@@connorhilchie2779 well if he used nerve gas in stalingrad before the 6th army invaded, it would have eliminated most of the russians defending there. Blanket all of stalingrad with gas.
@@M4A3E8_Sherman for real. despite what der fuhrer said about the slavs, they really were a different breed- almost like cast iron beasts. they deserve respect for their combat skills
This is how he achieved the Nobel peace prize as this was a revolutionary breakthrough not just for chemistry but for agricultural development which in turn forced massive cultural and societal changes
The visuals you put together gave me chills again. This story of Haber is a reminder that it is sometimes futile to sort certain figures into morally good or bad, making it difficult to treat their legacy and memory. A lot of times they may be both. Haber is probably the finest example of this.
In time Peace I belong to world. In time of War I belong to my Homeland. -Fritz Haubert Would He not invent poisonus gasses used in war houndred of thausends may would live. Would He not work with Bosh, bilions would starve to death.
Agreed it's hard witch one he is because he invented a faster way to make fertilizer but at the same time he invented a weapon as deadly as a nukeclear bomb if not as devistating it could be worse I hate to say it but both world wars used the most devistating weapons on earth to ever to be made
In my opinion there truly is no morally good nor bad. Some of the most "evil" people (say Adolf for example) had the best intentions "to help their country"
@@rougestorm1038 agreed there people in his government that did like Werner von baurn who invented the v2 rocket and then invented the Saturn 5 rocket for NASA that we used to go to the moon.
My great grandfather told my father when he was old when he fought in WW1 when he first saw the gas “was like a fog unlike I ever seen, I breathed some of that in and I never healed to this day I still smell it and it burns. Fuck that shit”
My greatgrandpa lost a lung during a gas attack. It led up to him dying after being in a house fire years later. He was in the hospital on the brink of death for a while.
@@mustang-vj1ih I would rather give this title to Napoleon, but apparently Henry Knox would be a talented logistician, expert in artillery and in logistics and transport (I did not know him at first.)
Amazing video. I especially love the inclusion of the scene from The Rise of Evil at the very end, as well as the auschwitz scenes showing that even after the 1st war it would still be used but rather than military targets it was used for a more nefarious purpose than ever thought of.
Haber was definitely rolling in his grave when a descendant of his creation was on innocent civilians. That is something that stands out about this particular video, showing the eventual regression of using gas, going from targeting troops in battle to non-combatants and people who have no chance; at least the Allied armies of the West developed and used gas masks to have a chance at surviving.
3:18 hearing the lyrics, I have listened to this song at least 50 times...and I never associated this song with Auschwitz. That sent chills down my spine....well done video ASCotter.
Fritz Haber developed Zyklon A. Which was a pesk control chemical. This was later perfected into Zyklon B. Which was ultimately used in the concentration camps. The ultimate irony is that Fritz Haber was a jew.
Not the first time he almost died during the war, he had a few close calls including a friendly fire accident that wiped out everyone in his unit but him
@@highshipper9222I'm pretty sure that's a British rumor of ww2. He most likely had 1 ball but from medical reasons not the war. Also if you lose 1 ball to a projectile anyone would scream like a girl because of the pain being so powerful that your voice box would start making sounds more like that (I don't speak english irl)
번역 A long ago in eastern Prussia (먼 옛날 동프로이센엔) Young men with great ambitions rise (큰 야망을 품은 사내가 자랐네) So who can tell me who can say for sure (그러니 어떤 이가 확실하게 내게 말할 수 있을까) Which one will win the Nobel Prize? (누가 노벨상을 수상할지?) It was a golden age for science (때는 과학의 황금기였고) The kaiserreich would hold the key (카이저라이히(독일제국)가 답을 알고 있었네) And as the conflict came and tension rose (그리고 갈등이 시작되고 긴장이 고조되며) The manifest of the 93 (93인의 성명서(93명의 과학자,예술가,철학가,작가들이 제 1차 세계대전 참전에 찬성한다는 성명서)) Haber-Bosch, the great alliance (하버와 보슈, 위대한 연합) Where's the contradiction? (모순은 어디에 있던가?) Fed the world by ways of science (과학의 길로 세계를 먹여살린 그는) Sinner or a saint? (죄인인가 성자인가?) Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare (독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지) His dark creation has been revealed (그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고) Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare (무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은) A deadly mist on the battlefield (전장의 치명적인 안개라네) "Perversion of ideals of science" ("과학의 이상적인 도착") Lost words of alienated wife (소외된 아내는 말을 잃었고) And in the trenches of the western front (서부전선의 참호속에서는) Unknowing soldiers pay the price (모르는 병사들이 목숨을 치뤘네) And on the battlefield they're dying (그들이 죽어가는 전장에서) And on the fields the crops are grown (작물이 자라가는 들판에서) So who can tell us what is right or wrong (누가 우리에게 옳고 그름을 말해주겠나?) Maths or morality alone? (수학인가 도덕성인가?) Haber-Bosch, the great alliance (하버와 보슈, 위대한 연합) Where's the contradiction? (모순은 어디에 있던가?) Fed the world by ways of science (과학의 길로 세계를 먹여살린 그는) Sinner or a saint? (죄인인가 성자인가?) Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare (독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지) His dark creation has been revealed (그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고) Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare (무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은) A deadly mist on the battlefield (전장의 치명적인 안개라네) Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare (독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지) His dark creation has been revealed (그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고) Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare (무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은) A deadly mist on the battlefield (전장의 치명적인 안개라네) During times when there's peace he belonged to the world (평화의 시절엔 세계를 위했고) During times when there's war he belonged to his place of birth (전쟁의 순간엔 그의 조국을 위했네) Where, will this lead? (이것이 무엇을 야기할 것인가?) What's coming next from your inventions? (너의 발명이 다음엔 무엇을 불러올 것인가?) We wonder where, where does it end? (우리는 이것이 어디서 끝나는지 알까?) Who can foresee, see what will be? (누가 예측하고, 무슨 일이 일어날지 알 수 있을까?) Haber-Bosch, the great alliance (하버와 보슈, 위대한 연합) Where's the contradiction? (모순은 어디에 있던가?) Fed the world by ways of science (과학의 길로 세계를 먹여살린 그는) Sinner or a saint? (죄인인가 성자인가?) Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare (독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지) His dark creation has been revealed (그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고) Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare (무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은) A deadly mist on the battlefield (전장의 치명적인 안개라네) Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare (독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지) His dark creation has been revealed (그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고) Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare (무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은) A deadly mist on the battlefield (전장의 치명적인 안개라네) 반박 환영
@@capt_noo He intended it ONLY for enemy combatants! Certainly not for helpless civilians. He spent his whole career, alongside Einstein, fighting against blood superstitions and similar nonsense. A big part of why he did what he did was that he thought it would solidify in most German’s views that ethnic Jews were as patriotic as everyone else, helping to end that superstition. Alas, it did not, in the end.
