One of my great-grandfathers was present for the Christmas Truce, and told me how wonderful it was. That great-grandfather fought for Germany in WWI.
@linguicinhajrn935711 ай бұрын
Very Nice
@leonardhpls610 ай бұрын
Scum
@MixedRaceAndProud16908 ай бұрын
@@leonardhpls6 - 🐀
@brucedoyle40555 ай бұрын
I haven't time to watch the movie again, but I need to know if they started fighting and killing eachother after the truce?
@dcseain5 ай бұрын
@@brucedoyle4055 That they did!
@gunengineering1338 Жыл бұрын
"Pvt. Elmer. Did you learn anything about the enemy while you were celebrating Christmas with him?" "Yes commander. I learned that he doesn't want to sleep in feces or get his head blown off any more than i do."
@oberstul1941 Жыл бұрын
Watching a documentary about the Xmas Truce right around Xmas has become very fast a Xmas tradition. Cheers!
@yeshualionofjudah710727 күн бұрын
It's Christmas not x mass
@JohnJ-p7o4 күн бұрын
Nobody talked about that for 60-70 years. It was a myth for decades. Historians reminded us then film makers. Now it's well known.
@bob_the_bomb4508 Жыл бұрын
“I was NEVER offside “ Capt E Blackadder
@andrewstevenson118 Жыл бұрын
Superb. "Look, I'm as British as Queen Victoria!!" "So your father's German, you're half German and you married a German!?"
@samsignorelli Жыл бұрын
"Both sides advanced further during one Christmas piss-up than they managed in the next two and a half years of war!"
Blackadder Goes Forth is one of my favourite sitcoms. Not historically accurate, but very funny and ultimately extremely poignant at the end. Definitely some of Ben Elton's best work.
@Dave-kw7jq Жыл бұрын
My Grandfather was at the Somme and got gassed.. He after convalescence went back and ended up in "Wipers" Ypres where he said he saw more friends die from drowning in mud than enemy fire.. My father was a senior anti aircraft gunner in WW2 and he always said it was 30 days of boredom followed by 30 mins of sheer terror.. Apart from Crete he would leave the room if ever a Stuka JU87 came on screen in a film before the wail he could not cope with that sound until the end of his life, I think we would call that ptsd nowadays.
@andrewstevenson118 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to write that. I have one relative DoW from Gallipoli (buried on Malta) and another at Bailleul in July 1916 in the Aussie attacks. My grandad was with the Kiwi armoured brigade in Italy, and thankfully he came home. He said it was like going camping in winter with bad food and once a week someone would try to kill you. Never bought a German or Japanese car in his life.
@MixedRaceAndProud1690 Жыл бұрын
@Dave-kw7jq - thanks for sharing that 🙏 .. my Grandad was in the 8th Army, North Africa but he never ever spoke about what happened & we were told as kids to never ever ask him about the War .. they would be turning in their graves now at the state of the UK & what it has become .. all those brave souls who sacrificed so much for our freedom must NEVER be forgotten, no matter how much “other people” try to eradicate the history, culture & heritage of Great Britain 🇬🇧
@Roz-y2d Жыл бұрын
Bless him.❤
@leonardhpls610 ай бұрын
@@MixedRaceAndProud1690 sure he was 😂 bullshiting kid
@MixedRaceAndProud169010 ай бұрын
@@leonardhpls6 - Eh ?? .. what you on about poppet ??
@Egobyte83 Жыл бұрын
Sad to say, in the wake of the events of the Christmas Truce, there was a crackdown by the military higher ups of both forces. British High Command, for one, feared that similar incidents could undermine morale and erode the antagonism between German and British troops to the point where soldiers would hesitate firing on each other. Steps were taken to try and ensure it would not happen again. And thus the war kept going for another three and a half years. Unfortunately, the Christmas Truce was a phenomenon that flared up spontaneously and then vanished as quickly as it arrived. I can't even begin to describe how sad it is to think how the regular trooper must have felt after having experienced the Christmas Truce and then been forced to shoot that very same people again. Just disheartening.
@CanadianCCP10 ай бұрын
Germans could have just gone home. Hard to care about them when they are invading foreign countries while committing war crimes …and don’t blame it on the Brits or western allies for prolonging the war, blame Germany. Hope every German there that day paid the price for their crimes. Not all of us are cowards like you.
