Hiroshima: After the Bomb (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
  • We all know about the first use of atomic weapons in warfare when the USA employed one on the city of Hiroshima at the end of World War 2. Yet what was life like in the city in the hours, days and weeks afterwards? Find out by watching this short and simple animated documentary.
    Twitter: / tenminhistory
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    A special thanks to all of these Patrons below, without whom the show wouldn't be possible:
    Arthur Hosey Jr.
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    Sources:
    The Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima: An Eye-Witness Account (Continued) by P. T. Siemes
    Imagining Nuclear Weapons: Hiroshima, Armageddon, and the Annihilation of the Students of Ichijo School by James H. Foard

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,6 тис.

  • @jonbaxter2254
    @jonbaxter2254 4 роки тому +16649

    How utterly terrifying to be a recon plane to check out a city you swore was there yesterday

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 4 роки тому +1307

      "Dude, I swear, I had shit to do there tomorrow!"

    • @bangscutter
      @bangscutter 4 роки тому +1271

      And see a mushroom cloud over where the city was supposed to be. It's a sight never seen before by most people, and probably resembled that of a volcanic eruption to someone who saw it the first time.

    • @mathewkelly9968
      @mathewkelly9968 4 роки тому +286

      The US had razed most Japanese cities to the ground anyway . Hiroshima and Nagasaki where left alone just so they be nuked .

    • @MichaelJ44
      @MichaelJ44 4 роки тому +72

      Jon Baxter
      It’s true. I was the yesterday

    • @frozengrip2609
      @frozengrip2609 4 роки тому +294

      @@mathewkelly9968 Pretty much. The Firebombing of Tokyo killed and destroyed more people and structures than the nukes.

  • @NolaWarNerve
    @NolaWarNerve 3 роки тому +7234

    Just looked him up. Died in 2010 born 1916 man lived through 2 a bombs and for 94 years. What a legend

    • @B3RyL
      @B3RyL 3 роки тому +800

      The simple fact that he's the only person in history to become the victim of two atomic bombings is mindblowing enough. The fact that after all that he lived a full life until the tender age of 94 is just unbelievable. He truly IS a legend in every sense of the word.

    • @bletrick3352
      @bletrick3352 3 роки тому +594

      God had to Nerf him somehow so he used two atomic bombs to injure him otherwise the dude would’ve lived forever

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 3 роки тому +226

      That man has a better claim to immortality than jesus.

    • @delanovanraalte3186
      @delanovanraalte3186 3 роки тому +37

      @@B3RyL well radiation is good for your live expetancy apparrently

    • @B3RyL
      @B3RyL 3 роки тому +120

      @Henry Bushell He probably wasn't the only one who left Hiroshima for Nagasaki, but he's the only Nijou Hibakusha (double atomic bombing survivor) to have been confirmed by the Japanese government. There is actually a documentary which claims that there were more than 160 Nijou Hibakusha or something like that, but their accounts could not be verified. Many people died of post-bombing wounds and complications too, so the line between "survivor" and "casualty" gets kinda blurry. In any case, he's the only one who was officially recognized as a 100% confirmed Nijou Hibakusha.

  • @AjarTadpole7202
    @AjarTadpole7202 3 роки тому +4700

    "He was able to escape Hiroshima" WOO HOO!
    "He then moved to Nagasaki" OH NO!

    • @kimjongun329
      @kimjongun329 3 роки тому +463

      "But he survived" WOO HOO!

    • @Misquif
      @Misquif 3 роки тому +257

      @@kimjongun329 "but later in his years he got, Leukemia, Cataracts and Stomach Cancer. OH FUCK NOOOOOOOOOOO"

    • @tacolepaco
      @tacolepaco 3 роки тому +9

      @@Misquif What happened next.

    • @yamato3894
      @yamato3894 3 роки тому +130

      @@tacolepaco He died in 1990 if I remember correctly , making him the oldest survivor of an atomic bombardement and one of the only survivor of two bombs.

    • @tacolepaco
      @tacolepaco 3 роки тому +2

      @@yamato3894 Wow

  • @nathanjohnwilliamson7675
    @nathanjohnwilliamson7675 4 роки тому +2091

    Can’t decide if Yamaguchi is the luckiest or unluckiest guy to ever live tbh

  • @SivakAurak
    @SivakAurak 4 роки тому +6783

    Tsutomu Yamaguchi when arriving in Nagasaki:
    "You wouldn't believe what just happened to me, there was a big bright flash kinda like that one over OH FU-"

    • @weijiafang1298
      @weijiafang1298 4 роки тому +662

      Yamaguchi: A bomb had completely destroyed Hiroshima.
      Boss: There is no way a bomb that powerful can be constructed. I cannot believe you unless I see it...

    • @PyroPuffs777
      @PyroPuffs777 4 роки тому +57

      Weijia Fang he never saw it because the flash ended everything in an instant rip in piece.

    • @LeuKang
      @LeuKang 4 роки тому +277

      "Yesterday I was in Hiroshima and a bright flash occurred and the city was gone"
      "That's bs"
      *Bright flash outside boss's window*
      "You've got to shitting me"

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 4 роки тому +72

      Weijia Fang This got me thinking.. probably there were some people who were sent to both a German death camp AND a Soviet Gulag.

    • @freddiemercury8625
      @freddiemercury8625 4 роки тому +41

      @@deadby15 I believe there should have been at least some Polish military personnel that probably did that since, both, the Nazis and the Soviets wanted the Polish command to get eradicated e.g. the Katyn Massacre for the Soviet Union (a lot of Polish military officers and higher ups died there, so I imagine somebody must've made it out and got caught by the Nazis).

  • @adamesd3699
    @adamesd3699 2 роки тому +218

    I read about Yamaguchi. He was obviously traumatized by his experience in Hiroshima, so went back to his hometown of Nagasaki to recover mentally and physically. When Nagasaki got bombed, he at first wondered if the great fire he had seen in Hiroshima had somehow followed him to Nagasaki. Just imagine that.

  • @michaelrizka
    @michaelrizka 4 роки тому +7338

    "If I had a coin for each time I've survived a nuclear bombing, I would've had 2, which is not much but very strange considering the circumstances"
    - Yamaguchi, probably

    • @DoABarrelRol1l
      @DoABarrelRol1l 4 роки тому +74

      More coins than any non-military personnel right? Assuming being miles away in a bunker counts as surviving and not cheating.
      Otherwise; he easily holds the record.

    • @emilsingapurcan8054
      @emilsingapurcan8054 4 роки тому +307

      Is 2 alot?
      Depends on the context.
      Coins? No.
      Survived nukes? Yeah definitely.

    • @roadent217
      @roadent217 4 роки тому +34

      In the land of the destitute, the 2-coined man is king.

    • @jacktheflash8478
      @jacktheflash8478 4 роки тому +5

      Mousazz okay

    • @jacktheflash8478
      @jacktheflash8478 4 роки тому +1

      Falfo N ?

  • @fakechloe207
    @fakechloe207 4 роки тому +5872

    Everybody asks "who is James Bizzonett?"
    But no one asks " how is James Bizzonett?"

