The Early 20th Century: Corrections, Questions, and Omissions

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0:00 Intro
0:56 Correction: HaNoten Teshua
1:15 Anti-Chinese pogroms in the US
3:09 Correction: the NAACP
3:39 Correction: Syrkin and the Uganda Scheme
4:31 Parallels to the Rwanda Scheme
7:52 Jewish-associated sports teams, Gary Lineker, and me
10:37 The logistics of the Zionist Congress
11:54 Sound quality
12:17 The Japanese military diet
13:06 The Black Hundreds weren’t one party
13:52 The shtetl and cultural memory
15:21 Correction: Ben-Zvi and Cemal Paşa
15:35 Tel Aviv and the Bible
16:37 Correction: certificates of naturalization
16:50 Correction: Palestine, Michigan
17:15 Correction: FDR
17:42 Javits and the Yaavetz
19:28 Tom Watson was even worse than you thought
21:07 Why did Jews support Wilson?
25:08 Name changes

Пікірлер: 119

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronow10 ай бұрын

    www.reddit.com/r/samaronow

  • @user-gr9fq9gt9w

    @user-gr9fq9gt9w

    10 ай бұрын

    0:39 What do you mean you "now" have a subreddit? I am in it since when it was created, more than a year ago.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    @@user-gr9fq9gt9w Yeah, but it wasn't going to be very active until people knew about it through the channel.

  • @gyllenspetzfamily7993

    @gyllenspetzfamily7993

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@SamAronowum Sam, you must consider Arsenal as your ESL team...haven't watched since 2012 but I liked Arsene and the international mix of the players

  • @stephenhoughton632

    @stephenhoughton632

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for pointing out the newness of the sanctions idea. People don't realize that used to be an act of war.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gyllenspetzfamily7993The problem with Arsenal is they always try to walk it in. Did you see that ridiculous display last night?

  • @CivilWarWeekByWeek
    @CivilWarWeekByWeek10 ай бұрын

    What a nice birthday surprise

  • @DD-re5ql

    @DD-re5ql

    10 ай бұрын

    hbd

  • @patria3023

    @patria3023

    10 ай бұрын

    Happy birthday!

  • @SunniLeBoeuf

    @SunniLeBoeuf

    10 ай бұрын

    Hey it’s my birthday too! Hbd

  • @CounterClaws

    @CounterClaws

    10 ай бұрын

    Happy Birthday!!!!

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671

    @thedemongodvlogs7671

    10 ай бұрын

    Happy birthday man!

  • @erraticonteuse
    @erraticonteuse10 ай бұрын

    2:40 Don’t forget, Emperor Norton helped protect San Francisco's Chinese population/Chinatown!

  • @patria3023

    @patria3023

    10 ай бұрын

    Hurrah for America’s one true emperor!

  • @PeterGFin
    @PeterGFin10 ай бұрын

    I've watched every one of your history videos, and appreciate all the work you've put into them.

  • @dolevlitvin8904
    @dolevlitvin890410 ай бұрын

    באמת שאתה נסיך. הלוואי והיה לי כסף לזרוק על הפרויקט הזה. צפיתי בכל סרטון, ברובם/חלקם הגדול כמה פעמים. ללא ספק הערוץ האהוב עליי ביוטיוב.

  • @vauiarex4877
    @vauiarex487710 ай бұрын

    Will you have an episode on Hungary? It had one of the largest Jewish populations, has its unique branches en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schism_in_Hungarian_Jewry?useskin=vector. And the explosion of anti-Semitism post ww1 would be important to cover to understand what will happen in Hungary during the Holocaust.

  • @Mackyle-Wotring

    @Mackyle-Wotring

    10 ай бұрын

    I agree he should do an episode about the history of the Jews in Hungary.

  • @patrickrowan6001

    @patrickrowan6001

    10 ай бұрын

    I really thought we’d get one during the Age of Nationalism

  • @colliwer
    @colliwer10 ай бұрын

    Senator Javits being a direct descendant of Emden was a fascinating revelation!

  • @DiamondKingStudios
    @DiamondKingStudios10 ай бұрын

    “American Jewish Committee vs American Jewish Congress” Meanwhile here in GA whenever “AJC” is mentioned it’s for an Atlanta-area newspaper

  • @elh93
    @elh9310 ай бұрын

    "stupid fights on twitter" That won't last much longer if things keep going as they are. The fights will keep happening of course...

