Since there are quite a few comments under this video likening its content to the Whatifalthist´s videos, many of them in a positive way but some of the comments in a manner indicating that I am duplicating his work, I feel it is fair to address it. I am, of course, aware of his work, and I do enjoy it. It would be disingenuous to pretend otherwise. I am also aware that many points I am raising in this particular video, for example, the cultural emulation or share of the European GDP falling, were raised by him in his work, and I was thinking about the implications when I was working on this video since I obviously do not want to seem as a copycat of a very successful established creator. But on the other hand, I genuinely believe those points to be true, I know that I was thinking and reading about them and this whole topic years before I even knew that Whatifalthist exists, and I also believe that I can offer different perspectives and also more detailed knowledge of inner workings of Europe since I am European myself. I hope this clears things up a little bit! Thanks for all the positive comments and the constructive critique alike!
@bottleofwatero1 Жыл бұрын
Hi kaiserbauch Were you also aware of the work of Jean Francois Revel and his views on America and anti americanism in Europe? You made a lot of similar arguments to him; some almost parallel ones. Is this a coincidence or did you use Revel's arguments during your research? Thanks. Great video by the way. Also kinda interested in your views on Russia. It's also anti american but of a different variant it seems.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
@@bottleofwatero1 thanks! I have to honestly admit I never heard of Revel. What similar thoughts do we have?
@bottleofwatero1 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 especially those using american tech or movies while bitching against america. Or the claim that europeans are the ones also doing the americanisation and it is voluntary. Revel died in '06 so he wouldn't mention stranger things or trump but if he is still alive, he would have said the same as you.
@bottleofwatero1 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 oh and that the anti american people always criticise america but never china, the former ussr, north korea, iran and the whatnots.
@bottleofwatero1 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 while you used stranger things ,he used Paris Disneyland as an example where America is villified or at least laughed at in France when Paris Disneyland is one of the most visited attractions in France
@WillowUfgood Жыл бұрын
We are Greece to the American's Rome - a progenitor civilisation that once was the envy of the world, now all we do is dream of past glories...
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I would argue that most of Europeans do not even dream of the past, they consider it deplorable. I would be much more satisfied if we were trying to proudly preserve the past, knowing that we cannot come close to the greatness.
@WillowUfgood Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 good point. We have been re-educated to deplore our past in a very sanctimonious way. I often wonder what level of hardship or horrors would be required to change that perspective.
@ericthegreat7805 Жыл бұрын
Dreaming of past glories is more common in Britain and Ireland
@IamdeaththedestroyerofWorlds Жыл бұрын
Indians do the same in some sense because we were the largest world economy for 1500 years
@matteopani9291 Жыл бұрын
Greece is not a progenitor of Rome
@helsinkianon Жыл бұрын
As a young Western European studying engineering in the best university in my country, I can confirm that there is a real sense of malaise. I grew up in an upper middle-class household and don't have aspirations for anything higher. I only decided to attend a prestigious institution to make it easier to gain a middle to high middle income job at a big corporation, my national government or the EU. I feel much like how I imagine the Austrians felt before the first world war. Our economy has been outpaced by our rivals and most ambitious young people move west. But life is comfortable, I don't want anything other than to be able to read good books, to enjoys walks in beautiful parks and to enjoy a good cup of coffee. Of course the Austrians only made up a small percentage of their empire, the rest weren't so lucky.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
That is a good analogy! Let´s hope there is not any Gavrilo Princip walking around to fuck it all up :D
@gamercatsz5441 Жыл бұрын
If it rains in the West it pours in the rest of the world. Don't think for a second that people in Russia, China or the middle east are better off than in Europe. We still have the ONLY thing that matters: freedom. People who want to take down the West as the Alpha in the world have no clue what it would be like if China or Russia would be the world's only superpower.
@helsinkianon Жыл бұрын
@@gamercatsz5441 I agree completely, compared to the rest of the world Europe truly is the garden to their jungle. I would never want to live and certainly not want to settle down in any of these regions. But next to the US we have been stagnating for the past half century. Perhaps it is just this lack of will to want to surpass our already comfortable living conditions that has lead to Europe's stagnation. I certainly don't believe a world dominated by China would be a better one, and dont even believe that it is likely, at least for the next half a century. I believe that overall US hegemony has served the world well. It is just that if Europe continues its relative decline compared to the US in population and economy, we will no longer have the capability to independently protect our way of life. If a Trump-like figure decides to pull out of Europe completely in 20-30 years, how will we be able to support our welfare states and economies? Will we have to cut a humiliating deal with China, neglecting their human-right abuses in the rest of Eurasia?
@cleightorres3841 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 My grandfather was an Austrian born in Vienna From everything I know from my family AustriaHungary was a really great place to live My family had money and I suppose that helped But I guess things didnt look so rosy to Gavrilo and the Austrians should have been more responsive to the needs of ALL the people in their little empire If they had maybe 2 world wars could have been avoided and the lottle empire could have endured
@verigumetin4291 Жыл бұрын
@@helsinkianon I also agree that Pax Americana has done wonders to the world. Safe oceans for flourishing trade, maintained by the century of naval expansion of America. Cultural homogenization of the world, even though gradual. Safe sleep at night knowing that the russians can't attack my country cuz we have a friend with six thousand nukes. Although they messed up in the middle east, I can't expect them to be perfect. What they do in their country, i can only give my opinion on, not demand anything about it. Would the world really have escaped WW3 without a hegemon? I feel like much of the criticism levied at America comes from the fact that it basically dictates the foreign policy of many other countries, and nobody likes to be told what to do. Most countries simply hate America for simply being in charge. They act as if their own mother died in the middle east, even though everybody knows they don't care about who died there, because if they did, they would have done something about it.
@hyperbrug9328 Жыл бұрын
As an American, Europe is generally viewed kind of funnily. It's simultaneously this mythical place rich with culture, filled with people with weird accents, social safety programs, "walkable cities", beautiful nature, etc; but also the origin of evil colonialist empires, white supremacy etc. I don't remotely agree with this, but that's just the way it is. In my view, it seems like Europe simply hasn't recovered from the trauma of the Great Wars, and have essentially resigned itself under the protection of American hegemony. I've been to Europe many times throughout my life, though I'm only 21, and it seems that the average European (I hate to generalize) are these snide, atheist, hyper-rationalist types who, as you mentioned, will take any chance to shit on America whilst wading knee deep through American culture. There is no virtue in weakness. And the way world affairs seems to be heading, I think future generations are in for a rude awakening. Frankly, I could apply this very same criticism to the younger American generations as well.
@hungrymusicwolf Жыл бұрын
I see you have been to one too many of the big cities if you find atheist, hyper-rationalist types everywhere. America is definitely more religious, but strong derision for religion tends to be more a city vs rural problem (as it happens in the US a lot as well from what I hear) rather than a US vs Europe problem.
@hyperbrug9328 Жыл бұрын
@@hungrymusicwolf That is very true and I suppose that exposes my bias. Probably the most "rural" place I've been to are some of the villages in Switzerland. However they are popular tourist destinations, so it's possible that the "locals" I interacted with weren't truly locals. As a side note, Switzerland and Southern France are the most beautiful locations I've ever seen on this planet.
@TheRezro Жыл бұрын
@@hyperbrug9328 That unfortunately is really bad urban legend. Colonialism and slavery exist from always. Roman Empire did it, literally every empire in the history did it. West was actually first Empire what actively start fighting with colonialism. It was "evil" Britain who as first liberated slaves and others did fallow for same reasons. Unfortunately moral hiccup make West blind on fact that they weren't the worst. What allow wannabee colonial powers like Russia and China to play on this narrative. Same is true for the great wars. But that is vastly uneven. While three dominant countries of Europe become docile, smaller countries show far more grounded approach to the social issues and risks. It is what screwed Russia in the end.
@apc9714 Жыл бұрын
A friend of mine used to hate the US, but after working there as a researcher for a few months now wants to live there.
@joecater894 Жыл бұрын
you're not really describing Europeans. Truth is they never talk about America ; they are too focused on Europe. As for atheism , most of the west is not actively practising religion now.. few go to church.. many more will say they are Christians though.. which is fair enough.. I dont think many hate America.. but we see your political strife which is much higher than anywhere in the rest of western world.. we see the USA is in big trouble.. and no, its not good for us. USA needs to depolarise and get some harmony back before it leads somewhere bad. Also your movie industry has been taken over by driven political ideology that is busting it.. and world history is being skewed and misrepresented in the US to try to separate society and create political leverage. The fact you focus on colonialism.. I'm afraid... that was the way of the world in the past not just by Europe.. but by the whole world stretching back thousands and thousands of years. it didnt end until it was time for it to end.. it ended because the world was developed enough to end it. There is no point going back and judging it through modern eyes.. it was a time when a small elite ruled the lands.. ordinary folk were peasants and media was limited and highly controlled. Conquering was taking place all over the globe.. tribes would conquer other tribes.. villages other villages.. countries and kingdoms routinely fight for territory. To believe Europe had a monopoly on conquest is a total denial of human history and nature. That said Europe as the dominant power did it more extensively during the 1700-1800s .. because it so happened to be the dominant power then. In fact, the reason you are speaking English is because of that.. and the fact I used the word monopoly is because of Roman conquest thousands of years ago... but its ancient history. Someone is try to stir it up to create strife.. best not to fall for it. The worst thing you can do is fall for the white supremacy myth as well.. thats pure brainwashing.. many white people at the time of empire where themselves virtually slaves in the states that created these empires. Instead of focusing on these countries having been part of Empire and colonialism.. celebrate the fact that for the first time in human history these were the countries that ended it and enforced that. The bottom line: europe and the broader west are the only countries today pushing solid human rights and democrasy.. some other countries have joined that way of thinking only because of the modern west. By trying to blame the west and taint it.. you are helping those powers that want to destroy that freedom and democrasy the west created in order to return to the dark times you hate.. and they love.
@Tanu.90 Жыл бұрын
Romanian here, moved to Austria for a better life. I talked with young people over here, and I can feel their lack of direction. Great country in any case, but man I wished europeans would be more alive and energetic. You got a new subscriber, I like your content!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
thank you!
@glaciatedluxray2849 Жыл бұрын
I’m from Ohio, a state in the U.S., which is quite far away from Austria, but I feel the same thing over here. We used to be apart of the rust belt, arguably one of the most thriving places in the US, but now it seems like people have no ambition here and just want to get by with doing as little as possible. It feels like my state has lost what drive it use to have
@TR4R Жыл бұрын
Lack of direction? Man, you're not alone! I'm from Costa Rica and often I feel the same! 🤣 We're lost in this world... 🤪🥴
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
I think this is a Gen Z thing tbh. It's the same in my state and I see the same thing happening in a few east Asian nations.
@GrimReaperNegi Жыл бұрын
"lack of direction," seems to be something common even in the US. I am starting to wonder if it is due to religion being on the decline.
@bob_0146 Жыл бұрын
It makes me laugh when people say the EU is a rising superpower
@cleightorres3841 Жыл бұрын
its a cruel lie designed to fuel the fragile euroEGO
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
It is cringe.