  • @triumphantking8549
    @triumphantking8549 4 роки тому +6867

    If someone wants to know why we see a Catholic priest multiple times in the video, it’s because the South of Japan was where a lot of Christian communities were formed and survived through the centuries, even during the 2 and a half century of Japanese ban on Catholicism. When this period ended, Catholic missionaries came back to the country and built a lot of schools and hospitals. In fact, Nagasaki was founded and developed by Catholic Portuguese priests and traders in the middle of the 16th Century and the city had about 200000 Catholics in 1945.

    • @xjdjaws
      @xjdjaws 4 роки тому +311

      The more you know.

    • @reset123451
      @reset123451 4 роки тому +282

      There is a film by Martin Scorsese that tells about the first Portuguese priests in Japan "silence"

    • @joshuakevinserdan9331
      @joshuakevinserdan9331 4 роки тому +56

      didn't know this, thanks!

    • @Nirkhuz
      @Nirkhuz 4 роки тому +227

      And don't forget that Pedro Arrupe, one spanish jesuit (and doctor) working in the outskirts of Hiroshima survived the bombing and made an campaign hospital in the jesuit novitiate in the aftermath of the bombing.

    • @Sorcerers_Apprentice
      @Sorcerers_Apprentice 4 роки тому +250

      Also, the most common type of Catholic priests present in Japan were the Jesuits, which is why you see them so often in Anime and Manga.

  • @donk5058
    @donk5058 4 роки тому +695

    "...decided to seek shelter in his home town, Nagasaki."
    Me: Wayaminute

  • @ChrisJones-ij3xp
    @ChrisJones-ij3xp 3 роки тому +239

    I remember when my Japanese-Canadian friend was sorting through some hoarded stuff of his mother's (whose father hailed from Hiroshima), and he showed me a 1945 letter he found which ended with: "We had made plans to visit the old hometown once the war ended, but have now decided against this." That was all.

  • @scottmalkinson9545
    @scottmalkinson9545 4 роки тому +13134

    He survived Hiroshima so he moved to nagasaki big oof.

    • @ggggyedidad1395
      @ggggyedidad1395 4 роки тому +288

      This is the best history channel

    • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
      @PremierCCGuyMMXVI 4 роки тому +768

      So he moved to an isolated island north of Russia in 1961
      *Even bigger oof*

    • @garybrown2039
      @garybrown2039 4 роки тому +280

      Yea that sucks . But at least he survived to tell the world about it.

    • @makaveli6873
      @makaveli6873 4 роки тому +93

      LMAOOOOOOO bruh I burst out laughing at a store and mfs looked at me like 😳

    • @MisterCynic18
      @MisterCynic18 4 роки тому +145

      unluckiest man ever to live

  • @GarlicPudding
    @GarlicPudding 4 роки тому +2802

    This raises a (very video-worthy) question: *What was life like in Occupied Germany and Japan?*

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 3 роки тому +103

      You can read A Pale View of Hills by Kazuo Ishiguro to find out about life in Nagasaki after the bombing.
      A very spooky book.

    • @TheGenericVideoGamer
      @TheGenericVideoGamer 3 роки тому +59

      james bizzanett

    • @Scarletraven87
      @Scarletraven87 3 роки тому +16

      Memories of a Geisha had something on the subject, but it's a novel so not necessarily accurate.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 3 роки тому +4

      There are several that have already been done on both.

    • @Pfisiar22
      @Pfisiar22 3 роки тому +58

      @@odysseusrex5908 Life in occupied germany was pretty awful, particularly in berlin where food shortages and inflation were rampant. Not helping this was an ongoing and escalating feud between the US and Soviet Union over what to do with germany. Eventually, the USSR blockaded Berlin and the cold war began as a result.

  • @keauxgeigh
    @keauxgeigh 4 роки тому +950

    A few years ago a U.S. mayor visited Hiroshima and asked his counterpart why Hiroshima's roads were so organized and orderly while other cities in Japan were so chaotic. Reportedly the Hiroshima mayor said something like, "Well, we had some help from (you) the Americans".

    • @andrewcopple7075
      @andrewcopple7075 2 роки тому

      US elected officials don't seem to have much in the way of brainpower or historical education. That does not bode well for America.

    • @willhaney96
      @willhaney96 2 роки тому +81

      As in rapidly disassembly or rapid reconstruction?

    • @JackHankeAnd
      @JackHankeAnd 2 роки тому +148

      @@willhaney96 Probably both.

    • @Vertutame
      @Vertutame 2 роки тому +31

      Which is kinda bad to japan's policy, really.
      They are disencouraging people to use car.
      I did live in Seno city [Higashi hiroshima] went to Hiroshima from time to time, the street were big and has many lanes but pretty empty.
      Most people are just using public transport anyway so. not really a good thing.

    • @hazardeur
      @hazardeur 2 роки тому +33

      that US mayor seems not to be the sharpest tool in the shed. not suprising

  • @Danandria
    @Danandria 4 роки тому +375

    1:00 "Seems Nukey"
    History Matters, the best channel for finding a way to put humor with something horrible.

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem 4 роки тому +8

      Green humour is best

    • @rwboa22
      @rwboa22 3 роки тому +2

      Or when they are about to die, they would say, "Later Nerds."

    • @hongxiuquan69
      @hongxiuquan69 2 роки тому

      @@FlagAnthem
      Hey, look who it is!

    • @Twinrehz
      @Twinrehz 2 роки тому +4

      What about the "Chalkboard for days"? Had me laughing at the most horrible part xD

    • @Senzawa69
      @Senzawa69 2 роки тому

      never heard dark humour?

  • @patchworkfellow
    @patchworkfellow 4 роки тому +974

    Tsutomo Yamaguchi must’ve been like _“These gosh-dang Americans have it in for me”_ after Nagasaki...

    • @Toni29360
      @Toni29360 4 роки тому +12

      Ew gacha

    • @patchworkfellow
      @patchworkfellow 4 роки тому +21

      dat doggo no offence meant, but can you please reply something _relevant,_ instead of insulting my profile-picture?

    • @aliensinnoh1
      @aliensinnoh1 4 роки тому +97

      The bombings of the cities were just a cover for the true American objective: killing Tsutomo Yamaguchi. That was the true objective of the entire war.

    • @Toni29360
      @Toni29360 4 роки тому +4

      @@patchworkfellow literally looks like shit and it's hella cringy

    • @miker.9138
      @miker.9138 4 роки тому +15

      What if both bombings were actually just targeting him? Heh.

  • @spartandud3
    @spartandud3 4 роки тому +252

    Just imagine being that pilot sent to investigate. After a while you see a peculiar shaped cloud far off into the distance where you're supposed to go. But as yet get closer it begins to dawn on you that it's the aftermath of a bomb of a magnitude you have never even thought possible and the city you're meant to investigate has been destroyed.

    • @SonnyBubba
      @SonnyBubba 2 роки тому +6

      It’s impossible for us to imagine a world where atomic bombs don’t exist. It’s even more impossible to imagine the shock and horror of that pilot who just saw the impossible.

    • @youthgamngpatnerz3300
      @youthgamngpatnerz3300 2 роки тому +1

      cloud of AMEIRCAN MIGHT

    • @IceSpoon
      @IceSpoon Рік тому

      And all of your instruments are starting going off because the radiation is increasing rapidly.

