How Venezuela was Destroyed
Today Venezuela is known as a failed nation. Everyone is poor, money is worthless, there is violence in the streets, and over a tenth of all Venezuelans have left the nation. But during the 1900s it was one of the richest nations in Latin America (and on Earth). So what happened to the country? Why is it now so poor?
#h0ser #venezuela #history
0:00 The Tragic Tale of Venezuela
0:49 Spanish Colonization
5:24 OOOIIIIIILLLLLL!!!!!
10:37 Chavismo!
Пікірлер: 3 400
Venezuela could have become the Latin American equivalent of Norway if it chose to create a large rainy day fund with its oil wealth instead of giving away all of its earnings like there’s no tomorrow.
@AdamSmith-gs2dv
Жыл бұрын
You are assuming socialists are smart. They aren't
@nguyengiaphong1346
Жыл бұрын
Basically almost every oil country can become Norway if they know their way
@CantusTropus
Жыл бұрын
But gotta have that socialism tho
@SpartanJoe193
Жыл бұрын
Yes. The one thing rightoids got right is that too much spending, especially if the fiscal policy is asymmetric as I like to call it, is a disaster.
@IpSyCo
Жыл бұрын
@@CantusTropus Not necessarily. Norway has done an excellent job creating a thriving capitalist economy.
I lived in Venezuela for 23 years, and personally I think the country is a lost cause. I am glad i was able to leave to Spain 3 months ago despite all the obstacles i had to go through. Exiting Venezuela as a Venezuelan is harder than entering Spain in my experience.
@danielmessi1092
Жыл бұрын
That’s why when people act like america is the worst country in earth I cringe. Like ofc we’re not perfect we have very high crime rates in cities like Chicago and Detroit and Baltimore and places that look like 3rd world. But we’re at peace, no wars, a high standard of living and many things we take for granted.
@AdamSmith-gs2dv
Жыл бұрын
Glad you got out. Hope you aren't voting for the same leftist morons who ruined Venezuela
@ikerriveraperez
Жыл бұрын
Guay tio, en que parte de españa estás???
@lucianoosorio5942
Жыл бұрын
Yo soy parte venezolano. Mis padres son de Venezuela
@Hisoka85
Жыл бұрын
@@danielmessi1092 I wouldn't consider a country with almost daily mass shootings to be a peaceful one lol The USA is not a good example of a country for many reasons.
I'm an American but spent around a year living in Ecuador. Not as a tourist but just like any other Ecuadorian. The amount of Venezuelan migrants I saw was staggering. It's really pretty sad especially seeing how well run a country like Ecuador is (not perfect but you have the basics in good order).
@goldhawk151
Жыл бұрын
Yeah I noticed that too when I studied there. So many Venezuelans were trying to make a living there. Plus met a bunch doing the same in Peru
@joenichols3901
Жыл бұрын
@@goldhawk151 Yeah its sad. I mean, there are some pretty hardcore slums in Ecuador, but for the most part the basics are in order. It is a tragedy that Venezuela is unable to meet its basics despite its massive oil reserves. I wish the US could work closely with Venezuela to get things setup properly there so that America benefits from a stable/free Venezuela and Venezuela gets all the benefits of economic stability/growth. Quite the man would be needed to get that done though
@XvicvicX
Жыл бұрын
@P T Well, maybe Venezuela shouldn't threaten to nationalize private foreign property and hostilize the countries they need to trade with. It's simply staggering that venezuelan socialism and others thrive on the propaganda that they can sustain themselves without capitalism and there are still people blaming their failure on sanctions from capitalist countries.
@joenichols3901
Жыл бұрын
@P T Yes. All your problems are caused by us Americans. It was not the rampant corruption, tying your economy to oil or any of the policy blunders made by your government leaders. Its all the US's fault. I mean, all of the allies of the US do terribly economically by working with us as friends. Poor victims of America
@RM-el3gw
Жыл бұрын
@@22andresmiguel venezuela went to shit long before sanctions. you really know nothing about how Venezuela works if you thnik the sanctions are what caused this fucking disaster
I was born and raised in Venezuela, I've lived abroad, I have travelled across the world, and still I won't surrender to the crisis, I will continue working and give opportunities to my people. I dont criticize those who have left nor try to convince people who stay, but I do ask that wherever they go, help other Venezuelans, because not everyone can withstand migrating without help.
@dukethepitbull1568
Жыл бұрын
Good luck to you man may you bring prosperity to you and your people
@javiruiz8365
9 ай бұрын
Sure 😂
@AndresVargasArevalo
9 ай бұрын
@@javiruiz8365 A 9 meses del comentario sigo aquí echandole bola e incremente el personal de las empresas en las que trabajo. No hay que rendirse.
@javiruiz8365
9 ай бұрын
@@AndresVargasArevalo that’s a good thing man! I salute you.
Sucks that Venezuela ended up from a promising oil-rich Latin American nation to the worst ending
@mmaksymko
Жыл бұрын
it's not the ending tho. some day, hopefully, Venezuela will be rich and happy place
@just_another_internet_man755
Жыл бұрын
This is the fate for most oil rich countries, just look at what is happening to the Middle East
@slappyrifle
Жыл бұрын
@@mmaksymko any country can flourish if it wasn't 𝓬𝓸𝓻𝓻𝓾𝓹𝓽𝓲𝓸𝓷
@rizkifauzi7048
Жыл бұрын
basically, they're becoming Yemen
@rizkifauzi7048
Жыл бұрын
@@just_another_internet_man755 Actually most of the Middle East are kinda wealthy or average, but the one that constantly broadcasted in media is only conflict countries like Yemen, Syria, or Libya
If this channel doesn’t tell you how critical keeping the corruption and elite accountable to the people is, idk what else will.
@mgntstr
Жыл бұрын
No, the elite always do as they please. They are unaccountable. In Norway and America they gave a fuck about their lesser men, in Norway it was altruism, in America it was fear of reprisals because those lesser men, they had guns. So many guns.
@commisaryarreck3974
Жыл бұрын
Most nations have already failed. The US for example is just a blatant oligarchy(matbe corpo state would be better) masquerading as a democratic republic So is most of Europe, if my country being told to vote again because we voted wrong...several times isn't obvious enough Your elites are most likely corrupt and they will never be held accountable
@mgntstr
Жыл бұрын
@@commisaryarreck3974 the brainwashing has gone so far you think the US should ideally be a DEMOCRATIC Republic... It's a Republic, it was specifically designed not to be democratic, tyranny of the majority. smh
@blackholeofmemes
Жыл бұрын
And look at Brazil, they just have robbed an election to put the biggest criminal corrupt again on the power...
@TeemoQuinton
Жыл бұрын
Now if only people applied that both sides rather than the one thats popular to hate
Venezuelan here. I find it hilarious you used Tropico’s music lol. Your review is highly accurate (even when your pronunciation isn’t but it’s alright)
@ghost.8836
Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, when he said "arapa" instead of arepa I was going to have a stroke.
I've been living in southern Brazil for over a year now and i get an existential crisis and a "is that how i used to live" moment everytime I remember my country. Truly sad that not everyone has the opportunity to escape
@blackholeofmemes
Жыл бұрын
And what you think about Lula the Socialist corrupt again on the criminal scene, the government
@RobertGames2030
Жыл бұрын
😢☝
@pillow69420
9 ай бұрын
You live either in Rio de janeiro or são Paulo right?
