when my professor began explaining history from the perspective of economics. We often think of civilizations by their monuments, art, or battles they fought. But all that glory is rooted in the strength of its economy.
@joker6solitaire
@joker6solitaire Жыл бұрын
I was a Geography major in college nearly 20 years ago. I learned SOME of what you covered in this video, but not all of it--and only piecemeal. I've never heard such a clear, thorough explanation of how the USA's geography has influenced its prosperity. You do marvelous work! I followed your link to Nebula and subscribed. Thank you for the wonderful content!
@cjsawinski
@cjsawinski Жыл бұрын
Check out “How the States got their Shapes”… I think you would like it. It was on the History channel about ten years ago. It’s an awesome series like this video but broken down by all the states boundaries and how they came to be defined.
@morgantippetts7681
@morgantippetts7681 Жыл бұрын
the Bakken field saved my dad from a lot of debt. He was on heavy debt and decided to risk it and he moved there himself but we stayed in Idaho. Once he made enough money we moved there with him. we bought a house. eventually he got a better job offer and we moved to Iowa. The ND oil boom saved my family that I can guarantee.
@mannyknoxville247
@mannyknoxville247 Жыл бұрын
Saved alot of us my friend
@SignalCorps1
@SignalCorps1 Жыл бұрын
I’m an engineer in Texas and used to travel up to ND to support the Bakken fields. I always tried to make my trips between May and September, first to avoid the cold and second to get a break from the Texas heat. I’m glad the Bakken gave your family a solid opportunity
@LucaSantarella1
@LucaSantarella1 10 ай бұрын
Did bro use the CIV 6 resource icons in the animation? Haha Great video!
@sirbean8506
@sirbean8506 5 ай бұрын
Yeah i noticed that too lol
@2x2is22
@2x2is22 2 жыл бұрын
I remember those days of energy insecurity. Foreign policy was dominated by the Mid East, as were our wars and headlines. Now it's all just like a foot note in a history book. Thanks for covering the shale revolution. It really has changed the face of US geopolitics and I feel like no one really realizes that or gives it the credit it deserves
@nathanseper8738
@nathanseper8738 2 жыл бұрын
I know. Cutting off the Gulf states will have profound global implications.
@badluck5647
@badluck5647 2 жыл бұрын
Too bad Biden only want fossil fuels from OPEC as he has been attacking domestic production.
@deadmeatjb
@deadmeatjb 2 жыл бұрын
I think the iraq war is still going on g
@Racko.
@Racko. 2 жыл бұрын
I Agree, the US geography is very blessed, that it makes other countries especially China and Western Europe quite jealous of it's strategic location
@2x2is22
@2x2is22 2 жыл бұрын
@@nathanseper8738 They'll be fine though, there's a lot of customers in East Asia and India
@CommonCommiestudios
@CommonCommiestudios 2 жыл бұрын
The country's so op they had to nerf it with an education system that makes 16% of the population believe that chocolate milk comes from brown cows Edit: the comment section makes the Russia-Ukraine war like a tea party, enter at your own risk
@lanceh.aguilar7982
@lanceh.aguilar7982 2 жыл бұрын
At least thats something we can change. Geography is fixed.
@t0manderson571
@t0manderson571 2 жыл бұрын
Where do you other 84% think it comes from?
@t0manderson571
@t0manderson571 2 жыл бұрын
Just to clarify, not brown cows, they must be chocolate cows.
@rogelio7524
@rogelio7524 2 жыл бұрын
Lol is this real ? 😂
@cann5565
@cann5565 2 жыл бұрын
That's because more weight is put on fairy tales like the Bible than real education.
@TonyHanation
@TonyHanation 2 жыл бұрын
Was so curious if Mississippi river carries that much volume so I searched it up. The global cargo volume was 1.85 billion Tons in 2019 and the M. River carried 500 million tons in 2021. That's 27% of the GLOBAL cargo volume! Insane.
@billhicks6449
@billhicks6449 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the twin cities mere blocks from the Mississippi. There's a constant stream of barges coming up and down at that point. And thats at the northernmost industrial point.
@TonyHanation
@TonyHanation 2 жыл бұрын
I gotta visit sometimes fascinating!
@loturzelrestaurant
@loturzelrestaurant 2 жыл бұрын
Part 2 to this video here: "How The US Should Have Spent The Afghanistan War Budget" by 'Second Thought'.
@steakfilly5199
@steakfilly5199 2 жыл бұрын
@@billhicks6449 I’m from mn too
@tylermech66
@tylermech66 2 жыл бұрын
@@billhicks6449 live up in Cloquet near Duluth, the twin city and Duluth represent the ends of each of their grand water networks, and I would imagine a lot of the land traffic in Minnesota comes from cargo being transports between those two cities.
@abnerlocklear2697
@abnerlocklear2697 3 ай бұрын
As a military service member, the opening of this video gives me goosebumps, need it played to me every morning
@risk5riskmks93
@risk5riskmks93 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service!
