"But I don't wanna learn about the politics surrounding the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki at a sleepover-" "NO! You will watch the skull and enjoy it!"
I've never been able to finish Interstellar, I always get to the bit where Matt Damon shows up and I get bored and go to bed. I've sat through the full length of every long-ass video by Shaun / Hbomb e.t.c
Shaun, the use of the calendar throughout the video was a brilliant and really effective way to structure and keep track of everything. It was a really effective use of this medium, I was able to easily follow everything, really well done.
@@DavidMyrmidon I suspect because Shaun's videos normally just consist of a cartoon skull unless there's something else, like a transcript of a quote, to pop up. Most people want to use the visual medium of video to show something visually interesting to keep the attention of the more easily distracted, even if it is of tangential relevance. Having the calendar there and just occasionally putting photos or transcripts over it means not making use of the visual channel for conveying information, which creators with different styles would not be willing to sacrifice.
Agreed. I would also have liked to see a permanent noting of August 15th as the date the USSR was meant to declare war originally, I think that would have added a nice bookend and helped to visualize the pressure building on Truman between the Potsdam Declaration and August 15th.
@Jacob Fenrir Funny, in another thread, there's someone saying Shaun "didn't do his homework" and "left out very important points" that Shaun did include, because this guy skipped most of the video to just assume stuff was left out in the comments. You're at a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't situation with people like that. If he has a concise version, idiots will claim he didn't mention something that they claim is exculpatory to their position, and if you do make a 2-hour version, they don't watch it to learn the supporting arguments for their conclusion are all objectively false.
If you like this, check out 'The Guns of August', the seminal book about the first weeks of World War One, which is basically a calendar with a bunch of French generals being dumb. 'The Sleepwalkers' is a longer, drier, take on the same period, on how this even in 1870 means this happens in 1911, which means... you have to see the calendar view. A month has become a week has become a day has become an hour in international diplomacy.
the sato story is so excruciating. its like the full experience of a horribly frustrating work experience where someone with less expertise but a higher rank in your company tries to boss you around into doing things that make no sense except the consequence is literally your country getting nuked
The US were intercepting the discussions between diplomat Sato and Togo of the Big Six - these are known as the magic transcripts , and are posted on the US National Archive Site . ...The discusses go on and on and on .... Sato very methodically paints Togo into corner . Then Sato says to Togo those are “pretty little phrases devoid of all connection with reality,” “If the Japanese empire is really faced with the necessity of terminating the war, we must first of all make up our minds to terminate the war.” Then Sato asked for peace terms , yet Togo would not offer any terms . The US were listening in the whole time . .
...morale bombing of totalitarian militaristic states, yes. That is to say, it might work with states that are governed differently. Not saying it's a good idea
“It took me 2 minutes at the top of the video to explain the easy lie, and the rest of the video to explain the difficult truth” The problem with the whole world right now right here.
45:48 Okay no but like, can we actually discuss the magnitude of this reason. “I once went there on holiday”, which means “I have been to this place, it’s more than just a name on a map, I have seen people there live their lives, I have fond memories of the place. We cannot destroy a place that was humanized to me before my eyes”. That is genuinely such a huge statement. This one place was more than just a target to him, which is so psychologically interesting.
Yeah, it gives so much insight into how they thought about what they were doing. A mere visit was enough to turn Kyoto from an optimal target to one that he would fight tooth and nail to avoid bombing. Why would we believe that the others would be any different had one of the other generals vacationed there?
@jamescharles5907 No, I don't think you're here in good faith after you opened with a comment about Kyoto not being a high priority target because it wasn't of military importance. I think you're either trolling or have already made up your mind. Either way I'm not going to waste my own time.
@@glugtrop2010They were already in talks and working towards surrender. It was effectively a coincidence that the second bomb was dropped during that talk, and it plainly did not affect their eventual decision. That much is clear if you had watched the damned video.
I will admit for most of my life I was on the "it was horrible but Japanese stubbornness to surrender made their use inevitable, although the cities thing is messed up" position, but this video taught me a lot of things I honestly didn't know about and has definitely changed my position to a much more firm "it was entirely unnecessary" camp. I appreciate the work that went into this.
It changed my mind to nukes were inevitable for an unconditional japanese surrender. Im still contemplating the importance of completely crushing a fascist regime especially one as belligerent as the japanese. I mean to take 2 nukes and not budge an inch... fuck me.
One counterexample: Iwo Jima I wrote basically a whole essay in another comment about this, but Iwo Jima would have made it pretty clear that America would either need a major show of force or the deaths of millions of its own men to overcome Japan.
@@MrNoobthenub I disagree. If Truman and Burns had put the lives of the Japanese civilian population above their desires to try and get re-elected and just openly accepted a conditional surrender in favour of the Moderates (the Emperor stays, that's it) which is what they wanted anyway, they could have prevented Hiroshima and Nagasaki entirely. Instead they wrote their names in the history books at the cost of hundreds of thousands of innocent lives including mass murder of elementary school children.
his line about how "strategic bombing" changes depending on one's point of view reminds me of a carl sagan quote: "if we like them, they're freedom fighters. if we don't like them, they're terrorists. and in the unlikely event that we can't make up our minds, they're temporarily just guerillas."
"Don't bomb Kyoto. I was on holiday there and I liked it." This is the true horror of life. We are all beholden to the whims of those in power. Yeah, Kyoto was saved here. But for what reasons?
@Your future president I very much believe that people in power are behaving like that today, outside of harrowing war condition, as well. I want to push back a bit against "Life is just like that", because as bagelmaster already said, it doesn't have to be, and I would also say, it shouldn't be like this. People in power need to be accountable for their decisions (and thus have valid reasons for them in the first place). And when they're not, that's something to look out for and call out. Otherwise we can't call the governing structures that we have in developped countries proper democracies.
@Your future president Where do you get the idea that I'm talking about Syria or any such country? I said developped countries in my last comment. There are plenty of shit decisions made in developped countries, *even in peacetime.* I'm really not sure why you want to talk about Syria. Because I don't. I wanted to talk about irrational or uninformed decisions made by people in power, regardless of wartime or not. I guess the only overlap of my comments and yours is that, yes, people in power in Syria are, with a high probability, also making whimsical decisions. But that is a very small subset overall. I don't live in Syria, and unless you live in Syria and want to know what to do about Assad (to which I don't have a satisfying answer), all we can do is focus on the countries we do live in and call out politicians making decisions based not on evidence, but on their personal preferences. I can't solve Syrias crisis. Franky, I'd love to, but I can't.
I think if the japanese miltarists actually visited china and understood their 3000 year old culture. They would have figured out they can never be conquered.
I'm watching this right after watching "Oppenheimer" last night--and while the movie was visually and artistically stunning, there were a few historical inaccuracies that typically come along with the biopic genre. I'm glad to have watched this and am incredibly greatful for your dedication to lay things out accurately. I've been a fan for a while and will remain so for quite a bit. Thank you!
how much do you think the info in this vid will be useful for the movie? does it mainly focus on oppenheimers life/work or does it include the bigger stuff? gonna watch it soon :)
@@midkn1ght231 the movie itself follows mostly Oppenheimer. This video, though, is focused on the bigger things sorrounding the last few months of the war. It mentions Oppenheimer but doesn't go into depth about him specifically, but spends more time on the overarching political pushes and pulls involved in the war. It's not required for the movie, but it will help understand just how complex it all was. I hope you enjoy the movie! I'd recommend watching this video regardless, really--it's still very informative.
Wait a minute, wait a minute. Kyoto, the single most important city in Japanese cultural history, is only here today because the American Secretary of State went there on holiday???? I’m glad he did, but fuck
WTF almost fell down of my chair. But thats the real world - lots of stupid decisions taken on subjective preferences. And I say this about every human on earth.
@@lucasoheyze4597 'still there' is a way to put it, certainly. the cities were not abandoned, but the vast majority was entirely laid to ruin and had to rebuilt. kind of a question of "if you replace all but one brick in a wall, is it still the same wall?" if the same had been done to Kyoto, yes, it'd probably be 'still here' as in probably rebuilt, but much of its cultural history would be lost.
Can't believe we have access to this sort of deeply researched and accurate content on UA-cam for free. It's a huge privilege. Thanks for the great work!
@@nev12345678910 The people most heavily impacted were innocent civilians who didn't even want the war in the first place. Did you even watch the video or do you just like the idea of people needlessly dying because of circumstances out of their control that much?
hold up the entire viedeo says no nukes should have been droped but why ? it would have costet far more lives to put out an complete invasion and far more atrocitys from japanese and american side would have been commited ?
@@maximilianbeyer5642 leftist youtube. So people like shaun, hbomberguy, contrapoints, philosophytube, etc The names based on 'the conquest of bread' I think
The slow response of the Japanese leadership to the bombing of Hiroshima may have had something to do with the fact that the leaders of Japan were busy destroying documents of their participation in the war in Asia.
But they didn't destroy their documents. They handed them over to the Americans when they invaded where the US gave all the war criminals from Unit 731 immunity and new identities in the states. Still think the US are the good guys? They bought worthless research with the blood of Chinese civilians. Happily so. McArthur was all about it.
@@marishiten5944 It’s a well known fact that the Japanese government destroyed thousands of documents related warcrimes. The Foreign Ministry started burning documents after the nuking of Hiroshima.
2:07:22 - "what I do when I want to find an example of a poor argument put forward ineptly is check if Prager University has ever made a video on the topic" - Shaun
I was looking forward for Shaun of the Sheep to join the Shaun of the Dead franchise. I like it that in this version the mindless zombies looking to cause endless death are the politicians we elect, unlike today of course... Oh wait.
One of the reasons I knew never to involve myself with science for the military is because I actually used to work for someone who knew J. Robert Oppenheimer, and had crossed paths with him on different occasions. I asked him what Oppenheimer was like, and he told me very bluntly eight ominous words of warning, "I have never seen a more broken man."
At around 32 minutes you talk about how Roosevelt went from a staunch opponent of bombing cities to the leader of a nation that bombed cities. You might be interested to know my father's reaction. In the years leading up to the war, my dad was in his late teens end early twenties and applauding Roosevelt's talk about "ruthless barbarism". When the US entered the war, my dad entered the infantry to 'save the world's children from areal bombardment". To save the children, my dad walked up Utah beach on the morning of D-Day. To save the children, he did what he did to get a battlefield commission during the Battle of Mortain. My father ended up a patient in a hospital in France, failing to come to terms with the bombing of Hiroshima. He wondered why HIS army had embraced the practice he had risked his life and killed and sacrificed his health to stop.
I mean, talking about last few months of the war (with the whole 5 years of it, and the leading buildup history since the turn of the century being the broader context) and comprising it all into a little over 2 hours is still an oversimplification ;)
No mention of the over 10 million Chinese dead from Japanese invasions and no mention that even AFTER Nagasaki members of the Japanese military attempted a coup to prevent surrender. Slanted and ill-informed attempt.
'Can you ask if they'll help?' "They won't help, you need to surrender" 'But maybe if you ask them harder?' "No, they aren't helping" 'Try one more time maybe?' "They said no, also I think they're going to declare war on us" 'But what if you ask another time? Just once more, with feeling' "They've declared war on us" '...does that mean they won't help?'
@@f_f_f_8142 bruh, if someone works for a fascist government, splitting hairs over what they truly believe in their heart is pointless. he worked for a fascist regime, he took actions which he believed would serve this fascist regime the best. if he wasn't a fascist, he certainly acted like one, and at that point it's both quicker and no less accurate to say "he was a fascist" than waste time on clarifying and adding asterisks.
When I was about 8 years old, I was in the library with my mother where I found a book about WWII. Attracted to the war imagery of tanks and planes, I wanted to check it out. My mother was a fiercely anti-war person. And flipped the book through to the section on Hiroshima. She directed me to a picture of a bloodied and crying little girl who survived. Without her usual softness, instead a dry blank expression, my mother told me how "the US bombed this city and only this little girl survived. Her entire family and all her friends were killed." I felt a deep shame for having been drawn to the violence. And since, I've never been able to engage with the standardized historical teachings about such things. I could never engage with the war material which always revolved around justifications. I knew I wasn't offered the true story. Thank you for expanding my understanding and empathy further with this video. Evil is truly banal.
@@Noelle-h6fthe hell? No one said they were. But the pure facts of the matter is that the vast majority of the people killed by the bombs were innocent civilians, not military or government people, and as Shaun discusses throughout this whole video, the bombs were unnecessary, killing all of those people for no reason. War is disgusting and brutal and innocents die all the time due to circumstances far beyond their control. There’s nothing to be gained in enjoying the violence of war. it doesn’t matter who the perpetrator is or how guilty they are, innocent people WILL be killed.
Histort CAN be really interesting, the problem is that it requires a lot of specific knowledge and academic honesty/nuance so it can be quite boring at times. Behind all that are some really interesting true stories about humanity
@@Tuxfanturnip weaponry is really cool though, even if war is fucking horrible. Even if I wish they didnt exist, I gotta admit that tanks are pretty friggin sweet.
I'd like to recommend Dan Carlin's "Supernova in the East" podcast series for anyone who wants a little more background on the circumstances of this war. It's not quite complete and hopefully the next (probably final) episode will examine some of these issues Shaun discusses.
@@dckuha I'm pretty sure Carlin did a standalone episode on the Atomic Bombs were he seemed in favor of dropping them. It's been a few years since I've listened to it so I could be wrong.
as someone who has trouble recollecting names, i really appreciate your use of pictures of the people you were talking about throughout the video :D love your content btw
Poor Sato. Imagine being one of the few sane, competent men around and trying quite hard to bitch slap them back to reality. Only to fail again and again.
Or even just the moderate Japanese council members who were at least trying to negotiate a reasonable settlement with a single condition (i.e. letting the Emperor stay on) the Americans were always gonna accept anyway. Frankly the American leadership should get a lot of blame for the back and forth shenanigans they did to keep up their posturing about "unconditional surrender" when all that the moderates wanted was a single reassurance that the Americans had every reason and intention of giving them anyway. Burns in particular for his stupidity in constantly stonewalling the Soviets even though everybody else knew getting them to attack Japan, particularly their conquered Chinese territories, was crucial to ending the war as quickly as possible.
@@ScorpionViper1001 there is by the way a very similar story in history. After WW 1 Germany threatened to not accept the treaty of Versailles unless the "Germany is responsible for the war" article was dropped, which in itself did nothing but humiliate Germany. The Entente threatened to restart open warfare and Germany gave in.
History Channel is funded by the military industrial complex. A belief that the atomic bomb was necessary(and in general other discourse that favors violence) is very beneficial to them
@@generalfred9426 All the things you mentioned rely on the assumption that an invasion would be necessary if the bombs weren't dropped. However, I don't believe this to be true. As mentioned in the video, Japan's sole goal was a conditional surrender. That's what they were fighting for. If the US had been willing to accept a conditional surrender, neither an invasion nor the atomic bombs would have been necessary. What makes this especially egregious is that even after the bombings, the US accepted a conditional surrender anyway (in regards to the Emperor at least).
Mine has been Hello Future Shaun. I watched this, as well as Hello Future Me's video "The US Covered Up Japan's Worst Warcrime. Here's How." It's a great double feature! Highly recommend!
