Indians React to Facts about Germans never taught in School!

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The Loud Bro

The Loud Bro

Күн бұрын

Hello guys, here is our reaction on Facts about Germans never taught in School | ! Watch&Share!
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Пікірлер: 186
@markusfrick6883
@markusfrick6883 3 ай бұрын
They didn't even mention, that most of the european royalty is German, in the video. ^^
@kinkfluencer
@kinkfluencer Ай бұрын
Why would they mention the unemployed?
@cobruh836
@cobruh836 2 ай бұрын
its nice to see that some people look behind the curtain of ww2 and appreciate what they find, thank you
@giafoneozu9998
@giafoneozu9998 2 ай бұрын
Hitler was not even german, he was austrian...
@FrankHarwald
@FrankHarwald 2 ай бұрын
Yes, Braunau am Inn is literally directly at the German-Austrian border, so some say he might be half German & half Austrian.
@Nik-nd1mv
@Nik-nd1mv 2 ай бұрын
@@FrankHarwald Braunau ist in Österreich
@rwps3677
@rwps3677 2 ай бұрын
Österreicher sind Deutsche und bis 1945 war das noch nicht mal kontrovers sondern völlig logisch und verständlich für jeden in Österreich und Deutschland.
@Nik-nd1mv
@Nik-nd1mv 2 ай бұрын
@@rwps3677 Sag DAS keinem Österreicher
@kitthey4963
@kitthey4963 Ай бұрын
@@Nik-nd1mv bevor sie mit Hitler in Verbindung gebracht werden? XD
@RobertHutchins-t4l
@RobertHutchins-t4l 2 ай бұрын
Ancient India also made massive contributions to science and technology.
@pablomax9376
@pablomax9376 Ай бұрын
Indeed- The country with the most inventions under their belts would be China though. Much of what we think of as modern inventions were actually invented in China much earlier. India had many contributions though, particularly in astronomy. Another interesting thing invented in Germany is Exothermic welding of train tracks, which makes the modern rail lines possible.
@eucitizen78
@eucitizen78 Ай бұрын
Oh yes India has a great history in this
@ranyl7744
@ranyl7744 Ай бұрын
​@@pablomax9376 you are totally wrong
@_Yannex
@_Yannex 3 ай бұрын
Another (India) interesting fact: The British crown have (had) a german heritage and surname
@AlexandraVioletta
@AlexandraVioletta Ай бұрын
Battenberg -> Mountbatten
@feroxk.9266
@feroxk.9266 Ай бұрын
What needs to be said and highlighted: Yes, germans do keep their own traditions intact wherever they roam BUT we always been taught to RESPECT and ADAPT to the locals and not the locals to us. THis is what is missing in modern immigration PLENTY of times as in the video mention, germany sadly gets reduced to the period of 1930/1940.
@Chillmann2k
@Chillmann2k Ай бұрын
Beer also made us invent the refrigerator. No kidding, the process of brewing beer requires cooling. Before the fridge it was predominantly made by monks inside the deep and cool basements of monasteries
@ArmandoBellagio
@ArmandoBellagio 3 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's like the narrator said. Many Germans migrated to places like the US, Australia, South America etc. before there was a German nation-state. So they were more into the culture of a particular area in Germany. And when the 2 world wars came many Germans in the US for example Americanized then more and even changed their names to more English-sounding names. And even the name of food items were changed e,g. Frankfurters became hot dogs, even though they call the sausages now Frankfurters again.
@54321eclipse12345
@54321eclipse12345 3 ай бұрын
Germans usually didn't really migrate in a sense of migratans. Germans generally settled as groups in unoccupied places of these countries. These german settlements were mostly self sufficient and with the goal of developing new land. This distinguishes them from other ethinc groups mostly migrating to the cities creating parallel societies.
@heinzhaupthaar5590
@heinzhaupthaar5590 2 ай бұрын
​@@54321eclipse12345 Is that really so? Do you by any chance have some sources on hand? I'd really like to read a bit about that.