@chatedits9456
@chatedits9456 Жыл бұрын
This was one of the absolute best 40-minuters I have ever watched. This covered my expectations, and more. Good job!🙂
@talldude1412
@talldude1412 2 жыл бұрын
I see someone read "the accidental superpower", this is basically a point by point retelling of the primary chapters of this book.
@johndawson6057
@johndawson6057 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah most of these youtubers just rip off ideas from books and rephrase it and present it as their own.
@Dandandandandandandandandanda1
@Dandandandandandandandandanda1 2 жыл бұрын
Which is fine since most people aren't interested in reading that book anyway and he wrote the reference in the description.
@thedustmancometh
@thedustmancometh 2 жыл бұрын
@Bill Randleman if he referenced it, plagiarism is not an issue.
@Wihf
@Wihf 2 жыл бұрын
He credited it in the description
@talldude1412
@talldude1412 2 жыл бұрын
@@Wihf I see that now, I feel like he could have mentioned that upfront. Like, I'm pretty sure most of this is a word for word copy of full paragraphs from the book. It's a very interesting topic of course, so it's cool seeing folks getting access to this info from KZbin, I just would have been more clear that this was basically a summary of those books.
@dumbe9567
@dumbe9567 2 жыл бұрын
When you add the varied biomes within America. Any invader would need to have the gear for nearly every kind of terrain to get through.
@jamesadams893
@jamesadams893 Жыл бұрын
​@@thedarkmajesty1773 that's pretty hilarious, Mexico annexing the usa. 400000000 guns in the hands of the American citizens might have something to say about that
@doomjuice.1652
@doomjuice.1652 Жыл бұрын
For sure the Rocky Mountains and the Appalachian mountains act as a barrier and the Great Lakes so the middle would be most protected unless they invade through Mexico but they would not even reach us cuz Mexico would already alert the USA
@clownworld4655
@clownworld4655 Жыл бұрын
I believe I had read that nearly every biome on earth exists within the US border with a few exceptions such as tropical rainforest (Florida gets close being subtropical)
@pacotaco1246
@pacotaco1246 Жыл бұрын
Does the US have Tundra?
@ChalenaRose
@ChalenaRose Жыл бұрын
Like the European invaders who conquered what is now known as the United States of America?
@dionadair8195
@dionadair8195 2 жыл бұрын
- Basically a continental fortress, isolated from any threat with geography that would be an invading force's nightmare. - Incredible amount of natural resources. - Modern starting point, from a beginning as self-sufficient colonies. Yeah, it really isn't fair.
@The15iceiceice15
@The15iceiceice15 2 жыл бұрын
Then why didn't the American Indians dominated the world? They've been here 10x longer than the US Americans. It's not so much about the territorial advantage as the people and ideology. Another example of this is Israel being surrounded by enemies in the middle of desert yet managed to survive and thrive more than their neighbors.
@dionadair8195
@dionadair8195 2 жыл бұрын
@@The15iceiceice15 You've answered your own question. Both were sponsored by empires, and had a starting point in the modern era. The Mississippians didn't have gunpowder or the Industrial Revolution, but the US was basically a custom-built nation that gained independence in the midst of a technological spike. Yes, ideology played a role (in that it fostered industry and the settlement of a vast territory), but as I pointed out in my original comment, the US had the technology to build an empire. I hoped this cleared up any confusion.
@christopherscott1336
@christopherscott1336 2 жыл бұрын
​@@dionadair8195 Great answer, and I'd further add that the reason that native Americans did not have the technology the Europeans had was that the basic plants and livestock needed to develop the sort of large scale sedentary agriculture that we saw arise in the middle east 10,000 years ago simply didn't evolve there in a usable way until later. There aren't many large livestock native to the Americas, which is a serious handicap, and the llama alone cannot make up for not having sheep, pigs, bovine, etc. Thus, Mesoamerica wasn't able to build it's first true cities until several thousand years after Mesopotamia had gotten the ball rolling.
@madisonatteberry9720
@madisonatteberry9720 2 жыл бұрын
@@The15iceiceice15 A little off subject of what you're talking about, but I wonder, if the Europeans never arrived in the America's weather or not the natives already in the Northern section would have survived long, as the Aztec's were slowly moving in? I wonder if, eventually, the Northern natives would have met a similar history, along the same time, but from the Southern American's?
@reuireuiop0
@reuireuiop0 2 жыл бұрын
The thinking game, the Chinese chess so the speak, is the board game Go. It's target is to slowly surround the opponent, than strangle it slowly. I don't like China much, but I can see them developing that strategy by slowly taking over the dominant Western role in financing major projects all over Africa, Asia, Latin America, even Eastern Europe. With their free trade & neoliberalism ideology, the West has handed over the focal points of economy, production and finance, to China and Arabia, to a lesser extent. We'll see whether the West can develop the kind of longer term strategic thinking, a central feature of Western development before WW2. The thinking behind all "Third Way" ideology of the nineties ( Blair & Clinton) seems to have been blind to the effect of turning over such important part of economy to China and S/E Asia. That strangling job has only just begun. Putin's war is just a preliminary exercise, aimed to sort out how strong get the West still is.