the story behind this song, shows a great truth, of scientific breakthroughs, meaning a great power when created can be used for both good and evil! Who uses it must know and be aware of it!
There is no debate. Haber and Bosch are saints by feeding the world and did what they could to defend their nation. Saints are never perfect. Great video to go with a great Sabaton song.
Саме іроничне, в його житті, що він змушений був тікати з Німеччини тому що був євреєм. Людина, яка була великим вченим, винахідником і патріотом батьківщини.
When his country called him he answered, when science called him, he answered. There's no definitive answer to the moral question of Haber or any other scientist like him.
This is a wonderful video. It shows not only the benefit of Haber's work, but the grim consequences of letting the genie out of the bottle. Haber, a Jew, converted to Christianity to further his career, was a fanatical German Nationalist, and a military veteran of 25 years. He re-enlisted at the beginning WWI and was immediately promoted to Captain and placed in charge of the German military's chemical weapons unit. Other gases were being tried before Haber took over the department, but it was Haber's decision to use Chlorine gas, (because it's heavy and settles downward). Fellow Nobel Laureates, James Franck, Gustav Hertz (both physics) and Otto Hahn (chemistry) served as gas troops in Haber’s unit. He was present at the first deployment of Chlorine gas at the Battle of Ypres. He defended the weapon against accusations that it was inhumane, saying that death was death, regardless of how it was inflicted. “The disapproval that the knight had for the man with the firearm is repeated in the soldier who shoots with steel bullets towards the man who confronts him with chemical weapons,” he said. “The gas weapons are not at all more cruel than the flying iron pieces; on the contrary, the fraction of fatal gas diseases is comparatively smaller, the mutilations are missing.” - Fritz Haber In his studies of the weapon’s effects, Haber noted that exposure to a low concentration for a long time often had the same effect-death-as exposure to a high concentration for a short time. He formulated a simple mathematical relationship between the gas concentration and the necessary exposure time. This relationship became known as Haber’s Rule. He continued his work in chemical warfare after WWI ended, and was the subject of much scrutiny and was harshly criticized for his involvement with the development of chemical weapons by many of his peers--Albert Einstein most notably. Haber was forced to flee Germany in the 30s, and died in exile in 1936. Ironically, (and brilliantly illustrated in this video), he was responsible for the development of the pesticide Zyklon-A, which spawned Zyklon-B: the infamous gas used in concentration camps. Interestingly (and sadly), his two children killed themselves after the 1918 Armistice, and in another morbid twist of fate, members of Haber's own family were murdered by the Nazis in concentration camps. Despite the controversy surrounding Haber and his work, the Minerva Foundation of the Max Planck Society and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem established the Fritz Haber Research Center for Molecular Dynamics, based at the Institute of Chemistry of the Hebrew University in 1981. Its purpose is the promotion of Israeli-German scientific collaboration in the field of molecular dynamics. The center also houses the Fritz Haber Library.
I was born and raised in Italy close to the Austro-Slovenian boarder - where 1st World War trenches digged up in the Alps can still be seen up on the slopes. My acquired uncle's father was a very young medical lieutenant in the Alpine artillery. He used to tell his son the story of five soldiers who had come back from the advanced position. They were laughing, but on the overall they wer in a good condition. No wounds, no other visible deteriorations. They were just laughing loud and as hours passed the laughter became hysterical. They were dead, all of them, within 48 hours. It was the only time the young medical doctor witnessed such a thing. It was some hyprite test - I am not sure.
Polish Translation of the lyrics: (Polskie Tłumaczenie Dawno temu w wschodniej Prusji Młodzi ludzie z wielkimi ambicjami powstają Więc kto mi powie z wielką pewnością, Kto otrzyma nagrodę Nobla? To był złoty wiek dla nauki Kaiserreich, on, trzymał klucz A kiedy starcie nadszedłą i tensje wielkie, Manifest dziewięćdziesiąt trzy [Refren] Haber-Bosch, wielkie przymierze Gdzie jest kontradykcja? Nakarmił świat w sposób nauki, Grześnik czy święty? Ojciec groźnego gazu i chemicznej wojny Jego kreacja została odkryta Nad ziemą niczyją, trujące piekło Śmiertelna mgła na polu bitwy [Koniec Refrenu] "Perwersje ideałów nauki" Stracone słowa jego żony I w okopach frontu na zachodzie, Nieznani żołnieże płacą dług I w walce oni giną, I na polach, rosną plony Więc kto nam powie, Co dobre i złe Nauka czy moralność sama? [Refren] Haber-Bosch, wielkie przymierze Gdzie jest kontradykcja? Nakarmił świat w sposób nauki, Grześnik czy święty? Ojciec groźnego gazu i chemicznej wojny Jego kreacja została odkryta Nad ziemą niczyją, trujące piekło Śmiertelna mgła na polu bitwy x2 [Koniec Refrenu] Kiedy na świecie jest pokój to do Ziemi on należy Kiedy na świecie jest wojna to należy to swojej ojczyzny! Gdzie.. To dojdzie? Co następne? Po wynalazkach? Myślimy, Gdzie, Gdzie się skończy? Kto zobaczy, Co z tym będzie? [Refren] Haber-Bosch, wielkie przymierze Gdzie jest kontradykcja? Nakarmił świat w sposób nauki, Grześnik czy święty? Ojciec groźnego gazu i chemicznej wojny Jego kreacja została odkryta Nad ziemą niczyją, trujące piekło Śmiertelna mgła na polu bitwy x2 [Koniec Refrenu]
This is a key example of a good man being twisted to turn something good into a weapon. I'm just glad he didn't live to see the extension of his invention past his life-time.
