Instability in one region breeds instability in others. Opportunistic leaders try to exploit distracted enemies whilst another war is ongoing.
@dlb4988 Жыл бұрын
Yep. That’s the reason the escalation in Palestine and Israel worried me so much at the beginning
@HolyAlric Жыл бұрын
But every time we ( USA) step in to settle things down we get called colonists and imperials. We don't do anything and we are called apathetic to the suffering of others...
@Mynipplesmychoice Жыл бұрын
Seriously I wish I was a midget and let the tall people deal with their own problems as I live in the enchanted forest away from the riff raff.
@ChadSimplicio Жыл бұрын
We're seeing that in authoritarian leaders looking to stretch the U.S. ability to respond to conflicts very thin. It started with China over Taiwan, then Russia over Ukraine, then the Muslim World over Gaza & its support for Israel. With that knowledge, you'd think Putin, Xi, Jong Un, and the Ayatollah would be pushing for Maduro to send his troops into the "New Venezuelan Province of Essequibo." And that's not also taking the ongoing American problems of border security amidst one migrant caravan after another, as well as the drug trade, and fears over the return of The Donald.
@lllongreen Жыл бұрын
Exactly! This is why, if the US flies apart around the November 2024 Presidential election. Taiwan will get invaded, shortly followed by NKorea making their move. I wish the two highly polarised faction in the US knows what they put on risk if they don't keep it together
@dulio12385 Жыл бұрын
One thing that often gets overlooked is Leadership; We're at this wierd time where most of the antagonistic actors seem to have leaders that are aging out, have shaky domestic support or at the end of their tenure, so they're incentivized to get into conflicts to prolong their posting or make a bid to cement their legacy while the usual pillars of stability are either more concerned with domestic affairs, reluctant to engage in conflict or have ulterior interests. Case in point your three major powers (US, Russia and China) have leaders that are over the age of 70. Its a really wierd world where Japan's PM is younger than all of them.
@minecraftwater8544 Жыл бұрын
also the rise of right wing politicians/leaders.
@eksiarvamus Жыл бұрын
@@momytik Yes, the Papua conflict is an armed conflict.
@tommasoastaldi2513 Жыл бұрын
Honestly kinda encouraging, it means that the period of intense war will end sooner than later and that it's just a passing trend, not a downward spiral
@abbemartensson3850 Жыл бұрын
true... old people in politics are bad news
@OLBAPPOAWECBRKLFK Жыл бұрын
Global governance needs to be rethought... and we need to have a global conversation about it asap. Subs like r/Globaltribe are trying to get that done but a lot more is needed.
@Malaika-uc8sm Жыл бұрын
I live in South Africa. But with a rise in crime I feel like I am in a war zone or something. The fact I'm in one of few countries in Africa without war doesn't make me proud at all.
@Soraviel Жыл бұрын
Bro, be happy SA isn't in conflict or a war
@Thatonepersonyouheard Жыл бұрын
Like what have you seen?
@TheCrimsonS4ge Жыл бұрын
Unlike the VAST, VAST majority of other African nations, South Africa is a relatively stable nation despite its high crime. We haven't had a rebellion or an insurgency since the Rand Rebellion in 1922.
@badluck5647 Жыл бұрын
South Africa will be a failed state if voters keep around the politicians who profit from electrical blackouts.
@mohamedtrfnx6632 Жыл бұрын
@@TheCrimsonS4ge Yeah but it's still a very poor country with bad quality of life and very high crime and disease rate
@TheNinjaDC Жыл бұрын
I feel economic issues are also a factor. The post pandemic economic slump is potentially the worst economic disruption since the great depression. And desperate economic environments breed desperate political moves. The great depression lead to WW2 just as much as WW1 did.
@callummcdonald1625 Жыл бұрын
Well put 👏🏼
@TheOmegaXicor Жыл бұрын
It's also Russia and Iran have finished preparing for the war they want because they are sliding out of relevance as Democracy rises in the world, though the democratic sliding is also causing them to be bolder about it.
@SlavTiger Жыл бұрын
tin foil hat time but i think the numerous ways all our once favorite companies have slowly turned to essentially organized crime is not getting a quarter the attention it really needs, and i think a lot of conflicts are a distraction from the bigger problems leering overhead, from pollution to outright scams, to theft, to falsehood, to anti competition anti consumer, shoddy materials, ever growing poisons in our food and water supply, and god knows what else, I really think we need to collectively step back and reflect on where we all went wrong, rather than blame each other for what a small but growing number of evil people do at our expense, we get screwed from birth to death in so many unnoticeable ways, until you start seeing more and more of it, that is. Doesn't matter what country when we all use the same couple hundred companies' products and resources, and they realize we don't have other options. we have been slowly becoming priced out of basic necessities, basic comforts, basic fucking any sense of stability in most of the world. Little by little the disparity grows, and the trash piles up. It's depressing to take it all in just how fucked we are as a species, let alone a society.
@bespokepenguin103 Жыл бұрын
@@TheOmegaXicor Democracy rising? 😂😂 is that a joke? There's a significant rise in neo-nazi and authoritarian groups. Democracy certainly isn't on the rise
@artemaung5274 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't downplay Great depression. People were hanging themselves, literally starving, entire generation was decimated. In 2008 crisis was also insane, educated people were forced to word at walmart, CVS just to survive people lost their homes, life savings, it was absolutely grim, not nearly as much as great depression but it was huge. Today US barely anyone is affected, it's nothing like 2008 crisis - business as usual, go to work as usual, some people were laid off but found work just as quickly. I know few people who's livelihood was annihilated in 2008, but today it's just business as usual for them. In real crisis car prices would slump, not skyrocket - otherwise who are all those people buying up luxury cars in bulk? Recovery was very impressive considering what we went though could objectively be much worse, but governments and monetary policy makers handled it incredibly. Russia is affected a lot more than EU and US, because of combined covid+war+sanctions, but situation is still tolerable with couple of percent GDP decline as a result, they remember far scarier economic shocks in recent history.
@sspectre8217 Жыл бұрын
As a costarrican I’m usually excited when our country gets mentioned but it’s very much true about the rise of violence and organized crime here. The main of it is our newest president making some funding cuts including defunding a lot of border security, a couple of months ago a gang member killed a cop something that has happened very rarely here and is a very bad sign. The moment organized crime believes they can overpower the state is when things begin to escalate rapidly
@isaacharvie3102 Жыл бұрын
Sup brotha I’m on here too
@martiddy Жыл бұрын
Hello fellow Costarrican!
@smartindian8500 Жыл бұрын
Hopefully your country stays safe. I’ve heard it’s the safest in central America
@sspectre8217 Жыл бұрын
@@smartindian8500 it has been for a while and in many metrics it was considered safer than a few developed countries. That safety and stability needs maintenance and the current government is failing at that
@cavebabybezerkers Жыл бұрын
Costa Rica is being denazified. Hold tight
@eisbergsyndrom5010 Жыл бұрын
I miss the good old days where we didn't live in a Hearts of Iron IV mod.
@mercenarygundam1487 Жыл бұрын
I miss the days when we aren't living in a literal satirical world.
@OptimalToast Жыл бұрын
I was thinking of my time playing Crusader Kings, but yeah, Hearts of Iron is a better choice. 😄
@Q84inHarbin Жыл бұрын
Trump is one of the reasons why everything is fucked@@Dubyagaming32
We've always lived in a world filled with conflict. You just didn't notice it because you where a kid.
@dazrienhaizor8624 Жыл бұрын
As messed up as it sounds, this level of wars is the norm across history. We all just got used to the US being the only millitary power that mattered, but over the last 30 years China, Russia, Iran and other have stepped up, which also forces Europe to step up as we’ve seen with German rearmament
@LilBlAcK76 Жыл бұрын
yea thats the truth. we have lived in probably the best times ever since WW2 ended.
@ChristianDoretti Жыл бұрын
The German realmente is a joke just like Europe
@MinusMedley Жыл бұрын
There will be many more over the next 50 years, grand solar minimum has begun and is expected to "peak" in 2050. The colder temperatures and mega droughts that come with it, will bring an explosion in energy prices and food shortages. World war two was right in the middle of the last drop in solar activity.
@tjt5055 Жыл бұрын
@@LilBlAcK76 And yet, a popular opinion was that the world was a mess that was going downhill. You cannot properly understand the present without knowing the past.
@tingleblade4274 Жыл бұрын
The United States, along with Europe, used its hegemony and tried to turn countries into powder. The list is known
@jebuschrist5618 Жыл бұрын
i remember when 2016 was considered a bad year beacuse of some political stuff, ah i miss those innocent times
@slewone4905 Жыл бұрын
this is what happens when these bad political stuff happen in 2016. We get an illegitimate President doing horrible things. DOn't you prefer the no new war President prior, the one who should of won.
@freedomgoddess Жыл бұрын
@@slewone4905 we can't go back.
@boaoftheboaians Жыл бұрын
I clown on those fools who called 2016 "the worst year in history", those idiots clearly had no idea what they were talking about, especially considering what the world is going through now
@badluck5647 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure Trump's $7.8 trillion in deficit spending has nothing to with high inflation, high interest rates, and economic instability.