@caramelldansen22042 ай бұрын
The best way to show the differing interests of the two classes... One wants peace, the other wants domination.
@caramelldansen22042 ай бұрын
Additionally: 44:35 "The troops went back to war willingly" HAHAHA
@lucasklein44811 күн бұрын
@@caramelldansen2204that's how a psycho looks like
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
@@caramelldansen2204They did for four long years.
@kyledunn6853 Жыл бұрын
And today we're all brothers Tonight we're all friends A moment of peace in a war that never ends Today we're all brothers we drink and unite Now that Christmas has arrived and the snow turns the ground white Hear carols from the trenches, we sing O Holy Night Our guns laid to rest among snowflakes A Christmas in the trenches, a Christmas on the front far from home
As a former professional soldier I can completely understand how this happened, it’s an attitude unique to the armed forces
@IrishTechnicalThinker Жыл бұрын
If we can play a football game on Christmas day in no man's land, then we can achieve anything.
@taz454 Жыл бұрын
I bet England lost on penalties.
@ConstantlyConfused-x2f Жыл бұрын
Bahahaha
@NaturingIFindNatural-august73 Жыл бұрын
🤣😂🤣 ✌🏻🇦🇺🌏🤘🏻
@Roz-y2d Жыл бұрын
Nah, not if there was a Gerrard or Dudek there. 🤣
@Tommie.ManicGK Жыл бұрын
LoL
@jamesross1799 Жыл бұрын
Lol yeah 😂
@Bethi4WFH Жыл бұрын
And still the wars go on! Very interesting. Thank you.
@unixbadger Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@mickcardiff3044 Жыл бұрын
I smell Christmas in the air from October when the clocks go back. It makes me feel like they did, always has. Wish life wasn't so hard for most on Earth. Love Christmas..
@seandelaney142311 ай бұрын
Don't the clocks go back in Autumn ?
@MsMayberry11 ай бұрын
My dad was WW2 Navy…there were never before or since, men and women like them. The finest and indeed the greatest. I love this newly discovered channel, and I love this post…God Bless.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
I beg to differ the men who fought in Korea and in the Falklands Wars were every bit and gallant and worthy as those of WW 1&2.
@lafther210 Жыл бұрын
I have enjoyed this re-upload. :)
@lucax23009 ай бұрын
I used to scoff about war reenactment, but over time, I've developed an appreciation for the tradition aspect of it. Most people who cooperate in shared imagination are children, but that doesn't mean everyone can't or shouldn't. It's one of those things that enough people will always find fascinating.
@wilfamos7314 Жыл бұрын
Informative and very moving. Thank you for such a fantastic video.
@ImolaS3 Жыл бұрын
This was fascinating and so well delivered. Would it be possible to produce an episode about the Hundred Days Offensive that ended the 1st world war?
@davidgray3321 Жыл бұрын
My grandfathers battalion (5the Cameronians) crossed the line and swapped souvenirs with a Saxon regiment, photos were taken and appeared in the press, and I have some in a scrap book. The men agreed a draw should be declared and that they should all go home. My best wishes to our friends in Germany. By the way they were not all professionals in 1914 , the 5the were territorials. And they were an excellent battalion. Your “expert” should know better. The territorials were asked to serve overseas and they did.
@davebeattie957311 ай бұрын
Having served in the British army from late 88 to early 98, I think that the Christmas Truce had nothing to do with man's humanity to man, but rather a simple understanding. The people on the lines have more in common with the men who they are trying to kill, and who in turn are trying to kill them, than they do with those far removed from the front who are giving them their orders. It is a real shame that over the years since 1914 we've gotten so much better at deomonizing the enemy, and yet there are always those that serve who remember that those they fight are just people much like themselves, and will take whatever steps are neccessary to breathe a little touch of civility into the worst of situations, often at great risk to themselves.
@LazyLizzy7068 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service. I’m not British but you defended your country
@Thekowaikaiju Жыл бұрын
Why fight and give your life for a country that treats you as shit while you defend it?
@jeffsanders444 Жыл бұрын
A brief moment of humanity in the midst of creeping death.