@BarnabyBaltimoron
@BarnabyBaltimoron 2 жыл бұрын
I loved geography and maps as a kid. This kind of content makes me so giddy, I’m sure I annoy everyone I talk to about it. *Love this channel!*
@killerkram1337
@killerkram1337 2 жыл бұрын
I come from a Minnesota farm south of the twin cities. The Mississippi river is a mighty river indeed. Fuels everything, home to so many bald eagles. Been the head waters of the Mississippi river aa few times, nice area to hike. America is an amazing country and living here is kick ass. From that small farm in southern Minnesota to a software engineer this place lets you become anything you want. Family migrated here and in 1 generation we went from farmers to engineers, still got plenty of farmers in the family though. Never going to give that farm up.
@preussianblau5595
@preussianblau5595 2 жыл бұрын
Farmington?
@preussianblau5595
@preussianblau5595 2 жыл бұрын
You don't live close enough yo diversity.
@naddarr1
@naddarr1 2 жыл бұрын
I'm from Central Minnesota myself. My favorite thing about the headwaters of the Mississippi is just how humble it all begins. A normal person can jump across it. I've seen it multiple times where it's not more then a foot deep. It's really humbling to be reminded that the only reason the Mississippi is so big is because of all the other rivers that flow into it, 1 of which I myself live on currently. It truly would be nothing without all of the other rivers and lakes the feed it water.
@czdaniel1
@czdaniel1 2 жыл бұрын
I saw a Bald Eagle driving southbound in Texas' Rio Grande valley. Long strait open highway with VERY WIDE open medians between the North & Southbound lanes. The Bald Eagle swooped down to the deck, landed among the grass & shrubs in that wide open median space. I'm told it was probably a Mexican bald eagle that I saw, which is a little smaller than the American Bald Eagle you see around the Mississippi
@kwakudapaah115
@kwakudapaah115 2 жыл бұрын
@@preussianblau5595 the shield
@i-likemy-space7729
@i-likemy-space7729 Жыл бұрын
The "OP" acronym should be defined in the title since google offers the definitions "Surgical Operation" and "Military Operation".
@zeldamaniac3188
@zeldamaniac3188 7 ай бұрын
I hate when gamer lingo makes it into serious things
@i-likemy-space7729
@i-likemy-space7729 7 ай бұрын
@@zeldamaniac3188 OP stands for Over Populated ?
@carlopoli9067
@carlopoli9067 7 ай бұрын
Totally agree with you. What the **** does the title mean, please?
@fractll
@fractll 7 ай бұрын
overpowered
@MyGuidingMoonlight55
@MyGuidingMoonlight55 6 ай бұрын
OP is overpowered
@almibry
@almibry 2 жыл бұрын
A few years ago I was really into reading about the US's water management and freshwater canal systems so I *knew* about most of this, but seeing it on a map is something else. Thank you!
@Neotenico
@Neotenico 2 жыл бұрын
One thing that confused me is at 13:15, you state that the Great Lakes and Atlantic weren't connected until the late 1950s. The Eerie canal, which connected the lakes to the Hudson River and thus New York City, was constructed in the 1820s. Also the subsequent, much deeper Barge Canal in 1918 allowed even larger commercial boats to pass through, keeping the passageway modernized for the craft that needed to traverse it.
@mrmoosetachio
@mrmoosetachio 2 жыл бұрын
I think he means *all* of the great lakes. Not *any* of the great lakes
@KCAlbak
@KCAlbak 2 жыл бұрын
@@mrmoosetachio Yes. It connected the shallow Erie and Lake Ontario. But no connection to Mesabi iron Range, or the Chicago grain markets
@rosepol
@rosepol 2 жыл бұрын
With the St. Lawrence seaway, large ships could access Chicago. The Erie handled only canal barges.
@ryanmartin4602
@ryanmartin4602 2 жыл бұрын
He's referring to navigable by large ships.
@galileocarandang7025
@galileocarandang7025 2 жыл бұрын
​@@rosepol
@savagemako17
@savagemako17 2 жыл бұрын
It might have been noted by others already, but the river theory is one of the reasons why Africa has been so slow to develop. With the exception of the Nile, there are no easily navigable rivers penetrating Africas interior.
@mrkrabs622
@mrkrabs622 2 жыл бұрын
Asia and the majority of Europe has this problem also, yet they developed great civilizations, unlike Africa.
@mwanikimwaniki6801
@mwanikimwaniki6801 2 жыл бұрын
@@mrkrabs622 Africa did develop great civilizations. And the greatest civilizations in the regions you mentioned did grow around a navigable river. Historical revisionism is pure garbage.
@swampdonkey1567
@swampdonkey1567 2 жыл бұрын
@@mrkrabs622 yes because the technology 3easily spread from the nearby dominat powers like the greeks or persians. Egypt is almost completely separated from the rest of africa besides the Nile making trade of technology slow (plus Egypt was one of the most authoritarian states in the bronze age) It wasn't really till the iron age any great civilizations existed.