@thijsjong Жыл бұрын
Biden made more debt than that. A lot of p45 spending was stimulus and getting the militairy up to snuff.
@jacobyboyer3681 Жыл бұрын
Come on yall, the transition out of a unipolar system and the last decade of America's retreat from its Hegemon status is clearly a factor in the rise in wars and stability. The rate of conflict tracks with other periods of polarity shift (the fall of the USSR in the 90s)
@AW-zk5qb Жыл бұрын
This just shows how good the world has it to live under Pax Americana, the period since WW2 where the US has been the most powerful nation in the world. Just imagine if Russia or China were the most powerful nation in the world. The world would be a much more chaotic, dangerous place, and liberal democracies would have much less influence in the world. With that said, the US is still the Global Hegemon by far, and Pax Americana is still here. The US has the largest economy, strongest military by far, most political, cultural influence, most technological power, dominates in soft power. Economy is the only aspect of power that China MIGHT pass the US in anytime soon
@knightshade2654 Жыл бұрын
I am very surprised that the video only made a brief mention of this at the beginning. Other countries not fearing American intervention and Russian sanctions failing to do much have emboldened many.
@paul1979uk2000 Жыл бұрын
That's party true, but a rising China isn't helping matters and as we know, there's poor leadership from the major powers like the EU and US on the global scale, which at least in the case of the EU, they have limited powers in what they can do as most forign policy powers are at a country level not EU level, then we have the US which is becoming more isolated. There's a lack of leadership on the world stage which the only powers that are credible to do that are the EU and US, but the EU would need to speak with a single voice and the US would need to be more engaged in trying to stabilise the world, which both seem unlikely in the near term, which means, things are likely going to get worse.
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
@@paul1979uk2000 Poor leadership for us. But completely working as intended for the ruling class. Nothing will change unless we change the system itself to prioritize the common people, rather than the most economically important.
@Western_Decline Жыл бұрын
@@paul1979uk2000Show me how the US can lead. We’ve been in non-stop wars for decades and we’re now supporting an ethnic cleansing. Should we keep leading?
@seanross8793 Жыл бұрын
There's one huge factor that you didn't mention. There is a huge denial of history causing people to lash out in anger at the wrong side of conflict. The world is just generally more stupid than it has ever been. People refuse science, history, and facts on a staggering scale. Today popular opinion is treated as more valid than the reality of things.
@Delmworks Жыл бұрын
With all due respect, none of that is new
@seanross8793 Жыл бұрын
@Delmworks not new, but much much worse than it has ever been.
@RoseMadrid-e5t Жыл бұрын
🔥THE GOSPEL OF THE WORD OF ALMIGHTY GOD "the last age in which God saves man from the destruction of this old world" (God incarnate is called Christ, and Christ is the human body clothed by the Spirit of God. He is the incarnation of the Spirit. He has both normal humanity and full divinity. Whether human or it is His divinity, both of them submit to the will of the Father in heaven. The Spirit is the spirit of Christ, which means the divinity. This is what all people must understand. The spirit of the work of the Holy Spirit is to save man, and for the sake of God's own rule. Since God became flesh, He realizes His spirit within His human body, that His human body is sufficient to carry out His work. Whether it is the Spirit of God or whether it is Christ, both are God Himself, and He does the work He should do and fulfills the ministry He should perform.) Almighty God said GOD incarnate is called CHRIST, and CHRIST is the flesh clothed by the SPIRIT of GOD. 🙏 This human body is not like any human being in the flesh. This difference is because CHRIST is NOT made of FLESH and BLOOD; He is the incarnation of the SPIRIT. He has BOTH NORMAL HUMANITY and FULL DIVINITY. 🙏 No man possesses His divinity. His normal humanity sustains all His normal activities in the human body, while His divinity accomplishes the work of God Himself. Whether it is His humanity or His divinity, they both submit to the will of the Father in heaven. The SPIRIT is the SPIRIT of CHRIST, meaning the GOD HEAD. Therefore, His SPIRIT is GOD HIMSELF; this SPIRIT will not INTERFERE with His OWN WORK, and He cannot possibly do anything that would destroy His own work, nor will He utter any words that are contrary to His own will. ☀️ Therefore, God incarnate will absolutely never do any work that interferes with His own governance. This is what all people should understand. The INTENT of the WORK of the HOLY SPIRIT is to SAVE MAN, and for the SAKE of GOD'S OWN RULE. ☀️ Similarly, the work of CHRIST is also to SAVE MAN, and it is for the WILL of GOD. Since GOD HAS BEEN INCARNATED, He REALIZES His SPIRIT within His HUMAN BODY, that His HUMAN BODY is SUFFICIENT to CARRY OUT His WORK. 🙏 Therefore, ALL the WORKS of the SPIRIT of GOD were REPLACED by the WORKS of CHRIST during the INCARNATION, and at the CORE of all the WORKS during the ENTIRE INCARNATION was the WORKS of CHRIST. ☀️ It CANNOT be MIXED with WORK from ANY OTHER ERA. And SINCE GOD BECOMES FLESH, He WORKS in the IDENTITY of His FLESH; since He COMES in the HUMAN BODY, He thus FINISHES in the HUMAN BODY the WORK He has to DO. ☀️ Whether it is the SPIRIT of GOD or CHRIST, both of them are GOD HIMSELF, and He DOES the WORK that He should DO and PERFORMS the MINISTRY that He should PERFORM. 🙏 From "The Spirit of Christ is Obedience to the Will of the Father in Heaven" Fulfillment of "When I looked up, someone handed me a book wrapped in a scroll. I opened it and I read on both sides the prayers, sorrows, and curses." (Ezekiel 2:9-10). ... "His garment was stained with blood. He was called the "Word of God" (Rev. 19:13). The kingdom He brought down and set up in the highest in the sky so that it can occupy His creation in the universe and engrave on it the entirety of His Holy name "THE CHURCH OF ALMIGHTY GOD" 💐 fulfillment of (Mat. 16:18) "And I say as for you, you are Peter, on top of this rock I will build my Church, that even the power of death will not prevail over it.". ... and "The Letter to the Church in Philadelphia" (Rev. 3:7-13). ... And fulfillment of "The New Jerusalem" 💫 "The Spirit enveloped me, and the angel led me to the top of a very high mountain. He showed Me Jerusalem, the Holy City, coming down from heaven from God." (Rev. 3:7-13). ... " For the time has come in the house of God for the beginning of judgment in the house of God." (1 Peter 4:17). ... It is fulfilled that God Himself is our Pastor in (Rev. 7:17) 💐 "For the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their PASTOR. He will lead them to springs of life-giving water; and God will wipe the tears from their eyes" 📩 Calling and leading the sheep of God to His glorious Throne "THE CHURCH OF ALMIGHTY GOD"💐 to submit again to His authority so that He will continue to teach, guide and protect even in plague, famine and wild animals will not be moved by it and completely win this final battle with the big red dragon! "They say with a loud voice, "Salvation comes from the Lamb, and from our God who sits on the Throne!" (Rev. 7:10). ... and it will be fulfilled that will be established above the sky/KZbin in (Isaiah 2: 2 / 9:6) "On the Last Day, the mountain on which Jehovah's temple stands will stand out above all the mountains. All nations will flock there. " . . . "For a baby boy is born to us. The rule will be given to him; and he shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Almighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace." 💌📨
@Vaiviablo11 ай бұрын
@@seanross8793 I think it's simply more visible due to our interconnectedness - more profound than ever. The general human population is also higher than ever, which only dilates the broader, more "basic" part of the gaussian curve.
@seanross879311 ай бұрын
@Vaiviablo I see how the gaussian curve comes into play here. I actually did not account for that in my prior statements. But, even so, I still stand by my prior statement about how much more boldly certain opinions and denials are being pushed nowadays. Back in the early 2000s things were just as publicized and we didn't see all of the craziness we do now. It also doesn't help that the media went from just facts to pushing bias opinion without regard for facts.
@Abotekapio Жыл бұрын
Let’s hope that 2024 will be a more peaceful year
@mtaufiqnmtn Жыл бұрын
*let's hope that 2024 will be a more dangerous year
@notfunny3397 Жыл бұрын
I hope so too. Unfortunately though, signs point to current conflicts getting worse. The Gaza war is nearing its end, chances are hamas is gonna use some drastic measure like detonating a bunch of bombs to collapse the tunnels and maximize casualties or something. And the Israelis might flood the tunnels or maybe the raze the entire region to the ground to make sure the Palestinians can't return. The seawater would make the land totally useless and maybe dangerous to build on. The Ukraine war, Russia still has a few more weapons it hasn't fully utilized yet if the Ukrainians get more land, and obviously it would be terrible if the Russians gained more ground. Or it could just stay at a standstill while thousands die every month. The situation in Ethiopia is still shaky and could lead to yet another war, either a civil war like the last one, or maybe with a neighbouring coastal country, or maybe with Egypt or the Somalian population. Basically all the major conflicts have mostly only gotten worst.
@slewone4905 Жыл бұрын
depends if they let the rightful person win the election.