@richardstever3242 Жыл бұрын
I couldn't agree more. If we all could act like they did. Maybe the most inspirational moment in history. Greetings from Canada
@MichaelGreen-v3w Жыл бұрын
Hard disagree with the cynics at the end. "Live and let life" was not unique to the Christmas Truce, it was practiced throughout the war across the Western Front. People wanted to live, they had nothing to gain from the war
@jubsy Жыл бұрын
My great uncle was a Pvt in the 1st Bn Highland Light Inf and was killed on Dec 19, 1914 in what I've been told was a German counter-attack against a captured German position. I'll never know the details or if the truce even touched that particular battlefield but I like to think that if they weren't able to bring him back and bury him right away, maybe they brought him home during the truce.
@thebrownchef Жыл бұрын
it's hard to say "I stood upon the parapet" without sounding like you're starting a Gilbert and Sullivan song 43:00
@justing763117 күн бұрын
The last man at the end sounds hard as fuck. That's a sense of duty and professionalism, regardless of how we could view that in the context of this story.
@MaxwellsSilverHammer- Жыл бұрын
Let the politicians go fight the wars they start..we can all afford those kind of losses.
@Dullborn Жыл бұрын
Well done...Taff and Peter had just the right stuff for this one...Albert died young but it really hadn't been so long since his widow, and all the cultural ties, ruled the land...English and Germans were akin to cousins at the time..the Celtic Fringe less so... I think there was, at the time, a large number of Indian soldiers somewhere on the line...any reports from them on the Truce?? This channel is a treat...
@billyferal55582 ай бұрын
Truly a Christmas Miracle.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
It didn't happen.
@LazyLizzy7068 ай бұрын
Someone brought a ball to the war thinking “Just in case” 😂😂
@zepher_blackstoc2366 Жыл бұрын
One day in time, one moment in history. It never happened before or since. When the soldier on the ground showed more heart and kinship than their generals, kings, politicians and common folk. One last happy time before the screaming hell would begin.
@MixedRaceAndProud1690 Жыл бұрын
Another excellent video & thank you for sharing 🙏
@charliebryce3783 Жыл бұрын
I cant think that anything that exemplies the insanity and the sheer senseless wast of war
@54mgtf22 Жыл бұрын
Love your work, HH 👍
@angusmacdonald7187 Жыл бұрын
One day in the midst of the horror and slaughter, something like a miracle occurred. Maybe never again, but it was there.
@tombranch2261 Жыл бұрын
Its sad really, had it not been for politics and war, these men could have easily been friends, and never known suffering, just shows underneath it all, we are all human.
@mickcardiff3044 Жыл бұрын
Amazing. God bless you all x
@katherinecollins468511 ай бұрын
Very interesting
@manricobianchini527611 ай бұрын
I love this story! Humanity conquered war!... for a little while, anyway. I disagree with some of what is said here. It wasn't just for a bit of respite; the two sides genuinely wanted to celebrate Christmas.
@williamrobinson7435 Жыл бұрын
I watched this 1st time around.. Well worth a repeat! ⭐👍
@Lassisvulgaris Жыл бұрын
Then I can recommend the movie "Joyeux Noel", if you haven't seen it....
@TBFI_Botswana Жыл бұрын
1:40 people in general and historians specifically show great disrespect to the Flemish army by statements such as the ‘Germans swept through!’ They were no chocolate soldiers and put up a brave and spirited fight against the German war machine. Respect.
@TheRiverPirate13 Жыл бұрын
More proof that sometimes the Peace of Christ is ever present and told these enemy soldiers they were brothers.
@NewChannel-wi7vj Жыл бұрын
Grow up.
@TheRiverPirate13 Жыл бұрын
@@NewChannel-wi7vj Jesus! These trolls never stop with dumbass replies! 😂
@Lassisvulgaris Жыл бұрын
Is that the same Christ who let the war happen, in the first place..?
@TheRiverPirate13 Жыл бұрын
@@Lassisvulgaris The question is why did man allow the war to happen in the 1st place? Free Will mate.
@Lassisvulgaris Жыл бұрын
@@TheRiverPirate13 There is no free will. The consesquences are normally too severe. That is why no true believer will leave the faith, despite "free will". An eternity in Hell (not that small place outside Trondheim in Norway). is too detering, to risk....
