There’s no big differences between people across the states. If it’s happening in one place, it’s guaranteed to be happening in another. So the states that haven’t banned it just don’t care that it’s happening. Nice try.
Out of all places in the world, California is the last place I would expect for cousin marriage to be legal. So your telling me in the state where ferrets and axolotls are banned, cousin marriage is legal?
Fun Fact: lack of population did in fact influence women's right to vote. Western states with low populations were some of the first to give women the right to vote as an attempt to attract more people, & I've also heard some people argue that the lack of infrastructure and "wild west" environment broke down traditional gender boundaries (as in everyone had to work in order to survive), leading to greater equality and political rights.
It's really funny how the backlash against "Sweet Home Alabama" actually made most of the South, Midwest, and Appalachia ban it while a lot of the North and pretty much all of Europe still has it legal. Nevada banning it does come as a surprise though...
I like to think the reason it's not illegal in Europe is because we're all already so closely related that if you banned cousin marriage none of us could ever get married unless marrying someone from outside the continent lmao.
4:45 Portugal was literally a dictatorship until 1974, most of the people weren’t allowed to vote, let alone women. The fact that it was issued 2 years later it’s because the new Constitution was still in the making
9:19 Depressing fact about this, All of these ancients wonders (except the Pyramids) got destroyed by either an invader or an earthquake. Also it's still a big debate whether the gardens of Babylon actually existed or not in the city of Babylon (they did exist but somewhere else in the region of Mesopotamia). Kings and Generals (channel) made a great video about this.
It is also generally agreed that the Colossus of Rhodes did not stand with one foot on either side of the harbor entrance, allowing ships to sail underneath. The Ancients were impressive engineers, but they did not possess steel-reinforced concrete.
@@janach1305 Yeah that's also true. It's depiction is fantasized a bit while in reality it stood on the shores of Rhodes, not at any of the harbour's entrance.
Especially when you compare it so Switzerland, which was a democracy and still didn't allow the women to vote. The reason it took so long, was that in one canton (which is rumoured to be pretty inbred btw :D) actually never democratically voted in favour of women voting, but were eventually forced by the Swiss supreme court to grant women that right.
In Europe's defence a cousin marraige usually includes a throne, crown, and is watched by millions, meanwhile an American cousin wedding takes place in the swamp lands involving a pickup, no shirts, and watched from a Mcdonalds drive-thru.
4:42 That's actually when Portugal became a democracy, before 1976, they were a republic but there was a dictatorship going on (it was still among the first ones they had), then after 1976 and the Carnation Revolution, the dictatorship ended and I guess everyone could vote?
They were Indeed. But even among the aristocracy, they had to get a special authorization from the catholic Church to marry a cousin, even a remote one. The catholic Church theorically doesn't allow a marriage between two people less than 6 degrees removed unless you get a special authorization for it, even if nowadays that rule is not as strictly enforced : basically, you'd need an authorization if you were to marry a first cousin or a niece/nephew (that's the closer you can get an authorization for), but not any more for a second degree cousin or a higher degree of distance. During the Middle Ages, nullifying a marriage between fifth degree cousins for inbreeding was the kind of power moves that aristocrats could inflict to one another... or an excuse to discard a spouse. And they sometimes waged war over it, for example there was a war between Alienor of Aquitaine and the duke of Champagne when she annuled the marriage between his sister and the count of Vermandois under the pretext that they were only five degrees removed (which we don't even know if it was true or not), so that her sister could marry said count of Vermandois instead.
They were third cousins. Marrying third cousins is legal everywhere dude, not just because genetically, at that point, it actually no longer makes any difference but because more importantly, who even knows their third cousins?
A bec de corbin is a medieval military weapon. It had three heads, an axe head, spear head, and a warhammer head. Meaning that it can break armor, slash, and stab. My favorite medieval weapon by far.
Yep! The hammer head was designed to bite into armor, dent it or even tear it open. Even if your armor held up, you still would have the wind taken out of you. A hit to the helmet would have knocked you out. The pick-axe side was pretty much for mercy kills after the fight. You wouldn't want your weapon to get stuck in an enemy in mid-combat.
4:02 You would be surprised, but this is year of this right firstly introduced in Russia, Finland was the part of Russia in 1906. It starts in 1906 in few administrative regions and in 1917 this right was implemented in whole of Russia.
The halberd was used by foot soldiers to dismount horsemen. They would swing the pike behind the ax part to impale the rider and throw him off the horse. The ax part was used to chop the legs off a horse or to finish off the rider. Medieval combat was pretty messy.
In the Netherlands all women were allowed to vote in 1919. But people always forget to tell that only in 1917 all men were allowed to vote, so only 2 years earlier. Before that, only certain men with enough money and/or property were allowed to vote.
8:26 - firearms and some types of pole weapons do in fact were used in the same time. A good example of this is the tercio - Spanish military units that combine arquebusiers (wielder of an arquebus - early type of firearms) and pikemen.