@@Dave-ks9fi Your talking about someone building a weapon to save his own from death by killing the other at that moment in time . Just like the Nuke. How would he had reacted if he knew what was to happen after the first world war and onwards.
Was wondering for your next Sabaton video if you could do one about Screaming Eagles as I always wanted to see a scene of the Germans receiving the reply of NUTS! while Sabaton played in the background.
I wouldn't say he saved mankind, we got on just fine for tens of thousands of years without him. If even the likes of the black death couldn't stop us, having to wait a while for another chemist to create a better fertilizer wouldn't either.
Без работ учёных.Без новых технологических прорывов существование человечества бессмысленно.Будут ли новые технологии использованны на благо человечества или уничтожат миллионы это ответственность военных и политиков.
Конкретно тут - это полностью его ответственность. Именно он пришёл с предложением превратить его изобретение в оружие, и он командовал первым применением газа на Ипре за что был удостоен звания капитана (хотя он не служил). Инициатива хим оружия в первой мировой полностью за ним: модификация огнемётной смеси, иприт, хлор и даже приложил руку к зарину, хотя там в основе стоял Шрадер) - все хим оружие первой мировой стоит за его предложениями. А вот во второй его как раз использовали. Под угрозой смерти (из-за того что он был евреем) он разработал Циклон А, а после смерти с его нароботок сделали Циклон Б. Вот почему в песне звучит вопрос: Грешник или святой ?. Он создавал аммиак исключительно из мирных целей (удобрение и пестициды которыми пользуются до сих пор, что позволило прокормить миллионы), но он так же предложил и реализовал это в оружие.
There' seems to be a bit of confusion about the "double-edged sword" of Haber's work. The Haber process (or Haber-Bosch process) for ammonia production indeed enabled the production of inexpensive fertilisers that boosted crop yields and made famine a thing of the past for billions of people over the decades. But that same ammonia which can be used to make fertilisers can also be used to produce explosives, and this effectively prolonged WWI because without the Haber process, Germany would have quickly run out of nitrate compounds to produce high explosives since they had to previously import the raw materials, instead of being able to synthesize those compounds at home. And yes, Fritz Haber also pioneered Germany's chemical weapons programme during the Great War, and was a staunch defender of the use of chemical weapons. However, the Haber process wasn't used for chemical weapon production, nor did Haber "invent" chlorine gas. Chlorine is a toxic chemical element which was first isolated about 125 years before the start of WWI. The irony of Fritz Haber's career is that the same man who developed a method that saved billions from starvation also helped develop munitions responsible for killing and maiming millions, and pioneered a uniquely horrible type of weapon. When the Nazis came to power in 1933, however, they didn't care a fig for how Haber had saved Germany from a much earlier defeat in WWI--they were happy to throw Haber's surviving relatives into concentration camps on account of the fact that the Haber family was Jewish. If WWI was "the chemist's war," then WWII was "the physicist's war" due to the development of atomic weapons near the end of that conflict.
The scenes from The Boy In The Striped Pajamas reminds me of when I told one of my friends that chemical warfare is mostly forbidden since 1925, she said: "well someone had a preference for it in ww2 didn't he?"
Damm good Music video with perfect editing. I truly see him as a monster but you also can call him a Hero As it perfectly sums up humanity In many ways of its own. I also he was a nationalist and i don't that he made it for his country but of course it made the war last longer
@@filipnassen9076 Several nasty naval wars for control of guano islands and major bat caves had been increasing throughout the 1890s-early 1900s, and only stopped when his discovery made international headlines. Without him, those would have only grown more and more deadly. We’d no longer be able to honor our dead with burials or ritual cremation, bone and fat nitrates would have HAD to be returned to the soil quickly, not slowed by embalming fluid or dumped into the air by fire. That would have been intolerable to most cultures, besides the Tibetans and Mongolians.
It’s hard to imange this happens in real life 🤯in fact as you see he died in ww2 1938 it’s crazy to think about that it’s only 2022 that means-100 it means the year would be 1922they would be using the dangerous chemicals back then then in fact it has not even Ben 100 years since ww2 and all of this happing less then 100 years 😳dam I got goose bumps😳
@@connorhilchie2779 huh interesting 🤔also how did he get kick out in Germany if he died during the war ? 😐in 1938? The war ended in 1942 so was he REALLY kicked out ? Or is their more to the story?🧐
No matter how many lives you save, the thing he created was the reason for a entire new era of warfare, one of brutality, he should have been tried for his crimes not given a Nobel prize.
For every man he killed, he saved 10 children from starvation and hellish wars for dwindling resources. Imagine civil wars over the last few small caves full of bat crap, or naval wars for the very last guano islands.