@JeremyMaldonadoSTK
9 ай бұрын
@@pillow69420 Parana, actually
The moral of the story is: When nation building, never ever ever ever ever leave all your eggs in one basket.
@ReviveHF
Жыл бұрын
In other words, diversify your economy.
@SpartanJoe193
Жыл бұрын
Oil has a tendency to have the prices jump up and down so that's one basket I'm not putting my eggs in.
@SpartanJoe193
Жыл бұрын
@@ReviveHF Facts
@N12015
Жыл бұрын
And well, never vote for the guy who promotes free stuff instead of a more stable economy.
@manuelsputnik
Жыл бұрын
Especially not on a non-renewable resource, like oil... which... y'know... RUNS OUT eventually and massively fluctuates in price?
Thanks for making this video! I'm a Venezuelan diaspora currently visiting my grandparents. My entire family was anti-government from the very beginning, my mom was at the 2002 Protests when she was shot at by pro-Government forces in the Llaguno Overpass. She managed to get out uninjured. We left in 2010, but our grandparents stayed in Margarita Island. Since 2010, the situation has become critical. Venezuela is a beautiful country plagued by corruption and tyranny. God bless you for this video. Love from Margarita Island ❤
@harrybaals2549
Жыл бұрын
if you talk to spoiled university students (usually rich white kids who've never had to work for anything in their lives) in 1st world countries, you'll notice that socialist rallies are common. a lot of them are convinced that us venezuelans who decry the government are the children of "wealthy politicos" that are mad that the socialist government took over and started "serving the people". nevermind my grandmother's apartment getting ransacked by the military. nevermind my cousin getting stabbed repeatedly, then thrown in a jail cell by the police instead of being taken to a hospital. nevermind my uncle trying to work an honest living, only to get his truck robbed multiple times by people even more desperate than him. these kids are completely delusional. we should send them to venezuela and see if they last a week
@jatinore4626
Жыл бұрын
I hope your family is doing well in Venezuela!! Best of luck to them
@Halcon_Sierreno
Жыл бұрын
You complain, yet you left.
@bronzy9826
Жыл бұрын
@@Halcon_Sierreno What?
@Halcon_Sierreno
Жыл бұрын
@@bronzy9826 Go back and fix your country.
As a Venezuelan, I want to congratulate you because you know more about the economics of Venezuela than a common Venezuelan, I think that's the problem most of the people in my country are just stupid, and candidates that offer a bag of food are more likely to win than others, thanks for the vid
@Bori.1776
Жыл бұрын
Uneducated is not the same as stupid.
@aordaz41
Жыл бұрын
@@Bori.1776 true on that, but having seen engineers and doctors on socialism stupid 100%
@Bori.1776
Жыл бұрын
@@aordaz41 Ideology is a virus that corrupts the mind. I agree.
@latonief
11 ай бұрын
@@aordaz41 I agree with you. I am Venezuelan, and it is rare to witness someone that is willing to admit that there are many other issues beside "socialism." I personally think that scapegoating socialism stems from Mcarthism, for some reason there is brutal fearmongering regarding leftist ideals in the culture of our state. It could, perhaps be because, the governments that led the country to the horrid state of brutal anarchy it is now, were all leftist governments. However, it is essential to recognize that leftist ideologies and values themselves were not the problem, but the rather the governments themselves. I have witnessed engineers with PHD'S, lawyers, doctors, people who had incredible higher levels of education deciding to simply deny any historical evidence and just start lambasting leftist ideology. I even get called a marxist and a "chavista," whenever I try pointing it out. It is insane. So yeah, I agree with you. Some people's level of education exceed their intelligence.
@sure5783
6 ай бұрын
@@latoniefpeople seem to think whatever bad happens in socialist government, is wholely due to socialism and not possible external factors, poor leadership and corruption are not exclusive to socialist countries, these factors affect a large number of countries
Hey thanks a lot for the video, I've lived here my entire 20 years of life and I honestly don't imagine myself living here 5 years from now on. We have reached a point where we can survive but the long term future seems bad
As young Venezuelan who left the country pretty recently , this is accurate to a certain extent , some of the numbers are off , our diaspora has been on part with the Syrians after the Arab spring of 2011 , but without going on the details is a summary. We had intellectuals like Uslar Pietri (famous Venezuelan scholar) that promoted and exhaustively demanded to cultivate oil (diversify the economy and promote other sectors besides the oil sector) but never actually made it and the anti-elitist , far left economic measures on Chavez-Maduro regime eroded whatever other industries were left in the country by expropriation and mismanagement. To whomever is fascinated by the events that led to Venezuela’s downfall , it is still being studied because it’s modern downfall on catastrophic levels. People lost jobs, businesses , family, savings, quality of life , freedom and hope and yet the country stands , our people dance , party, study, marry and live despite the utter chaos but any Venezuelan (that is not under the thumb of the party that runs the government or still indoctrinated ) will tell you about the social, economic and political erosion that has happened and how it has affected them in their daily lives, no matter their class or part of the country they are from.
@scarleteyes4418
Жыл бұрын
Brazilian here, glad you are in a better situation, we had a huge number of venezuelans coming to Brazil as we share a border. I'm glad to share a border with such amazing people and culture, hope our latin american brothers be in a better situation soon
@CrocodileWhispers
Жыл бұрын
I’m dating an older Venezuelan woman who was from a rich family and they lost everything. She makes me arrépa (spelling lol) all the time
@AholeAtheist
Жыл бұрын
LOL. Chavez and Maduro aren't far left though.
@bprogressive
Жыл бұрын
ok great propaganda😂😂..
@alejandrosalazar8766
Жыл бұрын
@@AholeAtheist They absolutely are.
As a Venezuelan, I gotta say this is one of the better takes. Though, that's kind of a low bar, since most try to oversimplify this to either "Socialism" (a word that basically means nothing anymore), or US Sanctions (which are indeed exacerbating the country's problems, but aren't the actual cause).
@ZhouEnlaiOriginal
Жыл бұрын
*Can you make another comment without you mention the western world or japan and South Korea?*
@caslaBBalsac
Жыл бұрын
@@ZhouEnlaiOriginal That's one of the dumbest replies I have ever seen, this is Venezuela, so those countries are 100% relevant.
@watermocules7735
Жыл бұрын
@@ZhouEnlaiOriginal shut
@sylviamontaez3889
Жыл бұрын
It's more to do with corruption and bad decisions
@sithlord5149
Жыл бұрын
Maybe you should make a video you seem to know what's going on
I am half Venezuelan and my Venezuelan grandfather talks about how amazing the country was when he lived there, but is now ashamed to be Venezuelan due to the events that took place. He always says it is a slippery slope what the government did and what many do today. Mind you, he grew up very poor. I wish to one day visit Venezuela and see its nature. Maybe some time soon
Venezuela has the standart latin american mentality on steroids, and I say this as a Brazilian, we are on election year and honestly, both major candidates are populists using lame ass speeches about god, family, gender rights and etc to classify themselves as either right or left wing candidates. Both are corrupt ones, and the people know it, some choose to ignore it, but deep inside they know it, but since the country isn't in deep shit, we are complacent about it, that's until things start falling apart, and they will. We sacrifice long term prosperity for some 3-4 years of "golden years" fueled by public spending and corruption, just for it to bite us in the ass later on.