As for the mega capitals map, Minneapolis Saint Paul should be an honorable mention because while Saint Paul is the capital and Minneapolis is bigger, the two of them are the same metropolitan area and are referred to as “the twin cities”
4:42 wasn't Portugal a dictatorship up until then? And the revolution started in part thanks to Eurovision? That's actually as insane as women not being able to vote until then.
1:58 The funny thing is, San Marino has a population of almost 34,000, so San Marino literally has 2 people in prison. Also I'm surprised France isn't higher on the anger map.
This video made me go and read the Swedish Law about marrage. From what I got from it was that the Law forbiding marrage between relatives don't seem to cover cousins, half siblings also seems to be a gray area and is judge by some goverment body on a case to case basis. I believe that is mostly if adoption is involved or the parties had no idea they were half siblings. Still, this was not something I knew about. Have never heard about anyone marrying their cousin though.
I have read that Sweden does sometimes allow half-sibling marriages, but I have never managed to find an actual example. Have you? I suppose that a half-sibling couple might want to keep it to themselves due to the negative attitudes they would get from people, but I would have thought that there would be some who ended up in the public eye.
There used to be, and arguably, still are, some places in Sweden where inbreeding was an actual problem until recently. (And this is something that happens all over the world) In Sweden, these were remote settlements in the north and isolated island communities. There's this joke about Skellefteå, that half the town has the last name Marklund and the other half is named Lundmark.
The Bec de Corbin and Poleaxe (and like 30 other very similar weapons like the lucerne hammer) are so different from other polearms because they aren’t intended for use by regular soldiers, but by fully-plate-armored knights (or men at arms, professional soldiers equipped like a knight, but without the titles or wealth) AGAINST other fully-plate-armored knights (or men at arms). They can have shorter reach because their armor basically ensures they’ll make it into range where their weapon is effective; the hammer and reinforced pick heads are designed to smash, puncture and bend steel; and the extra reinforcement on the sides of the pole DO make it less well balanced, but also a LOT more durable against repeated blows from a determined opponent and the polearm is short enough to manage it despite the imbalance.
4:00 Wyoming gave women suffrage for many reasons. They range from thinking it was a joke, not caring about the vote, and wanting to use it as a way to encourage women to migrate there. Afterwards they zealously protected that right, even as Congress threatened to delay their statehood over it. Utah did similar around the same time, but they revoked women's suffrage at that threat. It's because of women's suffrage and having numerous firsts for women holding public office that Wyoming's official nickname is the "Equality State."
The design of the Halberd was designed for the foot soldiers. It's part axe to chop into enemy formations out side of arm's reach. The sharp hook opposite the axe, was designed to grab and pull mounted cavalry off their horses. the point at the end of the top.. obviously a spear to jab or stab the enemy at length so they would not get chopped to pieces with swords.
The cousin marriage with restrictions in Wisconsin has to do with age/fertility/relation. I learned this when filling for marriage license with my wife (not cousin) They ask you all these questions to make sure you're not related. Like if a woman is older she can't have kids. Also you can have like a cousin who's not a relation like adopted and stuff. That's allowed.
9:58 While it seems that the earth is speeding up it is actually the opposite. In general, it is slowing down because the moon’s gravity that speeds up is getting lower because the moon is very slowly moving away. In order to get a 25 hour day we would need to wait millions of years but it will happen Edit: Btw we have nothing to do with this it’s all natural.
(4:00) These maps are also often misleading, because in Sweden, women got unrestricted voting right before men, and that is the year that is claimed to be the year Sweden had equal rights, which is false. It was when the gender based restriction for men was abolished that both genders had equal voting rights, when most men go the right to vote. But this is ignored. Sweden still had restrictions, but not based on gender. Most of these have been removed, so as of now, if you're 18+ and a Swedish or EU citizen living in Sweden, you have the right to vote almost regardless of your situation (even prisoners has the right to vote).
Portugal took so long to give women equal voting rights because between 1933-1974, we were under an extreme-right dictatorship which didnt allow women to vote.
@@berthebear_real yeah i remmeber actually the oversimpliefied Video, but one cousin marriage doesnt make childs stupid, it pretty much has the same risk, it gets bad at 2
That soil quality map is pretty interesting Mountains have poor soil because of erosion. The wind and rain will flush off any soil, and the water will carry it along downhill. The steeper the slope, the faster the water runs, so it can carry more soil, it's not as much about altitude as it is incline. When the water reaches flatlands, it moves more slowly, sediment will sink to the bottom and deposit. This also means the waterways will eventually find new paths, around those built-up layers of sediment. Over (long) time, rivers in flatlands will meander back and forth, covering vast areas with deposited sediment. Northern europe was covered with glacial ice as recently as 10k years ago. The ice sheets scraped away all of the top soil, baring the bedrock in most places, or leaving behind a rubble of crushed rock neatly sorted in order of size. Generally, the further uphill you go, the larger the rubble. That means, the layer of soil in most of this area is very thin: only as much as has been accumulated since the ice receeded. One exeption is the Mälar valley in central Sweden, where pre-glacial soil was caught and wasn't completely flushed away. Right out by the coast around Stockholm, you see an area in red, this is the bedrock sticking up and holding back all that soil, an obstacle that the ice needed to slide over before continuing into what is now the Baltic sea. The areas south of the ice caps is where most of that other scraped-away soil ended up, and you can clearly see that on the map too.