@drscopeify Жыл бұрын
@@mtaufiqnmtn Why should you want a dangerous time? You want your price of fuel and food to rise? Do you hate yourself? OK maybe that is a you problem.
@mtaufiqnmtn Жыл бұрын
@@drscopeify because like it or not, we are heading to that direction, humanity is a lost cause
@manwiththeredface7821 Жыл бұрын
Why so many wars? Because history. We grew up in an unprecedentedly long peacetime. We didn't become wiser and learned how to cooperate with one another but became afraid of the Big Bad Nuke and started waging economic warfare and other underhanded tactics (spies etc.) instead. Third world nations don't have that fear so all gloves are off in their conflicts.
@HorizonMakes Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I really think the unprecedented peace in the world has led to the uptick in wars. People who never experienced war don't know how bad it is, and so don't think as much of it when invoking it.
@jakeroper1096 Жыл бұрын
That explains why Russia is getting their face smeared through the dirt.
@archermadsen7744 Жыл бұрын
What peacetime are you talking about?
@AW-zk5qb Жыл бұрын
This just shows how good the world has it to live under Pax Americana, the period since WW2 where the US has been the most powerful nation in the world. Just imagine if Russia or China were the most powerful nation in the world. The world would be a much more chaotic, dangerous place, and liberal democracies would have much less influence in the world. With that said, the US is still the Global Hegemon by far, and Pax Americana is still here. The US has the largest economy, strongest military by far, most political, cultural influence, most technological power, dominates in soft power. Economy is the only aspect of power that China MIGHT pass the US in anytime soon
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
@@AW-zk5qb "Just imagine if Russia or China were the most powerful nation in the world." Then they would liberalize just like the USA. If an extreme superpower that is overwhelmingly more powerful than them militarily and economically has spent over half a century undermining their every action from domestic to foreign, they will become authoritarian and "dangerous." Humans do not just free will themselves into authority and security. History is not a series of unfortunate events where Russians and the Chinese just happened to have more centralized and heavy handed governments b-b-b-because muh judeo-christian values. If China allied Canada and Mexico, started making military drills on them, funded the BLM movement in the USA, constantly challenged the USA's treatment of human rights and creating several organizations to destabilize the USA for having 20% of the world's prison population. If China started patrolling US coasts and was allied with the entire developed world to belittle the country. To place endless sanctions on the US and the US' allies for difference in social organization and so on. (All of these are things the USA is doing to China) wouldn't Ultranationalism skyrocket in America? The Eastern "authoritarian states" of the world spend most of their existence trying to survive and make ends meet under the Overseeing eye of the US Empire. You beat people with sticks, and you're surprised they fight back.
@Bayard1503 Жыл бұрын
Because of precedent... This is what allowing Russia take Crimea and Donbass in 2014 started and it grew exponentially after 2022... Would Venezuela or Ethiopia actually think they could just grab land in Eritrea and Guyana before 2022?? I don't think so.
@Nerdvanna98 Жыл бұрын
No, this is what happens when the US and UN over extend themselves militarily and financially so that when we fail to push Russia back in Ukraine, it exposes how weak the international order is. Russia's invasion wasn't the catalyst, it was a symptom decades in the making deriving from the failures of the global order.
@mabus4910 Жыл бұрын
@@Nerdvanna98 The real problem is the corruption in people's minds that drives them to destroy everything around them. And I don't even mean that in a religious sense. I mean it in a very mundane way. People simply can't let other people live in peace.
@Ecaea Жыл бұрын
Sure... by that logic we could blame the Israel Hamas war all the way to back when Israel took over Palestinian land after ww2.
@Bayard1503 Жыл бұрын
@@Ecaea not really because that's a very unique situation. Nobody looks at what has been happening there and thinks that it fits their own country. Anyway, yeah this version of terrorism that has been plagueing us for a century started there with Israelis and Palestinians and it kept spreading.
@cravingtuna1561 Жыл бұрын
It's the same story as nuclear weapons. There is a taboo around them just like open wars had after world war 2. With the open invasion of Ukraine the taboo is gone and leaders saw how non western leaders did nothing but talk without taking any actions whilst certain nations even aligned with Russia. The more the Ukrainian war drags on and even worse, if Russia manages to annex the territories it wants and get away with it, then more and more wars will start. You can see it every day on the news. Asian and African leaders keep yapping about overthrowing the USA and the status quo. The reason why they do that is because without the USA there is no freedom of navigation there is no arsenal of democracy and the status quo you hear Russians and Chinese yapping about is that there should be no open wars and land grabs after world war 2 but they want to overturn that because that's what they want to do
@attemptedunkindness3632 Жыл бұрын
2026: Yeah so it turns out all of that was WW3, we just didn't want to panic you.
@randomcoyote8807 Жыл бұрын
Democracy is hard. It requires an educated, well-informed population that is engaged in the issues. But people are lazy. They want to come up with some unicorn-and-rainbows perfect system that runs itself without the need to check in but once every 4 years or so.
@briano9397 Жыл бұрын
One look at the map shows these are not democratic countries at war.
@sampatkalyan3103 Жыл бұрын
That is why it doesn't work
@OptimalToast Жыл бұрын
In part why I like mandatory voting in my country, forces people to be a little more engaged but not anywhere near enough and doesn't stop people from just scribbling nonsense on ballots, as long as your name is ticked off on the registry you're good. And of course the system is still heavily susceptible to populism, political tribalism, 'current thing', etc.
@1mol831 Жыл бұрын
@@OptimalToastyou’re in Australia?
@ibrahimhassan711 Жыл бұрын
And every 4 years the new guy undoes all the work of the last guy. This is why China can build a national rail network within a decade and America can’t even build it in a century, the bureaucracy of democracy is paralysing . A nation can achieve far more by having the same guy in power for a decade than having a new guy every 4 years undoing the work of his predecessor.
@Kardia_of_Rhodes Жыл бұрын
We're starting to reach a point where the generations that do remember global conflict are at an age where they simply don't care anymore, and the generations that don't have never truly experienced it.
@neeneko Жыл бұрын
Even more worryingly, that generation that remembers global conflicts is reaching the end of its ability to finish them, so we are seeing a lot of last gasp attempts to settle scores they could not finish in their youth.
@paul1979uk2000 Жыл бұрын
Probably why history repeats it's self so many times because the younger generation forget about it, when we should be learning from the lessons of it. We might be seeing the early warning signs of something that could escalate into something much bigger, and just like in the 30's, there were a lot of warning signs, but we didn't take notices, which allowed things to escalate, basically, the depression which led to poverty, which allowed the more radical elements to take charge, we've already had a few warning signs of that in EU countries and in the US over the last decade and yep most of the citizens are blind to the threat it could mean.
@nekilik7886 Жыл бұрын
I disagree, from my experience older generations that have experienced war (not counting America, their wars are absurd) are actually more prone to nationalism and willing to defend their nation's interests again. That is at least what I have noticed in Eastern Europe.
@TitoMikiii Жыл бұрын
If this were HOI4, I wonder how high the World Tension is 😓
@Jr-fn7oc Жыл бұрын
40-50℅
@fkz0303 Жыл бұрын
im glad im not the only one who thinks about this a lot
@mrsplashmanjr1285 Жыл бұрын
75
@kimyeonahchannel Жыл бұрын
Definitely above 25% because non alligned countries can declare war, maybe over 50% because some non alligned are justifying war goals, certainly below 100% because the democracies aren't declaring war yet Edit : it's definitely over 50% because the democracies (US, UK, germany) are sending lend lease and volunteers. Heck, you could argue it's over 80% because democracies like finland and sweden are joining nato
@alexrowe7063 Жыл бұрын
@@kimyeonahchannel isn't Israel a democracy?
@Legendary9000 Жыл бұрын
Trust me this is not even the beginning. 2023 will be looked on as a good year compared to whats gonna happen a few decades from now. Rising wealth inequality, crashing birthrates, people getting married less, etc is all a sign of bad times ahead
@1mol831 Жыл бұрын
Well it seems like the calm before the storm. I guess 2018 is an amazing year then
@terdragontra8900 Жыл бұрын
The effect of AI may be so huge it will swamp all of those effects, plausibly in either direction. (Annoyingly since its become a pop culture thing as of late, there are lots of uninformed opinions about this lately, Robert Miles has great AI safety videos about research in the field I recommend) Humanity is in unknown territory and accelerating further, our environment is becoming more and more different from the one we evolved in, we are stumbling in the dark.
@noneofyourbusiness4830 Жыл бұрын
Crashing birth rates sounds like a good thing, if it's global. Less cannon fodder for wars. Less cheap desperate labor - less undercutting of wages, more automation without suddenly losing jobs. Less consumers to burden the planet.
@terdragontra8900 Жыл бұрын
@@noneofyourbusiness4830 those are all true, but a higher tax burden on working young people for taking care of the elderly is absolutely a bad thing, it remains to be seen how all the effects will sus out. If birth rate crashes very fast and automation doesnt make life cozy it will be bad; if neither of those, it wont be.
@bponterci Жыл бұрын
Are you a Whatifalthist viewer?