@arthurg.calixto3338
Жыл бұрын
Voto nulo detected
@Daniel-rh7kh
Жыл бұрын
@@arthurg.calixto3338 Nem votei :v
A little correction. The actual number isn't 3 million, but 6 million who have left the country in the last decade.
The full story is always more complex than anyone with a political agenda wants to admit or even bother finding out.
@cardedmaster5393
Жыл бұрын
That with a lot of history people only use history that fits what’s belief’s instead of the other factors
@necromax13
Жыл бұрын
It's all too easy for braindead gringos to hear anything being used as a talking point towards their own idiotic "political" "parties", and to not call bullshit on it.
@Tivis7
Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@Humanresouces
3 ай бұрын
Confirmation bias is the term you're looking for.
I gotta say, hoser actually makes some really good content. No BS, controlled bias. good shit.
He mixes education and funny quotes which rhyme really well. You are having fun and also learning something! I also absolutely love that he represents countries as its national animals,so clever! Keep it up
@blankface_
Жыл бұрын
I love the animals, more personable than the countryballs
Every single Latin American country should be fully developed. The current situation is absolutely insane!
@manovrsb
Жыл бұрын
Alot of debt through public spending
@joaquinmoran75
Жыл бұрын
I wish
@keyboards6364
Жыл бұрын
At least they got hot women there haha
@JesusCaminoGarcia
Жыл бұрын
The corruption and bad economy policies keep them in poberty
@stephenjenkins7971
Жыл бұрын
Some did alright, but it really seems the curse of the Spanish Encomienda System and state-sponsored corruption really made reforming the political culture very difficult.
It's scary how the horrible decisions of a few can condemn a country of millions with so much promise, to lives often misery
you are one knowledgeable person !!!! and I love your style of teaching subjects that could at times be boring ..big thumbs up
That's why I follow this channel, you didn't take the cheap and easy out by blaming Chavez. Don't get me wrong he sucks but is a symptom, not a cause
@DonVigaDeFierro
Жыл бұрын
Nah, he was the hard liquor for the hypothermia patient that was Venezuela.
@neutronsareawesome
Жыл бұрын
He did accelerate the collapse, but yeah, we were going to collapse either way
@josea1707
Жыл бұрын
Actually unlike many would like you to believe, Chavez was a great president and he was about to succeed in nationalizing Venezuela’s oil when our country’s “energy interests” prevented that from happening.
@neutronsareawesome
Жыл бұрын
@@josea1707 The oil industry was nationalized back in the 70s, try again chavista tarifado
@electricdazz
Жыл бұрын
@@josea1707 Venezuela should focus on industrializing in order to make their weird brand of socialism actually work, overreliance on oil isn't going to do them any favors, not now nor in the future. Cuba is suffering from a weak industrial sector as well. But it's understandable that US sanctions make that goal very hard to achieve.
I will say it again: the success of a society does not come from its resources but from the quality of its government.
@sheltonyukevich7722
Жыл бұрын
Just look at Singapore
@nathanseper8738
Жыл бұрын
@@sheltonyukevich7722 And Botswana!
@zyanego3170
Жыл бұрын
Ressources play a big role too.
@shauncameron8390
Жыл бұрын
@@zyanego3170 But management is even more so.
@danielramirez8298
Жыл бұрын
Venezuela was a country closed to the world great part of its history, the oil boom in Venezuela emerged thanks that the government was reached, by a caudillo (juan vicente Gomez) managed by a venezuelan banker educated in new york (Manuel antonio matos), and the banker saw an opportunity in the oil industry, and created with the help of the caudillo that he manipulates, a liberal legal-frame, for first time in the history of the country and that allows many oil companies from USA and Europe invest in the oil industry of venezuela, venezuela for itself wouldn't developed the industry, because had not capital, and the knowledge of the industry, were the US oil companies that builded in venezuela the greatest refineries of all latin america (as the refinery San lorenzo) and the wells, that helped a lot the country get out of the extreme missery that lived at the beggining of the XX, and helped be the 4 richest country at the world in the 50's, but the venezuelan mentality, and the new government with socialist-communist trends, ( the majority of presidents of venezuela since 1960, were exiliated for be suspicios of comminist, during marcos perez jimenez dictatorship), they tore down all the foreign investment that the country was receiving for years and took full control of industry, not only the oil, also the steel, banking etc, and they dilapidated the money of the industries in subsidies, corruption, etc, they made the population more dependent of government welfare, the system of itself was unsustainable, and exploded in the 80's and that brough many dismay and uprising, the same president that nationalized the oil tried to turn the situation, and apply liberal policies and take off subsidies but received a social uprising, two coups, and the politics took him out of power for dirty political ways, and then the people preferred a more socialist and leftist, leader as hugo chavez thinking that the problem were for the government that tried liberalize the economy ( that didn't liberalise significantly).
Thanks for this. I'm viewing rhis from Venezuela's nearest island neighbours, Trinidad. This video clip gives a clear description of Venezuela's path over the lastt two hundred years or so. It reminded me that nothing occurs in a vacuum.
As a Venezuelan, I think our people is dammed from the beginning, we only care about money, money and more money and didn't take the good opportunities to invest in education, science and more technology, we are just a bunch of people surviving in other countries and in our own country...and it's painful to see it
I used to work with a bunch of Venezuelans back in the mid-80s in Dallas TX, they always talked about how great, rich and educated Venezuela was, and how everyone else in South and Central America were ignorant peasants who couldn't even speak proper Spanish. I wonder how they are doing now?
@tetraxis3011
Жыл бұрын
Sound like karma hit them like a train
@juanm8582
Жыл бұрын
well it was true at the time. And its still true most central americans and chileans cant speak proper Spanish lol.
@ddurlon
Жыл бұрын
@@juanm8582 lmaoo tf is proper spanish
@LouieManza
Жыл бұрын
Yes the Venezuelans still suffer to this day from an over inflated ego. Their self entitlement and lack of gratitude towards the host countries they immigrate to rubs many of their fellow Latin Americans brothers the wrong way. The sheer amount of violent crimes some of their nationals have and continue to commit in Colombia, Perú and Chile is astounding! Their problems has affected the entire continent in a negetive way.
@manny_menin022
Жыл бұрын
@@ddurlon Spanish that is closer to Spain. Argentina has Italian qualities and Mexico has its own Spanish. That's why we have different accents
The ballad of Heisenberg at the beginning killed me
@Dadderfield
Жыл бұрын
I’m so glad someone else pointed that out. But it’s such a good song, so I’m not mad about it lol
@SlapStyleAnims
Жыл бұрын
I knew someone else heard it!
@thxcbo
2 ай бұрын
The song is Mexican btw
This series is amazing. I never thought I would enjoy watching videos that concerned economies and governments, but you do such an excellent job packaging it up in an ‘easy to swallow pill’, the images are a plus. Excellent job!