Wyoming was the first state to allow women to vote! We Wyomingites have a joke that if we didn’t we wouldn’t have enough population to become a state Edit: Cheyenne only recently became the biggest city in Wyoming, it used to be Casper (:
Wyoming is known as the equality state for a reason. Wyoming allowed women to vote because it's population was/is so low. That's how we got away with becoming a state. Allowing women to vote automatically doubled the population barely qualifying it for statehood.
I watched a video on women's rights in the West. During the late 19th century women were crucial in operating settlements and such in the 'wild west'. Many had considerable respect in their communities as owners of large establishments like saloons. It was an all hands on deck so we don't die in the desert world which allowed women to show their brains and brawn. Some of the earliest female Mayors were in the West (Dayton, Wyoming in 1912, and the earliest was Argonia, Kansas in 1887).
This was true in the heartland as well. Iowa was one of the first states to allow women to study at their colleges to become doctors and lawyers from what I've read. The historical stigma against "career women" in America was more regional (like in the South and parts of the East) and above all else, a class thing. Empowering women is actually something Americans historically did VERY well. Heck, even in the 1950s the United States had ladies making up 25% or so of the entire factory workforce according to Life Magazine and was actually putting women in higher positions of power than the Soviet Union (I know that sounds insane, but it's a fact, for example between 1922 and 1957 the USSR did not have a single female member of the Politburo while the U.S. Cabinet had two, and other ladies served similar powerful Executive Branch roles).
@@blomgaming6480 I think he's talking about service in the military? That's the only thing I can think of where women in the USSR were ahead of the west.
4:40 Portugal just got away with not giving women equal voting rights for so long because from 1933 to 1974 nobody had equal voting rights (yes, Portugal was still under a facist dictatorship in the 70s, do what you will with this information)
Except that they do "have skin in the game", the politics of a country don't revolve exclusively around military, everybody is affected by their countries policies from the second they're born. Also that raises more moral questions, do you just ban handicapped people from voting too?
@@user-zz3sn8ky7z Then, BOTH men and women need to be conscripted. Also, I don't want to hear that "no one should be conscripted" because we have peace because of our military, not because people are nice. This world is a dangerous one. That's the real skin in the game.
@@estebanleon5826 are you saying risking death while giving birth to replenish a country's population is not "real skin in the game"? Only men being conscripted made sense in a non professional army, if you are left with 9 men and 1 women you get 1 baby per year max, if you have 9 women and 1 men left you can get 9. Men lack the "baby building" ability that is useful demographically to preserve population.
The spear with a weird thing on the end that you said is actually the man at arms insignia and weapon they use in civilization 6 which you might like being an old civilization youtuber Edit: the stick is the bac de Corbin
Lucky for Switzerland to be left off the women’s suffrage map, as its different cantons (basically very very autonomous regions) introduced women’s suffrage from 1959 to 1990. Federally, women were granted the right to vote in 1971.
4:42 in 1911, the discussion on equal voting rights came to light in portugal when a woman voted on the first presidential elections because the criteria for voting at the time was being the head of the family so she kinda found a loophole and voted. however, that criteria was fixed and she was no longer allowed to vote. but the reason why portugal only got equal voting rights in 1976 was because from 1932 until 1974 we were under a dictatorship and in 1976 we held the first democratic elections after the fall of said dictatorship
Fun fact about the women's right to vote in Portugal. Republic was only installed back in 1910 and a woman voted in the first elections because there's was nothing stopping her from voting. The law said: people over 21 who are the heads of a family and could read and write could vote. She was over 21 a nurse (if I'm remembering correctly) and a widow with kids, so, head of a family. She voted but then the law was changed so that only men could vote. And later Portugal had a dictatorship and it was only freed in 1974, this why women had right to vote so late on :)
The moon is moving further away, decreasing the drag on the earth (through gravitational pull) which is why the spin of the earth is slightly speeding up
6:40 there's a reason why some states/countries felt the need to ban it (if it's not happening then people don't think about forbidding it)
There’s no big differences between people across the states. If it’s happening in one place, it’s guaranteed to be happening in another. So the states that haven’t banned it just don’t care that it’s happening. Nice try.
Sure
Also cousin marriage was rampant throughout Europe in the royalty circles.
@@modarkthemauler gotta keep the bloodline pure
Weird cope
Out of all places in the world, California is the last place I would expect for cousin marriage to be legal. So your telling me in the state where ferrets and axolotls are banned, cousin marriage is legal?