@TheSwedishHistorian Жыл бұрын
managed decline is the eu. It widens as europe declines
@cleightorres3841 Жыл бұрын
@@TheSwedishHistorian I predict the rise of poland and ukraine and hungary AFTER ww3
@cleightorres3841 Жыл бұрын
@dihvocfoscocudvyvdd Dont you worry America has a plan lol
@orboakin8074 Жыл бұрын
Friend, this is a spectacular video. As a Nigerian with a love of history, especially European history, this video really hits several marks. Your presentation was well done. the discussion is objective and the points well researched and analyzed, especially the areas on socio-economic policies, manufacturing, cultural soft-power, regulation and innovation. It reminds me a bit of Whatifalthist but more detailed and analytical. I hope Europe can pick itself up in the future.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Ebb0Productions Жыл бұрын
Thank you :)
@dave_sic1365 Жыл бұрын
Wow thanks alot. I hope we can prevent that decline but i fear we are Close/over the point of no return.
@Ebb0Productions Жыл бұрын
@@dave_sic1365 Do not fear. We're good. And we're gonna be good.
@NoReaSoN2CaR3 Жыл бұрын
Nice to see a whatifalthist shoutout. That’s how I found this channel.
@Synochra Жыл бұрын
just a couple mins into the video, I'm soooo glad somebody is finally talking about the clearly euro-chauvinist brand of anti-americanism so ubiquitous among european liberals and many many leftists. It's a particularly whimpish and pathetic expression of impotent rage leveled by the old imperialist nations who feel humiliated by the dominance of a country that they deem to be governed by the descendents of their own undesirables. as a leftist I am convinced that you can't be an anti-imperialist if you are a disguised euro-chauvinist deep down yes and it's all even more painfully embarrassing when you consider that their media consumption is indeed so often just rehashed American culture. it's so obvious it hurts
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
You raise an interesting point with the disguised euro-chauvinism. It for example manifests itself in the different approach to people that Western Europeans deem as also European and thus holding to different standards than non-European peoples. USA, post-communist Europe or Israll are criticised heavily for things that are never brought up when discussing nations that are deemed non-European and thus, in a passive agressive way, too primitive to be criticised for their behaviour.
@chickenfishhybrid445 ай бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092I constantly point this out. It's like Europeans have an expectation of Americans and the US to be just like them, while often simultaneously shaming people for criticizing other countries or cultures.
@eldariskenderfranke4284 Жыл бұрын
Spot on, I'm a German who lives in Berlin with a lot of Hipsters, their vocabulary while speaking is 30-40% English because apparently that's cool, at the same time they "hate" the U.S., Europe is engaging in a massive cope. Europe has been an extension of the U.S. since Bretton Woods(and America already became the unipolar hegemon after ww1), now it will become an extension of Asia(which is destiny I guess). We have come a far way from Martin Luther, to Bismarck, to pop smoke.
@danbaltic9678 Жыл бұрын
Very good comment.
@Juan-qu4oj Жыл бұрын
Its sad that nationalism has a stigma in Germany. Just because you love your nation doesn’t make you a nazi. Germany for Germans
@joaquimbarbosa896 Жыл бұрын
I agree, but lets not pretend its one way traffic. Some parts of european cultures still impact/influence americans
@Synochra Жыл бұрын
nothing wrong with pop smoke rip it's not his fault things are the way they are
@eldariskenderfranke4284 Жыл бұрын
@@Synochra Nothing wrong with pop smoke(I just know he is a rapper) but I cringe at the germans who tarp as American rappers
@tomorrowneverdies567 Жыл бұрын
I am greek, and for now, my biggest concern is the future demographic composition of countries like Germany, the UK, Netherlands, Sweden, France, Austria.
@helsinkianon Жыл бұрын
It will be interesting to see if the immigrants keep coming after we can no longer pay for our welfare states.
@tomorrowneverdies567 Жыл бұрын
@@helsinkianon I believe that they will keep coming if they can and are legally allowed to.
@husted5488 Жыл бұрын
Greece was better off under the Ottomans.
@tomorrowneverdies567 Жыл бұрын
@@husted5488 I don't believe that it is really possible to compare modern day Greece, with how people lived in the 15th to 18th century, but from what I know, it was not better off from any point of view that I can now imagine.
@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 Жыл бұрын
@@tomorrowneverdies567 I guess in 15th-18th century Greece was occupied by Ottoman Turkey. I don't think you enjoyed that time.
@zeonive1173 Жыл бұрын
An important addendum to your point about the European automobile industry: The EU decided to ban the production of combustion engine vehicles starting 2035.
@cleightorres3841 Жыл бұрын
hahahahahahahahahahah
@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 Жыл бұрын
Yep, in Poland, where I live, our power engineering is based on coal, which soon also be prohibited (or strongly limited in best scenario). With only electric cars available, this will mean a car will be a luxury:) I am talking about that to my friends and they seems not to believe me.
@cleightorres3841 Жыл бұрын
@@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 It was the Germans who were pushing the Green Energy Lie, while they were running their real economy on cheap russian gas and cheap but high quality russian coal (german and polish coal is lignite , low quaity and limited applications) Now because of America the Germans are screwed and not very happy their lies have been exposed lol
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Yep, we are just adding nails to our coffin. I will talk more extensively about this in the second part of this series.
@helsinkianon Жыл бұрын
@@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 Hopefully you will be succesful in your nuclear power program. It will be interesting to see how Eastern and Central European economies deal with the decline of the auto sector, to my knowledge their economies are deeply reliant on German auto manufacturing supply chains.
@TheHistoryofBiology Жыл бұрын
I don't subscribe to this opinion, but here's one way to look at it. Europe is essentially turning into the republic of Venice on a global scale. A continent sized museum with a lot of respect from other countries but mostly irrelevant economically and militarily.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but the thing is that while tourism can pretty much sustain the economy of 1 mid-sized city, it sure can not sustain a continent's economy.
@TheHistoryofBiology Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 One thing's for certain. Things are going to change a lot and comparatively soon.
@percy3993 Жыл бұрын
@@TheHistoryofBiology Irrelevant? The EU has the second biggest economy in the world?
@TheHistoryofBiology Жыл бұрын
@@percy3993 So was the Soviet Union in 1970 at around 40 to 60% of the US GDP
@OneLifeJunkJack Жыл бұрын
The republic of Venice was anything but irrelevant economically in the Middle Ages, so that analogy seems odd.
@banto1 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video (as always). Europe's significant decline relative to the US is even more stark when you take into account that most Americans believe their own country is in rapid decline as well (there was a reason why "Make America Great Again" resonated so well with Americans). Add on the impending native population loss due to low fertility in most of Europe, coupled with "problematic" immigrant influxes, and you really don't see how Europe can innovate its way out of this predicament.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Yes, when I see some people simultaneously speaking about the "inevitable" American decline (Russia and China are about to launch their own reserve currency that is going to destroy the dollar any day now!) and the rise of Europe as a world power, I do not know if to cry or if to laugh. But the notion of American decline which many people seems to believe in the US just points out to the exceptional position of America. Its position is so strong, that people look at any small kind of inconvenience as a sign of coming decline.
@banto1 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 I don't agree with your upbeat view of America's future. America's "exceptional position" was gained by having all the other competitors knocked out of the game after WWII. While I agree that Europe Inc doesn't really pose an economic or technology leadership threat to the US, there is a real threat coming from China, where key future tech (e.g. solar, batteries, EVs, AI, robotics, and a lot more) is progressing towards dominance a lot faster in China than in the US. It's a lot more than just belief. The US government is worried and you can see it in the slew of anti-globalization moves they are putting in place to try to curb China's inevitable rise to the #1 technological and economic power in the world. Europe has a lot less to fear from China since Europe doesn't have a leadership position to lose (and the Chinese aren't about to start selling smelly cheese or expensive wines).
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I can not agree here. I think that you overlook the 1 most important source of American power - the geography. American geography is absolutely unmatched. Unlimited access to both Pacific and Atlantic oceans, largest continuous sway of fertile farmland in the world, best network of navigable rivers, huge deposits of natural resources like gas and oil, insularity from all the potential competitors and so on. No other country is even remotely close to this set of characteristics. tha tis the main reason why the US can just join a war anywhere in the world and the war never touches US mainland. China, while very technologically capable, is surrounded by hostile or semihostile powers that fears its rise, is completely dependant on imports of gas, oil, coal and food and is also in completely tragic demographic shape.
@banto1 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092Yes, the US is blessed with good farmland and rivers, but in the 21st century land borders are pretty much meaningless unless the Mongols are getting their act together again. Today countries don't need to invade and plunder in order to do real damage - from far far away. Inter-continental hyper-sonic nuclear weapons, offensive-cyber attacks on key infrastructure, and EMP blasts from space don't really care about borders. In history, all empires fall sooner or later. The American empire (sadly) has seen it's peak and it's all down hill from here on until the end. I really don't think that China wants the US to fall. Besides being dependent on oil from the outside, a lot China's economy depends on exports to a strong world economy - which rises and falls as the US economy jumps from from boom to bust. I also don't believe in the demographic doom story regarding China. Yes, their population will shrink, and there will be short term pain as the population ages, but a generation or 2 after that, they will stabilize on some lower number and replace those workers with automation and offshoring to even lower-cost production countries.
@joshbentley2307 Жыл бұрын
@@banto1 😂 that’s an outlandish take. NATO (which is controlled by the USA) owns around 50% of the world’s economy, spends way more than the rest of the world combined on its military (that gap is massively widening with Europe remilitarising) and has absolute dominance at sea (in global shipping and military). China is so dependent on the rest of the world that if the USA created a blockade there entire civilisation would collapse, tens of millions (potentiality hundreds of millions) would starve and they wouldn’t be able to get enough natural resources to maintain there economy (deindustrialisation). Not to mention China relies on cheep manufacturing to sell goods to rich countries, without that the majority of there economy would simply crumble. The USA’s geography is massively important, not just military but in an economic sense, ignoring this factor is ridiculous. The population collapse in China is a major issue, as it’s literally a ticking time bomb for there economy, without mass amounts of people what does China have to stay competitive with the west? Manufacturing (China’s main industry) with automation will leave China and move back to developed countries (why would companies keep there manufacturing there?) And China (unlike developed countries) simply its rich enough per person to support mass amounts of old people. China will become the number 1 economy, however the west as a collective will still far surpass them, and I believe just a a few decades after they become the number 1 economy the USA will overtake them again.
@TheSwedishHistorian Жыл бұрын
unfortunately what I seem to observe as well. I am from sweden and most europeans lack ambition. many study and change programmes multiple times in university. Everything is about sex and social issues, meanwhile the economy gets worse and worse. Low skilled work is almost completely gone and we have a permanent underclass
@joaquimbarbosa896 Жыл бұрын
I thought the swedish economy was ok
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
You mention the university and for me one of the most frustrating thing is the overall pressure created about the need to go to the university just for the sake of doing it, even if one is not particulary interested in anything or that talented. We can than boast about the number of students and graduates growing, but huge proportion of them is just studying something not that useful, the prestige and quality of college education is going down and we still have huge need for STEM graduates, number of which is going down, since most people wants to study humanities, which are just easier. It does not make any sense, since in my age bracket in the Czech Republic, people that are doing crafts are usually much better off than people that studied economy, sociology or even law.