@bamfyfe
@bamfyfe Ай бұрын
​@@heinzhaupthaar5590 I´m trying rly hard to find this amazing youtube video about some mennonites or hutterites and the US. One guy devided to take his family to south america i think it was peru or bolivia to build a new settlement pretty much in the jungle. They legit start building those famous big red barns where everyone lives together untill they finished building more houses. If i find it ill come back to you its rly worth a watch.
@heinzhaupthaar5590
@heinzhaupthaar5590 Ай бұрын
@@bamfyfe That'd be great, thanks!
@xxklesx1
@xxklesx1 Ай бұрын
@@54321eclipse12345 Thats the reasons that germans, even as one of the biggest if not the biggest group of migrants in the usa, never had a Mafia, because the left the big citys and went west.
@grunertee934
@grunertee934 3 ай бұрын
Kein Telefon, kein Fernsehen, kein Diesel Motor, kein Düsenatrieb für Jets? Relativitätstheorie, die Glühbirne, etc. etc...
@yakucho8123
@yakucho8123 3 ай бұрын
Geht ja darum was NICHT in den Schulen beigebracht wurde :D
@ulliulli
@ulliulli 3 ай бұрын
@@yakucho8123 Die meisten Schulen lehren, dass das Telefon von Bell stammt.
@Klaus-em3ix
@Klaus-em3ix 3 ай бұрын
Telephone? Düsenantrieb? Das letztere sehen die Britten anders.
@grunertee934
@grunertee934 3 ай бұрын
@@ulliulli Nein Philipp Reiss
@grunertee934
@grunertee934 3 ай бұрын
@@Klaus-em3ix Nein Hans von Ohaim. Aber der Sieger schreibt die Geschichte, also die Alliierten 😎
@jensspeicher8797
@jensspeicher8797 2 ай бұрын
Heinrich Hertz: German physicist who first conclusively proved the existence of the electromagnetic waves predicted by James Clerk Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism. The unit of frequency, cycle per second, was named the "hertz" in his honor. Todays modern, connected world: not possible without electromagnetic waves.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
11:00 Pomeranians were Germans from the lands more or less near the estuary of the Oder river (the Oder ending up in the Baltic Sea). Pomerania was situated between Mecklenburg to its West and Prussia to its East. A small part of Pomerania on the western side of the Oder, called „Vorpommern“, is still German.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
4:56 Martin Waldseemüller came up with the name in 1507, in order to honor Italian „explorer“ Amerigo Vespucci.
@robink.3557
@robink.3557 2 ай бұрын
Nowadays, Germans migrate to the comment section of these kinds of videos to lurk around and sometimes leave a comment such as this one
@dametalbayer1014
@dametalbayer1014 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for your support, majority of german people are really good dudes and ladies. hitler was an accident. horrific.... we are not that kind. !
@kapuzinergruft
@kapuzinergruft 2 ай бұрын
Humans are humans, regardless of anything. Homo homini lupus est.
@Vizeroy9
@Vizeroy9 Ай бұрын
Well... he was Austrian... not a native German.
@criticalcomment123
@criticalcomment123 2 ай бұрын
There are also a relatively unknown, partly Germanic people-the Circassians, an ethnic group that lived by the Black Sea. It is said that the Circassians consist of two main groups. One group is believed to be genetically similar to the Turks and Persians, while the other is thought to be of Germanic origin. Unfortunately, this people were absorbed by the Russian Empire, and their descendants now mostly live as "Turks" in Turkey or have immigrated to Europe.
@cbbcbb6803
@cbbcbb6803 3 ай бұрын
And the Anglo-Saxons remained loyal to their culture wherever they migrated away from England. Even when the Anglo-Saxons inte-rmarry, they refuse to assimilate.