@chaosXP3RT Жыл бұрын
Many people want a Multi-polar World. Well, they got it
@paul1979uk2000 Жыл бұрын
The multipolar world isn't the problem, it's weak leadership from the so-called good countries that like to think of themselves as the good guys, the democracies of this world, these have the power to stabilise things but are showing poor leadership, radical elements around the world are taking advantage of that, hence the rise of authoritarian governments, which could be a major threat to democracy, we've seen how they are rising in both EU countries and in the US and what we are seeing over the last decade reminds me of the 30's, there were a lot of signs of problems, we didn't take notice and it escalated into something much worse, I can't help but feel that we could be repeating history.
@chaosXP3RT Жыл бұрын
@@paul1979uk2000 The 1930's was a Multi-Polar World
@tingleblade4274 Жыл бұрын
yeah, freedom in the nature of the men
@landonconner5694 Жыл бұрын
If this doesn’t boil over to WWIII, then can we call it “The Phantom World War”?
@baseballboy4494 Жыл бұрын
I loved that name idea
@goodheavens111 ай бұрын
@SGN30doesn’t matter
@Posidon0910 ай бұрын
Why the hell are people so racist to americans it's annoying everywhere on politics Americans are ridiculed it's a stereotype and I'm tired of it. Some of us do need a decent education in politics but not all of us. It's so annoying to be treated as a joke just because I'm American.
@TheRaodrunner Жыл бұрын
I think also political destabilisation of the us is a major factor. First of all nations feel more self assured to create conflicts because us is becoming more and more isolationist and support for foreign countries at war is less popular amongst public. It also incentivises us enemies to create regional conflicts cause it further destabilises us politically and makes it more divided, so as a matter of opinion, a lot of regional conflicts makes us less influential and more unstable, which is good for its enemies
@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Жыл бұрын
Yup, it's a favorite pastime of the US that all issues eventually become partisan ones. So in time, any action towards a solution for any conflict would become politically impossible for the US Congress.
@com.grenate Жыл бұрын
Don’t act like the US is a stabilizing force for good in the world when the US has started of backed numerous wars, coups, blockades, embargoes, riots, sanctions, terrorist groups, etc etc etc in the last century. The US isn’t a global police force, but a global bully.
@knightshade2654 Жыл бұрын
I am very surprised that the video made such little note of the decline of US hegemony. The fall of the Republic of Afghanistan over the span of a month embroidered factions around the globe and was a nail in the coffin for American public support for intervention. Ukraine has been an exception, with the Israel-Gaza war creating an unseen rift.
@Western_Decline Жыл бұрын
@@knightshade2654you’re watching a Western propaganda KZbin channel
@derrickthewhite1 Жыл бұрын
@@knightshade2654 I found the video sloppy. The two big issues are probably the Ukraine war and a resurgence in American Isolationism. Everything else is probably a effect and not a cause. You can argue about the climate change stuff: without the first two that would probably result in tensions, not wars.
@I_am_somebody_1234 Жыл бұрын
5:43 The Costa Rican case is not Just about crime but also about the state being unable to stop it. As an example, the current president decided to extend police working hours without compensation, leading to a police protest (where they decided to halt policing). Also, the main áreas where this violence took hold were San José (the capitol, home to many of the nation's slums) and Limón (a rural, coastal Province well known for being a magnet for drugs) Point being, the main cause for the surge in crime and drugs were both a lack of effective policing and a surge in unemployment which led to many (specially Young folks) to see crime as the only choice...
@DrakenKorin140 Жыл бұрын
There is never a shortage of ambitious people who have no problem using any means to increase their own power and damn the consequences. Unfortunately have been very successful recently
@jakeroper1096 Жыл бұрын
“Successful” If this is their success, keep it coming 😂
@BucketKingu Жыл бұрын
One thing that is quickly falling behind the curtains due to more 'dramatic' causes of war is resources. Resources we previously viewed as things everyone should have like water, for example, is quickly drying up, and we already have fights breaking out about it. It's only going to get worse.
@gentlemanvontweed7147 Жыл бұрын
I blame Brexit.
@476233 Жыл бұрын
As an American, I feel really guilty here considering how well off we are and how much of the current state of world affairs we have caused. But our standard of living has greatly dropped. I have so many colleagues who have to work 2/3 jobs to pay for rent. Rent in my neighborhood increased about 1k. It’s crazy
@The_king567 Жыл бұрын
The USA hasn’t caused anything god you people are laughable
@Omer1996E.C Жыл бұрын
How well you are, idk what would happen if Trump won presidency
@Deiwos0 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, for good or bad, the US has also been a big stabilising effect on various parts of the world. The threat of US armed intervention has been a source of colonialism and interference in democracies in your history, but it's also stopped some states from acting out overtly; like Iran or China.
@Omer1996E.C Жыл бұрын
@@Deiwos0 "like iran or China", it's the west that's causing greater misery in this world. Just for the US, aiding corrupt officials in countries like mine, aiding the killing of thousands of children in Gaza, invading countries and causing hundreds of thousands of deaths, sanctioning anyone who don't obey them, not cutting ties with the US, but even forcing other states to stop trading with them. It's a one sided perspective to think that pax-Americana was an all good thing
@Deiwos0 Жыл бұрын
@@Omer1996E.C I didn't say it was a good thing. Absolutely no doubt that America throwing its weight around is propping up some seriously fucked up regimes; look at half the dictators in south America, all fully US funded and supported - but that same American weight is what's North Korea trundling down the peninsular or China invading Taiwan. Geopolitics is way more complicated than "good or bad"
@LTAD-xi6sw Жыл бұрын
You do realise you’re basically giving future GCSE History students the answers don’t you 😂
@TheScrowlingFender7 Жыл бұрын
I see that as a good thing (provided that the students themselves aren't cheating on the tests).
@jhonshephard921 Жыл бұрын
@@TheScrowlingFender7 I have taken GCSEs in Pakistan. They are completely impossible to cheat in. For one you don't take them in your own school, your teachers are not the ones conducting the tests, they bring in outside invigilators sometimes even from the UK, there are cameras and security everywhere. On the flip side, this incentivizes schools at least in Pakistan to give much harder practice tests than anything that you may see in the real GCSE.
@ibrahimhassan711 Жыл бұрын
@@jhonshephard921gcse are easy anyway, you just need some foundational knowledge and be able to formulate a basic argument. Things get a lot more tricky when you can’t pull quotes out of your arse anymore and you have to actually reference your evidence and sources. I use to make up quotes in my gcse papers 😂
@Seeker7172 Жыл бұрын
This will be a historical contemporary source. So admissible.
@scifino1 Жыл бұрын
Well, that is what every historical source does.
@MartinNew14 Жыл бұрын
You forgot to include a section about Sweden, where there's an ongoing challenge with gangs vying for control of territories for drug distribution. Moreover, there are individuals from a particular religious background peacefully voicing their disagreement with the LGBTQ community and women.
@benitzers8858 Жыл бұрын
yes
@mofra Жыл бұрын
the woke are usefull idiots. alla akbar!
@AntiImperialist666 Жыл бұрын
The Baltic countries are highly known for their human rights and equal rights. Even their society has been growing steadily under it for a few decades now. Their 'Open immigration' policy brought all the problems. Only idiots can do reckless things like this.
@omarnaranjo-h1p Жыл бұрын
Es terrible la situación de Suecia,mi hermana vive en Suecia desde hace 40años , estuve de visita 15dias este verano y quedé impresionado con la inseguridad que se vive allí y lo dice un venezolano que lleva viviendo toda la vida en Caracas
@Jazzisa311 Жыл бұрын
ehm, Sweden is not at war though. This video is about the outbreaks of wars, not the uprise of gangs around the world. So it's not relevant here.
@IamTheHolypumpkin Жыл бұрын
I would argue the increasing amount of large and monopoly like multinational cooperations are one of multiple driving force behind the ride of authoritarianism. Big multi nationals and their investments are the one keeping authoritarians in power, especially in developing countries and countries which are over reliant one a single resource.
@curryman999 Жыл бұрын
I think deglobalization is also a major factor, as the US pulls out of its role of global policeman.
@OLBAPPOAWECBRKLFK Жыл бұрын
Which shows that we absolutely need to collectively rethink global governance... this is urgent, existential threats are more present than ever and we as a species are completely unpreapared despite having the knowledge and means to stop it
@cyfangz9238 Жыл бұрын
US is not pulling out, it's being forced out. Other countries were eventually gonna "recover" from WW2 and the cold war.
@terdragontra8900 Жыл бұрын
we have the knowledge, but not the tendency. we are evolved to survive as small tribes on the steppe, and find ourselves in a very very different environment, of course we are doing poorly! @@OLBAPPOAWECBRKLFKwe havweee
@MigSur Жыл бұрын
I have some bad news for you.....Globalization was also the cause for the rise of the brics countries, which caused a definite change in the global order. That ' s why the US is not the sole politicsl power in this world anymore.
@AirSmellerThe3rd Жыл бұрын
@@OLBAPPOAWECBRKLFK More power to the UN.
