I think Obama’s 2004 My Brothers Keeper speech at the DNC will become more famous as his presidency is taken in context more. It really launched his national political career.
@@twoscarabsintheswarm9055 well Japan at that time was an oligarchy like Russia nowadays, and Hirohito was just a figure head that had no real say or power.
4:47 I love how it says 'USSR Zone' in Cyrillic, but 'French Zone' in English, because JJ's dislike for the French language extends all the way to Austria.
Incidentally "СССР зона" is rather awkward in Russian. Reversing the order to "Зона СССР" would be more grammatical, but in actual usage it was usually referred to as "Советская зона" (the Soviet zone).
@@vonPeterhof As an American who doesn't know too much Russian, I was thinking "Wouldn't it be 'Zona SSSR' [Зона СССР]?". What I didn't think was that it was called "Sovetskaya zona" (Советская зона)! This makes sense, since in English, when talking about Austria (or Germany, and maybe Korea), people don't usually talk about the "USSR zone", perhaps because it just sounds more clunky than "Soviet zone"!
Funnily enough, I never really heard that speech. But, what (most) Filipinos DO remember is the very memorable words of General Douglas McArthur. Yes, not a Filipino. His words that echo throughout modern Filipino history, is "I shall return". We even have a goddamned statue dedicated to that in Leyte (MacArthur Landing Memorial National Park). If you ask for a Filipino made speech, then "Ang kabataan ang pag-asa ng bayan" (Translation: Children are the hope of the Nation) by the National Hero, Jose Rizal (look up his full name) is going to be quoted. Mainly because its spread throughout the Philippines, hell, its even in the constitution that Education has to have the biggest slice of the budget pie.
' At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps. India will awaken to life and freedom'. That line is as important and famous if not more for Indians as ' i have a dream" line for Americans.
Hey, quick question, and I know this may seem obvious. I'm just curious. Have those specific words been translated to the many different languages of India, or is it closer to day that it's really only known among English speakers?
I actually really like the idea of what political lines schoolkids around the world are made to memorize Pledge of Allegiance is definitely a good example in the US (no, foreigners, it‘s not just a Simpsons joke)
In Vietnam the most famous iconic speeches in the country entire history was president Ho Chi Minh or as he like people to call him uncle ho reading the declaration of Independence on the ba dinh plaza. It is the most famous and memorable speech that all vietnamese peolpe know and And the line that most Vietnamese people remember people know is when he said is when he quotes some line from the American proclamation of independence what the l have the rights for because before before independence the nation was invaded by the French and Japanese empire and a life Life quality was awful millions of people was lost their life 90% of the entire population are illiterate and so much more problems.
Now I just remember the famous line that he said is all citizens are born with in penetrable rights and those rice or the right to live to be free and to be happy.If you include my suggestion in the next video the Covid pandemic will be gone I guarantee :)
"I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."
"Niemand hat die Absicht ein Mauer zu bauen!"- "nobody is gonna built a wall!" Walter Ulbricht, East Germany's head of state right before they built the wall in East Berlin.
That and Schabowski's press conference about the reopening are actually very important speeches in German history. Schabowski's even in world history, in my opinion
Schabowkis statement was not really a speech, it was delivered to a question in a press conferences. But it is one of the most famous german lines for sure.
„Das tritt nach meiner Kenntnis … ist das sofort, unverzüglich.“ "Liebe Landsleute, wir sind zu Ihnen gekommen, um Ihnen mitzuteilen, dass heute Ihre Ausreise..."
Same. This is probably the first time I saw the actual scene though. I think the version on the balcony is much more famous, even though that's not where it actually happened.
@@Christopher_TG id probably go with books or visual art (murals, sketches, paintings, that jazz). My country’s most famous book is probably Os Lusíadas. It’s a hell of a book. Visual wise, it’s probably “O Fado”
@@bernardosantos8020 Ah, ok. So, when it comes to visual construction forms of art, the most famous American work is the painting "Declaration of Independence" by John Trumbull, which portrays the Continental Congress signing the US Declaration of Independence. The most famous American book could be a handful of picks, but I would go with "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee, a loss-of-innocence story about a schoolgirl in a small town whose father is a lawyer who is tasked with defending a black man accused of raping a white girl.
JJ should watch a very infamous New Zealand campaign ad from 1975 called "dancing cossacks". The dancing cossacks ad was a cartoon that was only actually broadcast once. In the ad Muldoon heavily implied that Labour's new superannuation scheme would lead to Communism. It was the first election ad on colour TV and it helped National get a landslide victory in the next election. I think JJ should definitely watch the ad because it is a very important part of New Zealand political history.
If it's Ethiopia, it's got to be Emperor Haile Selassie's appeal to the League of Nations in 1936, "It is us today, it will be you tomorrow." The Philippines has a different iconic speech, it's one by Carlos Romulo. The David reply to the Soviets, "It is the duty of the little Davids of this world to fling the pebbles of truth in the eyes of the blustering Goliaths and force them to behave!"
in Greece the 2 most famous I would say are: «Δυστυχώς επτωχεύσαμεν» = "Unfortunately we went bankrupt" from 1893, yes we have a long history of bankruptcy. «Μαζί τα φάγαμε» = "Together we ate them," said by a corrupt politician after the 2008 crisis the ironic part was that he was corrupt and very fat trying to shift the blame to the people. edit: the younger generations (I think) will respect or at least accept the truth of the statement as the resentment for the older generations grows.
I would also add the "There are money" quote by Georgios A. Papandreou. Basically in a pre-election rally in 2009 he promised that we still had a lot of money but we all know what followed
Alexander the Great had a fantastic speech when he was done conquering its called the opis mutiny. Basically he rudely told all his men to go home and they almost performed a mutiny against him, but his speech was so powerful they all reconsidered.
Thanks! I wanted to comment this but you beat me to it! We could probably add as a more modern speech "νάτος νάτος ο Τσιπρας ο σκαφάτος" "Here he is here he is Mr Tsipras with the yacht". It was said by current PM Mitsotakis to now opposition leader Alexis Tsipras when he was caught by journalists on Marinakis' yacht (marinakis is one of the most corrupt Greek personalities, he owns Olympiacos FC)
20:35 I'd actually love to see a video like that. In Syria, kids tend to recite Baathist party mottos such as "One Arab nation with an immortal message", and "Unity, Freedom, Socialism" in schools.
Disappointed that the line "Niemand hat die Absicht, eine Mauer zu bauen" by the president of the DDR is mentioned. In English that is "nobody has the intention to build a wall", before they built a wall. This speech is ingrained in mainstream German culture and alot more well known than that Nazi speech. (We usually use that DDR speech to mock someone when they do something that they say they won't, it is most often used to criticise politicians).
@@omar42315 not 100% sure if it is from Hitler, but "ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer" is pretty famous because it gets memed alot with the last one being replace to smthing else, like "ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Kommentarbereich" (one Comment section). In general, I'd say that Hitler speeches are very far removed from mainstream culture
@@omar42315 curiously, no word for word speeches of his are remembered in popular culture. The most well known one would 100% be his "opener" to WW2 in front of the Parliament, if I'm not missing something here. "Since 5:45 AM we've been firing back (at them)" he says, falsely alleging that the Polish had actually raided a German border post. There are many more speeches of his. Passionate ones, to fire up the audience, diplomatic ones where he justifies his foreign policies under false pretences. I assume many of these aren't well-known because the former are hateful and dangerous to the youth, while the latter are dull of lies and might give justification to some of the moves he's made, if the listener doesn't know the real circumstances of the time or uses his words in a knowingly disingenuous manner. If you want to look into some, there are his speech over the annexation of the Sudetenland ("it is the last remaining territorial claim I have to make, but is this one that I will not yield!") and his declaration of war against the USA which is one of my all time favourite since he speaks a lot of truth in there, demonstrating mistakes of US foreign policy that enabled his rise to power. Sadly, this one seems banned on UA-cam and I only found an audio version in German which spans 90 minutes but if you want to, I can translate the most interesting parts of it. If interested, mail me under kaiserkaitrageser@gmx.de with subject line "Hitler speech" I might also just end up posting an analysis of the speech on my UA-cam channel.
@@omar42315 Frankly, it's less Hitler's speeches which are remembered and more Goebbels various lies. I actually know the speech by Otto Wels (SPD politician who spoke up against the "Ermächtigungsgesetz") better than anything Hitler ever said. But in terms of "quotes" people remember in Germany, the top quotes are certainly "Ich bin ein Berliner" (by Kennedy), "Niemand hat die Absicht eine Mauer zu errichten" (as mentioned, Ulbricht promising to not built a wall shortly before he actually built the wall), "Wir sind gekommen um ihnen mitzuteilen, dass ihre Ausreise..." (by Genscher in the Prague Ambassy when he told a bunch of Germans that they would be allowed to travel to West Germany...the sentences is cut off, because you couldn't understand what else he said due to the cheering crowd) and "Äh, äh, ich denke ab sofort." (which isn't actually from a speech, but from Schablowski, a GDR official who was supposed to give a press conference about the GDR loosening travel restrictions but accidentally cause the run on the wall which lead to its fall). It's understandable, I guess, because nowadays, the war has been over for so long, but the wall, that is something from living memory. And those quotes turn up in pretty much every "fast cut through German history" reel, while there is naturally little interest to show anything what Hitler did, and Otto Wels speech doesn't have a recording. Oh, and there are naturally the most important speech ever: Es gibt im Moment in diese Mannschaft, oh, einige Spieler vergessen ihren Profi was sie sind. Ich lese nicht sehr viele Zeitungen, aber ich habe gehört viele Situationen. Erstens: Wir haben nicht offensiv gespielt. Es gibt keine deutsche Mannschaft spielt offensiv und die Namen offensiv wie Bayern. Letzte Spiel hatten wir in Platz drei Spitzen: Elber, Jancker und dann Zickler. Wir mussen nicht vergessen Zickler. Zickler ist eine Spitzen mehr, Mehmet mehr Basler. Ist klar diese Wörter, ist möglich verstehen, was ich hab’ gesagt? Danke. Offensiv, offensiv ist wie machen in Platz. Zweite: Ich habe erklärt mit diese zwei Spieler: Nach Dortmund brauchen vielleicht Halbzeit Pause. Ich habe auch andere Mannschaften gesehen in Europa nach diese Mittwoch. Ich habe gesehen auch zwei Tage die Training. Ein Trainer ist nicht ein Idiot! Ein Trainer sehen was passieren in Platz. In diese Spiel es waren zwei, drei oder vier Spieler, die waren schwach wie eine Flasche leer! Haben Sie gesehen Mittwoch, welche Mannschaft hat gespielt Mittwoch? Hat gespielt Mehmet, oder gespielt Basler, oder gespielt Trapattoni? Diese Spieler beklagen mehr als sie spielen! Wissen Sie, warum die Italien-Mannschaften kaufen nicht diese Spieler? Weil wir haben gesehen viele Male solche Spiel. Haben gesagt, sind nicht Spieler für die italienische Meisters. Struuunz! Strunz ist zwei Jahre hier, hat gespielt zehn Spiele, ist immer verletzt. Was erlauben Strunz?! Letzte Jahre Meister geworden mit Hamann, eh…, Nerlinger. Diese Spieler waren Spieler und waren Meister geworden. Ist immer verletzt! Hat gespielt 25 Spiele in diese Mannschaft, in diese Verein. Muß respektieren die andere Kollega! Haben viel nette Kollegen, stellen sie die Kollegen die Frage! Haben keine Mut an Worten, aber ich weiß, was denken über diese Spieler. Mussen zeigen jetzt, ich will, Samstag, diese Spieler mussen zeigen mich, eh…, seine Fans, mussen alleine die Spiel gewinnen. Mussen allein die Spiel gewinnen! Ich bin müde jetzt Vater diese Spieler, eh…, verteidige diese Spieler. Ich habe immer die Schulde … über diese Spieler. Einer ist Mario, einer ist, anderer ist Mehmet. Strunz dagegen, egal, hat nur gespielt 25 Prozent diese Spiel! Ich habe fertig! (That's a speech of Football trainer Trappatoni, which resulted in a lot of German sayings, from "schwach wie eine Flasche leer" to "Ich habe fertig!")
Here's an idea: iconic commercials around the world. Commercials are a pressure cooker that really reveal cultural values in a way that other media don't.