I was working in Venezuela in 1992 when Chavez attempted his failed coup. I couldn't believe when only 6 years later the people there voted him as their president! I told my new Venezuelan wife back then "are you people crazy?" Wtf? I said to her "you'll never get him out of office once he's president. Ever!" Worse than that, they continued to vote for him election after election until he died of cancer. Personally, I don't feel empathy for the Venezuelan people. They knew what he was when they willingly handed over the reigns of power to him. Similar to how I feel if our own failed coup plotter is voted into the WH in 2024. We have brought whatever comes our way on ourselves. Why are so many people so darn naive?
@grimaffiliations3671
5 ай бұрын
i laughed until i realize the US might do the exact same thing with Trump
Venezuela is a cautionary tale of why you should not be so reliant with a single source of income. We've seen this pattern so much in history. Yesterday was the Congolese Empire, today it's Lebanon (and Venezuela), and Saudi Arabia might be the next one.
@fumothfan9
Жыл бұрын
@P T tbh world economies helped build Venezuela but it also was their downfall. Overall they got no leg to stand on solo. It's why you gotta invest in your own country not only others. Diverisfy the economy with several sectors. Incase 1-2 fall not much will happen if they all sorta equally control a piece of the economy. If you got 1-2 that fall that are a majority the rest will pick up the slack which isn't much. And the country in a sense resets.
H0ser: explains why and how Venezuela got to where it is today Me: is the background music the sound from breaking bad
@K3rrJu5t1n
Жыл бұрын
Also h0ser: 3:08
One very interesting development is that with the remittances of so many people abroad, the economy has stabilized(just a little) not enough to stop the inflation but enough to eliminate the scarcity of basic resources like food and medicine but in USD, so assuming you have a relative sending you some money for food you can survive, but that is were it ends, The country has become a lawless land, at this point, the government doesn't care about it citizens so you are on you own, no water? tough luck you better drill a water well for that, No electricity, Well you can buy an electric generator if you have the USDs, The police AND gangs are robbing you? well non of my business you can always buy a gun Not a very nice place to live or visit, for my part the best desition of my life was to leave in 2019, not to the best country(Colombia) but light years away better than Venezuela
@asierro2007
Жыл бұрын
Or make a water distiller from the rain and Buy tanks of water like 7 o 8 in total to Survive a few months without paying thousands in water cisterns
@PianoWolfg
Жыл бұрын
@@asierro2007 The funny thing is that we(me + my family) did exactly that, but the low-budget version, we didn't have the money for a filtration system or a big tank, so we used a couple of plastic barrels, the water wasn't particularly crystal clear but adding a little bit of chlorine + letting the sediment sink to the bottom of the barrel, was enough to make it usable, not drinkable (we still had you buy that), but it helped a lot, those were very dark days for me
@nintendoman12111
Жыл бұрын
Except that you actually CAN'T own a gun since Chávez made it ilegal to do so, and if cops find a gun in your house you get arrested, or more likely extorsioned.
@jameskamotho7513
Жыл бұрын
@@PianoWolfg I'm curious why the rain water is dirty. So for what has happened in your country...
@PianoWolfg
Жыл бұрын
@@jameskamotho7513 There aren't many environmental regulations and the ones that exist are ignored, Thus there are a lot of older cars and trucks without catalytic converters, thus a small fill of soot is created everywhere exposed to the elements, walls, floors, and roofs... the where the rain falls, the rain would wash the soot of the roof and thus would be contaminated, (cleaning the roof before it rains was useless because it only takes a couple of days for the soot to reaper)
As a Venezuelan, I am glad to see videos like this that go over this without some sort of agenda and looking for a political punching bag.
@Knock_Off0875
10 ай бұрын
Exactly! Every other video just uses socialism as an excuse but in reality what happened in Venezuela was not socialism. Social welfare programs do not instantly make a country socialist. A real life example of socialism in a country would have been Burkina Faso. You see Thomas Sankara Attempted Socialism in Burkina Faso and in just 3 years rose literally rates drastically, eradicated meningitis and measles, provided food housing and healthcare to millions and prevented famines by increasing the amount of food produced and reducing the amount of food imported. The only reason things went south was because he was overthrown and murdered by French Colonial Sympathizers. Since then Burkina Faso has been unstable and unsafe. So when socialism fails it is either a problem that isn’t integral to socialism like Military overspending and corruption or it fails because of western intervention. I still remember when I was first studying to learn Eccomoms I went in think “Socialism is Cuba and Cuba is poor and dictator” but after learning the factors that actually effect countries and I learned just how similar Scandinavian Social Democracy is to socialism and that is what encouraged be to become more open minded and learn what Socialism really is, what capitalism really is and even what communism is.
U remind me of a old youtuber id watch back in the day. Nice vids keep up the great work
Venezuela is like this person who had everything. He later had a car crash and his mood changed drastically cause he had a brain damage. After he started to have heavy drinking, and he causes vandalism in his town. Tell me what Venezuela is like in your opinions.
@jackakakreanxx5587
Жыл бұрын
That kinda reminds me of Caligula where in his early reign he was a better empire than his predecessor, Tiberius. But after a “brain fever” he went batshit insane
@amapianototheworld7156
Жыл бұрын
like that person who won the lottery but because of lack of education blew it all and is now living in the streets
@saulgoodmanKAZAKH
Жыл бұрын
@@amapianototheworld7156 okay, that's a good one.
@bruhbruh-us6gl
Жыл бұрын
Venezuela is that person who has the communist devil whisper into his ear and then murders his entire family
@joshuahagan1797
Жыл бұрын
The person who’s really rich but gambled all their money away
This is why Saudi Vision 2030 aims to decrease they're dependence on oil. It's impossible to stay rich forever if you get all your money from one industry.
@SpartanJoe193
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely. Having you entire country dependent on one shit alone is disastrous.
@toyotagaz
Жыл бұрын
Not with vanity projects like NEOM
@QuantumNoir
Жыл бұрын
That's why Russia isn't even developed.
@StuffandThings_
Жыл бұрын
Except that their "plans" aren't particularly future proof. NEOM is a joke bound to fail at best, and beyond that they don't have much going for them. Sounds good on paper but when the oil runs out I doubt they'll fare a whole lot better.
@parkouremaster
Жыл бұрын
Venezuela didn't fall because oil, but because Chávez and Maduro greedy theft ass, drying out every single penny to their own pockets and doing alliance with the worst countries in the world, Cuba and Russia
I'm from Belo Horizonte, a city in Brasil (a bit close to São Paulo and Rio de janeiro), and my city has a LOT of venezuelans. It's a sad situation because a lot of them ended up in the streets, but still, our government has a few welfare programs for them and society as a whole wants to help, offering shelter, food and jobs. I can only imagine what the cities near the amazon are facing, since mine is more than 1500km from Venezuela and we are still able to see the consequences of the regime.
Dutch disease is a concept that describes an economic phenomenon where the rapid development of one sector of the economy ( particularly natural resources) precipitates a decline in other sector
@RobespierreThePoof
4 ай бұрын
Correct. You get fifteen points
@noobnaut
2 ай бұрын
*loud correct buzzer*
As a nigerian i understand how big of an oppurtunity venzuela missed its similar to nigeria , does oil always have to be a curse
@zyanego3170
Жыл бұрын
Oil isn't a curse in Norway.