@tj-co9go Жыл бұрын
I agree but I would say everything is about *gender* and social issues nowadays :D Sex is a concept you will probably be banned and shunned for using
@RockyMountainPilgrim Жыл бұрын
At its core, the strength, prosperity and trajectory of any country or region are based upon demographics. All other factors are merely peripheral, and do not define the overall course in the long run. The fact that Europe fought two horrific world wars in the 20th Century, destroying their cream of the next generation, and now (during relative peace) are choosing to not have children at all, is the death knell. This will eventually leave the lands of Europe an empty carcass, a hollow shell of its previous glory, depopulated or perhaps even replaced by yet another foreign group. In my opinion, the hey-day of Europe was probably around 1900, and since then the Europeans have been committing (and are still committing) a slow, painful suicide. The worst part of this is that the decline is completely reversible, but Europeans are still doubling down on everything that has been rotting their society from within. I write this with no sense of moral superiority or satisfaction. I am an American, but I am of European descent, and I wish my cousins across the water would wake up from their self-imposed stupor and reclaim their once great heritage. Perhaps one day they will, but not with their current mindset, culture, leadership, and sense of priorities.
@hishamalaker491 Жыл бұрын
So do you blame Foreigners for anything do you think they are at fault or do you think that its Europeans who are at fault for their societal and demographic collapse? to me Its not foreigners i mean if your smart and you live in a 3rd world country when your offered a chance to live in a good prosperous rich country like in western Europe with good pay you will go for it and others will go for the purpose of finding a job or for getting better living conditions which Europeans are not denying them so to me they are allowing them in so they are not at fault its the Europeans who allow mass migration who are at work in the end its Human nature to go to another prosperous country for better life quality.
@RockyMountainPilgrim Жыл бұрын
@@hishamalaker491 No, I do not blame foreigners. Please go back to my original statement and read it more carefully. You will see that I never once blamed foreigners or immigrants, but repeatedly stated that the Europeans are doing this to themselves. The problem lies in demographic decline; immigration is ancillary and symptomatic of the problem, not the core issue.
@einarr42 Жыл бұрын
It is hard to have multiple children when houses in Europe are often more expensive than central New York relative to salaries.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I unfortunately agree with pretty much everything you wrote.
@webuyhouse8917 Жыл бұрын
@@einarr42 people in Europe can afford to have 2 children what it is is selfishness u what to spend every last scent on eating out and stuff instead of children
@willdehne1 Жыл бұрын
We moved 1963 to the USA. Age 22. We did rather well here but kept German citizenship. Mostly for emotional reasons. Past glory of music, literature and technology. We finally got the US citizenship recently. More or less as a protest. We do not like the German dependence of Russian energy and the German refusal to adequately develop a defense. We did notice the lack of German leadership in Information Technology. Rather revealing we think. Your comment about Elon Musk hit home with us. We agree.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Glad you are doing good!
@rubencouso7497 Жыл бұрын
Yes, because more expensive gas and oil from USA is much more than those from Russia for German economy. How brainwashed you are!
@asmirann3636 Жыл бұрын
Well you never believed in Europe or Germany even in the 60s. This is why you moved to a better place. Your attachments are emotional. Because your rational mind told you even six decades back that Europe or Germany is not a good place to be.
@davidhoracek6758 Жыл бұрын
The sense I get in Europe is that it's a continent planning its own retirement. Maybe it did some bad things when it was young and full of hormones, but now its priority is like you say: piles of regulation to prevent inconvenience for people who want to live quiet lives with occasional pleasing vacations. Let the younger powers overseas take all the bold actions, and make sure we can buy the best of it while being insulated from all the messiness that's inseparable from boldness. It doesn't help that the population of Europe is literally getting older every year from the lack of kids, and you get a culture that acts old and has old-people priorities. And to be fair, I honestly think that it will be a pretty nice continent-sized retirement home for many decades. It's probably where I will go to retire. The same trend is arising here in the US, but it's decades behind Europe. Until recently we really liked global free trade, thinking that we can win that game. Now it's more about "reshoring" and protectionist tariffs and acting scared of the dynamic "outside world" - which looks like the early stages of Euro-decay.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I agree. The thing that people often does not seem to realise or at least ackownledge is that retirement precedes death.
@mrguitarguygates Жыл бұрын
On that note, I would say you could look to the stagnation of the Soviet Union under Brezhnev, Andropov and Chernenko for comparison. Ending up with its collapse, and subsequent chaos throughout the Russian sphere, through the 90s. Life wasn't too bad during that stagnant phase, but lack of innovation and competitiveness led to the mess that is modern Russian society. Not a perfect comparison though, given that brain drain was a big part of the problem, and everyone still seems to want to come to the West (and I don't see China, India, etc. taking that place anytime soon).
@mkuc6951 Жыл бұрын
Agree. Long term I don't know how Europe will fund retirements when there won't be a tax base large enough to fund it.
@mkuc6951 Жыл бұрын
@@Gary-bz1rf Soylent green.
@Pythoner Жыл бұрын
@@mrguitarguygates What mess that is modern Russian society? What lack of innovation and competitiveness? Not that we are some paradise but you have no idea what you're talking about; probably why you guys expected Russia to collapse from Western sanctions. Is it that you make yourselves feel better about Europe's problems by pointing out how much worse allegedly other places in the world have it than you? Russia, India, China, etc..? Focus on yourselves instead, and without badmouthing others.
@GnosticLucifer Жыл бұрын
You should read the coming Caesars by Amaury de Riencourt if you haven't already. It focuses on the parallels between Europe and Greece and Rome and America. And we really are living in a world where while Greece is just living off of its cultural heritage while the Romans are constantly evolving.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I am aware of the book, but my reading list is so stacked up that I will be glad to get to it within a year :D
@ericthegreat7805 Жыл бұрын
So the Americanization of Europe in decline would correspond to the Byzantine Empire, a highly Latinized but slowly decaying Greek culture? And Europe's ambivalent attitude towards America would correspond to Byzantine Christianity's ambivalent attitude to the Latin Church?
@TR4R Жыл бұрын
Kinda the Athens syndrome, isn't it? We could have been conquered and humiliated but we're culturally superior! 🤣 The big problem is this: what if the American decadence becomes too serious to handle? In that case Athens will have to learn to live without Rome or die trying... 😝
@alsoascot02 Жыл бұрын
Except Rome was a concious Imperium the US barely understands that it needs to invest in its own infrastructure. Also it now more often plunders the world for STEM talent while its traditional population fall into backward superstition as well as anti Science & anti intellectualism. We hear a lot about US flexibility and adaptability but how real are these today? Other big problems for the Greece to Rome analogy are Geography (the US sees no Barbarians on its immediate borders) and US unwillingness to don the Imperial mantle is hard to miss. And any US cultural Imperialism is mostly shallow kitch surely. In most aspects of humsn activity the US genuinely seems to think the whole world just accepts it does all things better than the rest of the world. It patently doesn't in many areas.
@TR4R Жыл бұрын
@@alsoascot02 thanks for your comment. Although it's obvious you made some orthographic mistakes due to writing on a smartphone I understood the message and share it completely. I can't fathom why there's so much idolization of America, at least when it comes to American authors I can explain it with nationalism.
@emilianohermosilla3996 Жыл бұрын
Reminds of whatifalthist’s video on Europe, although your analysis seems more competent/well-constructed. Great video!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@joaquimbarbosa896 Жыл бұрын
I think whatiflist is to american-centric
@Jaapst Жыл бұрын
@@joaquimbarbosa896 Exactly what i feel!
@CornG4397 Жыл бұрын
You should read Oswald Spengler. German philosopher who predicted this in the 1920s by arguing European culture was losing its cultural mission
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I got The Decline of the West this christmas, but I haven´t started with it yet. It seems to me that it will be very challenging read and I thus always start reading something else when I finish the book I am currently reading :D
@erickentroller4132 Жыл бұрын
This video essay resonated with me quite deeply. Not just because I am an American that often wonders why some Europeans still have a sense of superiority to America dispite the fact that more than 50% of Europeans speak English yet Americans feel NO pressure to learn anything else besides English. Europeans consume in mass American culture, but Americans are barely aware of European culture and when security trouble arises in Europe, America is always the leader and largest contributor and is basically keeping Europe safe. Just like you, I am not commenting on how great America is, but rather how blind Europeans seem to be about the fact that if not for America the west wouldn't be a very important contributor to the world stage at this point. So much of the west lives in benefit of this one Country and doesn't recognise how most of the west has actually been stagnating for a long time. The west ISN'T European anymore! I am actually a Europhile. I love Europe and it's culture which makes me very sad to see the state that Europe finds itself in. I hope Europeans wake up and find a path that isn't so America centric. A path of partnership rather than depanancy for security and cultural development.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I am glad you like it!
@maximkretsch7134 Жыл бұрын
I guess the dollar as a world reserve currency plays its role. It allows the US to keep their standard of living at the expense of those who export their surplus to the US and getting "paid" by ever growing debts denominating in US currency. The money saved with this ponzi scheme is then spent to sustain an obscenely oversized military complex all over the world, while the bridges in the homeland are crumbling and the kids don't learn anything useful at school should the bubble once burst, like e.g. foreign languages.
@GrimReaperNegi Жыл бұрын
I think it has to do with Blackrock, ADL, and other major players who support DEI and CritRace incentives.
@test-20110 ай бұрын
English is not your language you're the second largest Spanish speaking country in the world and have been since 2013 The US buys a lot of its technological advancements directly from Europeans There's 750+ million white Europeans, your mexican/Irish hybrid army is protecting us from what exactly? Russia a country that cant even take Ukraine after 2 years Europe is definitely the west and your country will never do anything about it directly because all you can do is send US gay pride flags, you're going to be a south american country
@OmegAtlAnt11 ай бұрын
Please stop, I am at minute 24 and I can’t take anymore of these harsh truths 😭
@tj-co9go Жыл бұрын
22:00 There is a simple and straightforward explanation for the dominance of American culture. It is a larger area with a common language, and one of the wealthiest countries in the world. Americans can have a huge budjet into their movies and culture, since they have a huge audience in the same language. In Europe, you will have to export the product to countries with different languages which takes far more effort, or produce to your own domestic market. The reason for Britain dominating cultural influence in Europe is the same - they can access the American market easily due to common language
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
That is partially true, but it is not the whole story. There is undeniable cultural dynamism and energy that makes American culture so appealing to audiences that do not speak English at all.
@justinoheat2 Жыл бұрын
If that was true then how does South Korean media dominate asia despite not being in a common language?
@tj-co9go Жыл бұрын
@@justinoheat2 that's a good question. I would say that a large economy with a quite large number of speakers or audience in the area allows big budgets which allows cultural hegemony
@WickedMapping11 ай бұрын
@@tj-co9goYou have South Korea, and then North Korea and Koreans in other nations (mostly China) and the last two are under hostile regimes. South Korea only has like 50 million people, much the same as places like Italy, France, or the UK. And Korea's history under foreign empires and conflicts has shown that it has become influential DESPITE what it is, not BECAUSE of what it is.