@@theobuniel9643 What's yours? I've been watching Indonesian television and I think I remember seeing one about skin whitening cream (I'm learning Indonesian, so I may have misunderstood), but that's one I thought of. For the U.S. I think a candidate would be that Jeep commercial from Superbowl LV, really idolizing independence and the open road.
Goodness... As a german I think all the really iconic ones are just the stuff that got turned into memes... Well, that and some disturbingly sexist stuff from the 50's which is occasionally played just because it's so utterly absurd from a modern perspective (it featured a product called Frauengold "Women's Gold" and advertized itself as a tranquilizer for hysterical women and as such, the ads usually featured a woman getting rather upset for reasons that nowadays seem perfectly valid and then being recommended the stuff so they would calm down. It contained 16.5% alcohol and was banned in the 80's when some of the other active ingredients were found to be carcinogens and harmful to the kidneys).
I love how you are educated about the Philippines' martial law era. It was indeed the darkest period in modern Ph history. And Marcos apologist do exist and that is alarming.
It was a civil war tbh awesome moment at philippine history but sadly after the removal of Marcos the philippines had a horrible leader named Cory Aquino.
@@dudemevill1699 lol, civil war from what? Only Marcos Apologists (Far-right morons) would be so paranoid of it in which you will justify Marcos' declaration of Martial Law OF THE WHOLE ACHIPELAGO for 8 years. Truly the darkest chapter of modern Philippines.
If a non-English speech is required, India has tum mujhe khoon do, main tumhe aazadi dunga (You give me blood, I shall give you freedom) by Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. He is asking people to sacrifice for freedom. The original speech, I'm told in the replies, was in Bangla. Yeah, so why not Bangla? It's an Indian language, not a colonial one. Edited - Yo Bangladeshi bros! ✌️
But that's not a way ,respect Netaji subhash Chandra bose but hr is supporter of military rule which is bad for India in long run also Axis has command on him so most likely India move from british colony to Axis colony if India get independence from Iaf.
@@historyeditz8326 He was not a supporter of military rule lol. Who told you that? He needed Axis support. Why would the British help us get free from the British? An enemy's enemy is always a friend. And by the way, after the war, Axis was in tatters. We'd have got our independence and would have stayed united.
@@arnoygayen1984 Was it? I have no idea. I've only heard the Hindi version. We can show both versions then. Could also be a good way to show our diversity 🤷♂️
As a Hungarian, I was really surprised by the choice of my fellow Hungarians. I was sure it's going to be the Imre Nagy speech from the Revolution of 1956, or the Lajos Kossuth speech, the first ever sound recording in Hungarian. But in retrospect, they were right, it's the Öszöd speech that I can quote the longest, and it is something that still keeps Viktor Orbán in power today (combined, of course, with the continuous presence of Ferenc Gyurcsány himself in the Hungarian opposition movement)
I wish I sent Nagy Imre's speech in, given it is a better look for us, but this might be more honest, and more important to remember in our current political state.
“If Queen Elizabeth spoke in a confusing mix of Shakespearean English and Latin” Me remembering JJs previous video where Queen E said “annus horribilis”: she doesn’t?
The most famous political cartoon from each country,could be a nice subjct as yourself made political cartoons once,for the british is probably the one where Pitt the Younger and Napoleon are slicing the world,it could match perfectly for a next video
@@sodapop1794 what about the anti apartheid poster with the African man crammed at the bottom of the silhouette of Africa? I live in the us and have seen it a lot
From the hungarian speech you missed the way more iconic part: "Elkúrtuk elvtársak, nem kicsit, nagyon." "We fucked it up, comrades, not bit, but very much."
the "si quieren venir que vengan, les presentearemos batalla" line was also saud by Belgrano, one of the biggeet heroes in Argentina's independence war, so when Galtieri said it, it was one of the biggest spit in out history's face
@@ulriktrillana9521 tbf most people here in the Philippines speak and write really good English. It's been in our education since the American colonization days, paired with their centralized curriculum.
The American, “I pledge allegiance” that they make us recite in basically only elementary school is an interesting one that even 11 years later I still remember by heart
It used to be popular for American school children to recite the Gettysburg Address or the Emancipation Proclamation. I find there’s less of an emphasis on public speaking in general in more modern curriculums.
@@ocost3000 wasn’t really saying it was a speech. Was more pointing it out because he said he was interested in a video about patriotic things they teach children.
As a chilean, hearing Allende's last speech was always really sad. Think what you will about socialism, but the man fought like nobody for the people of the country and it's economical independece (although some may think otherwise), only for all his and people's dreams to be crushed for 17 years, and even longer. Now, after 2019's protests and recent politicals accomplishments, I finally think that Allende wasn't wrong in his hope about the future. It's just that he, from 1973, was looking farther into the future than anyone else could, and I find it inspiring just to think that, even confronted with his own innevitable dead, he was able to look into the future with hope and faith.
I learned that speech by heart when I was a kid in Sweden translated into Swedish. We gad many Chilean refugees where I grew up. So 9/11 was already ingrained in my mind in 2001, but with the year 1973 instead...
@@piekarzpaola Well, I shouldn't reply to this kind of comments, but I'll do it just for anyone who might wonder if this is actually true. The Mitrokhin archive, released by the MI6 (UK's national intelligence service) revealed that Allende not only wasn't a KGB agent, but also that they had a very bad impression of him. It seems that he was discredited by the Chilean Communist Party (Allende was from the Socialist Party). This might explain why the USSR did very little to help Chile when it was being economically sabotaged. Also one of KGB's policies was not to have spies in Latin America, as we weren't seen as "enemies of the USSR". The one thing that is true is that Allende received money from the KGB back in 1961 (9 years before becoming president) in exchange for information about Chile's security and while I agree that that's kind of shady, we have to understand that it was a context of Cold War and if you were a major political figure in Latin America you either received money from the CIA or the KGB. And most of the people that caused chilean's tragic coup d'état and the following dictatorship where financed by the CIA. The thought that Allende might be a KGB agent was reported to be a personal belief of Richard Nixon, who was kind of paranoid after the cuban revolution, wich he saw as a personnal defeat.
@@helterskelter9670 Hmm, "in Latin America you either received money from the CIA or the KGB" and "Allende received money from the KGB back in 1961 in exchange for information about Chile's security" but somehow he's not 5th Soviet column, ok. Neverthless I think "man fought like nobody for the people of the country" sentence is wrong.
MacArthur's Speech is also pretty famous "I shall return" basically gave the filipinos hope that america will liberate the Philippines and the madlad McArthur actually did it
Me being an argentinian myself, I consider that THE speech that makes any argentinian cry of emotion is the one made by Alfonsín on 1983. He was the first president elected after 7 years of dictatorship. Check it out, it really is thrilling. ❤️🇦🇷 Also, love you and admire you a lot, JJ!
14:32 I stepped into a taxi in the Philippines when I first entered the country and the driver kept complaining how bad life was without Marcos and kept praising the martial law period. It's like people apologising for Fascism in Spain.
Well to be fair Spain and Marcos downfall had the same story. Our economy plummeted after they were remove and it got worse. Both had a following and fanatics. What many dont realize is that the nation plummeted due to corruption and Filipinos instead of putting qualified leaders. Elected flaterers who are not qualified. Thus making it worse. No! As I condemn Spanish apologist who were silence due to Rizal law in the 50's so do I condemn Marcos apologist. Its not the Katipunan Revolution nor EDSA revolution fault why our country did not flourish its the fault of the people for they remove a monster by replacing it with another monster.
Hindi and English have official language status. With each state divided on a linguistic basis having an official language of their own. Only 22 languages are recognised by the constitution currently though
Current president of the philippines insisted declared that late president marcos was the great president in all time all over the world but america vilifies him. in 1966 george hueys says american goverment want to ousts the presidency of marcos in just 1 year of marcos term thats prove that america didnt want the philippines become super power because they cannnot manipulate the people and control the country by running the puppet goverment because in 1965 the philippines was in federal goverment means only high intellectual become president you can see it in speechess of president marcos....GREAT HERO!🇵🇭
@Kosorou Gaming Studio Archives Sure, let's say your argument is true. Marcos is not the mastermind. But under his administration, he enabled a gruesome 20-year slaughter of innocent lives and silencing of dissidents. He was supposed to be smart and powerful. The words "UP graduate" and "Bar topnotcher" are titles he had prior to him running in '65. He held the seat for 20 years. How could he, a supposedly smart guy, not know what's happening with PNP? And why would he choose to keep silent, refusing to fire overabusive military men and constables? It's as almost your Pontius Pilate of a puppet dictator is on the abusers' side...
Being a Polish person and hearing that speech and the dark and melancholy voice over the scratchy sound of the TV struck me knowing that my parents went through this when they were younger
I would say as a Newfoundlander, the most famous speech from here would actually be Richard Cashins conspiracy speech from 1949 about Newfoundland’s confederation to Canada. Although the speech was made about how he believed the referendum that caused Newfoundland to join Canada was rigged, it lives on as really the only speech which pretty much every Newfoundlander knows although the words of the speech are cherished by people who believe in an independent Newfoundland to this day.
@@JJMcCullough I'd say it's probably because they manage to remain as distinct as they do from the rest of Canada, which feels like it ought to be reflected in some official capacity. It seems to me, though I am not from Newfoundland, to be more efficient as a cultural rather than political idea.
as a pakistani, pls feel free to treat him as a meme. That clip of his is already an iconic meme. the bhuttos deserve it, excluding Benazir. She was th only worthy bhutto ✌️😂
@@fatimaqureshi4984 Yes exactly. More than focusing on war and animosity if the Pakistani leadership could focus more on other things, Pakistan would've been at a better place. It would be good for us Indians too, we could cut down our defence budget
I don't think warming relations between Pakistan and India would result in India lowering its Defense budget because it also has a much graver threat up north.
@@otterno.1128 They're not getting away with it, they are always getting criticised for it, most European countries have committed more genocides in closer time periods and they are getting away with it, france has probably killed more people in Algeria than ottomans killed in their whole history, and this happened in the 60s and 50s, and only in last few years have they start admitting the war crimes they did there, and Charles de gaulle who ordered many of these crimes is still considered a hero in France and whole western world, while everyone who was accused of participating in the Armenian genocide is considered a criminal
@@Goodguy507 France stopped the slave trade in Algeria and has payed their dues by letting many Algerian immigrants come and make a living in France, and send back money to their families - Turkey genocided the Armenians with no repercussions at all, and most countries still don't admit it happened.
@@otterno.1128 Omg, france actually ended the slave trade in Algeria, that's so nice of them, only problem is that every Algerian was pretty much a slave to France, so instead of some people being enslaved, now all the country is enslaved, true egalitarianism! And the Algerian immigrants who worked in France weren't allowed in because France is such a good and compassionate state, but because they were good for the economy, they didn't get free money, they worked, earned money, sent some of that money to their families, this isn't charity, most nations only allow immigration when economically beneficial, and once immigration startes harming the economy, you'd see a big rise in anti-immigration and laws will be changed, no western country allows immigration for the sake of moral goodness, don't fool yourself, it's all for money, and to this day the French government refuses to return the skulls of Algerian freedom fighters to Algeria because they are displayed I French museums, few years ago they returned the skulls of some leaders but still refuse to return all of them, so even symbolically, France still refuses to seek forgiveness for its mistakes
One VERY big independence speech ( here in Mexico) is the grito de Dolores. It isn't much of an official speech, but it is a very famous format that every president recites a version of on independence day. It happened in 1810 when the secret organization revealed themselves and started the 11 year old war for independence. It came from a pastor named Miguel Hidalgo that recited it from the top of a church ringing the bell in the middle of the night in the small town of Dolores.
You’re wrong. The most memorable speech in Mexican history is “Ricky Riquín Canallín” by OUR paramount leader Andrés «Me canso ganso/Abrazos, no balazos/Yo tengo otros datos» Manuelóvich
As a non-Mexican who is learning Spanish, I've heard of that one! In fact, in my 9th-grade Spanish class, I even learned about _el_ _Grito_ and the history behind the Mexican War of Independence! Thanks for remindimg me!
I’m German and I love the last Radio Broadcast of the Polish National Radio Service and it’s call for resistance and in Germany it’s often considered one of the greatest symbols of resistance to tyranny!