@Alex-dh2cx
@Alex-dh2cx 2 жыл бұрын
They've got bad ports, that's their biggest limitation
@reuireuiop0
@reuireuiop0 2 жыл бұрын
Africa has no winter season to speak of. Surviving winter on a regular basis requires long time planning, working together to preserve food for the tough season. Besides, Africa has surprisingly few native species suitable for agriculture or animal breeding. Cow species were savage animals, as for horses - try taming a zebra for riding or draw a cart. These factors make it difficult to develop a homegrown economy, not even very worthwhile to invade like what happened to Europe in several occasions. African weather can be every inch as harsh, though drought and heat can be escaped by trekking. Reckon most of ancient African empires depended upon trade with Arabia, India, where agricultural development had taken a higher flight. Basically the strongest Asian tribes have been chasing out the weaker ones, which then developed new skills in other parts of the world, whereas Africa kind of stuck in the old ways.
@Chris_Thorny
@Chris_Thorny Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@katana4813
@katana4813 2 жыл бұрын
I love how he uses Sid Meier's Civilization resource icons for crops and materials
@ilyasortor2084
@ilyasortor2084 2 жыл бұрын
Bro I used command F to find this comment
@VII0777
@VII0777 Жыл бұрын
The best video summary of the US geographic chapter in Peter Zeihan's book, The Accidental Superpower (2014) on KZbin. An absolute gem.
@thatspyguy839
@thatspyguy839 Жыл бұрын
I really like Peter Zeihan. His optimism about America’s Geopolitical situation is quite refreshing when most everything else is rather pessimistic, barring this video. As with any serious optimism though, it has to be taken with a grain of salt.
@koolaidman324
@koolaidman324 Жыл бұрын
Zeihan is the goat
@TCAPChrisHandsome
@TCAPChrisHandsome 2 жыл бұрын
I live in South Mississippi, and I understand why we have huge naval shipyards here and military bases and training camps everywhere in the Southeast. My dad lives about 30 minutes from Ingalls, which builds a lot of naval ships, including the destroyer class that my father used to help build.
@aKzDViNePaCcO
@aKzDViNePaCcO 2 жыл бұрын
I lived in Gulfport for a year last year when my ship was being built.
@jesse73429
@jesse73429 2 жыл бұрын
A1
@danicoleb5394
@danicoleb5394 2 ай бұрын
Just revisiting old videos. I remember seeing this channel a few years ago but I'm so happy the content has shifted more to geopolitics and world economies. It's incredibly informative, unbiased, and causes me rethink a lot of political narratives around past and current events where the full story isn't being told. I've gotten to the point of treating this and Nebula like my world news source. Only problem is not being able to get this great content more frequently. But that's okay. I'll rewatch old content and look for videos I haven't seen.
@BuddyCrotty
@BuddyCrotty 2 жыл бұрын
North America isn't a prime spawn point for pre-agrarian societies due to the lack of domesticable livestock (for labor and milk), but it is the best expansion point the closer you get to the Industrial age. If what you said was true, then the Americas would have never been colonized by Europeans.
@Andres-uw2kf
@Andres-uw2kf 2 жыл бұрын
Well also disease wiped out 90% of the pre existing population
@PassportAdam
@PassportAdam 2 жыл бұрын
Smallpox bud
@BuddyCrotty
@BuddyCrotty 2 жыл бұрын
@@PassportAdam agriculture allowed for dense urban living in close proximity to livestock, which gave Europeans generations to build immunity against zoonotic diseases like smallpox and plague. Without beasts of burden you don't get dense cities and close animal/human contact.