  • @hexticblue
    @hexticblue 4 роки тому +281

    I love how Admiral Nimitz and General Douglas MacArthur is differentiated with the latter having a corn cob pipe

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 4 роки тому +17

      I always love how many world leaders I would probably recognize without being told their name, just from knowing what topic the episode is about.

    • @ericlanglois9194
      @ericlanglois9194 4 роки тому +20

      Nimitz was an Admiral, not a General >.>

    • @nobodyuknow2490
      @nobodyuknow2490 4 роки тому +14

      @@ericlanglois9194 He was generally admirable? ^_^

    • @awesomemcawesomeshorts9531
      @awesomemcawesomeshorts9531 4 роки тому

      Gen. MacArthur was a real one

    • @yeahyeahyeah4488
      @yeahyeahyeah4488 3 роки тому +1

      I believe he also had a button nose and two eyes made out of coal.

  • @daltonthompson3083
    @daltonthompson3083 4 роки тому +3439

    “We are in possession of the most powerful bomb known to man. If you are in any doubt, make inquiry to the events of hiroshima.” - leaflets airdropped over japanese towns pre-nagasaki

    • @kelpthing5209
      @kelpthing5209 4 роки тому +217

      Must have been scary

    • @kyleplatter8954
      @kyleplatter8954 4 роки тому +690

      Dalton Thompson “lol, they brought a single bomber!” -some Japanese guy, Hiroshima (probably)

    • @23tovarm5
      @23tovarm5 4 роки тому +88

      @@kyleplatter8954 oh sh- BOOOOOOOOOOOOOM

    • @Nothing-1w3
      @Nothing-1w3 4 роки тому +80

      Wait is it geting brig- *immediately gets burned*

    • @jasonhenry8067
      @jasonhenry8067 4 роки тому +118

      Kyle Platter
      “Shit, they sent only ONE bomber!” - some other Japanese guy, probably.

  • @Patmanduu
    @Patmanduu 3 роки тому +133

    I shouldn’t laugh, but that look Yamaguchi is giving McArthur at 1:33 is priceless. Like, “see me after class...”

    • @shinjisakuwafemaleshingodz6122
      @shinjisakuwafemaleshingodz6122 3 роки тому +5

      True

    • @Snoflakes_1
      @Snoflakes_1 3 роки тому +13

      "Really dude? It's like you're after me or something"

    • @ScrambledAndBenedict
      @ScrambledAndBenedict 2 роки тому +1

      I greatly appreciate the humor of these. People can say it's bad taste all they like, but this is heavy stuff and it needs a bit of levity.

  • @TheJaviferrol
    @TheJaviferrol 4 роки тому +928

    "Lightning doesnt strike twice in the same place" is clearly an expression Tsutomu Yamaguchi never heard

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 4 роки тому +20

      Or at the very least would laugh at.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 4 роки тому +24

      Well, the people who stayed in the ruins of Hiroshima didn't get nuked again, so joke is on him.

    • @SixteenJacobsCreams
      @SixteenJacobsCreams 4 роки тому +17

      to be fair it didn't strike in the same place, just the same person

    • @TheJaviferrol
      @TheJaviferrol 4 роки тому +9

      @@SixteenJacobsCreams The point is he should have stayed near Hiroshima

    • @panachevitz
      @panachevitz 4 роки тому +5

      Lightning maybe not, but apparently nukes follow you like a bloodhound.

  • @bificommander
    @bificommander 4 роки тому +300

    "Chalkboards for days"
    Well, all primary necessities taken care of.

  • @makichandes
    @makichandes 4 роки тому +581

    I grew up in a small town just outside of Hiroshima. My grandmother was saved because she was on holiday at a cousin's house on an island off the coast. She remembers seeing the light from the bomb and wondering what it was. So grateful that she wasn't home when the bomb fell. She was so young. For me it was very hard growing up there as a half Japanese. Even now there is still lots of sadness and pain but things are getting better. Anyone who tells you otherwise doesn't know any older generations of Japanese. Good video. Glad you didn't make it humorous. Thank you

    • @skeletonjanitor
      @skeletonjanitor 3 роки тому +5

      @UpSideДown Most eastern Asian countries got over it, I’m just Nanjing got over it too.

    • @uzodinmankili9682
      @uzodinmankili9682 3 роки тому +17

      Get over it, your nation did far worse

    • @Copycat217
      @Copycat217 3 роки тому +22

      Dont cry bro US people gets cringe too from two buildings falling apart 😂😂😂

    • @itzimperiumxvi2620
      @itzimperiumxvi2620 3 роки тому +6

      @@Copycat217 by people they trained to fight someone else. Weird how the world works sometimes

    • @jancyraniak4739
      @jancyraniak4739 3 роки тому +1

      @@scarzi6154 Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not bombed before the nuke, they were spared to be targets for the nuke.

  • @77777Spooky
    @77777Spooky 4 роки тому +920

    I appreciate how they toned down the humor a bit for this one.

    • @johnmccnj
      @johnmccnj 4 роки тому +52

      Not one Death Thump for the entire video.

    • @EliAs-ub6yf
      @EliAs-ub6yf 4 роки тому +85

      "Seems nukey"

    • @Crosshair84
      @Crosshair84 4 роки тому +28

      but Chalkboards for days...

    • @jeandeauxconvair601
      @jeandeauxconvair601 4 роки тому +9

      @@johnmccnj no one died they just went to forever sleep

    • @reffa2858
      @reffa2858 4 роки тому +22

      Tone down!? Did we watch the same video. The hidden humorisism are everywhere in this video.

  • @vazeyo
    @vazeyo 4 роки тому +561

    Now make a video called Nagasaki: After the Bomb.
    Because...
    Obviously.

    • @logical5473
      @logical5473 3 роки тому +10

      @Michael Benedict no it wouldn’t this is Hiroshima and that’s Nagasaki

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 3 роки тому

      @@logical5473
      The Nagasaki bomb exploded right next to the cathedral, wiping out the large congregation who were hearing mass at the time.

    • @xiaoka
      @xiaoka 3 роки тому

      Don’t worry he already made it. The sign in the video says Nagasaki, not Hiroshima.

  • @kaisreece6491
    @kaisreece6491 3 роки тому +55

    The thing about the military garrison stopping reporting in and the recon plane heading there only to see the mushroom cloud 100 miles away makes me shudder

  • @thetooginator153
    @thetooginator153 4 роки тому +1343

    As a boy in the sixties, one of the first “grown up” books I read was “Hiroshima” by John Hersey. It was pretty terrifying, but I recommend it to everyone. Hiroshima was almost as recent then as 9/11 is now, so it felt pretty recent.
    It was pretty frightening to know that a person had been vaporized, and only his shadow remained. I believe that the book “Hiroshima” made the world take nuclear weapons more seriously, and may have saved the world from nuclear war - so far.

    • @edgarratsep3631
      @edgarratsep3631 4 роки тому +89

      I am very sorry for sounding rude but the bombing of Japanese cities did jack shit to make people realise how powerful nuclear weapons were(they knew it prior to nuking Japan). The bombing took place to show off the force of those bombs. There was even a plan to annihilate Russia in 1945 but the soviet military presence in Europe made the USA's and UK's question such action.
      In 1949 Russia created their own nuclear weapon which helped the world maintain relative peace.
      Mutual annihilation guarantees peace.