I as an Orthodox Christian like to ponder what could have happened had the Gallipoli offensive been a success. Churchill blamed the Admiralty for ruining their opportunity to surprise the Turks, but no, they were SO well prepared, that they knew they were coming. I lean to the theory that Saint Czar Nicholas had a German spy leak in his intelligence network, who then shared it with the Turks. What if that spy had been stopped? Part of the plan had been to liberate and arm the Armenians against their oppressors, which would have massively turned the tide. The Australians and Russians would have marched into Constantinople and taken back the Hagia Sophia for Christendom! Then, they’d have turned a blind eye as the surviving Armenians sought revenge after seeing the killing fields of Armenian corpses.
the way some weapons coincidentally was developed as an unintended product of good intentioned research is very unfortunate. at this point those that fall into this category included (not limited to): 1. gun powder from attempt to make elixir of immortality 2. TNT from development of safer explosives for mining 3. chemical weapons from development of method to manufacture chemical fertilizer 4. nuclear bombs from research into fundamental of matter
Idk if anyone noticed but the German soldier struggling to breathe at the end is supposedly suppose to be the future dictator of Germany
Some people say his experience getting gassed is why he himself didn't use any(despite having a decent supply and at the suggestion of his advisors)
@@connorhilchie2779 well if he used nerve gas in stalingrad before the 6th army invaded, it would have eliminated most of the russians defending there. Blanket all of stalingrad with gas.
@@russjiao-long5387 kinda, the gas blows with the wind, if the wind is coming to you, you will only gas yourself
@@russjiao-long5387 yeah but i think a scenario like the attack of the dead men would happen again
@@M4A3E8_Sherman for real. despite what der fuhrer said about the slavs, they really were a different breed- almost like cast iron beasts. they deserve respect for their combat skills
The Haber-Bosch process produces ammonia, important for fertilizer, hence the wheat, if anyone was wondering.
And it didn't require any particularly expensive equipment, either.
This is how he achieved the Nobel peace prize as this was a revolutionary breakthrough not just for chemistry but for agricultural development which in turn forced massive cultural and societal changes
Thanks man🫡
@@deathkorpsofkreig475 He definitely did not achieve the peace prize. Don't confuse peace with chemistry.
also ammonia used in gunpowder production
The visuals you put together gave me chills again. This story of Haber is a reminder that it is sometimes futile to sort certain figures into morally good or bad, making it difficult to treat their legacy and memory. A lot of times they may be both. Haber is probably the finest example of this.
In time Peace I belong to world. In time of War I belong to my Homeland. -Fritz Haubert
Would He not invent poisonus gasses used in war houndred of thausends may would live. Would He not work with Bosh, bilions would starve to death.
Fritz Harber, the man who killed millions to save billions.
Agreed it's hard witch one he is because he invented a faster way to make fertilizer but at the same time he invented a weapon as deadly as a nukeclear bomb if not as devistating it could be worse I hate to say it but both world wars used the most devistating weapons on earth to ever to be made
In my opinion there truly is no morally good nor bad.
Some of the most "evil" people (say Adolf for example) had the best intentions "to help their country"
@@rougestorm1038 agreed there people in his government that did like Werner von baurn who invented the v2 rocket and then invented the Saturn 5 rocket for NASA that we used to go to the moon.
My great grandfather told my father when he was old when he fought in WW1 when he first saw the gas “was like a fog unlike I ever seen, I breathed some of that in and I never healed to this day I still smell it and it burns. Fuck that shit”
My greatgrandpa lost a lung during a gas attack. It led up to him dying after being in a house fire years later. He was in the hospital on the brink of death for a while.
@@Niroc98 👌
I feel bad for everyone who fought in those wars. and even then I wasn't born during either of the 2
damn. do u have any documents from that era?
Haber is a fascinating man cause i truly feel he quite well embodies the human condition
I agree, the human condition both seeks to help and harm itself.
Pretty much humanity it sums it well
Can someone please explain to me what is meant my "human condition"?
I heard it a few times
@@Boone69 Our ability to subsume all humanity in order to ensure victory for our tribe.
@@huginnmuninn2155 Thank you
3:17 I love that one detail where when he says "Where will this lead?" we actually see where this leads! Well executed
"well executed" poor poor choice of words
@@soupfork6357 💀
@@I_Am_Scp_049 Accurate with the prisoners on Auschwitz
@@I_Am_Scp_049 mista white
This is what I'm missing in the official release. They should have added at least a silhouette of the famous Auschwitz gate in the clip.
its amazing that in the final moments of the video we see a certain dictator facing the wrath of a creation meant for his side.
The same creation used to kill millions by said dictator...
A certain failed painter
"Father of toxic gas, a chemical nightmare" such a hard hitting banger of a line
Imagine being called "The Father of Artillery", or "Father of Air Possession", or something like that.
@@altier1119there was a person known as the father of artillery. It was general Henry Knox
@@mustang-vj1ih I would rather give this title to Napoleon, but apparently Henry Knox would be a talented logistician, expert in artillery and in logistics and transport (I did not know him at first.)
"Father of toxic gas and chemical warfare" not "Father of toxic gas, a chemical nightmare"
@@Gondaldin sure buddy
Amazing video. I especially love the inclusion of the scene from The Rise of Evil at the very end, as well as the auschwitz scenes showing that even after the 1st war it would still be used but rather than military targets it was used for a more nefarious purpose than ever thought of.
Haber was definitely rolling in his grave when a descendant of his creation was on innocent civilians. That is something that stands out about this particular video, showing the eventual regression of using gas, going from targeting troops in battle to non-combatants and people who have no chance; at least the Allied armies of the West developed and used gas masks to have a chance at surviving.
the begining of the song feels so powerful with the visuals of waves of poison gas flowing forward, so mighty great work
3:18 hearing the lyrics, I have listened to this song at least 50 times...and I never associated this song with Auschwitz. That sent chills down my spine....well done video ASCotter.
