Japan's Post-War Meth Panic (& How They Stopped It) | Audio

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  • Опубліковано 25 гру 2024

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  • @FRISHR
    @FRISHR Рік тому +3168

    “JISUKE WE NEED TO COOK!” -Hiroshiberg

  • @deckape714
    @deckape714 Рік тому +75

    I love your work please keep at it. Thanks!

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      there is a decent amount of miss-info in this vid, they knew stims were addictive, for a long time they knew about cocaine at this point, they had opium going everywhere and knew that was addictive, there have been numerous times governments and companies turned around and feigned ignorance, to avoid being held liable.
      Meth is also still sold as an OTC cough suppressant in america, so long as its the weaker version. Also claiming that meth may have been a cause in heart failure is fairly ignorant and can also be attributed to genetics, or coffee, while coffee isnt as toxic, it is and was used more freely than meth, and probably for longer, which can cause the same amount of toxicity as a shorter term meth habit you picked up only after the war.
      The continued onslaught of "meth is bad" content normally fails to actually dig into any treatment methods, and normally stick to history, unfortunately due to the amount of lies surrounding this topic you cannot get an idea of anything that happened, so Im glad you actually included that this normally effected the lower classes, but "police putting the law into action" and it "lacking teeth" is extremely counter to harm reduction, this can be seen in the fact that it became used more immediately after prohibition, as well as the rise of crime surrounding the drugs, thus demonizing the people who are SUFFERING from a well known mental health issue known as Substance Use Disorder should never have been locked in a cage for being sick.
      Notice how every time laws were put in place it was too keep out impure thoughts or evil other races, and not specifically to help the public, it always had to be against certain groups of people, funny enough at around the same time the iran-contra movement was in full swing, were america (the cunts who hid japanise war crimes after ww2) was throwing as much cocaine and its freebase into black communities to fund weapon shipments to rebel groups in iran and south america, this has always had racists political motivation, it was almost never health motivated, if it was people would be using harm reduction methods like the Swiss did in the 90s, or like peru rn, or like some states rn who are doing decriminalization and legalization of certain substances because legal intervention does not help medical issues, canada is doing the same thing, columbia is trying to get these sorts of laws passed hell there is a video of the ex president of Columbia (could be wrong here may have been another southamerican country with a lot of cartels) who admitted the only reason for the constant demonetization of substances was because it was the only way the public would listen to a topic, and effectivly the public needed to be carefully de-radicalized (the debait was with Hamilton Moris its on yt), I would also like to recommend looking up Dr. Carl Hart, MAPS is also a great research organization that has picked up the good work with mdma that was nearly lost during the 70s when america tried to bury it all, Harvard medical also has some really great addiction studies, hell most universities have stopped producing bullshit that could be misconstrued as danger for the american gov (like that time they used meth instead of mdma and made a bunch of monkeys od, then said "ehh it likely doesnt matter", spoiler alert, it very much did matter, and the amount of mdma that would have been used would not have killed the monkeys, because meth is far more toxic then mdma).
      Please please please do research into addiction, expecially as an asian based channel there was a good period where the west was using these same tactics except with opium instead of meth, to demonize asian people and culture, while simultaneously trying to get all of the asians in the country addicted, via a revolving door of abuse, first from people that makes you depressed enough to use, then the torture and inhumane conditions in jail get to you, and now that you have PTSD and ur a "criminal", you are weird, and sick, and wont be allowed to rent a house because no one wants to rent to you, making you more depressed, driving you further into addiction, until people wake the fuck up and allow you to seek medical intervention.
      Please do your research on drugs this hurts far far too many people to be misrepresented or to have bits of the story thrown out so you can shorten a youtube vid.
      Also please ignore my username, I'm gonna change it soon, its vestigial from PTSD induced paranoia of writing my name on the internet.

    • @N_g_er
      @N_g_er 9 місяців тому +2

      I'm gay too buddy

    • @skinny5771
      @skinny5771 9 місяців тому

      @@N_g_er🫃

  • @TheDavidlloydjones
    @TheDavidlloydjones Рік тому +687

    In the 1970's, Japan's illicit drug of choice was "sinnarz," paint thinner. Anybody could buy a litre of the stuff at any hardware store for about 250 yen, or in a little brown energy-drink bottle, several thousand yen for 180 grams. Do the math: the gangsters pouring the big bottles into the small ones were making out quite nicely, thank you very much.
    I visited the campus of University of Tokyo back then. The surface of their campus lake was littered with plastic bags -- thrown there, I'm reliably told, by people who had used them as breathing bags, to inhale thinners from.

    • @derpinbird1180
      @derpinbird1180 Рік тому +35

      Wow thats bad. Why didn't the kids just buy it themselves and avoid criminals altogether though? was it an image thing?

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому +6

      correlation = causation comment 🤦

    • @lasskinn474
      @lasskinn474 Рік тому +19

      @@derpinbird1180 branding kind of? people like to inhale what they learned even if it makes no sense.

    • @gtc239
      @gtc239 Рік тому

      ​@@menjolnoStop spamming, dipsh*t.

    • @seanrowshandel1680
      @seanrowshandel1680 Рік тому +16

      The thing about the video which is fishy is that it's much more likely for methamphetamine (which occurs in nature more commonly than amphetamine) not to have been synthesized "by some German guy first, in the 1800s" (especially since Ephedra, which is famous among even Mormons, has been around for such a long time). Amphetamine is just a "purer and better version" of the compound than methamphetamine (it takes more steps to make it, and it's harder to have come up with a way to make it). I'm sure that the non-Islamic alchemists had already explored this frontier long ago (and nowadays we say that they acted in vain and merely wanted to make gold, in order to prevent the Muslims from finding out what they really discovered). Strangely, we don't even know whether it's safe for a patient to take a racemic (or, famously, 75:25) formulation of amphetamine. I'm not even a chemist, it's just obvious. There's research which supports this "hierarchy of amphetamines" with methamphetamine at the bottom: there's a learning/neuroplasticity protein the production of which is induced by amphetamine but suppressed by methamphetamine. Oddly enough, it results in the opening of a calcium channel which initiates apoptosis if signaling is strong enough (if I'm not mistaken). In other words, methamphetamine is more neuroprotective than amphetamine, and it's more lipophilic and probably reaches more areas of the brain and more blood vessels within the brain. There's a lot of nonsense research nowadays because we JUST REALIZED THAT WE failed to prevent the Muslims from finding out what we were doing for the past 65 years (after they dismantled the USSR and suddenly created a generation of "interracial" children). Just look at methylphenidate: they said it was a reuptake inhibitor, and now they're saying it was a releaser the whole time (this was done in order to prevent leaks of useful information, and to prevent any "homesteading" on their part). Sure, it was "chill" to take it easy on the "adult beverages" and begin to take amphetamines every day, just to prove to the younger generations that we do, indeed, exist. However, it certainly didn't "make a dent in Islam's tank" when we "threw that rock [of amphetamine into our stomach every morning]". And the worst part is the way that it changed the way that calcium was "trafficked, stored, sequestered, etc" in our brains.
      These dopaminergics can't help productivity like many people say that they do, unless someone has been abducted: they increase the productivity of people who have been abducted, but they don't really make normal people WORK. Every time someone from a big criminal family does something which he can't explain (and then he needs to run from the detectives and cops, and thinks he has a limited amount of time before they catch him and then he goes to prison FOREVER), he runs off and makes a batch of methamphetamine or LSD to fund his retreat/escape/relaxation/sanity. That's why it's illegal to make it: because these aren't necessarily BAD/Muslim families (they actually believe in parenting, and when they reproduce, they DO parenting, and participate in the community, and the children see them as ADULTS, and any responsibilities which come along with being "ADULTS", well... THEY FULFULL ALL OF THOSE RESPONSIBILITIES because they're not developmentally retarded)
      Japan, like America, is scary because they aren't concerned with hiding How Much They "Culturally" Respect Their Elders, and any 35-year old with the mind of a 5-year-old can get younger people to all bow to him when they greet him ("because it's part of their culture"), and they are "groomed" to accept such an invalid as their gang-leader. It's like being a Muslim, except Less Safe. No wonder they like stimulants.. to be honest, that's All They Ever Had. I hope people like me can open their hearts to care about Japan/America/Greenland/England (because it's obvious that nobody has ever done it before).

  • @thegreenpotato1
    @thegreenpotato1 Рік тому +149

    Almost transparet blue, by Ryu Murakami, is a great read for anyone intrested in a first hand account of how life was like for a group of addicted teenagers and young adults growing up in the post-war USA occupied Japan.

    • @theterminaldave
      @theterminaldave Рік тому +9

      Added to my reading list thanks!
      Have to recommend something i'm reading right now...
      The WindUp Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi
      sci-fi future dsytopia set in a future Thailand where the tech lacks electronics and is all based in biological applications of genetic science.
      The landscape the book paints is so good I feel like I'm eating, not just reading.

    • @khalidalali186
      @khalidalali186 Рік тому +4

      Wow, thanks! A world devoid of fossil fuels, and filled with bioengineering. Now that’s the perfect read for someone living in Arabia, all the way in West Asia. 🫡

    • @theterminaldave
      @theterminaldave Рік тому

      @@khalidalali186 I like your description of the book more than mine (:

    • @fangshing
      @fangshing Рік тому +4

      The later volumes of Barefoot Gen by Keiji Nakazawa also show what it was like growing up in that time. The author himself said he based everything in the manga after things that really happened, both to him and to others.

    • @arostwocents
      @arostwocents 10 місяців тому +2

      Sounds like Hiroshiberg was active there too.

  • @hrvstmusic
    @hrvstmusic Рік тому +231

    First time I’ve seen glue sniffing on a drug use graph

    • @bob456fk6
      @bob456fk6 Рік тому +21

      Several years ago I saw a report on serious glue sniffing in a Central American country.
      The manufacturer of the glue was heavily criticized for not putting a de-naturent in glue sold in that country while they did de-nature the glue sold in the US. That made it impossible to sniff glue in the US without getting sick.