@justinherrera3722
Жыл бұрын
Oil isn’t a curse, corruption and ineptitude is
@fenzelian
Жыл бұрын
Yes oil is always a curse. Any industry that in a short period of time gets bigger than the whole rest of an economy is a curse - it totally throws off the systems the economy used to run by, it guarantees all sorts of foreign interference, and it requires a ton of tricky adjustment to manage. Yeah some places get through it, but not easily, and a lot of places run into very serious problems. The most helpful thing when you find a huge windfall of a natural resource is to already have a large diversified economy so it doesn’t totally take over everything and devalue and marginalize every other industry. But nobody really has control over whether they have that or not.
@Knock_Off0875
11 ай бұрын
@@zyanego3170Oil is a curse to countries with corrupt governments that can’t afford to extract the resource themselves and so they let private multinational corporations use and exploit the natural resources found in their country
@ayadhyist
4 ай бұрын
Oil isn’t a curse for Norway and hopefully won’t be for Guyana.
As a Peruvian is kinda sad how our venezuelan brothers are doing right now, they used to the a freaking Norway in south america, I hope that those times where everyone here used to say "Dam, I would wish to move to Venezuela" come back one day
@HC-wo2tz
Жыл бұрын
They were never the Noraway of LA, they were a poverty stricken nation desperate to see one of their own assume power.
@matthewpunk2012
Жыл бұрын
haha peruvian lmao
@elvenezolanolacras1551
Жыл бұрын
eres de la sierra?
@carloszerpa2312
Жыл бұрын
@@HC-wo2tz what the hell are you talking about?
am binge watching your chanel right now, your stuff makes me crak uppppp and learn - just a comment though, I don't know if you talk fast naturally or are trying to keep the audience engaged, but I think you can slow down a bit :) I've put it to .8 speed and that feels comfortable and I actually understand it haha
Thank you for this video. Very insightful and impartial. Love how it does not glorify or excuses socialism or capitalism. Just explains the downfall.
This was a great insight for understanding the situation of my Venezuelan neighbors. Consider doing Peru next, we also had hyperinflation and violence during the 80s but managed to recover. Over our 200 years of independence our economy has been based on extracting natural resources like guano, rubber, copper, etc. Might be cool for a video.
@tetraxis3011
Жыл бұрын
Creo que no habla inglés XD
@elvenezolanolacras1551
Жыл бұрын
eres de la sierra?
@luisortega8085
Жыл бұрын
we are going to shit lmao
@zackhawn5944
Жыл бұрын
How are things going now? I read that there was a coup attempt or something
@arcturus4762
Жыл бұрын
@P T It was thanks to capitalism and the 1993 Constitution that we had the economic boom we had in the last 30 years. And not it's going to shit because of populism and idiots who think changing it is a good idea.
I subscribe to a lot of history, geopolitical, and news-centric channels, and this is one of those that I always click on first after I get home from work when I see it in my feed. I'm sure it'll hit 250k subs before too long because these videos are consistently pretty good and informative, even for me who is a history buff.
This channel has taught me more than 18 years of history / social studies
You really nailed it, they never found democracy before greed aka oil. Politicians in Venezuela literally went for office just to be like “aight how am I gonna sell oil and not give a shit about anything else going on”
I’m part Venezuelan. My parents are Venezuelan. My dad’s parents are Columbian and they moved before my father was born. I’m born in the US. My grandfather had a good life in Venezuela until it was in shambles.
@Leonhart2002
Жыл бұрын
It is Colombians no Columbians, this comment is only a correction
@auguaauaguga6517
Жыл бұрын
Why do you guys speak Spanish
@lucianoosorio5942
Жыл бұрын
@@auguaauaguga6517 cause we do. Watch the video, it tells things about history
@Brandonhayhew
Жыл бұрын
Why is Venezuela so lost cause, is there anyway to undo the hyperinflation
@2163mechows
Жыл бұрын
Soo... You are American
The discovery of massive oil reserves in Venezuela can be compared to someone winning millions of dollars in a lottery and spending it recklessly. There have been numerous stories of major lottery winners blowing all of their huge fortune and going deep into debt and misery. Some of those winners have ended up going homeless, being dependent on welfare, suffering a divorce, becoming a drug addict and even committing suicide etc. If you ever win a huge prize, you should hire financial advisors and lawyers to inform you how to manage your new riches.
@SF-eo6xf
Жыл бұрын
Put 5% a side to party and put the rest into EFTs and live of the dividend. Tell everyone the money is locked and you have no way of getting to i to give out loans.
@SF-eo6xf
Жыл бұрын
@P T you need to travel more. Corruption and Nepotism is the problem and an oligarchy who has no insentives to bring poor people into the middle class. We can at least hold our politicians accountable and there are checks and balances in place. On top of that rich Venezuelans spend their money abroad so it doesn't even trickle down into their own economy. Go to Venezuela or perhaps neighbouring Colombian and see for yourself.
@jotareiss
Жыл бұрын
Latin America is not as simple. Brazil in 2010s followed this path after discovery of pre-salt oil fields. They invested a lot in R&D, built a whole industrial complex around it, to the point the state-owned gas company became one of the most advanced players in the world, also investing revenue in things like education and other industries... All this to the country ending being crippled down to the ground on the verge of a far right coup
@necromax13
Жыл бұрын
@@jotareiss I'm in awe at what Brazil managed to achieve. Becoming a top player in the hydrocarbon game, becoming a top player in engineering projects, being poised to become an actual superpower. And what did you guys use all those advancements, land, and manpower for in the end? More violence, political drama, and advanced forms of corruption.
@jotareiss
Жыл бұрын
@@necromax13 but corruption and political drama is how we do it since... ever? The story i told, although extremely frustrating, is nowhere near surprising in the global south. There a lot of interests, both external and internal, in these countries being a mess, because corruption, political drama etc is profitable. In the process of Petrobras being gutted, it becames the gas company that paid the highest dividend payouts at expense of the gas prices surging to the highest value in this century and refineries being sold to foreign investors as cheap as 2 years of its revenue. To further illustrate how fucked up things are down here, as for today mainstream media is fearmongering how the stock markets are falling because the new president vowed to fight hunger in the country.
The problem was never "socialism.". If you really want to understand what went wrong compare Venezuela to Norway. Both have huge petrol-based wealth. But Norway secured a strong social -democracy and invested it's wealth incredibly carefully so that their people do, in fact, benefit directly from the oil wealth. There are incredibly low levels of corruption in Norway, as well. Venezuela was run by a corrupt economic idiot.
@h0ser
4 ай бұрын
Yup. I mostly can't argue with that. The thing is Norway only made their first withdrawal from their oil-fund in 2016. So everything before that was not using money invested from their oil wealth. Norway was rich because of its strong trust networks long before the oil wealth had an effect on them. Now the GPF is just a bonus on top of one of the richest economies on Earth!
Honestly, the fact that a foreigners recap of my country and the things that I see everyday is some of the only reliable sources of information I have to understand shit without bias in it's really depressing, but I'm already Venezuelan so...