@@Strogman25I fell asleep to the war crime one , and I woke up like an hour or 2 later and I heard unspeakable things😭 I don’t think that videos for me
Here the transcription of the passage you're all looking for: When we’re doing it to them, it’s called Strategic or Morale bombing. And it’s a calculated, emotionless tactic intended to bring a swift end to the war by breaking enemy morale and disrupting their war industry. When they’re doing it to us, on the other end, it’s called Terror bombing. And it’s a cowardly and despicable tactic intended to instil fear in the population by the ruthless slaughter of innocent women and children. It all depends on your point of view really.
I mean, it's Whataboutism at its finest on the part of Axis apologists. Who do you you think did it first? to quote Bomber Harris: they Sowed the wind, so they reaped the Whirlwind.
@@Soundwave3591 Are you seriously suggesting that the allies only bombed as a response? You have to be kidding. You seriously think the allies wouldn't use whatever they had at their disposal to win? Besides, it is not at all whataboutism to properly describe the hypocrisy of labeling the tactic as terror when done by the enemy and strategic when done by allies. That is hypocrisy whether the Axis did it first or not. It would be whataboutism if used to *excuse* such bombing, but that is clearly not what is happening here. So even if we conceed that the allies wouldn't do terror bombing if the Axis didn't do it first, which is based on fuck all, you still wouldn't be correct. Terror bombing is bad when done by the Axis, *and* when done by the allies. This is a morally consistent position, unlike Britain's official position on the matter.
@@dig8634 Sorry are you seriously equating the tactical and strategic decisions made by the axis and allies with regards to morale bombings? In the bombing of Warszawa the Germans handed out maps with markings of the density of Jews living in the various parts to their pilots. The point being to specifically bomb the parts of Warszawa where more Jews lived. This is in no way a strategically sound decision. The Germans went out of their way to bomb strategically insignificant cities with a high civilian population in the Soviet Union specifically to maximise civilian casualties. Such decisions where never made in any way by the allied powers. The strategy behind morale bombings by the allies where specifically made in order to target the civilian populations of industrial centres, or to cause the axis troops to give up strategical cities along the western and eastern advance to minimise allied casualties and expedite the advance on Germany. The targeting of the civilian population was never done to bring about their death or destruction nor was their death or destruction a hindrance to the allies. It was simply not a factor whether they died. The goal was the de-housing of the Axis labour force. The morale bombings of allied powers was completely different in nature from that of the axis powers and Japan. The goal of the axis powers and Japan was to spread terror, death and destruction, whereas the goal of the allies was a collapse of industrial power and breaking the enemy moral, both the military and civilian will to fight. And they where extremely effective. And yes... The German bombing of Guernica is what inspired the whole concept of morale bombing and the Germans would use this extensively throughout the war for years before the allies began conducting morale bombing operations.
He's extremely lazy... He doesn't do his own research, scripting, or video editing... Honestly he skates by on the bare minimum, his content isn't especially high quality... yet he has a lot of followers...
I just finished reading a review of Oppenheimer in my local paper (Chicago Tribune) and decided to watch this video. I'm just taken aback at the incredible amount of research Shaun must have done for this. I can barely motivate myself to basic things, so Shaun seems like some kind of master over his inner self to me lol
i guess the lesson we can all take from this is that "history" is a long series of complicated interactions between people with limited information, severe misunderstandings of reality, and often conflicting personal motivations
@@stevecarter8810 I've grown increasingly dissatisfied with that way of framing things. It is often taken to imply that victory decides who historians regard as the "goodies" and "baddies" which is effectively arguing "might makes right" in reverse. Neo Nazis and neo confederates use it to argue that the side they're glorifying were not the morally inferior side when they fucking well were. There's also the case of people like the Vikings who didn't record their own histories despite being the "winners" in many conflicts and expanding very successfully around Northern Europe.
@@theomegajuice8660 its not that the winner is the only thing that determines who was right, just that the side who won ends up having the most influence over the narrative of history. their version might be correct, sure, but even in cases were their version is incorrect it usually ends up being the one people are most familiar with. the saying also refers more to the popular perception of history, not so much an actual historians take on it. and nazis who use it to justify themselves fail to provide any evidence for their "alternative takes" (i cannot possibly put enough quoatation marks around that so i wont try) on history, so despite what they might think simply pointing out that history is writen by the winner does nothing to demonstrate their version as true (because its fucking not). also i dont understand your point about the vikings? the fact that some people don't record their history has no relevance to to behaviours of people that do.
Winners writing the history is a laughable ahistorical maxim ignored by all professional historians. Only in edge cases where a civilization totally destroys another which lacked the historical record to record itself is there no counternarrative, and even then it is the historian’s job to strip away biases and narratives from primary sources before serving them to a general audience.
@@luxborealis you, like many, are missing the point of the statement because you are using a different definition of the word history than the saying. The saying is referring to "history" as in what becomes the most popular perception of the past, not the academic study of it. Sure, real historians might not be influenced by the popular narrative of history, but they are only a small number of voices that form the general perception of history. There are plenty of popular perceptions of history that we have known to be false, or at least extremely unlikely, for decades or even centuries, but knowing them to be false has not stopped them from being so absorbed into most peoples mind to the point that the average person believes them to be true. The point is not that winners choose how the historical record is written, but often they are the ones who have the most influence over what the narrative of history becomes.
More like: “That’s bad, anyway they don’t have sealift capabilities.” *ding dong* “Sir the Americans dropped another nuke.” “Well fuck, they’re going to blast us into nothing if we don’t surrender.” Should I mention the coup that was attempted to prevent the surrender?
I remember watching a BBC documentary (complete with bad dramatization acting) and it being touched on in a scripted segment, where theyre picking the targets and the officer says "Kyoto's out, he likes the temples too much." In a sense, that means I was spoiled for the surprise in this video.
@@allymog5228 The 'kyo(u)' character in both is the same and does mean capital, but the 'to' (tou, long vowel) of Tokyo is different from the 'to' (to, short vowel) of Kyoto. But yes, Tokyo translates to Eastern capital.
This was really interesting. As a German, my high school education about WW2 begins and ends mostly with the Nazis and all they did. Which is very important and I'm glad they try not to leave out important things in the curriculum, but it also means the curriculum is very Germany-centric and I don't know all that much about other participants in the war. Thank you for offering more in-depth education on the topic.
@@lucasoheyze4597 well no. We also need to know how it came to the whole third reich thing, what happened in the camps, why and how Germany was torn apart, what happened to the remaining Nazis, how to remember the losses, grievings and crimes... To just remember that we lost doesn't even scrape the surface.
I think it largely influences the perception of the bombing. My history lessons basically went like: And then Nazi Germany surrendered, the war was over and then the Americans suddenly dropped nuclear bombs on Japan. That was the only time, Japan was metioned at all.
My grandpa was a POW in a Nazi work camp, forced to build the railways in Eastern France. The devastation that the bombing raids had on the prisoners is so graphic, the stories live with me and would probably get my account flagged. The raids were also the gateway to his freedom, but he lost many innocent friends who helped him survive (he was no older than 20) to those raids.
I'll be flamed for saying this, but oh well. Your story supports the idea that there is no such thing as a "non-combatant" in an industrialized war. Every person (willing or not), every railway, factory and hammer is a tool for a nation to fight a war. If you destroy a factory and the enemy has the population and means to rebuild and restart that factory, what have you really accomplished (see North Vietnam)? In a modern industrialized war a "city" is as valid a target as any other. The Germans, as with many losing nations, were drafting old men and young boys into the army by the end. The Japanese would have done the same. My personal feelings are we should put an end to warfare as a species and go explore the galaxy together, not look foolishly to find ways to make it more humane.
@@countsdooku and how do we simply put an end to war as a species? I'd like that too but it's something no one has really figured out yet historically. Helluva social contract to get the killings to stop and as long as they happen I think it's fair to think they're unjust
@@Shmethan I never said it was simple or easy, but a worthwhile endeavor to me nonetheless. We can have the society we choose to have. Humans created the concept and we can make it what we want.
@@countsdooku A society that is so accepting of bombing innocent civilians to win a war is not a society that is capable of putting an end to warfare. If people are that dismissive of the innocent lives of their allies, then they probably aren't the type of people to have a strong desire to end wars in general, since if they don't care about people dying, then they don't care about wars biggest downside.
I feel like the bottom line here is that very few of the people involved actually put the value of human lives above their strategic and political goals.
Or that they felt their strategic and political goals were 'for the greater good'...or at least the 'greater good' of their own people, and sod the others.
@@vishammahir9590 I did. Consider it a....charitable interpretation of the reasoning behind everyone acting like they did - all the power plays and brinksmanship was supposed to provide a benefit for their respective territories somewhere down the line. Charitable, because it assumes if pushed for a reason why they did all this that they'd have one besides 'I want to win'.
@@dynamicworlds1 Nope, I disagree with the killing of civilians. The n*zis that committed moral wrongs deserve to die; their lives are worthless. But it is still better to let people die than to kill one innocent to save a trillion.
I'm re-watching this cinematic masterpiece, and I can't overstate the comedic brilliance of illustrating Prime Minister Suzuki's side-swapping by just mirroring his photo
"Totalitarian militaristic regimes don't give a toss about their citizens. You can't frighten them by killing poor people... That's their day job" -Adding that to my list of quippy but true statements to always remember.
Without entirely advocating for the bomb, this is a *huge* misconception. Japanese Imperialism, just like German Fascism, depended heavily on public support. They just had a lower threshold of public support that they needed when compared to a standard democracy. Why else would they seek to cultivate such religious reverence for the Emperor. “Consent of the governed” is operative even if the elite refuses to admit that it is. Ditto morale. A demoralized military is still less effective, even if they are forced to fight. As to “killing poor people,” when a regime does this it is typically either done quietly or done so that everyone knows it who did it and who to fear. Having them fear the enemy more, whilst they still know the regime allowed it to happen, can only injure the regime’s legitimacy. It is never positive.
@@somexp12 While I agree with you about the need for public support I would argue that it is trivial for an authoritarian regime to manufacture support out of the necessity to defend the people against future war crimes. I don't think not being able to avoid the last one would be devastating, you just spin it as such an unbelievably evil move from the enemies.
@@neomcdoom While I get what you're saying, the whole point of something being quippy is that it is witty, brief, and intentionally or unintentionally lacking in nuance. It isn't a phrase you use in a legitimate good-faith debate, but it does capture the broad strokes of an ideology and that generalization can still be useful to bear in mind.
@@melaustin3305 It’s not “useful to bear in mind” because it’s literally not true. Even authoritarian regimes need people to function. If the regime loses all popular support, even if the reason for that happening is that their people are dying en masse, it will be unable to govern.
Can we take a moment to appriciate the persistent level of stupidity and denial of reality it takes to drive someone raised on Japanese etiquette which largely revolves around deferring to heirarchy and understating disagreement even when not dealing with superiors to that level of bluntness? If you're American, you should read phrases like "it seems extremely unlikely" as "it's (fucking) impossible" and "I see a serious discrepancy between your views and the actual state of affairs" as "you're completely delusional" if they're in a Japanese cultural context. Just a little framing for the conversations for those less familiar with the cultural etiquette in question so we can appriciate Sato's statements a bit more.
@@MrCrashDavi They abstained from the "powerbroker position" because they fucking invaded Manchuria and pushed into southern korea within days. Ready for invasion of the japanese islands within a few more days more, with local defensive forces of the japanese stationed towards the pacific. This happened after the two bombs. This meant two things: 1. The USSR would not mediate any peace. 2. The japanese empire was fucked. And thus Japan surrendered unconditionally.
@@MrCrashDavi almost no historian (well, legitimate historian; the braindead tankies probably do) takes seriously the contention that the japanese surrendered solely, or primarily, because of the invasion of manchuria. the kwantung army in manchuria had been an elite, prestigious unit in 1931. by 1945, all the effective elements (both manpower and equipment) of it had been long since been stripped away and sent to fight the americans, and it had become a place where they sent incompetents and people of suspect loyalties (if you have criterion channel, the human condition is an excellent film series about a japanese dissident who gets assigned to it and barely survives the soviet invasion). it's no surprise it fell apart as quickly as it did. also, they could never have invaded japan. they were barely able to invade the kuril islands, and then they were only able to with ships we provided (the soviet pacific fleet did not get much of a slice of the budget). the notion of them mounting a massive amphibious assault shortly afterward is intensely ludicrous and disconnected from reality. also there was no risk of revolution and even if there was, the military would have easily nipped it in the bud. communism was always an extremely marginal movement in japan.
@@kazaddum2448 what are you smoking. The Soviet Union had no experience or real capability in amphibious assault. They were most certainly not ready to do what the Americans and British had been doing for years and still having major short falls versus what they perceived they needed. And the Soviets after a blood campgain, yes they smashed the Japanese army but it wasn't cheap in terms of men. How were the Soviets get their men over. How would they supply them. It wasn't going to happen. The Soviets would only be on Japan's soil as part of an invasion if the British and Americans wanted them there which they did not
So about once or twice a year, I find this video again and click on it once more. I simply love how in-depth this goes, and on a strictly personal level, the video remains strangely entertaining even on the 6th listen. Thank you for your work!
That last part was so important. "...there's no monopoly held by any nation or race on a disregard for the lives of the powerless." Truly moving, truly terrible.
And I’m so glad he actually got a happy ending, he served 3 terms as president of Japan’s new upper congress after the war before enjoying 20 years of retirement. Maybe not being an authoritarian dumbass has its perks 😌
Dude, this is totally not what happened. US didn't wanted Japan to surrender nor was going to stop the bombing if they did, they just wanted to show power to the rest of the world since the soviets won WW2 basically by themselves.
@@LeonardoGPN And 'basically by themselves' you mean using American and British Tanks, vehicles, supplies, weapons, and so on that in leu of their army would've been incredibly underequipped. The soviets won WW2 by themselves as much as Ukraine has fought its recent war by itself.
Just discovered your channel and so far I'm loving your super well-researched and well-spoken content! I will be breaking up my watch of this into probably several days, however haha 2:11:12 I've just been skimming random chunks of this video so far, so forgive me if I missed a more detailed explanation somewhere, but from what I've read there were death estimates for an invasion of Mainland Japan as early as Spring of 1945. So I'm not sure this point is correct 2:02:30 Just another quick point here, while racism was certainly a factor here, I don't think that is the main reason Japan was chosen over Nazi Germany. Keep in mind, during the early 1900s, there was actually a lot of racism directed towards Germans as well. WWI especially saw a lot of anti-german racist propaganda, and many figures including US president Woodrow Wilson believed Germans couldn't assimilate in American culture. The definition of "white people" has evolved a lot with time, whereas today it includes a very broad spectrum of cultures, there were times where it was as restrictive as only anglo-saxons. The main reason Japan was the target over Nazi Germany was really because both the public and military strategists saw Japan as America's main foe in WWII. It wouldn't be until later decades when Nazi Germany would replace the Japanese in American eyes as public enemy number 1 of WW2. Surveys showed the majority of the American public saw Japan as their primary enemy, and strategists believed Japan was a greater threat to American soil than Germany. In fact, in the early war the vast majority of American resources went towards the Pacific theater, and it wouldn't be until 1944 when America would allocate a large amount of resources towards fighting Germany (notably, after the target of Japan was selected). I do believe racism played a strong factor with not only this, but in many decisions regarding the war with Japan, however I believe the reason they were chosen over Germany was more than just "cuz not white." Unlike Germany, Japan had physically attacked the United States, and that cemented them as the primary enemy for the American public.
And yet Boomers still insist on shoot first, ask questions rarely foreign policy because Golan-Globus films can't possibly lie about what war is really like.