@caramelldansen22042 ай бұрын
44:35 "The troops went back to war willingly" What a joke of a sentence.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
To repeat my earlier post. They went back willingly for four long years and never lost their belief in the war just as the British population did .
@caramelldansen22049 күн бұрын
@anthonyeaton5153 The pôôr people LOVE kǐIIǐňǧ each other for no reason! They "chose" to do it... which is why we impIemented the draft and ŝĥôt deserters - wait a minute... If people love kǐIIǐňǧ, you wouldn't need either. Don't faII for přôpǎǧǎňdǎ, friend, when basic logic will take you so much further.
@caramelldansen22049 күн бұрын
@anthonyeaton5153 Ťĥě pôôr ƒôǏǩ LÔVĚ kǐIIǐňǧ ěǎčĥ ôtĥěř ƒôř ňô řěǎšôň! Ťĥěŷ "čĥôšě" ţô dô ǐţ... ŵĥǐčĥ ǐš ŵĥŷ ţĥěŷ ǐmpǏěměňţěd ťĥě dřǎƒt ǎňd ŝĥôt děšěřţěřš...? lƒ pěôpIě Iôvě ǩǐIIǐňǧ, you wouldn't need either. Don't ƒǎII for přôpǎǧǎňdǎ, friend, when basic Iogic wiII take you so much further. Edit: sorry for the diacritics, I keep being ¢ěňšôřěď. Desperate times...
We need to see a documentary about the eastern front Christmas truces! Russians, Germans and Austro-Hungarians also had fraternisation and truces, at Easter as well as Christmas
@dondouglass6415 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes fact is stranger if not more beautiful than fiction. This 1914 Christmas proves, in reality, we are all the same the world over... Good will and love to all this 2023 Christmas.... Huzzah!! 😊
@anthonyeaton51538 күн бұрын
The Christmas Truce as portrayed is fictional.
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 Жыл бұрын
A wonderful historical coverage video about unique beloved occasion unique history events during wartime between enmity authorities...it was proven there were not enmity amongst populations, but there were enmity against authorities ...thank you( history Hit) channel for sharing
@kenc9236 Жыл бұрын
Doubt we will ever see this again in history.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
It wasnt seen before either because it didn't happen.
@K8E66613 күн бұрын
Jumpers for Goalposts !
@photosbyjf Жыл бұрын
What is the movie that portrayed the Christmas truce with singing and sharing food and wine between the troops. I would like to watch it again
@roebucksummers86149 ай бұрын
Joyeux Noel
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
OH what a lovely War, a parody.
@MamtaSingh-jz9wm11 ай бұрын
The whole story is in my English NCERT book honey dew chapter 1:- the best Christmas present in the world by Michael Morpugo
@jamesross1799 Жыл бұрын
Id like to think that they actually did kick a ball around. I've heard an interview with a guy who said that a can was kicked around where he was ypres I think. It comes up far too often though to not have actually happened.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
Kicking a ball about was the only thing that happened
@anthonyeaton51538 күн бұрын
That precisely what did do but no football match.
@photosbyjf Жыл бұрын
I watch this and then think of the song of Snoopy and the Red Baron
@HM-yv2wt Жыл бұрын
Was there a similar truce in subsequent war years for Christmas?
@jinna05123 ай бұрын
In WWII
@hannahstretton3087 Жыл бұрын
The older English gentleman's testimony made me feel uncomfortable with his delivery. I can understand being passionate about a topic but he is so enthusiastic about his delivery of the facts that I feel like it detracts from the horrific nature of the war.
@chalkiememe4183 Жыл бұрын
I disagree, for me I felt it added to my mind imagery of the horror of what these men went through all because of despots and politics.
@danieldoyle8646 Жыл бұрын
I think it illustrates the insanity of it all.
@jinna05123 ай бұрын
War made him uncomfortable too, honey, respect him enough to express himself even if you’re put out a bit? They made history. You simply complained!
@sandybarrie5526 Жыл бұрын
My maternal grandfather BEF 2nd London Rgt, was show such chivilray by german troops on several occasions, one time led tohim winning themilitary medal, while his own army treated him with such bastadry, Field Punishment No.1, one several occasions. (eg one time getting his ambulance back late to the depot)… the friendlshic between enemies during this ‘total war’ was surprising. so not surprised that among common soldiers they would have had the christmas truce and foot ball match.