The Germans were killing the Jews with a gas invented by a Jew (Zyklon-B).
Fritz Haber developed Zyklon A. Which was a pesk control chemical. This was later perfected into Zyklon B. Which was ultimately used in the concentration camps. The ultimate irony is that Fritz Haber was a jew.
Haber's institute was the one that invented Zyklon-B. Veritasium talked about it
You truly know how to embed the music with the perfect video sequences! Keep up your great works!
This is even better than I thought it would be. Excellent work!
4:27 adolf nearly dying from mustard gas
Not the first time he almost died during the war, he had a few close calls including a friendly fire accident that wiped out everyone in his unit but him
@@connorhilchie2779History was cursed to have that monster survive...
Yeah that’s him at the end
He also lost a ball during a battle. In fact a soldier who fought alongside him when it happened said 'He screamed like a girl'
@@highshipper9222I'm pretty sure that's a British rumor of ww2. He most likely had 1 ball but from medical reasons not the war. Also if you lose 1 ball to a projectile anyone would scream like a girl because of the pain being so powerful that your voice box would start making sounds more like that (I don't speak english irl)
Very interesting composition
The bodies of your generation will feed the land by composting.
번역
A long ago in eastern Prussia
(먼 옛날 동프로이센엔)
Young men with great ambitions rise
(큰 야망을 품은 사내가 자랐네)
So who can tell me who can say for sure
(그러니 어떤 이가 확실하게 내게 말할 수 있을까)
Which one will win the Nobel Prize?
(누가 노벨상을 수상할지?)
It was a golden age for science
(때는 과학의 황금기였고)
The kaiserreich would hold the key
(카이저라이히(독일제국)가 답을 알고 있었네)
And as the conflict came and tension rose
(그리고 갈등이 시작되고 긴장이 고조되며)
The manifest of the 93
(93인의 성명서(93명의 과학자,예술가,철학가,작가들이 제 1차 세계대전 참전에 찬성한다는 성명서))
Haber-Bosch, the great alliance
(하버와 보슈, 위대한 연합)
Where's the contradiction?
(모순은 어디에 있던가?)
Fed the world by ways of science
(과학의 길로 세계를 먹여살린 그는)
Sinner or a saint?
(죄인인가 성자인가?)
Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare
(독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지)
His dark creation has been revealed
(그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고)
Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare
(무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은)
A deadly mist on the battlefield
(전장의 치명적인 안개라네)
"Perversion of ideals of science"
("과학의 이상적인 도착")
Lost words of alienated wife
(소외된 아내는 말을 잃었고)
And in the trenches of the western front
(서부전선의 참호속에서는)
Unknowing soldiers pay the price
(모르는 병사들이 목숨을 치뤘네)
And on the battlefield they're dying
(그들이 죽어가는 전장에서)
And on the fields the crops are grown
(작물이 자라가는 들판에서)
So who can tell us what is right or wrong
(누가 우리에게 옳고 그름을 말해주겠나?)
Maths or morality alone?
(수학인가 도덕성인가?)
Haber-Bosch, the great alliance
(하버와 보슈, 위대한 연합)
Where's the contradiction?
(모순은 어디에 있던가?)
Fed the world by ways of science
(과학의 길로 세계를 먹여살린 그는)
Sinner or a saint?
(죄인인가 성자인가?)
Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare
(독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지)
His dark creation has been revealed
(그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고)
Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare
(무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은)
A deadly mist on the battlefield
(전장의 치명적인 안개라네)
Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare
(독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지)
His dark creation has been revealed
(그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고)
Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare
(무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은)
A deadly mist on the battlefield
(전장의 치명적인 안개라네)
During times when there's peace he belonged to the world
(평화의 시절엔 세계를 위했고)
During times when there's war he belonged to his place of birth
(전쟁의 순간엔 그의 조국을 위했네)
Where, will this lead?
(이것이 무엇을 야기할 것인가?)
What's coming next from your inventions?
(너의 발명이 다음엔 무엇을 불러올 것인가?)
We wonder where, where does it end?
(우리는 이것이 어디서 끝나는지 알까?)
Who can foresee, see what will be?
(누가 예측하고, 무슨 일이 일어날지 알 수 있을까?)
Haber-Bosch, the great alliance
(하버와 보슈, 위대한 연합)
Where's the contradiction?
(모순은 어디에 있던가?)
Fed the world by ways of science
(과학의 길로 세계를 먹여살린 그는)
Sinner or a saint?
(죄인인가 성자인가?)
Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare
(독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지)
His dark creation has been revealed
(그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고)
Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare
(무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은)
A deadly mist on the battlefield
(전장의 치명적인 안개라네)
Father of toxic gas, and chemical warfare
(독성가스와 생화학무기의 아버지)
His dark creation has been revealed
(그의 어두운 발명이 깨어나고)
Flow over no man's land, a poisonous nightmare
(무인지대로 흘러가는 그 맹독의 악몽은)
A deadly mist on the battlefield
(전장의 치명적인 안개라네)
반박 환영
고맙소 동무
3:18 gives me the chills
@Darth Nihilus he truly did not deserve the blame for it
@Darth Nihilus but fritz defended the use of poison gas in war? unless you're talking about someone else
edit: ok
@@capt_noo
He intended it ONLY for enemy combatants! Certainly not for helpless civilians. He spent his whole career, alongside Einstein, fighting against blood superstitions and similar nonsense. A big part of why he did what he did was that he thought it would solidify in most German’s views that ethnic Jews were as patriotic as everyone else, helping to end that superstition. Alas, it did not, in the end.
@Darth Nihilus oh right
@@capt_noo Killing enemy soldiers in war is very different to mass executions of your own civilians.