    • @Ren505nm
      @Ren505nm Рік тому +3

      Not Elmer's glue 😂😂😂

    • @mgg7756
      @mgg7756 Рік тому +2

      Makes sense though. It gets you high and people do it.

    • @escalanteti0
      @escalanteti0 10 місяців тому +1

      third world issues in a first world perception

    • @Ggfddjbgd
      @Ggfddjbgd 9 місяців тому

      The stuff they selling on streets is poison

  • @DonnDenisse
    @DonnDenisse Рік тому +304

    I could remember some years ago meth addiction actually destroyed my life. I also suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 2 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.

    • @ErnestoHorner88
      @ErnestoHorner88 Рік тому

      Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Germany. Really need!

    • @gefferystones2814
      @gefferystones2814 Рік тому

      How do I reach out to him? Is he on insta

    • @ChristopherEric-fr8im
      @ChristopherEric-fr8im Рік тому +1

      Microdosing helped me get out of the pit of my worst depressive episode, a three year long episode, enough to start working on my mental health.

    • @PriscillaLogan-by9ll
      @PriscillaLogan-by9ll Рік тому

      Does he ship? Can he deliver to me here in northern Ireland 🇮🇪

    • @Ksl9393
      @Ksl9393 Рік тому +11

      Can you guys ship it to “my ass”? Plsss?

  • @jojoanggono3229
    @jojoanggono3229 Рік тому +209

    Now I know where the name "Shabu" came from. In 90s I saw some of my friends who were addicted to meth. It changes their behaviour, personality, and impacted their body functions. It tooks many years to rehab back to normal.

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому +10

      correlation = causation comment. also stop exaggerating edit: I joined uttp

    • @TheonormalMBV
      @TheonormalMBV Рік тому +2

      South East Asian I assume?

    • @teodorferseta8254
      @teodorferseta8254 Рік тому +47

      @@menjolno Most of the time a correlation is there because of a causal relationship. Taking meth and experiencing the side effects of meth is a blatant example of that.

    • @josephgee2515
      @josephgee2515 Рік тому +14

      ​@@menjolnoIts known as the most potent form of meth, often purple in color due to the most potent ingredients our government banned to try and curb production of.

    • @fredd3.14
      @fredd3.14 Рік тому

      pure methamphetamine is white powder or clear crystals. if there was any color it was added on purpose or due to impurites. this isn't breaking bad! @@josephgee2515

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
    @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 Рік тому +71

    As an absolute cinema geek and long time fan of Kurosawa's work, you've just given me part the backstory to much of his earlier movies (Drunken Angel, High and Low, Stray Dog...), a subject which I would never have thought to look up myself. Thanks!

    • @garrysekelli6776
      @garrysekelli6776 Рік тому +1

      What about the kamekaze pilots? Were they high on amphetamine?

    • @_Tizoc_
      @_Tizoc_ Рік тому +4

      @@garrysekelli6776 most of the wehrmacht and ss were (ever wonder why Einsatzgruppen were as brutal as they were?). Americans were on Dexedrine. The use of chemical stimulants was a huge part of the conflict the world over.

    • @garrysekelli6776
      @garrysekelli6776 Рік тому

      @@_Tizoc_ agreed. I thought that those were more of an issue during the first world war . The great war. Although the issue probably extended into the second ww as well.

    • @jasonmoser8957
      @jasonmoser8957 Рік тому

      I watched a doc in Japan where they interviewed a woman who as a child worked in a factory where they made special 'chocolates' for the kamikaze - they didn't know what they were made of at the time but were warned about any tasting. @@garrysekelli6776

    • @kingterry6045
      @kingterry6045 Рік тому

      @@_Tizoc_ Oh please that's such an obvious lie lmao, there was issued amphetamine to German soldiers but there's zero proof outside hearsay from historical revisionists. It's the same stupid lie around Zyklon B as if it wasn't a delousing agent.

  • @lawrenceshadai4966
    @lawrenceshadai4966 Рік тому +24

    A really underrated channel !

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому

      It is really overrated. The author puts unrelated political stuff along side other stuff

    • @fredd3.14
      @fredd3.14 Рік тому +1

      just skip the political videos, i do. who cares @@menjolno

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому

      @@fredd3.14 hypocrite

    • @fredd3.14
      @fredd3.14 Рік тому +1

      i dont think that word means what you think it means @@menjolno

  • @olipito
    @olipito Рік тому +7

    It's crazy the amount of stuff I learn on your channel! Thank you

  • @OzMat
    @OzMat Рік тому +181

    I have witnessed the tragic affect that solvent/glue/petrol, gas sniffing has had on people in the UK, Europe and Australia. In extreme but too common a case it causes the central nervous system to all but shut down leaving the addict in a bed ridden vegetative state requiring 24 hour care for the rest of their life.
    It got so bad in central Australian Aboriginal communities that it is illegal to sell petrol or gasoline in these communities, requiring all vehicles and machinery to be diesel powered . The sight of Aboriginal children and teenagers walking around with a petrol or solvent filled container hang around their necks so that they could get an all day buzz was once common. The tragic end of life when lighting up a cigarette was not unheard of. It's the cheapest nastiest form of high.

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому +4

      correlation = causation comment

    • @ThePowerLover
      @ThePowerLover Рік тому +3

      @@menjolnoRead Hume.

    • @dinte215
      @dinte215 Рік тому

      ​@@menjolnoin everything related to drugs I always see these comments that dismiss people experiences without addressing their concern.
      I'm starting to believe these accounts are been run by street pushers and cartels. Yes the mexican and other South American drug cartels have propaganda departments (they do everything from publishing beheading of critics and opponents, sell shirts glorifying drugs, cartel bosses and condemning govs.) Latin America is wild man.

    • @ash-is-napping
      @ash-is-napping Рік тому +21

      @@Rubicola174only if the rest of Australia can recognise their worth and stop treating them like second class citizens 😢

    • @poetryflynn3712
      @poetryflynn3712 Рік тому +2

      Do you not get high off diesel?

  • @sapphiron21
    @sapphiron21 Рік тому +190

    Even modern Japan still glorifies the harsh work culture where falling asleep from exhaustion on public transport or even at work is considered a point of pride so its no wonder these drugs take roots so deeply

    • @ebx100
      @ebx100 Рік тому +16

      First time I had to excuse myself after being in a meeting for 12 consecutive hours.

    • @Jay-vt1mw
      @Jay-vt1mw Рік тому +2

      i wouldn't draw that conclusion when there's very few country's that don't have deep drug use problems or alcohol.

    • @pibob7880
      @pibob7880 Рік тому +2

      Now we know how they managed.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      its almost like it might have been enforced addiction on the poor, who were often minorities

    • @musaran2
      @musaran2 Рік тому +9

      Manga/anime still casually show people downing loads of stimulants.

  • @z-e-r-o-
    @z-e-r-o- Рік тому +63

    アジアノメトリーの鹿さんの守備範囲、広すぎ😂👍 EUVからヒロポンまで… ほんと尊敬しちゃうわ〜。
    ちなみに、黒澤明の『天国と地獄(High & Low)』では、戦後の横浜のドラッグ闇市が描かれています。

  • @LifeofBrad1
    @LifeofBrad1 Рік тому +293

    I'm pretty sure "shabu" actually translates to "swish", hence the Japanese hotpot named "shabu-shabu", which translates to "swish-swish" because you swish thin slices of meat around in the boiling broth to cook them. I actually had no idea "shabu" alone meant meth. I said it to a Japanese guy I knew years ago and he said "Huh? You mean shabu-shabu, right? Because shabu is slang for meth in Japan". Crazy how just leaving out the second shabu completely changes what you're referring to. Interestingly, it goes by the same name in the Philippines. My guess is the Japanese brought it over there during the occupation in WWII, the locals heard them referring to it as "shabu", so that's what they began calling it also.

    • @chillphil967
      @chillphil967 Рік тому +18

      that’s an interesting story, and cool point. 1). in my minds eye, when you described “swish swish” i see bacon sizzling in a hot greasy pan. then i think of those infamous mtv 1990s anti drug commercials “this is your brain - this is your brain on drugs!”
      anyway maybe the meat frying is like the brain sizzling into a frenzied, chaotic state. or maybe i just skipped breakfast and am thinking about bacon too much lol.

    • @feelincrispy7053
      @feelincrispy7053 Рік тому +3

      In Thailand and such it’s spelt shaboo I believe. At least that’s the way I’ve seen it spelt

    • @The_Conspiracy_Analyst
      @The_Conspiracy_Analyst Рік тому +8

      Yes, but Tagalog uses reduplication to put emphasis on something. I got a big kick out of seeing a sign for a restaurant in Pampanga that said "Shabu Shabu".

    • @marw9541
      @marw9541 Рік тому +16

      "Shabu, a slang term for the drug methamphetamine used in Japan, Hong Kong, Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Saudi Arabia, possibly from the verb しゃぶる (shaburu, 'to suck on something'), from the way that the addictiveness of the drugs sucks in the user."

    • @natthaphonhongcharoen
      @natthaphonhongcharoen Рік тому +2

      @@feelincrispy7053 It's pronounced and written in Thai as shaboo but pretty much all of them romanized as shabu

  • @aynsley544
    @aynsley544 Рік тому +126

    I think the name 'Hiropon' comes from "hiro" (tiredness or fatigue) and "pon" (throw away). So, "Fatigue - Out!"

    • @LatitudeSky
      @LatitudeSky Рік тому +16

      It can also be a joke. Used to know a girl named Hiroko. When she would go hyper and have a lot of energy, we would say she had "Hiro-pon Power" and everyone laughed. There was no stigma. It was just funny.

    • @AllisterCaine
      @AllisterCaine Рік тому +3

      But... Wasn't the emperor called hirohito? So how das that translate? I know in Japanese the same words often have different meanings... But I don't know japanese at all... 😅

    • @aynsley544
      @aynsley544 Рік тому +14

      @AllisterCaine The last-but-one emperor's personal name was indeed Hirohito, but Japanese would never call him "Emperor Hirohito". When he assumed the imperial throne he became simply "The Emperor". When he died he became "Emperoro Shōwa", named after the year period that commenced with the first year of his reign.