I love axolotls
You're
Considering everything else that California has made illegal or has legalized it is actually not surprising at all.
Another reason why California is so stupid
Sweet Home California
Drew knowing the states that incest is prominent dosent surprize me a bit
I knew which channel this was immediately when I saw the thumbnail.
dosent
ah yes, dosent
@@tomriddle8933 Yeah, all my favourite channels always make their thumbnails in a certain way
@@SicMvndvsCreatvsEst8 True, but it misses the joke.
Fun Fact: lack of population did in fact influence women's right to vote. Western states with low populations were some of the first to give women the right to vote as an attempt to attract more people, & I've also heard some people argue that the lack of infrastructure and "wild west" environment broke down traditional gender boundaries (as in everyone had to work in order to survive), leading to greater equality and political rights.
Yep. That's gotta be why, of all places, UTAH was one of the earliest states to have women voting. :)
Another big reason, brothels were big female led businesses. They had huge amounts of money and power. They wanted to exercise it.
It led to the downfall of western civilization.
Also, weirdly America tends to just be more progressive in general. Sure it can suck, but it is like 50 countries under one main country
@Swarmpope Prehistoric societies were, though. Native Americans, too.
Fun fact: Genetically, marrying your cousin isn’t a big deal AS LONG AS it’s only done once every 3-4 generations at most.
Speaking from experience?
@@wertkol1 I would hope not
Might explain why so many European kings had their children die at an early age. They were all inbred
A game for the whole family
thanx i will use this info
It's really funny how the backlash against "Sweet Home Alabama" actually made most of the South, Midwest, and Appalachia ban it while a lot of the North and pretty much all of Europe still has it legal. Nevada banning it does come as a surprise though...
?
I think that first line cousin marriage wasn't a big thing in Europe, so we never really bothered making these laws
@@ohmmegag5056 Hapsburg Moment :P
I like to think the reason it's not illegal in Europe is because we're all already so closely related that if you banned cousin marriage none of us could ever get married unless marrying someone from outside the continent lmao.
@@Gohka Nah. It's about first cousin marriage and we don't share the same grandparents with that many people
4:45 Portugal was literally a dictatorship until 1974, most of the people weren’t allowed to vote, let alone women. The fact that it was issued 2 years later it’s because the new Constitution was still in the making
Good ol' Estado Novo
How did it become a dictatorship?
@@YoureRatharStewpidMate4 words Antonio de Oliviera Salazar
9:19 Depressing fact about this, All of these ancients wonders (except the Pyramids) got destroyed by either an invader or an earthquake. Also it's still a big debate whether the gardens of Babylon actually existed or not in the city of Babylon (they did exist but somewhere else in the region of Mesopotamia). Kings and Generals (channel) made a great video about this.
It is also generally agreed that the Colossus of Rhodes did not stand with one foot on either side of the harbor entrance, allowing ships to sail underneath. The Ancients were impressive engineers, but they did not possess steel-reinforced concrete.
@@janach1305 Yeah that's also true. It's depiction is fantasized a bit while in reality it stood on the shores of Rhodes, not at any of the harbour's entrance.
Britain tried picking them up and taking them to the British Museum but dropped them 😪😪 worth a try
Drew’s and his cousin are going to announce their marriage soon
His sister*
I hope His Argentinian Grandpa accepts this
r/usernamechecksout
@@iamgreatalwaysgreat8209 I've been to his house, he has some really beautiful paintings.
He should try to get in an Academy of Fine Arts.
*Sister
6:43
There is a big difference.
Just because it is legal, does not mean it is done on a regular basis and culturally accepted. 😄
No one made it illegal, 'cause no one would even consider it
the internet is screwing with me, i thought ur pfp was 4chan💀
@@prcxiale1124 go outside
Fun fact: my mom is also my dads mom
@@wertkol1 society
Drew asking how Portugal only gave women the right to vote in 1976 like the country wasn't in a fascist dictatorship until 1974
In Brazil Vargas gave woman the right to vote, then removed the right to vote from everyone
But you see, mr Durnil, that wasn't a map of places where incest actually happens
In Portugal we didn’t have votes at all until 1976… we lived until 74 in a dictatorship so we kinda have an excuse
Yeah, I makes it sound so bad when people say "women were not allowed to vote", when men were not allowed to vote either...
Exactly
Why is Portugal the safest country in mainland Europe?
Especially when you compare it so Switzerland, which was a democracy and still didn't allow the women to vote. The reason it took so long, was that in one canton (which is rumoured to be pretty inbred btw :D) actually never democratically voted in favour of women voting, but were eventually forced by the Swiss supreme court to grant women that right.
In Europe's defence a cousin marraige usually includes a throne, crown, and is watched by millions, meanwhile an American cousin wedding takes place in the swamp lands involving a pickup, no shirts, and watched from a Mcdonalds drive-thru.