Amazing work on this ascotter! i'm glad your other videos are getting recognized!!
What I like is in the instrumental, you showcased the benefits of ammonia, in contrast to the intro.
the story behind this song, shows a great truth, of scientific breakthroughs, meaning a great power when created can be used for both good and evil! Who uses it must know and be aware of it!
Though the audio quality sucks
YT videos rarely leave me breathless.
But you've definitely managed to do just that.
Thank you!
💀
This is one of your best. Very well done
This channel is a gem of History material
Great work putting these together
Very haunting video👍👍great work as always 👍👍
There is no debate. Haber and Bosch are saints by feeding the world and did what they could to defend their nation. Saints are never perfect. Great video to go with a great Sabaton song.
They're not saints, nor devils
They're scientists
@@RandomFurry07no, they are human
He's contributions are still a significant net positive to humanity.
this song is so sad and beautifull at the same time becouse of how it feels while listening to it and knowing the story behind the history of it,
And just like that, he disappeared with a banger.
The path to hell is paved with good intentions and the cobblestones are the skulls of the fallen.
Thanks for making this alternative clip. It's really amazing
This song took me half a year for it to grow on me but now I love it. It's strange isn't it? Hope you're doing well Otter!
I was excited for this. Worth watching, innit
unlike some videos
Your videos are so awesome every time
Meno male che c'è questo gruppo che sensibilizza e racconta questi fatti realmente accaduti......😢😢😢😢😢GRANDI.....
Adolf Hitler is the guy at the end with the Iron Cross
Yep, he got it on in time, unfortunately.
@@eldermillennial8330 Exactly, if only he didn't
@@eldermillennial8330 Can’t forget the time a british soldier had him in his sights but didn’t shoot.
Incredible video! Well done!
Awesome
You are right, Herr von Richthofen.
I- I thought you were kaputt??!!!??
@@JD-jn3eu Nein he wasnt Kaputt thats a lie from ur germans the truth is we froze him so we can revive him later
You're also awesome
@@floriankanzaki2085 I'm a zombie
Always great work cotter!
Саме іроничне, в його житті, що він змушений був тікати з Німеччини тому що був євреєм.
Людина, яка була великим вченим, винахідником і патріотом батьківщини.
This is really good tbh
Great Work!, though I don't prescribe to the Zyklon-B shower hype I did enjoy this endeavor, you earned a sub, Prosit!
Great job
When his country called him he answered, when science called him, he answered. There's no definitive answer to the moral question of Haber or any other scientist like him.
This is a wonderful video. It shows not only the benefit of Haber's work, but the grim consequences of letting the genie out of the bottle. Haber, a Jew, converted to Christianity to further his career, was a fanatical German Nationalist, and a military veteran of 25 years. He re-enlisted at the beginning WWI and was immediately promoted to Captain and placed in charge of the German military's chemical weapons unit. Other gases were being tried before Haber took over the department, but it was Haber's decision to use Chlorine gas, (because it's heavy and settles downward). Fellow Nobel Laureates, James Franck, Gustav Hertz (both physics) and Otto Hahn (chemistry) served as gas troops in Haber’s unit. He was present at the first deployment of Chlorine gas at the Battle of Ypres. He defended the weapon against accusations that it was inhumane, saying that death was death, regardless of how it was inflicted.
“The disapproval that the knight had for the man with the firearm is repeated in the soldier who shoots with steel bullets towards the man who confronts him with chemical weapons,” he said. “The gas weapons are not at all more cruel than the flying iron pieces; on the contrary, the fraction of fatal gas diseases is comparatively smaller, the mutilations are missing.” - Fritz Haber
In his studies of the weapon’s effects, Haber noted that exposure to a low concentration for a long time often had the same effect-death-as exposure to a high concentration for a short time. He formulated a simple mathematical relationship between the gas concentration and the necessary exposure time. This relationship became known as Haber’s Rule. He continued his work in chemical warfare after WWI ended, and was the subject of much scrutiny and was harshly criticized for his involvement with the development of chemical weapons by many of his peers--Albert Einstein most notably.
Haber was forced to flee Germany in the 30s, and died in exile in 1936. Ironically, (and brilliantly illustrated in this video), he was responsible for the development of the pesticide Zyklon-A, which spawned Zyklon-B: the infamous gas used in concentration camps. Interestingly (and sadly), his two children killed themselves after the 1918 Armistice, and in another morbid twist of fate, members of Haber's own family were murdered by the Nazis in concentration camps.
Despite the controversy surrounding Haber and his work, the Minerva Foundation of the Max Planck Society and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem established the Fritz Haber Research Center for Molecular Dynamics, based at the Institute of Chemistry of the Hebrew University in 1981. Its purpose is the promotion of Israeli-German scientific collaboration in the field of molecular dynamics. The center also houses the Fritz Haber Library.
I bet even today theirs people who look upon this man with loathing in their hearts.
1:28 WOW that powerful ! He said "Help me !"
Sorry to spoil your bubble, but that was actually "Albie" in reference to his friend before he was consumed by the gas.
I was born and raised in Italy close to the Austro-Slovenian boarder - where 1st World War trenches digged up in the Alps can still be seen up on the slopes. My acquired uncle's father was a very young medical lieutenant in the Alpine artillery. He used to tell his son the story of five soldiers who had come back from the advanced position. They were laughing, but on the overall they wer in a good condition. No wounds, no other visible deteriorations. They were just laughing loud and as hours passed the laughter became hysterical. They were dead, all of them, within 48 hours. It was the only time the young medical doctor witnessed such a thing. It was some hyprite test - I am not sure.
Great work.