@DarDarBinks1986
@DarDarBinks1986 2 жыл бұрын
If the Norse had permanently settled North America, all that livestock would have arrived earlier. The Amerindians would still have been hit with Old World diseases such as smallpox, but 1) probably less so than they did and 2) had more time to recover their numbers and build immunity after the initial upheavals. They'd have also probably not been forced off their land, or at least not so much. In one or more places, we'd likely have seen a synthesis of Scandinavian and the myriad Amerindian cultures, especially in the Northeast. Similar to Imperial Japan, one or more Amerindian nation-states would have adopted European weapons and technology and rapidly modernized, then gone about conquering other countries. By now, at least the eastern half of North America would be demographically more Amerindian with a European-descended minority (a la South Africa) and a plurality of Norse-speaking mestizos. The Euro-descendants would look mostly Nordic, but they'd be culturally, religiously, and linguistically very different from their cousins back in the old country. What of language and writing? I'd like to believe that while the nations of Northern Europe would switch to the Latin alphabet following Christianization, the Norse newcomers and their Amerindian compatriots would still write in the runic alphabet. Just as the Latin and Cyrillic alphabets have their own variations for different languages, so would the Futhark script have its own variations to accommodate sounds that exist in the Algonquian, Iroquoian, Muskogean, and other languages but not in Old Norse and whatever descendant language(s) it'd spawn in North America. There'd be exceptions, though. Take the Mikmaq, for instance. They had their own hieroglyphic system pre-contact. If that writing system continued to develop apace, I'd like to think it would have developed in a more stylized fashion akin to Chinese characters. Same with the Mayan writing system--the glyphs would have become more stylized over time to the point of bearing little, if any, resemblance to how they originally looked. As for the Norse side of things, one of two things would happen with a population of Old Norse-speaking people plopped into North America and left there for multiple generations for a thousand years. Their language might still resemble Old Norse, albeit with loanwords from the various Amerindian language families, but still be mutually intelligible with the other North Germanic languages. Or their language may diverge so far as to be unintelligible with other such languages. But they won't speak Icelandic, Faroese, Norwegian, Danish, or Swedish because identical vocabularies aren't going to occur twice. Religion? Unlike in the America we ended up with, a Norse America would probably be more pagan. If Christianity took hold in North America at all, it'd be a minority religion at most. We'd probably see Norse pagan holdouts fleeing Christianization and bringing their old ways with them. Said pagans forcibly converting Amerindians and making them worship Odin, Thor, Freyja, and all them? Don't bank so much on it. I've never heard of a pagan person imposing their beliefs on anyone else. I've only heard of Abrahamic religions (namely Christianity and Islam) doing that shit. The only exception I can think of is Hindu nationalists simping for Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, going after their Muslim countrymen. North America's religious makeup would be a cornucopia of various pagan religions with a Christian minority at most. Not only Christianity, but also any Abrahamic religion would probably be a minority as well. The most hardcore Christians? They'd be seen as a fringe movement, almost exclusively European and not taken seriously by most people. All things considered, one or more nation-states that grow out of a Norse colonization would still end up in the same position as the U.S. is in now. North America has the best geography for any civilization to spawn and thrive in, even if that civilization has to play the long game to do it.
@weirdshibainu
@weirdshibainu 2 жыл бұрын
Simple fact is that geography aside, it was easy to colonize North America as Native Americans were tribal, easy to exploit differences among tribes and lacked a single leader.
@kalebbruwer
@kalebbruwer 2 жыл бұрын
It's also important that, for almost two centuries, America was geographically separated from any other superpower and rarely fought wars on home soil. They were practically unscathed by WWI and WWII, so afterwards they modernized while other countries were rebuilding from the ashes. Modern technology brought this to an end, though.
@huntclanhunt9697
@huntclanhunt9697 2 жыл бұрын
Not yet. We still haven't had to fight a war on our soil. Closest would have been 9/11, which while tragic, was hardly the same damage as a war.
@EvilDaveCanada
@EvilDaveCanada 2 жыл бұрын
@@huntclanhunt9697 What do your call a fight between two countries where your capital city, Washington DC, gets burned to the ground by a combination of ground & naval forces? Is the History Class completely optional in your High Schools?
@commisaryarreck3974
@commisaryarreck3974 2 жыл бұрын
@@EvilDaveCanada A war that actually mattered leaf, don't make me get out the rake. A devastating war with actual impact on the nation rather then what can be a minor skirmish that didn't amount to much of anything Closest the US got to seeing the horrors of war was during Shermans march to the sea in their civil war. Considering how gladly they inflict these horrors worldwide we can be certain their population literally cannot even comprehend it anymore and even then the civil war was rather tame But for US education, it's not just history that's optional, math, geography. Pretty much every class TBH. Their standards for education are a joke to most of the world. Keep in mind most of these savages generally say yes to should we invade X nation and can't even point it out on a map Alongside drinkable tap water I swear in some aspects the US is a third world nation
@AidanBrtYT
@AidanBrtYT 2 жыл бұрын
@@huntclanhunt9697 Civil war??
@MCWaffles2003-1
@MCWaffles2003-1 2 жыл бұрын
This is both a boon to the US and a pitfall. We never had to rebuild which saved us costs, but we are also becoming infrastructurally outdated since we rely on old systems that were never broken.
@ryanreedgibson
@ryanreedgibson 2 жыл бұрын
This is the best geography video I have seen in my life. Aside from the best on KZbin. There were two declarations that are misconstrued but they don't affect the underlying premise. WHAT A GREAT PRESENTATION!
@leskobrandon691
@leskobrandon691 2 жыл бұрын
It was a great video. I think he may have made most of this video before Biden handed the keys to our oil empire over to the climate alarmist folks. He was right that we were self sustaining & we'd never have to go begging others for our oil ever again. But here we are....begging others for oil now. What a shame.
@tonyfriendly4409
@tonyfriendly4409 2 жыл бұрын
Do tell!
@raymondpaul123
@raymondpaul123 11 ай бұрын
I love Canadians. Oh and by the way, what a great episode. man. I had no idea great job. I need to join nebula, thank you.
@dalepeto9620
@dalepeto9620 9 ай бұрын
Leave your sex life out of it.