In Europe cousin weddings are soundtracked by orchestras and choirs,
in the USA they’re soundtracked by Cletus with his banjo.
The reason they chose this map projection is because south america is basically in the center, where do you think they go most often ?
its their favorite place
Brazil
@@neoieo5832 their playground
4:25 fun fact: Finland was the first country in a world to allow women run for office. We got the right same time we got the right to vote.
If drew becomes any buffer he’s surely gonna get drafted
I have overweight and minor privileges
Also non-american privileges
same
@@efaznoorchowdhury1980 wtf is a minor privilege
@@ProfessionalBugLover in jail for raping minors
4:42 That's actually when Portugal became a democracy, before 1976, they were a republic but there was a dictatorship going on (it was still among the first ones they had), then after 1976 and the Carnation Revolution, the dictatorship ended and I guess everyone could vote?
“Before gunpowder, wars really came down to how long were your sticks”
- Drew
I mean, guns are just sticks that can go boom if you think about it. Arrows meanwhile are sticks which a sharpened rock strapped to the front.
@@bigoof1105 greenades are just rocks that go boom
Drew going back to his roots with this thumbnail
Are you really surprised about Europe? Just about every monarch in Europe. Habsburgs. Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip were cousins.
They were Indeed. But even among the aristocracy, they had to get a special authorization from the catholic Church to marry a cousin, even a remote one. The catholic Church theorically doesn't allow a marriage between two people less than 6 degrees removed unless you get a special authorization for it, even if nowadays that rule is not as strictly enforced : basically, you'd need an authorization if you were to marry a first cousin or a niece/nephew (that's the closer you can get an authorization for), but not any more for a second degree cousin or a higher degree of distance. During the Middle Ages, nullifying a marriage between fifth degree cousins for inbreeding was the kind of power moves that aristocrats could inflict to one another... or an excuse to discard a spouse.
And they sometimes waged war over it, for example there was a war between Alienor of Aquitaine and the duke of Champagne when she annuled the marriage between his sister and the count of Vermandois under the pretext that they were only five degrees removed (which we don't even know if it was true or not), so that her sister could marry said count of Vermandois instead.
They were third cousins. Marrying third cousins is legal everywhere dude, not just because genetically, at that point, it actually no longer makes any difference but because more importantly, who even knows their third cousins?
As someone from europe, me and my 4 eyed baby are very offended
@@giantWario My parents were fourth cousins twice removed.
@@jarnovanderzee2469 I’m from Norfolk, England and we get made fun of by people saying we have 6 fingers on each hand
I like how whole EU made marrying your cousin legal but only in my homeland(Croatia) and Bulgaria made it illegal
Based Hrvatskis
Not based
Crotia shouldnt even be a country
@@dumbbol4657 da
@@dumbbol4657 Hrvatska*
Map: Number of people per 100,000 people
Drew: Monaco seems to be the smallest
San Marino: 😶
"number of people per 100'000 people"
I want you to think about this for a second.
@@OzoneTheLynx And i want you to think about your grammar for a moment too
@@catwhite905 Thanks. "wan't" obviously doesn't make sense XD
He corrected himself later.
@@IloveRumania ik
1:40 Does san marino even have a prison?🤣
Ur name is drew
OMFG YOUR RIGHT
yes u right
Cringe
It’s Drew not drew
How you know this information
You are truly a James bond
A bec de corbin is a medieval military weapon. It had three heads, an axe head, spear head, and a warhammer head. Meaning that it can break armor, slash, and stab. My favorite medieval weapon by far.
4:42 to be fair Portugal had a dictator for 49 years.
Yep, 1976 was the first time women got to vote, it was also the first time anyone got to vote in half a century.
4:41 There weren't free elections Drew. That's the reason.
3:17
-Wake up
-Realize you are turkish
-Day ruined
My very existince is the reason of my anger
Countries and states in green just didn't have a reason to make a law about cousin marriage.
8:01 The bec de corbin is basically a war hammer with a longer handle and was made for penetrating through plate and chainmail armor.
Or just bashing heads.
Yep! The hammer head was designed to bite into armor, dent it or even tear it open. Even if your armor held up, you still would have the wind taken out of you. A hit to the helmet would have knocked you out. The pick-axe side was pretty much for mercy kills after the fight. You wouldn't want your weapon to get stuck in an enemy in mid-combat.
Can you weaponize dentures?
@@becauseyesisnotaword If Terry Pratchett ever tought me anything, then yes you can^^
@@becauseyesisnotaword probably
"Where can you marry your cousin?"
The kind of information I need
"i will marry my sister"
-Drew Durnil
4:02 You would be surprised, but this is year of this right firstly introduced in Russia, Finland was the part of Russia in 1906. It starts in 1906 in few administrative regions and in 1917 this right was implemented in whole of Russia.