    • @danvol3835
      @danvol3835 Рік тому +14

      Apparently "hirou [fatigue]"+"pon [onomatopoeia for bouncing or tossing]" is often attributed, but, as the video states, the manufacturer's intent was to use Greek "philo [love]"+"ponos [work]", meaning a medicine that will make you love your work.

    • @ayemane2828
      @ayemane2828 9 місяців тому

      Fatigue away xD

  • @UsmanBello
    @UsmanBello Рік тому +146

    I remember in the mid-1990s of a "weight loss" supplement called Oxycut whose first ingredient was ephedrine, which is derived from 麻黄 (or "Ma Huang"). I considered taking this supplement until my mother (who was fluent in written Traditional Chinese) pointed out that Ma Huang is a stimulant that can cause the heart muscles to malfunction and lead to various ailments like hypertension and arrythmia. I took her advice and did not take it.

    • @ostrich67
      @ostrich67 Рік тому +22

      Another weight loss supplement was Metabolife. I was taking that in the late 90s; I didn't lose any weight but man I was angry a lot. It also spiked my blood pressure.

    • @christopheralan6327
      @christopheralan6327 Рік тому +25

      Hydroxycut

    • @ostrich67
      @ostrich67 Рік тому

      @@alllove1754 Herbal crank, is what it was.

    • @alanfike
      @alanfike Рік тому +6

      Ma Huang has since been outlawed for sale in the United States. I know this because I worked at GNC when we still sold Xenadrine, Hydroxycut, Ripped Fuel, etc. Yes, each one of these products had the herb you described as the primary, but certainly not only, ingredient. They were also extremely effective and popular, but still at the risk of people dying or having long-term heart problems. I've taken it myself, and even the Ma Huang in the lesser known brands was very strong.
      Now such supplements, known as thermogenics, use caffeine as their stimulant, and I understand that some of them are still around in that capacity.
      You have to understand, it worked well and you knew it worked at least to stimulate you from the first pill. But it also showed results in weight loss, so it was probably the most popular category of product that GNC sold. The stores I worked at mainly sold two categories despite covering basically all areas of health from vitamins to shakes: it was either protein shakes for muscle growth, or thermogenic tablets. It's what people asked for.
      But at the end it the day, it really is unsafe to use on a regular basis, and I've met a customer who got a stroke from one.

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy Рік тому +6

      Even before that, ephedra was popular among body builders and "fitness" fanatics. There was a "stack" of caffeine, aspirin and ephedra that was supposed to be great for losing weight, without too much caffeine jitters or uncomfortable ephedra side-effects Now, on the internet I see lots of "stacks" of various supplements recommended. Also, I think regulations against ephedra were mainly to keep them out of the hands of meth makers, I don't think the safety factors were considered alone. I'm rather cynical about such regulations, because I see so many harmful and even addictive substances are ignored, the process is politicized at best, maybe even rife with corruption.

  • @dylhas1
    @dylhas1 Рік тому +119

    Great video. This has always been one of the more fascinating consequences of WWII that people don’t seem to know.

    • @anthonygato407
      @anthonygato407 Рік тому +19

      its been said that ww2 was the battle of the stimulants. Germany and Japan with their meth vs USA with their amphetamine. the USA soldiers supposedly performed better because the amphetamine allowed them to sleep eventually while the meth soldiers kept on driving into exhaustion and delusions.

    • @mewhenimdrunknhigh5001
      @mewhenimdrunknhigh5001 Рік тому +4

      ​@@anthonygato407 Wow, that's an interesting aspect. Of course amphetamine can also keep you up "indefinitely"* if you take it repeatedly, but it's metabolic half life *is* significantly lower than meth's, and a "reasonable" dose taken in the morning won't rob you of sleep at night.
      * I can tell you from personal experience that repeated amphetamine use - I took it when I was frantically trying to reach a deadline on an academic paper - can mess with your psyche. I slept very little and badly over the course of several days, and I ended up with auditory hallucinations. The ambient music I was listening to while writing kept on playing after I turned off my PC. And I'm sure things would've deteriorated further had I kept on taking speed. Scary times.

    • @TylerHorton-qq8jd
      @TylerHorton-qq8jd Рік тому

      Ive had audio ones too and they jus trash talk me im glad its not scary lol but for reasons i dont get much sleep

    • @Mansikkacake
      @Mansikkacake Рік тому

      I just randomly watched this video rn and this is the most useful one this week for sure.

    • @agentbubbles782
      @agentbubbles782 Рік тому

      War on drugs worked because japan nipped it in the bud before it got out of control. Didn't work in America because they let it get out of hand

  • @ntabile
    @ntabile Рік тому +31

    No wonder, shabu originated in Japan. This scourge once hit the Philippines and created unnecessary street executions due to rampant drug pushing and addiction.

  • @blackflagnation
    @blackflagnation Рік тому +175

    My uncle fought for the Japanese military in WW2 as a 15 year old. We used to go visit him, my grandmother, and aunt a lot as children. One day he was cleaning out his back room, and he showed me these tiny glass viles in a wood case still with liquid in them. He told me it was ヒロポン. He said he never took any of them because he was afraid to do so.

    • @janoplt
      @janoplt Рік тому +33

      ヒロポン = cyanide. That is why he did not take... :)
      (if you mix English with characters of another language, then don't be surprised if I translate it like this. I don't know why you don't write it in Latin...)

    • @plumebrise4801
      @plumebrise4801 Рік тому +6

      But you needed to be atleast 17 year old (17 to 40 years old at the time ,nowadays it's 18 to 32 years old) to be in the Japanese military so ...

    • @changedhandle86
      @changedhandle86 Рік тому +61

      @plumebrise4801 The Japanese Imperial Army drafted 15 year olds for the defense of Honshu in March 1945, and may have conscripted even younger boys for the defense of Okinawa months earlier

    • @BussyBoyBonanza
      @BussyBoyBonanza Рік тому

      @@plumebrise4801They literally used children soldiers in WWII out of desperation you have no fucking clue what you're talking about

    • @rageius
      @rageius Рік тому +16

      ​@@plumebrise4801there's record of a gi killing a 12 or 13 year old sniper at Okinawa

  • @dewinmoonl
    @dewinmoonl Рік тому +49

    chinese here . . . so THATS why mahuang was (banned in U.S.)
    edit: were told we shouldn't bring that out of the country or it'll be annoying at the customs
    when I was a kid we used it all the time to clear up a cogged nose. it works better than anything. 1 drop of that thing was like a drain cleaner that drips right into your sinuses and you can breath free immediately.
    little did I know it was also possible to synthesize meth from it haha.

    • @floycewhite6991
      @floycewhite6991 Рік тому +15

      Pseudoephedrine is available over the counter, but in California the buyer must be 21 and show identification.

    • @andrewduff2048
      @andrewduff2048 Рік тому +5

      ephedra or mahuang was common in supplements for weight loss and its use was banned due to safety concerns, it was linked to rare heart related deaths in young women. It's not illegal to have or use, just to market as a supplement. I don't know much about customs but I've heard it being hard to bring fruit through customs and I think that would be true for most plants. I would bet their was quite a difference between the raw plant and the supplements "containing" ephedra which weren't regulated. Supplements in the U.S. are kind of a mess.

    • @vulpo
      @vulpo Рік тому

      @@andrewduff2048 A big deal was made about the safety of ephedra, but the risks were somewhat exaggerated to get the public on board with banning it. The real reason it was banned was to prevent meth heads from making methamphetamine from it. The ban worked for a while and meth usage went way down. Unfortunately smuggling from Mexico eventually filled the gap.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      @@andrewduff2048 USA customs are different, they dont just make drugs illegal, they also make all of the products needed to synth it illegal, it still doesnt work

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 hey listen Im really sorry for you but you should really do research into actual addiction treatment as american insurance companies are just spectacular at not reading scientific studies and just looking at their bottom line

  • @jamesbarca7229
    @jamesbarca7229 Рік тому +130

    Knowing that Kamikaze pilots were high on meth makes me see them in a whole new light. I've heard about the Germans and Pervitin, but considering everything I've read and watched about the Kamikaze and the war in the Pacific I'm shocked that I never heard this before.

    • @dayglownick5493
      @dayglownick5493 Рік тому +43

      Honestly everybody was on meth back then, or at least some type of speed. Some Allied rations came with amphetamine pills as well

    • @redharp4749
      @redharp4749 Рік тому +16

      really?? lmao itrs not that crazy.. so many ppl are on adderall and shit now its pretty normal

    • @oRealAlieNo
      @oRealAlieNo Рік тому

      The most powerful people are tweakers

    • @PeterT-i1w
      @PeterT-i1w Рік тому +7

      everybody talks about Kamikaze, ignoring the fact that suicide attacks of all kinds were a lot more common in the Red Army than among the Japanese

    • @TylerShackleford
      @TylerShackleford Рік тому +6

      @@dayglownick5493I agree that everybody was on speed- but to say that everybody was on “meth“is not true. Amphetamines and methamphetamine are not interchangeable.

  • @happycook6737
    @happycook6737 Рік тому +31

    My grandma had been very fat so in the 1950's the doctor prescribed amphetamines. It was a common practice in the USA at that time. She was almost normal weight while taking them but then they became illegal in the USA for weight loss. Her weight went back up. She passed in 1987 at 72 years old. The photo of her "thin" days was her pride and joy. Despite constantly trying to diet it was only with the amphetamines she was near normal weight.

    • @YuckFoutube-e1z
      @YuckFoutube-e1z Рік тому

      Lol the photo of her addicted to meth was her pride and joy. That is funny.

    • @kamakaziozzie3038
      @kamakaziozzie3038 Рік тому +6

      It was a different time.
      Nowadays to be morbidly obese is considered healthy (“Healthy at any Weight” campaign) even called sexy by many in the media.