    • @naxergss2625
      @naxergss2625 4 роки тому +61

      ah yes 9/11 is comparable to Hiroshima true

    • @thetooginator153
      @thetooginator153 4 роки тому +18

      Andrew Mitchell - That is exactly what I meant. Thanks.

    • @Tushii
      @Tushii 4 роки тому +8

      I remember we had a chapter regarding that book. It had the exact same line (in my native language) a person vaporised and only the shadow remained in a rock

    • @thisnicklldo
      @thisnicklldo 4 роки тому +6

      Me too. Old style Penguin with the grey and white colour bands. I think my uncle had bought it and left it at our house, I guess I read it in about 1965 at the age of 12. We had not long been through the Cuba crisis and I distinctly remember in 1961 looking up at contrails wondering if this was it. When I then read Hershey's book it had a permanent effect on my opinions - one of the most sobering things I have ever read. Appalling business. I too have carried with me for 50+ years the picture of an image of a man burnt permanently into concrete.

  • @mazkas1476
    @mazkas1476 4 роки тому +181

    I am a simple man. I see History Matters, I watch.

  • @mshotz1
    @mshotz1 4 роки тому +48

    During the War, the 20th Air Force would organize 'Recon/weather" patrols with B-29's modified with Bomb-bay mounted Recon Cameras and carrying weather experts. They would fly in threes for mutual protection. The Japanese soon learned to ignore any incoming B-29's that were just three planes.
    After the initial air raid warning, and "all clear was" broadcast. The Army saw 3 bombers approaching. Little Boy was released almost at the exact time the "all Clear" was giving.

    • @IudiciumInfernalum
      @IudiciumInfernalum 2 роки тому +6

      It's pretty fucking horrible to go for "maximum carnage".

    • @henrygustavekrausse7459
      @henrygustavekrausse7459 2 роки тому +1

      ​@@IudiciumInfernalum You expect them to send a fleet of extra planes for no reason?

  • @nigelo92
    @nigelo92 3 роки тому +1117

    I've lived in Hiroshima, and it's almost eerily in how peaceful the city feels. You'd never know what had happened. My workplace was really close to the where the epicentre was and there's a small plaque denoting it, but you wouldn't know without looking for it as it's just kind of hidden next to an ordinary inner city car park.

    • @Foxingg
      @Foxingg 2 роки тому +100

      I wouldn't imagine the people living there would want to have a huge monument commemorating one of the worst and most brutal acts of war ever committed looming over the place

    • @bentencho
      @bentencho 2 роки тому +31

      @@Foxingg There is the Peace Memorial Building, a few other monuments plus that partially ruined building in the area.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 роки тому +3

      @@Foxingg hardly, the nuclear bombs killed less than the Tokyo fire bombings alone
      In the death toll of tens of millions in the largest war humanity hath witnessed…200,000ish dead are almost a drop in the bucket, and considering the *alternative* ie “To fully pacify the nation, we would have to kill 25% of the Japanese population (in the event of an invasion)”
      You tell me which would be worse

    • @malkav1337
      @malkav1337 2 роки тому +43

      Got to say, there is Peace Memorial Park featuring the Atomic Bomb Dome (the famous remnants of an industrial exhibition center that sat beneath the blast), which is a World Heritage site. And a museum there which shows the horrors of atomic weapons while promoting the end of all atomic weapons everywhere. And the peace flame, which will only go out when all atomic weapons are abolished. Yes, the marker of where the bomb actually exploded (in the air) is on a side street, but that's because the Enola Gay didn't hit the bridge target dead on. My point is that Hiroshima very much acknowledges, advocates, protests and fights against the existence of nuclear weapons. It's part of the city's spirit.

    • @gezzarandom
      @gezzarandom 2 роки тому +8

      That’s the thing with the Japanese, they don’t tend to dwell on the past.

  • @pauld6967
    @pauld6967 4 роки тому +202

    The man moving from one target city to another reminds me of the man who moved from Manassas, Virginia to avoid the Civil War after the first land battle and went to Appomattox, Virginia where, a few years later, General Lee surrendered, effectively ending the Civil War.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 3 роки тому +42

      Wilmer Mclean, Lee and Grant met *in his house.*

    • @pauld6967
      @pauld6967 3 роки тому +31

      @@odysseusrex5908 Yes, for the surrender at Appomattox, VA. Fate said "oh no buddy, you don't get to escape being a historical figure. You saw the first engagement in Virginia, so now you get to witness the end."
      Yes there was still some fighting afterwards but for all intents and purposes, Appomattox was the end of the Civil War.

    • @Mr110074
      @Mr110074 2 роки тому +3

      I remember the Ken Burns docuseries on the Civil War began telling his story.

    • @parthbonde2106
      @parthbonde2106 2 роки тому +4

      haha yes..it was also in oversimplified's video about the civil war.

    • @youthgamngpatnerz3300
      @youthgamngpatnerz3300 2 роки тому

      yeaahh XD
      there was this man who continously move away from the war but war came close to him
      and at last general lee and grand met at his house

  • @blackout6772
    @blackout6772 4 роки тому +295

    Suggestion: destruction and rebuilding of Warsaw. City was literally razed to a ground( 90%) and was later rebuild using pictures and paintings.

    • @gezzarandom
      @gezzarandom 4 роки тому +40

      What happened to that city was like the atomic bomb but without the massive explosion.

    • @fammader96
      @fammader96 4 роки тому +7

      Ephabouyed the Masked Reviewer It was many many explosions!

    • @gezzarandom
      @gezzarandom 4 роки тому

      Fam Mader I said without the massive explosion, I didn’t say no explosions.

    • @aleksandarvil5718
      @aleksandarvil5718 4 роки тому +10

      Manila: AM i a joke to you?!

    • @1TopGunPaintballer
      @1TopGunPaintballer 3 роки тому +9

      I heard how the US fire bombed German cities and the fire was so bad that it created a fire tornado.

  • @johnjiang487
    @johnjiang487 4 роки тому +110

    Oversimplified: goofy characters
    The Front: actual history
    History matters: waving signs

    • @makiskotsampasis3223
      @makiskotsampasis3223 3 роки тому +11

      History matters: james bissonette

    • @Sumschmuck
      @Sumschmuck 3 роки тому +5

      UA-cam History teachers in a nutshell
      oversimplified: uses comedy and silly characters
      The Front: teaches you the serious aspects of history and occasionally talks about star wars
      History Matters: uses signs and small pictures to help create understanding
      Simple History: uses detailed images to teach
      Sam O Nella: curses at the students and disappears for over a year
      Sabaton: burns the textbooks and just headbangs the knowledge into you

  • @aleksandarvil5718
    @aleksandarvil5718 4 роки тому +486

    *"Not Great, Not Terrible."*

    • @Erik-ko6lh
      @Erik-ko6lh 4 роки тому +32

      The Comrade Dyatlov has reported.