@JoaoOliveira-rk8gv Жыл бұрын
Don't talk about Europe like we are all the same. Me and my countrymen are aware how shit our country is. Portugal has been declining since the 1700's. Depression is our culture and fate. Fado is our music.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Fair enough :D
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
@WickedMapping11 ай бұрын
Iberia is honestly really interesting in this regard, as neither Portugal nor Spain were really part of the World Wars. (Yes, Portugal joined WW1, but had much less involvement than other nations.) Iberia always just gave me a different vibe than Western Europe, despite being colonial powers like the French, Dutch, and British. I think it's relative non-belligerence in the World Wars is a big reason for that. Kraut actually talked a bit about that in his series on Mexico, I believe.
@adamoliver40949 ай бұрын
Portugal should get a pass! Your history in the 15th and 16th centuries is so implausible that if I didn't know it was real I wouldn't believe it. It's tough to expect a small, resource poor, earthquake prone country to stay on top forever. We know deep down you're still Portuguese and not to be doubted.
@leileijoker8465 Жыл бұрын
I visited Germany two months ago. The quality of life is definitely a lot lower than back home in the US. There's no air conditioning in hot summer in most places. Energy costs are over twice as high while income is only half of the US salary.
@sinistercrusader4981 Жыл бұрын
I took a class on modern European politics in uni. One of the most frequent themes was ennui - disquiet of the soul and how modern Europe suffers from this lack of belief in itself and its future. I think this is a affliction affecting Europe in everything and there is no clear way to get rid of ennui in European life.
@willdehne1 Жыл бұрын
I can second that. I am German in the USA. My boss is in Germany and wife are highly educated (doctors). I asked them about the low birthrate. Their answer? "There is a lack of belief in an obtainable great future". I tend to accept that. I was born and educated in the Ruhr district of Germany. Very polluted and densely populated. Emigrated to the Midwest of the USA I felt free and the sky is the limit. That attitude (in part) set me free to do well financially. Eventuelly I think. BTW, my family in Germany suffered from birth defects traced to pollution.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Interesting!
@alsoascot02 Жыл бұрын
@@Ebb0Productions History tells us outside China gew falken Empires ever recover. It took circa 1500 years from the fall of the Western Empire for European to again safely travel across the continent on any kind of joined up system.
@kanaldeleo7776 Жыл бұрын
Eu cred că Europa nu mai are valori supreme pt care să trăiască și pe care să se bazeze, așa că se degradează.
@lluc84 Жыл бұрын
European living overseas, this is exactly why I left Europe. so sad. Many europeans think that Europe position on the world is granted... is not
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Hope you are doing good overseas.
@FictionHubZA Жыл бұрын
Thinking success is destined is the first step to decline.
@mr-boo Жыл бұрын
Where did you move to, if I may ask?
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
Another real problem not discussed in the video is the propensity of Europe to collapse into warfare no different than that that has characterized the Middle East in recent decades. The USSR and United States sat on that for decades, but now the old differences between numerous nations are bubbling to the surface again, and when they can't be compromised, they are settled by WAR. Europe is riddled by clashes of interest that have invited warfare for centuries. That has been the history of Europe, and it is the future history of Europe too.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I agree.
@hardmaxx Жыл бұрын
I disagree if anything Western Europe is more United than ever culturally and politically
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
@@hardmaxx > Is Europe not AT WAR RIGHT NOW? Oh ---- you said WESTERN EUROPE. But Europe at war is naturally parts of Europe at war with other parts of Europe. And then there are issues such as demographic collapse, uncontrolled illegal immigration, gross economic differences between a few rich countries and the rest of Europe and so on. The EU was built on a foundation of peace and prosperity. Now it doesn't have either.
@TR4R Жыл бұрын
Sounds interesting in a sinister way, but I don't see it too probable and the existence of nuclear weapons makes annihilation no longer a matter of fiction but of reality. Although a good start would be to conquer England and make it a slave of the continental powers 😝
@Ebb0Productions Жыл бұрын
I disagree. Europeans are tired of war within Europe. Nobody wants it. And many Europeans have things they like about other European countries. What "old differences"? The only divide I can see is the right vs left political divide, but that's not between countries. It's within countries. Overall Europe is more united than ever, but with a political divide that runs across all countries.
@benrex7775 Жыл бұрын
I am a 28 old Swiss who studies for a masters in laser technology at the moment. I will try to give a bit of a background about Switzerland from my point of view. Switzerland is a country which focuses on innovation. It has an edge over much larger countries with many more geniuses based on a few cultural reasons. - The German speaking world has a protestant history. And that history allows them to have a good working mindset. - You mentioned that European people don't value competition as much as Americans or Asians. I do think that is a problem indeed. But Not entirely. In Switzerland the work life balance is valued highly. This allows for (hopefully) healthier individuals, families and communities. And a person who is healthy and part of a healthy community is more capable of being creative. Which is one of the only reasons why Switzerland can stay so relevant. If you want a high standard of living, a high social security and a very innovative job in the field of technology, pharma or economy then Switzerland is an attractive place. If you value financial gain over quality of life or if you value a high tempo environment or if you value being a head of a company with hundreds of thousands of employees then Switzerland is not the place for you. That is called finding a niche and optimizing for it. Switzerland has a lot of inventions and it produces machines which are exported all over the world. The high quantity production is not done in Switzerland. As long as we can optimize on that we stay competitive. If other countries catch up in that aspect then Switzerland looses a lot in value for the pure fact alone that it is so small, has so little natural resources and such a small population. - Social structure including our form of government places a high value of the individual person. We try to place local over centralized in many places. For example we do not have a silicon valley. We do not even have big cities. Sure Zurich and Geneva are pretty big compared to other places in Switzerland. But most of our population is spread out. And thanks to our road and public transport system anything is accessible within a relatively short amount of time. Because of that we have world leading companies in very specialized areas in random villages all over Switzerland. That allows us to combine high quality workplaces with a high quality living environment. And even if you want to live in the city, you can easily go into the mountains over the weekend or even go to some close-by forest during evening. - ~95% of our population goes to public school. And our public school is of better quality than even our own private schools. In the last year of school we have set apart some time to look at all the professions out there. We visit job advice centers, we visit companies to see how we like the work there and then we can choose to go the route of high school or apprenticeship. Apprenticeship is a combination of working at a company with a focus on learning the craft and the vocational school where we learn the relevant theory. Both highschool and apprenticeship normally take 4 years. Afterwards you can go to either an university or an university of applied science. With that education system people are enabled to choose whatever profession they like best. Sure it doesn't work 100%, but it is a lot better than some other systems out there as basically every person get's a qualified education and we have a contact with practice pretty early on so we know right then if we actually like it or not. - I've heard that in other countries universities of applied sciences are way below universities in terms of quality. In Switzerland there is a difference too, but it is way smaller. There are even plenty of companies which prefer students with a bachelor from an university of applied science over a student with a masters from a regular university. Our university of applied science is set up in a way that you learn both theory and application in the bachelor. Two teachers of mine who taught both in Swiss universities and foreign universities said that the university of applied science I attended was equivalent to a midclass university outside of Switzerland. - Both the regular university and the university of applied sciences are roughly 90% payed by the tax payer. Also in the university of applied science I studied at, all the teachers had to work at an institute and take research jobs from companies to not loose touch with the industry. But it also comes with the advantage of the universities being partially self funding on top of it. Just to give another example of how important education is to Switzerland. The ETH alone gets 1.3bio$ from the government. As a comparison the entire Swiss military spent 5.2bio$ last year. - Just as a small addition about my field of study. In both the field of thin film technology and laser technology the German speaking countries are very dominant in it. We have a lot of companies and universities specializing in that to the point that these countries are way overrepresented compared to their actual size. And generally speaking I've worked at two companies in two completely different fields before and both were exporting world wide to the point that they were major players in their field of technology. I wasn't looking for world leading companies. I just looked for a job which seemed interesting. Same with my masters in lasers right now. If we just look at the biggest companies or the people who lead culture then this aspect will be overlooked. - Since you measured countries based on their influence on the world I want to bring another point. Being at the top of the world has a certain disadvantage. The people and organizations which are hungry for power want to take over your government. I've heard the saying that if you are an imperialistic country then you are basically selecting which foreigners rule over your grand children. So if you want to stay a cohesive culture then not being too successful is a way more lasting strategy. But that requires also at least 2.1 children and a resistance to mass immigration.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this insight!
@benrex7775 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 No problem. You offer me plenty of insight into the eastern Europe which I neglect way too much.
@CyrilGazengel Жыл бұрын
I agree with that analysis, and as a French, I can see how the French society lost its intellectual dynamism and how the politico-mediatic oligarchy is unable to understand the era and out of touch with modernity, recycling old obsolete ideologies from right to left.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I am glad you agree!
@brendanosullivan2484 Жыл бұрын
Europa: The Last Battle is worth a watch!
@thejustifier5566 Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that china’s GDP numbers are not as accurate as American and European metrics. But it doesn’t change Europes’ precipitous decline.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Why do you think that is the case?
@thejustifier5566 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 Countries that are run by totalitarian governments tend to inflate gdp data. This was in the news a few months ago.
@crystalencore91 Жыл бұрын
@KaiserBauch the Chinese Communist Party like to spin stats and news to deceive those whom they perceive to be a threat: the rest of the world
@fringetravelideas Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 watch Serpantza on China gdp figures. Also PPP might not be the best metric when you want to highlight technology. PPP is only good for life quality, as stuff is cheaper in poorer countries but technology costs the same.
@fringetravelideas Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 also let’s be honest, back in the day GDP figures wasn’t a competition but now is used for soft power projection. Ofcourse authoritarian regimes will inflate them as much as they can.
@PnCIa Жыл бұрын
Great video! As a german in my mid 30s i share most of your perspectives.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@janlanik2660 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are amazing!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@janlanik2660 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 But you need to work on that pronunciation my friend :D The content is top, but it's very hard to listen to as it sound as if you read each word separately.
@JCNL871 Жыл бұрын
Pop-culturally you forgot one thing. Football. Everywhere you go around the world you will see kids wear Barcelona, Real Madrid or Premier League club shirts and the Championship League is by far the biggest annual sporting event in the world.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
That is a very good point. Legit. Football trully is the last European cultural soft-power weapon.
@rilindshehu96 Жыл бұрын
The fact that people are so preoccupied with American internal dealings like abortion laws and the rest says more about the American monopoly over the internet and media than the decline of Europe. The US have monopolized the internet and mainstream media in the West, and this is simply its result. There is a lot of stuff going on in Europe every day to keep people occupied, but those same people won't be hearing about those things much because they're not as noisy in the social media.
@georgios_5342 Жыл бұрын
Europe is just dying unfortunately. Politically, demographically, economically, technologically and culturally. It needs a big shock to rejuvenate.
@cazwalt9013 Жыл бұрын
We're entering a dark age but I wish we can get out of it really fast
@bassdgod1 Жыл бұрын
@@cazwalt9013 I suspect the whole world might enter a dark age
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Do not lose hope.
@Alex-df4lt Жыл бұрын
That narrative is promoted mainly in fascist circles.