@AlexandraVioletta
@AlexandraVioletta Ай бұрын
Like the first 2 or 3 generations of Germans did in the now called USA
@Icelandchan
@Icelandchan 2 ай бұрын
I take anthropology classes in university and even there, Germans are everywhere: - a German dude moved to the US and founded the American Anthropology there -> Franz Boas - a half German dude went to England and founded the British Anthropology there -> B. Malinowski Both had an immense impact in their fields. Malinowski created the method mostly used by anthropologists all around the world to this day. And for the time they lived in (around 1900 to early 20th century) they had such new ideas such as there is no hierarchy of cultures or people with Europe at the top (as it was believed before) and that you should work with the people you want to know about and not simply pull things out of your bu...out of some books. Haha...Germans. And while we had a wonderful start in Germany, too, it went downhill in the first half of the 20th century, especially after 1933.
@stianthijsen4784
@stianthijsen4784 Ай бұрын
it went downhill because of BRITAIN... they planned the war against germany since 1880. "GERMANY MUST PERRISH!"
@SebastianUnterberg
@SebastianUnterberg 2 ай бұрын
Sad that we Germans almost learn nothing about India in school. For me, India is one of the countries with most history + rich culture.
@ColdRoland
@ColdRoland 2 ай бұрын
Can't learn about the wider world when 9 of 10 years in history class is dedicated to learning about 1935-1945.
@miss_california
@miss_california 2 ай бұрын
Yes, such a rich old culture, and there are so many languages spoken in India. I love India very much!
@Arc0w
@Arc0w 2 ай бұрын
​@@ColdRoland BS, you learn 2-3 years about that time in different intensity and also it is more 1914-1945, because without WW1, the results of that and understanding the downfall and shortcomings of the Weimarer Republik it is impossible to get why the Nazis came into power. In addition it is normal for every country to prioritize your own history, then your continents, global and only after that the specific history of other countries. You just don't have the time to learn about every country. But you are given the tools to research that knowledge for yourself. PS: Why 1935? If you want just the NS regime it is 1933-1945, if you wanted to just take WW2 it would be 1939-1945, even if you consider the japanese war against China as the start it would be 1937-1945. 1935 is just random.
@ColdRoland
@ColdRoland Ай бұрын
@@Arc0w And still you don't get much of the History of the world. I get why it's important know your own countrie's History first. Especially one that had such an impact on the world overall. But the curriculum overdid it. By quite a lot. I've had classes in grade 10, that STILL was only about WW2 and how it came to be a situation. I just think it's really overkill at the expense of getting to learn about anything outside of your own borders. And yes, I got the years wrong, don't really care. That's why History lessons and tests always bored me to tears. It was just remember event and the date. Not why it was remarkable, not how it influenced anything following, just remember the date and the event. Maybe I just had a shit History teacher, but as someone interested in it, I basically had to go out of my way to learn what I was actually interested in.
@Gegengegenfa
@Gegengegenfa Ай бұрын
​@@ColdRoland1935🤔
@sns4748
@sns4748 Ай бұрын
I have to correct the narrator at 1:40. What he called "Eastern Europe" where millions of Germans were violently expelled from after WW2, wasn't "Eastern Europe" but was actually mostly actual German territories that were annexed by Poland and Russia after WW2. To say this wasn't Germany is like saying London doesnt belong to England. Königsberg (today known as Kaliningrad) was founded by German knights in 1200. Other actual German terroritories were Silecia, East and West Prussia and Pomerania.
@feroxk.9266
@feroxk.9266 Ай бұрын
to be fair, most of the areas switched so many sides, you cant even define where one land specifically was. When Königsberg or todays north poland (danzig area) was settled by german knights (before that it was actually slavic/polish), todays germany was italian. you just cant draw any definitive lines from the past :D it was in constant motion so at some point everyone is right ^^
@stianthijsen4784
@stianthijsen4784 Ай бұрын
@@feroxk.9266 well, then NO ONE has a right to set borders.... everything belongs to everyone! That is an utter LEFTIST mindset. NO BORDER NO NATION. What about Ukraine then? What about Crimea? What about STEALING land in general? Can you OWN something stolen? The germans BUILT these cities and DEVELOPED East-Prussia on their own. What about CONTRACTS?