Great job mate
Excellent video my man
Good work on the video
1:06 gas joke💀
Great video! Gives me the ambition to make it again.
perfection :)
Polish Translation of the lyrics:
(Polskie Tłumaczenie
Dawno temu w wschodniej Prusji
Młodzi ludzie z wielkimi ambicjami powstają
Więc kto mi powie z wielką pewnością,
Kto otrzyma nagrodę Nobla?
To był złoty wiek dla nauki
Kaiserreich, on, trzymał klucz
A kiedy starcie nadszedłą i tensje wielkie,
Manifest dziewięćdziesiąt trzy
[Refren]
Haber-Bosch, wielkie przymierze
Gdzie jest kontradykcja?
Nakarmił świat w sposób nauki,
Grześnik czy święty?
Ojciec groźnego gazu i chemicznej wojny
Jego kreacja została odkryta
Nad ziemą niczyją, trujące piekło
Śmiertelna mgła na polu bitwy
[Koniec Refrenu]
"Perwersje ideałów nauki"
Stracone słowa jego żony
I w okopach frontu na zachodzie,
Nieznani żołnieże płacą dług
I w walce oni giną,
I na polach, rosną plony
Więc kto nam powie,
Co dobre i złe
Nauka czy moralność sama?
[Refren]
Haber-Bosch, wielkie przymierze
Gdzie jest kontradykcja?
Nakarmił świat w sposób nauki,
Grześnik czy święty?
Ojciec groźnego gazu i chemicznej wojny
Jego kreacja została odkryta
Nad ziemą niczyją, trujące piekło
Śmiertelna mgła na polu bitwy x2
[Koniec Refrenu]
Kiedy na świecie jest pokój
to do Ziemi on należy
Kiedy na świecie jest wojna
to należy to swojej
ojczyzny!
Gdzie.. To dojdzie?
Co następne?
Po wynalazkach?
Myślimy, Gdzie,
Gdzie się skończy?
Kto zobaczy,
Co z tym będzie?
[Refren]
Haber-Bosch, wielkie przymierze
Gdzie jest kontradykcja?
Nakarmił świat w sposób nauki,
Grześnik czy święty?
Ojciec groźnego gazu i chemicznej wojny
Jego kreacja została odkryta
Nad ziemą niczyją, trujące piekło
Śmiertelna mgła na polu bitwy x2
[Koniec Refrenu]
This is a key example of a good man being twisted to turn something good into a weapon. I'm just glad he didn't live to see the extension of his invention past his life-time.
You might want to read more about him. He personally went to the trenches to check the equipment and had no feelings about it after the war.
@@Dave-ks9fi Your talking about someone building a weapon to save his own from death by killing the other at that moment in time . Just like the Nuke. How would he had reacted if he knew what was to happen after the first world war and onwards.
@@insainetrooper7489 Oppenheimer felt really bad for example
이젠.. 한국어 자막을 볼 수 없는것인가..
Allied Troops: why do I smell mustard gas?
Fritz Haber: 😈
Plants: Mm, this gas smells good, lets check it out
Someone get a condenser and some hotdogs.
Was wondering for your next Sabaton video if you could do one about Screaming Eagles as I always wanted to see a scene of the Germans receiving the reply of NUTS! while Sabaton played in the background.
this video gives me the chills
Amazing work
You gave me PTSD from a past life i had in WW1...... the memories..... the SCREAMING!
全人類の未来を救い、一方で何千万人も殺すことになった悲劇の科学者…
I wouldn't say he saved mankind, we got on just fine for tens of thousands of years without him. If even the likes of the black death couldn't stop us, having to wait a while for another chemist to create a better fertilizer wouldn't either.
Без работ учёных.Без новых технологических прорывов существование человечества бессмысленно.Будут ли новые технологии использованны на благо человечества или уничтожат миллионы это ответственность военных и политиков.
Конкретно тут - это полностью его ответственность. Именно он пришёл с предложением превратить его изобретение в оружие, и он командовал первым применением газа на Ипре за что был удостоен звания капитана (хотя он не служил). Инициатива хим оружия в первой мировой полностью за ним: модификация огнемётной смеси, иприт, хлор и даже приложил руку к зарину, хотя там в основе стоял Шрадер) - все хим оружие первой мировой стоит за его предложениями. А вот во второй его как раз использовали. Под угрозой смерти (из-за того что он был евреем) он разработал Циклон А, а после смерти с его нароботок сделали Циклон Б. Вот почему в песне звучит вопрос: Грешник или святой ?. Он создавал аммиак исключительно из мирных целей (удобрение и пестициды которыми пользуются до сих пор, что позволило прокормить миллионы), но он так же предложил и реализовал это в оружие.
@@soft_er0030 До Второй Мировой он не дожил и уехал из Германии перед смертью.
Wonderful
Well put together!
My guys really made a Veritasium Video into a Sabaton Song lmao
An invention that would improve lives and take lives. Where's the evil in this invention and where's the good? There's no difference anyway more.
There' seems to be a bit of confusion about the "double-edged sword" of Haber's work. The Haber process (or Haber-Bosch process) for ammonia production indeed enabled the production of inexpensive fertilisers that boosted crop yields and made famine a thing of the past for billions of people over the decades.
But that same ammonia which can be used to make fertilisers can also be used to produce explosives, and this effectively prolonged WWI because without the Haber process, Germany would have quickly run out of nitrate compounds to produce high explosives since they had to previously import the raw materials, instead of being able to synthesize those compounds at home.
And yes, Fritz Haber also pioneered Germany's chemical weapons programme during the Great War, and was a staunch defender of the use of chemical weapons. However, the Haber process wasn't used for chemical weapon production, nor did Haber "invent" chlorine gas. Chlorine is a toxic chemical element which was first isolated about 125 years before the start of WWI.