You left out the best part from Gyurcsány's speech as a hungarian we all know this line: "Elkúrtuk, nem kicsit, nagyon" which means: We fucked up and not by a little but by a lot
@@simpsbelongtothegulags3702 Nazi is literally the abbreviation for national socialist (the Z being courtesy of the german spelling as the german language doesn't use the letter C in the same way as english).
I would say that Pakistan's most iconic speech belongs to its Founder, the Quaid e Azam (The Great Leader) Muhammad Ali Jinnah giving his vision for Pakistan on August 11, 1947
@@yogeshpandey1612 I feel sorry for India to hold the souls of people like you. I will not disrespect a nation whom we want to brefiend cuz of one moron :)
One of, if not the most memorable speech in Australian history would be the impromptu one given by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam on the steps of parliament just after he was dismissed, "well may we say God save the queen".
There’s a famous one for Japan made by an American as he was leaving, “Boys, be ambitious!”. He helped develop Hokkaido (the northern island) during Japan’s industrialization and they have statues of him
Would love to see a follow up of the most famous mistakes and faux pas in speeches. Some speeches are memorable for speakers saying something silly or nonsensical, or saying something they didn't mean to say or based on information they misunderstood.
America has some great options for such a topic. “There's an old saying in Tennessee - I know it's in Texas, probably in Tennessee - that says, fool me once, shame on - shame on you. Fool me - you can't get fooled again.” Bush “We hold these truths to be self-evident. All men and women are created, by the, you know, you know the thing,” Biden "Corporations are people my friend" Mitt Romney.
Not a speech but portuguese President Cavaco Silva raised the portuguese flag upside down during the commemorations of the 5th of October (implantation of the Republic), which was a pretty big mistake since in in the military it used to mean an occupied territory and at the time people felt the country was being "invaded" by Troika
Just use anything from Merkel Example: when asked why she trusts corrupt politicians as ministers of Finance, she only replies that she trusts completely, and when asked again she says that she's said enough. But more widely known here are the stances of Drug Ministers on Weed. "Cannabis is prohibited becaus it is illegal" or "Cannabis isn't Broccoli"
I would say another famous speech for Poland was the final goodbye during World War 2. The speech had such a dark tone to it and reminded the people that Poland was not yet lost.
Mr. Lee Kuan Yew had high expectations on Malaysia, since Singapore at that time was small and poor. When Malaysia kicked out Singapore in 1965, it went so bad even Mr. Lee himself cried, worrying about his country’s future.
3:34 holy shit I can't believe Bangladesh is mentioned, thank you! Sometimes our struggle for independance and history feel invisible to the world, overshadowed by our neighbours, so thank you for being the only youtube video I've seen that aknowleges this speech.
8:48 The most famous and most important speech in Argentina in my opinion is that of President Alfonsin "Happy Easter, the house is in order" (the pink house) after having to deal with a military uprising, Alfonsin being the first president of the return of democracy after 7 years of civic-ecclesial-military dictatorship that disappeared thousands of people. The speech itself was analyzed many times, Alfosin was a very good speaker.
As soon as I saw the thumbnail, I had that one in mind, but I kinda agree that Galtieri's is the popular one. I guess it's more memeable. There is also De la Rúa's state of emergency speech, pretty boring (heh) but also really well known.
@@JJMcCullough should have mentioned. Not actually norwegian. From Canada, but found that song through Alexander Rybak who i enjoy listened to his music after I found him in Eurovision.
I feel delighted and honoured by seeing the proposition that I brought up among other Poles here. It is also meaningful to see somewhat similar moments for other nations. Whenever you will need help with similar worldwide comparisons, you can count on me :) I will be pleased to show the "details" of my country.
Also, what do you think about such topic? "The Trumps of the world" By this, I mean politicians who have had no political expirience before, but managed to somehow becomes significant in the realm of politics.
@@piekarzpaola A tak na serio, jestem po prostu wdzięczny w pewnym sensie, że w jakiś sposób udało mi się przyczynić do stworzenia treści tego filmiku. That's it. Żegnam.
In Ireland, we are made to learn two separate national anthems in primary school; one in Irish and one in English. Amhran na bhFiann, which translates to "The Soldier's Song", is usually taught first and is what I learned first. The song comes from the days of the Irish War of Independence, but surprisingly enough it was originally written in English. The Irish translation is what children learn today, and is sung at all big Irish sports games (gaelic football, hurling, soccer, etc). The notable exception is rugby, where because the Irish team is made up for the entire island, including the British owned Northern Ireland, an English anthem is sung. It would considered inappropriate by players from the North to play Amhran na bhFiann in English, as the lyrics describe war against the British, which many in the North were against. Instead they use a new song written in 1995 called "Ireland's Call". This song's lyrics are entirely in English and describe Irish people from all over the island standing together in unity. It's a strong symbol of unity between the Republic and the North. I'm not sure if Ireland's Call is on the curriculum for children to learn here, but Amhran na bhFiann certainly is. Regardless, my teachers made sure we knew both word for word, and we could sing it for the parents when the teachers wanted us to, in a choir sort of set up. This is strictly a primary school thing though, and once a child goes to secondary school at 12/13, they will most likely forget the words to Amhran na bhFiann pretty quickly, as most people don't speak enough Irish to keep it in their heads properly
Funnily enough given Britain's reputation for jingoism among Europeans, British children aren't taught God Save the King unless teachers choose to. Plus it's so short and repetitive that most pick it up on their own in no time!
I am currently preparing for UPSC, one of the toughest exams in the whole world and whenever i feel demotivated i open UA-cam and listen to Jawaharlal Nehru's speech. Every single time it sends chills down my spine. It reminds me that i am grinding day and night not just for myself but my fellow countrymen, especially the poor who don't have a voice of their own.
14:40. That is correct. English is the universally spoken language in The Philippines. Pilipino (not Tagalog a common mistake) the national language comes next. The local dialects are too diverse only English is a common denominator for spoken languages. BTW The Philippines has the Thomasites to thank for that and effectively eradicating Spanish as a common language and French as an upper class language.
@@santbibliophile It is different. Filipino uses the complete latin alphabet and uses loan letters such as x, c, j, z. It also incorporates loan words from Spain and United States. In other words, Filipino is tagalog but standardized enough to be used in official documents. Making tagalog the official language is way harder to implement as there's so many words that don't exist in the tagalog language.
@@kb-ww1uw Just because a dialect incorporates more foreign words doesn't make it a separate language. And if it is a separate language, why doesn't it have native speakers in PSA records? Oh, well, it is just Tagalog, why does it need to be separated. If borrowing words make a dialect a separate language then we can separate Davaoeño from Cebuano, unfortunately linguistics doesn't work that way. Lol
"Ballot or Bullet" by Malcolm X is the greatest American speech I can think of. Reagan's "Time for Choosing" is up there as well as Ron Paul's Farewell Address.
Fun fact: Today 7th March, the upload day of this video in Bangladesh time, is the 50th anniversary of the Sheikh Mujibur Rahman speech from Bangladesh. 🇧🇩
Idk if this is relevant for this video but I would say that one of the most famous speeches in Israeli history is in fact the speech Bill Clinton gave in the funeral of Yitzhak Rabin, especially the phrase "shalom haver" which has turned into an icon.
For Argentina another famous quote ingrained in our collective memory is the ending of the prosecution's final statement during the trial of the juntas (our equivalent to the Nuremberg trials for the officials of our last dictatorship, including Galtieri himself). The quote was "señores jueces: nunca más" (mister judges: never again).
The most iconic goodbye speech from the United States is definitely George Washington's Farewell Address, but I think what's interesting is that the exact words were relatively unknown until Lin Manuel Miranda turned it into a song, "One Last Time", in Hamilton. Christopher Jackson's performance on the Original Broadway Cast Recording may be far more dramatic than how Washington really delivered the speech, but the humility and love of country and warnings of partisanship resonate with Americans, even to this day. I remember, years before Hamilton, I was taught in school how Washington warned us about partisan politics. But I'd never actually heard the words until listening to Hamilton.
From Greece, there's a speech that was given after the fall of the military junta and the restoration of democracy in 1974. Two of its quotes are almost universally remembered. Konstantinos Karamanlis was the first Prime Minister of the Third Hellenic Republic, and the two most remembered phrases are "Ανήκομεν εις την Δύσιν/We belong to the West" and "Η Κύπρος κείται μακράν/Cyprus is far" in reference to the ongoing Turkish conquest of Cyprus, partially allowed by the previous military regime's mismanagement and collapse. Cyprus was a Greek island before that point but nowadays it's divided in Greek and Turkish sectors. His speech is remembered as a symbol of political division and the deep struggle of the Greek state to find its political place in the world. There are many Greeks that consider Greece to be its own separate cultural sphere and that we should have some sort of independence, while there are also others that believe we belong to the west and we should try to conform to it as much as possible if we want to survive from Turkey. The reality is that Greece was independent culturally and politically in the time of the Byzantine Empire, but then it was squished between Islam/Turkey and Catholicism/Western Powers, which relentlessly invaded it again and again until it was divided in 1204 and then completely annexed in 1453. The entire early modern era for Greece was its people being slaughtered and its culture and language being replaced and assimilated by the Turkish while its religion was replaced by Islam, to the point where the Greek identity went from a Great power to a minor power. Because then Turkish power also diminished, Greece became free but with the aid of the Western Powers. A lot of independence movements had happened all across the Balkans and Anatolia, but they were slaughtered in the tens of thousands. The only real movements that ever had any success were the ones that were aided by and profited foreign powers. This has given Greece a huge national trauma to the point where many people believe we're depended on someone to exist. Even today Greeks are terribly scared of what a Turkish invasion would mean, so Greece is fairly stratocratic and spends a huge amount of its funds on army equipments and ensuring alliances, and Greek men are obliged by law to 1 year of military service (it was recently extended because of Turkish aggression and militarism under Erdogan). So yeah, many people consider him to be a "traitor" to Greece as its own little sphere, because he "submitted" us to the west and betrayed the Greeks on Cyprus, while others uphold his speech for "renewing" our traditional allies in the West and at least securing mainland Greece, since it was evident that, just as in Cyprus, an unexpected Turkish invasion could happen and it would be... bad.
"Turkish conquest" nice wording. Certainly it was conquest and not stopping the massacres committed to Turks and stopping enosis. Cyprus wasn't a Greek island. It was a Greek and Turkish island until Greeks didn't want the Turks anymore. We assimilated your culture , religion and language so well that your language , culture and religion after 600 years of Turkish rule , even more in some other regions , exists today. Also , Greeks answered to the Patriarchate of Constantinople as they were Christians and they had autonomy on many matters.
@@afinoxi all of modern Turkey except for Kurdish and Armenian territories were originally exclusively Greek, and Turks came as migrants. Despite that, Greeks lived with Turks for centuries and only rebelled when they were being slaughtered. Of course, not always was there an organized plan for the extinction of the Greeks, but especially after 1909 and the Young Turks and then in modern Turkey, Greeks are actively censored and expelled and exterminated. In 1909-1922 especially the Greeks were genocided systematically in the Ottoman Empire, in an effort to transition to an ethnic state from multiethnic empire. But Young Turks and Kemal didn't accept giving foreign inhabited lands to the respective nations, instead they purged non-turks from the empire to make a huge Turkish state. That's Nazism. And Hitler himself applauded Kemal, saying he only wanted to copy what he did. Anyway, Greece was always a Greek island. The Muslim minority on Cyprus was 15%, concentrated in the cities on the southern coast. Even if you count Northern Cyprus as a different "region", Greeks were the majority even there. In fact the Turkish Cypriots are an even smaller minority than the Muslim Cretans, who were 22-24% the island's population. And of course, the propaganda you're fed in Turkey shows from the illogical arguments that are made. If Greeks don't want Turks in Cyprus, why do they accept Turks in Thrace and in fact they are protected and prosper? Did you know that the "massacres" you say were in reality terrorist attacks by an extremist group that were then jailed? Did you know that the victims were 150-200 people, while Greek victims of the Turkish invasion were 6000 innocent civilians and of course many more soldiers? Finally, I want to show you a last fact that might make you reconsider. How have Turkey and Greece taken care of each other's minorities since 1922? Turkey: unilaterally abolished the autonomy and rights of the Greek majority on Imbros and Tenedos in 1927. Imposed unequal taxation (Varlik Vergisi) and instituted a pogrom with many victims and destruction of property in Constantinople (September 1955, the September Events) Greeks in Turkey (1914)=>approximately 3 million Greeks in Turkey (1922)=> approximately 300.000 Greeks in Turkey (1925)=>approximately 125.000 (in Constantinople, Imbros and Tenedos) Greeks in Turkey (1955)=>less than 80.000 Greeks in Turkey (today)=> 2.500 This paints a pretty dramatic picture. On the other hand, the Turks in Greece were exchanged according to the Lausanne convention signed in January 1923, with the exception of the Turks in Thrace, which were a significant minority. As such: Turks in Greece (1923, pre exchange)=> approximately 500.000 Turks in Greece (1924, post exchange)=> approximately 75.000 (remaining only in Western Thrace) Turks in Greece (today)=> approximately 125.000, ie have almost doubled, while the Greeks have been forced to extinction. I hope you see these with an open mind. Have a good day.