@stianthijsen4784
@stianthijsen4784 Ай бұрын
@sns4748 very important that you've mentioned that!
@thomasmorgenroth4668
@thomasmorgenroth4668 2 ай бұрын
Any form of motion invented in Germany Bike Car Plane Rocket Exception is train
@mrmetalbones3768
@mrmetalbones3768 Ай бұрын
Maybe I'm a little late with my comment, but the fact that many who came to Germany from the eastern territories after the end of the Second World War had never seen it before is actually true. My grandfather was brought by Americans from Lower Silesia (a place near Breslau that no longer exists) to the Czech Republic and from there to Bavaria. He and his grandfather did not know these areas. In addition, many were forcibly expelled during this time and lost everything. Many were killed while fleeing, but also by soldiers of the Red Army. But this is not even taught in German schools. You only find out about it when you look into the subject more closely or read it in your family's diaries.
@melchiorvonsternberg844
@melchiorvonsternberg844 3 ай бұрын
I wanted to give you a few more figures on this story of the expulsions from Eastern Europe. After the end of the war in Europe, the hour of revenge and settling of old scores, as well as just shameless enrichment, began. Various actions were carried out in Stalin's sphere of influence. In the part of Germany that the Soviets had directly occupied, between 500,000 and 600,000 Germans were murdered as political opponents by the Stalinists between 1945 and 1948. They used the old Nazi concentration camps for this purpose. So it could happen that someone who had been persecuted by the Nazis and put in a camp ended up in the same camp again, this time on the orders of the Stalinists! The expulsion was a completely different matter. In total, 12.2 million ethnic Germans were expelled. Up to 1.6 million people died in the process. If we combine these two figures, up to 2.2 million Germans died. It's one thing if people die during a war, which is bad enough! But it's a whole other story when people die in peacetime...
@morpheus3334
@morpheus3334 2 ай бұрын
😉🙋‍♂️ Sehr gut ! 👍 Grüße aus Deutschland 🇩🇪
@CaptianInternet
@CaptianInternet Ай бұрын
I can’t wait to see this. But I need to wait for a beak.
@TheVaan1
@TheVaan1 Ай бұрын
Historically it can be said that germans do not conquer or hold territory through military force very well. But through settling germans expanded to all continents.🤫
@MonicaKiesel
@MonicaKiesel Ай бұрын
pretty cool that you guys are interested in german historie, we are not that bad as the world sees us.
@alexanderschulz5961
@alexanderschulz5961 Ай бұрын
Note to your channel. Make more interactions with each other. In an action video like this, stop and talk about what you've seen. For example, at the beginning about beer. Ask the other person if they have ever drunk German beer, or ask your viewers to write in their experiences or thoughts. At the moment you just look into the camera and nothing else. Especially since you have a different energy before and after the video than during the contribution. Good luck and greetings from Germany
@deutschlanddeutschland7111
@deutschlanddeutschland7111 Ай бұрын
Jawed Karim, one of the three founders of KZbin, is also a German (half German half Bangladeshi, grew up in Germany). He emigrated to the US though, because Germans are a bit technophobic and xenophobic nowadays, unfortunately.
@Coolgamer400
@Coolgamer400 2 ай бұрын
Poorly Germany now is only a shadow of itself.
@AlexandraVioletta
@AlexandraVioletta Ай бұрын
It truly is. 😢
@ElRabito
@ElRabito Ай бұрын
Bullshit
@Coolgamer400
@Coolgamer400 Ай бұрын
@@ElRabito Politics is maximally decoupled from the needs of the population, People feel more insecure, the financial security of the working population is dwindling, many can no longer afford property, not to mention general housing costs. It is better to fight against the “right”. The economy is groaning under anti-competitive conditions such as high energy costs or poor political planning, which is why more and more companies are going abroad. Tax money is distributed around the world rather than bringing the dilapidated infrastructure (including education) into shape, etc. I don't even know where to stop...