@georgios_5342 Жыл бұрын
@@Alex-df4lt I'm not a fascist. But hey, if the fascists say something, that doesn't immediately discredit its truthfulness. The communists also say some good/correct things, but it's their propaganda. If a fascist says it's good to drink water, do you stop drinking it? Just because a fascist does something, doesn't mean it's bad.
@mefistowski5292 Жыл бұрын
fragment from 29th minute mark is very true Even in Poland young people were expressing immense support for Floyd guy, and while I think that Police overstepped their boundaries there, why would like 98% ethnically white country care about it. Furthermore, while this was going on our beautiful Polish government (at least from what I remember) made harsher decisions regarding abortion laws and some other tax stuff, no one cared as much as they did about some random guy in US getting abused by Police. It hurts me to see such a state of affairs as I am deeply patriotic, and I would love for my country to make more of an impact but as it is for now - politics contribute greatly to the economical stagnation, with our best reform being enacted around 1990 (Ustawa Wilczka). If you ever wondered how Poland is such a quickly growing post-soviet country this is one of the major reasons for it... it happened roughly 10 years before I was born and to this day all we have is bickering among parties whether or not LGBT should have rights or not. And yes I know Poland is still quickly developing, but we are all the same dependent on American and Asian technology - we have no car companies, no technological giants - part of which I believe is caused by government feuding for power rather than caring about welfare of Poland at large. It was a long time since we have had a politician in power that, even if sometimes wrong, put Poland first and foremost. In short, Poland is deeply divided politically, its people being played by politicians that rarely seem to genuinely care for the public, only improving situation if it is sure to bring them more votes in upcoming elections. And as always, your video is exceptionally interesting and touches on subjects not oft touched upon by anyone else, I will be sure to see part 2 asap.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! And yeah, what I find most absurd is that people in our countries, the Czech Republic and Poland, are jumping the "white privilege post-colonial guilt" jumpwagon, while Slavic peoples were victims of racism for much of modern history in Europe and the world "Slave" is derived from Slav.
@arthurg.calixto3338 Жыл бұрын
George Floyd is not necessarily a race thing.
@mefistowski5292 Жыл бұрын
@@arthurg.calixto3338 Okay I may be misremembering events, but from what I remember whole thing was about a predominately Caucasian US police force abusing black people. It happened because it was common that when police mistreated white people they, usually, immediately were punished all the while George's killer went under the radar until protests started, thus being punished not as a matter of justice but taking a fall.
@arthurg.calixto3338 Жыл бұрын
@@mefistowski5292 Yes, because predominantly systemic racism (not talking about racism coming from minorities, or as liberals like to call it, ''''reverse'''' racism) comes from the dominant class. But I think the George Floyd protests were just generally a show of compassion to marginalized communities, and also criticism of police brutality and incompetence all around the board. The racial themes probably aren't really sound with eastern european countries but they can just relate to the pain and suffering of black families hit by police brutality just off of a morality thing, and also be in favor of police reform (assuming that many eastern european youth is anti-authoritarian)
@borginburkes1819 Жыл бұрын
so the killing of unarmed civilians by the police force isn't an issue for you when the victim is black? if george floyd were white but the cirumstances the same, would poland be right to have cared?
@incurableromantic4006 Жыл бұрын
There are many factors at work, but I think it all really comes down to demographics - Europeans can sense that their civilisation is dying out, and being replaced by immigrants. It's a feeling that produces a general sense of despair.
@epifanpefev2835 Жыл бұрын
I had high hopes when we joined in 2007. I was dreaming that being part of larger union will crush corruption on local level and will lead to (at least some form of) meritocracy. Nothing far from the truth - eu funds made our oligarchs and lifetime politicians even richer and more powerful. I share the opinion that lack of social mobility and ever increasing wealth inequality are the core issues for Europe. Policymakers are focusing on preserving generational wealth, “prosperous society” is forgotten phrase. Bureaucracy killed European democracy long time ago. “EU policies” are dictating sovereign members affairs, but the citizens vote is not represented in Brussels. “Brussels” holds accountability to none. Few Europeans voters can explain who are the shot callers in the Union and how are they elected - that’s not a foundation for democracy. Hopefully the war will sober us up. It’s a great example of what corruption and plutocracy (in both countries) aways leads to. This channel is awesome 🖖🇧🇬🇪🇺
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Tanu.90 Жыл бұрын
Romanian here, I totally agree.
@Flergerberg4 ай бұрын
Concentrating power into more centralized government only amplifies corruption, injustice, and genocide. The West learned absolutely nothing from the 20th century, the catastrophe of marx and socialism(whether national socialist or "democratic" variety), and the Gulag Archipelago. If you vote for increased centralized govt you will get either get Hitler, Mussolini or Mao, Stalin, Castro, or Maduro. Keep voting socialist and begging an oligarch for more cenrralized power over your personal life, and then dont complain about the result.
@mariomusic3058 Жыл бұрын
The average age of the population of Europe is around 50 years, and when we talk about domiciled Europeans, the average age is close to 60 years. Europe is a continent of old people, a real old people's home, and the EU has the highest taxes in the world, so it is not surprising that Europe is collapsing. Liberalism, feminism and globalism, and the americanization of Europe have done their work. The situation is the same in Japan. We are just an American colony, and the servant never eats at the master's table, but collects the crumbs.🤑
@bumarangnebula2589 Жыл бұрын
The Average Age among indigenous Europeans is maybe not 60 Years, but 45 Years. And the average native European (excluding Russia) just has 1.25 Children on Average. Far less than needed for reproduction. And this since decades
@anthonynicoli Жыл бұрын
You talk about Europe ending up as a tourist destination. Well, maybe not even that. I was in there two weeks ago and I can tell you it was not much fun. I’m not rushing back for a vacation.
@Zersetzor Жыл бұрын
Europe is in a doubly difficult situation in comparison to the US. Not only has Europe been losing its global dominance, as outlined in the video, to a large part to the US, Europe has at the same time become a colony of America. This is most readily seen in matters of culture, but it goes far beyond that. So we went from the preeminent colonizers of the globe to colony of the new empire. It's no wonder many Europeans are disdainful of the US.
@jackoofman2560 Жыл бұрын
I love detailed videos like this, thank you for making this!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I am glad you like it!
@danconcompany9285 Жыл бұрын
Fine video with solid data. I'm a middle aged American living in Denmark. I agree with your analysis, and yet I prefer to remain in Denmark because I feel like the quality of life for me and my family is better here. But I'm neither very wealthy nor ambitious, so the system suits me better.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! It is also fair to point out, that Denmark is one the richest and best governed countries in Europe and the future is likely pretty bright there. But it is not that way for most of Europe.
@NH-zi4jr Жыл бұрын
I hope you enjoy living with all those Nazi Europeans. I heard Danes are burning Qurans and hating on Muslims while sending weapons to Ukraine to kill more Russians just like the Nazis did. Oh and Danes and Nazis both viewed Americans as inferior but we both know who won the war.
@jhrusa8125 Жыл бұрын
Good we don't want you hear anyways.
@MichaelWilliams-nh3hv Жыл бұрын
That very well may be the point of the video; middle aged, comfortable, and none ambitious. In other words, America was/is populated by young, ambitious immigration while Europe repatriates fat cats.
@jimdemos5351 Жыл бұрын
Just such an underated channel!! Your videos are so well made
@lazer-ape Жыл бұрын
the question which concerns me most these days is whether or not Europe can find it in itself to escape from this stagnation with newfound purpose. I am confident in America's ability to rebound because it is innately geared towards continuous competition. I dont think modern Europe has that spark. In the very least I hope future Europe does. I would be incredibly dissappointed to see Europe become fully Americanized, and I say as much as an American. I sincerely hope the future offers both America and Europe a return to tradition and true prosperity.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I do not think that contmeporary Europe will find some new purpouse in any near future, I think we are in for slow corosion of everything. It sure will change at some point, but it is hard to say if the continent will have much in common with what we know right now at that point.
@Slydime917 Жыл бұрын
So what, for example, could I do? I don't want to emigrate, my passion isn't high-tech. My passion is animation and story telling. Could one option be to open an animation studio in Europe, gain some soft power? I know it's not easy, just a curious thought. I don't want to wallow in self pity, I want to take action
@jackpotbear4559 Жыл бұрын
You're doing great kid
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@Zoltan_Gyarmathi Жыл бұрын
video of the decade.
@ssssaa2 Жыл бұрын
I think Europe's situation is much more tenuous than the US because it's location is much worse, it has far fewer resources and much more geopolitical issues, such things just aren't serious issues in North America but potentially crippling for European nations. I'm unsure of what will happen because of the demographic situation in the world. It seems that as countries become more developed they stop having kids, and that gets extremely far in some countries (like south korea with it's fertility rate of 0.8 or worse now), and in addition the elites of the west seem to think the ideal solution to this problem is just to import as many people from the least developed countries on earth as possible forever, even if they have nothing going for them, so who knows what the future holds for each country or for that matter human civilization as a whole moving forwards.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
It is true, the American geography is just completely superb and gives them great geopolitical isnularity.
@sydneylaroche8276 Жыл бұрын
A lot of Western Europe's problems will eventually come to the US, I think it's just a couple of decades ahead. We're all heading the same way. Climate change also will greatly affect the US and make it less resourceful, plus it is more prone to natural disasters than Europe, so the US is by no means 'out of the woods'.
@pistoneteo Жыл бұрын
Great video, and absolutely true.
@talbot9255 Жыл бұрын
Modern Europe always makes me depressed.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
It is kinda depressing.
@cmd7930 Жыл бұрын
Am European and it's only getting worse it seems. Shame the police and military are supporting the capitalists who want to destroy Europe.
@loveistheanswer123 Жыл бұрын
Guess its time to do something about it
@MrAlberts88 Жыл бұрын
heat the ovens up
@rudbarnes8577 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. I learned a lot that really surprised me, especially on the economics front. The GDP per capita and debt per capita figures were so different from what I imagined that I looked them up to make sure there was no mistake. Well done! Not that it's a happy story.
@robertgordon5339 Жыл бұрын
You gave an excellent analysis of how European companies are struggling. It is interesting to note that European pharmaceutical companies (Roche, Novartis, Sanofi, AZ, GSK) comprise 5/10 of the top Global Pharmaceutical companies by turnover. There are no Chinese or Japanese companies in this top ten. These companies are heavily involved in traditional chemical medicines as well as newer high tech biologic based medicines. The Europeans have heavily invested in newer technologies like genomics, AI and robotics. Although the US produces the majority of the new drugs discovered, Switzerland is the world leader in new drugs discovered per million people. There is no decline in Europe in this area, just business as usual.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your praise and for this insight!
@fronkamili6686 Жыл бұрын
Euro biotech are so cool!
@louis9116 Жыл бұрын
it is criminal that you have so little subs for such superb content. Keep up the good work, some day the algorithm will eventually bless you
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I will keep grinding!
@miroslavdusin4325 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 Great. Výborný obsah, i když ten český přízvuk je v té angličtině hodně znatelný :)
@hereticalgames3695 Жыл бұрын
Toyota is borderline American at this point. The HQ is in Japan but the largest plants are in Kentucky and Texas. Samsung and TSMC are building out primarily in the American southwest right now. I don’t know if it is a security thing or a demographic one (as those states happen to be immigration hot beds and thus has available labor).