@ATownDown32 Жыл бұрын
"Man I hate American hegemony and how they interfere with other countries , we should strive to have a multipolar world where America doesn't play world police". Oh my god why is there so much fighting and wars breaking out ?
@AW-zk5qb Жыл бұрын
This just shows how good the world has it to live under Pax Americana, the period since WW2 where the US has been the most powerful nation in the world. Just imagine if Russia or China were the most powerful nation in the world. The world would be a much more chaotic, dangerous place, and liberal democracies would have much less influence in the world. With that said, the US is still the Global Hegemon by far, and Pax Americana is still here. The US has the largest economy, strongest military by far, most political, cultural influence, most technological power, dominates in soft power. Economy is the only aspect of power that China MIGHT pass the US in anytime soon
@obcane3072 Жыл бұрын
Wars have been around forever. The real question is why have the last 70 years been relatively peaceful.
@thetaomega7816 Жыл бұрын
US as the sole world power needed stability to adhere to the wants of the corporate overlords. Now that others have partially caught up, the US cant provide for the whole world anymore. It´s the joke about being the world police except there are a lot of places that really hated the police until they were gone and the thugs came in instead
@briano9397 Жыл бұрын
The US created a world where peace was possible. Everyone took it for granted and now it's over.
@Swirlz0 Жыл бұрын
Tell me your American without telling me
@ianshaver8954 Жыл бұрын
It is true though
@knightshade2654 Жыл бұрын
@@Swirlz0 The term "the Long Peace" exists for a reason to refer to unprecedented peace between global powers since WWII. This is not to deny the existence of proxy wars or wars among minor powers, but we all know that war between large countries is far more devastating.
@darthdingus7439 Жыл бұрын
Isn't there a phenomenon of every 80 years there being a major world disruption? WWII was 80 years ago now. We were due for more strife, sadly
@lllongreen Жыл бұрын
This is why, if the US flies apart around the November 2024 Presidential election. Taiwan will get invaded, shortly followed by NKorea making their move. This will be exploited by Russia in the Ukraine war, and after that the dominoes will keep falling. Wish the two extremely polarised factions in the US knows what THEY put on risk if they don't keep it together !
@EricRandhel-np3tr Жыл бұрын
We ending humanity before 2032 with this one 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@zachfinemusic Жыл бұрын
Imagine knowing you have a finite existence with a max of around 80 years, and then fighting in a war for a leader who doesn’t give a 💩 about you and fighting for arbitrary borders.
@Calum_S Жыл бұрын
#6. Aging leaders who have failed to do anything good for their populations and start casting around for scapegoats.
@alankeithmurray767 Жыл бұрын
What about a power vacuum left as a greater power (Russia) pulls back influence from an area (Ngorno Kharabak), leaving an ally (Armenia) without the support they need to discourage a neighboring country (Azerbaijan) from taking action in a territorial dispute?
@Milo-id9qd Жыл бұрын
Russia was backing Armenia, and Armenia decided to say 'we recognize Azerbaijan has Nagorno-Kharabah' ... it actually shocked the russians, and annoyed the hell out of them. There is something else going on there.
@shafsteryellow Жыл бұрын
It wasn't disputed territory loool Russia was not their to enforce the illegal separatist control of Azerbaijans SOVEREIGN territory. They were there to ensure Armenia didn't face a two front war. Azerbaijan did not touch a single sliver of Armenia land. Russia tried time and time again even with the EU to get Armenia to relinquish its illegal occupation. There was literally NOTHING Russia could legally do about Azerbaijan conducting an operation within its internationally recognised borders. Not even Armenia decided to help the occupying separatist forces. Armenian arrogance was the cause for all of this the azeris even offered them the land in exchange for the other regions the Armenians illegally occupied... They refused and that's when the EU gave up. The azeris LEGALLY retook their seven occupied regions from Armenia by force which was so swift and decisive that Russia decided they were not only a diplomatic headache but also an incompetent military.
@markdowding5737 Жыл бұрын
@@Milo-id9qd That was just an excuse the Russians used to justify their inaction. They were never going to act on Nagorno-Karabakh regardless of whether Armenia recognized the region as part of Azerbaijan or not.
@jamesverner9132 Жыл бұрын
Shocked Russians. Interesting Call me once the move from shocked to remembering how legs work. Because all I have ever seen from Russian people are husks that do nothing as the world gets blown up by their missiles.
@sobhansarthak6000 Жыл бұрын
Armenia had weapons and they decided not to use it though. This is well documeted.@@markdowding5737
@H1kari_1 Жыл бұрын
Probably harsh comment, but I wonder if it's so weird because the vast majority of leaders and politicians are over 60 and older, far above the average age of rulers, which makes them drag their very old and unflexible world views along as long as they can? The world population is getting as old as never before and a huge bubble of civilication is far beyond an age where you learn to accept or compromise with new insights.
@ibrahimhassan711 Жыл бұрын
This is an interesting perspective but I’d argue younger generations are far more belligerent and hot headed than their elders. The young have never really seen war and so sometimes they romanticise it. I’d force 16 year old to watch awful war footage as to traumatise them a little and make them less willing to be pro war. Or at least have some aversion towards it. Call of duty almost made me enlist then I watched some wiki leaks and changed my mind. Slaughtering civilians isn’t my vibe.
@Historyandlegends789 Жыл бұрын
@@ibrahimhassan711remember that the young are NEVER allowed into power because the elderly sloth farts won’t let them disrupt the system keeping them rich and in power.
@cosmicelectron Жыл бұрын
@@Historyandlegends789You know those old people used to be young too, and when they die, the next set of old people take power, until those who are currently young are the old people and are in power, it's not about blocking the youth from power it's about making them wait until it's their turn
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
Its good you're trying to theorycraft about world events. But know that there's a scientific method applied to politics, called Historical Materialism. Try to learn about it, maybe the events of history unfolding right now will make more sense. History is not a series of disconnected individual events. Human ideas do not manipulate the world, but rather human ideas are a response to the world. Youthful open-mindedness is unfortunately not the utopian solution to everything.
@H1kari_1 Жыл бұрын
Good point. I wonder if many youth addicted to CSGO and the like actually think it's getting short and respawn. No pain, no suffering, just pew pew and haha's.@@ibrahimhassan711
@Christmas12 Жыл бұрын
Victoria Nuland has been working on this war in Ukraine her whole diplomatic career, she was there all those years ago involved with Dick Cheney setting up the first Orange revolution in Ukraine in 2004, then she became NATO ambassador, then she worked on the Euromaidan coup in 2014, then she came back and got promoted when Biden was sworn into office - what category would we put her in, Organized crime?
@colgategilbert8067 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Potentially factor number 6 is the slow decline of Globalization. (I know I go on about this, but it has defined the past 70 years of human history.) This not only has provided resources for people but has induced people to participate for their individual prosperity and benefit. Conflicts would disrupt it. With it going away, people looking at supply chain issues and having less, are more prone to get what the can by any means. Governments looking at declining resources are wanting to return to Imperial Models to get resources. With the US withdrawing as a heavy to push peoples and nations into behaving, governments and peoples are looking to realign however they can. Others are testing the waters to see what they can get away with and set up new regional orders. This very sadly will continue to be messy and violent.
@erim98 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly what I was about to comment! The shift in the global world order is I think the biggest reason all these conflicts escalated so quickly :/
@mendesjosr4438 Жыл бұрын
❤
@KnowledgeNerd123 Жыл бұрын
Are you Peter Zeihan?
@colgategilbert8067 Жыл бұрын
@@KnowledgeNerd123 No. But a Historic Researcher who, with Zeihan's revelation of the 'Hidden Policy' aspects of Bretton Woods, has gotten understand of 60 years of observations of "Current Events".
@Ravi9A Жыл бұрын
Repulsive. No, globalism is our death and should be opposed at all costs.
@haykk5375 Жыл бұрын
It's interesting how Azerbaijan is marked yellow in that "democracy" map. Their ruling family has been in power for the last 30 years with the president's wife as the vice president and the county ranks #134 in the latest democracy index.
@monstaplaytv4545 Жыл бұрын
USA With 71 illegal base in Iraq and 41 in North Syria also marked democratic here in Index, so its absurd.
@Ironguy-gm6vf Жыл бұрын
@@monstaplaytv4545That has nothing to do with democracy
@sashagrey2984 Жыл бұрын
@@Ironguy-gm6vfUSA has nothing to do with democracy, agreed. A planetary terrorist.
@stefannicolae2570 Жыл бұрын
@@monstaplaytv4545 wow...the ignorance...
@rubikfan1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the update. Its very good to not forget smaller conflicts. Keep the updates going👍
@ikinloch4618 Жыл бұрын
Am I watching this at 5am yes… thank you tldr for everything you do!
@qdaniele97 Жыл бұрын
_"...People enjoyed luxuries once thought the realm of science fiction: Domestic robots, fusion-powered cars, portable computers._ _But then, in the 21st century, people awoke from the American dream._ _Years of consumption lead to shortages of every major resource._ _The entire world unraveled._ _Peace became a distant memory._ _It is now the year 2077. We stand on the brink of total war._ _And I am afraid. For myself, for my wife, for my infant son._ _Because if my time in the army taught me one thing, it's that war, war never changes."_ The Fallout 4 intro hits different these days.