  • @Lawarch
    @Lawarch10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for including my quote Sam! Also if anyone would want to read about the Leo Frank story in relation to Watson and Smith check out the book The Jew Accused: Three Anti-Semitic Affairs by UC Santa Barbara History Prof. Albert S. Lindemann 20:52 Also to add on some more interesting details about Jon Ossoff he is also one of the few Australian-Americans to be elected to office, with him having Australian citizenship for a time through his Australian immigrant mother

  • @brodysuski6564
    @brodysuski656410 ай бұрын

    Hey SamAronow, this is probably my first time commenting on a History KZread video but I just wanted to say I love your videos and as an aspiring History Student I find your videos to be some of the best History videos on this platform I haven't finished this video, but the segment on Jewish-associated sports teams and your discussion of it although brief was interesting and I wanted to lend my own thoughts with the sports knowledge I know. Firstly, there have actually been Jewish-American Soccer Teams founded in the US! While American Soccer History is one I am still looking to research into (I literally just got done purchasing some History books on the subject) I wanted to say that it is a fascinating aspect of American History not often talked about. Alot of the early days of American Soccer History, especially during the Dark Ages after the Depression and before the modern period of American Soccer History started were dominated by Ethnic Soccer Leagues compromised of Immigrants from America who usually played after work had ended and following trends elsewhere these clubs usually were workers clubs sort of like in Europe but uniquely different in that these teams had a largely immigrant base of support and had to compete with Baseball extensively. So to get back on topic, there is a Jewish American Soccer Team, it's called Maccabee Los Angeles (link at the end of this mini-rant) and for the brief time they were around they were immensely successful. Also I know you mentioned that there is "No Soccer Hooliganism in America" within your video but with the rise of MLS and even America Soccer's Past of having Insurgent Leagues pop up, American Soccer History can have Soccer Hooliganism just not nearly to the scale of Europe. Like I said, American Soccer History is still something I am looking to research further, but I just wanted to add my own thoughts as Soccer is one of my special interests alongside History and I think it is a fascinating aspect of History that is never really talked about. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maccabee_Los_Angeles (The Jewish Sports Team I was talking about) P.S: If you want to know the American Soccer History books I purchased if that interests you, I will also include them here: Distant Corners: American Soccer's History of Missed Opportunities and Lost Causes by David Wangerin Soccer in a Football World: The Story of America's Forgotten Game (Also by David Wangerin) Offside: Soccer and American Exceptionalism (Andrei S. Markovits and Steven L. Hellerman) I haven't read them yet but I am excited to read them! (Also sorry for the long comment I realized I ranted a little bit)

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Wait…Maccabi played at Jackie Robinson Field. That’s in Pasadena, my hometown! Thank you for this information!

  • @edberge
    @edberge10 ай бұрын

    My Great-Great- Grandparents got on a boat from the Russian Empire (now Lithuania) c. 1880 and landed in Northern England; family legend has it that they fully intended to immediately take passage on the next ship to New York, but were swindled out of their money and had to settle in Leeds for want of the price of tickets. My Great-Grandfather (who as the eldest son had been born in Lithuania, unlike his successively younger siblings) eventually emigrated to the US with his family (including my English-born Grandmother) in 1910 or so. With respect to names, my Grandfather (b. 1902) was originally called Yankel, but went by James, until as a young teenager his sister started calling him "Chester", reportedly because it was fashionable (his siblings wound up as Janet, Mabel, Hazel and Theodore; their first language was Yiddish and no, those weren't their original given names, either). Chester appears on his 1918 draft card, in his handwriting, and as far as I can tell was his legal name from then on - it's what's on his military service record starting in 1920, and as far as I can tell he never used either Yankel or James since then.

  • @McFluff33
    @McFluff3310 ай бұрын

    25:40 Similar to this, one of my great grandfathers Roy (Israel) Cohen was born in Misk around 1899, moved to England as a baby and came to the US around 1912. I have relatives on both sides of family that lived in London for a few years before leaving through Liverpool.

  • @zacharytrosch3406
    @zacharytrosch340610 ай бұрын

    You and Max Miller having a crossover would basically make my life. It’s basically my dream KZread collab.