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Japanese are very good at preparing for the future by outsourcing the factories to the future markets.
@MrX-wd8cm Жыл бұрын
Misleading - the plants in the US are for the US martket, other locations all round the globe have Toyota factories too.
@popNdawg Жыл бұрын
@@MrX-wd8cm No sh*t, Sherlock.
@MrX-wd8cm Жыл бұрын
@@popNdawg Tell the Original commenter not me , Einstein.
@hereticalgames3695 Жыл бұрын
@mrX they are the primary consumer and producer of Toyota. They are also building out in the US. To clarify further Japan has embraced a offshoring strategy for most businesses but outside semiconductors (who aren’t completely exempt) this has led to pretty close economic ties between Japan and the US to the point where Japan’s capital goes pretty heavily into US production.
@radosawkmita2764 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video! I agree with all said. I believe that the long-term decline can only be halted through further EU integration. However, this path may already be compromised by what Germany/France presented last year. Specifically, we need to unify e-commerce/digital markets to create a large, unified market similar to the US (IMO that's the reason why so many unicorns are in the US). We should also implement immigration policies that attract the best and most entrepreneurial individuals, similar to the ones in the US, Canada, and Australia. Finally, we need a military capable of protecting all members and the interests of the bloc, as China, the US, and India do. Cheers from Poland
@Bleilock1 Жыл бұрын
as someone who is from the EU (cro) i genuinely cant see if, how and if ever will the EU have its own standing army
@radosawkmita2764 Жыл бұрын
Nobody believed NATO or EU could exist 70 yrs ago too
@Bleilock1 Жыл бұрын
@@radosawkmita2764 well not really Nato coming couldve been seen from other galaxy away after the ww2 And EU sorta exists in weird forms from the 70s but it changed names as it spread and was becoming mote cohetent Its also not an wild and "progressive" idea as people tend to be But EU or whatever that uniom was before Never imagined nor wanted to have an army precisely because of nato, that was always a no no and it will always remain weird and very hard to achieve (Because thats exactly what we didnt imagine eu will have to do in the future, or rather our present)
@radosawkmita2764 Жыл бұрын
@@Bleilock1 I get your points and I agree with them. I also don't like what I'm seeing and how the EU operates. I can see a broken machine, but my goal here is to look from 50-100 yrs perspective what options there are. In my opinion, Europe's only choice is to either remain fragmented and disorganized or to evolve, deepen integration, and reform in order to slowly become something more capable of standing up to other players in the global arena.
@helsinkianon Жыл бұрын
@@radosawkmita2764 This is all true, but America has a lot of influence in Europe which they will use to keep us divided. I don't see any political will to significantly deepen European integration in a way which is acceptable to all members. I would say that there are significant parts of Europe, such as the Nordics, the Netherlands, Ireland, parts of anti-Russian Eastern Europe which would rather deepen ties with the United States. Southern Europe will be a burden with terminal demographics. Can France + Germany push this trough alone? Maybe another Trump term in Washington will give them momentum. But more in general, do Europeans even want to be an autonomous actor on the world stage? Our leaders have no experience in this and the last independent act of European foreign policy, the Suez intervention, ended in disaster.
@programmabilities Жыл бұрын
Also, regarding the "decline of Europe", demographically, according to Richard Lynn and Dr. Nyborg, the average IQ (human capital) is declining in West Europe. (--Declining towards the national per-capita average IQ levels of the Third-World populations that today's "new Europeans" came from. According to Dr. Richard Lynn and Dr. Nyborg.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I am aware of these propositions, however I think this issues is broader and do not include just western Europe, but the whole developed world.
@borginburkes1819 Жыл бұрын
lynn is a racist who only does research to further his racist views. i wouldnt be surprised of his studies were tampered with and dishonest
@programmabilities Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 wrong. the developed world--japan korea China--does not have declining IQs. because there are no "new Koreans" from Africa.
@lif3andthings763 Жыл бұрын
Yes Dr. Richard Lynn who definitely hasn’t received criticism for skewing research and literally does not receive funding from a white supremacist group dedicated to proving race realism.
@stefankalisch424 Жыл бұрын
very good content. Thx.
@Ian-dr4vv7 ай бұрын
Interesting insights, thanks for making this. I'm pretty fed up with the anti-american sensitment that has completely saturated the internet in the past couple decades. I don't mind people critizing the US goverment for it's policies or interworkings, the problem I have is when I hear euopeans talking down on americans like we are somehow responsible for their troubles, or even our own government. Do not talk about me or my fellow citiziens with such distain when you have never met us.
@Flergerberg4 ай бұрын
I agree with your sentiment. But the Foucalt cukt has already taken over America and made it a judicial dictatorship with an irrelevant Constitution. America had the best Constitution in history, until a few judges decided that Congress and a few dictators in black robes could just defy the Bill of Rights and Amendment process with an act of Congress and "Compelling State Interest" case law mental gymnastics. I remain a Patriot to the Constitution and America as a nation of laws, not men. An idea. But the American people are hopelessly lost in forever 2020 land because the medical, psychological, pokitical, and sociokogocal academy is monopolized with Foucalt Acolytes who reject objectivity, science, and proper experimental methods. This in turn floided the entire federal gov and pentagon officer core with peopke who think the Constitution is a white supremacist document and want to, as they say, "burn the system down." Humpty Dumpty fell off the wall finally in 2020. And you arent going to put it back together again with an illegitimate 2 tier judicial system. If at all. Enjoy the ride downhill. Sorry to be the messenger of gloom and doom. But focus on your kids and family, cut off your social media and tv, and return to the lost positive aspects of the ethics of your grandparents. Stop listening to Critical Theorists and keep your kids off social media and disney. Stop apologizing, and boycott all corporate activists and companies. These are a few things everyone can do to help turn the tide, but lets not sit and oretend we still have the Bill of Rights and equality. Its just not true anymore. 2020 marked the end of the post war US and Constitutional Law. What comes next can be pulled from the writings of Solzhenitsyn or the history of Rome. If you dont agree, all I can say is either attend your DEI cukt classes or go bake my rainbow cake before I sue you and discriminate against you in the economy.
@tunisian_stats24 күн бұрын
23:15 France is very influential in my country, Tunisia, tho. And generally still more influential in all of French Africa, not more than the USA tho.
@solivagant1170 Жыл бұрын
The changing dynamic between Europe and the U.S. will become more apparent over the coming decade. As of now, most Europeans, from my personal experience see the U.S. as equal if not lesser.
@aar0n70910 ай бұрын
Europe is not a country it is a continent. An irrelevant one at that.
@Itsshadowgod7 ай бұрын
GIVE THIS MAN A US CITIZENSHIP
@DungeonMarshal Жыл бұрын
7:00 As a Russian, I would really like to get your opinion on my country (and other post-Soviet states as well)
@dariuszgaat5771 Жыл бұрын
Well, I think the biggest problem of Russia and other post-Soviet countries is the massive shrinking of their populations.
@DungeonMarshal Жыл бұрын
@@dariuszgaat5771 Yes, but for Russia it's not so different from Central and Western European countries, because we have a large flow of immigrants from Muslim countries of Central Asia and fertility rates about average by European standards (1.5, which is similar to Poland, Germany or the UK); though, if you take Ukraine and Belarus, then yes, they don't receive such numbers of immigrants and depopulate much faster
@dariuszgaat5771 Жыл бұрын
@@DungeonMarshal But the influx of so many immigrants from culturally alien countries is not a good thing. I also heard that there is a huge number of abortions in Russia. That's very bad.
@S_Warden Жыл бұрын
Peter Zeihan seems pretty accurate
@S_Warden Жыл бұрын
@@DungeonMarshal but are those immigrants Russian culturally. Will they impose their own beliefs or will they adopt Russian values.
@ahtepacholiztli2 ай бұрын
EU's largest tech companies are not based around consumer products. Like Philips, dutch company which was huge before the rise of chinese tech, now Philips are mostly centered around industrial and medical products. There is also the decline of some american semiconductor companies like Intel.
@askarufus7939 Жыл бұрын
I watched Dick Cavett's interview with Janis Joplin where she said she didn't like performing in europe as europeans are "too cerebral". It says a lot about differences between USA and why it was the american culture that won the race. From the early beggining of boomers' lives it was all about fun and flowers, almost hedonistic, while europe kept being more masochistic-like.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Interesting insight! Thanks!
@Ebb0Productions Жыл бұрын
She died over 50 years ago. I don't think what she said applies today. There are so many festivals across Europe and they get pretty wild. Especially when it comes to metal.