@isabelvidal3584 Жыл бұрын
Here in Argentina, we are suffering from harsh economical situation, i.e. inflation of 1 0/0 a day, drug dealing, drinking problems, human traffic, political corruption, etc. We have elected a new president, Mr. Javiwr Milei. We hope he and we can change this sad story 😢
@trent3727 Жыл бұрын
The only thing he will change is inflation to massive deflation. Argentina needs to stop borrowing USD and show the IMF and the work bank the middle finger.
@IuriFiedoruk Жыл бұрын
It is pretty much like the opening text of Lord of the Rings, people forget, the second world war is almost a legend now. Or the opening of Secret of Mana game, "time flows like a river, and history repeats".
@knightshade2654 Жыл бұрын
>the second world war is almost a legend now It is hard to believe how true this is. There are only so many WWII veterans who are still alive, and every aspect of the conflict has been written about to such an extent that it can feel more like a setting than real, horrible war. Great references, too. I screenshotted your comment.
@sincourier8110 Жыл бұрын
@@knightshade2654Alter ego pfp W
@insectslayer1374 Жыл бұрын
the hegemon is showing signs of weakness so the aspirants want to test if they can nibble a piece of dominance and get away with what they do
@AW-zk5qb Жыл бұрын
This just shows how good the world has it to live under Pax Americana, the period since WW2 where the US has been the most powerful nation in the world. Just imagine if Russia or China were the most powerful nation in the world. The world would be a much more chaotic, dangerous place, and liberal democracies would have much less influence in the world. With that said, the US is still the Global Hegemon by far, and Pax Americana is still here. The US has the largest economy, strongest military by far, most political, cultural influence, most technological power, dominates in soft power. Economy is the only aspect of power that China MIGHT pass the US in anytime soon
@ahmadimran6231 Жыл бұрын
@@AW-zk5qb I can smell the copium from here. Look up gdp and who the US relies on economically more.
@ravensmith8614 Жыл бұрын
I blame FIFA. Don't know how they're connected, but I think we all know they are...
@Abvro Жыл бұрын
A full democracy is when the population votes on everything. All current democratic nations live under the representative democracy. We elect officials who we hope vote in our interests, which they usually don't and vote to deepen their pockets. A full democracy relies on an educated and informed population. That's something our elected officials make certain is never achieved
@connormcgee4711 Жыл бұрын
The source of TLDR News for that section was the Westminister Foundation for Democracy, whose metrics are based on The Democracy Index. Unlike your definition (which is equally valid), they include measurements of civil liberties and pluralism, which also factors into the definition. I do think it is quite bizarre that a "full" democracy has a spectral score, but please be aware that many experts disagree with the notion that a direct democracy = a full democracy.
@kotenoklelu3471 Жыл бұрын
There is global food crises which started in 2021. It leads to riots, coups and civil wars in poor African countries that can't afford food, fertilizers and fuel
@Snufflegrunt Жыл бұрын
What on Earth does "full democracy" mean? That's such an ambiguous term. It's not a term I'd usually expect to hear from TLDR News.
@andrewklang809 Жыл бұрын
Free and fair elections, free press, freedom of protest, rule of law, peaceful transitions of power, relatively low corruption. The opposite of an autocracy, with rigged elections, state media, political intimidation, arrests of political rivals, nepotism, and kleptocracy.
@Abvro Жыл бұрын
A full democracy is when the population votes on everything. All current democratic nations live under the representative democracy. We elect officials who we hope vote in our interests, which they usually don't and vote to deepen their pockets. A full democracy relies on an educated and informed population. That's something our elected officials make certain is never achieved
@Snufflegrunt Жыл бұрын
@@Abvro That's one interpretation, yes, and probably mine, but it's clearly not the UK government's or TLDR's.
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
@@Abvro Ah yes. Full democracy is when you vote for a 4 year dictator that MIGHT fulfill their promises.
@slothnium Жыл бұрын
Seeing all this conflict around the world, the ineffectiveness of UN, and trying not to be a doomer challenge: extremely difficult
@Justpaulkamau Жыл бұрын
Let's hope for conflict resolution without warfare from 2024
@Mistersteger Жыл бұрын
War is just the natural state of man. We just lived through a rare period of history called the Pax Americana, so we have taken peace for granted. As the US has pulled back on policing the world, conflict is inevitable.
@jamesverner9132 Жыл бұрын
Im not going to have a child. This world is choking on itself. And the only thing people know how to do is start wars. I will spare a sad soul that fate. Which is less harm than most seem to be capable of achieving.
@chammo10 Жыл бұрын
Plague, war, famine… a tale as old as civilization.
@PASH3227 Жыл бұрын
But remember that they’re still way less deaths from wars compared to 100 or 50 years ago.
@danwylie-sears1134 Жыл бұрын
One reason for armed conflict is that as soon as two groups take up arms, they _are_ "the two sides", no matter how unrepresentative they are of the populations from which they draw recruits. If the outside world's response to an armed conflict was consistently to try to empower other subsets of the two populations, so that both "sides" lose, there would be fewer armed conflicts. But that would be difficult. (It's also not an answer to "why now?".)
@davidz3879 Жыл бұрын
Many wars have more than 2 sides; the Syrian civil war has 4.
@JewTube001 Жыл бұрын
Adding more sides just adds to the chaos. You wouldn't be solving anything.
@danwylie-sears1134 Жыл бұрын
@@JewTube001 I'm not saying we should add more sides to armed conflicts. I'm saying that we should undermine the "sides" that are already there. If people are equating "the Palestinians" with Hamas because Hamas is who's killing people most recently, we should try to strengthen Fatah. If, hypothetically, the PKK leads a military campaign (in which a dozen other Kurdish organizations join), while the Islamic Kurdistan Movement opts out (along with another dozen other Kurdish organizations), we shouldn't equate "the Kurds" with the PKK and try to facilitate negotiations between Iran, Turkey, and the PKK. Instead, we should try to figure out which Kurdish organizations really are working peacefully rather than being a civilian arm of the PKK, and then try both to divert Kurdish support away from the PKK and toward the Islamic Kurdistan Movement, and to get Iran and Turkey to negotiate with the Islamic Kurdistan Movement. Maybe we like one group's vision of what Kurdistan better than another, but that should be set aside if the one we would have preferred decides to use violent means while the other commits to peaceful means. Neither organization _is_ "the Kurds", but the moment there's violence, both diplomacy and the media center the perpetrators and sidelines the relatively peaceful. (Again, the choice of Kurdish organizations to use in the example is hypothetical. I have no idea which Kurdish organizations are more inclined to perpetrate or materially support violence and which are less so, nor which ones besides the PKK are prominent enough to usefully negotiate with. And it's not as though we have a lot of leverage with Iran at the moment. I'm just trying to illustrate the type of approach I'm talking about.)
@moyndebs6759 Жыл бұрын
Childfree Nigerian guy here. Just to add to list of reasons. OVERPOPULATION. Big World = Big Problems
@randomvideos69681 Жыл бұрын
Greed is the main reason for this wars....
@airisakura1119 Жыл бұрын
An increasing number of individuals are driven by greed, engaging in actions that adversely affect others. Perhaps more disheartening is the realization that even some of the wealthiest companies and organizations appear only focused on personal gain rather than striving to improve the lives of individuals.
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
Wow I wonder how such corrupt individuals get in power in the first place. It's almost as if the capitalist system we live in requires obsessive competition and backstabbing to climb the social ladder, and as if money is actually not just currency but a reflection of your importance in society and that governments would always prioritize people who contribute more to the economy.
@johnmartin17t Жыл бұрын
thank you. You forgot to include a section about Sweden, where there's an ongoing challenge with gangs vying for control of territories for drug distribution. Moreover, there are individuals from a particular religious background peacefully voicing their disagreement with the LGBTQ community and women.
@gaius_enceladus Жыл бұрын
@juanmartin1729 - "... individuals from a particular religious background...." Ahh yes..... the "religion" of "peace" making its presence felt.......... :) "Diversity" and "cultural enrichment" - ain't they grand? Seriously, I do feel sorry for some Swedes. Not the blockheads who voted to open the immigration floodgates but the *sensible conservatives* who could see the disaster coming a mile away.
@artman12 Жыл бұрын
It’s not just Sweden though. It’s also France, UK, Germany, Canada and even parts of the USA.
@imbaby5499 Жыл бұрын
@@gaius_enceladusaren't sensible conservatives anti-LGBT too? Or am I missing something?
@masterchief2402 Жыл бұрын
Cough cough muslims
@zekkiy Жыл бұрын
@@gaius_enceladus man the world would be se much better if the westernern christians hadnt destableized, genocided, ethnically cleansed and destroyed the rest of the world for centuries for their own financial and religious purpouses.
@ScottDaniels1977 Жыл бұрын
demographics change with the aging of the population in both Russia and China
@EagleX100 Жыл бұрын
You didn't name the most important reason for wars starting-USA redrawing from Afghanistan
@engab00111 ай бұрын
All fingers mainly point towards western countries as reasons behind the wars if not directly then indirectly.