    • @ortherner
      @ortherner 4 роки тому +8

      It was terrible

    • @colts8146
      @colts8146 4 роки тому +12

      @@ortherner no, it wasnt terrible. Wasnt great either

    • @bongcloudopening5404
      @bongcloudopening5404 4 роки тому +6

      @@ortherner i agree on the it wasn't great it wasn't terrible since it was for to end the war

    • @DarkSamael55
      @DarkSamael55 4 роки тому +25

      @@ortherner You're delusional. Take him to the infirmary.

  • @notquiteatory971
    @notquiteatory971 4 роки тому +324

    There is a question on political compass which says “are people naturally unlucky?” I justify “yes” with yamagoochi

    • @liem11
      @liem11 4 роки тому +78

      Considering he survived both bombings with his family intact and suffered no long term consequences I would say he was extremely lucky.

    • @ayoa1173
      @ayoa1173 4 роки тому +20

      @@liem11 he had cancer twice in his life.

    • @MephLeo
      @MephLeo 4 роки тому +35

      @@ayoa1173 Which implies he survived cancer at least once. Though bastard as well.

    • @ianbryant3037
      @ianbryant3037 4 роки тому +2

      *yamaguchi

    • @flynntom8057
      @flynntom8057 4 роки тому +3

      @@ianbryant3037 yummygucci**

  • @whyamialive5842
    @whyamialive5842 3 роки тому +58

    My great-grandpa was in the navy from 1943-1945. He passed by Hiroshima shortly after the bomb on a ship. He described it as “Desolate”.

  • @toast2300
    @toast2300 4 роки тому +510

    James Bissonette is probably the channel owner/narrator giving a shout out to himself...

    • @AzureRT456
      @AzureRT456 4 роки тому +6

      I see you have a Reisen profile picture. I highly approve it.

    • @zawarudo596
      @zawarudo596 4 роки тому +81

      Maybe the real James Bizzonet was the friends we made along the way?

    • @kfraser3783
      @kfraser3783 4 роки тому

      Stop.

    • @dukes1993724
      @dukes1993724 4 роки тому +1

      Bizzy my Nizzy

    • @nick-vb8gd
      @nick-vb8gd 4 роки тому +2

      Sure are a lot of weebs here I like it

  • @solinvictus1214
    @solinvictus1214 4 роки тому +460

    James Bizzanett kick-started the Japanese economy

  • @STDMT
    @STDMT 4 роки тому +139

    History Matters: *makes an interesting video based on comprehensive research*
    The comments: J A M E S B I Z O N N E T T E

    • @mland2012
      @mland2012 3 роки тому +5

      Which begs the obvious question: Why?

  • @pg3384
    @pg3384 4 роки тому +43

    My old chemistry class in high school read some book called "Hiroshima" I think, a collection of stories about some survivors from the bombing of Hiroshima. The descriptions of some people were so insanely gruesome.

    • @ChrisPBacon9
      @ChrisPBacon9 2 роки тому +3

      The one where someone tried to lend a hand and their skin came off like a glove was the one that always got me 😬

  • @bootdude7527
    @bootdude7527 4 роки тому +32

    If you Google Tsutomu Yamaguchi his expression isnt sad, or traumatic (given the man survived two atomic bombs)
    It's more of an "yeah I've been through the shit"

  • @nubworthycigars6682
    @nubworthycigars6682 3 роки тому +41

    I’ve been binging a ton of episodes for the last few days. As a student of history this is very entertaining stuff. I just hope anyone who finds any of these topics interesting that they do more research on the topics that interest them to give yourself a broader context and perspective. Every topic I’ve been more familiar with definitely leaves out details I wouldn’t omit from the story, but then again I’ve never tried to condense massive historical events into 3-4 min video. So, hats off to @history matters. My comments and mission (to those who choose to accept it) is study history more.

    • @carlosherrera6851
      @carlosherrera6851 2 роки тому

      I've also been binge watching that, but I don't consider myself a student of history, although I would like to read more on this topic. Is there any source or book you recommend?

    • @MrBattlecharge
      @MrBattlecharge Рік тому

      Challenge accepted

    • @MrBattlecharge
      @MrBattlecharge Рік тому

      ​@@carlosherrera6851 "Hiroshima" by John Hersey

  • @sron-adharcach950
    @sron-adharcach950 4 роки тому +797

    I got a vid idea: Why did Turkey switch to the Latin alphabet?

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 4 роки тому +130

      Simple answer, but perfect for a 3 minute video.

    • @spartanx9293
      @spartanx9293 4 роки тому +98

      3 words Mustafa kemal attaturk

    • @toggafamai4224
      @toggafamai4224 4 роки тому +118

      There were already discussions of a new alphabet system because the Arabic alphabet had problems codifying the palace language (Ottoman Turkish) and wasn't really formalized to fit the standard rural Turkish before Atatürk too. Details of the inconsistency would be better explained by a linguist, but it was heavily discussed that the alphabet didn't fit the language. There were several attempts at promoting the Latin alphabet during the 1910s. Enver Paşa even invented a brand new writing system based on the Arabic alphabet called Huruf-u Munfasıla and tried to get the army to adopt it, but it fell out of favor quickly due to its impracticality.
      There were alternatives to the Latin alphabet like adapting the Arabic alphabet, adopting an old Turkic alphabet or creating a new one but these proposals were rejected because Atatürk envisioned a Western oriented Turkey, and adopting the Latin alphabet emphasized that goal.
      Literacy rates in the late Ottoman empire were really low, estimated between 6-10% before the revolution and most of the literate population were the educated elite, state bureaucrats and officers in the army. A very large percentage of those were already literate in French and/or German due to Westernization efforts of the late Ottoman administrations, therefore familiar with the Latin alphabet. Some discussions about it make it seem like a huge reform that shook the foundations of the culture, but in reality it was relatively easy to adopt and massively successful too, as indicated in literacy boom of the young republic between 1923-1938.

    • @salahddinebensebane8429
      @salahddinebensebane8429 4 роки тому +10

      @@toggafamai4224 what's so grait destroying 600 years of you history sure ataturk saved your contry but he was to delusional to westerns if he read a little history in the 16 century when everone was traying to copy sulaiman l laws and how all the west tried to copy the ottoman literature

    • @hazemdarwish8089
      @hazemdarwish8089 4 роки тому +1

      A bit of a dump decision

  • @mackys774
    @mackys774 4 роки тому +204

    Do a video called ‘’What if James Bizonette didn’t support the channel?’’

    • @Mahesha2310
      @Mahesha2310 4 роки тому +12

      Economy Downturn , Yo

    • @adventurenlifelive4031
      @adventurenlifelive4031 4 роки тому

      History will still matter

    • @LordJaric
      @LordJaric 4 роки тому

      I'm seeing this name all over the comment section but it isn't ringing a bell to me.

    • @LordJaric
      @LordJaric 4 роки тому

      @Kiaser Jerry and what is special about this one supporter over the others?

    • @CraigTheCriminal
      @CraigTheCriminal 3 роки тому +2

      This channel won’t have any economic downturn as they got Kelly Moneymaker

  • @pota2531
    @pota2531 4 роки тому +24

    When Hiroshima survivor moves to Nagasaki “well it looked like a big rain drop kinda like that thing in the sky” 💥

    • @glennchartrand5411
      @glennchartrand5411 4 роки тому +3

      The Hiroshima was 15 kilotons....Nagasaki was 21 Kilotons
      So Hiroshima was just warming him up for Nagasaki.