The halberd was used by foot soldiers to dismount horsemen. They would swing the pike behind the ax part to impale the rider and throw him off the horse. The ax part was used to chop the legs off a horse or to finish off the rider. Medieval combat was pretty messy.
6:35 Disney+ counts their package deal subscription including Hulu and ESPN+ as 3 separate subscriptions, that's how they boost their numbers.
thank you for pronouncing appalachian correctly, drew. you’re a hero.
In the Netherlands all women were allowed to vote in 1919. But people always forget to tell that only in 1917 all men were allowed to vote, so only 2 years earlier. Before that, only certain men with enough money and/or property were allowed to vote.
6:57 Austria(Habsburg) and Saarland also
8:26 - firearms and some types of pole weapons do in fact were used in the same time. A good example of this is the tercio - Spanish military units that combine arquebusiers (wielder of an arquebus - early type of firearms) and pikemen.
Not to mention the time period literally called “Pike and Shot” by historians
As for the mega capitals map, Minneapolis Saint Paul should be an honorable mention because while Saint Paul is the capital and Minneapolis is bigger, the two of them are the same metropolitan area and are referred to as “the twin cities”
1:54 Alright guys lets go to Norway to get arrested
1:44
Drew: The lowest in this map seems to be Monaco!
Me looking down to the right.
One theory is that Chandler Wobble, or wobble due to earth's tilt, is decreasing, allowing earth to spin faster.
4:42 wasn't Portugal a dictatorship up until then? And the revolution started in part thanks to Eurovision? That's actually as insane as women not being able to vote until then.
4:41 To be fare we were under a dictatorship until 1974, and the first women voted in 1911.
1:58 The funny thing is, San Marino has a population of almost 34,000, so San Marino literally has 2 people in prison.
Also I'm surprised France isn't higher on the anger map.
10:05 actually the earths spin is slowing down, in the jurrasic period, a day was only 23 hours long.
This video made me go and read the Swedish Law about marrage. From what I got from it was that the Law forbiding marrage between relatives don't seem to cover cousins, half siblings also seems to be a gray area and is judge by some goverment body on a case to case basis. I believe that is mostly if adoption is involved or the parties had no idea they were half siblings.
Still, this was not something I knew about. Have never heard about anyone marrying their cousin though.
I have read that Sweden does sometimes allow half-sibling marriages, but I have never managed to find an actual example. Have you? I suppose that a half-sibling couple might want to keep it to themselves due to the negative attitudes they would get from people, but I would have thought that there would be some who ended up in the public eye.
Oh throughout history, cousin marriages were commonplace. Strange by todays culture, but nevertheless fascinating in equal parts ☺️☺️☺️
There used to be, and arguably, still are, some places in Sweden where inbreeding was an actual problem until recently. (And this is something that happens all over the world)
In Sweden, these were remote settlements in the north and isolated island communities.
There's this joke about Skellefteå, that half the town has the last name Marklund and the other half is named Lundmark.
@@JH-lo9ut I think I've heard about that at some point.
0:00 Wisconsin casually taking over the upper peninsula
The Bec de Corbin and Poleaxe (and like 30 other very similar weapons like the lucerne hammer) are so different from other polearms because they aren’t intended for use by regular soldiers, but by fully-plate-armored knights (or men at arms, professional soldiers equipped like a knight, but without the titles or wealth) AGAINST other fully-plate-armored knights (or men at arms). They can have shorter reach because their armor basically ensures they’ll make it into range where their weapon is effective; the hammer and reinforced pick heads are designed to smash, puncture and bend steel; and the extra reinforcement on the sides of the pole DO make it less well balanced, but also a LOT more durable against repeated blows from a determined opponent and the polearm is short enough to manage it despite the imbalance.
8:30 "How long was your sticks" Drew Durnil 2022
Drew: “Me? Wanting to do Incest? Nah! I’m just curious!”
"I Would Never Marry My Cousin, I Would Marry My Sister."
Weird drew moved from Alabama to cali witch both have cousins married allowed I think there might be a connection
5:22 "and thats not a joke, i think they really do know where to find me" 🤣🤣
Fun fact: In Spain we say "Are your parents cousins?" to call someone stupid
Never heard that one before jaja
3:35 in Russia, we dont get angry. We directly missile strike with a calm face
Portugal was a dictatorship before 74. So neither women and men voted.
Found this channel last night, I fuckin love it bro
4:00 Wyoming gave women suffrage for many reasons. They range from thinking it was a joke, not caring about the vote, and wanting to use it as a way to encourage women to migrate there. Afterwards they zealously protected that right, even as Congress threatened to delay their statehood over it. Utah did similar around the same time, but they revoked women's suffrage at that threat.
It's because of women's suffrage and having numerous firsts for women holding public office that Wyoming's official nickname is the "Equality State."
The design of the Halberd was designed for the foot soldiers. It's part axe to chop into enemy formations out side of arm's reach. The sharp hook opposite the axe, was designed to grab and pull mounted cavalry off their horses. the point at the end of the top.. obviously a spear to jab or stab the enemy at length so they would not get chopped to pieces with swords.