Marcos sympathizers always boast about his "regimes" achievements during his governance as pros to his rule. Ok, most of the projects were Manila based, like the International Convention Center, Manila Terminal 1, the LRT line etc. But many of these projects came at least a decade late and at the expense of the rest of the country.
Not only are they decade late but most of his projects came from loans and most are distributed to its cronies. Not really something you should celebrate. (Of course Marcos Apologists will say otherwise)
Well they don't really need to boast those but when he got hated bc of Liberals for years and even indoctrinated the young generation to hate him without giving all the info just makes his supporters want to boast him to get back from all the propaganda against him
@@simpsbelongtothegulags3702 the Liberal party is only ONE of the victims of Marcos' brutal regime. It's only natural for political parties to fight each other in the political stage and influence people. It is the people that should change and stop being loyal to politicians, thinking that they are messiahs that would end their suffering.
My favourite is from Gough Whitlam in 1975 - “Ladies and gentlemen, well may we say 'God Save the Queen', because nothing will save the Governor-General.” It’s a better speech to watch because of the emphasis placed on certain words. The story behind it, and that he made this statement just in the moment and without rehearsal also speaks to the man’s character and intellect.
J.J you should do a "most revered athletes of the world" video. I think it would be interesting to find out why each country has each specific athlete that's so revered.
He could put up a poll and see how people answer although I'm not sure how effective that would be. The truth is however most countries around the world really only have a few players/teams throughout history that are really revered. Only a few such as the u.s. have so many dominant/loved athletes
If you’re still thinking of doing the patriotic things kids need to learn in school, the “Pledge of Allegiance” is the US’s biggest one other than singing the national anthem. Every kid needs to learn this pledge by heart and recite it while facing the flag every morning of their elementary school career, and in retrospect it’s something you’d see in like the Man in the High Castle of children being brainwashed to be completely aligned with the state. But then again by middle and high school, no one does does the pledge or the national anthem at least in CPS schools, and those times in one’s life might be more important in whether or not someone would be an ultra patriotic robot or a normal person who can recognize the flaws in their government.
As an American student, I would agree that the _Pledge_ _of_ _Allegiance_ is the biggest example in the US of patriotic school activities! Like yourself, I have recited it every school day in elementary school, but not in middle school or high school. I would also see why you would compare it to _The_ _Man_ _in_ _the_ _High_ _Castle,_ or suggest that we should acknowledge the flaws of our own governments. Heck, remember Allende? He was overthrown with American aid!
Great video J.J. 👌 Have you ever heard of former president of Egypt nasser? He literally became a leader of the arab world by being a good speech giver, he would make a speech about an arab leader, next day protest in the country of that leader would start against him, I dislike his politics but he definitely one of the best orators of modern Arab history, his most famous speech would be either the one after forming the "United Arab Republic" or after losing the 6 days war, or the speech when he said "an Egyptian soldier shoe is worth more than the Kings of Jordan and Saudi Arabia" he was a very anti-monarchy did, if you ever made a part 2 to this you should consider one of his speechs
What modern speeches do you think will become famous in 50 years?
That's a good question.
"We will march to the Capitol"
I think Obama’s 2004 My Brothers Keeper speech at the DNC will become more famous as his presidency is taken in context more. It really launched his national political career.
I think in New Zealand Jacinda Arderns No active covid cases speech will be memorable
Trump - "We do a little trolling; its called we do a little trolling" (Trump rally 2020)
“The war has not necessarily gone well for Japan.”
Possibly one of the grossest understatements of all time.
Well he was a politician afterall
@@tasibsharar7357 emperor* but at the time it was basically the same
*HA*
@@twoscarabsintheswarm9055 well Japan at that time was an oligarchy like Russia nowadays, and Hirohito was just a figure head that had no real say or power.
The kind of understatement you'd expect from the british if anyone...
4:47 I love how it says 'USSR Zone' in Cyrillic, but 'French Zone' in English, because JJ's dislike for the French language extends all the way to Austria.
I was actually going to make it say "Zone Francais" but I couldn't fit in the map. And I KNEW someone would comment about that!
@@JJMcCullough it would be "Zone française" in proper french. Love ya
Incidentally "СССР зона" is rather awkward in Russian. Reversing the order to "Зона СССР" would be more grammatical, but in actual usage it was usually referred to as "Советская зона" (the Soviet zone).
@@vonPeterhof As an American who doesn't know too much Russian, I was thinking "Wouldn't it be 'Zona SSSR' [Зона СССР]?". What I didn't think was that it was called "Sovetskaya zona" (Советская зона)! This makes sense, since in English, when talking about Austria (or Germany, and maybe Korea), people don't usually talk about the "USSR zone", perhaps because it just sounds more clunky than "Soviet zone"!
Are there actually non French that like the language?
Funnily enough, I never really heard that speech. But, what (most) Filipinos DO remember is the very memorable words of General Douglas McArthur. Yes, not a Filipino. His words that echo throughout modern Filipino history, is "I shall return". We even have a goddamned statue dedicated to that in Leyte (MacArthur Landing Memorial National Park). If you ask for a Filipino made speech, then "Ang kabataan ang pag-asa ng bayan" (Translation: Children are the hope of the Nation) by the National Hero, Jose Rizal (look up his full name) is going to be quoted. Mainly because its spread throughout the Philippines, hell, its even in the constitution that Education has to have the biggest slice of the budget pie.
And ironically, we didnt get Rizal's heed right. Because the communists poisoned our youth. Hence why our country doesnt like the youth.
@@TheMaster4534 is being progressive now equates to being a communist? I doubt you actually understand what communism means.
@@Xhin229 they really dont ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@@him12672 he is referring to the new left
It's more like "youth", not children
That french politicians goodbye is just comedy gold.
🧍♂️
🚶♂️
🎺🎺🎺
@Egg T 🤦🏻♂️
@@modaltib880 LMFAO
We have a meme about him from this
He's a about to stand up, saying "Goodbye" and has guns in each hand :v
I love that the Pakistani UN speech boils down to "Screw you guys, I'm going home."
He screwed us (his country) alongside the UN members...
@@mirzahamzabaig5667 He did... And his children are continuing his legacy
@@ismailshahzad6368
Does anyone even take Bilawal seriously any more though? Well except for his thugs in higher position..
So he made a Cartman, long before Cartman or South Park, the Series, were invented.
@@mirzahamzabaig5667 the entire population of Sindh does take that clown seriously.
' At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps. India will awaken to life and freedom'. That line is as important and famous if not more for Indians as ' i have a dream" line for Americans.
Jawaharlal Nehru ❤
Hey, quick question, and I know this may seem obvious. I'm just curious.
Have those specific words been translated to the many different languages of India, or is it closer to day that it's really only known among English speakers?
I actually really like the idea of what political lines schoolkids around the world are made to memorize
Pledge of Allegiance is definitely a good example in the US (no, foreigners, it‘s not just a Simpsons joke)
Singapore also has a national pledge that all school children must recite at every flag-raising ceremony in the morning.
In Vietnam the most famous iconic speeches in the country entire history was president Ho Chi Minh or as he like people to call him uncle ho reading the declaration of Independence on the ba dinh plaza. It is the most famous and memorable speech that all vietnamese peolpe know and And the line that most Vietnamese people remember people know is when he said is when he quotes some line from the American proclamation of independence what the l have the rights for because before before independence the nation was invaded by the French and Japanese empire and a life Life quality was awful millions of people was lost their life 90% of the entire population are illiterate and so much more problems.
Now I just remember the famous line that he said is all citizens are born with in penetrable rights and those rice or the right to live to be free and to be happy.If you include my suggestion in the next video the Covid pandemic will be gone I guarantee :)
“Bác hồ đọc bản tuyên ngôn độc lập” Copy this line to the searching bar and you will probably find the full video maybe ;D
"I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."
"Niemand hat die Absicht ein Mauer zu bauen!"- "nobody is gonna built a wall!" Walter Ulbricht, East Germany's head of state
right before they built the wall in East Berlin.
Irony
The irony
That and Schabowski's press conference about the reopening are actually very important speeches in German history. Schabowski's even in world history, in my opinion
Schabowkis statement was not really a speech, it was delivered to a question in a press conferences. But it is one of the most famous german lines for sure.
„Das tritt nach meiner Kenntnis … ist das sofort, unverzüglich.“
"Liebe Landsleute, wir sind zu Ihnen gekommen, um Ihnen mitzuteilen, dass heute Ihre Ausreise..."
>French politician concedes and surrenders on TV
>French National Anthem plays
Ah, the French...
i am sry to the french but i genuinely had to laugh at this. partially due to the french anthem being so often used in a stereotypical way in media
@@poke-champ4256 Don't worry, the French have been laughing at this clip for 40 years.
@@poke-champ4256 dude same here almost looked like a meme
No hard feelings though, I love Frenchies!
@@KingOfInsanity777 I have a Question, When Mass changes there flag will you keep the old one or change it to the new one. Hi From Wyoming
JJ that magnificent mane just gets grander every week. At this rate you will end up looking like a fashionable 17th century aristocrat.
"End up"???
@@JJMcCullough Touché
Brave of you to assume he is not a 17th century aristocrat already
A well trimmed stache, bit of goatee, JJ, you'd make the most handsome Musketeer.
Great content, thank you
*FOP*
As an Austrian I very much agree with the choice of "Österreich ist frei" and inmediately thought of it myself as well. Nice video!!
Same. This is probably the first time I saw the actual scene though. I think the version on the balcony is much more famous, even though that's not where it actually happened.
I think “Each countries most famous artwork” would be cool
You would probably need to narrow it down a bit to what form of artwork.
@@Christopher_TG id probably go with books or visual art (murals, sketches, paintings, that jazz).
My country’s most famous book is probably Os Lusíadas. It’s a hell of a book.
Visual wise, it’s probably “O Fado”
@@bernardosantos8020 Ah, ok. So, when it comes to visual construction forms of art, the most famous American work is the painting "Declaration of Independence" by John Trumbull, which portrays the Continental Congress signing the US Declaration of Independence. The most famous American book could be a handful of picks, but I would go with "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee, a loss-of-innocence story about a schoolgirl in a small town whose father is a lawyer who is tasked with defending a black man accused of raping a white girl.
@@bernardosantos8020 I had to read your comment twice because at first I thought you were classifying jazz music as visual art.
I love this idea. I'm from the US, and our most famous artwork, at least within the country, is "American Gothic", hands down.
The next time. Do one with different countries most famous election posters!
Or just propaganda posters in general
JJ should watch a very infamous New Zealand campaign ad from 1975 called "dancing cossacks". The dancing cossacks ad was a cartoon that was only actually broadcast once. In the ad Muldoon heavily implied that Labour's new superannuation scheme would lead to Communism. It was the first election ad on colour TV and it helped National get a landslide victory in the next election. I think JJ should definitely watch the ad because it is a very important part of New Zealand political history.
For France, one obvious choice would be Mitterrand's 1981 "La force tranquille"
Good idea. I suggest "Labour isn't working" from the UK, for the pun if nothing else.
For Chile, probably the logo of the "No" (a black NO over a rainbow) campaign for the 1988 referendum on the continuation of Pinochet's government.
If it's Ethiopia, it's got to be Emperor Haile Selassie's appeal to the League of Nations in 1936, "It is us today, it will be you tomorrow."
The Philippines has a different iconic speech, it's one by Carlos Romulo. The David reply to the Soviets, "It is the duty of the little Davids of this world to fling the pebbles of truth in the eyes of the blustering Goliaths and force them to behave!"