  • @miaththered
    @miaththered10 ай бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoy your teaching, thank you for the lessons.

  • @Chris-io4iz
    @Chris-io4iz10 ай бұрын

    I'm a long time fan. Thanks for doing all of this amazing research and teaching.

  • @JL-ti3us
    @JL-ti3us10 ай бұрын

    That commentary of WASPy sounding names, that happened in South Africa too in regard to how the white population interacted with domestic workers and garderners. Names like Gladys, Gloria, Bradly, Eric, names like those would simply be given by settlers to african people, especially those who ended up semi-grating (migrating within one "country") at the time to Johannesburg, Port Elizabeth or Durban, any of the urbanizing cities in the late 19th and early 20th century. It also happened in the Afrikaans community, especially on rural farmland, black farm workers ending up being given Afrikaans names.

  • @mathiassalmon7968
    @mathiassalmon796810 ай бұрын

    I love your videos, thank you so much for all your work. Keep it up!

  • @Joe-pc3hs
    @Joe-pc3hs10 ай бұрын

    That opener was a coinkydink. Just started watching Fidler on the Roof last night

  • @injustanotherguy
    @injustanotherguy10 ай бұрын

    You've given me a way to reconnect with my heritage and I realy needed it. I can't afford much, but I do want to thank you

  • @jasonwelle
    @jasonwelle10 ай бұрын

    Bodie shoutout in a Sam Aranow video! Love it!

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    I went there every year as a kid! I haven’t been back since a college-aged cross-country trip though.

  • @samuelfeldman9912
    @samuelfeldman991210 ай бұрын

    My great grandfather emigrated from Poland . We have his records and it says on the back “name changed by the U.S government to “Lewis”. (It used to be Lazar) and his hebrew name was Eliezer Ben Yonah HaKohen.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Right, they would have applied for that, in the same way you apply for a driver's license. It isn't forced. I looked into this via the USCIS and it would appear the trope of the Ellis Island Special originates with an overly literal reading of "our name was changed," implying a lack of consent that wasn't the case.

  • @samuelfeldman9912

    @samuelfeldman9912

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow Interesting I unfortunately never got to meet him so I couldn’t ask him, however I know he did teach Torah when he was in Europe so you’d think he may want to keep his my Hebrew/Yiddish name.

  • @Dor150
    @Dor15010 ай бұрын

    Welcome to the Spurs fan club Sam! I should say though Lineker is mostly identified with Leicester rather with Spurs, but he was in the last team that won a major cup for us in 1991.

  • @jennapeed
    @jennapeed10 ай бұрын

    Nice bumping into you Sam! Subscribed to your channel and look forward to checking it out.

  • @OPOS-el7tj
    @OPOS-el7tj10 ай бұрын

    Interesting video

  • @pickledboaby
    @pickledboaby10 ай бұрын

    Hey Sam I’m a big fan of this series just wanted to make sure to ask again pleaseeeee cover Martin Buber he’s a really cool figure in this era!

  • @kndrdfndindngoudng
    @kndrdfndindngoudng4 ай бұрын

    It is actually warnock who holds the senate seat (class 3) that watson had, ossof has the class 2 senate seat.

  • @nikolamilivojevic8835
    @nikolamilivojevic883510 ай бұрын

    Thanks for all your videos! I learned a lot on stuff I couldnt learn during my University years. Do you have some book titles in English, German, Slovak, Czech or Serbo - Croatian on the subjects you cover to share with me? 😊

  • @Bwkjam
    @Bwkjam10 ай бұрын

    @SamAronow I just saw Oppenheimer this weekend and besides being a good movie, it featured a fantastic clash of two very different American Jews who seem to embody some of the strains of thought you have discussed in your videos. While it’s a bit off topic, I think a video touching on this movie and it’s Jewish aspects could bring a nice influx of people to your excellent channel.

  • @oduludo
    @oduludo10 ай бұрын

    Thanks

  • @miguelcubero3440
    @miguelcubero344010 ай бұрын

    Just went back and rewatched the entire jewish history series to get ready for the next, it's amazing to see the evolution of Sam's Work 😮😅

  • @Solomonpious
    @Solomonpious10 ай бұрын

    YL Gordon also used the term Tel Aviv btw, in Europe in the 1850s

  • @tamarleahh.2150
    @tamarleahh.215010 ай бұрын

    It's so cool you're contacting tasting history lol. All the KZreadrs I follow band together. While you're at it maybe you can do some kind of Collab with snappy dragon

  • @bobmcbob9856
    @bobmcbob985610 ай бұрын

    I used to be a spurs fan briefly as a kid. More of a phase for I forget what reason, but I still think of them fondly.