    • @NuclearAnNoahlation
      @NuclearAnNoahlation 11 місяців тому +3

      Requiem for a dream displays how much that can backfire

  • @stijnvandamme76
    @stijnvandamme76 Рік тому +29

    0:45 Not correct, Nagai Nagayoshi did not "discover" Methamphetamine!!
    It was first discovered in 1887 in Germany by Romanian chemist Lazăr Edeleanu
    But Nagayoshi discovered Ephedrine, and the method to synthesize methamphetamine from ephedrine in 1893, That is what he discovered. not Methamphetamine itself.
    5:26 Incorrect baseless conclusion..
    Japan used Meth(did not win), Germany used Meth (did not win).. US used Meth (did the war)
    The War was won on logistics, production of weaponry and tactics.
    The Meth did help on tactical level to keep pilots going on long missions.
    And I'm fairly certain that infantry in prolonged battles got energy out of it.
    So though meth alone does not make you a winner in war.. it does help.. the US has been using "Go pills" in every wars since.. why? because it helps.. They did switch to Diphenylmethyl-sulfinylacetamide instead, for less side effects and addiction.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому +4

      the benefits meth gave to pilots, especially kamakazis are overstated, a lot of times they would do drugs to psych themselves up so if they were given meth they likely stayed up all day and night till flight day and hallucinated targets from sleep deprivation, a lot of them didnt even know how to land so they did what they could so the government wouldnt hurt their families
      As soon as withdrawl and comedown and cravings start, all gains are outweighed by the loss of life resulting

    • @letzte_maahsname
      @letzte_maahsname Рік тому

      So they switched to Modafinil?

  • @MyTv-
    @MyTv- Рік тому +78

    Very interesting, informative and disturbing. Also makes me remember, how Honda started to just drink sake after the war, until his wife called him lazy and made him mount engines on bicycles.
    Thanks for a really great video!

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому +2

      Irrelevent bot comment, how is "honda" and "sake" related to the video?

    • @MyTv-
      @MyTv- Рік тому +20

      @@menjolno Exact same postwar period in Japan. Exact same dissolution. If you’re ever read a real academic history book it’s common to broaden the picture to broaden the understanding.
      Unlike the crap your served in school before university.

    • @jamescarter3196
      @jamescarter3196 Рік тому

      @@MyTv-Let's not turn a pointless person's question into a really-stupid attempt to bash public schools like some kind of entitled jackoff

    • @varnix1006
      @varnix1006 Рік тому +7

      History should be viewed as narrative chapters instead of topic chapters. Only then people will realize that history is closer to each other than it's depiction in school history books.

    • @MyTv-
      @MyTv- Рік тому +7

      @@varnix1006 Actually been thinking about how abysmal history schoolbooks are. It takes a very engaged and talented teacher, who’s not afraid to deviate from the curriculum to make it work.

  • @GuardianAzure
    @GuardianAzure Рік тому +17

    Super interesting. Never knew this part of Japan's post WW2 history. Thanks!

  • @The_Conspiracy_Analyst
    @The_Conspiracy_Analyst Рік тому +142

    It's an open secret that this was the key behind their "economic miracle" and "amazing work ethic". Not only does tweaking make factory work bearable, it actually makes it quite fun.

    • @freddiepatterson1045
      @freddiepatterson1045 Рік тому +14

      Interesting story but I highly doubt that's actually true

    • @Aberusugi
      @Aberusugi Рік тому +42

      Sounds like cope from a tweaker

    • @abdiganiaden
      @abdiganiaden Рік тому

      Bruh meth doesn’t allow workers to remain sane and they mentally break before they gain much experience

    • @jesusisunstoppable4438
      @jesusisunstoppable4438 Рік тому

      ​@@freddiepatterson1045
      Never know.
      Kinda makes sense when you look at America's industrial boom late 1800s / early 1900s when Most Hard Core Drugs were Legal.
      -- Even Cocain was used in Soda for many many yrs.

    • @The_Conspiracy_Analyst
      @The_Conspiracy_Analyst Рік тому +14

      @@freddiepatterson1045 I guess you didn't listen to the video, LOL

  • @tomlewis4205
    @tomlewis4205 Рік тому +5

    Humanity never learns that there is always a downside - a cost hidden or not.

  • @jbeason2929
    @jbeason2929 Рік тому +7

    @6:40 Wendigoon did a video about "Tokyo Rose." Her story is really sad how she was treated as a traitor after the war ended. People should check it out

  • @taWay21
    @taWay21 Рік тому +19

    Im a simple man. I see Asianometry, I click like.

  • @naurrr
    @naurrr Рік тому +73

    it's disappointing that this has led to a ban of effective treatments for conditions and disabilities like narcolepsy and ADHD, especially in a society where people with those conditions are expected to work under their crushing work culture and keep up with everyone else.
    people will abuse anything they can get their hands on, but prohibition of these treatments just makes it more difficult for those who need adequate healthcare.

    • @Rene-uz3eb
      @Rene-uz3eb Рік тому

      Meth is not adequate healthcare on any planet

    • @Joseph-dj9pi
      @Joseph-dj9pi Рік тому +16

      ADHD isn't a real thing. Just pay attention and get your work done.

    • @sharonrigs7999
      @sharonrigs7999 Рік тому +12

      Just like how the opioid epidemic has made things suck for chronic pain patients

    • @Rene-uz3eb
      @Rene-uz3eb Рік тому +11

      @@sharonrigs7999 adhd comes down to low performance. Performance enhancing drugs speed up anybody, not just adhd. If there's a particular problem, like a energy deficit, then addressing that should be the plan.

    • @RAPEDBYBLACKS
      @RAPEDBYBLACKS Рік тому

      ADHD is a fake condition, like almost all psychological problems. Made up by overly pampered westerners.

  • @jzdude01
    @jzdude01 Рік тому +21

    2:24 I think it’s important to note a better description of dopamine would be that it makes you feel motivated rather than makes you feel good. It’s a slight but very distinct and important detail about dopamine that I feel contributes to a widespread misconception of it.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      very minor thing to add, nuroreceptors all do a number of tasks so "most associated with" is better phrasing, as people get very mislead about biology thinking our bodies are like machines and every cell has one specific task, leading to things like a broken down knowledge base surrounding genes, gender, sex, hormones, evolution and many many more things.

    • @Trump2024asw
      @Trump2024asw Рік тому +1

      Ty I'm a oxytocin man myself.

    • @AJWRAJWR
      @AJWRAJWR Рік тому

      Yeah, makes you motivated only for the next dopamine hit. And receiving that hit feels good.

    • @neetpride5919
      @neetpride5919 Рік тому

      You do realize that when you feel motivated without drugs, it's still just your brain chasing dopamine, right? I guess working a job is just "chasing the next dopamine hit" from your paycheck, making friends is just "chasing the next serotonin hit", and going on dates is just "chasing the next oxytocin hit"

    • @McFwoupson
      @McFwoupson Рік тому

      ​@@AnthemUnanthemeddopamine release and reuptake from drugs definitely can make someone feel very good and euphoric lol

  • @BassForever44
    @BassForever44 Рік тому +2

    Man, I really appreciate finding your channel. It somehow keeps me connected to lovely Asia, but not in a sugarcoated way, more in a realistic way and I love that. I'll be back there one day. What a place.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      this video was hella sugarcoated actually, please in addition to this video, do your own research, there is a huge amount of context that they missed, like how iran contra was going on, or how it was fairly well known already that criminalization and prohibition does not prevent use

  • @GeDruchy
    @GeDruchy Рік тому +8

    The American Japanese collaborators sounds really interesting, I agree. A video on this would be appreciated !

  • @jakedill1304
    @jakedill1304 Рік тому +55

    The hallucinations come from the sleeplessness in a lot of cases, the overall long-term hallucinations even after ceasing are probably just brain damage.. but it's complicated with that particular drug because it can be ingested with tolerances significantly higher than you would think should be possible..
    That's one of those things they don't talk too much in the public sphere about, I think because people think if they get their kid rehab or something like that he's going to be okay again.. but not really.. at least on my experience I mean better for sure and maybe even functional.. but again it all depends on various things because some people do amphetamines fairly regularly without going overboard, it's kind of a time-honor tradition in America and around the world from my understanding is correct..
    But yeah I just turned into mention the hallucinations are the sleeplessness.. for the most part anyways.. a lot of people get the impression that the drug works in a sort of, like the reputation of bath salts etc or like a dissociative.. and while it can cause you to dissociate that is at the very long end of a series of strings of things. But the big one is the no sleep, the brain can't heal function reset body doesn't heal.. that's where that toothbrush bathtub '90s commercial was hinting at.. like wounds don't heal so end up with a lot of scabs and scars and whatnot and if you're a needle user.. that's you know LOL
    Sorry I just had a thought of OCD trying to find a vein.. the benefit I guess of the long-term effects.. I used to date a cocaine shooter, that was every 10 minutes so that was incredibly heartbreaking actually.. you kind of get to a point where all you want to do is help.. find it that is not anything else cuz you know you're stupid like I was when I was younger.

    • @fredd3.14
      @fredd3.14 Рік тому +5

      especially in a work culture like japan, that seems like it would easily lead to people not sleeping for very extended periods... ignorance of how hard it is to sleep, the negative effects of stimulants etc still unknown.. that's so sad, must have been scary for a lot of people going for days feeling okay, then the shadow people come and you start hearing shit. crazy times..

    • @Gummo2020
      @Gummo2020 Рік тому +4

      Hit the nail on the head, I was an amphetamine addict for 4 years and used it to binge in all that time (4-5 days straight awake every week). The hallucinations & hints of psychosis were always a fun extra for me, I did see people lose it after being awake for too long though.

    • @Gummo2020
      @Gummo2020 Рік тому

      @@sparklesparklesparkle6318 yeah I was starting to fade away more cause I lived completely isolated, not a good thing although I never stole, attacked someone or altogether did something illegal. I took my frustrations out on my self (self harm).