Napoleon the Russians are running.
How amazing of them to say
in Greece the 2 most famous I would say are:
«Δυστυχώς επτωχεύσαμεν» = "Unfortunately we went bankrupt" from 1893, yes we have a long history of bankruptcy.
«Μαζί τα φάγαμε» = "Together we ate them," said by a corrupt politician after the 2008 crisis the ironic part was that he was corrupt and very fat trying to shift the blame to the people.
edit: the younger generations (I think) will respect or at least accept the truth of the statement as the resentment for the older generations grows.
I would also add the "There are money" quote by Georgios A. Papandreou. Basically in a pre-election rally in 2009 he promised that we still had a lot of money but we all know what followed
the absolute state of greece
Alexander the Great had a fantastic speech when he was done conquering its called the opis mutiny. Basically he rudely told all his men to go home and they almost performed a mutiny against him, but his speech was so powerful they all reconsidered.
Thanks! I wanted to comment this but you beat me to it! We could probably add as a more modern speech "νάτος νάτος ο Τσιπρας ο σκαφάτος" "Here he is here he is Mr Tsipras with the yacht". It was said by current PM Mitsotakis to now opposition leader Alexis Tsipras when he was caught by journalists on Marinakis' yacht (marinakis is one of the most corrupt Greek personalities, he owns Olympiacos FC)
@@norbertangelopoulos1247 Haha that was a nice quote but I don't think that this speech counts as historical and infamous
20:35 I'd actually love to see a video like that. In Syria, kids tend to recite Baathist party mottos such as "One Arab nation with an immortal message", and "Unity, Freedom, Socialism" in schools.
In Vietnam we receite the "7 commands from Uncle Ho".
😂 don't remind me. This mindless motto has become a joke in every Syrian household
@@TarekMidani I guess it's because of the civil war, and with Syrians being more and more cynical about Baathist/Assadist rule?
@@TarekMidani Is it the "Immortal Message" one or the "Unity, Freedom, Socialism" one? Because both seem to qualify as mindless mottoes!
I love how Bhutto doesn't even care at all that he's infornt of The UN and just says " I'm not wasting my time here I'm leaving'
"Screw you guys, I'm going home!"
Disappointed that the line "Niemand hat die Absicht, eine Mauer zu bauen" by the president of the DDR is mentioned. In English that is "nobody has the intention to build a wall", before they built a wall. This speech is ingrained in mainstream German culture and alot more well known than that Nazi speech. (We usually use that DDR speech to mock someone when they do something that they say they won't, it is most often used to criticise politicians).
What would you say is the most famous Hitler speech? Just curious cause it wasn’t mentioned in the video
@@omar42315 not 100% sure if it is from Hitler, but "ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer" is pretty famous because it gets memed alot with the last one being replace to smthing else, like "ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Kommentarbereich" (one Comment section). In general, I'd say that Hitler speeches are very far removed from mainstream culture
Except it's not a speech at all, but an answer to a question posed by a journalist. Look it up, you can find film clips of it right here on UA-cam.
@@omar42315 curiously, no word for word speeches of his are remembered in popular culture.
The most well known one would 100% be his "opener" to WW2 in front of the Parliament, if I'm not missing something here.
"Since 5:45 AM we've been firing back (at them)" he says, falsely alleging that the Polish had actually raided a German border post.
There are many more speeches of his. Passionate ones, to fire up the audience, diplomatic ones where he justifies his foreign policies under false pretences.
I assume many of these aren't well-known because the former are hateful and dangerous to the youth, while the latter are dull of lies and might give justification to some of the moves he's made, if the listener doesn't know the real circumstances of the time or uses his words in a knowingly disingenuous manner.
If you want to look into some, there are his speech over the annexation of the Sudetenland ("it is the last remaining territorial claim I have to make, but is this one that I will not yield!") and his declaration of war against the USA which is one of my all time favourite since he speaks a lot of truth in there, demonstrating mistakes of US foreign policy that enabled his rise to power. Sadly, this one seems banned on UA-cam and I only found an audio version in German which spans 90 minutes but if you want to, I can translate the most interesting parts of it. If interested, mail me under kaiserkaitrageser@gmx.de with subject line "Hitler speech"
I might also just end up posting an analysis of the speech on my UA-cam channel.
@@omar42315 Frankly, it's less Hitler's speeches which are remembered and more Goebbels various lies. I actually know the speech by Otto Wels (SPD politician who spoke up against the "Ermächtigungsgesetz") better than anything Hitler ever said. But in terms of "quotes" people remember in Germany, the top quotes are certainly "Ich bin ein Berliner" (by Kennedy), "Niemand hat die Absicht eine Mauer zu errichten" (as mentioned, Ulbricht promising to not built a wall shortly before he actually built the wall), "Wir sind gekommen um ihnen mitzuteilen, dass ihre Ausreise..." (by Genscher in the Prague Ambassy when he told a bunch of Germans that they would be allowed to travel to West Germany...the sentences is cut off, because you couldn't understand what else he said due to the cheering crowd) and "Äh, äh, ich denke ab sofort." (which isn't actually from a speech, but from Schablowski, a GDR official who was supposed to give a press conference about the GDR loosening travel restrictions but accidentally cause the run on the wall which lead to its fall). It's understandable, I guess, because nowadays, the war has been over for so long, but the wall, that is something from living memory. And those quotes turn up in pretty much every "fast cut through German history" reel, while there is naturally little interest to show anything what Hitler did, and Otto Wels speech doesn't have a recording.
Oh, and there are naturally the most important speech ever:
Es gibt im Moment in diese Mannschaft, oh, einige Spieler vergessen ihren Profi was sie sind. Ich lese nicht sehr viele Zeitungen, aber ich habe gehört viele Situationen.
Erstens: Wir haben nicht offensiv gespielt. Es gibt keine deutsche Mannschaft spielt offensiv und die Namen offensiv wie Bayern. Letzte Spiel hatten wir in Platz drei Spitzen: Elber, Jancker und dann Zickler. Wir mussen nicht vergessen Zickler. Zickler ist eine Spitzen mehr, Mehmet mehr Basler.
Ist klar diese Wörter, ist möglich verstehen, was ich hab’ gesagt? Danke.
Offensiv, offensiv ist wie machen in Platz.
Zweite: Ich habe erklärt mit diese zwei Spieler: Nach Dortmund brauchen vielleicht Halbzeit Pause. Ich habe auch andere Mannschaften gesehen in Europa nach diese Mittwoch. Ich habe gesehen auch zwei Tage die Training. Ein Trainer ist nicht ein Idiot! Ein Trainer sehen was passieren in Platz. In diese Spiel es waren zwei, drei oder vier Spieler, die waren schwach wie eine Flasche leer!
Haben Sie gesehen Mittwoch, welche Mannschaft hat gespielt Mittwoch? Hat gespielt Mehmet, oder gespielt Basler, oder gespielt Trapattoni? Diese Spieler beklagen mehr als sie spielen!
Wissen Sie, warum die Italien-Mannschaften kaufen nicht diese Spieler? Weil wir haben gesehen viele Male solche Spiel. Haben gesagt, sind nicht Spieler für die italienische Meisters.
Struuunz! Strunz ist zwei Jahre hier, hat gespielt zehn Spiele, ist immer verletzt. Was erlauben Strunz?! Letzte Jahre Meister geworden mit Hamann, eh…, Nerlinger. Diese Spieler waren Spieler und waren Meister geworden. Ist immer verletzt! Hat gespielt 25 Spiele in diese Mannschaft, in diese Verein. Muß respektieren die andere Kollega!
Haben viel nette Kollegen, stellen sie die Kollegen die Frage! Haben keine Mut an Worten, aber ich weiß, was denken über diese Spieler. Mussen zeigen jetzt, ich will, Samstag, diese Spieler mussen zeigen mich, eh…, seine Fans, mussen alleine die Spiel gewinnen. Mussen allein die Spiel gewinnen!
Ich bin müde jetzt Vater diese Spieler, eh…, verteidige diese Spieler. Ich habe immer die Schulde … über diese Spieler. Einer ist Mario, einer ist, anderer ist Mehmet. Strunz dagegen, egal, hat nur gespielt 25 Prozent diese Spiel!
Ich habe fertig!
(That's a speech of Football trainer Trappatoni, which resulted in a lot of German sayings, from "schwach wie eine Flasche leer" to "Ich habe fertig!")
Here's an idea: iconic commercials around the world. Commercials are a pressure cooker that really reveal cultural values in a way that other media don't.
Oh, that would be a REALLY good one. I can already think of one from my country (Philippines).
@@theobuniel9643 What's yours? I've been watching Indonesian television and I think I remember seeing one about skin whitening cream (I'm learning Indonesian, so I may have misunderstood), but that's one I thought of.
For the U.S. I think a candidate would be that Jeep commercial from Superbowl LV, really idolizing independence and the open road.
Goodness... As a german I think all the really iconic ones are just the stuff that got turned into memes... Well, that and some disturbingly sexist stuff from the 50's which is occasionally played just because it's so utterly absurd from a modern perspective (it featured a product called Frauengold "Women's Gold" and advertized itself as a tranquilizer for hysterical women and as such, the ads usually featured a woman getting rather upset for reasons that nowadays seem perfectly valid and then being recommended the stuff so they would calm down. It contained 16.5% alcohol and was banned in the 80's when some of the other active ingredients were found to be carcinogens and harmful to the kidneys).
I love how you are educated about the Philippines' martial law era. It was indeed the darkest period in modern Ph history. And Marcos apologist do exist and that is alarming.
It was a civil war tbh awesome moment at philippine history but sadly after the removal of Marcos the philippines had a horrible leader named Cory Aquino.
@@dudemevill1699 i love cory cory
@@dudemevill1699 fascist aupporter
@@dudemevill1699 lol, civil war from what?
Only Marcos Apologists (Far-right morons) would be so paranoid of it in which you will justify Marcos' declaration of Martial Law OF THE WHOLE ACHIPELAGO for 8 years.
Truly the darkest chapter of modern Philippines.
@@evenskyzhekovic2538 lol, if marcos didnt declared the martial law we are the communist country now.
If a non-English speech is required, India has tum mujhe khoon do, main tumhe aazadi dunga (You give me blood, I shall give you freedom) by Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. He is asking people to sacrifice for freedom. The original speech, I'm told in the replies, was in Bangla. Yeah, so why not Bangla? It's an Indian language, not a colonial one.
Edited -
Yo Bangladeshi bros! ✌️
But that's not a way ,respect Netaji subhash Chandra bose but hr is supporter of military rule which is bad for India in long run also Axis has command on him so most likely India move from british colony to Axis colony if India get independence from Iaf.
@@historyeditz8326 He was not a supporter of military rule lol. Who told you that? He needed Axis support. Why would the British help us get free from the British? An enemy's enemy is always a friend. And by the way, after the war, Axis was in tatters. We'd have got our independence and would have stayed united.
@@historyeditz8326 you just f facts
Was not it in Bengali first ?
@@arnoygayen1984 Was it? I have no idea. I've only heard the Hindi version. We can show both versions then. Could also be a good way to show our diversity 🤷♂️
As a Hungarian, I was really surprised by the choice of my fellow Hungarians. I was sure it's going to be the Imre Nagy speech from the Revolution of 1956, or the Lajos Kossuth speech, the first ever sound recording in Hungarian. But in retrospect, they were right, it's the Öszöd speech that I can quote the longest, and it is something that still keeps Viktor Orbán in power today (combined, of course, with the continuous presence of Ferenc Gyurcsány himself in the Hungarian opposition movement)
Me too
I wish I sent Nagy Imre's speech in, given it is a better look for us, but this might be more honest, and more important to remember in our current political state.
“If Queen Elizabeth spoke in a confusing mix of Shakespearean English and Latin”
Me remembering JJs previous video where Queen E said “annus horribilis”: she doesn’t?
The Emperor's speech was in a much less understood dialect exclusive to the palace (and much better audio copies exist).
As a Derry man (in the north west of Northern Ireland), thank you for making use of our dialect through the word "yous"
I thought I was doing that guy from Futuramma
Yous is also common in Aussie slang like what are yous looking at.