@@joneelillard892 I don’t think war and politics are comparable. Somehow vaporising civilians to some fancy shadows seems a little worse than petty squabbling between two opposed parties. At least this way it is mostly out in the open and they rarely just kill each other.
@Your future president But the video argues that using the nukes wasn't necessary for ending the war quickly and that there were several alternatives that would have achieved the same ends without the massive loss of civilian life. Assuming that is true - and I see no reason to doubt it, as Shaun's done his research - the use of the bombs was sad and senseless. The school children of Hiroshima and Nagasaki never did anything to China or Korea. They were school children. They didn't deserve that.
@Your future president I'm not here to debate the value of lives. An innocent life is an innocent life. Shaun makes, in my opinion, a very credible case that Japan would have surrendered in circumstances where atom bombs were not used against innocent Japanese civilians, and thus doing so instead of taking those alternatives was a sad and senseless event. If you disagree, please take it up with Shaun and not me because he's the one with the research and sources here ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
“We should bomb Kyoto because it’s an intellectual center so the people there would be able to understand the significance of the bomb more” Sir, they would be dead.
More people died from firebombs every 2 days than from each atomic bomb. If the bomb even sped up surrender by 2 days, it still saved lives. This video is potentially Japanese propaganda. The Japanese Imperial Army were still brutally killing, raping, and enslaving millions of civilians across the continent of Asia. They absolutely were not going to surrender. Even after the first bomb dropped, Japan refused to surrender and wrote it off as a natural disaster. After the second one, they literally reached a tie vote on whether or not to surrender, half the top military commanders were ready to commit a coup to continue fighting the war before the emperor finally stepped in and stopped it. The atom bombs were absolutely necessary. Even if you don’t trust US reasons, ask any person who was living in Korea, China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, Vietnam, even Australia at the time. The whitewashing of Japanese imperialism is ridiculous, they were arguably worse than the Nazis. You should know that the creator of this video has been called out on Reddit.com/badhistory for misrepresenting his claims. old.reddit.com/r/badhistory/comments/i4ztgw/atomic_bomb_badhistory_from_shaun_vids/ Don’t use UA-cam videos as a source when historical consensus by actual professional historians disagrees.
But at same time the deadlock was a normal outcome for them. Read the book “The rising sun” by John Toland in that book it shows that the Japanese high command even at the end of the war were still fighting among each other like they were in the early 30s. There has never been a time where they all were together on something. All of them were fighting for what they thought the emperor wanted, or what they thought he thought he wanted.
Ever since someone commented about they envisioned Shaun to be an animate skull just chilling in the woods and talking to people, I can't get it out of my head.
There are actual stories with talking skulls, one about a guy accidently killing a guy, but burying oddly specific with his dying wish, and he came back as family friend bringing luck and protecting the children, he returned as husband of the daughter afte the skull died. Wouldnt be a much weirder folktake having a talking skull in the woods setting fact right.
This is the World War II content we need. Not fetishized accounts of the weapons and tactics, but the complicated and frankly disgusting underbelly of it. Thank you for this video.
As someone studying history, fuck yes. I barely stay awake when my professors are discussing yet another fucking endless string of wars and weapons. The reason I love history is because it's the biggest wealth of information we have about people - the almost infinite variation in how they live, what they value, how they think, how they act, how they organise themselves, etc.
@@AliceDiableaux absolutely! That's the very reason Im studying Art history. While the political economical enviroments certainly are interesting, what really interests me is the people themselves. Their culture, their way of life and thinking - nothing displayes this easier than the art they produced. Stuff like finding out people in the Bronze Age made baby bottles shaped like animals warms my heart and really brings me closer to our collective ancestors and history, as well as the concept of being human. Culture is a beutiful thing.
@@AliceDiableaux What's up with your professors?! Even in high school, for as much as the material was biased and in many cases outright lied to us, it was about themes, political movements, names, dates, decisions... talking about WEAPONS?! I guess you would be more interested in anthropology or palaeontology, though, which is more my jam as well. Conflict is a major driving force in historical change, so I would expect a lot of wars/revolutions/strikes to be mentioned in history class. Weapons, though. What the heck... is this where you check your transcripts and see it was somehow Jingoism 101 you took instead?
you should read the story about the russian fleet they lost during the russo-japanese war. its funny as shit. its basicly a wonder they even arrived at korea
I really like your video on Roman trade with the Axum Empire and The Far Side Ports. Do you have any plans to do a video on Rome's interactions with Nubia?
Absolutely love how Shaun is like "I know it sounds unbelievable that the supreme council didn't do jack shit even though they got hit with two nukes." -looks outside and sees what's going on now- No, totally believeable.
It does make me wonder how this video would have hit before 2020? Did people used to believe that leaders cared about their citizens 'just because'? I know that I did at some point in my life, but I don't remember when I let go of that hope.
@@NaraMouse101 I've pretty much always been of the opinion that, for those in a position of power above direct accountability for the lives and experience of their subjects, altruistic sentiments are rarely ever genuine. Save for genuine self-delusion about whose interests their actions really serve, I guess. I lost my faith in general humanity's regard for honor and ethics on principle alone as soon as I realized how rare it was for me to not be the only one pointing out when my peers were being cruel. That sense of cynicism was cemented in stone as soon as I developed the level of self-awareness necessary to realize that I was guilty of the same kind of bullshit. I tend to respect overt prejudice and hatred more than the selective hypocrisy we're all privy to on a daily basis. This social dance of feigned virtue is exhausting me, both in action and observance. I wish people cared more about making sense than looking desirable. but I guess it's a lot easier for most people to just look the other way when the world or they, themselves, are evil. To tie the delusion of a virtuous world to the hope for a better one is erroneous, though. In giving up the former you open yourself to the latter- I lost my faith when I was a kid, but I refuse to ever give up hope, because if I did that I don't think I could afford to be honest with myself
Kyoto had over a million residents at the time, about three times the (pre-bombing) population of Hiroshima. That they were saved is something I'm glad of, but that it happened because some guy in the government bureaucracy liked the sightseeing there and was more comfortable levelling a city he'd never visited . . . that makes my blood run cold.
1:36:05 "So what's happened here is the United States said to Japan, 'We demand you surrender unconditionally,' and Japan responded, 'We will gladly accept unconditional surrender on the condition that you first agree to this condition to that unconditional surrender,' to with the United States responded, 'Oh we will happily agree to this condition to the unconditional surrender on the condition that you agree that you're accepting the condition, not that we're accepting the condition'" Just had to get that amazing quote
maybe they should have kept pushing it... "Also we will only accept the unconditional surrender with the condition that you pay for war repairs which ofcourse we will accept completely and with no opposition whatsoever"
Dude your comment is really dumb. JAPAN SHOULD HAVE JUST SURRENDERED UNCONDITIONALLY. stop making excuses for the fascist imperialist government of Japan
Someone should quote Shaun's recent tweet about how amazing it was that a war that could only ended with a nuclear bomb happened right when the nuclear bomb was invented. That bomb hasn't been necessary in any conflict since so it really is pretty lucky
How can you say the bomb hasn’t been necessary in any conflict since? It pretty clearly shaped the geopolitical relationship of US-USSR relations for the next 50 years.
@shanepaulryanalexander2934 You're conflating 'necessary to have' with 'necessary to use'. The video makes it clear that it was not necessary to use an atomic bomb on Japan, and it didn't work better than any of the other tools that the US was using to force Japan's surrender. If you want an analogy, it's like the tool in my car that cuts my seat belt and breaks my window. Yes, it's a necessary tool, but I don't use it to get out of my car
Uh no, not really it ended the only war it could end in such a way. If such a war between 5 of the largest militaries on the planet were to happen today, they would all have atomic bombs. You can’t really use a gun to end a fistfight when your opponent also has a gun. You’re saying this as if MAD doctrine hasn’t shaped geopoliticals for over half a century at this point.
@@mftripz8445 No - Kyoto was spared, much earlier on, - because it was liked as a vacation spot by one of the characters in the story... I don't think the name of the cloudy target was mentioned
"There is no monopoly held by any nation or race on disregard for the lives of the powerless." That, sir skull, is truth on the level of James Baldwin and Frantz Fanon.
Hey Shaun, thank you for giving me new insights into this incredibly complex situation. It's clear, after watching this video, these bombs were not necessary to drop. All it did was cause chaos, and eventually, another power to develop these weapons for threats. I will show this to anyone who thinks otherwise.
@@homestuck_official To be fair to them Sergei Witte had been sent by the Czar to do a similarly impossible job, and he actually pulled it off. "It can't be done, boss!" "Just figure it out!" "OK, it's done, I made a fucking miracle." is a thing that actually happens from time to time. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergei_Witte?wprov=sfla1
I could see a really funny comedy of errors with Sato as the protagonist... a very dark and very bad taste comedy that would be closed after the first night
Listening to the whole thing just gave me awful flashbacks to the time I worked within the Japanese bureaucratic system, and I guess it’s nice to know that nothing really changed 75 years later
I actually sent this to my AP World teacher from back in high school (who was wonderful) because it’s *so* well put together that I was sure she’d love it. I know she got it, and can only hope she watched & enjoyed it. I certainly did- and am about to do so again! Hooray for some light listening to wind down for the evening, am I right folks?
@@kopall unfortunately no idea what her response to the video itself was- she responded to my email the next morning when I’d sent it pretty late at night, and she thanked me for the recommendation. Mostly it was just nice to be in touch.
"Surely, worsening the condition of the German proletariat will force them to rise up against their fascist oppressors!" Months later: "Surely, worsening the condition of the Japanese proletariat will force them to rise up against their fascist oppressors!" smh can't believe the Allies were accelerationists.
The German proletariat did actually rise up and occupy factories in the final days of the war, in anticipation of the arrival of the Red Army. The Soviet military administration told them to go back to work and returned to their legal owners
@@CTOOFBOOGLE its not its what we like to call a red herring or mentioning a relatively irrelevant thing that seems related to something else but isn't and is just a distraction.
"Anyone whose pointing to a singular reason for why the bombs were dropped is definitely oversimplifying history" I would say, anyone whose pointing to a singular reason for any historical event is definitely oversimplifying history ^^
@@taloob493 I guess the exeption rule I guess, and even there you would have people that probably thought of it more from the economical perspective than the racist one in the south.
@@taloob493 Not really, as Lincoln didn't abolish slavery until like four years later ^^ Although slavery was an important piece of the conflict, especially as he dragged on, there was a more profound separation between the North and the SOuth economically. The North was industrialized and was producing manufactured goods that they destined to their home market, so they were very protectionnists and wanted that the South industrialize too to sell them those goods (like machines to replace slaves). The South was mainly in the production of basic goods, for exportation. So, they didn't want protectionism and wanted to be more open towards Europe (reason why France and Britain, although neutral, favored South), and they were already against North. Lincoln and his abolitionist position was just the droplet of water that overflowed the casket ^^
also the rise of the NAZI party in the Weimar Republic is another exception, sort of, since there were complicated factors that made it NAZIs specifically, but under the treaty of Versailles some extreme totalitarian regime would have likely risen.
This is an incredibly informative video, but I feel like the thing that is going to stick the most with me is just how horrible pretty much everyone in power is, and how little most of them care about "normal people".
Has been the case since the beginning of "civilization " up till today, and will be for many decades to come. Sadly. Case in point. When Joe Stalin learned of Churchill's failure to be voted in as prime minister in 1945 he could not believe that his old adversary could not simply rig the votes to suit his own agenda. Just like he and many others in non democratic states do on a regular basis.
@@deep_cuts2019ah yes the socialist and communist countries have never been evil🙄 If you unironically want to be a socialist you endorse more death and destruction than any nuclear bomb Just look at the historical scoreboard Or better yet ask someone who escaped the communist hell holes It's very weird that escaping Communism is a tried and true trope ..yet it never reverses? Odd...why don't people escape the u.k or the u.s to go Cuba?🤷🏻♂️ I had my far left commy loving phase...but then I talked to my grandmother and realized it's a joke But it's fun to pretend it's moral online where you are safe from the net result of death and hunger
@@youare5907 You realize thats only 36,000 a year right? Not a lot of money. Also why? Because people like his content... To use your name here: You are more dense than lead.
I guess this answers a question that has been nagging me for half my life now. From ages 9 to 15 I lived in a tiny town that was really overly proud of its handful of medieval buildings. It had two castles, but we learned in school that there was a third one that got destroyed by bombs in WWII. That always confused me, because, the town has only 10.000 inhabitants even now. It is tiny. What was worth bombing? What thing of strategic importance could have been there? The most significant thing that ever happened there is that a noble was made the imperial cupbearer in the middle ages, & that was still the town's whole thing cause nothing of note happened there since. The school I went to was called something like "Imperial Cupbearer Grammar School". There was also a regionally famous horse market but that was it. Teeny Tiny rural town surrounded by fields. It stinks of manure come planting season. Every day id fantasize about moving to a big town where you can buy sushi. I wondered if there was like, a secret Nazi weapons stash hidden there or like what could make that tiny insignificant cow village a military target. I guess now my question has been answered: it was probably strategic bombing.
More likely a bomber just got lost, thought 'screw it' and dropped its remaining bombs on whatever it saw that looked like it could be worth blowing up. Bombers didn't have enough fuel for the return journey if they were still carrying bombs, so they dropped them regardless of finding their target.
RAF bomber command had huge loses during the day and had to switch to night time bombing. However , even though a strategic bombing campaign was a well accepted theory in the interwar years , the British didn't have the navigational technology - and were lucky to get within 5 miles of the target - seriously . Hence a possible reason why a bomb was accidentally dropped on a castle. However , as early as the Battle of Britain, Luftwaffe bombers were guided by radio beams - kickbien (spelling) guided the bombers at night by radio dashes on one side , and dots on the other . Just before reaching the target , the bomber crossed another beam an a timer was set . The British caught onto this , and a contest of radio frequency jamming occurred . This became known as the battle of the beams. However , sometime during the war , the Luftwaffe set up a retaliation program , to intentionally target historical land marks in Britain. A bomb hit the side of Exeter Cathedral . .
The bombers often dropped their bombs on any target they could find on their way back home, no matter how valuable. Then on the other hand, RAF and USAF planes also shot random women and children with machine guns so nothing's really surprising there.
@@davids.3584 if you posted this elsewhere, I would not have called you a troll. But you posted this as a comment on a video about how japan would have surrendered without the bomb, with tons of sources. Like, did you watch the video? If so, argue with it bro
@@ellentheeducator No, I didn't watch this 2hr and 20 minute video posted by a very left leaning individual because I trust Google and websites more than him that say the exact opposite.
Given the recent release of Oppenheimer, I think it’s only appropriate to leave a comment here and hope it helps boost this video into some more people’s recommendations
My grandfathers school class actually got completely eliminated on a school trip by a bomb, which my grandfather wasn’t a part of only because he had broken his arm attempting to jump on an already moving tramways back, as he was late to school that day.
@Curiosity What an intriguing thing to say. Clearly a few minutes consideration would yield the answer to your question, it was a modern war, after all.
@Curiosity Because bombings were designed to be unpredictable and fast. Bomber formations were designed to maximize the amount of damage done as quickly as possible, to prevent giving the enemy time to fight back. Radar was still a very new concept and Japan didn't deploy any in time.