@ogulbilgi8892 Жыл бұрын
This was very well done! Subscribed!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@wyatt13131 Жыл бұрын
Such good analysis
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@user-pm4pl5hh9m4 ай бұрын
Very nice introduction to the story of European decline. As an outsider - I am Indian, living in India - the obviousness of the reasons stares one in the face, at least for outsiders, if not for Europeans. I can distill some of them, a few of which you have brought up, especially in about 25:00 (sense of inferiority among contemporary Europeans) and 30:00 (cultural superiority). First, Europe was always about an overt expression of intellectual and cultural superiority that dates back to the time of the Renaissance and after. Europe likes to place its origins of philosophy, science, mathematics, etc to Greece and thereby the later contributions in Continental Europe and the British Isles from approximately the 17th century. In the process, they have freely scavenged and appropriated the discoveries that came their way, through the Arabic lands, from further East - most of them from India. And in a sick method that they have since practiced and perfected in aid of their own advancement, they never credited the origin - for example, the most basic building blocks in mathematics that did not come from Greece but from Asia but renamed them to later Europeans who absorbed and rewrote these ancient findings in their own language. No acknowledgment, but redirection to a European "discoverer" in matters of mathematics, physics, physiology, and philosophy. Second, Europe was able to assert, control, and legitimize these thefts of intellectual property because of something that came soon after the Renaissance - the Industrial Revolution. This allowed many European kingdoms (Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Italy, Denmark) to go "global", first for trade and later for colonization resulting absurdly in subsequent centuries for Europeans to claim that they were "civilized" and the rest were un-civilized heathens or pagans (the British arrogance as a colonial master overlording India had its peak in the assertions of such luminaries as Thomas Babington Macaulay, secretary of war between 1939 and 1841, that the entire civilizational "contributions to science and literature" of India would not exceed what the English could stock on one cupboard shelf.) Oh, what arrogance. They had no deep knowledge of Hindu scriptures dating back to 5,000 BC and the various Sanskrit texts that encoded - encoded, mind you, that has now gained prominence in cryptography in modern programming - extraordinary information about the origin of modern numbers, place number system in arithmetics, the concepts of zero and infinity, arithmetic and geometric progression, algebra, Pingala series (that Europeans gave the name Fibonacci series), spherical trigonometry, calculations of the number Pi, calculations of very large numbers associated with distance and time that Europe had never imagined even as late as the 18th century, and numerical astronomical exercises relating to origin of the universe, celestial bodies, and eclypses. The Hindu concept of the Universe is very, very different from that in Christendom: while there is a single point origin in Christianity, Hinduism accords no such definitive, deterministic, origins. Instead, it postulates - in a manner eerily similar to modern Physics on the subject - to different parallel universes, each having their own cycles in extraordinary long time periods. Our own solar system and our Milky Way gallaxy exists along with possibly millions of other similar celestial bodies that had their own origins in time. Such arrogance of the English - and more generally of Europeans - is particularly satisfying when the UK finds most of its most iconic companies - British Steel, Tetley's, Jaguar, Land Rover, Hamley's, etc - now in Indian hands. I am sure the Chinese feel the same way when they give it back to the Americans. Third, European decline commenced after WWII when: First, their large scale inhumanity, appalling war mongering on a large scale, and ethical disconnect became evident to the world at large. The rise of the US soon after gave an added punch and while Europe (at least, Western Europe) progressed economically and became rich, it could never maintain the facade of being "civilized" any time after, even in the midst of every symbol of material prosperity. That facade was permanently blown - and remains problematic as the world today recognizes that every major war of the world has been fought in Europe - WWI, WWII, Yugoslavia, Ukraine, besides smaller and internal civil wars and terrorism - that seriously affected and continues to affect the rest of the world. With this came an increasingly entrenched inferiority complex that Europe finds itself unable to get rid of. Hence the fascination with American cultural fashion, more as a distraction. This inferiority complex now comes added with other dimensions of slow decline in all spheres for which there are no real solutions, many of which are being discussed by Kaiser: demographics, out-of-control welfarism, lack of industrial competitiveness, inability to innovate at small scales, lack of entrepreneurship, breakdown in family, and national depression, etc. All these greatly determine not just the quality of life - which Europe still is in denial about as it relates the concept only to material things - but also self-belief, tradition, family, child bearing, and fertility rates. Fourth, and this speaks particularly to the idea of European superiority, is the general loss of civilizational identity, pride, and family - these are different from an institutional superiority of the European experiment that gave the world colonialists in an earlier era and wars later - and reflects on the absence of something at the individual level. Europeans are proud of their new philosophers of the 19th and 20th centuries in Germany, France, and the UK that gave a taste for a methodology of thinking that infected the rest of the world in the 20th century - first as the version 1.0 of Marxism and later as "old wine in a new bottle" version 2.0 that took root in the US in the 2010s - Woke - and has become the new political ideology that seeks to destroy the basics of a nation - society, family, culture, religion, tradition, etc. This disease, while prominent today in the US, has defined contemporary European (especially EU) policies on all matters - particularly immigration, gender, and climate - that resonates deeply with liberal or labor parties. While Europe experiences all the ill-effects today, the growing Woke movement in the US, along with its Islamist comprador characteristics will surely repeat itself in that country as well in future years. But...the decline of Europe is not just a contemporary tale that began almost a hundred years ago, but an irreversible fact in coming years.
@Flergerberg4 ай бұрын
I disagree with much of what you say. It is true that Greeks innovated from Egyptians, Arabs innovated that, India created Zero and our number system. But thats everyone. Everyone stands on those before them. Eurooe is unique, and Greece was a major contributor, if not the greatest, to science and math. Nothing out of the Caliphate was possible without them, and yes Arabs innovated and trabsferred that knowledge to Europe (unintentionally). Your concerns at imperialism cam be directed at everyone. European imperialism was not the first, not even the worst (Mongols). Its scake was due to the weapons and tech the inherited after centuries as a backwater for Arab and Mongol slave raids. Europe is no more guilty as anyone else and people today owe zero for it. I completely reject the concept of "historical justice" and anyone of good morals should. Having said all this, your conclusions on the Renaissance, 19th-20th century Sophists like Marx/Foucalt, and their children the detestable Critical Theorists of the 2010-present, are the nails in the coffin of the West and I agree 100%
@Quentin-vi4zi Жыл бұрын
You missed one part that, that the machines producing advanced semi-conductors are largely made by a Dutch company. But yeah I overall agree, Europe is struggling to innovate. The American and European economies are so close, that Silicon Valley is the tech region for both and with the linked economies it’s very hard to set up a region to rival that.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I actually mention the ASML in the text at 20:10.
@Quentin-vi4zi Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 Ah yes sorry
@karimmanaouil9354 Жыл бұрын
ASML is multinational and 99% of the engineering workforce is not even Dutch but literally from every country in the world. ASML is given huge money from Intel and Apple and the formers are not interested in Lithography as long as there is someone trusted enough to make it for them. It's not very lucrative business, it's just a niche use case. The most lucrative business when it comes to Silicon is IP design.
@Quentin-vi4zi Жыл бұрын
@@karimmanaouil9354 18.000 out of the 39.000 employees that ASML has are based in the Netherlands (and in the next few years this will be expanded to 35k employees in the Netherlands). Also, the HQ and according to ASML themselves, their worldwide biggest R&D centre is located there. Besides that there is also a factory located in Berlin (but the Berlin location is ofcourse less notable compared to asia and the US)
@johnjones6601 Жыл бұрын
Great presentation. Europe has major internal contradictions, the likes of which cannot be resolved without some tectonic societal shifts. It's not going to end well.
@canadianpirateanders9951 Жыл бұрын
very glad I move outa Europe as a kid. my family in Scandinavia and has a good life, but we have built a great life in America and it only took 30 years. everyone is my direct family in the us is a business owner. I live in a very safe area. we own land in multiple states, houses in multiple states. I just bought my first house and will sell it in couple years once I'm done fixing it. when I moved here in the early 90s we didn't have much of anything. my dad built a house thing that we lived in in rural Alaska. at one point the roof was a tarp :) we didn't have toilets till I was a teenager. insane what can happen when you try in America. Also crazy the capital in this country. you prob have a neighbor who is worth 10 plus million and you have no idea.
@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 Жыл бұрын
Man, in Scandinavia you might have been a viking and live a happy pirate ☠️ life. Instead, you chose to become American cowboy, tending cattle. Bad choice ! 😜 😆 😀
@practicaltheory6604 Жыл бұрын
Hi , I also living now in Sweden , which state would you recomend me to go if I would move to USA ? Maybe you could give me some ideas. From here in europe , USA looks a bit weird .
@canadianpirateanders9951 Жыл бұрын
@@practicaltheory6604 depends what you do career wise and what you can afford. America has insane range of geographies. my parents rented cheap cars and drove around till they found small towns they like. sleeping in the back of the car or at cheap hotels.( wallmart parking Lots are ALWAYS open to campers just fyi) they ended up liking north Florida and I do too but everyone is different. Wisconsin and Minnesota have ALOT of scandinavians from back in the day if you looking for something more like Sweden land wise ( looks kinda like rural sweden) . I haven't been back in Stockholm since pre covid but if you want a city that similar to stochholm id say Chicago with its walkability and river network. just one thing id say is Americans are extremely nice on average and they get nicer and nicer the more distance you get from a major city. honestly best move is a little American vacation to see what you like. I highly recommend searching based on weather. you cant go wrong with a little sunshine. ie Colorado or Arizona. also eastern Washington around Pullman have amazing seasonal weather ( Spokane is a bit ruff right now) sorry for any grammar mistakes and hope this helps.
@canadianpirateanders9951 Жыл бұрын
@@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 ya was a tuff trade. America is the land of the fatties, so the whole country is kinda like herding cattle. hopefully that explains why we all must give up there ship and rope for the horse and saddle.
@practicaltheory6604 Жыл бұрын
@@canadianpirateanders9951 Honestly I would be scared to get to close to a USA citizen , do not want to pull out some guns to point them at me >.
@morm608 Жыл бұрын
24:00 spanish and portuguese speaking countries are a desert of anglophone music. In the last ten years the englush music has vanished from spain , portugal and latinamerica.
@Eterif Жыл бұрын
This is not true atleast in latin america, foreign music is really popular.
@morm608 Жыл бұрын
@@Eterif you are wrong, just check it yourself, in the spanish speaking countries maybe there is a couple songs in english maximum in the top100, kzbin.info/aero/PL4fGSI1pDJn4Kd7YEG9LbUqvt64PLs9Fo
@WastedBananas Жыл бұрын
Funny how you tried to say the rape issue in India is "severe" but the chart says the rate is less than 2.0 per 100k, which is MUCH lower than many countries of the world like South Africa for example, and even lower than some western countries. The truth is India will never shy away from these cases and won't hesitate to report them, whereas incidents of rape and sexual assault are REGULARLY covered up in Western countries and never reported on by the news media.
@magg93 Жыл бұрын
The slow one now will later be fast, as the present now will later be past. The order is rapidly fading. And the first one now will later be last - for the times they are a-changing.. - Bob Dylan
@genmontgomeree9888 Жыл бұрын
My opinion exactly. Most of the European countries growing in relevance are in the east of central-Europe, Czechia or Poland, there’s a higher degree of support for market-orientation there then in Western Europe where even the ‘liberals’ are dominated by socialists and technocrats.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
that is true, the memory of communism is still present.
@crystalencore91 Жыл бұрын
This. THIS. This comment needs more upvotes.
@Alex-df4lt Жыл бұрын
Not true at all. Try finding a job at international company in those places that is innovative, well paid and doesn't have the primary site abroad. Good luck with that. Central Europe is a dumping ground for old projects and a slave site.
@Forsthman64 Жыл бұрын
Well done, my man!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@orboakin8074 Жыл бұрын
31:00 This one still confuses me. Why did so many Europeans take up the whole BLM grift so much? Even in much of Africa, we ignored that scam.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
It is truly remarkable. It is as if we are not able not to have an opinion about something that is a subject in America.
@Diggy77 Жыл бұрын
The biggest difference (in my opinion) is not how much wealth there is in the economy, but how it is distributed, and in Europe, because of the welfare programs the wealth is more equally distributed
@OrixDalgrath Жыл бұрын
Great video m8!
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@-haclong2366 Жыл бұрын
15:45 This is almost a direct result of Europe's horrible intellectual property laws which effectively allow large companies to monopolise everything. Nobody ever talks about this because the entire political spectrum in the West agrees that this should be the case. The American Constitution prohibits intellectual property from going too far but European influence has slowly been making it worse. For example "the Mickey Mouse law" which locked a lot of older works from entering the public domain was just Disney pushing the U.S. government to adopt a milder version of Europe's draconian copyright laws.
@derekgreen7319 Жыл бұрын
You're right europe isn't anything like what it used to be. Considering that Germany is in for a hard time and that only means it will get worse for europe as Germany is pretty critical to the EU as a whole.
@brunorocha79455 ай бұрын
Like Emmanuel Todd didn't say, but should have, "watch all Kaiser Bauch videos"
@TorMax9 Жыл бұрын
The three biggest mistakes Europe made was 1) arrogantly pushing Russia away into the arms of China, militarily and politically and economically, instead of welcoming and integrating and trading with natural-resources-rich European-Christian Russia respectfully as equal partners after the fall of the USSR, 2) sending her hard-earned industry and technology and methodology to China, closing factories and reducing manufacturing capacity and capability and increasing unemployment at home and becoming dependant on a ethno-totalitarian-expansionist state that, besides being the biggest polluter in the world by far, doesn't play by the rules and 3) opening her borders to unskilled and unwilling to assimilate non-Europeans, fracturing social cohesion, increasing crime and corruption, insecurity and suspicion. Add to that, a) lack of historical/ethnic/cultural confidence and clarity and purpose and b) loss of transcendental purpose and joy and love, i.e., life is good because God made life, be fruitful and multiply, enjoy family and c) overly-bureaucratic and regulatory and red tape and d) inflexible "secular" ideology with recently made-up metaphysical concepts and categories and quotas and e) lack of risk-taking and creativity, vision and cojones.