@@JJMcCullough We'll claim whatever bone is thrown in our general direction haha
P.S. Alternatively, we also use "yis" and "yousins"
It's also very common in New Jersey and New York
“Youse” is common in the Philadelphia area too
The most famous political cartoon from each country,could be a nice subjct as yourself made political cartoons once,for the british is probably the one where Pitt the Younger and Napoleon are slicing the world,it could match perfectly for a next video
Great idea
Perhaps the one with Standard Oil, US Steel, etc. all in the senate for America
For India it is The Common Man by R.K Laxman
For South Africa it's most definitely the "Rape of Lady Justice" cartoon by Zapiro
@@sodapop1794 what about the anti apartheid poster with the African man crammed at the bottom of the silhouette of Africa? I live in the us and have seen it a lot
From the hungarian speech you missed the way more iconic part:
"Elkúrtuk elvtársak, nem kicsit, nagyon."
"We fucked it up, comrades, not bit, but very much."
he didn't say comrades
@@benjaminmoloy7163 You are right, i dont know why i remembered it this way.
@@VYHSB I'm seeing different people explaining and reiterating the speech in new and different ways.
I like how this video is posted on 7th March (Bangladesh Time), the Anniversary of the speech.
Anyway, thanks a lot JJ, for using my comment!
This is my second account.
@@nuzayerov Yes
B'deshi here 🇧🇩 🇧🇩 🇧🇩
Joy Bangla!
Whats whith the che thing he was a murdering prick
Fidel's "history will absolve me" speech is a pretty iconic one for Cuba
the "si quieren venir que vengan, les presentearemos batalla" line was also saud by Belgrano, one of the biggeet heroes in Argentina's independence war, so when Galtieri said it, it was one of the biggest spit in out history's face
JJ's impression of a Marcos apologist is spot on.
His English was too good though
Not a pro-Marcos, but I’m glad he included him.
@@ulriktrillana9521 yeah
@@ulriktrillana9521 tbf most people here in the Philippines speak and write really good English. It's been in our education since the American colonization days, paired with their centralized curriculum.
I'm guessing you guys are also Filipinos. Anyway, I'm surprised that no "facebook" political people came here, well you know who they are.
I would say that the most chilling speech was the one given by Allende.
chilean speech gave me goosebumps
" No power on Earth can undo Pakistan " ~ Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Founder of Pakistan and this is the most ionic speech for Pakistanis.
Ctrl Z
Respect from Bangladesh 🇧🇩
@@johnny-db1tg Love from Pakistan
Chal jhoothaa 🇮🇳🇮🇳
@@sabalsneh9315 wah jhoothaa keh k agy mention bhi ker kia India ko
hahahah
The American, “I pledge allegiance” that they make us recite in basically only elementary school is an interesting one that even 11 years later I still remember by heart
Not really a speech though, just a pledge that has changed over the years designed to instill patriotism (and sell flags).
It used to be popular for American school children to recite the Gettysburg Address or the Emancipation Proclamation. I find there’s less of an emphasis on public speaking in general in more modern curriculums.
@@ocost3000 wasn’t really saying it was a speech. Was more pointing it out because he said he was interested in a video about patriotic things they teach children.
We still do it every day and I'ma be a freshman in highschool next year
@@gamerfanification oh right, my bad!
You didn't include the part all Hungarians know xD
"elkúrtuk, nem kicsit, nagyon"
Translates to:
"we fucked up, not mildly.. Heavily"
As a chilean, hearing Allende's last speech was always really sad. Think what you will about socialism, but the man fought like nobody for the people of the country and it's economical independece (although some may think otherwise), only for all his and people's dreams to be crushed for 17 years, and even longer.
Now, after 2019's protests and recent politicals accomplishments, I finally think that Allende wasn't wrong in his hope about the future. It's just that he, from 1973, was looking farther into the future than anyone else could, and I find it inspiring just to think that, even confronted with his own innevitable dead, he was able to look into the future with hope and faith.
I feel sad for that man too.
I learned that speech by heart when I was a kid in Sweden translated into Swedish. We gad many Chilean refugees where I grew up. So 9/11 was already ingrained in my mind in 2001, but with the year 1973 instead...
Bullshit, he was fighting for USSR, because he was a KGB agent
@@piekarzpaola Well, I shouldn't reply to this kind of comments, but I'll do it just for anyone who might wonder if this is actually true. The Mitrokhin archive, released by the MI6 (UK's national intelligence service) revealed that Allende not only wasn't a KGB agent, but also that they had a very bad impression of him. It seems that he was discredited by the Chilean Communist Party (Allende was from the Socialist Party). This might explain why the USSR did very little to help Chile when it was being economically sabotaged.
Also one of KGB's policies was not to have spies in Latin America, as we weren't seen as "enemies of the USSR".
The one thing that is true is that Allende received money from the KGB back in 1961 (9 years before becoming president) in exchange for information about Chile's security and while I agree that that's kind of shady, we have to understand that it was a context of Cold War and if you were a major political figure in Latin America you either received money from the CIA or the KGB. And most of the people that caused chilean's tragic coup d'état and the following dictatorship where financed by the CIA.
The thought that Allende might be a KGB agent was reported to be a personal belief of Richard Nixon, who was kind of paranoid after the cuban revolution, wich he saw as a personnal defeat.
@@helterskelter9670 Hmm, "in Latin America you either received money from the CIA or the KGB" and "Allende received money from the KGB back in 1961 in exchange for information about Chile's security" but somehow he's not 5th Soviet column, ok.
Neverthless I think "man fought like nobody for the people of the country" sentence is wrong.
I really enjoy these videos where you ask people about their favorites from their counties! Keep it up JJ!
I really enjoy making em!
They are so fun to watch too!
@@JJMcCullough It seems to work really well. It's what you deserve for cultivating a great UA-cam community.
@@JJMcCullough It showed in your delivery. A real award winner this one.
Hungarian Leader: Speaks like a gangsta.
Leaker: I'm gonna end this guys Prime Minister career.
"We fucked up, not a bit, a lot." didn't make it into the video.
His career somehow hasn't ended. His new party got ~5% of the vote last election.
MacArthur's Speech is also pretty famous
"I shall return"
basically gave the filipinos hope that america will liberate the Philippines and the madlad McArthur actually did it
"MacArthur? Did you bring the shore based artillery?"
"No, I brought the whole US Pacific Fleet."
-MacArthur, probably
@@RyuzoSan19 "No kill like overkill amirite."
"I've got more than enough to eat at home" - Mayor Rob Ford
For me, the best speech is “I am Iron Man”. This will always be remembered.
and that is a true story
I am more impressed with “I can do this all day”
To be honest, I think either the "Darth Plagueis" or the "You were the chosen one" speech will be remembered longer
@@kevinw4267 not a speech
Which one, though? There are at least three separate "I am Iron Man" speeches.
Me being an argentinian myself, I consider that THE speech that makes any argentinian cry of emotion is the one made by Alfonsín on 1983. He was the first president elected after 7 years of dictatorship.
Check it out, it really is thrilling. ❤️🇦🇷 Also, love you and admire you a lot, JJ!
10:44 This is hilarious. I love your channel.
14:32 I stepped into a taxi in the Philippines when I first entered the country and the driver kept complaining how bad life was without Marcos and kept praising the martial law period.
It's like people apologising for Fascism in Spain.
It's ironic that Marcos is the reason why we're still a developing country and his apologist still whining about today's daily life
Well to be fair Spain and Marcos downfall had the same story. Our economy plummeted after they were remove and it got worse. Both had a following and fanatics. What many dont realize is that the nation plummeted due to corruption and Filipinos instead of putting qualified leaders. Elected flaterers who are not qualified. Thus making it worse. No! As I condemn Spanish apologist who were silence due to Rizal law in the 50's so do I condemn Marcos apologist. Its not the Katipunan Revolution nor EDSA revolution fault why our country did not flourish its the fault of the people for they remove a monster by replacing it with another monster.
I feel like every former fascist country has its share of misguided fascism sympathizers. Isn’t that what drove Bolsinaro’s election?
Well to be fair it was either Franco or becoming Stalin's foothold in the West.
@@thrallfan1056 yup and I don’t tolerate the killings of my Catholic brothers.
For India it is Modi's demonetization speech :- " pooraane 500 aur hazaar ke note Aaj se band " 😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣
"Will hold no legal tender from midnight tonight."
Definitely will one of the most iconic speech in the future 😂
han ji logon, ab me sab ko ghareeb karunga
-Modi
"... just don't forget to translate" - JJ.
It was just 5 words and you failed.
The chilean speech gave me goosebumps
gotta give JJ huge props to put out actual entertaining videos trough subscriber input one reason i like this channel so much
My subs have so much knowledge!
I am from Austria and I have tears now in my eyes. Thank you to the good austrian who sent this in.
02:00 India has 700+ languages with 2300+ dialects, English is still the de facto national language.
Hindi and English have official language status. With each state divided on a linguistic basis having an official language of their own. Only 22 languages are recognised by the constitution currently though
@Hello ! We don't speak hindi in the south. English is preferable over hindi.
We don't have any national language...we use English and Hindi as official...with each states having number of other languages...
22 official languages
And I'm confident in just one of them 🥲
Sounds like the Philippines
i love how jj called out the marcos apologists lmao love this channel m8
Current president of the philippines insisted declared that late president marcos was the great president in all time all over the world but america vilifies him. in 1966 george hueys says american goverment want to ousts the presidency of marcos in just 1 year of marcos term thats prove that america didnt want the philippines become super power because they cannnot manipulate the people and control the country by running the puppet goverment because in 1965 the philippines was in federal goverment means only high intellectual become president you can see it in speechess of president marcos....GREAT HERO!🇵🇭
@@jimmybaja8141 go away troll.
@@jimmybaja8141 marcos h1tl3r diktador tuta
@Kosorou Gaming Studio Archives In what world is "not being born during that time" an excuse for being historically ignorant?
@Kosorou Gaming Studio Archives Sure, let's say your argument is true. Marcos is not the mastermind. But under his administration, he enabled a gruesome 20-year slaughter of innocent lives and silencing of dissidents.
He was supposed to be smart and powerful. The words "UP graduate" and "Bar topnotcher" are titles he had prior to him running in '65. He held the seat for 20 years. How could he, a supposedly smart guy, not know what's happening with PNP? And why would he choose to keep silent, refusing to fire overabusive military men and constables?
It's as almost your Pontius Pilate of a puppet dictator is on the abusers' side...
Being a Polish person and hearing that speech and the dark and melancholy voice over the scratchy sound of the TV struck me knowing that my parents went through this when they were younger
I would say as a Newfoundlander, the most famous speech from here would actually be Richard Cashins conspiracy speech from 1949 about Newfoundland’s confederation to Canada. Although the speech was made about how he believed the referendum that caused Newfoundland to join Canada was rigged, it lives on as really the only speech which pretty much every Newfoundlander knows although the words of the speech are cherished by people who believe in an independent Newfoundland to this day.
I don't know why so many Newfoundlanders continue to nurse such an absurd fantasy
@@JJMcCullough I'd say it's probably because they manage to remain as distinct as they do from the rest of Canada, which feels like it ought to be reflected in some official capacity. It seems to me, though I am not from Newfoundland, to be more efficient as a cultural rather than political idea.
I was just listening to The Latecomers by Glenn Gould. If you haven't listened to it, it's awesome. Much respect to Newfoundland, keeping it real.
@@JJMcCullough Because Island nations are ❤️
from flagspert to....speechspert.
I'm a spert spert!
originally a canadaspert
And now an allspert
Bhutto's speech is comedy gold, we should make a meme out of it now
as a pakistani, pls feel free to treat him as a meme. That clip of his is already an iconic meme. the bhuttos deserve it, excluding Benazir. She was th only worthy bhutto ✌️😂
@@fatimaqureshi4984
Yes exactly. More than focusing on war and animosity if the Pakistani leadership could focus more on other things, Pakistan would've been at a better place. It would be good for us Indians too, we could cut down our defence budget
I don't think warming relations between Pakistan and India would result in India lowering its Defense budget because it also has a much graver threat up north.
Why do you need to make a meme on bhutto though? Your current pm modi is the clown of the century
Nice to platform Allende's speech to your audience.
20:17 "noble blood" I would love to see how such a statement in a political speech today would be perceived
20:12
It's Turkey so no one would care about their nationalism lol, they still get away with the Armenian genocide...