@greyno7030
@greyno7030 2 жыл бұрын
Growing up in St. Louis gave me an appreciation for the Mississippi-Missouri River system as an economic powerhouse. I'd argue that St. Louis is the most strategically viable location for the US capital, given its location at the joining of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers and its central location. Gabaret Island and Choteau Island are easily defensible, and should New Orleans fall into enemy hands a location on the Mississippi-Missouri would allow this hypothetical St. Louis capital to still reap the benefits of the 4th largest river system in the world. Historically, before the invention of phones and the internet, St. Louis' location is ideal. Information could be sent quickly to and from any tributary of the Mississippi to the capital. Had St. Louis been developed as the capital of the US, it would also be an ideal railway hub. I may be a bit biased
@jacobbernard1393
@jacobbernard1393 2 жыл бұрын
It's also no coincidence that St Louis is the major US city closest to the gravitational center of population.
@blancavelasquez9859
@blancavelasquez9859 2 жыл бұрын
@@jacobbernard1393 one day St. louis will be our Paris
@clarenceartman7487
@clarenceartman7487 2 жыл бұрын
Perhaps a bit but it's very logical I wanted to buy the Kentucky loop exclave, get the Army Corps of Engineers to flood proof it and move the capital there - it's not St Louis but I wanted to build a city from scratch and to keep its population only government, no residents as was intended all along
@sigh7731
@sigh7731 2 жыл бұрын
The Hog Rider is a fast ground troop with medium hit points, low damage, and the ability to jump over enemy Walls. He is unlocked from the Spell Valley (Arena 5). He is a quick building-targeting, melee troop with moderately high hitpoints and damage
@jacobbernard1393
@jacobbernard1393 2 жыл бұрын
@@johnperic6860 My point was that any such city placed at that strategic geographic point would eventually constitute a transcontinental US' center of population.
@williammorrison6963
@williammorrison6963 Жыл бұрын
Slight correction: the old river control structure is not close to Vidalia, LA. It's about 35 miles to the South, not really close to any significantly sized towns.
@MeloniousThunk
@MeloniousThunk Жыл бұрын
and Baton Rouge’s main supply of fresh water isn’t the Mississippi river
@mammajamma4397
@mammajamma4397 Жыл бұрын
@@MeloniousThunk besides, the Mississippi river could hardly be called fresh water
@oppionatedindividual8256
@oppionatedindividual8256 Жыл бұрын
@@mammajamma4397 yes it could, because it is.
@richellebrittain2127
@richellebrittain2127 Жыл бұрын
@@oppionatedindividual8256 Nope, because the lower Mississippi & most of its tributaries are too full of pollution, sediments, and even salts for most cities to use as drinking water, New Orleans being the biggest exception as there are no other fresh-water sources nearby. Baton Rouge & Memphis both rely on wells; Little Rock, AR (on the tributary Arkansas River) gets its water from two lakes in the Ouachita Mountains. (I live near Little Rock in a town that uses a mix of Little Rock water, another small lake in North Central AR, and its own wells.)
@tomsenft7434
@tomsenft7434 Жыл бұрын
@@richellebrittain2127 I think you are confusing "fresh" with "potable."
@notcherbane3218
@notcherbane3218 2 жыл бұрын
Well the waterways are definitely a huge huge benefit but you have to remember had our country not been consolidated on under one power it could not have been completely utilized imagine if the United States have been broke up into like four sections with the French holding one section the English holding another section Spanish holding another section and the Germans or Russians or somebody holding the four section this would have limited the benefit of the Mississippi and meant that this area would have been at least for 100 years under continual conflict. Had not one authority taking control of the riverways the true benefit of this would not have been realized.
@cablefeed3738
@cablefeed3738 2 жыл бұрын
No but it probably be close we'd end up with an AU which would be very very powerful
@Nyet-Zdyes
@Nyet-Zdyes 2 жыл бұрын
@@cablefeed3738 It's MORE likely that we would have ended with the strife of Europe 1700's-1900's, instead of something like the EU. Remember, it took two World Wars AND a cold war to result in the EU. As for the modern US-Can friendship (peace) that's almost certainly due to those same two world wars, AND the common cultural heritage and language... and also by actual blood-ties (Yes, I know about the French heritage of Quebec, but THAT is balanced between Quebec and Ontario, already, purely internally.)
@SomethingWittyRW
@SomethingWittyRW 2 жыл бұрын
Huh? Current rivers in Europe that are comparable to the Mississippi and similar rivers have been used for trade for literal thousands of years without problem unless war broke out or embargos placed. European nations understood the importance of trade and keeping trade flowing into other countries regardless of political differences for thousands of years. This is such a large and baseless assumption I'm struggling to even understand how you can claim something like this without significant evidence.
@michaelmerck7576
@michaelmerck7576 2 жыл бұрын
Think of how railways would have developed without the benefit of having a unified source of technology
@SomethingWittyRW
@SomethingWittyRW 2 жыл бұрын
@@michaelmerck7576 what do you mean by this? Railways were started in Europe in Britain during the industrial revolution.