  • @matthewbrotman2907
    @matthewbrotman290710 ай бұрын

    YID ARMY! 😆 Of course, they just signed Manor Solomon, as far as I know the second Israeli player in team history (Ronny Rosenthal in the 90s).

  • @robloxfanboy86
    @robloxfanboy8610 ай бұрын

    wake up babe new sam aronow vid just dropped

  • @d.c.8828
    @d.c.882810 ай бұрын

    Shout-out to tha homie Emma G!

  • @patria3023

    @patria3023

    10 ай бұрын

    Hell yeah comrade!!!

  • @rezajafari6395
    @rezajafari63959 ай бұрын

    The part about Tom Watson holding the seat that would eventually be Jon Ossof's isn't true. Ossof is the Class 2 senator while Watson was the Class 3 senator, so his seat is currently held by Raphael Warnock.

  • @patria3023
    @patria302310 ай бұрын

    0:04 AMEN!

  • @navetal
    @navetal10 ай бұрын

    12:57 You said you'll link to Linfamy's video but I didn't get any popup with the link... Did you not link it yet or is YT's player acting up again?

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Not yet, I’m out of the house.

  • @israelilocal
    @israelilocal10 ай бұрын

    Hello Sam I can't wait for the WWI era and I assume the disscussion of the Jews in the Balkan and the Ottoman empire I wanted to ask something that just wasn't clear to me during this era of videos you barely talked about Congress Poland (besides lately some things in Warsaw and mentioning pogroms that happened there) and i wanted to know since most of my family came from there. what were the differences between living in congress Poland and the Pale of settlement? I also am really interested in the Hasidic developments around that time (mostly because of a personal connection) and Hasidic Zionism that started to take off after WWI

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Slight change: because the Benaroya video involves the Macedonia Front, I realized I couldn’t explain that without first explaining Gallipoli, so the ZMC will come first and will be a direct sequel to “The Second Aliyah.” As to Poland, I don’t remember the specifics, but I can say that Jews in Congress Poland had _some_ of the same restrictions applied to the Jews of the Pale, but not _all_ of them. This is one reason Jews didn’t emigrate from Congress Poland at quite as high a rate. It’s also one of several reasons Poland briefly had the world’s largest Jewish population in the early 1920s.

  • @JL-ti3us
    @JL-ti3us10 ай бұрын

    A funny thing, our Sports Minister in South Africa wanted to use state money amounting 1 billion rand to buy a stake in tottenham hotspur.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    That…certainly sounds like something that would happen in Gupta-era South Africa. I’m a loyal codeterminist, so Andromeda Jaffa will be co-owned by me, the players, and the fans.

  • @user-gr9fq9gt9w
    @user-gr9fq9gt9w10 ай бұрын

    4:14 Why is that a terrible name? Zionism is a national movement, not nationalist. The name of the N*zi party is just a meaningles name. In fact, Hitler wrote in his book, that he regrets not calling the party the "Social-revolutionary party" (yeah, similar to the Russian social-democratic party in the early 1920's).

  • @2bit8bytes
    @2bit8bytes10 ай бұрын

    28:42 "Barred admission to anarchists, epileptics, beggars, and pimps" Those riffraff epileptics. lol

  • @matthewwallack601
    @matthewwallack60110 ай бұрын

    Someone correct me if they can think of other examples, but AFAIK the quintessential fan base of the old Brooklyn Dodgers is probably the closest thing North American sports has had to the European style niche/ethnic/class style fan base, with the exception of the often politically tied fan bases of the NHL’s Montreal Canadiens and Quebec Nordiques before the latter moved.

  • @dunnowy123

    @dunnowy123

    10 ай бұрын

    That's so true. In North America, sports teams are seen the OPPOSITE as how they are in most of the world; even when cities have multiple teams, like LA or New York, they only really focus in the geography (I.e Brooklyn vs New York) and never talk about politics, class, or ethnicity. We often focus on the unifying power of sports, as a way to transcend these identities.