@ElRabito
@ElRabito Ай бұрын
@@Coolgamer400 bullshit. It's a global problem, stop pretending it's a local problem......
@TheVaan1
@TheVaan1 Ай бұрын
Sad but true.😢
@lordradam5409
@lordradam5409 Ай бұрын
America is named after Amerigo Vespucci, there must be some great documentations here on YT.
@biggsdarklighter0473
@biggsdarklighter0473 2 ай бұрын
We weren´t inventors of this world: - some things, like i.e. printing with movable types was invented in ancient china, where there were way to many signs, so the inventor emigrated to korea, where the amount of diffrent signs was way lower. At most Johannes Gutenberg may claim Convergent evolution for that idea, as he wasn´t the first to come up with it. He also didn´t gain any money from his invention and died poor, while his investors made money from his invention.
@JayRioLasRocas
@JayRioLasRocas 2 ай бұрын
"ooooooooooooooooooooh" 😂✌🏽
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
6:47 You might have heard of an American name for the Mennonites: The Amish.
@BR618
@BR618 3 ай бұрын
For our hosts: Amish and Mennonites (A split from M ~ 1693) compare, like Roman Catholic and English Evangelic, both some kind of Christian believe but different in interpretation. ^^
@ekesandras1481
@ekesandras1481 3 ай бұрын
@@BR618 the difference is mostly ethnically and less theologically: Mennonites speak a Low German dialect (Platt, close to Dutch), while Amish speak a South-Western dialect from the Palatinate (like in Pennsylvania or South America). The third Anabaptist group - that is often forgotten, the Hutterites who now mainly live in Prairie Canada speak a Austrian-Baviarian dialect.
@BR618
@BR618 3 ай бұрын
@@ekesandras1481 And one tells me things I know, because?
@heinzhaupthaar5590
@heinzhaupthaar5590 2 ай бұрын
​@@BR618 If it's correct and you know then why did you claim otherwise?
@BR618
@BR618 2 ай бұрын
@@heinzhaupthaar5590 if you say so, please reread the thread, as I didn't ^^ weak try for a troll
@wintersoldat2074
@wintersoldat2074 2 ай бұрын
You forgot Green Hell vr in the survival genre
@andreasleszczak9868
@andreasleszczak9868 Ай бұрын
Yeah Germany is way more then the Nazi rulership. Its nice here, come visit us ;)
@Uodal-Ge
@Uodal-Ge 2 ай бұрын
Schade habe leider nicht alles verstanden, es klingt auf jeden Fall recht positiv für Deutschland.
@holz6661
@holz6661 2 ай бұрын
What? German is older than English? Nonsense. What the Indians really should know: German and English possess the same ancestor: West Germanic. English and German both arose in the 7th century AD when they split off/diverged. At the same time Old French arose, which is a descendant of Latin mixed with West Germanic vocabulary, because a Germanic tribe, the Franks, settled in France, mixed with the Romanised Kelts in France and took the Vulgar Latin language, before Vulgar Latin developped into Old French. And Germans did not exist in Roman times. They were mainly the afore-mentioned Franks, Angles and Saxons and other West Germanic tribes. These tribes sometimes fought against each other. Also, the ancestors of the Anglo-Saxons in Britain, came from the area we now call Germany especially in the North of present Germany before they migrated to the British Isles...By the way, some Indian languages like Hindi and Urdu are also related to West Germanic languages. The ancestor is called Indo-European.
@naru9453
@naru9453 2 ай бұрын
You do know that flat German is German... Flat German is older then English
@PBroecker
@PBroecker 3 ай бұрын
Please react to: German Alps From Above MUST SEE Views: Berechtesgadener Land 4k | Königsee
@ronik24
@ronik24 3 ай бұрын
0:30 Germanic languages may have developed over a long time, and there may have been some tribes called "Germanic" by the Romans 2000 years ago - but modern "Germans" are a mixture of many different migrations - claiming some population is unchanged for millenia is just silly at best or has some dangerous racist intentions at worst.