@rolliepollie5564 Жыл бұрын
How's an honest warmonger supposed to make a living?
@heisenbachofficial9437 Жыл бұрын
McDonald's
@safwan074 Жыл бұрын
Africa's getting a bit too peaceful..
@magnateze Жыл бұрын
I can never escape the mgr memes
@olegat Жыл бұрын
TLDR at the start of the video: so many wars... so sad... TLDR at the end of the video: BRILLIANT!! 😅
@TDCflyer Жыл бұрын
Stealing wealth is faster than working for wealth. In fact, working for wealth just doesn't work out - as soon as a small amount of wealth is accumulated there will be someone willing to take a risk to steal it.
@Knightfire66 Жыл бұрын
stealing people from africa worked for usa... so you right. stealing "wealth" is faster.
@MrIGameHard Жыл бұрын
Not our problem, the USA should withdraw all military assets besides Japan, SK and Poland, and focus on North American affairs. The trend of increasingly isolationist presidents in the USA is a good trend.
@ahmadimran6231 Жыл бұрын
Same. I see social, moral and economic problems in my country but with the resources we have, we are one of the few nations that can be 100% self reliant. Akin to the sakoku decree. Peace is won either by respecting territorial integrity and favoring trade or by mutually assured destruction and favoring ties.
@josemama428 Жыл бұрын
No wars in Europe… just the great replacement….
@zscout370 Жыл бұрын
#4 do you also feel that the involvement of PMCs like Wagner also had a major factor as well in this or just too hard to tell?
@legatilegions8055 Жыл бұрын
sure in african i would say private military companies in general has had an impact the last decade. The fact that african dictator warlords can hire a foreign PMC to secure and defend their natrual resources and dont care about human rights or warcrimes
@houseplant1016 Жыл бұрын
@@legatilegions8055was already happening with legitimate Western government lmao, the only reason why "we need to be concerned" is that this time the Russians are doing it...
@safwan074 Жыл бұрын
If Metal gear rising predicted pmc's then we must have politicians fighting against cyborg ninja's soon?
@DrVictorVasconcelos Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure what would be hard to tell. The PMC deal is crystal clear, no one is even trying to hide it. The deal is "we offer military aid with no democratic or anti-corruption requirements, and you join our sphere of influence and use part of that corruption in our favor". It's the type of deal that was done by the mafia. So yeah, this will lead to conflict, just like any other mafia deal did.
@badluck5647 Жыл бұрын
They did talk about Russia making a bloc that disputes the rule-based international order.
@Based_n_Boredpilled Жыл бұрын
Pax Americana is over, time to rearm and get prepared.
@JustAnotherAccount8 Жыл бұрын
bit early to claim that
@drscopeify Жыл бұрын
The USA is a globalized country, almost everything you buy in a store in the USA that is not food is imported. The USA as such might play up internal political games but in reality will show up and and do it's duty or else will suffer greatly with unimaginable inflation and shortages. No no, Pax American is far far from over. The USA is right now policing the situation in the Red Sea even as most European and Asian countries bailed out. When the moment of truth comes the USA will show up as always. Internet cheap pundits will say nonsense to get people to watch their pointless videos but the reality on the ground, or on the water, says otherwise. Trump, Biden it does not matter, the USA imports more than it exports by 100 billion PER MONTH!!!! No the USA is not going to step away from anything. Wake me up if the USA manufactures everything people buy in the stores and Exports more than it imports, THEN only THEN I will agree with that view.
@AW-zk5qb Жыл бұрын
This just shows how good the world has it to live under Pax Americana, the period since WW2 where the US has been the most powerful nation in the world. Just imagine if Russia or China were the most powerful nation in the world. The world would be a much more chaotic, dangerous place, and liberal democracies would have much less influence in the world. With that said, the US is still the Global Hegemon by far, Pax Americana is NOT over. The US has the largest economy, strongest military by far, most political, cultural influence, most technological power, dominates in soft power. Economy is the only aspect of power that China MIGHT pass the US in anytime soon
@lemont64 Жыл бұрын
Was guessing any sensible person knows American involvement is one of the reasons why wars are still happening
@connormcgee4711 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately it seems wars are happening with or without American involvement. It is a long and perilous road to world peace
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
These people beat people with rocks, and are surprised they fight back with sticks.
@magnvss Жыл бұрын
Africa is the only continent where there is no demographic crisis, meaning that it is growing, population wise, at an astounding level. This creates many hurdles on a continent who still hasn't solved many of its issues. Population growth is good (when it's closer to the replacement line) but not on such level and without many other things figured out. Climate change, that has little to do with the problems, given that many of the countries listed paid the price of bad planning (or no planning at all) while growing demographically. Democracy, lol, when was that a thing on an international level? Only in the 90's there was some "illusion" of turning the tables due to the Americas finally grasping some semblance of democracy, the fall of the Soviet Union or some hope for Africa to begin to walk the road. But most countries do not have neither the philosophies nor the system or the political will to make democracy something functional (that's why they turn back to having thing resembling to their old empires, when they are big, or kingdoms when they are small). The Middle East will be forever a source of conflict or war because their (political and even life) philosophies are based on the subjugation of whoever, never on negotiations and peace, there is no such thing as accepting (real) dissent, it makes them crazy mad. The only thing that Israel is good for is that it makes them forget how much they hate each other.
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
Ah yes. Democracy is when human free will want democracy. Democracy is totally not correlated with national security and prosperity.. "The Middle East will be forever a source of conflict or war because their (political and even life) philosophies are based on the subjugation of whoever, never on negotiations and peace, there is no such thing as accepting (real) dissent, it makes them crazy mad. The only thing that Israel is good for is that it makes them forget how much they hate each other." Let me guess. You made this up. This is what happens when you don't apply the scientific method into politics. Read about Historical Materialism. The middle east is a source of conflict and war because they are still suffering the consequences of colonialism until this day. Not to mention they are left poor and undeveloped due to the structure of globalist trade (unequal exchange demands they sell more resources than they gain. There is a reason why the 1st world consumes more than they produce. I wonder where all of those resources they're consuming are coming from. Its as if the welfare they offer their citizens don't come from their Capitalists' pockets but rather the exploitation of those living in the 3rd world.) The middle east also has to deal with the constant harassment of the imperial west. All it takes is a single perceived "rigged election" in the USA to piss off half the entire population. Yet in the Middle east the USA has deposed the Saudi Arabian monarch in the past. Has rigged Syrian elections. Invaded Afghanistan to establish an unpopular government, and invaded Iraq for claims of Nuclear Arsenal (which they found didn't exist in the end) but then proceeded to place a puppet Iraqi government anyways. This is not even a fraction of the west's crimes towards the middle east. And yet despite all this you expect them to behave like Buddha? Even the existence of Islamic Extremism is a result of desperation caused by the suffering of colonialism, which only further took root and intensified during neocolonialism when the west refused to let the Middle East manage themselves without harassment.
@magnvss Жыл бұрын
@@DeletedSince.2020 Yeah, Colonialism, a negative factor turned into the eternal excuse for avoiding seeing inside and always distracting themselves with an outside force, the enemies of the noble locals, who can't do but cope. It works for many of the locals while they kill themselves and blow themselves up. "They, on the outside, make me hate you, even if we have been hating each other since time immemorial". Thus "colonialism" yet you have examples of countries that had very recent colonialism or dictatorships and made a fast turn towards some local version of democracy,. So that wouldn't be the impediment per se, but the cultural factor that I mentioned. Democracy is an empty shell without the philosophies that give it sustenance. Philosophies spring ideologies. In the Middle East no philosophy can spring without a strong religious component and Islam and its understanding of things is the only one that provides. Islam hasn't give birth to a secular version, like it would be Humanism in the West, after so many, many religious wars in Europe. They haven't solved the hatred. Europe did by sifting through what they agreed upon but taking out the religious mention. Thus Humanism, as a philosophy, that allowed (in time, a long time) for the development of ideological and political systems that could work only concentrated on those things that could work for the betterment of everybody, as an ideal. A "human" ideal. The middle East lived under the subjugation of empires for ever, the Europeans merely arrived last in a region that was always under the logic of tyranny. Even their religion expanded by the synergy of force rather than conversion. Humanism is incompatible with them: they value their own religion, tribe, clan, and other divisions over any other adherence or ideal. Alawites in Syria, Hashemites in Jordan, religious designated positions in Lebanon, and so on and on and on. Even when they deny this, they know that ethnicity, language, sect, etc. play a role on who gets what. Family connections moves the wheel, not the selection per merit. That's also why you have the Golf States where, in some cases you have 80% or 90% of the population being (eternal) foreign workers (as you can never, ever, gain permanent residence, let alone citizenship, that is almost practically impossible) while the tiny teeny minority of locals rule them all, undisturbed and without any hint of guilt, any local discourse about violating Human Rights (that they adopt for international convenience but have absolutely no bearing in local beliefs) or feeling of contradiction. Hence (and they ALL know it) he who wields the sword is the one who rule. Iran, a theocracy whose democratic parody is the closest to what they consider "democracy" (meaning: the people elect a little puppet, the bigger strings are handled by the untouchable and unelected religious class, who sees that nothing, ever, deviates from their vision of religion in the state) also tries to expand, through violence and foundation of different armed groups, the poisonous seed of discord so they can one day be the ones who wield the sword in the Middle East. Hence and under this present conditions, without a foundational local philosophy that makes them understand a different view on life and humanity and with many, many, many forces fighting to keep their power and even expand it over each other, there will never be peace among them. Israel is the only unifier (on hatred) but even if Israel disappears ipso facto, that wouldn't solve not a bit their struggles. Oil merely works as some respite on an utterly maladaptive region that never knew piece other than being subjugated by empires. It shifted the location though. Islamic extremism, that is just another modernized version of the religious wars fought along centuries every time yet another version of Islam wanted to have their say without having their heads cut. Wahhabism and its backwardism is historically quite recent (from the XVIII century) yet it inspired many "extremisms" way before the Europeas had any interest in the region, due to oil. It's the locals, with local means, traditional ancestral hatred and quarrels, with some renewal because of the political changes that swept the world (pan-Arabism would've made them laugh before the concept of some shared ethnic trait, as a base to build nations, was introduced from Europe) etc.