@amirbabaki6267 ай бұрын
Having an interest in knowledge is admirable, but we have come a long way from the time of ancient philosophers, who could have an opinion in every field of knowledge. Without a proper understanding of how currency exchange works, one can not and ought not attempt to draw conclusions from GDP per capita tables. Also, the forthcoming economic assessments of Mario Draghi is going to change everyone's perspective on Europe's economic future.
@appa609 Жыл бұрын
Europe is a pretty small piece of land. The fact that it ever dominated world affairs was a temporary miracle and it's been gradually returning to normal since the 1890's. But as a people, Europeans are doing quite well. North Americans are English Irish Italian and German. Latin Americans are majority Spanish and Portuguese. And as a culture, nothing comes close. Anime is Western. Kpop is Western. Indians talking to different Indians speak English. Every nativist movement is losing ground.
@cmd7930 Жыл бұрын
European dominatin was not a miracle. We have superior Aryan genes and we dominate like our ancestors did.
@marcusj9947 Жыл бұрын
@@cmd7930 you Nazi's are funny
@cmd7930 Жыл бұрын
@@marcusj9947 its true tho. look at history
@borginburkes1819 Жыл бұрын
@@cmd7930 so can you please explain why you're losing so much influence?
@cmd7930 Жыл бұрын
@@borginburkes1819 small hat tribe wants to destroy us
@norgepingvin3745 Жыл бұрын
good content keep it up!
@Shalefist Жыл бұрын
The tragedy of Europe is a tragedy written in demographics. China will be the first to showcase the world exactly what this looks like when they go tits up in a decade due to losing so many to retirement, and simply not having a replacement workforce. Germany will be Europe's version of this, as Russia cutting the balls of their entire industry over Ukraine is going to force them to make some very hard choices regarding their entire economic model, especially in a world where the closest access to oil and gas for the Germans is -- Nigeria. Oh, and they are losing their working age population over aging. Most other European states (save France) are in the same boat, and are only off a few years or also dependent on now-dying globalization for any economic significance. Looking back historically, Europe is the story of one people group moving in to supplant another, usually a pliant native group overrun by starving and ruthless nomads. Even Rome itself was settled by the last remnants of Aeneas's descendants from Troy, via Carthage. Fewer parts of Europe have seen more invading peoples than the British isles, part of why I suspect they have such a rich set of traditions and genetic stock, as evidenced by the great men that little speck of land tends to produce. For Europe to be overrun again by less-progressive peoples is just history going down the same rabbit hole (either by invitation, holdovers of colonization, or just mass immigration waves), is simply par for the course. The only difference is the new immigrants are not, dare I say, sourced from more local stock? Parts of Europe are dealing with true multicultural issues not seen in centuries, and slowly turning into settler societies. Western Europe would do well to study how (rightly or wrongly) the New World handled these issues, and adjust accordingly. You have two options Europe: one, increase your birthrates to above 2 per woman, or accept immigration and cultural change as the price for replacing your disappearing workforce. Japan is trying to automate or outsource swaths of its economy to salvage it from this fate, but this only delays the inevitable. Even if tomorrow the EU offered no taxes for citizens bearing and rearing children plus state assistance, it would still take 20 years to have that workforce come online. With the spectre of nuclear war over Ukraine lurking around the corner, the continent might simply be out of time.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
True, but the demographic crisis is not an European phenomenon, as you correctly wrote. Places like Brazil, Turkey, Iran, Thailand and others will likely ecperienced on their own in the future.
@balasaashti3146 Жыл бұрын
Late comment. Banning guns will reduce gun deaths not violent deaths. I will say I feel a lot safer with my assaults' weapons then not, since last time my ancestors were in Europe a Austrian painter tried to wipe them off the face of the planet. And now there are a bunch of diverse people there that hold the same views towards me. Awesome video though love it.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@NoscoperLoaf Жыл бұрын
I actually wonder if in the future Eroupe will partake in the colonization of space
@lazer-ape Жыл бұрын
the youtuber WhatifAlthist briefly discussed the matter in a video series where he covered the future of Europe and America, and it was his opinion that the Americans would carry Europe and Japan to space with them. As time goes on it seems to make more and more sense to me. Both Japan and Europe will need the aid as their populations dip below replacement level and America, having reindustrialized by then, will eagerly supply them with it because of all the scientists and designers they'll get out of it.
@andrewlechner6343 Жыл бұрын
Probably, but it would most likely be in form of a support role to the Americans, not a competing homegrown effort.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I would not bet on it, not directly or between the first pioneers to do so.
@joaquimbarbosa896 Жыл бұрын
@@lazer-ape Depends. I think sea mining can have an absurd impact on reviving european economies for exemple
@LostinMango Жыл бұрын
@@lazer-ape lol you guys have a short term thinking we are not going to Mars until 2050 the technology is not there and by then china and india will have half of world GDP so india and china Usa will be pioneers not Eu.
@Ravi9A Жыл бұрын
love it.
@Astillion Жыл бұрын
You make a compelling case. And yet, as a European, I don't feel even the slightest urge to move to America. I'm very grateful to have been born in Europe. Though maybe Sweden, where I was born and still live, is different. You mention brain-drain, and Sweden and a lot of other Western European countries are beneficiaries of brain-drain, mostly from Eastern Europe. Sweden also, I think, punches well above it's weight-class in terms of having big successful companies, athletes and great music. The American left is certainly jealous of our system with payed vacation and parental leave and such policies, while I think the Swedish right is a bit jealous of the American system, while at the same time not wanting to give up our benefits. GDP per capita also doesn't matter much for the vast majority of people, it it's all concentrated at the top. The US is a country far richer than most European countries, but they also suffer from widely outspread poverty. The way human nature works, maybe it's inevitable that Europe will keep declining. We were on top of the world and started to get comfortable. And we're seeing ourselves get outpaced now by others. But we're not willing to give up our comforts. And it might just be a matter of time until Americans get those same comforts, and then the same will happen to them.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I do not have any desire to move to America either, I love my country. The brain drain I am talking about is of a peculiar character. It is not really noticable in the statistics, because it might consist of tens of hundreds of people a year, but those are often the entepreneurs or the highest paid professionals. The brain drain from eastern Europe to the west is much more massive and conventional. And as you said, Sweden is one of the places in Europe that is surely in the best shape, the whole Scandinavia is. American left is envying your social system, but they also do not understand that the solutions are not universal and what can be applied in a Scandinavian countries is not universally aplicaple in other places, like the US with vastly different social structure and history. And the whole Scandinavia combined is something under 30 million people, so it is not gonna to pull whole Europe up.
@Juan-qu4oj Жыл бұрын
No reason to. I live in America and we have the same problems
@Astillion Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserbauch9092 I think it's natural that when a society becomes rich, they introduce more comfort. We can see this in countless examples across history. Western Europe has to a much larger extent than America converted it's productivity and wealth into comfort for it's people. Maybe the US has found a "better" way? They can keep their high productivity by denying what many Europeans would call basic comforts. The price is more suffering for the people. But in the long term it might be more sustainable. I don't know, I'm just speculating.
@segiraldovi Жыл бұрын
@@Astillion I share your point of basic conformity, it is like what happened with pensions, this type of benefit occurred when your society was more productive and rich, at first they were not expensive but as time goes by their price grows and it becomes unmaintainable. Every minimally educated politician and economist knows that they are unsustainable, but touch them and your country will fall into chaos. (I always find it funny to see the French angry because Macro wants to end the many special regimes inherited from before the French revolution) Political parties promise more and more of these amenities in order to be elected and gain power and people vote for them without taking into account that it will bankrupt their society in the long run (just look at the case of Spain and Argentina).
@righteousmammon9011 Жыл бұрын
The US has an 11.6% poverty rate, compared with 16.6% in Germany and 20% in the UK. The US has the highest MEDIAN disposable income in the world.
@MysliusLT Жыл бұрын
0:39 this is highly related to the population growth, The two bumps in 1914 and around 1945 are the result of wars. The war leaves huge dent in demographics. Since 1900, US pop grew by 350%, Europe's by 170%
@hkmorhsi Жыл бұрын
What you guys will get one day, is that Europe is not always first, but almost always comes in clutch and very well prepared and advanced, with a lot of quality work. Let them cook.... Europe is very good at making stuff that stand the test of time
@simplyme5324 Жыл бұрын
About startup culture - how can the big players in Western Europe change that? Concerning computing I'd like to remark that Moore's law comes to an end and physical computing will most likely be the future. And Europe is heavily catching up here. Some of the best companies in quantum computing are European and I hope that the same will go for physical computing in general.
@botatobias2539 Жыл бұрын
As a Romanian: good riddance. My country isn't even part of "Europe" as most think of it. Western Europe sought to dictate to us and trade us over as if we were cattle for centuries. Heck, were it up to Western Europe, Romania wouldn't even exist: the August 1858 Paris Convention sought to stop the Romanian Principalities from unifying. But as per usual, Romanians found a way... I hope Romania becomes a strong conduit for American control over Europe. It would be objectively deserved and cathartic to us. As it has been cathartic for me to see Sweden being held up at NATO's door. Posh twat Western country being on the receiving end for once.
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
I understand what you mean. I believe that the development of the eastern part of the continent will be very different. We never experienced such highs, but we thus won´t see such lows, in the relative terms. My next video (after part II. of this series) will be about the future of central and eastern Europe.
@toniderdon Жыл бұрын
One thing you didn't mention in this video when you mentioned the high debt levels in EU countries: The US debt and Chinese debt is now higher than most EU countries and not slowing down. Right now it looks like the years of growth in the US economy since 2008 were mostly build on debt and "cheap" money for tech companies to innovate with. US debt to GDP ratio is at 121% already and projected to grow to over 150% very soon. The interest payments on the debt will eat up most of their tax revenue by 2100. While the US economy is strong, I am very worried about these debt levels. So if Europe falls and people "escape" to the US, they will end up in a country that will soon be crippled by debt.
@user-hu3iy9gz5j Жыл бұрын
"And Schwitzerland... which is Schwitzerland" Great video!
@jerzyzbiaowiezy6249 Жыл бұрын
Either Switzerland or Schweiz. Not Schwitzerland :)
@kaiserbauch9092 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@chrisrauber6602 Жыл бұрын
Well, as an Austrian from an (slightly) above middle class family I make the same eperience with most of my friends/collegues. U are either a single child or have one sibling. At age 40-50 u make a heritage in a height that allows u to retire "in style". Either in your home or at a warmer and cheaper place like Thailand or the Dominican Republic, There is simply no need to study and work "hard" anymore. U study "something" and work at some uninteresting job for about 2 decades. Doing so for at least 180 months enables u to a "minimum pension" not far from an average workers pension if u reach 65.