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      there is a decent amount of miss-info in this vid, they knew stims were addictive, for a long time they knew about cocaine at this point, they had opium going everywhere and knew that was addictive, there have been numerous times governments and companies turned around and feigned ignorance, to avoid being held liable.
      Meth is also still sold as an OTC cough suppressant in america, so long as its the weaker version. Also claiming that meth may have been a cause in heart failure is fairly ignorant and can also be attributed to genetics, or coffee, while coffee isnt as toxic, it is and was used more freely than meth, and probably for longer, which can cause the same amount of toxicity as a shorter term meth habit you picked up only after the war.
      The continued onslaught of "meth is bad" content normally fails to actually dig into any treatment methods, and normally stick to history, unfortunately due to the amount of lies surrounding this topic you cannot get an idea of anything that happened, so Im glad you actually included that this normally effected the lower classes, but "police putting the law into action" and it "lacking teeth" is extremely counter to harm reduction, this can be seen in the fact that it became used more immediately after prohibition, as well as the rise of crime surrounding the drugs, thus demonizing the people who are SUFFERING from a well known mental health issue known as Substance Use Disorder should never have been locked in a cage for being sick.
      Notice how every time laws were put in place it was too keep out impure thoughts or evil other races, and not specifically to help the public, it always had to be against certain groups of people, funny enough at around the same time the iran-contra movement was in full swing, were america (the cunts who hid japanise war crimes after ww2) was throwing as much cocaine and its freebase into black communities to fund weapon shipments to rebel groups in iran and south america, this has always had racists political motivation, it was almost never health motivated, if it was people would be using harm reduction methods like the Swiss did in the 90s, or like peru rn, or like some states rn who are doing decriminalization and legalization of certain substances because legal intervention does not help medical issues, canada is doing the same thing, columbia is trying to get these sorts of laws passed hell there is a video of the ex president of Columbia (could be wrong here may have been another southamerican country with a lot of cartels) who admitted the only reason for the constant demonetization of substances was because it was the only way the public would listen to a topic, and effectivly the public needed to be carefully de-radicalized (the debait was with Hamilton Moris its on yt), I would also like to recommend looking up Dr. Carl Hart, MAPS is also a great research organization that has picked up the good work with mdma that was nearly lost during the 70s when america tried to bury it all, Harvard medical also has some really great addiction studies, hell most universities have stopped producing bullshit that could be misconstrued as danger for the american gov (like that time they used meth instead of mdma and made a bunch of monkeys od, then said "ehh it likely doesnt matter", spoiler alert, it very much did matter, and the amount of mdma that would have been used would not have killed the monkeys, because meth is far more toxic then mdma).
      Please please please do research into addiction, expecially as an asian based channel there was a good period where the west was using these same tactics except with opium instead of meth, to demonize asian people and culture, while simultaneously trying to get all of the asians in the country addicted, via a revolving door of abuse, first from people that makes you depressed enough to use, then the torture and inhumane conditions in jail get to you, and now that you have PTSD and ur a "criminal", you are weird, and sick, and wont be allowed to rent a house because no one wants to rent to you, making you more depressed, driving you further into addiction, until people wake the fuck up and allow you to seek medical intervention.
      Please do your research on drugs this hurts far far too many people to be misrepresented or to have bits of the story thrown out so you can shorten a youtube vid.

    • @thepopeofkeke
      @thepopeofkeke Рік тому

      When you haven’t slept your brain just needs to take a shit
      Fun with phrasing and 💯 facts

  • @simokoistinen276
    @simokoistinen276 Рік тому +60

    Another drug promlem which could be interesting to hear more is mass consumption of heroin and amphetamine in Finland after WW2. I would be glad if you could cover that in some point.
    Edit:
    There has been some wondering how Finland makes a difference with heroin and amphetamine use after WW2. The difference is that Finland was already the world's biggest heroin user per capita since 1936 and was using more heroin than Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Iceland compined. And it just became much worse after WW2.

    • @thetruthseeker5448
      @thetruthseeker5448 Рік тому

      and all the parties and armies involved during the WWII, Germans, Brits and the US. They were forced to use these drugs not only the Japanese. Sadly it has become a hidden truth, unless and until someone wants to dig it up.

    • @cognitivedisability9864
      @cognitivedisability9864 Рік тому +8

      Same happened in norway, even long after. For example my uncle became addicted to amphetamines in the army. And ive heard other stories like it. Many wont like to think it, but just as the germans and japansese used amphetamines in ww2 so did the allies. Not alot of info on it but seem several veterans mention it and seen it in weekly field rationa for american troops. Ncos were the ones who gave out to the squad "when neccesary". Also saw a british sas talk about them spiking coffe with some sort of amphetamine that when i googled it i didnt find a SINGLE thing on it.

    • @badart3204
      @badart3204 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, everyone used it in WW2

    • @bickyboo7789
      @bickyboo7789 Рік тому +3

      ​@@cognitivedisability9864 modern militaries still give out dexedrine under specific circumstances to Special Forces and pilots.

    • @Steve-ev6vx
      @Steve-ev6vx Рік тому +4

      Amphetamines aren't that addictive. The hand them out of school kids for adhd. When you stop taking them you don't get sick or anything. The only problems come from taking them to much and stopping fixes all of that. It's downers that have complicated withdrawal processes that lead to quiting being very hard.

  • @mcmann7149
    @mcmann7149 Рік тому +84

    Reading up on the research done after this, there was a major problem, even today with African immigrants, with organized crime groups using foreign-born runners as frontmen for their operations. A lot of the storehouses being in those areas leading to police searching them and the news getting out that once again, a Korean business or organization was a front for a drug smuggling, money laundering or racketeering operation. I think that it would be interesting to see a video on the gold smuggling scheme that was prevalent a few years ago in Japan and Hong Kong.

    • @j4genius961
      @j4genius961 Рік тому +14

      African migrants in JAPAN?! How many live over there???

    • @highbread817
      @highbread817 Рік тому +15

      For some reason Japanese, Hong Kong, and North Korean organized crime is a topic that fascinates me. I think a lot of other people would find them interesting as well.
      Would love to see videos on any of these topics

    • @Avantime
      @Avantime Рік тому

      @@j4genius961 Not many, but they're very visible, like the South Asians. Many of them start their own businesses (legal or otherwise) and then bring their mates in. Go to Kawaguchi and have a look.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      there is a decent amount of miss-info in this vid, they knew stims were addictive, for a long time they knew about cocaine at this point, they had opium going everywhere and knew that was addictive, there have been numerous times governments and companies turned around and feigned ignorance, to avoid being held liable.
      Meth is also still sold as an OTC cough suppressant in america, so long as its the weaker version. Also claiming that meth may have been a cause in heart failure is fairly ignorant and can also be attributed to genetics, or coffee, while coffee isnt as toxic, it is and was used more freely than meth, and probably for longer, which can cause the same amount of toxicity as a shorter term meth habit you picked up only after the war.
      The continued onslaught of "meth is bad" content normally fails to actually dig into any treatment methods, and normally stick to history, unfortunately due to the amount of lies surrounding this topic you cannot get an idea of anything that happened, so Im glad you actually included that this normally effected the lower classes, but "police putting the law into action" and it "lacking teeth" is extremely counter to harm reduction, this can be seen in the fact that it became used more immediately after prohibition, as well as the rise of crime surrounding the drugs, thus demonizing the people who are SUFFERING from a well known mental health issue known as Substance Use Disorder should never have been locked in a cage for being sick.
      Notice how every time laws were put in place it was too keep out impure thoughts or evil other races, and not specifically to help the public, it always had to be against certain groups of people, funny enough at around the same time the iran-contra movement was in full swing, were america (the cunts who hid japanise war crimes after ww2) was throwing as much cocaine and its freebase into black communities to fund weapon shipments to rebel groups in iran and south america, this has always had racists political motivation, it was almost never health motivated, if it was people would be using harm reduction methods like the Swiss did in the 90s, or like peru rn, or like some states rn who are doing decriminalization and legalization of certain substances because legal intervention does not help medical issues, canada is doing the same thing, columbia is trying to get these sorts of laws passed hell there is a video of the ex president of Columbia (could be wrong here may have been another southamerican country with a lot of cartels) who admitted the only reason for the constant demonetization of substances was because it was the only way the public would listen to a topic, and effectivly the public needed to be carefully de-radicalized (the debait was with Hamilton Moris its on yt), I would also like to recommend looking up Dr. Carl Hart, MAPS is also a great research organization that has picked up the good work with mdma that was nearly lost during the 70s when america tried to bury it all, Harvard medical also has some really great addiction studies, hell most universities have stopped producing bullshit that could be misconstrued as danger for the american gov (like that time they used meth instead of mdma and made a bunch of monkeys od, then said "ehh it likely doesnt matter", spoiler alert, it very much did matter, and the amount of mdma that would have been used would not have killed the monkeys, because meth is far more toxic then mdma).
      Please please please do research into addiction, expecially as an asian based channel there was a good period where the west was using these same tactics except with opium instead of meth, to demonize asian people and culture, while simultaneously trying to get all of the asians in the country addicted, via a revolving door of abuse, first from people that makes you depressed enough to use, then the torture and inhumane conditions in jail get to you, and now that you have PTSD and ur a "criminal", you are weird, and sick, and wont be allowed to rent a house because no one wants to rent to you, making you more depressed, driving you further into addiction, until people wake the fuck up and allow you to seek medical intervention.
      Please do your research on drugs this hurts far far too many people to be misrepresented or to have bits of the story thrown out so you can shorten a youtube vid.
      Also please ignore my username, I'm gonna change it soon, its vestigial from PTSD induced paranoia of writing my name on the internet.

    • @poetryflynn3712
      @poetryflynn3712 Рік тому

      @@j4genius961 I have heard a rumor before that they should be avoided due to slavery and stealing your organs.
      No clue how true that is.
      But, we should be aware, human trafficking is extremely common across the globe - not sure about organ trading, but I imagine it's a similar deal.

  • @i6power30
    @i6power30 Рік тому +6

    I'm happy you post forgotten history

  • @XerrolAvengerII
    @XerrolAvengerII Рік тому +8

    I'm an asthmatic and i still buy over the counter ephedrine during the allergy season. It doesn't cause highness but can cause unpleasant side effects which makes it only worthwhile during the height of the season.