@Curiosity Because the country should still function even while there's the threat of bombings? They didn't know _when_ they'd get bombed, the only way they'd 100% guarantee to be safe when they got bombed was to completely lock down the country, which would do more damage than getting bombed in the first place
just imagine that: the people who where nice to that guy on his vacation in kyoto basically saved their whole city and the thousands who lived there...
I mean, it matches basic human psychology to a T - people are more empathetic when they travel and meet other people. Most racists are racist because they've never or rarely left their hometowns or traveled anywhere. He was against bombing Kyoto because he remembered what he liked about Kyoto - the places, the people, everything. The same would have been true for any of the cities on the list if he'd gone there instead.
As a Japanese citizen, it was a pleasant surprise to see a western content creator present the events of WW2 with this much nuance. A sentiment I hear a lot of from well-meaning western liberals is "you weren't responsible for the war, your ancestors were", as if to reassure me that I wasn't in the wrong. It hasn't occurred to them that no, none of my ancestors were directly responsible for the war, because they too, along with many other people, were the ones being oppressed by the wartime regime. (That's not to say that offspring of war criminals are responsible in any way either.) It always bothered me how Germans were always afforded the luxury of having their wartime bad guys compartmentalized into "the Nazis," completely divorced from their national identity. With Japan, it was never "the imperial army" or "the high council," but always "the Japanese". If I'm not mistaken, that is how we got our slur. People, especially in the west, can't seem to wrap their minds around the idea that under a totalitarian regime, whether it be Japan or Germany, very few people are left unscathed. Sent off to war against their will, abandoned in the jungle with no food and no way to get home when the high command decided it wasn't worth it, pulled out of school and onto one-way fueled airplanes for suicide missions. Most of the people that did fight in the war were just trying not to get killed, or get their families locked up. That is in no way an excuse for r*ping or killing civilians and military sex slaves, but concerning the fighting, they were not given much of a choice. Getting drafted was half way to a death sentence. Somehow, nuance that seems incredibly intuitive and easy is lost on most people. A part of this I attribute to good old racism, and a part to complex political relations in East Asia continuing to this day. Anyway, I saw this video a while back but came back to comment since I had some time on my hands. Thank you Shaun, as well-researched and excellently argued as I've come to expect from your content.
While I do agree that you are right that a lot of nuance is lost in the perception of Japan in relation to WWII, I completely disagree that compartmentalization of the bad guys as Nazis divorced Germany’s war crimes from its national identity. I have spent a significant time in Germany and I have not met a single German proud to be German. Exceptions exist on the extreme right, but for the general populations there are constant reminders of their faults in detailed schooling, war debt, cobblestones, museums, global perception etc. Germans do have a Memorial Day, but in contrast to other countries it commemorates victims of violent oppression of all countries. Being the bad guys in WWII is so tied to the nation’s identity, that it’s not surprising Germans do not think they can be proud of being german. Internationally, Germany will always be held to a higher standard and could never get away with the kind of treatment Japan has been giving countries like Korea. When you think of Germany, Nazis do come to mind. In contrast, I would argue that Japan is more commonly associated with cherry blossoms, anime and nuclear atrocities. Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings are tragic, but also present clear evidence of tragedy and victimhood - Japan is not purely ‘the bad guy’ in relation to war.
You must now know a lot about the West. The Germans themselves have been so attached to Nazism in the past 80 years that patriotism is seen as dangerous in much of Germany, and in almost the entire West (including the Slavic nations of Europe) being German was associated with Nazism. This has only calmed down recently (in the last 10 to 20 years). Even today, Germany is synonymous with Nazism in most of America, but most Americans associate the Japanese with anime, ninjas, samurai, and Sengoku Jidai.
> because they too, along with many other people, were the ones being oppressed by the wartime regime How did the regime become a regime if it wasn't backed by most people? I'm unaware of any significant opposition to the ideology of the Japanese government. >Germans were always afforded the luxury of having their wartime bad guys compartmentalized into "the Nazis," To the contrary, Germans were and are being taught that a majority of the population was responsible not just for the Nazis being in power, but all of their atrocities. Meanwhile there is no such education in Japan.
@dylanrodriguesno be said that's what would happen if you didn't join the army. After that, it's not mandatory to commit war crimes, but a lot of people did. That's different. No one starts out particularly evil. They are turned evil. If your military is so desensitized to death and war crimes, you'll probably get it too. This is just the chain of evolution from normal people to war criminals. But the fact stands that you would be drafted against your will and imperial japan wasn't keen on freedom.
It's MY sleepover and I get to pick the movie
I would love to put this on for the 3rd graders I teach at Sunday school
@@tombuell2782 Shawn's a tad bit too much for 3rd grade. hell, he is a bit topo much for most people my age and beyond :D
SCREW YOU GUYS IM GOING HOME
"But I don't wanna learn about the politics surrounding the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki at a sleepover-"
"NO! You will watch the skull and enjoy it!"
I see you're as good at making/keeping friends as me; wanna spend two hours learning why everything you were taught is a lie?
Watching movie that I have been meaning to for years: “maybe later”
Watching a feature length video essay without any warning: “it’s about time”
LMAOOOOOO me tho
Me
I've never been able to finish Interstellar, I always get to the bit where Matt Damon shows up and I get bored and go to bed. I've sat through the full length of every long-ass video by Shaun / Hbomb e.t.c
@@musicdev fr
..... that hit hard XD
Shaun, the use of the calendar throughout the video was a brilliant and really effective way to structure and keep track of everything. It was a really effective use of this medium, I was able to easily follow everything, really well done.
Was thinking the same thing. "Why doesn't anyone do this? It makes it so much easier to follow." 😅
@@DavidMyrmidon
I suspect because Shaun's videos normally just consist of a cartoon skull unless there's something else, like a transcript of a quote, to pop up. Most people want to use the visual medium of video to show something visually interesting to keep the attention of the more easily distracted, even if it is of tangential relevance. Having the calendar there and just occasionally putting photos or transcripts over it means not making use of the visual channel for conveying information, which creators with different styles would not be willing to sacrifice.
Agreed. I would also have liked to see a permanent noting of August 15th as the date the USSR was meant to declare war originally, I think that would have added a nice bookend and helped to visualize the pressure building on Truman between the Potsdam Declaration and August 15th.
@Jacob Fenrir Funny, in another thread, there's someone saying Shaun "didn't do his homework" and "left out very important points" that Shaun did include, because this guy skipped most of the video to just assume stuff was left out in the comments. You're at a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't situation with people like that. If he has a concise version, idiots will claim he didn't mention something that they claim is exculpatory to their position, and if you do make a 2-hour version, they don't watch it to learn the supporting arguments for their conclusion are all objectively false.
If you like this, check out 'The Guns of August', the seminal book about the first weeks of World War One, which is basically a calendar with a bunch of French generals being dumb. 'The Sleepwalkers' is a longer, drier, take on the same period, on how this even in 1870 means this happens in 1911, which means... you have to see the calendar view. A month has become a week has become a day has become an hour in international diplomacy.
the sato story is so excruciating. its like the full experience of a horribly frustrating work experience where someone with less expertise but a higher rank in your company tries to boss you around into doing things that make no sense except the consequence is literally your country getting nuked
What a fucking "I told you so" that woulda been though
A shame Kafka wasn't around to write a novel about this, it sounds so kafkaesque
@@micha0585 as most modern tragedies do
@@jackferdinger4180use a different word.
The US were intercepting the discussions between diplomat Sato and Togo of the Big Six - these are known as the magic transcripts , and are posted on the US National Archive Site . ...The discusses go on and on and on .... Sato very methodically paints Togo into corner . Then Sato says to Togo those are “pretty little phrases devoid of all connection with reality,”
“If the Japanese empire is really faced with the necessity of terminating the war, we must first of all make up our minds to terminate the war.”
Then Sato asked for peace terms , yet Togo would not offer any terms .
The US were listening in the whole time .
.
"You can't frighten them by killing poor people-- that's their day job" is the most succinct way of dismissing the idea of morale bombing.
Comment (with preceding context) at around 1:29:53
@@Cheerios100 now 3
@@Cheerios100 literally "no notes"
...morale bombing of totalitarian militaristic states, yes. That is to say, it might work with states that are governed differently. Not saying it's a good idea
This is a hauntingly effective summary, and has stuck to me since I first saw this video couple of years ago.
“It took me 2 minutes at the top of the video to explain the easy lie, and the rest of the video to explain the difficult truth”
The problem with the whole world right now right here.
The Marketplace Of Free Ideas^TM doesn't favor what is right, just what is appealing and easily repeated.
@@joemomma3648 it's really difficult to condense thousands of words of the truth and its context into one snappy meme.
@@ctographerm3285 also the fact that repeating a lie too much tricks the brain.
@@ctographerm3285 Here in two words: "elite panic".
Easy to condense the common orthodox mode of thought that has persisted for years and say 'its a lie' then claim you have to produce a new truth
Welcome back king.
Holy shit I didnt expect you to be here
based and redpilled
Love your videos!
Really cool to see you here! You also make great videos!
A suprise to see you here, but a welcomed one
45:48 Okay no but like, can we actually discuss the magnitude of this reason. “I once went there on holiday”, which means “I have been to this place, it’s more than just a name on a map, I have seen people there live their lives, I have fond memories of the place. We cannot destroy a place that was humanized to me before my eyes”. That is genuinely such a huge statement. This one place was more than just a target to him, which is so psychologically interesting.
Yeah, it gives so much insight into how they thought about what they were doing. A mere visit was enough to turn Kyoto from an optimal target to one that he would fight tooth and nail to avoid bombing. Why would we believe that the others would be any different had one of the other generals vacationed there?
@@glugtrop2010 Please watch the video you're in the comments section of. All of what you said is addressed.
@@glugtrop2010 If you really watched the video, you've already heard the answers to these questions and decided you don't like them.
@jamescharles5907 No, I don't think you're here in good faith after you opened with a comment about Kyoto not being a high priority target because it wasn't of military importance. I think you're either trolling or have already made up your mind. Either way I'm not going to waste my own time.
@@glugtrop2010They were already in talks and working towards surrender. It was effectively a coincidence that the second bomb was dropped during that talk, and it plainly did not affect their eventual decision. That much is clear if you had watched the damned video.
I will admit for most of my life I was on the "it was horrible but Japanese stubbornness to surrender made their use inevitable, although the cities thing is messed up" position, but this video taught me a lot of things I honestly didn't know about and has definitely changed my position to a much more firm "it was entirely unnecessary" camp. I appreciate the work that went into this.
Ayo
It changed my mind to nukes were inevitable for an unconditional japanese surrender. Im still contemplating the importance of completely crushing a fascist regime especially one as belligerent as the japanese. I mean to take 2 nukes and not budge an inch... fuck me.
One counterexample: Iwo Jima
I wrote basically a whole essay in another comment about this, but Iwo Jima would have made it pretty clear that America would either need a major show of force or the deaths of millions of its own men to overcome Japan.
I've thought it was unnecessary for forever and I A. Think the bomb itself is incredibly cool and B. think nuclear winter is a load of hooey.
@@MrNoobthenub I disagree. If Truman and Burns had put the lives of the Japanese civilian population above their desires to try and get re-elected and just openly accepted a conditional surrender in favour of the Moderates (the Emperor stays, that's it) which is what they wanted anyway, they could have prevented Hiroshima and Nagasaki entirely. Instead they wrote their names in the history books at the cost of hundreds of thousands of innocent lives including mass murder of elementary school children.
his line about how "strategic bombing" changes depending on one's point of view reminds me of a carl sagan quote: "if we like them, they're freedom fighters. if we don't like them, they're terrorists. and in the unlikely event that we can't make up our minds, they're temporarily just guerillas."
that's... Actually kinda a good quote from Carl Sargon. Broken clock, I guess
Edit: I'm fucking illiterate holy shit.
@@puffinatheart5565 hey now he also said "to make a delicious apple pie we must first create the universe"
@@puffinatheart5565 pls tell me this is some advanced shitposting
That’s rich :)
@@puffinatheart5565?????????
"Don't bomb Kyoto. I was on holiday there and I liked it."
This is the true horror of life. We are all beholden to the whims of those in power. Yeah, Kyoto was saved here. But for what reasons?
@Your future president instead of just accepting that we are asking why “life is just like that”. it doesn’t have to be
@Your future president oh I see what you’re saying. I would agree
@Your future president I very much believe that people in power are behaving like that today, outside of harrowing war condition, as well.
I want to push back a bit against "Life is just like that", because as bagelmaster already said, it doesn't have to be, and I would also say, it shouldn't be like this. People in power need to be accountable for their decisions (and thus have valid reasons for them in the first place). And when they're not, that's something to look out for and call out. Otherwise we can't call the governing structures that we have in developped countries proper democracies.
@Your future president Where do you get the idea that I'm talking about Syria or any such country? I said developped countries in my last comment. There are plenty of shit decisions made in developped countries, *even in peacetime.*
I'm really not sure why you want to talk about Syria. Because I don't. I wanted to talk about irrational or uninformed decisions made by people in power, regardless of wartime or not. I guess the only overlap of my comments and yours is that, yes, people in power in Syria are, with a high probability, also making whimsical decisions. But that is a very small subset overall.
I don't live in Syria, and unless you live in Syria and want to know what to do about Assad (to which I don't have a satisfying answer), all we can do is focus on the countries we do live in and call out politicians making decisions based not on evidence, but on their personal preferences. I can't solve Syrias crisis. Franky, I'd love to, but I can't.
I think if the japanese miltarists actually visited china and understood their 3000 year old culture. They would have figured out they can never be conquered.
I'm watching this right after watching "Oppenheimer" last night--and while the movie was visually and artistically stunning, there were a few historical inaccuracies that typically come along with the biopic genre. I'm glad to have watched this and am incredibly greatful for your dedication to lay things out accurately. I've been a fan for a while and will remain so for quite a bit. Thank you!
how much do you think the info in this vid will be useful for the movie? does it mainly focus on oppenheimers life/work or does it include the bigger stuff? gonna watch it soon :)
@@midkn1ght231 the movie itself follows mostly Oppenheimer. This video, though, is focused on the bigger things sorrounding the last few months of the war. It mentions Oppenheimer but doesn't go into depth about him specifically, but spends more time on the overarching political pushes and pulls involved in the war. It's not required for the movie, but it will help understand just how complex it all was. I hope you enjoy the movie! I'd recommend watching this video regardless, really--it's still very informative.
@@samf4112 sry i wasn't clear i just finished the video but your comment answered my question so thanks anyway.
Yes, I'm doing the same! This is the best follow-up to Oppenheimer, and a reason to finally watch this video after 2 years...
What are the historical inaccuracies?
youre on a walk in a autumn forest. you sit down to have a snack. a skull on the ground starts talking about nuclear warfare
Answer is "listen to it for two hours".
Did I pass the Voight-Kampff? 😄
it's okay though because he said hello so nicely :)
I'd rather find a talking skull than a non talking skull tbh
Okay this one got me
Unless it says "Look out! Behind you!"
Wait a minute, wait a minute.
Kyoto, the single most important city in Japanese cultural history, is only here today because the American Secretary of State went there on holiday????
I’m glad he did, but fuck
WTF almost fell down of my chair. But thats the real world - lots of stupid decisions taken on subjective preferences. And I say this about every human on earth.
History is crazy like that.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki are both still there.