@h0ser This is my first time watching one of your videos and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I thought your use of sound facts, witty sarcasm, decent music, decent animations, and well structured out analysis culminate in a quality video. That being said, I have one, critical yet constructive complaint. I thought your pace of talking was to fast. Personally, I could follow. However, I love history and already have a rough understanding of the history of Latin and Central America. One of my personal favorite you tubers who is in the same niche as yourself is Kraut. He is the polar opposite and utilizes a very slow, yet precise and intentional use of language. I prefer it because it opens the marketability of the video to those who are new to the field of historical analysis and also enables him to dissect topics over a longer period of time and to highlight interesting and intelligent views that appeal to ardent historians. Anyways, I look forward to watching more of your videos!
hey h0ser, you're video on Venezuela has been very enlightening on the history and difficulties in Venezuela that plague the countries society to this day, it has also made very interested in my own country, the nation of Malaysia, and its history as has also benefited from oil wealth as well. I would love to see a video on Malaysia as might give a more nuanced understanding on oil wealth as we aren't exactly a Norway but we are a relatively successful state but also really screwed by certain actors, ideas and people over the decades
@cck4863
Жыл бұрын
The major different between Malaysia and Venezuela is that in Malaysia, Malays govt just took the money ,waste it like no tmr , BUT didn't buy up its other industries with the oil wealth and let it rot. So unlike Venezuela , even when Malaysian oil money disappear, they still have other industries to fall onto. While it isn't Norway, people still have job and food on the table.
Fun fact: Not sure if it's still the case, but the Venezuelan currency was actually worth less at one point than the gold in Old School RuneScape, due to in-game gold "farmers" making more IRL money for themselves than they could at a real job for Venezuelan bucks.
@cristianjosegonzalezmalave7500
Ай бұрын
It was a real, I've met a couple guys doing that, they made a considerable amount of money at the time. This actually extended to all forms of gaining money through the internet (fiver, commissions, KZread. Etc) but to use RuneScape to make money definitely was quite surprising.
Great videos! Learning lots! Keep it up
One tiny error you commit, the official number of emigrees is 6 million by international estimates, though the suspected unofficial approaches the 9 million mark. One fourth/third of Venezuelans have left, this comment as a Venezuelan myself.
@sand7861
Жыл бұрын
A lot of them came here in Brazil
@y4go650
Жыл бұрын
@@sand7861 And Mexico too
@QuantumNoir
Жыл бұрын
Yeah I read a year or two ago that about 7 million have left. A massive amount are next door in Colombia
@alexandroscyrtos424
Жыл бұрын
@@QuantumNoir That might change soon...a sizeable amount of them is leaving...going through the Darien Gap and crossing the US-Mexico border
@riograndedosulball248
Жыл бұрын
I'm >4000 Kms away from Venezuela and now and then see refugees begging on the streets, during a freezing cold winter. It's like they went from the pan to the fire, may God help them...
I like the point of view about not having mature democratic institutions before the oil discovery... thanks
@HC-wo2tz
Жыл бұрын
Very stupid take
@wlt3585
Жыл бұрын
@@HC-wo2tz disagree
@Directlite664
Жыл бұрын
Its all cognitive bias. Look at how rich gulf states are, and look at poor democratic African countries with more resources than gulf states. Also, there are other countless counter examples. Like countries like china becoming richer than usa and how democracy ruined usa, and western states, which is just surviving because of military might and colonial wealth.
@HC-wo2tz
Жыл бұрын
@@Directlite664 Well said. I've even had the misfortune of reading certain comments where conservatives explain that African countries are poor due to socialistic policies. That's how stupid and ignorant some people are regarding geopolitics.
always love seeing political discussion without bias, just a genuine passion for learning about people, nations, and how all that works and what's happened so far in human history. I think they call it anthropology.
As Venezuelan u are by far the best and most accurate video essay shit about Venezuela I’ve seen, thank u so much for translating that shit show so nicely
As a Venezuelan, I'm glad this video exists
I'm Venezuelan. From the beginning, Simón Bolívar was a dictator, yes, like the traitor of Miranda and Paez. During the period of Gomez and Perez Jimenez, most of the Venezuelan infrastructure was built. However, they were heavily criticized because they used prisoners as labor and were not well known for upholding current human rights. For Venezuela it was impossible to diversify from oil if they lacked the necessary infrastructure to do so and they knew it, also the Venezuelan universities were improved in an attempt to expand the economy in the future. But unfortunately, later came the "democracies" that never had anything of democracy, they were a bunch of populist parties, since now they should not get power with a coup, but by offering any kind of free or better thing in the most socialist and populist way. It was a race to see who would be the new dictator. Of course the central nor central left won with the promises to improve the quality of life in the simplest way; with public spending this led to the part you mention in the caracazo. Most Venezuelan politicians have always been on the left, but the final blow was with Chavez's extreme left. Where the generation like mine from 1990 to 2010 had nothing to do with the boomers who voted for him, but we pay the consequences of those who voted for him and by the wat, fled the country after a few years looking for a better place like the US. From abroad people always criticize that the Venezuelan people do nothing to get rid of Maduro, but the reality is that there are countless dead and missing people of my age and even minors who tried to protest or demonstrate against it. But it is impossible without military help. Venezuela is one of the Latin American countries with the best army, even better than other countries outside of Latin America, and as you know, they are on the side of the government. In Venezuela it used to be legal to use weapons like in the United States, but this was abolished by one of the Venezuelan "democracies" and only organized crime, military and police cartels can have weapons, all on the socialist side. Not even the lowest seat: the police are on the civilian side, all the great positions in this country are bought, but what hurts Venezuelans the most is that the supposed presidency of Juan Guaido is also corrupt. In Venezuela there is no true leader, only people aspiring to be the new dictator... So there is no way that a civil war will happen in Venezuela either. The most serious thing that could happen, and what many Venezuelans really want, is an intervention, like the Panamanian one. Those who really do not agree with an intervention are the politicians and Venezuelans affiliated with Guaido, another politician of the bunch. Personally, I think it will never be done until there is a good Venezuelan leader. However, I already resigned myself to the fact that Venezuela will be like Cuba.
@Iamwolf134
Жыл бұрын
Yikes, that is a rather terrifying thought.
@memimodeee2
Жыл бұрын
I agree with that u said of Marcos Pérez Jiménez this guy didnt pay atenttion to that
@JesusChristLovesYouBro
Жыл бұрын
Jesus Christ loves you so much. Turn your life to him and pray for forgiveness. Have a good day. ✝️✝️✝️
@JesusChristLovesYouBro
Жыл бұрын
@@Iamwolf134 Jesus Christ loves you so much. Turn your life to him and pray for forgiveness. Have a good day. ✝️✝️✝️
@HC-wo2tz
Жыл бұрын
Stop blaming socialism for everything. Seriously, you right wingers toss that word around and don’t even know what it means.
i swer this channel has teached me more about history then the entirety of history class
Hi, I am actually from Venezuela, thanks for the video. I really don't know if exist a way to resolve the problems of my country, but so many people do the best for survive everyday, maybe there is the solution, one time I heard something " never waste a crisis" if a country of have experience to learn our us
Venezuela is inverse of Taiwan. Venezuela has great geography and tons of oil and is the poorest country in Latin America. Taiwan is a tiny island with like nothing and like 15 countries even recognize them as a country and is one of the most wealthy nations on the planet.