@kaiglass4347
@kaiglass4347 3 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂 the left stories!
@ronik24
@ronik24 3 ай бұрын
@@kaiglass4347 Scientific facts = reality.
@kaiglass4347
@kaiglass4347 3 ай бұрын
@@ronik24 i don't care, believe this nonsense
@ronik24
@ronik24 2 ай бұрын
@@kaiglass4347 Facts are nothing to believe. Facts are facts.
@kaiglass4347
@kaiglass4347 2 ай бұрын
@@ronik24 like the "facts" about corona? Don't listen to the world, the world played their own games! And about the german history, like I said, don't believe the lies, it is a culture war against germany since 1880!!! Learn real history not propaganda!
@NRubric
@NRubric 3 ай бұрын
And most of that will not teached in german schools. In most german schools the main focus in history classes are WW1, WW2 and the Cold War. Everything before WW1 is only skimmed over, if at all.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
Funny. My experience in the 1980s in Hessen with regard to history lessons at school was exactly the other way around… we went through all of history twice during my 13 years of school until Abitur, and the first time only made it to the Russian Revolutions of 1917, and only on the second run we barely made it to 1933…
@Arsenic71
@Arsenic71 3 ай бұрын
@@Roberternst72 You must be an exception then. Hessen isn't exactly known to be the epitome of education in Germany.
@NRubric
@NRubric 3 ай бұрын
@@Roberternst72 Indeed very interesting. In all schools in were I was in the 1980s and 1990s in NRW, the main focus was on that time periods of german history. So much that It started to annoy me.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
@@Arsenic71 Mhm. Are you aware that Marburg university dates back to 1527? Are you aware of Goethe‘s place of birth? Or of Büchner‘s? Have you ever heard of Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung maybe? Or of Adorno, Horkheimer and the Frankfurt School? Does the name Heinrich Hoffmann ring a bell? Maybe Alois Alzheimer? How about Maria Sibylle Merian? Or Arthur Schopenhauer? (I mean, I‘ll give you one thing, a certain blue-brown history teacher is officially still employed by the state of Hessen, and that one is pretty much an embarrassment… but that one is mostly on the state he grew up in, Rhineland-Palatinate, and state of political activities, Thuringia…)
@Arsenic71
@Arsenic71 3 ай бұрын
@@Roberternst72 I am very well aware of all the good things that Germany did to the world. But in school that was all diminished by "German guilt". And to this day Germany takes the sole responsibility for WW2 while everyone else knows that is not the case.
@markus-pg6me
@markus-pg6me 3 ай бұрын
Schon mal gehört "Indogermanisch".Die Wurzeln der Sprache sind in Indien.
@gerhardrobertbieber4129
@gerhardrobertbieber4129 2 ай бұрын
Ja stimmt, aber man sagt nur im deutschen indogermanisch , im Ausland spricht man von indoeuropäisch .
@sleepingcity85
@sleepingcity85 2 ай бұрын
WTF, bitte erzähle sowas nicht nochmal. Es heißt Indoeuropäische Sprachen weil es Sprachen beinhaltet die von Westeuropa bis Indien gesprochen wurden/werden. Es gibt mehrere Hypothesen über den Ursprung der Sprachfamilie, aber keine davon ist Indien. Heutige Türkei, Kaukasus, Iran sind in etwa das Ursprungsgebiet. Auch was im Video direkt am Anfang erzählt wird zum Alter der Sprache - Bullshit. Da hat mal wieder ein Übersetzer Germanisch und Deutsch verwechselt. Deutsch ist wie English aus dem Germanischen ungefähr gleichzeitig entstanden. Genauso wie Niederländisch oder die ganzen skandinavischen Sprache. Italienisch um die selbe Zeit aus Latein. Französisch etwas später, Spanisch und Portugiesisch wiederum danach. Indogermanisch impliziert das es alles germanische Sprache sind, was nicht so ist.