  • @cursedex3755
    @cursedex3755 4 роки тому +1598

    How to get likes on History Matters comment section:
    > *Insert comment about James Bizzanet*
    >People see it
    >???
    >Profit

    • @monarchistemu6054
      @monarchistemu6054 4 роки тому +5

      Lol. Nice South Park reference.

    • @Ake-TL
      @Ake-TL 4 роки тому +36

      Likes of this commentary were sponsored by James Bizzanet

    • @antoniocamacho4412
      @antoniocamacho4412 4 роки тому +13

      Probably the only youtuber who's fans care about the names at the end of the video

    • @JBTriple8
      @JBTriple8 4 роки тому

      you guys need to stop it

    • @moshedajan2338
      @moshedajan2338 4 роки тому +4

      James Bizzanet is the most hated man on this channel

  • @TheGentlemanGamer
    @TheGentlemanGamer 4 роки тому +40

    It's my dream for the $10 Patreon tier to open up again just so I can back as Bames Jizzonette.

    • @jamesbissonette8002
      @jamesbissonette8002 4 роки тому +12

      I should change my name to that

    • @mickey4125
      @mickey4125 3 роки тому +3

      @@jamesbissonette8002 I found him! Finally!

    • @jmjedi923
      @jmjedi923 3 роки тому

      @@mickey4125 holy shit I'll get my camera

  • @shoopiesty805
    @shoopiesty805 3 роки тому +10

    Tsutomi: *Hears and witnesses massive explosion, gets burned from it and moves somewhere else*
    Tsutomi: *hears same explosion again*
    Tsutomi: “Are you fucking kidding me”

  • @stephank9172
    @stephank9172 4 роки тому +7

    Its great to be hearing about those specific topics you don’t learn about in history class

  • @abren5974
    @abren5974 4 роки тому +34

    You need to make a mini-biography for James Bisonette, that way I can die in peace

  • @Fox2-Videos
    @Fox2-Videos 3 роки тому +13

    1:13 the building in the top right is called the Hiroshima Bomb Dome. I have visited it before, and although it symbolizes a nuke-ing, it is generally peaceful.

  • @MC-CFC
    @MC-CFC 4 роки тому +7

    I feel like this channel reads my subconscious on the answers I want. Great content.

    • @youthgamngpatnerz3300
      @youthgamngpatnerz3300 2 роки тому

      MInd : Do you think the eagle in the roman flag migrated to america with washington and became american ?
      Simple sistory uploads the same vid

  • @lombardo141
    @lombardo141 4 роки тому +45

    That Yamaguchi guys is proof that "if its not your time to go, its literally not your time to go"

    • @andreassoderholm3870
      @andreassoderholm3870 4 роки тому +4

      Yeah he become over 90 years old and that after being nuked twice a feat in itself and when he hit his nineties he started to take about his experiences in school and went to UN to take against the bomb, he was a quite remarkable person.

  • @jhmcd2
    @jhmcd2 2 роки тому +8

    There is another reason why the relief efforts were scarce. One thing that isn't well known is that, other bombings in Japan had actually had far higher casualty counts and were far more destructive. Initially Japan thought this bombing was similar to the one conducted on Tokyo just a few months prior.

  • @TrialByDance
    @TrialByDance 4 роки тому +132

    "8:15 in the morning and the population of Hiroshima...was dead."
    *thud*

    • @chalaars2939
      @chalaars2939 4 роки тому +1

      @cycl0ps__ no not really

    • @timberthus2562
      @timberthus2562 4 роки тому +8

      Except he’s not quoting, because this wasn’t said in the video.

    • @daljan1101
      @daljan1101 4 роки тому +1

      @cycl0ps__Did you just start using the internet?

    • @abdulmasaiev9024
      @abdulmasaiev9024 4 роки тому

      ​@cycl0ps__ Would you care to point out when in the video this quote is from

    • @melonschooleducationandlea4653
      @melonschooleducationandlea4653 4 роки тому +3

      @cycl0ps__ Welcome to UA-cam Comments! This is where 55% of comments are quotes.
      (don't quote me on that)
      (how ironic)

  • @johnmccnj
    @johnmccnj 4 роки тому +6

    I feel like a horrible person for laughing at Mr Yamaguchi's "Dude - WTF" expression towards General Macarthur at 1:32

  • @devin1234
    @devin1234 3 роки тому +8

    The pilot's face at 0:43 gets me every time

  • @filmart430
    @filmart430 4 роки тому +10

    Legend has it that after leaving Hiroshima then Nagasaki, he built a small cabin on top of Mt. Saint Helen in January 1980.

  • @zothanmawiapachuau
    @zothanmawiapachuau 4 роки тому +11

    "What's your assessment of the situation based on your expertise?"
    "Seems nukey...."

  • @arandomyoutubeaccount3166
    @arandomyoutubeaccount3166 4 роки тому +3

    1:32 LOL, that angry face Yamaguchi makes towards MacArthur.

  • @MontyRL
    @MontyRL 4 роки тому +5

    I love your videos man, keep it up. You make history fun. The animation, narration, voice, everything.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 4 роки тому +136

    We read a very sad story when we learned about Hiroshima called Shin's Tricycle, a story about a toddler and his tricycle. I admit, I cried a bit while reading it. He was still holding onto the handlebars when the bomb was detonated

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 4 роки тому +44

      What is sad is the fact they made 5876904 sad stories about bombing but zero about their war crimes and to this day deny they happened...

    • @MithrandirFreak
      @MithrandirFreak 4 роки тому +21

      @@KuK137 That's not true...?

    • @anubhavghosh4556
      @anubhavghosh4556 4 роки тому +26

      @@KuK137 most people don't deny it, the govt does

    • @ZackMarrs556NAT0
      @ZackMarrs556NAT0 4 роки тому +40

      @Tiberiu Farcas they were unfortunately necessary. Japan intended to fight to the death, Japan knew it, the US knew it.
      Considering Japanese conduct on invaded home islands, it's safe to say that if you didn't take your own life, you'd be forced to partake in a mass human wave attack against US landing forces armed with nothing but sticks. Which was an actual plan the Japanese had BTW.
      We knew the fight would be so bad that in preparation, we made so much .50BMG ammo and M2 HMG's the military is still using left over supplies to this day. And as of a few years ago, the gov't is still giving purple hearts that were minted in preparation for the invasion.
      Idiots like you astound me. So sorry you didn't get to see millions upon millions of not only soldiers/marines die, but also civilians.

    • @batuhanbayer5058
      @batuhanbayer5058 4 роки тому +35

      @@ZackMarrs556NAT0 A man fights to the death, a soldier kills a soldier this is what war ethics say, if you drop a nuclear warhead to the heart of a industrial city filled with kids babies and civilians then I'm sory but even if you win easily that makes Americans equal to imperal japanese in my eyes as ethics go. There's literally nothing left for Americans to say about japanese cause at the moment that bomb ignited above hiroshima they became equally brutal and unetichal.

  • @athapratama55
    @athapratama55 3 роки тому +7

    USA: “We Nuked Japan”
    Japan: “Oh Really? I don’t believe you.”