    • @JanjayTrollface
      @JanjayTrollface Рік тому +2

      If you take more you will get high. And those side effects go from unpleasant to quite uncomfortable, and if you're a real pig up through the spectrum to hideous or even excruciating, to the point where you think: "I'm never doing that again!". And you don't do it again. Until the next time that you do.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh Рік тому +4

      As another asthmatic - and now an old man - it was very convenient when Primatene pills and inhalers were available over the counter. Of course that could not and did not last.

  • @burneraccount900
    @burneraccount900 Рік тому +3

    Excellent and professional work as always.

  • @Frisbieinstein
    @Frisbieinstein Рік тому +17

    I worked in a lab with toluene (active ingredient of glue). It gave me a headache and a general horrible feeling.

    • @LifeofBrad1
      @LifeofBrad1 Рік тому +1

      Yeah. I've breathed in fumes from super glue while applying it to stuff and it made me feel lightheaded after only a minute of breathing it in. Probably gonna wear a respirator when applying it from now on.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 Рік тому

      this reminds me of my wife. she was given ketamine in hospital to reduce pain from her operation. She didn't like ketamine at all. It made her feel sick. But street kids buy it from crooked vetinary surgeons. It is a mystery why.

    • @GrandDawggy
      @GrandDawggy Рік тому

      ​@@keithammleter3824 the same way alcohol isn't always enjoyable the first time ketamine can be the same I've only used ketamine a few times but the first two times were much less enjoyable

    • @randomcow505
      @randomcow505 Рік тому

      @@keithammleter3824 different effects on different people
      Ive tried green, light opioids and stimulants and not a single one ever made me feel good, they didn't even have much of an effect I just felt lethargic and sick like an instant hangover
      whereas I know people who love the stuff and dont understand why I never use anything more than alcohol

    • @letzte_maahsname
      @letzte_maahsname Рік тому

      ​@@keithammleter3824Some people are looking for this kind of mind alteration. It's neither a good nor bad trait; some people can find stress-relief, some expansion of consciousness, some only a sick feeling in their stomachs. You do get used to the physical side effects though.

  • @namenotfound8747
    @namenotfound8747 Рік тому +12

    The lost generation of orphans of WWII in Japan would be interesting as a topic. Many people ended up losing their parents in the war, may single mothers that couldn't take care of there kids either sent them away to family, they even sold there kids in slavery or abandoned altogether. And Japan was very quick to swept it under the rug, as it was a point of great shame.

  • @johnwalsh4857
    @johnwalsh4857 Рік тому +6

    yah Thailand and the Philippines experienced these kinds of meth violence epidemics, however their response was a lot more brutal compared to the Japanese, Thailand was suffering from a Yaba(meth) epidemic a decade ago , the Thai gov response was to do shoot to kill orders on addicts and thousands were killed. Philippines under duterte recently also did the same thing with even more larger bodycount. However both Thailand and the PHilipiines were able to control their problems however the root cause was still there.

    • @Trump2024asw
      @Trump2024asw Рік тому +6

      I'f the root cause is not addressed they failed to address the problem period.

    • @johnwalsh4857
      @johnwalsh4857 Рік тому +3

      @@Trump2024asw Thailand and the PH failed to solve their problems since they did nto go to the root cause which was poverty and the drug lords who were pushing the drugs to the users, reason: The drug lords were rich and influential and were friends of the very same Thai and Filipino politicos who were out killing the addicts, when the addicts were properly culled and the crime rate much lowered back again to pushing drugs.

    • @johnwalsh4857
      @johnwalsh4857 Рік тому

      @@Trump2024asw also the Thai and PH govs are in collusion with teh drug lords, and their politicos get rich from the bribes. They even cook meth in Manila prisons with full knowledge of the PH gov

    • @Trump2024asw
      @Trump2024asw Рік тому

      @@johnwalsh4857 Really that's fucking gross an unfortunately unsurprising God is going to judge humanity harshly an will be justified in all punishment an humbling of us.

  • @lukepapapetrou1234
    @lukepapapetrou1234 Рік тому +8

    It's almost as if a country that glorifies working to exhaustion coupled with terrible economic conditions would push people to abuse drugs that boost productivity. Crazy I know.
    And there's no way the pharma industry didn't know about the negative effects post WW2. Greed, exploitation and extreme poverty created this crisis, not the drug itself. Evidenced by the fact you mentioned that after the crackdown on meth, a lot of people switched to other substances.

    • @Trump2024asw
      @Trump2024asw Рік тому +2

      Dude I didn't become addicted to opioid drug's to make work easier but I stayed addicted to make work an general life easier. Unfortunately opioids speed me up so my life going to shit slowly was the only down side. Thank God I quit but still the trap of I don't do this to get high I do it to get by work attitude is a hard one to escape because to your loved ones an employer your behavior goes to shit after sobering up. 30 days in jail sobering up helped me but do not recommend.

    • @thepopeofkeke
      @thepopeofkeke Рік тому

      why adderall is illegal there tho

    • @CordeliaAurora
      @CordeliaAurora Рік тому +1

      So the answer is to give it to kids of young age?
      Seems like that's the American way right now.
      Suddenly everyone has ADHD and diagnosis is as easy as ticking a few boxes on a piece of paper in the psychiatrist's office.
      So that means it's good right?
      Level the playing field?..
      No, of course not.
      Like you mentioned, we need to solve the root cause and not treat symptoms with brain harming drugs.

  • @jeffbrinkerhoff5121
    @jeffbrinkerhoff5121 Рік тому +2

    Another well produced highly informative video...excellent channel.

  • @abraxasjinx5207
    @abraxasjinx5207 Рік тому +44

    I remember when real ephedrine pills were sold OTC at gas stations. I used to use them for asthma when I didn't have an Albuterol inhaler during my childhood in the 90s.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Рік тому +6

      You can always get ephedra/Mormon Tea from anyplace that sells herbs, I think there are "bulk" herb sellers online.

    • @glass1258
      @glass1258 Рік тому +1

      Same here

    • @emberframe6994
      @emberframe6994 Рік тому +1

      Wait thats a meth, i thought it was jsut for the making your breathe easier

    • @glass1258
      @glass1258 Рік тому

      @@emberframe6994 it’s a precursor to meth

    • @abraxasjinx5207
      @abraxasjinx5207 Рік тому

      @@emberframe6994 it is the original precursor to meth, though chemists and cooks have found new recipes since ephedrine has become more regulated. Plain ephedra is just a bronchodilator.

  • @SF-fb6lv
    @SF-fb6lv 8 місяців тому

    Really good content as usual; nice to see you branch out to other subjects too. When it comes to semiconductor news you are the BEST!

  • @animalhouse8849
    @animalhouse8849 Рік тому +7

    Explains a lot about the harsh sentences laid out for drug crimes in modern Japan.

  • @Superknullisch
    @Superknullisch Рік тому +1

    Triple five K subs!!! Huge Congrats!

  • @cpcreit
    @cpcreit Рік тому +34

    Just like currently mideast wars, drugs play a part. Captagon is the preferred drug for the fighters there...(I bet Ukraine is similar, no sane person can perform under such brutal conditions...). I once read Nanjing Massacre's Japanese soldiers' acc, claiming they were seeing demons/hellish creatures attacking them and they just went crazy during that horrific battle...now we can speculate the soldiers were fed a cocktail of drugs to enhance their fighting but instead, took away all humanity during the process...

    • @av_oid
      @av_oid Рік тому +9

      Drugs or no drugs, way too many of the Japanese leaders who played a part the atrocities of the Chinese invasion, Korean occupation and WW2 got a way without adequate punishment.

    • @inuhundchien6041
      @inuhundchien6041 Рік тому

      @av_oid let's be real, no leaders or rich people get their punishment when others of their own social class that give out punishment. Why? Because they are all in the same club, so they give each other leeway.
      Compared to when the people outside their class give out punishment, for example the French Revolution or Chinese revolution. They all get beheaded.

    • @OortCloudObject
      @OortCloudObject Рік тому +5

      For reals. Only Learned about Shiro Ishii and Unit 731 recently; they got away with a barely a slap on the wrist compared to those tried in Nuremberg, and their atrocities swept under a rug. Hello Future Me has an excellent (although horrifying) documentary on the subject.

    • @dinte215
      @dinte215 Рік тому

      ​@@OortCloudObjectthe Nuremberg trial where only Hitler and Goebells where blamed for everything, a few prison guards where given 10 years in jail. Former commanders where given new advisory roles in new gov, scientists responsible for many atrocities given lucrative salaries in US, UK and SU.
      Sorry the nuremberg trials where literally taking shit and rubbing it on the faces of those who fought in the war.
      Imagine fighting against someone in the war and a few months after it ends they are your boss in a new covert department. That's what happened to many US soldiers, yesterday they fought them and today they were given military orders to become their guinea pigs in labs and test fields.