@riottonitedragon8344
@riottonitedragon8344 Жыл бұрын
New Orleans is how Lincoln suffocated the confederacy
@Xalerdane
@Xalerdane 2 жыл бұрын
You mentioned Western Canada being more integrated with the Northwestern United States than the rest of Canada; the same thing is happening to Northern Mexico. The dry top half of Mexico is more economically, infrastructurally, and culturally affiliated with the Southwestern United States than it is with the wetter bottom half. So I think the US is slowly _eating_ its neighbors.
@alt_zaq1_esc
@alt_zaq1_esc Жыл бұрын
So far from God, so close to the US
@AndersAylward
@AndersAylward Жыл бұрын
"America, F Yeah"
@ivann.1916
@ivann.1916 Жыл бұрын
Demographically, is Mexico who's eating the US southwest. Mexican people will surpass whites, blacks, asians and will be the majority group in the next decades (at least in the southwest). Economy is another story, but the demographic tendency is irreversible.
@Xalerdane
@Xalerdane Жыл бұрын
@@ivann.1916 The American Southwest has _always_ been majority Hispanic. Meanwhile, Mexicans from the northern _estados_ are mostly employed either across the border or in factories owned by American companies, and consume more American media, speak more English, and use more American money than the Mexicans farther south. There’s also more roads and railways connecting the northern estados to the southern states than there are connecting them to the southern estados. Northern Mexico is slowly being pulled out of Southern Mexico’s sphere of influence and being pulled into America’s. People from Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, and Coahuila have more in common with people from California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, than they do with people from Mexico City, Veracruz, Oaxaca, or Tabasco.
@aidanmurray3979
@aidanmurray3979 6 ай бұрын
The Northern Mexican states that border the US are the wealthiest in Mexico apart from CDMX area.
@paulmckean4583
@paulmckean4583 Жыл бұрын
One other minor critique of your analysis: Although I agree that New Orleans is critical to US commerce, even if it was destroyed or captured US commerce would not shut down as you have stated that the Mississippi basin is also connected to the great lakes and trade could be rerouted through there to reach the Atlantic. It would suck but the US heartland would still be connected as an oceanic port.
@kna3951
@kna3951 Жыл бұрын
You are oh so very smart
@leodesgarcons
@leodesgarcons Жыл бұрын
True, it wouldn’t wipe out the mississippi river trade line but it would definitely cripple it substantially
@brianb7388
@brianb7388 Жыл бұрын
the problem with this theory is that much of the production/refining capability is also located on the mississippi.
@chandlerwright5460
@chandlerwright5460 Жыл бұрын
I think another issue is if New Orleans was somehow captured, we’d have no way to defend the river if someone uses it to attack upstream
@seaneustace9838
@seaneustace9838 11 ай бұрын
The thing with North America is it just keeps getting better and better not only do we have all these terrific waterways, but when the New Englanders and New Yorkers realized they were going to lose political and economic power to Louisiana they built the area Canal, and all sorts of railroads crossing the country and that good old protestant fashion with nature doesn’t obey you you simply whip the shit out of it and make it do your bidding. Do you know back when men or men, and not ruled over by foreigners and usurpers. Hell, they even kick their own, English countrymen out of the country and get rid of their own king, calling him a foreigner, because he was from Hannover Germany. He didn’t put up with the kind of shit we put up with today they were ready to go to war, over a penny in taxes if they did not feel represented today, we let them steal elections from us and do nothing. New wine and a full belly take away the heart.
@qjnel12345
@qjnel12345 2 жыл бұрын
I drove across the country and as you drive from the appalachians to the great plains to the rockies the geography really makes you feel like the midwest is in the middle of two castle walls. And you cannot help but ponder how any adversary would be able to cross those mountain ranges if the roads were guarded/ destroyed.
@rafaelfeliz9961
@rafaelfeliz9961 4 ай бұрын
Excellent!!!! The narrator speaks English clearly and distinct, full of VALUABLE content. Never heard any documentary more straight to the point.... And useful I'm a subscriber !!!! You are going to be close to me at all times.
@winchester208
@winchester208 2 жыл бұрын
Simply amazing. This 40 minute KZbin video has tied in so many points about history, geography, foreign policy, geopolitics and wars. Also helps to fill in the blanks about why certain things including why this union can never allow states to secede from it. Bravo!
@THE_IS300_KID
@THE_IS300_KID 2 жыл бұрын
I didn't realize until I read this. Got into the rabbit hole of learning new things.
@Shikuesi
@Shikuesi 2 жыл бұрын
That last point amounts to a key vulnerability. If Scotland were to secede from the United Kingdom, I doubt the English economy would care that much - it would be Scotland that mainly paid the price. On the other hand if the US lost Alaska and Texas (with associated Gulf waters), wouldn't that make a significant dent in its energy security?
@johnkology9599
@johnkology9599 2 жыл бұрын
read peter zeihan. It is everything in this video and more. He got most of this video from peters ideas
@thepagecollective
@thepagecollective 2 жыл бұрын
@@Shikuesi I don't think Scotland would pay much of a price at this point. Rejoining the EU would make them wealthier than their southern neighbor.