    • @jmjedi923
      @jmjedi923 3 роки тому +1

      "Oh yeah? Prove it with another one!"

  • @remhawk73
    @remhawk73 4 роки тому +30

    “Since that building no longer existed.”

  • @LadyCooper
    @LadyCooper 4 роки тому +18

    I went to Hiroshima last year and it was it was interesting to see what the city is apart from the bomb. Folks there are absolutely insanely passionate about their local baseball team, the Hiroshima Carp.

    • @addyred1861
      @addyred1861 3 роки тому +2

      They named the team....carp🙃

    • @Ihaveagasmask
      @Ihaveagasmask 2 роки тому

      Man imagine a fucking nuke being less popular that a local baseball team

    • @youthgamngpatnerz3300
      @youthgamngpatnerz3300 2 роки тому

      what u see aint always the reality

    • @mattdavis9601
      @mattdavis9601 Рік тому

      The Carp are owned by Mazda, the car company. (Mazda is Toyo Kogyo, IIRC)

  • @matthewtrent2019
    @matthewtrent2019 3 роки тому +15

    Q- what we’re conditions like in the city after the bomb was dropped?
    A- What city?

  • @thoughtportal123
    @thoughtportal123 4 роки тому +192

    Today's Atomic boms are way more powerful and scarier

    • @peterg76yt
      @peterg76yt 4 роки тому +55

      A modern fusion bomb uses an atomic bomb as its detonator.

    • @garybrown2039
      @garybrown2039 4 роки тому +32

      Unfortunately that’s very true. To put it in perspective, my history teacher told me that if one modern bomb was dropped in New York City parts of NJ and Delaware would be dying from atomic fire if they didn’t die from the initial blast. Meanwhile those in the middle and southeastern states would likely get cancer from the radioactive dust .

    • @planetkc
      @planetkc 4 роки тому +4

      Correction *Nuclear and *Hydrogen

    • @hothoploink1509
      @hothoploink1509 4 роки тому +49

      @@garybrown2039 There is a common misconception there: While radiation should not be ignored and is pretty horrible, it is nowhere near as bad as media often represents it. Yes, many people die directly from radiation sickness in the vicinity of the explosion (those that survive the other effects), it's not actually that much and further away it's effects are at most a slight increase in cancer rates.
      I mean the biggest bomb ever detonated, the tsar bomba (roughly 50 times the power of the most powerful bombs currently deployed by the nuclear powers) was detonated over northern russia, and there is no evidence of radiation sickness and while there was a slight increase in cancer rated it was only in the far north, it didn't spread to cover the eurasian landmass. Any modern bomb that can be carried by missiles that detonates in NYC would have no effect on states outside new england and even there a lot more limited than people usually believe.

    • @doctorthee
      @doctorthee 4 роки тому +6

      @@peterg76yt You make it sound strange. It's just a combinations of fission and fusion in stages, still going all off in seconds. Even older bombs were fusionbombs/thermonuclear, just like the Tsar bomba.

  • @Patrick_3751
    @Patrick_3751 4 роки тому +53

    Video ideas for other notable destroyed cities from WW2:
    Nagasaki
    Dresden
    Stalingrad
    Nanjing
    Warsaw
    Tokyo

  • @14thbattlegroupcommander
    @14thbattlegroupcommander 4 роки тому +8

    STATUS:
    -no water
    -little food
    -loads of chalkboards

  • @CavCave
    @CavCave 4 роки тому +11

    Imagine if James Bizanette and History Matters were the same people all along.

  • @ed6077
    @ed6077 4 роки тому +29

    The last thing I always hear when I’m done with these videos is James Bizzanett

  • @briantayler1230
    @briantayler1230 4 роки тому +3

    Gidday, my father went through Hiroshima in 1952. He remembered it largely as a shanty town with no multistory buildings.

  • @LowLiving
    @LowLiving 4 роки тому +68

    Imagine that... surviving 2 nukes... dude I'd be steaming

    • @unscenegamers
      @unscenegamers 4 роки тому +9

      He was steaming too, radiation does that to people.

  • @Masada1911
    @Masada1911 4 роки тому +75

    0:00 Japanese guy looks so dissapointed :-(

    • @fattahrambe
      @fattahrambe 4 роки тому +11

      No shit

    • @kelpthing5209
      @kelpthing5209 4 роки тому

      Me too

    • @flynn659
      @flynn659 4 роки тому

      @@fattahrambe Yes shit

    • @pgsells
      @pgsells 4 роки тому

      I thought it was the ambassador who came to sign the treaty on board the Missouri.

  • @arandomyoutubeaccount3166
    @arandomyoutubeaccount3166 4 роки тому +6

    I just noticed that someone is caught underneath some wreckage at 0:22, The bottom-right, by the way.

  • @tammygant4216
    @tammygant4216 4 роки тому +14

    I highly recommend "To Hell and Back: The Last Train from Hiroshima" for eyewitness accounts (arranged minute by minute) leading up to and right after both bombs and even updates years later. It turns out, Mr. Yamaguchi wasn't the only one to leave Hiroshima and go to Nagasaki (though he was the only one to be in ground zero for both). It's heartbreaking, but beautifully written and brings a human face to these tragedies.

  • @JosephSheu86
    @JosephSheu86 4 роки тому +10

    Hi. Great video as always.
    Small error, whenever the animation showed the sign signalling Hiroshima in Kanji script, it actually says Nagasaki instead.

  • @davidstout6051
    @davidstout6051 2 роки тому +22

    My mother saw the ruins of Hiroshima shortly after the war while working for the Canadian Embassy. She said it was the most horrible scene she had ever seen.

  • @sid2112
    @sid2112 4 роки тому +8

    I would like to thank James Bizonett. Thanks, James.

  • @THECOMMUNISTCHANNEL
    @THECOMMUNISTCHANNEL 4 роки тому +40

    Before: *BANZAI!*
    After: *SENPAI!*
    A bit more: *HENTAI!*

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 4 роки тому

      Now: WAIFAI!

    • @biliminsrlar5752
      @biliminsrlar5752 4 роки тому +1

      Anime is an effect of radiation the bombs caused.

    • @FlagAnthem
      @FlagAnthem 4 роки тому

      Do you guys know that Hokusai didn't just draw giant waves and Mount Fuji perspectives, don't you?

    • @Tofu3435
      @Tofu3435 4 роки тому

      The most famous hentai was "dream of fisherman's wife" from 1814 ... and nowadays i can play China inferno on DLsite English.
      (and i hope the FBI would not nuke me for it)

    • @colecummings2071
      @colecummings2071 4 роки тому

      Ebola guy:what have I done?!?

  • @stevemc01
    @stevemc01 3 роки тому +2

    Yamaguchi in Nagasaki watching the nurse point outside the window: "Aw s***. Here we go again..."

  • @NexusApollo
    @NexusApollo 4 роки тому +67

    "Lol. That plane says Gay on it-"

  • @erikperik1671
    @erikperik1671 4 роки тому +39

    No after-credit scene this time?