The irony of Fritz Haber's career is that the same man who developed a method that saved billions from starvation also helped develop munitions responsible for killing and maiming millions, and pioneered a uniquely horrible type of weapon. When the Nazis came to power in 1933, however, they didn't care a fig for how Haber had saved Germany from a much earlier defeat in WWI--they were happy to throw Haber's surviving relatives into concentration camps on account of the fact that the Haber family was Jewish.
If WWI was "the chemist's war," then WWII was "the physicist's war" due to the development of atomic weapons near the end of that conflict.
The video gives me chills, "Where will this lead"?
I hate to say it, but the video is much better than the one sabaton made
The ultimate mixed legacy
The scenes from The Boy In The Striped Pajamas reminds me of when I told one of my friends that chemical warfare is mostly forbidden since 1925, she said: "well someone had a preference for it in ww2 didn't he?"
0:53 The third member of the group who did nothing, introducing the guys who actually did everything:
Da best
Damm good Music video with perfect editing.
I truly see him as a monster but you also can call him a Hero
As it perfectly sums up humanity
In many ways of its own.
I also he was a nationalist and i don't that he made it for his country but of course it made the war last longer
Well, without him humanity would stagger and massive famine would claim billions of people and lead to wars for resources all over the world.
Pretty true now the question is IS HE A SAINT OR A SINNER!
And you see him as a sinner while I don't.
@@filipnassen9076
Several nasty naval wars for control of guano islands and major bat caves had been increasing throughout the 1890s-early 1900s, and only stopped when his discovery made international headlines. Without him, those would have only grown more and more deadly. We’d no longer be able to honor our dead with burials or ritual cremation, bone and fat nitrates would have HAD to be returned to the soil quickly, not slowed by embalming fluid or dumped into the air by fire. That would have been intolerable to most cultures, besides the Tibetans and Mongolians.
It’s hard to imange this happens in real life 🤯in fact as you see he died in ww2 1938 it’s crazy to think about that it’s only 2022 that means-100 it means the year would be 1922they would be using the dangerous chemicals back then then in fact it has not even Ben 100 years since ww2 and all of this happing less then 100 years 😳dam I got goose bumps😳
If I remember correctly he didn't live long enough to see WW2 and the holocost. He did get kicked out of Nazi Germany for being a Jew though
@@connorhilchie2779 huh interesting 🤔also how did he get kick out in Germany if he died during the war ? 😐in 1938? The war ended in 1942 so was he REALLY kicked out ? Or is their more to the story?🧐
@@jettmthebluedragon you are off by 3 years 1945 was the end of the war
@@thebloodmoonwarrior I’m was not talking about the war I was referring to the death of well the father of this video 😐I don’t remember his name 😓
I love how they added the gas chamber scene from movie: " The boys in the striped pajams"....
My favorite sabaton song, btw great scientist amd very smart and patriotic man, he deserved such a good song at least
Good video.
No matter how many lives you save, the thing he created was the reason for a entire new era of warfare, one of brutality, he should have been tried for his crimes not given a Nobel prize.
For every man he killed, he saved 10 children from starvation and hellish wars for dwindling resources. Imagine civil wars over the last few small caves full of bat crap, or naval wars for the very last guano islands.
Am i the only one who thinks the kaiser in the beginning looked kind of hot he had this leather Steampunk look an little bit thats hot
한국인들 소속을 밝히시오(중복선택 가능)
1. 사바톤팬
2. 밀덕
3. 역사덕후
다
If you ever do Cliffs of Gallipoli, you should show the HMHS _Britannic_ at least once.
I as an Orthodox Christian like to ponder what could have happened had the Gallipoli offensive been a success. Churchill blamed the Admiralty for ruining their opportunity to surprise the Turks, but no, they were SO well prepared, that they knew they were coming. I lean to the theory that Saint Czar Nicholas had a German spy leak in his intelligence network, who then shared it with the Turks.
What if that spy had been stopped?
Part of the plan had been to liberate and arm the Armenians against their oppressors, which would have massively turned the tide. The Australians and Russians would have marched into Constantinople and taken back the Hagia Sophia for Christendom! Then, they’d have turned a blind eye as the surviving Armenians sought revenge after seeing the killing fields of Armenian corpses.
I remember on a year 9 history residential to France and Belgium that we went to the memorial for the first use of chemical warfare.
I never knew Sabaton could make watching plants grow look awesome.
If not for Haber, the privilege of watching plants grow would be as awesome a sight as it gets in a starving world.
0:40 did i see hecter salamanca?
yes, he is
@@TheIronWire lol mafia mexican in world war 1
Yep, that is Mark Margolis, the actor of Hector Salamanca and the attempted carbomber in Scarface.
good videos 👍
Love this
wow, incredible💯
Good job love how you match the music with video
MMM SPICY AIR
WhY Iz It SpIcY
This two men deserve to got a statue at every european country. Without thier process hunger had killed more people than both World Wars.
A Germain Medic once said:
"ze healing is not as rewarding as ze hurting"
Coincidence? I think not 🧐
A fucking scientist and german psycho medic are not the same you oaf
(unrelated)
german soldier: hey look a dove maybe its a sign of peace
*it has arty cords*
No mans land
Every man grave
💀💀💀
1:28 what's the film with this poor british soldier?
For the Grandfather
the way some weapons coincidentally was developed as an unintended product of good intentioned research is very unfortunate. at this point those that fall into this category included (not limited to):
1. gun powder from attempt to make elixir of immortality
2. TNT from development of safer explosives for mining
3. chemical weapons from development of method to manufacture chemical fertilizer
4. nuclear bombs from research into fundamental of matter
Was Haber's recipe for mustard gas ammonia and bleach or more complicated? Yes it is my King Of The Hill fan side talking.
He created the process for making ammonia before him even that recipe would be impossible
You get chloroamine by bleach and ammonia. Mustard gas is s(ch2ch2cl)2