@Don333dr Жыл бұрын
It's sad how there is always money for war 😢😢
@norude Жыл бұрын
MONOPOLY USUALLY STARTS A WAR IN MY HOUSE OVER CHRISTMAS
@briano9397 Жыл бұрын
Must be shit, get better at the game and win like a man
@rageshk7828 Жыл бұрын
this is one of the more depressing videos I have seen.
@stephenschroeder6567 Жыл бұрын
If you want a better world, we need better people. Approximately 10K years of history strongly suggests that will never happen. Sadly, the only way this can end is when there are no more people. I wonder if the last two humans will realize they are the end as they strangle each other while rolling around in the dust and blood?
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, free will shall solve everything! humans should just be perfect! Think of a real solution. Study about Historical Materialism. The mission is to create a system that assumes human imperfection. Rather than a system that can only work when humans act perfectly.
@Krazy6ix Жыл бұрын
context is we have so many popularity driven leaders and the amount of wars happening is really down to these leaders wanting to push a domestic issue or scandal out of the public eye.
@Historyandlegends789 Жыл бұрын
Short answer: corporations and politicians are old and making money and the world can burn as long as they can keep their livelihood
@Misiok89 Жыл бұрын
Who could predicted that COVID pandemic would ignite many tensions and accelerate some processes based on existing tensions
@felixschrider9037 Жыл бұрын
I think the primary enabling factor probably has more to do with the relative rollback of global power networks and more specifically the loosening of the great powers grip on their less reliable proxies. During the Cold War, the US and USSR essentially dictated any major conflict that was happening at any given time. However after the collapse of the USSR, a lot of these countries found themselves in a strange position. The US began to slowly roll back the more domineering side of its global role... especially in recent years. The Soviet Powerblock essentially ceased to exist. Russia being barely a shadow of the soviet Union, retained some influence, enough to delay conflict in some places, but its current weakness is somewhat underscored by the ongoing conflict in Nagorno Karabakh. Armenia effectively lost the support of Russia, which allows the Turkish backed Azerbaijan to do as it pleases. The same is true in central Asia.. Africa is the result of the finally collapsing French influence and the results of what the influence entailed for African states in general. Not all that much is going on in East Asia. but Burma has finally boiled over again... a result of internal issues, partially stemming from its self imposed isolation. In short, the influences and alliances that held the previous peace together have fractured. for a minuet, even NATO looked as if it might dissolve. The US in particular, shifting away from its role as global Hegemon towards one of Great Power Competition and potentially conflict also plays its part. The US appears to be rapidly loosing interest in the Middle East. Almost threatening to leave Saudi Arabia to its fate, all but pulling out of Iraq and Syria. Other Western powers have not offered to fill the gap either. (most of them lack the capability). We should also include perception. As the US has taken an apparent step back... that alone is the cause. not the step back, but the cause. which is quite possibly why Hezbolla and Iran aren't interested in provoking US intervention on the side of Israel. If they wait a few more years. the US will be too preoccupied to give half a damn about the Middle east and they will have free reign. especially the the shrinking need for foreign oil in the US market. Everything is currently pointing towards a period of global instability. (IMO)
@HAL-bo5lr Жыл бұрын
I remember a mere 7 years ago, people were assuring others that war was in decline. That we were living in the most peaceful time in human history. I guess that era has ended. We humans just cannot help ourselves but to destroy one another.
@dixonhill110811 ай бұрын
A lot of the conflict is just generic islamic warfare. Turns out you liberate an islamic country and they quickly turn to war.
@6thface Жыл бұрын
Fun fact. This is the least vioent time in the history of our species.
@Human_01 Жыл бұрын
You can thank the british and the rest of the west. Their colonial history and present is at the heart of instability in POC/non-Western countries. This fact cannot be brushed to the side and ignored.
@jamespyle777 Жыл бұрын
Selfishness and treating the population as a commodity. What is considered good anymore?
@thesnesgeek Жыл бұрын
Me
@RipCityBassWorks Жыл бұрын
UN and world leadership have failed. The priority is somehow STILL power and ego instead of cooperation, solving global issues, and technological advancements. We need reform at the UN.
@MrRrrr698 Жыл бұрын
Most of these conflicts are very minor or just skirmishes they aren't really a big deal. For example I am from India and there is Kashmir conflict as a separatist movement by Kashmiri militants but this conflict hasn't any effect on our country on our daily life and even on the citizens living in there
@getnohappy Жыл бұрын
This is that multipolar world the literati were so keen on in the mid 'oughts. Hope you like it
@antirbx Жыл бұрын
They were in a hoi4 lobby and after clicking political and economic focus trees started clicking expansion focuses to demand land and go to war
@paratirisis Жыл бұрын
"If the trend continues, less than 5% ... will live in a democracy". Maybe the benchmark you're applying is too high, but USA, Europe, most of Latin America, India are democracies in my book.
@khanhnguyen-tt3ff Жыл бұрын
India could turn it self into a theocracy it all depend who will be the leader after moldi or will he willing to step down when the people vote him out
@jakalordarkblood4331 Жыл бұрын
India is literally lead by a fascist attempting to do ethnic cleansing. South America has major issues with legal struggles between corruption and the will of the people. Same with Central America.
@Snp2024 Жыл бұрын
@@khanhnguyen-tt3ff then talk when it happens in future people are saying that since 2014 . also he is not autocratic in sense of russia or china it's bcz opposition parties are so pathetic bcz of infighting (like literal childrens) it gave him absolute majority even his muslim and christan vote percentage increased . lastly his work on sanitation , free housing and wider availabiltiy of electricity attracted non hindu_nationalist secular voter . BJP is doing better then what most exxpected i suppose.
@runajain5773 Жыл бұрын
@@Snp2024yeh i agre inflation and unemployment also india economy also oppostioni has coalition nobody like coalition goverment also after recent congress corruption case and dmk north speech can impact image in north india congress lost vote north then coalition modi will become next prime minister
@Snp2024 Жыл бұрын
@@runajain5773yeah love for Modi is dwarfed by hate for congres
@かんちょう-q9p Жыл бұрын
Feels like a bubble waiting to burst, just like WWI
@krishnanunnimadathil8142 Жыл бұрын
And more people than ever have weapons! Yay!
@gogrape9716 Жыл бұрын
How many of these conflicts involve Islamo Fascism…???
@jean-marcgagnon6716 Жыл бұрын
You just noticed, it has been going since the beginning of time.
@nohbdy1122 Жыл бұрын
The so-called "rules-based international order" is crumbling. There is no solution to this as long as capitalism exists.
@falaksvasa Жыл бұрын
You forgot the biggest overlapping factor: US imperialism
@aogsalihataman7130 Жыл бұрын
6. There are also ideological disputes.
@DeletedSince.2020 Жыл бұрын
Ideas don't manipulate the world. Ideas are a response to the world. Learn about Historical Materialism. You are a few steps from quoting Mein Kampf, idealist.
@jdaystar Жыл бұрын
So many wars because we’ve only been putting off many of the issues that need to be resolved, especially sovereignty. Historically people who don’t resolve their issues amicably will have to fight it out, when the dust settles whoever is left can prosper, hopefully without foreign interference😂. Africa has way too much going on, it’s going to take a least 15-20 more years to settle. Some will do better or worse, that’s just how life on earth goes man.
@richardalex4516 Жыл бұрын
Money. Conflict is profitable and as Lenin said "See who stands to benefit".
@Jwinius Жыл бұрын
The rise of neoliberalism, free-market economics and globalization over the past 30-45 years are also an important factor that has contributed to global instability. This has has led to income inequality and diminished government influence that have resulted in frustration in local populations. In turn, this resulted in xenophobia and the rise of right-wing populism that has been eroding our democracies. Undermining your own democracy by electing a right-wing demagogue in order to 'set things right' has the exact opposite result, but people just don't understand what has happened to them, and so end up voting against their own interests. The spread of disinformation via social media has only made things worse.