@@lucasoheyze4597 'still there' is a way to put it, certainly. the cities were not abandoned, but the vast majority was entirely laid to ruin and had to rebuilt. kind of a question of "if you replace all but one brick in a wall, is it still the same wall?"
if the same had been done to Kyoto, yes, it'd probably be 'still here' as in probably rebuilt, but much of its cultural history would be lost.
It was firebombed.
0/10, didn't get Hbomberguy to voice Bomber Harris
Came here to comment this, but 4/10 not 0
I get that it's a missed opportunity, but not one that should inflict that big a minus.
@@EloquentTroll i think that was a joke
That won't be quite in character... Though I loved how he's voiced the faction of elves in MandaloreGaming's Warhammer review.
@@EloquentTroll it’s a joke
Can't believe we have access to this sort of deeply researched and accurate content on UA-cam for free. It's a huge privilege. Thanks for the great work!
I wouldn't say it's accurate but it does have the illusion of that.
@@bananian wow a free thinker in the flesh.. (digiflesh?)
please explain how the bomb was justified. genuinely. change my mind.
@@nev12345678910 The people most heavily impacted were innocent civilians who didn't even want the war in the first place. Did you even watch the video or do you just like the idea of people needlessly dying because of circumstances out of their control that much?
@@gem9535 im just applying Shaun’s own logic here
I guess we didn't watch the same video,. Shaun is such a master of "factoid" manipulation.
When Shaun says "However," you know you're in for a good ride.
It gets me excited every time he says it!
I've started saying "however" the way Shaun says it when I'm arguing with myself.
Ikikik
I can hear it now lol
@@johnchessant3012 Arguing with myself in Shaun voice is actually so good I get to the point much quicker and I have fun
lesson from history: try to be nice to tourists, even if they seem a bit clueless; they might be responsible for deciding where the nukes are dropped.
I admit, that was probably the most incredible part of this sad story.
This comment SENT ME! Thanks for the laughs after this depressing video
hold up the entire viedeo says no nukes should have been droped but why ?
it would have costet far more lives to put out an complete invasion and far more atrocitys from japanese and american side would have been commited ?
@@nicolai8820 did you miss the part where japan was willing to surrender?
@@soupalex I think they missed the whole video
"Why doesn't shaun upload more frequently?"
*Sees a two hour video with extensive sources and footnotes*
"Ah, I see. No further questions."
I had to split it up into 2 sessions, but it was worth every minute.
His videos are of such a high standard of quality.
@@katiecat9353 agreed, it’s a shame UA-cam doesn’t reward such a format
Yeah, because he actually does the research instead of talking out of his ass as many "woke" channels do.
@@189Blake Such as?
Frankly it's astonishing that so many important military figures are keeping diaries.
What are you talking about? It’s a good human practice to keep a diary. Cuz ya know our written history is largely what separates us from animals
The idea that foreign intelligence would attack Military general’s homes and search for their… journal…. For tactical reasons is utterly laughable
Even more astonishing is that they're later published.
Good for historians
@@thedapperdolphin1590 you know, that considered, oftentimes they are probably doing this intentionally to control the narrative of their legacies.
"as you might be able to tell from his nickname..." *Hbomberguy looks around nervously*
His name’s even Harris!!
I feel like not getting him to read that guys quotes in this video is a missed opportunity, but that might be just me...
lol I'm rewatching this and was going to make a similar Hbomberguy joke so I searched the page and thought "damn this guy beat me"
@@DGarrettDG You played yourself.
It's ok it's definitely short for "HBO Member Guy"
In a long-anticipated follow-up to his landmark "The Bell Curve", Shaun releases his second feature length film, another monstrous masterpiece.
If it didn't drop red pills about race/gender and IQ, then it's not a masterpiece.
@@user-fe8gx3ie5v Red pills are only good when they're put down a garbage disposal.
@@Tcrror Last time I checked, disposing of drugs that way is illegal and dangerous. Red pills are based, though.
@@user-fe8gx3ie5v I can't tell if you're joking or not
@@Tcrror Old timey trans people going to transition would disagree. Though these days I heard estrogen comes in different colors too.
Shaun was really effective at disguising his PragerU takedown video as an examination of the geopolitical influence of atomic weapons for 2 hours.
Thanks to shaun, dunking on PragerU is now an entry level exam for Breadtube while the skull has been taking his arts to a new level
@@chrisbartek7732 what’s bread tube?
@@maximilianbeyer5642 leftist youtube. So people like shaun, hbomberguy, contrapoints, philosophytube, etc
The names based on 'the conquest of bread' I think
@@maximilianbeyer5642
Basically the skeptics but left wing.
Some people like them, some people don't.
@@chrisbartek7732 completely useless comment, everyone recieves critique.
The slow response of the Japanese leadership to the bombing of Hiroshima may have had something to do with the fact that the leaders of Japan were busy destroying documents of their participation in the war in Asia.
But they didn't destroy their documents. They handed them over to the Americans when they invaded where the US gave all the war criminals from Unit 731 immunity and new identities in the states.
Still think the US are the good guys? They bought worthless research with the blood of Chinese civilians. Happily so. McArthur was all about it.
@@marishiten5944 It’s a well known fact that the Japanese government destroyed thousands of documents related warcrimes. The Foreign Ministry started burning documents after the nuking of Hiroshima.
More likely the people under them could handle that
2:07:22 - "what I do when I want to find an example of a poor argument put forward ineptly is check if Prager University has ever made a video on the topic"
- Shaun
Man, the Shaun the Sheep franchise took a weird turn.
I was looking forward for Shaun of the Sheep to join the Shaun of the Dead franchise. I like it that in this version the mindless zombies looking to cause endless death are the politicians we elect, unlike today of course... Oh wait.
It is Christmas time! Lets take something lighthearted and uncomplicated.
I find this funny because my four year old loves Shaun the Sheep
Lol
Knowing what you know of Shaun this doesn't seem too far off from what he would say if he could speak English, right?
Bomber Harris: definitely my least favourite of the Harris bomber guys.
I always wondered if hbomberguy chose his nickame in reference to that guy...
Oh my God
Fighter Harris is ok.
@@ratopretotm8698 It was H Bomb, but because that nickname was taken at some site he added the "er guy"
He ruled actually. Shaun is just such a lib that he thinks fighting fascists makes you just as bad as them
I like how Sato’s portrait perfectly conveys his feelings about his superiors
I was scrolling through the comments while listening to the video and the instant I read this comment Sato popped onto the screen for the first time!
One of the reasons I knew never to involve myself with science for the military is because I actually used to work for someone who knew J. Robert Oppenheimer, and had crossed paths with him on different occasions. I asked him what Oppenheimer was like, and he told me very bluntly eight ominous words of warning, "I have never seen a more broken man."
ya. His uttering of "I am become death, destroyer of worlds" wasn't really said in jubilation.
who said this?
Oppenheimer himself, on a speech. look it up it's on youtube
@@macizogalaico i'm asking about the "broken man" quote, not what he said after the trinity test.
@@zingbanana well idk it's allison's friend he might not be famous
Shaun the movie 2
Nuclear Boogaloo
The Shaunquel
The Shauning
@@ChinGam3R a great many things
How is this comment 8 hours old when this vid came out 20 mins ago
At around 32 minutes you talk about how Roosevelt went from a staunch opponent of bombing cities to the leader of a nation that bombed cities. You might be interested to know my father's reaction. In the years leading up to the war, my dad was in his late teens end early twenties and applauding Roosevelt's talk about "ruthless barbarism". When the US entered the war, my dad entered the infantry to 'save the world's children from areal bombardment". To save the children, my dad walked up Utah beach on the morning of D-Day. To save the children, he did what he did to get a battlefield commission during the Battle of Mortain. My father ended up a patient in a hospital in France, failing to come to terms with the bombing of Hiroshima. He wondered why HIS army had embraced the practice he had risked his life and killed and sacrificed his health to stop.
Your father is/was a hero.
Your father truly was strong and I applaud his heroic efforts.
Thank you.
There is no good way to fight a war. War is barbaric.
If only he knew USA was terror bombing long before nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki..
"As per my last email..." - Sato
Lmao yes. I feel so bad for Sato, I’m so exasperated just hearing about this, I can only imagine how infuriated he must have been. 🤦🏻♀️
Shaun: makes a 2 hour and 20-minute video
Also Shaun in the video: "to oversimplify a little bit ..."
That history for you. The more you investigate the more complex it gets.
Yeah i know is a joke. XD
I mean, talking about last few months of the war (with the whole 5 years of it, and the leading buildup history since the turn of the century being the broader context) and comprising it all into a little over 2 hours is still an oversimplification ;)
Just goes to show the enormity of the complexity and nuance of the history of all of it.
No mention of the over 10 million Chinese dead from Japanese invasions and no mention that even AFTER Nagasaki members of the Japanese military attempted a coup to prevent surrender. Slanted and ill-informed attempt.
@@hoagielamp6543 may you direct me with some links to said world war II historians?
Nothing for years
So, Hiroshima
But the death penalty video was only 7 months ago. And really has anything interesting happened in that time?
I like your your banner lol
he posts videos about twice a year depending on whats going on in the world
@@littlesnowflakepunk855 I know, sorry it was a joke 🐙
@@lohierlutchano9433 thank you!
Ambassador Sato is probably the most relatable character in this whole thing.
'Can you ask if they'll help?'
"They won't help, you need to surrender"
'But maybe if you ask them harder?'
"No, they aren't helping"
'Try one more time maybe?'
"They said no, also I think they're going to declare war on us"
'But what if you ask another time? Just once more, with feeling'
"They've declared war on us"
'...does that mean they won't help?'
The hero of the story
Well really the Cassandra, that poor dude
@@helengordon-smith5753 While he was certainly relatable, he was still a fascist lol
@@BurkinaFaso69 Do you actually know his political ideology or do you just call him a fascist on the basis that he worked for a fascist government?
@@f_f_f_8142 bruh, if someone works for a fascist government, splitting hairs over what they truly believe in their heart is pointless. he worked for a fascist regime, he took actions which he believed would serve this fascist regime the best. if he wasn't a fascist, he certainly acted like one, and at that point it's both quicker and no less accurate to say "he was a fascist" than waste time on clarifying and adding asterisks.
When I was about 8 years old, I was in the library with my mother where I found a book about WWII. Attracted to the war imagery of tanks and planes, I wanted to check it out.
My mother was a fiercely anti-war person. And flipped the book through to the section on Hiroshima. She directed me to a picture of a bloodied and crying little girl who survived. Without her usual softness, instead a dry blank expression, my mother told me how "the US bombed this city and only this little girl survived. Her entire family and all her friends were killed." I felt a deep shame for having been drawn to the violence. And since, I've never been able to engage with the standardized historical teachings about such things. I could never engage with the war material which always revolved around justifications. I knew I wasn't offered the true story.
Thank you for expanding my understanding and empathy further with this video. Evil is truly banal.
that's just nuts. What is this weird historical revisionism?? Japan was not an innocent bystander in the war.
@@Noelle-h6f Who said Japan was an innocent bystander in the war?
@@Noelle-h6fBe quiet. Talk less. Listen more.
@@Noelle-h6fthe hell? No one said they were. But the pure facts of the matter is that the vast majority of the people killed by the bombs were innocent civilians, not military or government people, and as Shaun discusses throughout this whole video, the bombs were unnecessary, killing all of those people for no reason.
War is disgusting and brutal and innocents die all the time due to circumstances far beyond their control. There’s nothing to be gained in enjoying the violence of war. it doesn’t matter who the perpetrator is or how guilty they are, innocent people WILL be killed.
Me: I'm not really interested in WWII-era history.
Shaun: Yes, you are.
Me: Yes, I am.
Histort CAN be really interesting, the problem is that it requires a lot of specific knowledge and academic honesty/nuance so it can be quite boring at times. Behind all that are some really interesting true stories about humanity
@@JohnDoe-mj6cc that and a lot of people use WWII era history as an excuse to fawn over weaponry and nazi regalia
@@Tuxfanturnip weaponry is really cool though, even if war is fucking horrible. Even if I wish they didnt exist, I gotta admit that tanks are pretty friggin sweet.
I'd like to recommend Dan Carlin's "Supernova in the East" podcast series for anyone who wants a little more background on the circumstances of this war. It's not quite complete and hopefully the next (probably final) episode will examine some of these issues Shaun discusses.
@@dckuha I'm pretty sure Carlin did a standalone episode on the Atomic Bombs were he seemed in favor of dropping them. It's been a few years since I've listened to it so I could be wrong.
as someone who has trouble recollecting names, i really appreciate your use of pictures of the people you were talking about throughout the video :D love your content btw
Poor Sato. Imagine being one of the few sane, competent men around and trying quite hard to bitch slap them back to reality. Only to fail again and again.
Or even just the moderate Japanese council members who were at least trying to negotiate a reasonable settlement with a single condition (i.e. letting the Emperor stay on) the Americans were always gonna accept anyway. Frankly the American leadership should get a lot of blame for the back and forth shenanigans they did to keep up their posturing about "unconditional surrender" when all that the moderates wanted was a single reassurance that the Americans had every reason and intention of giving them anyway. Burns in particular for his stupidity in constantly stonewalling the Soviets even though everybody else knew getting them to attack Japan, particularly their conquered Chinese territories, was crucial to ending the war as quickly as possible.
@@ScorpionViper1001 there is by the way a very similar story in history. After WW 1 Germany threatened to not accept the treaty of Versailles unless the "Germany is responsible for the war" article was dropped, which in itself did nothing but humiliate Germany. The Entente threatened to restart open warfare and Germany gave in.
@@f_f_f_8142 guess we can thank that guy for ww2
Is that profile pic starsector?? Do I have a fellow space smuggler on my hand? Maybe an explorer?
Im pretty sure we know some modern day individuals who are currently suffering through that right now. -v-;
2020 is cursed.
‘there are no innocent civilians’ where i have heard that recently
History repeats itsself 🍉
Palestine is home to Christian’s Islam and 🧃
271K cookies though
This Harris Bomber guy doesn't sound too friendly
I agree, and I heard he has awful opinions about Dark Souls.
@@InquisitorThomas Dark Souls 2 isn't a bad game.
@@basilofgoodwishes4138 you're wrong on every level imaginable. You're not only wrong, but you're ignorant.
@@emrekaraman6877 ssst u don't need to be soo wrong
@@emrekaraman6877 Or he just likes the game and you don't and thats okay. :)
Two dislikes within one minute. I guess some folk don't like the greeting, "hello everyone".
Nowadays its considered offensive
"hello everyone" hmm sounds collectivist
Indeed. They're very unfriendly.
Well some patreons could've disliked this earlier, but i doubt that's the case
He didn’t include animals and objects like forks or cars. Instant dislike.
This documentary is MILES better than anything History channel has done in a decade.
more informative about the bombs than the entire ap us history course too
That's a pretty low standard considering Swamp People and Ancient Aliens.
History Channel is funded by the military industrial complex. A belief that the atomic bomb was necessary(and in general other discourse that favors violence) is very beneficial to them
@@generalfred9426 Tempted in the first place, but he also showed reasons why it wouldn't be necessary at the end.
@@generalfred9426 All the things you mentioned rely on the assumption that an invasion would be necessary if the bombs weren't dropped. However, I don't believe this to be true. As mentioned in the video, Japan's sole goal was a conditional surrender. That's what they were fighting for. If the US had been willing to accept a conditional surrender, neither an invasion nor the atomic bombs would have been necessary. What makes this especially egregious is that even after the bombings, the US accepted a conditional surrender anyway (in regards to the Emperor at least).