  • @JamieHaDov
    @JamieHaDov10 ай бұрын

    We love Tottenham in my house here in Oregon. Come on you Spurs!

  • @cratorcic9362
    @cratorcic93626 ай бұрын

    Uganda actually now has a growing Jewish population due to a movement that began among indigenous Africans in direct spite to British Missionaries

  • @laurynassedvydis320
    @laurynassedvydis32010 ай бұрын

    A comment on the migration via UK. At that particular time prior to WW1 immigrants were being attracted by coal (?) mining companies in the UK, so this could have been a multi-stage migration, after failing to get permanent work or laid-off. This is the reason why a small Lithuanian community emerged in Scotland in the first decade of 20th century, and it would mean that there were Jewish compatriots with them as well.

  • @diegotz8
    @diegotz810 ай бұрын

    You can include Brazil's Fluminense as a sports club with a Jewish related history and fan base.

  • @patria3023
    @patria302310 ай бұрын

    whOOPS 4:23 (when you and the bros accidentally make your party name very similar to the nazis)

  • @CaptainTowll
    @CaptainTowll10 ай бұрын

    Surely you should be a Leicester fan out of solidarity with Lineker. He's from Leicester and spent the majority of his footalling career there.

  • @fazaam
    @fazaam10 ай бұрын

    you did'nt mention the unique Sephardic jewish community in Seattle which for many years was second largest Sephardic community in America

  • @lyralazers
    @lyralazers5 ай бұрын

    I think you're missing that colonialism does have a lot of inherent contradictions while still being colonialism, US and Aus were both colonies of unwanted and criminal populations, australia basically being a prison camp; and at the same time were strategic ways to expand britain's economic, military, and extractive power. these contradictions are the rule, not the exception, also true when analyzing zionism

  • @baneofbanes

    @baneofbanes

    5 ай бұрын

    Eh Australia may have started out as a penal colony but very quickly most of the settlers were not criminals.

  • @leiderdawg
    @leiderdawg10 ай бұрын

    11:05 It's true! We meet in person and yell at each other while trying to be more Zionist than the next

  • @cv990a4
    @cv990a410 ай бұрын

    On sanctions, it really depends on what you define as effective. Iranian sanctions have been devastating in many ways. It's just that the leadership of Iran is so fanatic it doesn't care. So, if the purpose of sanctions is to get Iran to change its policies that hasn't happened (actually, it kind of did happen, in the Obama-era deal with Iran, rolled back by Trump). But if it's to diminish Iran's economy, make Iran less powerful, that certainly has happened. Sanctions have a cumulative impact over time. Iran has been under sanctions for a very long time - even if the impact was to knock only 1% off its economic growth per year, by now that cumulative effect is substantial. Same thing is likely to be true for Russia. You will mostly see the impact of sanctions over time. Though things like the German elimination of gas imports are already having a pretty devastating effect (since Russia has very little way of transporting that gas to any other country - pipelines to China transport *other* gas to China, and Russia has too little LNG capacity to resell the gas that previously went to e.g. Germany.)

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah, my problem with peacetime sanctions is: look what it’s done (or hasn’t done) to North Korea. On the other hand, current sanctions against Russia have materially harmed its ability to fight, to the point that they’re constantly running out of weapons and ammo.

  • @cv990a4

    @cv990a4

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow I think if you want to criticize peacetime sanctions, the best example is Cuba, which is US stupidity. North Korea - effectively every meaningful country, even NoKo's main ally, has imposed sanctions - that strongly suggests no country can think of no better way of minimizing the danger posed by NoKo than by doing their best to suppress it short of military action. A state has to be pretty dang awful to get to that position. I understand the rationale for engagement as a strategy. But also the limits. The west faces a conundrum in China - the whole idea with China 20-25 years ago was hey, let them get rich, they'll become friends. Turns out... not so much. Are we supposed to engage with North Korea and thereby give the Kim regime more money and power in the hope that somehow they'll become better people? That seems a risky bet, when even their closest allies don't think it's wise. NoKo have told us, for decades, who they are - assassinations, bombings, kidnappings, organized crime, etc. Juche is also a wild ideology, with racial purity ideals that are extremely troubling - NoKo published vile racist things about Obama, for instance. Maybe, sometimes, suppression is the best you can do. What do you do with a state, like Russia, that engages is open and flagrant assassinations, such as what Russia has done in the UK on at least two occasions, and which has suborned western elections and engaged in all kinds of other terrible things? Turn the other cheek and continue engagement? You think Germany should continue to buy Russian gas? The interesting thing about Russia is that, notwithstanding their huge endowment of Soviet legacy equipment, they are running out of materiel. It's mind-boggling, it's another example of just how incredibly incompetent, corrupt and shambolic is that state, but it appears to be true.