    • @seanrowshandel1680
      @seanrowshandel1680 Рік тому +1

      The thing about the video which is fishy is that it's much more likely for methamphetamine (which occurs in nature more commonly than amphetamine) not to have been synthesized "by some German guy first, in the 1800s" (especially since Ephedra, which is famous among even Mormons, has been around for such a long time). Amphetamine is just a "purer and better version" of the compound than methamphetamine (it takes more steps to make it, and it's harder to have come up with a way to make it). I'm sure that the non-Islamic alchemists had already explored this frontier long ago (and nowadays we say that they acted in vain and merely wanted to make gold, in order to prevent the Muslims from finding out what they really discovered). Strangely, we don't even know whether it's safe for a patient to take a racemic (or, famously, 75:25) formulation of amphetamine. I'm not even a chemist, it's just obvious. There's research which supports this "hierarchy of amphetamines" with methamphetamine at the bottom: there's a learning/neuroplasticity protein the production of which is induced by amphetamine but suppressed by methamphetamine. Oddly enough, it results in the opening of a calcium channel which initiates apoptosis if signaling is strong enough (if I'm not mistaken). In other words, methamphetamine is more neuroprotective than amphetamine, and it's more lipophilic and probably reaches more areas of the brain and more blood vessels within the brain. There's a lot of nonsense research nowadays because we JUST REALIZED THAT WE failed to prevent the Muslims from finding out what we were doing for the past 65 years (after they dismantled the USSR and suddenly created a generation of "interracial" children). Just look at methylphenidate: they said it was a reuptake inhibitor, and now they're saying it was a releaser the whole time (this was done in order to prevent leaks of useful information, and to prevent any "homesteading" on their part). Sure, it was "chill" to take it easy on the "adult beverages" and begin to take amphetamines every day, just to prove to the younger generations that we do, indeed, exist. However, it certainly didn't "make a dent in Islam's tank" when we "threw that rock [of amphetamine into our stomach every morning]". And the worst part is the way that it changed the way that calcium was "trafficked, stored, sequestered, etc" in our brains.
      These dopaminergics can't help productivity like many people say that they do, unless someone has been abducted: they increase the productivity of people who have been abducted, but they don't really make normal people WORK. Every time someone from a big criminal family does something which he can't explain (and then he needs to run from the detectives and cops, and thinks he has a limited amount of time before they catch him and then he goes to prison FOREVER), he runs off and makes a batch of methamphetamine or LSD to fund his retreat/escape/relaxation/sanity. That's why it's illegal to make it: because these aren't necessarily BAD/Muslim families (they actually believe in parenting, and when they reproduce, they DO parenting, and participate in the community, and the children see them as ADULTS, and any responsibilities which come along with being "ADULTS", well... THEY FULFULL ALL OF THOSE RESPONSIBILITIES because they're not developmentally retarded)
      Japan, like America, is scary because they aren't concerned with hiding How Much They "Culturally" Respect Their Elders, and any 35-year old with the mind of a 5-year-old can get younger people to all bow to him when they greet him ("because it's part of their culture"), and they are "groomed" to accept such an invalid as their gang-leader. It's like being a Muslim, except Less Safe. No wonder they like stimulants.. to be honest, that's All They Ever Had. I hope people like me can open their hearts to care about Japan/America/Greenland/England (because it's obvious that nobody has ever done it before).

  • @jaredkennedy6576
    @jaredkennedy6576 Рік тому +42

    I had no idea that this stuff was that old. Previously i had only seen references to German use in WWII, but this really helps open up some experimentation a character in one of my books can use. (Historical fiction horror)

    • @rustams7502
      @rustams7502 Рік тому +2

      Sounds interesting

    • @tomhalla426
      @tomhalla426 Рік тому +8

      The US also used amphetamines during WWII.

    • @Charles-Darwin
      @Charles-Darwin Рік тому +2

      and the Beatles

    • @wholesomebaker5410
      @wholesomebaker5410 Рік тому

      Every major country during WW2 was using some sort of drugs for soldiers and every had drug problems after.
      Only Russians didn't but only because they were giving soldiers high amount of heavy alcohol, which actually was worst than these drugs, looking how reckless and aggressive their army was on occupied and "liberated" lands.
      To this day western armies are using rebranded drugs like provigil that makes soilders "On high alert for 80h" and other addictive pills, destroying young minds and bodies...

    • @texxstalker
      @texxstalker Рік тому +3

      And millions of children with add/adhd, and university students all around the world (nowadays)

  • @melody3741
    @melody3741 Рік тому +24

    The hallucinations are a direct result of the lack of sleep, not of the drug itself

  • @konst80hum
    @konst80hum Рік тому +2

    Great coverage on a very interesting subject. Please keep it up!

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      it really wasnt great covrage please look into this subject on your own time, everything from the history to the chemistry was inaccurate or misleading at best

  • @custos3249
    @custos3249 Рік тому +26

    A video about meth yet the most disgusting detail is a culture that views office work in terms of morality.

    • @skylinefever
      @skylinefever Рік тому +4

      It's interesting to see how a work ethic might not be so ethical.

  • @monarsinghhijam5685
    @monarsinghhijam5685 Рік тому

    Oh I'm glad to see someone made a video of it !

  • @regularJJ
    @regularJJ Рік тому +3

    The Germans and the Americans also used amphetamines during WW2. My grandpa was a pilot in the pacific theatre, they called them Bennys. They would fly for 8+ hours a day in their P51's and their bodies would be so ravaged afterwards they needed a crew to remove their stiffened bodies from the plane, remove the flight suit for them and loosen their muscles up with hot water etc.
    Also worth mentioning he held the record for the longest combat flight for sometime, at almost 11 hours or something (definitely taking the bennys lol). Him and a few other pilots spent most of the flight trying to find a downed airman, and never found him.

  • @BrewsterMcBrewster
    @BrewsterMcBrewster 8 місяців тому +1

    At 2:25 in your audio you SAY the word "Norephedrine" but your closed captions spell out "Norepinephrine"; two different medical words that probably should not be mixed up. (I'm not a doctor or pharmacist, just a little anal about spelling and word usage)

  • @DavidAlsh
    @DavidAlsh Рік тому +29

    That's very interesting. I can certainly comprehend the support for prohibition when framed in the context of such a horrific scenario - particularly if, as a citizen at the time, you observed a meaningful reduction in drug related crime as a result of the efforts of prohibition.
    What's fascinating to me is how the situation has evolved over time. Perhaps at the time of enacting prohibition, they thought that prohibition would be a short burst of expense that would squash drug use and then require minimal maintenance after that.
    In reality, what set in was a long campaign of prohibition that costs an unimaginable amount of money to maintain, has a marginal effect on drug use, ironically increases the damage to society, while also serving as the primary income for organised crime around the world.
    Current recommendations by the WHO are to regulate all drugs (legalise them, prohibition means they are unregulated), restrict their sale and provide harm reduction mechanisms like doctor consultation/supervision, quality control and public education campaigns.
    However due to this long horrific history, fear is a more powerful motivator than reducing cost, saving lives or defeating organised crime.

    • @JamEngulfer
      @JamEngulfer Рік тому +9

      Interesting to see how they went from acknowledging that there was a problem with having so many addicts to sudden crackdown. Not surprising at all that it created a booming yakuza business. Those addicts don’t just pack up and go home when you make their drug illegal.

    • @duncanluciak5516
      @duncanluciak5516 Рік тому

      Drug Warrios are like Hiroo Onoda.
      They need to be told it's a health care issue and retire.

    • @TEDodd
      @TEDodd Рік тому

      Fear and racism have been used against many drugs. Opium and marijuana are 2 others.

    • @ferguson8143
      @ferguson8143 Рік тому +1

      And wouldn't of had Nascar or Ricky Bobby

  • @deadby15
    @deadby15 9 місяців тому +1

    Given the fact 80% of the Yakuza organizations hail from either Korean/Burakumin communities, while prolly exaggerated, the Japanese police' linking the Korean underground organizations to the issue was not entirely wrong, in all fairness. I am not sure about the communisit plot part, but it feels quite possible. During the Cold war, lots of sinister things were done by both parties.

  • @angelvillamor4838
    @angelvillamor4838 Рік тому +6

    Hopefully this history provides ideas for the similar issue in today's United States of America. The numbers of people caught up in this terrible situation of meth abuse are probably higher than I think it is.
    The drug induced psychosis inflicted on people is sad and disturbing. Hopefully the country can learn something from this Japanese history. As well as what has worked in Europe with Portugal's recent developments in the last two decades, or so with their substance abuse. Thanks for this interesting video. Congrats on the work.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      the iran contra scandal happened at the same time as this japanies "meth epidemic", talking about this in such a narrow view avoids the very real probability that it was the same shit different state, exponentially so when there were americans in japan specifically to "deal" with this "issue"

    • @EriniusT
      @EriniusT Рік тому +3

      @@AnthemUnanthemed No it didn't, they happened decades apart

  • @PharadayCage
    @PharadayCage 10 місяців тому +1

    I think it’s more accurate to describe dopamine as a “motivating” neurotransmitter than a “pleasure” neurotransmitter

  • @cc-dtv
    @cc-dtv Рік тому +45

    Methamphetamine is pretty much the only drug problem Japan has had, if you do not count the massive amount of deaths from tobacco and alcohol, and it's very understandable why. It's hard to work for 12 hours or whatever is considered acceptable in many Southeast Asian cultures

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Рік тому

      correlation = causation comment. sorry, did work cause it or the baaned stiff did

    • @isaiahc1576
      @isaiahc1576 Рік тому +4

      2b2t avi so clearly youre 13 years old or just cooked. the video explains the marketing behind the amphetamines at 4:55 @@menjolno

    • @thefunniestfella9366
      @thefunniestfella9366 Рік тому +2

      South east?

    • @seanrowshandel1680
      @seanrowshandel1680 Рік тому +2

      The thing about the video which is fishy is that it's much more likely for methamphetamine (which occurs in nature more commonly than amphetamine) not to have been synthesized "by some German guy first, in the 1800s" (especially since Ephedra, which is famous among even Mormons, has been around for such a long time). Amphetamine is just a "purer and better version" of the compound than methamphetamine (it takes more steps to make it, and it's harder to have come up with a way to make it). I'm sure that the non-Islamic alchemists had already explored this frontier long ago (and nowadays we say that they acted in vain and merely wanted to make gold, in order to prevent the Muslims from finding out what they really discovered). Strangely, we don't even know whether it's safe for a patient to take a racemic (or, famously, 75:25) formulation of amphetamine. I'm not even a chemist, it's just obvious. There's research which supports this "hierarchy of amphetamines" with methamphetamine at the bottom: there's a learning/neuroplasticity protein the production of which is induced by amphetamine but suppressed by methamphetamine. Oddly enough, it results in the opening of a calcium channel which initiates apoptosis if signaling is strong enough (if I'm not mistaken). In other words, methamphetamine is more neuroprotective than amphetamine, and it's more lipophilic and probably reaches more areas of the brain and more blood vessels within the brain. There's a lot of nonsense research nowadays because we JUST REALIZED THAT WE failed to prevent the Muslims from finding out what we were doing for the past 65 years (after they dismantled the USSR and suddenly created a generation of "interracial" children). Just look at methylphenidate: they said it was a reuptake inhibitor, and now they're saying it was a releaser the whole time (this was done in order to prevent leaks of useful information, and to prevent any "homesteading" on their part). Sure, it was "chill" to take it easy on the "adult beverages" and begin to take amphetamines every day, just to prove to the younger generations that we do, indeed, exist. However, it certainly didn't "make a dent in Islam's tank" when we "threw that rock [of amphetamine into our stomach every morning]". And the worst part is the way that it changed the way that calcium was "trafficked, stored, sequestered, etc" in our brains.
      These dopaminergics can't help productivity like many people say that they do, unless someone has been abducted: they increase the productivity of people who have been abducted, but they don't really make normal people WORK. Every time someone from a big criminal family does something which he can't explain (and then he needs to run from the detectives and cops, and thinks he has a limited amount of time before they catch him and then he goes to prison FOREVER), he runs off and makes a batch of methamphetamine or LSD to fund his retreat/escape/relaxation/sanity. That's why it's illegal to make it: because these aren't necessarily BAD/Muslim families (they actually believe in parenting, and when they reproduce, they DO parenting, and participate in the community, and the children see them as ADULTS, and any responsibilities which come along with being "ADULTS", well... THEY FULFULL ALL OF THOSE RESPONSIBILITIES because they're not developmentally retarded)
      Japan, like America, is scary because they aren't concerned with hiding How Much They "Culturally" Respect Their Elders, and any 35-year old with the mind of a 5-year-old can get younger people to all bow to him when they greet him ("because it's part of their culture"), and they are "groomed" to accept such an invalid as their gang-leader. It's like being a Muslim, except Less Safe. No wonder they like stimulants.. to be honest, that's All They Ever Had. I hope people like me can open their hearts to care about Japan/America/Greenland/England (because it's obvious that nobody has ever done it before).