Forget Barbenheimer; my weekend double feature will be Shaupenheimer: a glorious 5 hrs and 20 minutes of atomic bomb discourse!
Mine has been Hello Future Shaun. I watched this, as well as Hello Future Me's video "The US Covered Up Japan's Worst Warcrime. Here's How." It's a great double feature! Highly recommend!
@@Strogman25 i've been waiting for that one to drop for a long time and this is how i found out it dropped haha
@@Strogman25I fell asleep to the war crime one , and I woke up like an hour or 2 later and I heard unspeakable things😭 I don’t think that videos for me
Here the transcription of the passage you're all looking for:
When we’re doing it to them, it’s called Strategic or Morale bombing. And it’s a calculated, emotionless tactic intended to bring a swift end to the war by breaking enemy morale and disrupting their war industry.
When they’re doing it to us, on the other end, it’s called Terror bombing. And it’s a cowardly and despicable tactic intended to instil fear in the population by the ruthless slaughter of innocent women and children.
It all depends on your point of view really.
27:03 for those wanting to find it in the video
Yeah
I mean, it's Whataboutism at its finest on the part of Axis apologists. Who do you you think did it first?
to quote Bomber Harris: they Sowed the wind, so they reaped the Whirlwind.
@@Soundwave3591 Are you seriously suggesting that the allies only bombed as a response? You have to be kidding. You seriously think the allies wouldn't use whatever they had at their disposal to win?
Besides, it is not at all whataboutism to properly describe the hypocrisy of labeling the tactic as terror when done by the enemy and strategic when done by allies. That is hypocrisy whether the Axis did it first or not.
It would be whataboutism if used to *excuse* such bombing, but that is clearly not what is happening here. So even if we conceed that the allies wouldn't do terror bombing if the Axis didn't do it first, which is based on fuck all, you still wouldn't be correct.
Terror bombing is bad when done by the Axis, *and* when done by the allies. This is a morally consistent position, unlike Britain's official position on the matter.
@@dig8634 Sorry are you seriously equating the tactical and strategic decisions made by the axis and allies with regards to morale bombings? In the bombing of Warszawa the Germans handed out maps with markings of the density of Jews living in the various parts to their pilots. The point being to specifically bomb the parts of Warszawa where more Jews lived. This is in no way a strategically sound decision. The Germans went out of their way to bomb strategically insignificant cities with a high civilian population in the Soviet Union specifically to maximise civilian casualties. Such decisions where never made in any way by the allied powers.
The strategy behind morale bombings by the allies where specifically made in order to target the civilian populations of industrial centres, or to cause the axis troops to give up strategical cities along the western and eastern advance to minimise allied casualties and expedite the advance on Germany. The targeting of the civilian population was never done to bring about their death or destruction nor was their death or destruction a hindrance to the allies. It was simply not a factor whether they died. The goal was the de-housing of the Axis labour force.
The morale bombings of allied powers was completely different in nature from that of the axis powers and Japan. The goal of the axis powers and Japan was to spread terror, death and destruction, whereas the goal of the allies was a collapse of industrial power and breaking the enemy moral, both the military and civilian will to fight. And they where extremely effective. And yes... The German bombing of Guernica is what inspired the whole concept of morale bombing and the Germans would use this extensively throughout the war for years before the allies began conducting morale bombing operations.
"more like Joseph stalling" booooo
We stan the dad puns round these parts, EC
The quietest and most dangerous of their children
Joseph Ballin’
ua-cam.com/video/xbdIRfXSaBA/v-deo.html
Bbbbbbrrrrrrruuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhh
Everybody gangsta untill Shaun goes silent for half a year and then shows up with a 2 hour video.
this is the godfather 2
He's extremely lazy... He doesn't do his own research, scripting, or video editing... Honestly he skates by on the bare minimum, his content isn't especially high quality... yet he has a lot of followers...
@@William-Morey-Baker literally what are you basing this on?
Not fact that’s for sure.
@@William-Morey-Baker stop whinning
I just finished reading a review of Oppenheimer in my local paper (Chicago Tribune) and decided to watch this video. I'm just taken aback at the incredible amount of research Shaun must have done for this. I can barely motivate myself to basic things, so Shaun seems like some kind of master over his inner self to me lol
Halfassedly misrepresenting the truth for 2 hours to blind morons with words words words isnt very hard work
@@MagikarpBeast like what?
@@nrsrymj Like what?
@@MagikarpBeast thanks for the thorough response.
Some people just enjoy learning about history
i guess the lesson we can all take from this is that "history" is a long series of complicated interactions between people with limited information, severe misunderstandings of reality, and often conflicting personal motivations
... Which is why it boils down to "Stories, told by the winner"
@@stevecarter8810 I've grown increasingly dissatisfied with that way of framing things.
It is often taken to imply that victory decides who historians regard as the "goodies" and "baddies" which is effectively arguing "might makes right" in reverse. Neo Nazis and neo confederates use it to argue that the side they're glorifying were not the morally inferior side when they fucking well were.
There's also the case of people like the Vikings who didn't record their own histories despite being the "winners" in many conflicts and expanding very successfully around Northern Europe.
@@theomegajuice8660 its not that the winner is the only thing that determines who was right, just that the side who won ends up having the most influence over the narrative of history. their version might be correct, sure, but even in cases were their version is incorrect it usually ends up being the one people are most familiar with. the saying also refers more to the popular perception of history, not so much an actual historians take on it. and nazis who use it to justify themselves fail to provide any evidence for their "alternative takes" (i cannot possibly put enough quoatation marks around that so i wont try) on history, so despite what they might think simply pointing out that history is writen by the winner does nothing to demonstrate their version as true (because its fucking not).
also i dont understand your point about the vikings? the fact that some people don't record their history has no relevance to to behaviours of people that do.
Winners writing the history is a laughable ahistorical maxim ignored by all professional historians. Only in edge cases where a civilization totally destroys another which lacked the historical record to record itself is there no counternarrative, and even then it is the historian’s job to strip away biases and narratives from primary sources before serving them to a general audience.
@@luxborealis you, like many, are missing the point of the statement because you are using a different definition of the word history than the saying. The saying is referring to "history" as in what becomes the most popular perception of the past, not the academic study of it. Sure, real historians might not be influenced by the popular narrative of history, but they are only a small number of voices that form the general perception of history. There are plenty of popular perceptions of history that we have known to be false, or at least extremely unlikely, for decades or even centuries, but knowing them to be false has not stopped them from being so absorbed into most peoples mind to the point that the average person believes them to be true.
The point is not that winners choose how the historical record is written, but often they are the ones who have the most influence over what the narrative of history becomes.
In 2030, shaun posts his first video after 2026, it is 12 hours long.
you watch it one sitting instead of doing anything else bc theres still a quarantine in place and theres nothing else to do anyway
"Where humanity went wrong: 200,000 years of the alt-right"
Bomber harris? holly shit, hbomberguy's name origin is DARK.
no shit sherlock
@@SirrahBeats Sherlock? *shakes violently*
He's said himself that this is pure coincidence. Bomber Harris is not the origin of the name Hbomberguy.
Joking aside, Harris's brother gave him the nickname which he used for his channel.
He was called h-bomb by his cousin and if stuck. If it's related to any bomb it's the hydrogen bomb.
Mandatory post-oppenheimer watch
Real
Molotov: We declare war on your country
Sato: I am extremely thankful for that sir.
More like: “That’s bad, anyway they don’t have sealift capabilities.”
*ding dong*
“Sir the Americans dropped another nuke.”
“Well fuck, they’re going to blast us into nothing if we don’t surrender.”
Should I mention the coup that was attempted to prevent the surrender?
@@aidanmattson681 Did you.... did you even watch the video?
@@nakenmil What sort of youtube commentor watches the videos?
As I was watching the begining I started to wonder "Why didn't they bomb Kyoto then? It's the cultural capital", but I was not prepared for the answer
I remember watching a BBC documentary (complete with bad dramatization acting) and it being touched on in a scripted segment, where theyre picking the targets and the officer says "Kyoto's out, he likes the temples too much." In a sense, that means I was spoiled for the surprise in this video.
@@HistoryTwistedInc Kyoto - The anagram-lover's Tokyo!
I'm going around dropping the timestamp for those wanting to watch the clip
45:32
@@Dick_Gozinya It's my understanding that Tokyo means 'Eastern Capital', whereas Kyoto means 'Capital of the East';same parts, just rearranged
@@allymog5228 The 'kyo(u)' character in both is the same and does mean capital, but the 'to' (tou, long vowel) of Tokyo is different from the 'to' (to, short vowel) of Kyoto. But yes, Tokyo translates to Eastern capital.
This was really interesting. As a German, my high school education about WW2 begins and ends mostly with the Nazis and all they did. Which is very important and I'm glad they try not to leave out important things in the curriculum, but it also means the curriculum is very Germany-centric and I don't know all that much about other participants in the war. Thank you for offering more in-depth education on the topic.
Well, these kinds of education systems for specific country's tend to focus on themselves rather than focusing on things happening elsewhere
All you really need to know is, you fuckin' lost.
That's fascinating, because as an American we learn about that, plus how we saved the world from the godless Japanese kamikazes
@@lucasoheyze4597 well no. We also need to know how it came to the whole third reich thing, what happened in the camps, why and how Germany was torn apart, what happened to the remaining Nazis, how to remember the losses, grievings and crimes...
To just remember that we lost doesn't even scrape the surface.
I think it largely influences the perception of the bombing. My history lessons basically went like: And then Nazi Germany surrendered, the war was over and then the Americans suddenly dropped nuclear bombs on Japan. That was the only time, Japan was metioned at all.
My grandpa was a POW in a Nazi work camp, forced to build the railways in Eastern France. The devastation that the bombing raids had on the prisoners is so graphic, the stories live with me and would probably get my account flagged. The raids were also the gateway to his freedom, but he lost many innocent friends who helped him survive (he was no older than 20) to those raids.
I'll be flamed for saying this, but oh well. Your story supports the idea that there is no such thing as a "non-combatant" in an industrialized war. Every person (willing or not), every railway, factory and hammer is a tool for a nation to fight a war. If you destroy a factory and the enemy has the population and means to rebuild and restart that factory, what have you really accomplished (see North Vietnam)? In a modern industrialized war a "city" is as valid a target as any other. The Germans, as with many losing nations, were drafting old men and young boys into the army by the end. The Japanese would have done the same.
My personal feelings are we should put an end to warfare as a species and go explore the galaxy together, not look foolishly to find ways to make it more humane.
@@countsdooku and how do we simply put an end to war as a species? I'd like that too but it's something no one has really figured out yet historically. Helluva social contract to get the killings to stop and as long as they happen I think it's fair to think they're unjust
@@Shmethan I never said it was simple or easy, but a worthwhile endeavor to me nonetheless. We can have the society we choose to have. Humans created the concept and we can make it what we want.
@@countsdooku A society that is so accepting of bombing innocent civilians to win a war is not a society that is capable of putting an end to warfare. If people are that dismissive of the innocent lives of their allies, then they probably aren't the type of people to have a strong desire to end wars in general, since if they don't care about people dying, then they don't care about wars biggest downside.
... because he went to Kyoto on holiday
absolutely breathtaking
The Ayatollah should just invite senior leaders in US admin and military to go on holiday in Iran
Your breathtaking
I feel like the bottom line here is that very few of the people involved actually put the value of human lives above their strategic and political goals.
Or that they felt their strategic and political goals were 'for the greater good'...or at least the 'greater good' of their own people, and sod the others.
@@vishammahir9590 I did. Consider it a....charitable interpretation of the reasoning behind everyone acting like they did - all the power plays and brinksmanship was supposed to provide a benefit for their respective territories somewhere down the line.
Charitable, because it assumes if pushed for a reason why they did all this that they'd have one besides 'I want to win'.
@@vfaulkon Such is the fault of utilitarianism.
It is always better to let a trillion people die than to kill one person to save a trillion lives.
@@hoominbeeing so you disagree with _all_ violent resistance to Nazi Germany?
@@dynamicworlds1 Nope, I disagree with the killing of civilians. The n*zis that committed moral wrongs deserve to die; their lives are worthless.
But it is still better to let people die than to kill one innocent to save a trillion.
I'm re-watching this cinematic masterpiece, and I can't overstate the comedic brilliance of illustrating Prime Minister Suzuki's side-swapping by just mirroring his photo
the phrase "there are no innocent civilians" hits different in 2024...
Especially if you're in Gaza.
"Totalitarian militaristic regimes don't give a toss about their citizens. You can't frighten them by killing poor people... That's their day job"
-Adding that to my list of quippy but true statements to always remember.
Without entirely advocating for the bomb, this is a *huge* misconception. Japanese Imperialism, just like German Fascism, depended heavily on public support. They just had a lower threshold of public support that they needed when compared to a standard democracy. Why else would they seek to cultivate such religious reverence for the Emperor. “Consent of the governed” is operative even if the elite refuses to admit that it is. Ditto morale. A demoralized military is still less effective, even if they are forced to fight.
As to “killing poor people,” when a regime does this it is typically either done quietly or done so that everyone knows it who did it and who to fear. Having them fear the enemy more, whilst they still know the regime allowed it to happen, can only injure the regime’s legitimacy. It is never positive.
@@somexp12 While I agree with you about the need for public support I would argue that it is trivial for an authoritarian regime to manufacture support out of the necessity to defend the people against future war crimes. I don't think not being able to avoid the last one would be devastating, you just spin it as such an unbelievably evil move from the enemies.
I'd say that was actually a bit too much of a generalization
@@neomcdoom While I get what you're saying, the whole point of something being quippy is that it is witty, brief, and intentionally or unintentionally lacking in nuance. It isn't a phrase you use in a legitimate good-faith debate, but it does capture the broad strokes of an ideology and that generalization can still be useful to bear in mind.
@@melaustin3305 It’s not “useful to bear in mind” because it’s literally not true. Even authoritarian regimes need people to function. If the regime loses all popular support, even if the reason for that happening is that their people are dying en masse, it will be unable to govern.
Satō was the unexpected best 'character' in this entire mess.
The one sane man in a room full of men in uniform throwing poo at each other. Dude probably took the ambassador job to get away from the poo-flinging.
@@ctographerm3285 Maybe invoking the ape comparison isn't super wise in this context.
Can we take a moment to appriciate the persistent level of stupidity and denial of reality it takes to drive someone raised on Japanese etiquette which largely revolves around deferring to heirarchy and understating disagreement even when not dealing with superiors to that level of bluntness?
If you're American, you should read phrases like "it seems extremely unlikely" as "it's (fucking) impossible" and "I see a serious discrepancy between your views and the actual state of affairs" as "you're completely delusional" if they're in a Japanese cultural context.
Just a little framing for the conversations for those less familiar with the cultural etiquette in question so we can appriciate Sato's statements a bit more.
@@dynamicworlds1 YUP! It took me a few years of living in Japan before I realized that "that may be difficult" in Japanese means "It ain't happening".
@@MandleRoss in Britain "that would be difficult" would mean "I think that's such a stupid suggestion I'm not even gonna try"
Finally, a discussion about the atomic bombs that doesn't do apologia on either the Allies nor the Japanese Imperial fascists. Thank you!
It seems like a very balanced perspective
@@MrCrashDavi That’s fair. If nothing else, the video shows it is more complex than what pragerpoo would have one believe.