@isaiahc8390
@isaiahc8390 2 жыл бұрын
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20. Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God. Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
@saigovind3006
@saigovind3006 Жыл бұрын
For those like me searching for the meaning of OP here it is Op- overpowered!
@geraldkern6794
@geraldkern6794 Жыл бұрын
Thank you.🤩
@rydunning
@rydunning Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@jeanmartin6410
@jeanmartin6410 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@garzascreek
@garzascreek Жыл бұрын
You found the Easter egg! 2:26
@ddawson100
@ddawson100 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I'm kinda annoyed when abbreviations are used without prior definition.
@kedoka6603
@kedoka6603 Жыл бұрын
I have not, till now, watched content like this. Now I am more inclined to watch more like this. Great content thank you
@Go_40subscribers.
@Go_40subscribers. Жыл бұрын
There are more countries are smaller and more overpowered than the U.S. I made videos on them check it out 💯
@drshin9893
@drshin9893 Жыл бұрын
@@Go_40subscribers.if you want people to watch your content, you probably shouldn’t type like a moron
@patsagonsaechin3006
@patsagonsaechin3006 Жыл бұрын
@@Go_40subscribers. lame clickbait
@KingAlanI
@KingAlanI Жыл бұрын
As for water shipping being much cheaper, the Erie Canal was huge in the early 19th century development of New York state for the same reason
@Joseph-ax999
@Joseph-ax999 Жыл бұрын
"The Americans are very fortunate. They're bordered to the north and south by weak neighbors, and to the east and west by fish". Otto von Bismarck , German chancellor
@dalepeto9620
@dalepeto9620 9 ай бұрын
Didn't he also say "God protects bums, drunks and the US Army??
@raymondsaldana2161
@raymondsaldana2161 2 жыл бұрын
I love the amount of work you put into both the research and animations.
@Srdjana-
@Srdjana- 2 жыл бұрын
yet they couldn't research enough to spell the names of cities correctly.
@vizsla8579
@vizsla8579 2 жыл бұрын
You know he doesn’t do these animations himself right?
@alicehoffman9729
@alicehoffman9729 2 жыл бұрын
So amazing love the movie 😍😍😍
@Srdjana-
@Srdjana- 2 жыл бұрын
@@vizsla8579 Notice I said " They "
@purple.9919
@purple.9919 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly though, the animation is definitely top tier 👍
@Red-Magic
@Red-Magic 2 жыл бұрын
It freaked me out when you told me the embargo on Cuba never ended. In the US, we are taught about the crisis and including the embargo placed in Cuba, but it never explicitly said that the embargo never ended, so I just assumed that the embargo was lifted when the missiles were removed. Boy was I wrong. Had to pause this video and jump into the online rabbit hole for half an hour
@DissidentB
@DissidentB 2 жыл бұрын
The US empire has a tendency to never forgive any country that asserts it's own sovereignty over the empire's attempts to meddle within it's affairs and overthrows whatever neo-colonial puppet regime the empire had installed in their country in order to pillage it's resources keep the local population under control, and it especially can't forgive or make peace with any country that successfully creates the threat of a positive example for viable alternatives to the empire's global "free market" capitalist hegemony and its "rules-based international order" that it's forcibly imposed upon the world in order to serve it's own interests at the expense of everyone else. It will do anything it possibly can to infiltrate, destabilize, subvert, starve, fund minoritarian insurgencies and astroturfed protest movements within, or provoke a response from such uncooperative countries, and will manufacture or just outright fabricate whatever pretext is necessary in order to make themselves look like the good guy's while doing so. Cuba is just one country among many dozens who have become targets of the empire for refusing to bend the knee and allow their governments to be subverted by the US state department, their natural resources to be plundered by US corporations, and their populations to be systematically exploited and pillaged. Now that we're well into the 21st century and the US has been doing this all over the world for well over 100 years, that list of targeted countries has started to band together in a global alliance of resistance that cumulatively outnumbers and overpowers the empire and it's satellite states not just militarily and economically, but diplomatically as well. The crumbling yet arrogant and entitled as ever US empire has condemned itself to eventual isolation and collapse with it's own insatiable greed and brutality with it's treatment of other countries around the world, and sadly it's own population is largely clueless about what it's happening and what it's own ruling class has perpetrated upon the rest of the global population.
@shakshukioflibya6633
@shakshukioflibya6633 2 жыл бұрын
Omg you have a lot of learning to do child
@MSportsEngineering
@MSportsEngineering 2 жыл бұрын
I think you are confounding the words embargo and blockade.
@creativeuser2083
@creativeuser2083 2 жыл бұрын
american zealots will never cede anything in the bid to retain power indefinitely.
@diegovasquez7610
@diegovasquez7610 2 жыл бұрын
That embargo has little to no effect since Cuba can still trade with anyone they want, even the US sends a lot of chicken to Cuba.
@twveach
@twveach 3 ай бұрын
👇Knows that OP means over powered button.
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