@danshakuimo
Жыл бұрын
People forget or didn't know but Taiwan actually even went as far as starting development projects in Africa back in the day. Many Taiwanese even involved themselves in the economic development of their now rival, the PRC. This sounds dumb but for many of the former Nationalist soldiers their family and home was in China and people were more optimistic back then so it seems a bit more reasonable. I wish H0ser would make a vid about the development of Taiwan and thinking about it, things kind of went exceptionally well. Japanese colonialism ironically created many highly educated Taiwanese (a lot of doctors for some reason) while the KMT losing the mainland brought China's best and brightest to the island.
@logpo5402
Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy how pure good leadership can lead a shanty town into one of the richest country’s, and sadly the opposite also applies
Can you make a video on Syria? I would love that because your videos are quite informative, concise and not as boring as history class.
Nice video and explanation, so accurate
Great video, writing, entertaining and informative.
Good luck to my brothers from Venezuela, here in Brazil we are at the edge of the abyss too, but we will die fighting for our country 🇧🇷❤🇻🇪
@auguaauaguga6517
Жыл бұрын
Lol Why do you guys still speak languages of c0l0nizers
@cokoctepannx5864
Жыл бұрын
Brazil is at the edge of the abyss?
@Sceptonic
Жыл бұрын
@@cokoctepannx5864 something to do with their president
@nosferatustg7675
Жыл бұрын
How are we in the edge of the abyss?
@Pabloto-dq3sx
Жыл бұрын
Is this some delusional speech?
Fun fact: there once used to be a German colony in modern Venezuela, called Klein-Venedig And this video reminds me on how the Kongo Kingdom was dependant on exporting slaves and the Saudis depend on exporting oil.
@norik434
Жыл бұрын
Klein-Venedig is in fact the origin of the name Venezuela. When writing about the indigenous peoples from the coastal areas, the early German explorers noted how similar their construction techniques were to those of Venice: laying a foundation of tree trunks underwater and then constructing stilt houses atop the water (named Palafitos), making it easy to fish from their own homes. Because of this, they named the place Klein-Venedig (meaning "Little Venice" in German) which Spanish courts translated as Vene-zuela.
@juanm8582
Жыл бұрын
there's still a german colony-ish near Caracas. Its a tourist site now, they grow flowers in those hills and you can stay the night in some European-looking hostals. Its pretty cool.
@norik434
Жыл бұрын
@@juanm8582 yes, Colonia Tovar is in my home state of Aragua. That settlement has nothing to do with the Klein-Venedig expeditions though. It's a much later colony of Allemanic-speaking immigrants from the late 1800s. Fun fact: their dialect is mutually intelligible with Pennsylvania Dutch!
@juanm8582
Жыл бұрын
@@norik434 I love that place lol. Its cool, but a bit unsafe to drive to.
@b.j.880
Жыл бұрын
Kraut?
I disagree about how much blame should be on Chavez's shoulders. As someone familiar with another extremely corrupt oil rich country (Nigeria), I can tell you that everything Venezuela went through before Chavez was also experienced there. However, because Nigeria never had a Chavez and thus never implemented socialist, anti entrepreneural policies, things never got close to as bad (at least economically). The combination of over generous welfare AND rabid anti business policies that many South American countries have implemented just seems like complete madness to me. How can a government promise a safety net on one hand while penalizing the sector of the economy that is supposed to fund that safety net? It's thr main difference between Scandinavia and LatAm. They are wise enough to have very pro market policies to support their welfare states. (Also, they're far less corrupt but that's another matter, lol)
Just to remember Venezuela gov was anti imperialism. Before oil money went to the outside, now it is going to internal elites. Only downfall was these elites not reinvesting the money into the country development, but what could you expect of SA bourgeoisie...
One of my mom's friends is from Venezuela. Thanks to the regime Hugo Chavez put in place she lost every single penny she had because according to the government she doesn't need money to survive and took her business too so she couldn't make more money, she had to gather what little she had left and come here to the states for a better life.
@tetraxis3011
Жыл бұрын
Quite sad, but Chavez was voted into office, so his government technically doesn’t qualify as a regime. Still, the was the first of this cursed wave of socialism that is hitting Latin America right now.
@zyco9188
Жыл бұрын
Ah the horrors of seizing the means of production and distribution.
@Sceptonic
Жыл бұрын
Dissapointing thing to see is how much of a cult personality he has even though it was his socialism program that led to the rise of corruption, Maduro, and the eventual collapse of the economy.
@CountingStars333
Жыл бұрын
@@zyco9188 Did you not read, the multiple coups, slavery, exploitative systems before hand. There are socialist-capitalist hybrid nations that do fine. Vietnam
@zyco9188
Жыл бұрын
@@CountingStars333 socialist-capitalist is an oxymoron.
There are too many historical errors in this video, there are also misrepresentations of various facts.
Socialism alone didn't lead to Venezuela's downfall, but it was a HUGE contributing factor.
Venezuelan here, the video basically covers everything, good shit. I used to go back every year but cant do so anymore cause its consistently getting more dangerous. Itl be a WHILE before we see any major progress.
The way he pronounced Arepa was the biggest tragedy in this video
@korenaya
Жыл бұрын
mhm
@Yuki_Ika7
Жыл бұрын
If his channel name is what he is, his pronunciation can probably be worse
@thefallenoverlord2487
Жыл бұрын
was better if he just said "bread"
@stopreplyingtomycomments7954
Жыл бұрын
That and the name pronunciation
@carloszerpa2312
Жыл бұрын
@@stopreplyingtomycomments7954 ah reh pah
My parents are from Venezuela and I am so thankful they left to Canada
i watched one video now i love this channel
These videos must take a lot of time and research to make, good job
Damn, this one is personal. my poor country :(
I feel bad for the people
Good video, and I liked the art. I learned a lot about Venezuela, thanks!
As a Venezuelan currently still in Venezuela. This is a very good summary of the roots of the issue. And it makes my blood boil whenever the older folk blame all of the problems on the current populist practices of the governement, blaming corruption all around, despite the periods of most growth being in an ALSO insufferable, fascist dictatorship during the economic boom from the Juan Gomez/Perez Jimenez periods, but oh well, those periods ended in the 50's, and the ''Democratic'' Era was really well off riding that wave of being one of the richest countries. But as that wealth ran out (and dont get me wrong, Chavismo did a lot of damage as well), and we didnt invest into actually developing the country. We reach the current state of affairs I am part of the minority that believes in a future here and would rather people stay. But with the current state of political affairs I do not blame anyone emigrating in the slightest, there's no real nation-wide leaders, and so the corruption problem remains... I do love our land and people, its just a sad reality that the country has had corruption issues since its inception
Venezuela is like the popular kid that peaked in high school but fell off afterwards
Thank you for this objective evaluation instead of solely blaming socialism like your average American news outlet.
@fordnash7449
Жыл бұрын
Ye
@juanm8582
Жыл бұрын
As a Venezuelan, I can tell you socialism did fucking ruin us a lot. The gvt (still) cant a find a way to break the private sector to make the populace dependant on them for food or services.