@@MrCrashDavi They abstained from the "powerbroker position" because they fucking invaded Manchuria and pushed into southern korea within days. Ready for invasion of the japanese islands within a few more days more, with local defensive forces of the japanese stationed towards the pacific.
This happened after the two bombs.
This meant two things: 1. The USSR would not mediate any peace. 2. The japanese empire was fucked.
And thus Japan surrendered unconditionally.
@@MrCrashDavi almost no historian (well, legitimate historian; the braindead tankies probably do) takes seriously the contention that the japanese surrendered solely, or primarily, because of the invasion of manchuria. the kwantung army in manchuria had been an elite, prestigious unit in 1931. by 1945, all the effective elements (both manpower and equipment) of it had been long since been stripped away and sent to fight the americans, and it had become a place where they sent incompetents and people of suspect loyalties (if you have criterion channel, the human condition is an excellent film series about a japanese dissident who gets assigned to it and barely survives the soviet invasion). it's no surprise it fell apart as quickly as it did. also, they could never have invaded japan. they were barely able to invade the kuril islands, and then they were only able to with ships we provided (the soviet pacific fleet did not get much of a slice of the budget). the notion of them mounting a massive amphibious assault shortly afterward is intensely ludicrous and disconnected from reality.
also there was no risk of revolution and even if there was, the military would have easily nipped it in the bud. communism was always an extremely marginal movement in japan.
@@kazaddum2448 what are you smoking. The Soviet Union had no experience or real capability in amphibious assault. They were most certainly not ready to do what the Americans and British had been doing for years and still having major short falls versus what they perceived they needed. And the Soviets after a blood campgain, yes they smashed the Japanese army but it wasn't cheap in terms of men. How were the Soviets get their men over. How would they supply them. It wasn't going to happen. The Soviets would only be on Japan's soil as part of an invasion if the British and Americans wanted them there which they did not
So about once or twice a year, I find this video again and click on it once more. I simply love how in-depth this goes, and on a strictly personal level, the video remains strangely entertaining even on the 6th listen. Thank you for your work!
My god... to think I’m alive because my grandma living in Kyoto got spared by some old white guy that went on holiday there...
Goes to show how much power and influence is in the hands of too few petty and egocentric people.
@Your future president Did you... watch the video at all?
It's totally because he was old and white, not because he was a Secretary of War or anything.
@Your future president r/thathappened Was it your friend's or your grandfather after all?
@Hyperion Dionysus probably not, any important political figure was most likely to be an aging white man. But what's your point?
That last part was so important. "...there's no monopoly held by any nation or race on a disregard for the lives of the powerless." Truly moving, truly terrible.
Sato is definitely my favorite character in this movie. I can’t imagine how frustrating it is to work with such tone deaf stubborn ministers
that's basically everyone who has ever had an idiot boss
And I’m so glad he actually got a happy ending, he served 3 terms as president of Japan’s new upper congress after the war before enjoying 20 years of retirement. Maybe not being an authoritarian dumbass has its perks 😌
Dude, this is totally not what happened. US didn't wanted Japan to surrender nor was going to stop the bombing if they did, they just wanted to show power to the rest of the world since the soviets won WW2 basically by themselves.
@@LeonardoGPN
The Soviets would've been wiped out if not for the interventions of British and American policies and forces.
@@LeonardoGPN And 'basically by themselves' you mean using American and British Tanks, vehicles, supplies, weapons, and so on that in leu of their army would've been incredibly underequipped. The soviets won WW2 by themselves as much as Ukraine has fought its recent war by itself.
Just discovered your channel and so far I'm loving your super well-researched and well-spoken content! I will be breaking up my watch of this into probably several days, however haha
2:11:12 I've just been skimming random chunks of this video so far, so forgive me if I missed a more detailed explanation somewhere, but from what I've read there were death estimates for an invasion of Mainland Japan as early as Spring of 1945. So I'm not sure this point is correct
2:02:30 Just another quick point here, while racism was certainly a factor here, I don't think that is the main reason Japan was chosen over Nazi Germany. Keep in mind, during the early 1900s, there was actually a lot of racism directed towards Germans as well. WWI especially saw a lot of anti-german racist propaganda, and many figures including US president Woodrow Wilson believed Germans couldn't assimilate in American culture. The definition of "white people" has evolved a lot with time, whereas today it includes a very broad spectrum of cultures, there were times where it was as restrictive as only anglo-saxons. The main reason Japan was the target over Nazi Germany was really because both the public and military strategists saw Japan as America's main foe in WWII. It wouldn't be until later decades when Nazi Germany would replace the Japanese in American eyes as public enemy number 1 of WW2. Surveys showed the majority of the American public saw Japan as their primary enemy, and strategists believed Japan was a greater threat to American soil than Germany. In fact, in the early war the vast majority of American resources went towards the Pacific theater, and it wouldn't be until 1944 when America would allocate a large amount of resources towards fighting Germany (notably, after the target of Japan was selected). I do believe racism played a strong factor with not only this, but in many decisions regarding the war with Japan, however I believe the reason they were chosen over Germany was more than just "cuz not white." Unlike Germany, Japan had physically attacked the United States, and that cemented them as the primary enemy for the American public.
hi bluejay
Nah
All of this sounds so sad and senseless. Then again, "sad and senseless" probably sums up the majority of war outcomes, doesn't it?
And yet Boomers still insist on shoot first, ask questions rarely foreign policy because Golan-Globus films can't possibly lie about what war is really like.
All war and politics in general are sad and senseless.
@@joneelillard892 I don’t think war and politics are comparable. Somehow vaporising civilians to some fancy shadows seems a little worse than petty squabbling between two opposed parties. At least this way it is mostly out in the open and they rarely just kill each other.
@Your future president But the video argues that using the nukes wasn't necessary for ending the war quickly and that there were several alternatives that would have achieved the same ends without the massive loss of civilian life. Assuming that is true - and I see no reason to doubt it, as Shaun's done his research - the use of the bombs was sad and senseless.
The school children of Hiroshima and Nagasaki never did anything to China or Korea. They were school children. They didn't deserve that.
@Your future president I'm not here to debate the value of lives. An innocent life is an innocent life.
Shaun makes, in my opinion, a very credible case that Japan would have surrendered in circumstances where atom bombs were not used against innocent Japanese civilians, and thus doing so instead of taking those alternatives was a sad and senseless event.
If you disagree, please take it up with Shaun and not me because he's the one with the research and sources here ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
“We should bomb Kyoto because it’s an intellectual center so the people there would be able to understand the significance of the bomb more”
Sir, they would be dead.
good thing that one guy hoeny mooned there and said no
Ooh, what a marvel in the sky, that sure is threate-
*ka-boom*
You know, my skin is melting off and I’m suffering nuclear burns but damn that is a nice bomb!
*moments before atomisation*
"i can tell this is signific-"
"Now, if you pay attention to the speed with which this bomb is hurtling towards the school, you can already tell-"
the absolute deadlock of the Japanese Supreme Council and lack of any emotion to TWO cities being completely leveled... astounds me at every level
I mean this is a country whose war crimes are considered on par if not worse then the Nazis, so does it really surprise you they might lack empathy.
Yeah the Imperial Japanese Govt. was pretty fucked up, especially during WW2
Save Face
More people died from firebombs every 2 days than from each atomic bomb. If the bomb even sped up surrender by 2 days, it still saved lives.
This video is potentially Japanese propaganda. The Japanese Imperial Army were still brutally killing, raping, and enslaving millions of civilians across the continent of Asia. They absolutely were not going to surrender. Even after the first bomb dropped, Japan refused to surrender and wrote it off as a natural disaster. After the second one, they literally reached a tie vote on whether or not to surrender, half the top military commanders were ready to commit a coup to continue fighting the war before the emperor finally stepped in and stopped it. The atom bombs were absolutely necessary. Even if you don’t trust US reasons, ask any person who was living in Korea, China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, Vietnam, even Australia at the time. The whitewashing of Japanese imperialism is ridiculous, they were arguably worse than the Nazis.
You should know that the creator of this video has been called out on Reddit.com/badhistory for misrepresenting his claims.
old.reddit.com/r/badhistory/comments/i4ztgw/atomic_bomb_badhistory_from_shaun_vids/
Don’t use UA-cam videos as a source when historical consensus by actual professional historians disagrees.
But at same time the deadlock was a normal outcome for them. Read the book “The rising sun” by John Toland in that book it shows that the Japanese high command even at the end of the war were still fighting among each other like they were in the early 30s. There has never been a time where they all were together on something. All of them were fighting for what they thought the emperor wanted, or what they thought he thought he wanted.
It's amazing how you were able to distill so much information in such a concise way. The calendar was a huge help too.
Ever since someone commented about they envisioned Shaun to be an animate skull just chilling in the woods and talking to people, I can't get it out of my head.
There are actual stories with talking skulls, one about a guy accidently killing a guy, but burying oddly specific with his dying wish, and he came back as family friend bringing luck and protecting the children, he returned as husband of the daughter afte the skull died.
Wouldnt be a much weirder folktake having a talking skull in the woods setting fact right.
This is the World War II content we need. Not fetishized accounts of the weapons and tactics, but the complicated and frankly disgusting underbelly of it. Thank you for this video.
As someone studying history, fuck yes. I barely stay awake when my professors are discussing yet another fucking endless string of wars and weapons. The reason I love history is because it's the biggest wealth of information we have about people - the almost infinite variation in how they live, what they value, how they think, how they act, how they organise themselves, etc.
@@AliceDiableaux absolutely! That's the very reason Im studying Art history. While the political economical enviroments certainly are interesting, what really interests me is the people themselves. Their culture, their way of life and thinking - nothing displayes this easier than the art they produced. Stuff like finding out people in the Bronze Age made baby bottles shaped like animals warms my heart and really brings me closer to our collective ancestors and history, as well as the concept of being human. Culture is a beutiful thing.
Well that's not going to move all these copy's of CoD now is it?
@@AliceDiableaux What's up with your professors?! Even in high school, for as much as the material was biased and in many cases outright lied to us, it was about themes, political movements, names, dates, decisions... talking about WEAPONS?!
I guess you would be more interested in anthropology or palaeontology, though, which is more my jam as well. Conflict is a major driving force in historical change, so I would expect a lot of wars/revolutions/strikes to be mentioned in history class. Weapons, though. What the heck... is this where you check your transcripts and see it was somehow Jingoism 101 you took instead?
you should read the story about the russian fleet they lost during the russo-japanese war. its funny as shit. its basicly a wonder they even arrived at korea
Dropping the bomb = releasing the video
True
You're the last person I expected to see here
I really like your video on Roman trade with the Axum Empire and The Far Side Ports. Do you have any plans to do a video on Rome's interactions with Nubia?
Danger: ionizing content within
@@aarontavolacci2311 I think he comments on Vaush’s vids as well
Anybody else here watching in 2023 for more context after seeing Barbie?
Congratulations for this comment 👏👏👏👏
Me. And I wore blue on behalf of all the Ken supporters 💙💗💙💗💙💗💙💗💙
😂😂😂😂😂yes
Yup lol
better video about WW2 than Oppenheimer
Absolutely love how Shaun is like "I know it sounds unbelievable that the supreme council didn't do jack shit even though they got hit with two nukes."
-looks outside and sees what's going on now- No, totally believeable.
More people have died to Covid in the US than civilians died in Japan, and we still don't have a second relief package...
Yeah, entirely believable.
It does make me wonder how this video would have hit before 2020? Did people used to believe that leaders cared about their citizens 'just because'?
I know that I did at some point in my life, but I don't remember when I let go of that hope.
i let go of that hope after 9/11 and it let go of me after the invasion of iraq
@@NaraMouse101 I've pretty much always been of the opinion that, for those in a position of power above direct accountability for the lives and experience of their subjects, altruistic sentiments are rarely ever genuine. Save for genuine self-delusion about whose interests their actions really serve, I guess.
I lost my faith in general humanity's regard for honor and ethics on principle alone as soon as I realized how rare it was for me to not be the only one pointing out when my peers were being cruel. That sense of cynicism was cemented in stone as soon as I developed the level of self-awareness necessary to realize that I was guilty of the same kind of bullshit.
I tend to respect overt prejudice and hatred more than the selective hypocrisy we're all privy to on a daily basis. This social dance of feigned virtue is exhausting me, both in action and observance. I wish people cared more about making sense than looking desirable. but I guess it's a lot easier for most people to just look the other way when the world or they, themselves, are evil.
To tie the delusion of a virtuous world to the hope for a better one is erroneous, though. In giving up the former you open yourself to the latter- I lost my faith when I was a kid, but I refuse to ever give up hope, because if I did that I don't think I could afford to be honest with myself
@@beansworth5694 The world has gone mad, might as well sit back and laugh along.
Finding out that Kyoto, and with it thousands of human lives, were spared essentially on a whim... that fucked me up
It seems like the thought process for saving thousands of lives is about as frivolous as the thought process that kill them.
Kyoto had over a million residents at the time, about three times the (pre-bombing) population of Hiroshima. That they were saved is something I'm glad of, but that it happened because some guy in the government bureaucracy liked the sightseeing there and was more comfortable levelling a city he'd never visited . . . that makes my blood run cold.
They had already destroyed the city with firebombz
Even more fucked up that Kokura was an intended target and escaped being obliterated because it was too cloudy
@@casematecardinal Kyoto was never heavily firebombed during the war
1:36:05
"So what's happened here is the United States said to Japan, 'We demand you surrender unconditionally,' and Japan responded, 'We will gladly accept unconditional surrender on the condition that you first agree to this condition to that unconditional surrender,' to with the United States responded, 'Oh we will happily agree to this condition to the unconditional surrender on the condition that you agree that you're accepting the condition, not that we're accepting the condition'"
Just had to get that amazing quote
maybe they should have kept pushing it... "Also we will only accept the unconditional surrender with the condition that you pay for war repairs which ofcourse we will accept completely and with no opposition whatsoever"
Dude your comment is really dumb. JAPAN SHOULD HAVE JUST SURRENDERED UNCONDITIONALLY. stop making excuses for the fascist imperialist government of Japan
@@singhatar0912 IQ: 10
That straight up sounds like a skit from Sir Humphrey Appleby in Yes Prime Minister
Kindergardeners toying with milions of lives !
Someone should quote Shaun's recent tweet about how amazing it was that a war that could only ended with a nuclear bomb happened right when the nuclear bomb was invented. That bomb hasn't been necessary in any conflict since so it really is pretty lucky
You mean the bomb that could end the world was used in the only war in which its use would not end the world? Fucking crazy.
How can you say the bomb hasn’t been necessary in any conflict since? It pretty clearly shaped the geopolitical relationship of US-USSR relations for the next 50 years.
@shanepaulryanalexander2934 You're conflating 'necessary to have' with 'necessary to use'. The video makes it clear that it was not necessary to use an atomic bomb on Japan, and it didn't work better than any of the other tools that the US was using to force Japan's surrender. If you want an analogy, it's like the tool in my car that cuts my seat belt and breaks my window. Yes, it's a necessary tool, but I don't use it to get out of my car
Uh no, not really it ended the only war it could end in such a way. If such a war between 5 of the largest militaries on the planet were to happen today, they would all have atomic bombs. You can’t really use a gun to end a fistfight when your opponent also has a gun. You’re saying this as if MAD doctrine hasn’t shaped geopoliticals for over half a century at this point.
@@Zoinkski Japan didnt deserve negotiation
I can't tell which is worse - that Kyoto was spared on a whim, or that Nagasaki was destroyed on a whim.