1:00 New Jersey: Ohiofication complete 💯
6:40 isent right.
Its illegal in Sweden not ”fully legal”.
The cousin marriage with restrictions in Wisconsin has to do with age/fertility/relation. I learned this when filling for marriage license with my wife (not cousin) They ask you all these questions to make sure you're not related. Like if a woman is older she can't have kids. Also you can have like a cousin who's not a relation like adopted and stuff. That's allowed.
Wisconsin sounds insanely authoritarian.
@@omp199 I mean I'd think any place would have to ask those questions or you'd get cousins marrying each other.
9:58 While it seems that the earth is speeding up it is actually the opposite. In general, it is slowing down because the moon’s gravity that speeds up is getting lower because the moon is very slowly moving away. In order to get a 25 hour day we would need to wait millions of years but it will happen
Edit: Btw we have nothing to do with this it’s all natural.
Drew: says he’d marry his sister instead of his cousin
*[Sweet Home Alabama intensifies]*
(4:00) These maps are also often misleading, because in Sweden, women got unrestricted voting right before men, and that is the year that is claimed to be the year Sweden had equal rights, which is false. It was when the gender based restriction for men was abolished that both genders had equal voting rights, when most men go the right to vote. But this is ignored. Sweden still had restrictions, but not based on gender. Most of these have been removed, so as of now, if you're 18+ and a Swedish or EU citizen living in Sweden, you have the right to vote almost regardless of your situation (even prisoners has the right to vote).
In Korea, the septum was used so their soldiers could easily pull the spear out regarding their shapes
6:50 if it's illegal, it's because they had to make it illegal cuz it happened to many times
Portugal took so long to give women equal voting rights because between 1933-1974, we were under an extreme-right dictatorship which didnt allow women to vote.
I have a feeling that in case it was a dictatorship, no men voted either 😅
well it also didnt really allow men to vote much
I now see why the Norwegian Vikings wanted my country scotland so bad the just wanted to connect the mountain range
Fun fact: Hilters mom was the cousin of his father
Cap
@@paulfischer4586 Not cap, watch Oversimplified.
@@paulfischer4586 learn history
@@berthebear_real yeah i remmeber actually the oversimpliefied Video, but one cousin marriage doesnt make childs stupid, it pretty much has the same risk, it gets bad at 2
@@paulfischer4586 i dident say that the child was stupid, i simply stated a fact and you decided to say it was cap
That soil quality map is pretty interesting
Mountains have poor soil because of erosion. The wind and rain will flush off any soil, and the water will carry it along downhill.
The steeper the slope, the faster the water runs, so it can carry more soil, it's not as much about altitude as it is incline.
When the water reaches flatlands, it moves more slowly, sediment will sink to the bottom and deposit. This also means the waterways will eventually find new paths, around those built-up layers of sediment. Over (long) time, rivers in flatlands will meander back and forth, covering vast areas with deposited sediment.
Northern europe was covered with glacial ice as recently as 10k years ago. The ice sheets scraped away all of the top soil, baring the bedrock in most places, or leaving behind a rubble of crushed rock neatly sorted in order of size. Generally, the further uphill you go, the larger the rubble.
That means, the layer of soil in most of this area is very thin: only as much as has been accumulated since the ice receeded.
One exeption is the Mälar valley in central Sweden, where pre-glacial soil was caught and wasn't completely flushed away. Right out by the coast around Stockholm, you see an area in red, this is the bedrock sticking up and holding back all that soil, an obstacle that the ice needed to slide over before continuing into what is now the Baltic sea.
The areas south of the ice caps is where most of that other scraped-away soil ended up, and you can clearly see that on the map too.
Wyoming was the first state to allow women to vote!
We Wyomingites have a joke that if we didn’t we wouldn’t have enough population to become a state
Edit: Cheyenne only recently became the biggest city in Wyoming, it used to be Casper (:
That’s interesting to know, thanks for the information! :)
@@YahyeAli123 Always! Have a good day (:
I watched in on Adam Ruins Everything, but I think you are right: without it Wyoming would not have enough women to reproduce and become a state.
I’m not sure if this is true or not, but I herd that Wyoming also counted sheep so they could boost their population
@@youngbrew8764 Nah, we’d have to count cows…
But who knows, you might’ve herd that right
I still find it interesting how dc has a higher population than Vermont and whyoming and ppl don’t know 😂
Have you seen Turkey's inflation numbers lately Drew? I'm surprised it's not more than 48% really.
9:58 Actually Its slowing down because of the Moon
Wyoming is known as the equality state for a reason. Wyoming allowed women to vote because it's population was/is so low. That's how we got away with becoming a state. Allowing women to vote automatically doubled the population barely qualifying it for statehood.