@XxLIVRAxX
Жыл бұрын
Socialism has alot to do with it, mass confiscations of private assets, state run monopolies, coercitive economic measures against the private sector, banking etc. Socialism is not limited to public funded goods, you can have that with a modern capitalist economy.
@darwinjackson3560
Жыл бұрын
@@XxLIVRAxX none of those things are related to socialism tho, even if Venezuela were a capitalist country same things would've happened, because the government was plagued with corruption
@sandman1006
Жыл бұрын
@@XxLIVRAxX socialism is not when "too much state" A country 100% state would still be capitalist if the dominant class were the bourgeoisie and had a market economy (price control is not planned economy) The only exception is Yugoslavia, because even though it had a market economy, it was based on cooperatives (worker's control of work environment), so we consider it market socialist.
I think this is a very good introductory video, but as always there's a lot of issues when trying to summarize a couple hundred years of history in 16 minutes. I just wanted to point out the most egregious error in the video, at 4:05 this is just... not true, France did not invade Spain nor Venezuela in 1814, France had completely lost naval military presense in the Atlantic since the defeat at Trafalgar in 1805, and was really just crumbling as a military power by 1814. I'm not sure if you confused it with the invasion of 1823 or more likely the invasion of 1808, but no such thing occured in 1814 (and Venezuela wasn't attacked in either of those invasions anyways). Rather, in that year Ferdinand VII was reinstalled as the king of Spain, and he promptly set an army led by general Pablo Morillo "The Peace Maker" that reconquered both Venezuela and New Granada
I have friends from Venezuela 🇻🇪. They told how it is there. I pray 🙏🏻 that things would get better there in the future. They need to make the right decisions to move the country forward. I am from Barbados 🇧🇧 and my country is north of Venezuela 🇻🇪.
as Venezuelan i'll add that other reason of the actual situation is because Chavez and Maduro didnt learn about the mistakes commited in the past "or" They wanted that sussy oil from the begginings, which ended up doing the country more dependent of petroleum and being more corrupt than ever. I would like to tell other things but i dont want to do a bible, so nice vid and God bless Venezuela.
@kgsniper4850
Жыл бұрын
Sussy 😂
@korenaya
Жыл бұрын
as another venezuelan, why tf would you use an among us joke, im banning you from venezuels
@angelj.2051
Жыл бұрын
@@korenaya lol
@ventooreo1546
Жыл бұрын
@@korenaya amogus
@MrSadSmileyFace
Жыл бұрын
@@korenaya amboga
Great, informative, impactful video man especially for me whos from Algeria, a similar case but has a bit more dynamics than Venezuela.. PS: please do algeria next ma man!
I’m a catalan history student and last quatrimester we talked about that. The Conquistadors were nobles and rich people from all Europe, not only Castille and Aragon, who bought a license to the iberian monarchy in order to get the right to go to the “new world” and conquer ir for them. Then they were allowed to forge hiciendas in that land. The funny thing is that this whole process didn’t cost a Damm coin to the monarchy. And about Cortés, he did it without a licence. The monarchy wanted him dead, but he was quick enough to dedicate “his conquests” (which cannot have happened without the locals who joined his Army as the Federation of the three cities (the mexica/aztecs) were universaly hated) to the crown, so they just accepted and gave him a remote hicienda. It was a moment when the “encomenderos” of Colòmbia and Veneçuela tried to rebel and become hereditary lords like the nobles of Europe, but that failed. It seemed like the natives prefered to fight for the crown that to fight for the “encomenderos” who were the ones directly above them. Maybe they thought like the remences in catalonia that siding with the crown would mean the end of the hiciendas… Another thing, the conquistadors tried to invade places which already had some organization in order to suplant it. That explains things like the fact that the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico wasn’t properly “civilized” until the independence of Mexico, as the Mayan city-stat system collapsed before Columbus sailed to the Caribean thinking he was on the indic sea, or that when the castilians saw How similar the cultural supremacism of the incans was to their own, they decided to respect the quechua people more than the other conquered ones (the quechuas tried to form a homogenizing empire in the Andes making many smaller cultures dissapear into them). The independence of the americas might have been changed If the Bourbons remained faithful to the constitutions of Cadiz after the napoleònic wars. There is much there that was liked by the natives in america. The think they liked the most was that it would grant them all spanish citizenship and make them legally Equal to the encomenderos. Of course that was also because the constitutions of Cadiz said that every man older than 20 could vote when in France and USA only the richest could. That idea was really powerful. In fact there was many natives that fought for the crown, as independence would mean that the criollos would rule the countries and they would be far worse than before. There are lots of terrifying histories of natives being persecuted after the independence wars to be punished for siding with the crown.
I used to speak to a lot of venezuelans when playing oldschool runescape. usually nice guys who just wanted their country to be less of a joke
on today’s episode of ‘the spanish managed their colonies so horribly and with such arrogance that we still feel the consequences today’: venezuela
@jorgeluis2247
Жыл бұрын
Venezuela's issue has always been the same: Venezuelans. It's a great country, but is the people that live there that made it what it is today.
@ARojas-dg2ce
Жыл бұрын
@@jorgeluis2247 this
@shauncameron8390
Жыл бұрын
Also the manner how the colonies got their independence only so they could hoard the resources for themselves.
@alfonsoherguetagomez1821
Жыл бұрын
It's enough to blame spanish colonization. 200 years ago, we let Venezuela. If you are not able to deal with your own country after that, it's not a Spain Empire problem. Look for the cause into yourself, instead...
@Ireee702
Жыл бұрын
According to your logic, Japan should be like the Congo after those 2 nukes
Awesome video. Keep up the great work! Could you do Colombia too?
Now, with Venezuela trying to expand towards Guyana because the latter had oil, this would be another problem for them.
I gotta say, as a venezuelan living abroad, this is pretty on point (more than most of the stuff I see on KZread anyways). I would just add that the exodus nowadays is closer to 7 million venezuelans abroad.
Well, a foreigner talking this explicitly, though, respectfully about our situation is kinda refreshing. I would contribute the cause of the instability was and still being the power-hungry and egotistical notions behind the ideals of the politicians. Every turn since 1946 resume in some various intents to form democracy and peace being obliterated by politic sectarism, corruption, populism and mainly greed. The rise of Chavez is the infamous consequence of all the past mistakes; above all, wanting that savior-like figure that the average venezuelan sees in the military men
@Gabogonz_02
Жыл бұрын
I'm agree with you
Oh my country, I hope it can recover its glory someday. Thanks for making a video about it 🇻🇪
@auguaauaguga6517
Жыл бұрын
Why do you guys speak languages of c0l0nizers
@Zepellin
Жыл бұрын
@@auguaauaguga6517 a. Why’d you put 0 instead of o’s and b. It’s a unified language that the people there would know so they kept it as the official language it’s the exact same reason the us speaks English and didn’t decide to make up their own language or use a different already existing one
@hewkii7157
Жыл бұрын
@@auguaauaguga6517 ¿hay alguna razin que no deveriamos, o solo estas maullando para llamar la atencion?
Thanks for bringing the whole thing about the story of my country. I can say it's 100% accurate
I was expecting bias. Good video