Communist Peter 😱
Wasn’t kyoto only spared because it was too cloudy that day?
Yes.
@@ji8044 nice sources
@@mftripz8445 No - Kyoto was spared, much earlier on, - because it was liked as a vacation spot by one of the characters in the story... I don't think the name of the cloudy target was mentioned
Roosevelt's been real quiet ever since this was released...
Kinda sus right
He's already been canceled anyway...by intracerebral hemorrhaging
@@ScorpionViper1001 smh they'll go after anyone these days
LOL!!!
*Suddenly, sounds begin to emit from FDR's grave*
"There is no monopoly held by any nation or race on disregard for the lives of the powerless." That, sir skull, is truth on the level of James Baldwin and Frantz Fanon.
This line made me tear up. It's such a powerful yet horrifying truth.
Hey Shaun, thank you for giving me new insights into this incredibly complex situation. It's clear, after watching this video, these bombs were not necessary to drop. All it did was cause chaos, and eventually, another power to develop these weapons for threats. I will show this to anyone who thinks otherwise.
"Enjoyed" is the wrong word. I did *not* enjoy this video. But I very strongly *appreciate* it.
Mood
To be honest Sato's constant back-and-forth with the supreme council is so frustrating it becomes comical
@@homestuck_official To be fair to them Sergei Witte had been sent by the Czar to do a similarly impossible job, and he actually pulled it off. "It can't be done, boss!" "Just figure it out!" "OK, it's done, I made a fucking miracle." is a thing that actually happens from time to time. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergei_Witte?wprov=sfla1
I enjoyed it like I enjoyed a Shakespearean tragedy...
Well i enjoyed it. There i made up for you not.
The Japanese Council Comedy Hour would be hilarious if it wasn't so tragic.
Hilariously Tragic
I could see a really funny comedy of errors with Sato as the protagonist... a very dark and very bad taste comedy that would be closed after the first night
@@theomegajuice8660 that would be a pretty timeless classic
Listening to the whole thing just gave me awful flashbacks to the time I worked within the Japanese bureaucratic system, and I guess it’s nice to know that nothing really changed 75 years later
I could easily imagine the BBC making it.
Like, straight up in the vein of Absolutely Fabulous.
"I see a serious discrepancy between your view and the actual state of affairs."
"Just convince them looool 4Head"
I actually sent this to my AP World teacher from back in high school (who was wonderful) because it’s *so* well put together that I was sure she’d love it. I know she got it, and can only hope she watched & enjoyed it. I certainly did- and am about to do so again! Hooray for some light listening to wind down for the evening, am I right folks?
wait now im curious as to how she reacted, tell me tell me telll meeeee
@@kopall unfortunately no idea what her response to the video itself was- she responded to my email the next morning when I’d sent it pretty late at night, and she thanked me for the recommendation. Mostly it was just nice to be in touch.
"Surely, worsening the condition of the German proletariat will force them to rise up against their fascist oppressors!"
Months later: "Surely, worsening the condition of the Japanese proletariat will force them to rise up against their fascist oppressors!"
smh can't believe the Allies were accelerationists.
Like Shaun who is Bernie or bust, saying he couldn’t vote for Biden over Trump? 😹 (if he was able to)
The German proletariat did actually rise up and occupy factories in the final days of the war, in anticipation of the arrival of the Red Army. The Soviet military administration told them to go back to work and returned to their legal owners
@@wisetrollman how is that in any way relevant?
@@CTOOFBOOGLE its not its what we like to call a red herring or mentioning a relatively irrelevant thing that seems related to something else but isn't and is just a distraction.
@@Salt0fTheEarth lmaooo, the soviets are hilarious, its like they reveled in destroying the idealism of socialists and workers
“That’s right, this was a stealth PragerU response video this whole time. Twist.”
I love your deadpan humor
This was absolute gold.
"Anyone whose pointing to a singular reason for why the bombs were dropped is definitely oversimplifying history"
I would say, anyone whose pointing to a singular reason for any historical event is definitely oversimplifying history ^^
except for the american civil war, pretty much everything leads back to slavery and the south wanting to protect it at all costs
@@taloob493 I guess the exeption rule I guess, and even there you would have people that probably thought of it more from the economical perspective than the racist one in the south.
@@0Clewi0 well yeah there are those that think that but the economy was tightly bound to the racism
@@taloob493 Not really, as Lincoln didn't abolish slavery until like four years later ^^
Although slavery was an important piece of the conflict, especially as he dragged on, there was a more profound separation between the North and the SOuth economically. The North was industrialized and was producing manufactured goods that they destined to their home market, so they were very protectionnists and wanted that the South industrialize too to sell them those goods (like machines to replace slaves).
The South was mainly in the production of basic goods, for exportation. So, they didn't want protectionism and wanted to be more open towards Europe (reason why France and Britain, although neutral, favored South), and they were already against North. Lincoln and his abolitionist position was just the droplet of water that overflowed the casket ^^
also the rise of the NAZI party in the Weimar Republic is another exception, sort of, since there were complicated factors that made it NAZIs specifically, but under the treaty of Versailles some extreme totalitarian regime would have likely risen.
This is an incredibly informative video, but I feel like the thing that is going to stick the most with me is just how horrible pretty much everyone in power is, and how little most of them care about "normal people".
Every country is like this, the weak ones just can't commit as much evil.
Has been the case since the beginning of "civilization " up till today, and will be for many decades to come. Sadly. Case in point. When Joe Stalin learned of Churchill's failure to be voted in as prime minister in 1945 he could not believe that his old adversary could not simply rig the votes to suit his own agenda. Just like he and many others in non democratic states do on a regular basis.
Some are more evil than others. I don't think any country could top Japan in war crimes and brutality.
I think once you understand that becoming a socialist of some sort is pretty inevitable
@@deep_cuts2019ah yes the socialist and communist countries have never been evil🙄
If you unironically want to be a socialist you endorse more death and destruction than any nuclear bomb
Just look at the historical scoreboard
Or better yet ask someone who escaped the communist hell holes
It's very weird that escaping Communism is a tried and true trope ..yet it never reverses?
Odd...why don't people escape the u.k or the u.s to go Cuba?🤷🏻♂️
I had my far left commy loving phase...but then I talked to my grandmother and realized it's a joke
But it's fun to pretend it's moral online where you are safe from the net result of death and hunger
he's alive! I thought he just had a haunted Twitter account
Alive?
He’s literally a talking skull, he’s undead tf you talkin about.
If you donated just 1$ per month you could be aware as to whether or not Shaun is dead.
Herman Cain be like
@@hoagielamp6543 the dude is at minimum making 3k a month solely off patreon, why would anyone give him more?
@@youare5907 You realize thats only 36,000 a year right? Not a lot of money. Also why? Because people like his content...
To use your name here:
You are more dense than lead.
I guess this answers a question that has been nagging me for half my life now.
From ages 9 to 15 I lived in a tiny town that was really overly proud of its handful of medieval buildings. It had two castles, but we learned in school that there was a third one that got destroyed by bombs in WWII.
That always confused me, because, the town has only 10.000 inhabitants even now. It is tiny. What was worth bombing? What thing of strategic importance could have been there? The most significant thing that ever happened there is that a noble was made the imperial cupbearer in the middle ages, & that was still the town's whole thing cause nothing of note happened there since. The school I went to was called something like "Imperial Cupbearer Grammar School". There was also a regionally famous horse market but that was it. Teeny Tiny rural town surrounded by fields. It stinks of manure come planting season. Every day id fantasize about moving to a big town where you can buy sushi.
I wondered if there was like, a secret Nazi weapons stash hidden there or like what could make that tiny insignificant cow village a military target.
I guess now my question has been answered: it was probably strategic bombing.
The insane logic of total war. Everyone is the enemy, so every woman, man, and child can be tortured and killed without remorse.
100% man.
More likely a bomber just got lost, thought 'screw it' and dropped its remaining bombs on whatever it saw that looked like it could be worth blowing up.
Bombers didn't have enough fuel for the return journey if they were still carrying bombs, so they dropped them regardless of finding their target.
RAF bomber command had huge loses during the day and had to switch to night time bombing. However , even though a strategic bombing campaign was a well accepted theory in the interwar years , the British didn't have the navigational technology - and were lucky to get within 5 miles of the target - seriously .
Hence a possible reason why a bomb was accidentally dropped on a castle.
However , as early as the Battle of Britain, Luftwaffe bombers were guided by radio beams - kickbien (spelling)
guided the bombers at night by radio dashes on one side , and dots on the other . Just before reaching the target , the bomber crossed another beam an a timer was set .
The British caught onto this , and a contest of radio frequency jamming occurred .
This became known as the battle of the beams.
However , sometime during the war , the Luftwaffe set up a retaliation program , to intentionally target historical land marks in Britain. A bomb hit the side of Exeter Cathedral .
.
The bombers often dropped their bombs on any target they could find on their way back home, no matter how valuable. Then on the other hand, RAF and USAF planes also shot random women and children with machine guns so nothing's really surprising there.
"Militarists don't care about killing a bunch of poor people. That's their day job."
Chilling
You should look up how the nukes ended up saving more people than it killed. A lot more
@@davids.3584 I- uh- did you watch the video? Like, you've got to be an obvious troll but it's just so bizarre
@@davids.3584 if you posted this elsewhere, I would not have called you a troll. But you posted this as a comment on a video about how japan would have surrendered without the bomb, with tons of sources. Like, did you watch the video? If so, argue with it bro
@@ellentheeducator No, I didn't watch this 2hr and 20 minute video posted by a very left leaning individual because I trust Google and websites more than him that say the exact opposite.
@@davids.3584 then why are you commenting on it? Like, why bother? If you actually believe, watch the video. If you don't, piss off
Given the recent release of Oppenheimer, I think it’s only appropriate to leave a comment here and hope it helps boost this video into some more people’s recommendations
My grandfathers school class actually got completely eliminated on a school trip by a bomb, which my grandfather wasn’t a part of only because he had broken his arm attempting to jump on an already moving tramways back, as he was late to school that day.
“Stay out of school, kids”
@Curiosity What an intriguing thing to say. Clearly a few minutes consideration would yield the answer to your question, it was a modern war, after all.
@Curiosity Because bombings were designed to be unpredictable and fast. Bomber formations were designed to maximize the amount of damage done as quickly as possible, to prevent giving the enemy time to fight back. Radar was still a very new concept and Japan didn't deploy any in time.
@Curiosity Because the country should still function even while there's the threat of bombings? They didn't know _when_ they'd get bombed, the only way they'd 100% guarantee to be safe when they got bombed was to completely lock down the country, which would do more damage than getting bombed in the first place
@Curiosity hmm, i wonder why warring countries didn’t tell each other when they were dropping a fucking warhead on the other
7:02 "the hardliners favoured a more... hardline military strategy and the moderates were more... moderate." That skull really do be as dry as bone
just imagine that: the people who where nice to that guy on his vacation in kyoto basically saved their whole city and the thousands who lived there...
The path to world peace is clear - we must provide for more vacations for the generals of the world.
Sounds like a destopian horror movie
Saved their city and doomed another, by being pleasant, amazing 😔
I mean, it matches basic human psychology to a T - people are more empathetic when they travel and meet other people. Most racists are racist because they've never or rarely left their hometowns or traveled anywhere. He was against bombing Kyoto because he remembered what he liked about Kyoto - the places, the people, everything. The same would have been true for any of the cities on the list if he'd gone there instead.
Never underestimate the military importance of tourism!
As a Japanese citizen, it was a pleasant surprise to see a western content creator present the events of WW2 with this much nuance.
A sentiment I hear a lot of from well-meaning western liberals is "you weren't responsible for the war, your ancestors were", as if to reassure me that I wasn't in the wrong. It hasn't occurred to them that no, none of my ancestors were directly responsible for the war, because they too, along with many other people, were the ones being oppressed by the wartime regime. (That's not to say that offspring of war criminals are responsible in any way either.)
It always bothered me how Germans were always afforded the luxury of having their wartime bad guys compartmentalized into "the Nazis," completely divorced from their national identity. With Japan, it was never "the imperial army" or "the high council," but always "the Japanese". If I'm not mistaken, that is how we got our slur. People, especially in the west, can't seem to wrap their minds around the idea that under a totalitarian regime, whether it be Japan or Germany, very few people are left unscathed. Sent off to war against their will, abandoned in the jungle with no food and no way to get home when the high command decided it wasn't worth it, pulled out of school and onto one-way fueled airplanes for suicide missions. Most of the people that did fight in the war were just trying not to get killed, or get their families locked up. That is in no way an excuse for r*ping or killing civilians and military sex slaves, but concerning the fighting, they were not given much of a choice. Getting drafted was half way to a death sentence.
Somehow, nuance that seems incredibly intuitive and easy is lost on most people. A part of this I attribute to good old racism, and a part to complex political relations in East Asia continuing to this day.
Anyway, I saw this video a while back but came back to comment since I had some time on my hands. Thank you Shaun, as well-researched and excellently argued as I've come to expect from your content.
While I do agree that you are right that a lot of nuance is lost in the perception of Japan in relation to WWII, I completely disagree that compartmentalization of the bad guys as Nazis divorced Germany’s war crimes from its national identity.
I have spent a significant time in Germany and I have not met a single German proud to be German. Exceptions exist on the extreme right, but for the general populations there are constant reminders of their faults in detailed schooling, war debt, cobblestones, museums, global perception etc. Germans do have a Memorial Day, but in contrast to other countries it commemorates victims of violent oppression of all countries. Being the bad guys in WWII is so tied to the nation’s identity, that it’s not surprising Germans do not think they can be proud of being german.
Internationally, Germany will always be held to a higher standard and could never get away with the kind of treatment Japan has been giving countries like Korea. When you think of Germany, Nazis do come to mind.
In contrast, I would argue that Japan is more commonly associated with cherry blossoms, anime and nuclear atrocities. Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings are tragic, but also present clear evidence of tragedy and victimhood - Japan is not purely ‘the bad guy’ in relation to war.
You must now know a lot about the West. The Germans themselves have been so attached to Nazism in the past 80 years that patriotism is seen as dangerous in much of Germany, and in almost the entire West (including the Slavic nations of Europe) being German was associated with Nazism. This has only calmed down recently (in the last 10 to 20 years). Even today, Germany is synonymous with Nazism in most of America, but most Americans associate the Japanese with anime, ninjas, samurai, and Sengoku Jidai.
@dylanrodrigues not to menmtion the prince leading the rape on nankin who was entirely absolved of any wrongdoing which is extremely disgusting to me
> because they too, along with many other people, were the ones being oppressed by the wartime regime
How did the regime become a regime if it wasn't backed by most people? I'm unaware of any significant opposition to the ideology of the Japanese government.
>Germans were always afforded the luxury of having their wartime bad guys compartmentalized into "the Nazis,"
To the contrary, Germans were and are being taught that a majority of the population was responsible not just for the Nazis being in power, but all of their atrocities.
Meanwhile there is no such education in Japan.
@dylanrodriguesno be said that's what would happen if you didn't join the army. After that, it's not mandatory to commit war crimes, but a lot of people did. That's different. No one starts out particularly evil. They are turned evil. If your military is so desensitized to death and war crimes, you'll probably get it too. This is just the chain of evolution from normal people to war criminals. But the fact stands that you would be drafted against your will and imperial japan wasn't keen on freedom.