@richardstever3242 Жыл бұрын
46:50 - I think like a barbarian so therefore you do too (self referral) 48:12 - Those people! Those people! (self referral) I wonder if these guys see what they are showing?
@rhysnichols8608 Жыл бұрын
Well said, i was hoping to see this comment. Far too often modern historians project their own values and emotions and psychology onto the past. Just because THEY would only enact a truce for purely selfish and practical reasons doesn’t mean everyone did. To suggest there was no humanity behind it and there was no genuine Christian sentiment that motivated these (Christian) men is absurd. No no! It was all for selfish reasons and material concerns, no deeper emotions or religious motivations I’m sure! (Despite the fact several of the letters they quoted literally say they felt a religious motivation) I’m sure it was a mix of course, but I hate this reductionist modern lens we’re view everything through.
@richardstever3242 Жыл бұрын
That was very enlightening...Thank you!
@ninamarieiiimiller80611 ай бұрын
What is the tittle of this movie? Can somebody please reply to me?😅
@peterdavidcrossfield48852 ай бұрын
Of course it was a humanitarian event. My grandfather was there. He said there was nothing more terrible for both sides. Raining all the time, cold water and mud and muck over your boots. The best present he received was dry socks. The officers began shooting their own soldiers to make them fight again after that.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
Pardon my language but that is bollocks. The British soldier was the best well looked after soldier on the Western Front both via food and comforts.
@behindthespotlight7983 Жыл бұрын
6:12 WAY TOO CLEAN
@murrayscott9546 Жыл бұрын
I like youzall analysis. The Truth, and the Lies. The Truth may hurt but it's the Lies that kill you.
@3scoopsofguac11 ай бұрын
Too bad Esperanto didn’t take off enough for the troops to actually converse with each other.
@hmzdu Жыл бұрын
Big men angered each other, and little men went to kill each other under the name for their countries.
@masqerader Жыл бұрын
Like most wars people die at the expense of the rich
@rolandscales9380 Жыл бұрын
There have been similar truces in other wars, as described by Somerset Gough-Calthorpe who served in Crimea in 1855. He described British and Russian sentries fraternising and smoking together. "1st Russian soldier: ‘Englise bono!’ 1st English soldier: ‘Ruskie bono!’ 2nd Russian soldier: ‘Francis bono!’ 2nd English soldier: ‘Bono!’ 3rd Russian soldier: ‘Oslem no bono!’ 3rd English soldier: ‘Ah, ah! Turk no bono!’ 1st Russian soldier: ‘Oslem!’ making a face, and spitting on the ground, to show his contempt." 1st English soldier: 'Turk ;' pretending to run away, as if frightened, upon which all the party go into roars of laughter, and then, after shaking hands, they retire to their respect beats." Gough-Calthorpe goes on to mention Russian sentries bringing British soldiers gifts of firewood. (Gough-Calthorpe, S. G. "Letters from Headquarters, or, The Realities of the War in the Crimea, by an Officer on the Staff." London: John Murray, 1858)
@TigerPat_9180 Жыл бұрын
It's Human Nature , Sooner or Later You'll get Tired of Killing . Of Seeing the Bewilderment in the Eyes of the Dieing . 🐯🤠
@brucedoyle40555 ай бұрын
I dont really have time to watch, all i need to know is if they same group of people who made the truce started fighting eachother again after it ended?