@@otterno.1128
They're not getting away with it, they are always getting criticised for it, most European countries have committed more genocides in closer time periods and they are getting away with it, france has probably killed more people in Algeria than ottomans killed in their whole history, and this happened in the 60s and 50s, and only in last few years have they start admitting the war crimes they did there, and Charles de gaulle who ordered many of these crimes is still considered a hero in France and whole western world, while everyone who was accused of participating in the Armenian genocide is considered a criminal
@@Goodguy507 France stopped the slave trade in Algeria and has payed their dues by letting many Algerian immigrants come and make a living in France, and send back money to their families - Turkey genocided the Armenians with no repercussions at all, and most countries still don't admit it happened.
@@otterno.1128
Omg, france actually ended the slave trade in Algeria, that's so nice of them, only problem is that every Algerian was pretty much a slave to France, so instead of some people being enslaved, now all the country is enslaved, true egalitarianism!
And the Algerian immigrants who worked in France weren't allowed in because France is such a good and compassionate state, but because they were good for the economy, they didn't get free money, they worked, earned money, sent some of that money to their families, this isn't charity, most nations only allow immigration when economically beneficial, and once immigration startes harming the economy, you'd see a big rise in anti-immigration and laws will be changed, no western country allows immigration for the sake of moral goodness, don't fool yourself, it's all for money, and to this day the French government refuses to return the skulls of Algerian freedom fighters to Algeria because they are displayed I French museums, few years ago they returned the skulls of some leaders but still refuse to return all of them, so even symbolically, France still refuses to seek forgiveness for its mistakes
One VERY big independence speech ( here in Mexico) is the grito de Dolores. It isn't much of an official speech, but it is a very famous format that every president recites a version of on independence day. It happened in 1810 when the secret organization revealed themselves and started the 11 year old war for independence. It came from a pastor named Miguel Hidalgo that recited it from the top of a church ringing the bell in the middle of the night in the small town of Dolores.
You’re wrong. The most memorable speech in Mexican history is “Ricky Riquín Canallín” by OUR paramount leader Andrés «Me canso ganso/Abrazos, no balazos/Yo tengo otros datos» Manuelóvich
As a non-Mexican who is learning Spanish, I've heard of that one! In fact, in my 9th-grade Spanish class, I even learned about _el_ _Grito_ and the history behind the Mexican War of Independence! Thanks for remindimg me!
India: Not to forget Subash Chandra Bose’s “Give Me Blood and I Will Give you Freedom” speech
Netaji 🔥😎
OR Mitroooo
True indeed
@@kingsentertainment786 p a ppu aalu Sona speech
I thnik, for India it is Modi's demonetization speech :- " pooraane 500 aur hazaar ke note Aaj se band " 😂😂😂
I’m German and I love the last Radio Broadcast of the Polish National Radio Service and it’s call for resistance and in Germany it’s often considered one of the greatest symbols of resistance to tyranny!
You left out the best part from Gyurcsány's speech as a hungarian we all know this line: "Elkúrtuk, nem kicsit, nagyon" which means: We fucked up and not by a little but by a lot
Goebbels and Nazi Germany: “Yes, we want total war!”
USA, UK, USSR: Lol. Okay.
+colonies:bruh, are these guy on meth?
Not Nazi
National Socialist
You're missing alot more nations
@@simpsbelongtothegulags3702 Nazi is literally the abbreviation for national socialist (the Z being courtesy of the german spelling as the german language doesn't use the letter C in the same way as english).
@@darthplagueis13 National Socialists never refer to themselves as Nazi only their enemies did
I would say that Pakistan's most iconic speech belongs to its Founder, the Quaid e Azam (The Great Leader) Muhammad Ali Jinnah giving his vision for Pakistan on August 11, 1947
Definitely
the nation has only given terrorists
@@yogeshpandey1612 I feel sorry for India to hold the souls of people like you. I will not disrespect a nation whom we want to brefiend cuz of one moron :)
@@yogeshpandey1612 how did you know
@@yogeshpandey1612 by bollywood movies
3:36 The great leader Bongobondhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman ❤️❤️.
Famous Quote : ' We have learned to die, that's why no one can stop us'
Bangladesh 🇧🇩
he pronounced it like "moogeybur ramen" 😭😭
@@pastthe.expirationdate I happens 😕..
Don't be sad
@@pastthe.expirationdate Americans does that shit! They have real problem in their tongue
I just love how no one can pronounce hungarian names and we can't even explain how it should be pronounced
V4 is the holy quaternity of hard to pronounce names.
The last words of Allende are so powerfull, truly the most important and famous speech of my country
As an Argentinian I would also choose the final campaign speech from Raul Alfonsin, it’s incredibly powerful.
One of, if not the most memorable speech in Australian history would be the impromptu one given by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam on the steps of parliament just after he was dismissed, "well may we say God save the queen".
"... because *NOTHING* will save, the Governor-General"
Ahh the Marcos Regime speech, when you got to the national emergency part, I had a feeling it'd be Marcos again and I was right hahah
Excuse me?
@@amielpatriarca2551 ok i excuse you
We need martial law in Mindanao again rebels are striving
@@kizuma_0993 Bruh
@@dudemevill1699 bruh hahahahah tugutin kaya ni duterte?
There’s a famous one for Japan made by an American as he was leaving, “Boys, be ambitious!”. He helped develop Hokkaido (the northern island) during Japan’s industrialization and they have statues of him
I think the people of Japan have really adopted this motto to the T!
For more information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_S._Clark
@@Hand-in-Shot_ProductionsYou lie
Would love to see a follow up of the most famous mistakes and faux pas in speeches. Some speeches are memorable for speakers saying something silly or nonsensical, or saying something they didn't mean to say or based on information they misunderstood.
America has some great options for such a topic.
“There's an old saying in Tennessee - I know it's in Texas, probably in Tennessee - that says, fool me once, shame on - shame on you. Fool me - you can't get fooled again.” Bush
“We hold these truths to be self-evident. All men and women are created, by the, you know, you know the thing,” Biden
"Corporations are people my friend" Mitt Romney.
@@pascalausensi9592 “Please clap” is my favourite
Not a speech but portuguese President Cavaco Silva raised the portuguese flag upside down during the commemorations of the 5th of October (implantation of the Republic), which was a pretty big mistake since in in the military it used to mean an occupied territory and at the time people felt the country was being "invaded" by Troika
Just use anything from Merkel
Example: when asked why she trusts corrupt politicians as ministers of Finance, she only replies that she trusts completely, and when asked again she says that she's said enough.
But more widely known here are the stances of Drug Ministers on Weed.
"Cannabis is prohibited becaus it is illegal" or "Cannabis isn't Broccoli"
Gotta remember when the president of Argentina thanked drug trafficking
I would say another famous speech for Poland was the final goodbye during World War 2. The speech had such a dark tone to it and reminded the people that Poland was not yet lost.
this guy never has to walk on a treadmill or go for a jog, talking for couple minutes is enough cardio for him
Singapore’s independence speech is an iconic one.
Mr. Lee Kuan Yew had high expectations on Malaysia, since Singapore at that time was small and poor. When Malaysia kicked out Singapore in 1965, it went so bad even Mr. Lee himself cried, worrying about his country’s future.
@@risannd the country ended up becoming incredibly rich though, so it all worked out in the end (for Singapore at least... not so much for Malaysia).
@@LjuboCupic1912 how they succeed?
@@pierren___ Tax haven + great port for international trade = profit
@@LjuboCupic1912 Thanks. What about the insiders life, indegenous?
3:34 holy shit I can't believe Bangladesh is mentioned, thank you! Sometimes our struggle for independance and history feel invisible to the world, overshadowed by our neighbours, so thank you for being the only youtube video I've seen that aknowleges this speech.
many indians know his speech i dont know much about others but i definitely know this line ...
@@kgovind2171 thats great, thanks for the respect.
Bangladesh is a sh!thole
@@pingpong1465 still better than your soul
@@kgovind2171 🤡🤡🤡truth hurts eh
8:48
The most famous and most important speech in Argentina in my opinion is that of President Alfonsin "Happy Easter, the house is in order" (the pink house) after having to deal with a military uprising, Alfonsin being the first president of the return of democracy after 7 years of civic-ecclesial-military dictatorship that disappeared thousands of people. The speech itself was analyzed many times, Alfosin was a very good speaker.
As soon as I saw the thumbnail, I had that one in mind, but I kinda agree that Galtieri's is the popular one. I guess it's more memeable.
There is also De la Rúa's state of emergency speech, pretty boring (heh) but also really well known.
@@alejandro6070 Yet the funniest goes to Menem and his rocket to the stratosphere.
I've listened to that Norwegian song for years now and never knew about its historical context, thank you for sharing that.
Is he popular in Norway, or is he not considered cool because he’s Norwegian?
@@JJMcCullough should have mentioned. Not actually norwegian. From Canada, but found that song through Alexander Rybak who i enjoy listened to his music after I found him in Eurovision.
I feel delighted and honoured by seeing the proposition that I brought up among other Poles here.
It is also meaningful to see somewhat similar moments for other nations.
Whenever you will need help with similar worldwide comparisons, you can count on me :)
I will be pleased to show the "details" of my country.
Also, what do you think about such topic?
"The Trumps of the world"
By this, I mean politicians who have had no political expirience before, but managed to somehow becomes significant in the realm of politics.
Przestań się płaszczyć
@@piekarzpaola witam
@@piekarzpaola A tak na serio, jestem po prostu wdzięczny w pewnym sensie, że w jakiś sposób udało mi się przyczynić do stworzenia treści tego filmiku.
That's it.
Żegnam.
@@kacpergalik609 That's a great idea! Probably safer to call it Reagans of the World though.
In Ireland, we are made to learn two separate national anthems in primary school; one in Irish and one in English. Amhran na bhFiann, which translates to "The Soldier's Song", is usually taught first and is what I learned first. The song comes from the days of the Irish War of Independence, but surprisingly enough it was originally written in English. The Irish translation is what children learn today, and is sung at all big Irish sports games (gaelic football, hurling, soccer, etc).
The notable exception is rugby, where because the Irish team is made up for the entire island, including the British owned Northern Ireland, an English anthem is sung. It would considered inappropriate by players from the North to play Amhran na bhFiann in English, as the lyrics describe war against the British, which many in the North were against. Instead they use a new song written in 1995 called "Ireland's Call". This song's lyrics are entirely in English and describe Irish people from all over the island standing together in unity. It's a strong symbol of unity between the Republic and the North.
I'm not sure if Ireland's Call is on the curriculum for children to learn here, but Amhran na bhFiann certainly is. Regardless, my teachers made sure we knew both word for word, and we could sing it for the parents when the teachers wanted us to, in a choir sort of set up. This is strictly a primary school thing though, and once a child goes to secondary school at 12/13, they will most likely forget the words to Amhran na bhFiann pretty quickly, as most people don't speak enough Irish to keep it in their heads properly
Funnily enough given Britain's reputation for jingoism among Europeans, British children aren't taught God Save the King unless teachers choose to. Plus it's so short and repetitive that most pick it up on their own in no time!
I am currently preparing for UPSC, one of the toughest exams in the whole world and whenever i feel demotivated i open UA-cam and listen to Jawaharlal Nehru's speech. Every single time it sends chills down my spine. It reminds me that i am grinding day and night not just for myself but my fellow countrymen, especially the poor who don't have a voice of their own.
14:40. That is correct. English is the universally spoken language in The Philippines. Pilipino (not Tagalog a common mistake) the national language comes next. The local dialects are too diverse only English is a common denominator for spoken languages. BTW The Philippines has the Thomasites to thank for that and effectively eradicating Spanish as a common language and French as an upper class language.
*Filipino, to be precise
Filipino is just Tagalog. And those are not dialects, they are languages.
Filipino is just Tagalog. And those are not dialects, they are languages. Where did you get that French?
@@santbibliophile It is different. Filipino uses the complete latin alphabet and uses loan letters such as x, c, j, z. It also incorporates loan words from Spain and United States. In other words, Filipino is tagalog but standardized enough to be used in official documents. Making tagalog the official language is way harder to implement as there's so many words that don't exist in the tagalog language.
@@kb-ww1uw Just because a dialect incorporates more foreign words doesn't make it a separate language. And if it is a separate language, why doesn't it have native speakers in PSA records?