@juikabloth3993
@juikabloth3993 3 ай бұрын
Algorithmus
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
3:26 Well, actually, that „Tsingtao“ thing is not exactly a particularly noble thing… Tsingtao was the main settlement of a German colony / navy port / trading post in China, and pretty much taken by a mix of blackmail and military force… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiautschou_Bay_Leased_Territory
@phillipsmejkal1
@phillipsmejkal1 Ай бұрын
sry but why does he speak german like a charakter from South Park.😅🤣
@Swammy68
@Swammy68 Ай бұрын
Its a Ki pronounce Speaker, its not german but yes it sounds like a Disney Cartoon.
@Arsenic71
@Arsenic71 3 ай бұрын
Imagine you are being told in school that as a German, you are born guilty.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
That’s BS, and you bloody well know it.
@Arsenic71
@Arsenic71 3 ай бұрын
@@Roberternst72 It isn't BS. Maybe you are too young to know.
@Ingrid-wf4cl
@Ingrid-wf4cl 3 ай бұрын
If they are not considered guilty ,why i see everywhere people call the Germans nazis and claim that this is in their DNA ? And i talk of people from many different countries.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
@@Arsenic71Sure. As a fifty-something-years old person, I am „too young to know“…
@Arsenic71
@Arsenic71 3 ай бұрын
@@Roberternst72 Don't get me wrong, the world knows that Germany isn't solely responsible for WW2. But back in the 70s and 80s, it was almost impossible to say such a thing in schools. Maybe you were lucky. I'm a year older than you (provided you were born in 72), so no difference, but when I was in school, I was taught that Germany was THE epitome of evil of all mankind. I'm sorry, I did not mean to belittle or insult you.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
13:36 Herbert Hoover‘s family were of SWISS descent.
@atconnys8786
@atconnys8786 3 ай бұрын
Back then there were no German borders present at all. There were thousands of German speaking kingdoms and counties. I think Switzerland and Austria belong to that.
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
@@atconnys8786 Switzerland has been outside of Germany, depending on who you’re asking, at least since 1648, arguably even as early as the 1300s. And I doubt those Hoovers arrived with the Pilgrims… 😉
@atconnys8786
@atconnys8786 3 ай бұрын
@@Roberternst72 Again... back then there wasn`t a Germany or a Switzerland, only German speaking tribes
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 3 ай бұрын
I stand corrected. I have looked it up and apparently I was mistaken. The first Huber ancestor of Herbert Hoover, Andreas / Andrew Huber / Hoover came from the Rhenish part of the Palatinate in 1783, which makes at least that part of his ancestors quite decidedly German. (In my defense, I had seen a list of people „erroneously believed to be of German Descent“ around 20 to 25 years ago, and Hoover was on that list as having Swiss ancestors instead, which I found quite memorable enough to, well, remember.)
@synestia4005
@synestia4005 2 ай бұрын
German as in culture
@helfgott1
@helfgott1 3 ай бұрын
We germans are strange 😁😁
@atconnys8786
@atconnys8786 3 ай бұрын
but in a good way, glad to be German :)
@GerhardOstermann-ud6rr
@GerhardOstermann-ud6rr 3 ай бұрын
Und das ist auch gut so.
@Moneymark1979
@Moneymark1979 2 ай бұрын
Yes we are,and I am proud of it... Even if I am half Ghanaian 🥰
@mareen622
@mareen622 2 ай бұрын
Schöne Mischung ​@@Moneymark1979
@samuelordway-nh4oh
@samuelordway-nh4oh Ай бұрын
here is a very unfunny german joke alle rennen in denn bunker nur renate die fängt die granate gossenweib..
@EnyelNesnaj
@EnyelNesnaj 2 ай бұрын
This Video discribes the history of the Jews and not the Germans.... The first newspapers wasnt by germans
@AlexandraVioletta
@AlexandraVioletta Ай бұрын
German Jews are still GERMAN Jews.
@XXXandTHC6558
@XXXandTHC6558 Ай бұрын
now is Germany Down 4ever 😭
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