@garrywilliams8479 Жыл бұрын
..but the *few that First stood up in *Complete {trust} did do so with an Unblemished Goodwill 🙏💖☮️🕊️
@GregPodster1337 күн бұрын
'Slaughter' all brought on by Politicians 😢
@dhruvaratna12 күн бұрын
Remembrance of Xmas past. Twenty years ago I composed this (my dad was wounded on the Somme): ..... Christmas 1914 It began with Tannenbaume and shouts of ‘Got mit uns’, and replies, ‘we got mittens too.’ They met hesitant at first, between the wire. On a crust of frozen mud, swapped Princess Mary’s tins of chocolate and tobacco for Pickelhaube helmets, and belt buckles. Saxon shook hands with Celt and Saxon; discussed how best to kill the lice. Then field grey with khaki, kicked a ball around - but only after they’d agreed to bury last week’s dead. Harry Nicholson author of 'Tom Fleck'
@johnworthington8360 Жыл бұрын
dads uncle Frank didn't get back to Manchester
@NaturingIFindNatural-august73 Жыл бұрын
pipes of peace - paul mc cartney the video clip depicts this day. such a great xmas time song too.! check it out 😉😄 🤘🏻🇦🇺🌏✌🏻
@Trecesolotienesdos Жыл бұрын
Once the game ended, they asked each other for a re-match. only the english soldiers agreed, as the scottish, welsh and irish didn't care, so the alloted re-match was the 1966 world cup final.
@karlkarlos3545 Жыл бұрын
nice fan fiction.
@ferdinandsiegel4470 Жыл бұрын
If both Armies would have thought the WWI could have ended that day. Just say this is stupid and go home.
@juancana457 Жыл бұрын
I would've liked that option in jungle and streets of El Salvador, yet 'bad paper' (BCD or DD) would destroy your future prospects.
@weizmeister Жыл бұрын
One clean moment in a dirty war.
@dionysise5008 Жыл бұрын
No more brother wars
@Jayjay-qe6um Жыл бұрын
Adolf Hitler dance with British troops in No Man's Land, I thought he was an opponent of the truce.
@rhysnichols8608 Жыл бұрын
No one knows for sure, he was against it for tactical reasons, he believed in the cause and didn’t want to waste opportunities by having truces, but he may have also joined in with the crowd.
@jinna05123 ай бұрын
This is WWI
@lastburning13 күн бұрын
@@jinna0512 ...which Hitler fought in.
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
Who was to say that Hitler aka Herr Schicklegruber was in that part of Bekgium.
@kevinstreet5709 Жыл бұрын
Any truth in the rumour that a certain runner named Adolf saw some of this fraternisation and reported back to command
@anthonyeaton51539 күн бұрын
Nope.
@bertgerry294511 ай бұрын
I don't the French ever had a "mighty empire".
@petes5041 Жыл бұрын
A great thought! but realistically with so many shell craters, how would that be possible.
@rhysnichols8608 Жыл бұрын
There were not shell craters in every area, often there were relatively open fields
@offshoretinker Жыл бұрын
If you are going to illustrate shaving in a trench, at least show how you hold an open razor.
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 Жыл бұрын
Soldiers followed orders ...
@ferdinandsiegel4470 Жыл бұрын
The British people ancestry was of German origin.
@ferdinandsiegel4470 Жыл бұрын
The British and French started the WWI which led to WWII.
@paulmcdonough1093 Жыл бұрын
and you just started on breast milk
@rhysnichols8608 Жыл бұрын
Russia shares a lot of blame too. They were the first major power to escalate a Balkan conflict into a continental war, they had no real business meddling in Balkan affairs, but they sought to gain a rail way through Romania and Serbia, and Russia wanted to look strong as a protector of Slavic peoples, which was her traditional role but she had failed to do so in 1909 when Bosnia was fully annexed and she didn’t intervene in the Balkan wars, Nicholas II foolishly listened to his warmongering advisors who insisted Russia had to step in to save face. Throughout the July crisis the French ambassador in Russia was constantly urging them to go to war, something not lost on the Germans…..French mobilisation orders also went out several hours before the German ones did. There was much political scheming on Britain’s part too….every nation shares blame and that included Germany and Austria Hungary but they are often unfairly and inaccurately portrayed as the main aggressors, this is not the case
@ferdinandsiegel4470 Жыл бұрын
So!@@paulmcdonough1093
@emmawhistler162 Жыл бұрын
🥹🥹😭😭❤️❤️
@ferdinandsiegel4470 Жыл бұрын
People with weak minds.
@Katmando007 Жыл бұрын
REPEAT
@ferdinandsiegel4470 Жыл бұрын
British trying to make them look innocent.
@jonathonmitchell968428 күн бұрын
Britain and Germany ❤🥹🎄
@lonely_trans_girl Жыл бұрын
I got halfway through before the video got removed. Thanks for keeping me safe, algorithmic censorship!😮💨