Oh, well, it is just Tagalog, why does it need to be separated. If borrowing words make a dialect a separate language then we can separate Davaoeño from Cebuano, unfortunately linguistics doesn't work that way. Lol
"Ballot or Bullet" by Malcolm X is the greatest American speech I can think of. Reagan's "Time for Choosing" is up there as well as Ron Paul's Farewell Address.
So cool! I wrote the Hebrew book with Ben Gurion's speech LOL
Woah, did you really??
Yeah, and the quote in my book is the exact famous sentence...
@@JJMcCullough Did you see the Canada plaque at the entrance of that building? I was shocked when I saw it!
What a funny coincidence
@@JJMcCullough Her channel was made 9 years ago and she also has Hebrew videos on her channel. So I don't think she's lying
I was waiting for this video since the last Saturday. Loved it!
Lmao at 12:55 “the very melodramatic way he opened the speech seems to be what poles remember most” and then immediately an Advil commercial plays.
Fun fact: Today 7th March, the upload day of this video in Bangladesh time, is the 50th anniversary of the Sheikh Mujibur Rahman speech from Bangladesh. 🇧🇩
জয় বাংলা!
🇵🇰💚🇧🇩
🇺🇸 ❤ 🇧🇩
Dhaka Division
Man these types of videos are so much fun.
God I was drinking water when you transitioned from Bhutto to Zia and it made me choke with laughter.
The israeli children book got it right, the "Hava nagila" song in the end is cringe though 😅.
Children's books tend to be cringe, especially Israeli nationalistic children's books
Pretty sure it's an imitation of Ben Gurion.
Should have been Hatikvah, its a much better and more fitting song
I agree, i am israeli.
Idk if this is relevant for this video but I would say that one of the most famous speeches in Israeli history is in fact the speech Bill Clinton gave in the funeral of Yitzhak Rabin, especially the phrase "shalom haver" which has turned into an icon.
I think he has a yisrael beitenu election card in the background
For Argentina another famous quote ingrained in our collective memory is the ending of the prosecution's final statement during the trial of the juntas (our equivalent to the Nuremberg trials for the officials of our last dictatorship, including Galtieri himself). The quote was "señores jueces: nunca más" (mister judges: never again).
"Österreich ist frei!" Short and sweet
"Wollt ihr den totalen Krieg" short and sweet /s
Here is Time stamp if you want a particular contry:
00:00 intro
1)SPEECHES OF NATIONAL LIBERATION
India: 00:59
Israël: 2:33
Bangladesh : 3:34
Austria: 4:36
France(De Gaulle): 5:04
2)WAR SPEECHES
Germany: 7:00
Argentina 7:59
3)GOODBYE SPEECHES
Chili : 9:19
France (Giscard d'Estaing): 10:37
Pakistan: 11:07
4) EMERGENCY DECLARATION SPEECHES
Poland: 12:35
Philippines : 13:45
5) NATIONAL DOWNERS SPEECHES
Japan: 15:03
Hungary: 16:40
czecoslovaquia (sorry if it is miss spelled) : 18:34
6) PATRIOTIC SPEECHES
Turkey: 19:33
South Africa: 20:47
Norway 21:59
CONCLUSION : 23:00
End: 23:37 .
*Czechoslovakia
The most iconic goodbye speech from the United States is definitely George Washington's Farewell Address, but I think what's interesting is that the exact words were relatively unknown until Lin Manuel Miranda turned it into a song, "One Last Time", in Hamilton. Christopher Jackson's performance on the Original Broadway Cast Recording may be far more dramatic than how Washington really delivered the speech, but the humility and love of country and warnings of partisanship resonate with Americans, even to this day. I remember, years before Hamilton, I was taught in school how Washington warned us about partisan politics. But I'd never actually heard the words until listening to Hamilton.
From Greece, there's a speech that was given after the fall of the military junta and the restoration of democracy in 1974. Two of its quotes are almost universally remembered. Konstantinos Karamanlis was the first Prime Minister of the Third Hellenic Republic, and the two most remembered phrases are "Ανήκομεν εις την Δύσιν/We belong to the West" and "Η Κύπρος κείται μακράν/Cyprus is far" in reference to the ongoing Turkish conquest of Cyprus, partially allowed by the previous military regime's mismanagement and collapse. Cyprus was a Greek island before that point but nowadays it's divided in Greek and Turkish sectors. His speech is remembered as a symbol of political division and the deep struggle of the Greek state to find its political place in the world. There are many Greeks that consider Greece to be its own separate cultural sphere and that we should have some sort of independence, while there are also others that believe we belong to the west and we should try to conform to it as much as possible if we want to survive from Turkey. The reality is that Greece was independent culturally and politically in the time of the Byzantine Empire, but then it was squished between Islam/Turkey and Catholicism/Western Powers, which relentlessly invaded it again and again until it was divided in 1204 and then completely annexed in 1453. The entire early modern era for Greece was its people being slaughtered and its culture and language being replaced and assimilated by the Turkish while its religion was replaced by Islam, to the point where the Greek identity went from a Great power to a minor power. Because then Turkish power also diminished, Greece became free but with the aid of the Western Powers. A lot of independence movements had happened all across the Balkans and Anatolia, but they were slaughtered in the tens of thousands. The only real movements that ever had any success were the ones that were aided by and profited foreign powers. This has given Greece a huge national trauma to the point where many people believe we're depended on someone to exist. Even today Greeks are terribly scared of what a Turkish invasion would mean, so Greece is fairly stratocratic and spends a huge amount of its funds on army equipments and ensuring alliances, and Greek men are obliged by law to 1 year of military service (it was recently extended because of Turkish aggression and militarism under Erdogan). So yeah, many people consider him to be a "traitor" to Greece as its own little sphere, because he "submitted" us to the west and betrayed the Greeks on Cyprus, while others uphold his speech for "renewing" our traditional allies in the West and at least securing mainland Greece, since it was evident that, just as in Cyprus, an unexpected Turkish invasion could happen and it would be... bad.
"Turkish conquest" nice wording. Certainly it was conquest and not stopping the massacres committed to Turks and stopping enosis. Cyprus wasn't a Greek island. It was a Greek and Turkish island until Greeks didn't want the Turks anymore.
We assimilated your culture , religion and language so well that your language , culture and religion after 600 years of Turkish rule , even more in some other regions , exists today. Also , Greeks answered to the Patriarchate of Constantinople as they were Christians and they had autonomy on many matters.
@@afinoxi all of modern Turkey except for Kurdish and Armenian territories were originally exclusively Greek, and Turks came as migrants. Despite that, Greeks lived with Turks for centuries and only rebelled when they were being slaughtered. Of course, not always was there an organized plan for the extinction of the Greeks, but especially after 1909 and the Young Turks and then in modern Turkey, Greeks are actively censored and expelled and exterminated. In 1909-1922 especially the Greeks were genocided systematically in the Ottoman Empire, in an effort to transition to an ethnic state from multiethnic empire. But Young Turks and Kemal didn't accept giving foreign inhabited lands to the respective nations, instead they purged non-turks from the empire to make a huge Turkish state. That's Nazism. And Hitler himself applauded Kemal, saying he only wanted to copy what he did.
Anyway, Greece was always a Greek island. The Muslim minority on Cyprus was 15%, concentrated in the cities on the southern coast. Even if you count Northern Cyprus as a different "region", Greeks were the majority even there. In fact the Turkish Cypriots are an even smaller minority than the Muslim Cretans, who were 22-24% the island's population. And of course, the propaganda you're fed in Turkey shows from the illogical arguments that are made. If Greeks don't want Turks in Cyprus, why do they accept Turks in Thrace and in fact they are protected and prosper? Did you know that the "massacres" you say were in reality terrorist attacks by an extremist group that were then jailed? Did you know that the victims were 150-200 people, while Greek victims of the Turkish invasion were 6000 innocent civilians and of course many more soldiers?
Finally, I want to show you a last fact that might make you reconsider. How have Turkey and Greece taken care of each other's minorities since 1922?
Turkey: unilaterally abolished the autonomy and rights of the Greek majority on Imbros and Tenedos in 1927. Imposed unequal taxation (Varlik Vergisi) and instituted a pogrom with many victims and destruction of property in Constantinople (September 1955, the September Events)
Greeks in Turkey (1914)=>approximately 3 million
Greeks in Turkey (1922)=> approximately 300.000
Greeks in Turkey (1925)=>approximately 125.000 (in Constantinople, Imbros and Tenedos)
Greeks in Turkey (1955)=>less than 80.000
Greeks in Turkey (today)=> 2.500
This paints a pretty dramatic picture. On the other hand, the Turks in Greece were exchanged according to the Lausanne convention signed in January 1923, with the exception of the Turks in Thrace, which were a significant minority. As such:
Turks in Greece (1923, pre exchange)=> approximately 500.000
Turks in Greece (1924, post exchange)=> approximately 75.000 (remaining only in Western Thrace)
Turks in Greece (today)=> approximately 125.000, ie have almost doubled, while the Greeks have been forced to extinction.
I hope you see these with an open mind. Have a good day.
Marcos sympathizers always boast about his "regimes" achievements during his governance as pros to his rule.
Ok, most of the projects were Manila based, like the International Convention Center, Manila Terminal 1, the LRT line etc. But many of these projects came at least a decade late and at the expense of the rest of the country.
Aquino's suck just saying I hate them
@@dudemevill1699 indoctrinated fascist
Not only are they decade late but most of his projects came from loans and most are distributed to its cronies.
Not really something you should celebrate. (Of course Marcos Apologists will say otherwise)
Well they don't really need to boast those but when he got hated bc of Liberals for years and even indoctrinated the young generation to hate him without giving all the info just makes his supporters want to boast him to get back from all the propaganda against him
@@simpsbelongtothegulags3702 the Liberal party is only ONE of the victims of Marcos' brutal regime.
It's only natural for political parties to fight each other in the political stage and influence people. It is the people that should change and stop being loyal to politicians, thinking that they are messiahs that would end their suffering.
My favourite is from Gough Whitlam in 1975 -
“Ladies and gentlemen, well may we say 'God Save the Queen', because nothing will save the Governor-General.”
It’s a better speech to watch because of the emphasis placed on certain words.
The story behind it, and that he made this statement just in the moment and without rehearsal also speaks to the man’s character and intellect.
J.J you should do a "most revered athletes of the world" video. I think it would be interesting to find out why each country has each specific athlete that's so revered.
He could put up a poll and see how people answer although I'm not sure how effective that would be. The truth is however most countries around the world really only have a few players/teams throughout history that are really revered. Only a few such as the u.s. have so many dominant/loved athletes
If you’re still thinking of doing the patriotic things kids need to learn in school, the “Pledge of Allegiance” is the US’s biggest one other than singing the national anthem. Every kid needs to learn this pledge by heart and recite it while facing the flag every morning of their elementary school career, and in retrospect it’s something you’d see in like the Man in the High Castle of children being brainwashed to be completely aligned with the state. But then again by middle and high school, no one does does the pledge or the national anthem at least in CPS schools, and those times in one’s life might be more important in whether or not someone would be an ultra patriotic robot or a normal person who can recognize the flaws in their government.
If there’s one thing no one would accuse us Americans of, it’s bilingualism!
As an American student, I would agree that the _Pledge_ _of_ _Allegiance_ is the biggest example in the US of patriotic school activities! Like yourself, I have recited it every school day in elementary school, but not in middle school or high school. I would also see why you would compare it to _The_ _Man_ _in_ _the_ _High_ _Castle,_ or suggest that we should acknowledge the flaws of our own governments. Heck, remember Allende? He was overthrown with American aid!
Man, that super grim Polish speech has the vibe of the Fallout 4 newscaster telling everyone the bombs are dropping.
Fun fact: Every popular Polish speech people nowadays joke about
Great video J.J. 👌
Have you ever heard of former president of Egypt nasser? He literally became a leader of the arab world by being a good speech giver, he would make a speech about an arab leader, next day protest in the country of that leader would start against him, I dislike his politics but he definitely one of the best orators of modern Arab history, his most famous speech would be either the one after forming the "United Arab Republic" or after losing the 6 days war, or the speech when he said "an Egyptian soldier shoe is worth more than the Kings of Jordan and Saudi Arabia" he was a very anti-monarchy did, if you ever made a part 2 to this you should consider one of his speechs
Game Abdul Nasser