I watched a video on women's rights in the West. During the late 19th century women were crucial in operating settlements and such in the 'wild west'. Many had considerable respect in their communities as owners of large establishments like saloons. It was an all hands on deck so we don't die in the desert world which allowed women to show their brains and brawn. Some of the earliest female Mayors were in the West (Dayton, Wyoming in 1912, and the earliest was Argonia, Kansas in 1887).
This was true in the heartland as well. Iowa was one of the first states to allow women to study at their colleges to become doctors and lawyers from what I've read. The historical stigma against "career women" in America was more regional (like in the South and parts of the East) and above all else, a class thing. Empowering women is actually something Americans historically did VERY well. Heck, even in the 1950s the United States had ladies making up 25% or so of the entire factory workforce according to Life Magazine and was actually putting women in higher positions of power than the Soviet Union (I know that sounds insane, but it's a fact, for example between 1922 and 1957 the USSR did not have a single female member of the Politburo while the U.S. Cabinet had two, and other ladies served similar powerful Executive Branch roles).
4:22 I love how they chose to not show, that Soviet Union gave women equal rights before the USA and most of Europe
The Soviet Union doesn't exist anymore, they used a modern map.
i love how soviet union didnt exist before usa and most of europe
oh and i forgot the most important thing
ELECTIONS IN SOVIET UNION
What rights
@@Itchybol right, that too, women didn't really have a right to vote if there's no one to vote for.
@@blomgaming6480 I think he's talking about service in the military? That's the only thing I can think of where women in the USSR were ahead of the west.
4:43 fun fact, that was the year Portugal's Estado novo regime was overthrown and elections were possible again.
Well there is a diference between being able to marry your cousin, and actually marrying your cousin Drew.
4:40 Portugal just got away with not giving women equal voting rights for so long because from 1933 to 1974 nobody had equal voting rights (yes, Portugal was still under a facist dictatorship in the 70s, do what you will with this information)
Actually, the voting thing makes sense. If you're not conscripted, then you don't have a say. You need to have skin in the game.
I think you should have to serve to be in politics
E
Except that they do "have skin in the game", the politics of a country don't revolve exclusively around military, everybody is affected by their countries policies from the second they're born. Also that raises more moral questions, do you just ban handicapped people from voting too?
@@user-zz3sn8ky7z Then, BOTH men and women need to be conscripted. Also, I don't want to hear that "no one should be conscripted" because we have peace because of our military, not because people are nice. This world is a dangerous one. That's the real skin in the game.
@@estebanleon5826 are you saying risking death while giving birth to replenish a country's population is not "real skin in the game"? Only men being conscripted made sense in a non professional army, if you are left with 9 men and 1 women you get 1 baby per year max, if you have 9 women and 1 men left you can get 9. Men lack the "baby building" ability that is useful demographically to preserve population.
1:58
Considering their population, that is probably just two people
The spear with a weird thing on the end that you said is actually the man at arms insignia and weapon they use in civilization 6 which you might like being an old civilization youtuber
Edit: the stick is the bac de Corbin
Bec* (means beak)
Probably the reason the CIA chose that map projection was to get no warping.
*as little warping as a map could possibly have
Where can you Marry your cousin?
*SWEET HOME ALABAMA*
I love how in the thumbnail Switzerland stayed out of it
Lucky for Switzerland to be left off the women’s suffrage map, as its different cantons (basically very very autonomous regions) introduced women’s suffrage from 1959 to 1990.
Federally, women were granted the right to vote in 1971.
drew:san marino is lowest with 6.
also drew 10 seconds later:san marino is lowest with 6
7:04 SWEET HOME ALABAMA
4:42 in 1911, the discussion on equal voting rights came to light in portugal when a woman voted on the first presidential elections because the criteria for voting at the time was being the head of the family so she kinda found a loophole and voted. however, that criteria was fixed and she was no longer allowed to vote. but the reason why portugal only got equal voting rights in 1976 was because from 1932 until 1974 we were under a dictatorship and in 1976 we held the first democratic elections after the fall of said dictatorship
Fun fact about the women's right to vote in Portugal. Republic was only installed back in 1910 and a woman voted in the first elections because there's was nothing stopping her from voting. The law said: people over 21 who are the heads of a family and could read and write could vote. She was over 21 a nurse (if I'm remembering correctly) and a widow with kids, so, head of a family. She voted but then the law was changed so that only men could vote. And later Portugal had a dictatorship and it was only freed in 1974, this why women had right to vote so late on :)
8:58 That "Deep green" in belgium is just from all the fertiliser it got from 1939 - 1945.
lol
Drew is gonna marry his cousin please help I’m just a lemon.
I thought u was India
@@uselesstutorialss we don’t talk about that
as a turkish i can confirm the chart about being angry...
Erdogan
You don’t poke with a halberd, most the time you slash
The moon is moving further away, decreasing the drag on the earth (through gravitational pull) which is why the spin of the earth is slightly speeding up