    • @densgwapo6123
      @densgwapo6123 4 роки тому +7

      Yeah. James bizzonet gonna stop the economy of this channel if u stop the end credits scenes

  • @johnmanno2052
    @johnmanno2052 3 роки тому +11

    If you read the excellent graphic novel "The Tale of Gen" written by a survivor of the bombing, you get an excellent, and horrifying, picture of what happened, and what it was like.

    • @ALLMETAL1970
      @ALLMETAL1970 8 місяців тому +1

      That was later adapted into the movie "barefoot gen", which also got a sequel to it.

    • @johnmanno2052
      @johnmanno2052 7 місяців тому

      @@ALLMETAL1970 OMG!!! I'll try to find that! Thank you!

    • @ALLMETAL1970
      @ALLMETAL1970 7 місяців тому

      @@johnmanno2052 I've seen the first but not the 2nd first movie put me off watching the 2nd. Tell me how that one is if you get a chance to watch both.

    • @johnmanno2052
      @johnmanno2052 7 місяців тому

      @@ALLMETAL1970 huh. The manga is awesome. I'm surprised that the movie wasn't

    • @ALLMETAL1970
      @ALLMETAL1970 7 місяців тому

      @@johnmanno2052 no the movie was brilliant, I just mean because of how quite frankly horrific it was it's putting me off watching the sequel. I don't know if it'll be tamer or even more scary, I just don't want to be put through the type of hell the first one brought.

  • @jeffreyli7421
    @jeffreyli7421 4 роки тому +6

    “If I had a coin for every time I survived an atomic bombing, I would have two coins. Which isn’t much but it’s strange that it happened twice”

  • @miguelmontenegro3520
    @miguelmontenegro3520 3 роки тому +1

    Hirohito: What happened to my city????
    Governament: Eh... Godzilla?

  • @leirumf5476
    @leirumf5476 2 роки тому +6

    I'll leave my little grain of sand here. There are two mangas by Fumiyo Kouno, one about life during wwII in Kouno (and how the bombings were felt there) where the character is from Hiroshima. And the other one is about a family from Hiroshima who survived the bombings but had to live through the aftermath of it and the problems that the nuke still posed to the survivors.
    I'd recommend them both if anyone is interested to know more.

  • @alexandermathieson4774
    @alexandermathieson4774 3 роки тому +8

    the bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima , as tragically horrific as they were , probably saved millions of lives, without the direct witness to the aftermath , the world may have been pushed into war on october 16 1962, after the Cuban Missile Crisis.

    • @christopherclark9569
      @christopherclark9569 3 роки тому

      lol m8 killing innocent civilians rather than brutal japanese army 🥴 and aftermath could've been shown through nuclear tests

    • @alexandermathieson4774
      @alexandermathieson4774 3 роки тому +1

      @@christopherclark9569 it almost took 3 to end Japans war, they had a " last man standing " policy . and humans arnt the smartest of creatures , bombing desert isn't as big an example as the 3 generations of birth defects in those 2 regions .

    • @christopherclark9569
      @christopherclark9569 3 роки тому

      @@alexandermathieson4774 well last man standing policy is justified for a small country like Japan even nazis had a similar policy like that but surrendered after , and this might have eased the Cuban missile crisis but brought more shit to world like arms race , Vietnam Korean wars and Islamic radicalisation(blowback of 🇺🇸) U could still win a war without bombing ,Well china is going to be more dominant than 🇺🇸 in few years🥲

    • @alexandermathieson4774
      @alexandermathieson4774 3 роки тому +1

      @@christopherclark9569 China is counting on western apathy , greed and stupidity. the arms race was going 1000 years before we split the atom , and Islamic radicalization ? that started just after the 1st rightly guided khalifa. in 632, that's got zip to do with us. khrushchev wouldn't have back down if he hadn't seen the nuclear horror.

    • @dumigamez397
      @dumigamez397 2 роки тому +1

      Innocent civilians that would have fought with sticks.

  • @arkady714
    @arkady714 Рік тому

    I'd no idea about Hamaguchi. Thank you for yet another brilliant video.

  • @uglyteethbakeryandotherstr7333
    @uglyteethbakeryandotherstr7333 4 роки тому +9

    What happened to the little clips at the end? I liked that.

  • @LegoLiam1803
    @LegoLiam1803 4 роки тому +7

    Japan after the bomb: *WE’VE GOT TO HAVE...MONEY*

  • @akamiguelsanchez9985
    @akamiguelsanchez9985 3 роки тому +2

    I’d love a condensed video on the rebuilding effort after WW2, seems impossible to comprehend the magnitude of that task

    • @booradley6832
      @booradley6832 3 роки тому +2

      A video on George Marshall, the man who i(t can be said) won the largest war in history and put the world back together, would be great.
      He is proof that competent management and attention to logistics can achieve things thought unattainable.

  • @312squadron
    @312squadron 4 роки тому +5

    Wow, that’s harsh living in Hiroshima and flee to safety of Nagasaki. But this guy also had an incredible luck because surviving two atomic bomb attacks is probability beyond comprehension.

  • @Violent2aShadow
    @Violent2aShadow 4 роки тому +5

    Afterwards, he said "Screw this! I'm moving to Chernobyl!"

  • @inigochicano
    @inigochicano Рік тому +2

    Yamaguchi literally won the worst lottery by getting nuked twice, then immediately winning the best lottery by surviving both bombings.

  • @MelonGearSolid
    @MelonGearSolid 4 роки тому +28

    I always found it strange that in history class (Scotland) we were never taught about the Japanese involvement in WW2 other than the two bombings. I can only speculate the reason for this is that what the Japanese did to China wasn't appropriate to be taught to teenage kids.

    • @Nate-gj3jx
      @Nate-gj3jx 4 роки тому +5

      The bombs weren’t appropriate too

    • @tayler2396
      @tayler2396 2 роки тому +9

      @@Nate-gj3jx What would your choice have been?

    • @tayler2396
      @tayler2396 2 роки тому +17

      @@peter3334floyd You don't seem to know much about history, peter3334floyd, but you do have opinions. Do you think ports weren't bombed prior to the use of atomic bombs? Lots of things were bombed including other cities with conventional bombs, which killed even more people over the course of the war. Also, Children Peter. Children? Did you know that the Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos and others also had children?

    • @ra_alf9467
      @ra_alf9467 2 роки тому +5

      I think because you're in Europe, sir.
      Here in Asia we were teached more about Japan than Germany during WW2

    • @nickbell4984
      @nickbell4984 2 роки тому +13

      @@peter3334floyd the fact that it took not one but two atomic bombs and the complete flattering of Osaka and Tokyo to get the Japanese to surrender emphasizes how many more people would have died in the alternative decision of invading.

  • @Whatamievingdoing
    @Whatamievingdoing 4 роки тому +48

    “Seems nukey”
    -random weirdo who went there

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 4 роки тому +1

      "What does that even mean?"
      - everyone else there

  • @_Mr.Tuvok_
    @_Mr.Tuvok_ 3 роки тому

    “Chalkboards for days” induced a hysterical chuckle storm in my body

  • @electricalcoconut979
    @electricalcoconut979 3 роки тому +5

    "Hey man why is there another sun?"
    a few seconds later and he died

  • @captainaffection
    @captainaffection 4 роки тому +8

    The signboard at 1:21 says "Nagasaki" NOT "Hiroshima"