  • @bentoth9555
    @bentoth95557 ай бұрын

    Speaking of the disproportionate effect of Fiddler on the Roof all I can say is "TRADITION!:

  • @mathiassalmon7968
    @mathiassalmon796810 ай бұрын

    Will get as close to 18 as possible

  • @electricangel4488
    @electricangel44889 ай бұрын

    The sports clubs kinda triggerd something for me. year ago we had a scandal in the netherlands on a row between the football clubs of feyenoord and Ajax. Beacause Feyenoord hooligan supporters have a very bad no good song about there Rivals in the club Ajax. And all i can remember is thinking to myself. ''i dint know the ajax club was jewish''

  • @dovi77
    @dovi7710 ай бұрын

    Brooklyn Cyclones!!!

  • @tiktokuniverse4367
    @tiktokuniverse436710 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your great videos! Could you make a video on the roman and venetian ghettos? :)

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    I actually planned to visit the Roman ghetto two years ago, but had to cancel. Rome has been taunting me ever since. I'll be changing flights there, but not with enough time to see anything sadly. Italy is #1 on my list for Europe.

  • @freedomclub6969
    @freedomclub696910 ай бұрын

    I am sorry I gave the 70th like...

  • @arigarin4480
    @arigarin448010 ай бұрын

    9:50 "hooliganism is not a thing in America" Bro go to Philly

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Philly people are repping Philly. And if they represent any specific political ideology, it is broadly socialist. They're not beating up antisemitic fans from a rival, right-wing Philly team that doesn't exist.

  • @arigarin4480

    @arigarin4480

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow that isn't the only form of hooliganism. They absolutely riot, stir shit, etc. Their football stadium had a jail and court inside for years.

  • @HVACSoldier
    @HVACSoldier10 ай бұрын

    FUN FACT: Sometimes, a “name change” might have happened, because people working at the immigration center like Ellis Island, etc. couldn’t pronounce the name properly. Like Corey, might be an “Anglicized” name of an Arabic name. I’m sure the same thing happened with Jews, and others, coming from Eastern Europe.

  • @SoManyDucks

    @SoManyDucks

    10 ай бұрын

    Just a heads up, at least according to last video's guest GeneaVlogger, this is actually is not true. Apparently Ellis Island employed a lot of people who could speak the languages of the various peoples coming through, so this is not where the name changes would have taken place. I suspect a lot of the formal name changes come with the naturalization process, which is implied in this video.

  • @SusanHays-uy6jm
    @SusanHays-uy6jm10 ай бұрын

    At Torreon, Mexico, the anti-Huerta rebels under Pancho Villa massacred the entire Chinese population of several hundred. The Chinese who wore nice suits were forced to strip, so the suits would not have bullet holes in them. A Chinese Mexican woman I know grew up in Torreon, and was there in high school on the centennial of the massacre. Mexican education and media did not mention the massacre. The young woman had never heard of the Torreon Massacre. No whiners or ethno-masochists in Mexico, which I find rather nice.

  • @ihavenojawandimustscream4681

    @ihavenojawandimustscream4681

    10 ай бұрын

    I think killing people is worse than whining about people being killed, but that's just me

  • @CyberMartian890
    @CyberMartian89010 ай бұрын

    Gary Liniker is a massive Leicester fan, so if you want to sopport Gary. Go with the foxes 🦊🦊🦊

  • @qounqer
    @qounqer10 ай бұрын

    I just want to apologize for all the times my ancestors shorted you guys on rent to buy vodka.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    Nah, fuck landlords.

  • @jonyprepperisrael60
    @jonyprepperisrael6010 ай бұрын

    what do you sayor think about those that say that Zionism is a western colonial scheme due to it being started by Ashkenazi jews? Since you official get involved on the reddit, I think its best if you prepare to those kind of questions, especially from r/askmiddleeast

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    10 ай бұрын

    I think they don't know who is or isn't Ashkenazi or what is or isn't "Western." The most westward-looking of the early Zionists were all of the Sephardic minhag: Montefiore, Alkalai, Herzl, Nordau, etc. They came from a culture that looked down on Ashkenazim for being too eastern.

  • @coe3408

    @coe3408

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@SamAronow Exactly. People the USA (including Ashkenazi jews) look at Sephardic Jews as exotic, and non-western (sometimes non-white), but as you have pointed out in your videos, the most westernized Jews until the mid 19th century, were Portuguese Sephardic Jews from Western Europe. Not an accident that Benjamin Disraeli was of Sephardic, not of Ashkenazi origin. Even the polemical issue jews and slavery in the Caribbean involves virtually only Sephardic Jews, who were indeed dominant as the white colonial class in the Dutch Caribbean.

  • @joaoribeiro5938

    @joaoribeiro5938

    10 ай бұрын

    These guys probably think that Ashkenazi Jews are descendants of Turkic or Slavic converts.

  • @Mr_Pilat
    @Mr_Pilat10 ай бұрын

    FIRST!

  • @coolandhip_7596
    @coolandhip_759610 ай бұрын

    10:50 calling the british conservative party "right wing" is a bit of stretch imo.

  • @patrickrowan6001

    @patrickrowan6001

    10 ай бұрын

    What? Why?

  • @2IDSGT
    @2IDSGT10 ай бұрын

    If you actually think the current British government is “right-wing,” you need to talk to more people.

  • @patrickrowan6001

    @patrickrowan6001

    10 ай бұрын

    The current British government is right wing

  • @Mark761966
    @Mark7619668 ай бұрын

    Sam. There's a Kossoff family in England. It produced both the actor David Kossoff and his son, who I'm sure your Mum and Dad have heard of, Paul; who played guitar with the hard rock band Free. I wonder if your mate Jake might be related? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Kossoff

  • @gavrielsolomons
    @gavrielsolomons10 ай бұрын

    Sam this video is very disappointing. You make clear your political bias and that's fair as long as it doesn't affect your videos too much. But increasingly it is. Your last one gave far too much positive attention to socialists and even attempted to apologise for antisemitic elements of them and Democrats. And now you've adopted a viewpoint on the Rwanda scheme based, as far as I can see, solely on taking the left-wing stance because it's left-wing. The parallels with Uganda are interesting but you ruin that by taking out the complexity with partisan commentary. For the record, as someone whose great grandparents came to this country in the wake of the Aliens Act, the immigration situation today is very different to then and the British public poll clearly in favour of the scheme as an attempt to get some control over the situation in the Channel. As for Lineker, I oppose his sacking on free speech grounds but he compared the government to the Nazis... Something inaccurate, highly offensive and laughable when the Conservatives even now enjoy majority support among British Jews and are very philosemitic and pro-Israel. Please stop letting your personal biases cause you to present a left-wing narrative as being factual. I love your channel and appreciate the research you put into your videos, but the videos are becoming increasingly uncomfortable to watch as the biases become more noticeable. Remember that not all Jews are secular socialists, as much as you might present the community and history itself as being overwhelmingly disposed that way. Make it so that I don't have to caveat sharing your videos by saying "he's a secular Socialist so keep that in mind when watching". I'll also note that while Tottenham is known as the "Yids", various other teams enjoy strong Jewish support, particularly regionally. And ironically, Arsenal, Tottenham's dual nemesis, has a similar share of Jewish football fans as Tottenham itself. Which my Jewish Arsenal-supporting friends would keenly point out. Edit: I'm sorry if this sounds aggressive. But so much content on the internet is politically biased and it would be a shame for this to be a defining feature of your videos. I'm asking you be more mindful of your own bias and not to paint history from an ideological perspective but factually and making space for differing interpretations.

  • @patrickrowan6001

    @patrickrowan6001

    10 ай бұрын

    The political views sam shares here are perfectly reasonable to the point of morally expected. Which part do you object to, out of interest? The part where he criticises deporting refugees? Wow, I’m sorry you had to expose your relatives to such atheistic communist rhetoric

  • @gavrielsolomons

    @gavrielsolomons

    10 ай бұрын

    @@patrickrowan6001 I hope you get over your arrogant ignorance.