    • @custos3249
      @custos3249 Рік тому +5

      They still have a huge drug problem, the most common type actually. For instance, you risk arrest if you travel there and have the gall to bring your ADHD medication.

  • @Fee.1
    @Fee.1 Рік тому +2

    Addiction Medicine Specialist here, are you open to receiving some info ? Great video btw, just some nuances that any video on addiction should include

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Рік тому +10

    Who would had thought such a simple phenethylamine would have such effects.

    • @pissass.8675
      @pissass.8675 10 місяців тому

      Not just meth, there's a whole world of substituted phenethylamines for you to explore :)

  • @ReallyTinyShoes
    @ReallyTinyShoes Рік тому +2

    Excellent video and a very interesting subject, thanks

  • @armandoventura9043
    @armandoventura9043 Рік тому +8

    It is interesting to see the difference between the differences between the drug pandemics between Japan and the United States: In the United States, the epidemic began due to the constant search to mitigate or extinguish people's pain, while in Japan they were used more due to issues of oversaturation and overwork

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому +7

      Idk about u, but to me that is the same thing just a much more narrowed focus

    • @seasonedbeefs
      @seasonedbeefs Рік тому +4

      Zero difference

  • @Christopher-iu6kq
    @Christopher-iu6kq Рік тому +1

    Well done. Very informative. Thank you.

  • @RabbitEarsCh
    @RabbitEarsCh Рік тому +5

    I was wondering why even today you cannot travel to Japan with most ADHD medication, and it's the remnants of this 1951 law still enforced today.
    They never forget. Same with how few trash cans exist even 30 years after the sarin gas attacks.

    • @AJWRAJWR
      @AJWRAJWR Рік тому +3

      That doesn't explain why they use nuclear power stations despite getting nuked.

  • @stevengill1736
    @stevengill1736 Рік тому +16

    At 2:27 you were naming neurotransmitters affected by methamphetamine - the one you called norephedrine is actually norepinephrine (noradrenaline). Sounds close, I know.... Norephedrine is related to ephedrine, and was used as a nasal decongestant, but it's pretty much been taken off the market....still too stimulating.... ;*[}
    I wonder if future generations will compare past meth epidemics to the one the US is in today - we're awash in the stuff, perhaps for similar reasons that Japan suffered.

  • @human_shaped
    @human_shaped Рік тому +1

    What's your source for the use of the term "shabu"? It is not "speed" in Japanese. The term is primarily used in the Philippines and also to some extent in Thailand and Indonesia, but that dates from later than you're suggesting. Do you have a source reference for this? It would be interesting etymologically if you do because the history of the word is very murky.

    • @jackiejiaqiyu7294
      @jackiejiaqiyu7294 Рік тому +1

      I’ve seen numerous Japanese TV shows about gangs and drugs and they used the term shabu often. It usually refers to the action/state of taking drugs, usually meth

    • @human_shaped
      @human_shaped Рік тому +1

      @@jackiejiaqiyu7294 Yes, but I wonder if that's just modern usage that was brought back from the Philippines where it perhaps originated from.

  • @DirkusTurkess
    @DirkusTurkess Рік тому +11

    "Jesse-san, we need to cook." - Heisenbergu

  • @ch0wned
    @ch0wned Рік тому +1

    Very well researched!

  • @fool7491
    @fool7491 Рік тому +5

    On UA-cam, there are two channels called Densho and Go for Broke Center that recorded life's of Japanese American.

  • @AV24798
    @AV24798 Рік тому +2

    At 2:25 it must have meant norepinephrine, or basically adrenaline. In the video it says noraphedrine which doesn’t exist afaik

  • @MrLemonbaby
    @MrLemonbaby Рік тому +3

    Very good work. As is often the case I'll start one of your vids on a subject I'm not particularly interested but then watch the whole with interest.

  • @bigkat_tv
    @bigkat_tv Рік тому +3

    so what im getting from this, is that Today many japanese struggle to keep up with standards created by meth fueled politics and conglomerates

  • @FatGuyTries
    @FatGuyTries Рік тому +1

    5:45 wow homeboy on the far left was so geeked and tweaked he appears to be in two places at once in his picture.

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 Рік тому +21

    Solid content. Controversial topic, done well.
    Government created the problem, pinned the blame on everyone else but themselves.

    • @ebx100
      @ebx100 Рік тому +2

      I've never heard of that kind of behavior in any other country!

  • @robertthompson5501
    @robertthompson5501 6 місяців тому +1

    I took "White Crosses" while studying for my high school Physics final. I read the whole text in one night! I scored highest of all seniors. The physics teacher remarked " there was something wrong with the test". Unfortunately college use of " white crosseses" did not result in my studies and quit college and joined the Navy. When I returned to college I applied myself and graduated with honors. There are no shortcuts, just focus and hardwork. The Japanese got it right!🏋‍♂️🏋🏻🦊

  • @eamonnprunty
    @eamonnprunty Рік тому +4

    can you do a video of your processes that you follow for research?

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      ye this is necessary bc this vid was pretty ignorant all round, bad chem, ignorant to world events as this did not occur in a vacuum an there was so many more errors, especially missing the entire feild of modern evidence based practice surrounding harm reduction and Substance use disorder

  • @TheMsksk
    @TheMsksk Рік тому +1

    Thank you for this lovely and detailed documentary

  • @testboga5991
    @testboga5991 Рік тому +3

    Crystal Meth is the same as regular meth. It just refers to crystalized forms.

  • @lakrids-pibe
    @lakrids-pibe Рік тому +1

    This was an interesting video to watch with the morning coffee

  • @smatthewson2613
    @smatthewson2613 Рік тому +7

    I was told Ma Huang literally meant "asking for trouble". This cat may have some knowledge of the field, if you want any advice for future vids on the business-south east asia being interestingly involved in all stages of development of both trade and prohibition of these products, historically. Great vid, as usual.

    • @rherydrevins
      @rherydrevins Рік тому +5

      Nah, it's a near-homophone for the word for "troublesome" (麻烦) in some Chinese languages, but it's written with different characters (麻黄).

  • @NatalieSanguis
    @NatalieSanguis Рік тому +2

    Now I understand why Japan is so strict with drugs used to treat ADHD. They’re scared if they allow them that this will happen all over again.

  • @majd_shoots
    @majd_shoots Рік тому +3

    7:03 Oh my god, Sha'bo is the street name for methamphetamines in Yemen!
    And I thought it was a completely random name to get the negative notion out, but I'm guessing not 😳

  • @ppumpkin3282
    @ppumpkin3282 Рік тому +1

    In the war the Japanese were well known for night time attacks. They would also march zombie like into machine gun fire and get mowed down in many battles. I wouldn't be surprised if their soldiers were given meth. The author mentioned that pilots were told it was for improving vision. Surprisngly the Japanese Navy had special spotters who spotted allied ship before radar spotted them. It was thought this was due to the Navy having a great way of selecting spotters with great vision.
    American aircraft carriers also were noteriously bad with night warfare. Pilots on Japanese carriers were well trained at landing at night. I don't know if this anything to do with Meth.

  • @maartenherrmann
    @maartenherrmann Рік тому +29

    Interesting video. I find it especially interesting in the context of Japan’s work environment still requiring long hours and many people still taking meth to this day. Multiple major factors at work.

    • @Dr.W.Krueger
      @Dr.W.Krueger Рік тому +1

      source: my *ss
      shut up, druggie

    • @alext3811
      @alext3811 Рік тому

      Yeah. I've heard that ADHD medications are banned in japan, that includes any Schedule 2 (US) drugs. A english teacher was arrested for having her prescriptions on her for diagnosed ADHD.

  • @Chibastud
    @Chibastud Рік тому +1

    Great video and well researched and presented. Have you done one on modern day meth issues in Japan?

  • @MCPicoli
    @MCPicoli Рік тому +4

    See, the Japanese already knew that without fighting poverty and without giving people some perspective in life, fighting drugs is hopeless... and yet so much money and lives are wasted on our "war on drugs" worldwide!

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      ye no they still demonized it and just like pretending they are the exception to the rule while letting a shit storm brew

  • @xanacotti
    @xanacotti Рік тому +2

    Fans of Japanese contemporary artist Takashi Murakami probably know of one of his provocative early pieces, HIROPON. The title seems to be at least partially referencing the specific meth product in this video "Hiropon".. gives me a new appreciation of the work (a statue)

  • @thiagoalmeida3140
    @thiagoalmeida3140 Рік тому +2

    I think there was an error on the edition. I like this channel and never had seen this type of edition. The theme is very interesting, but sadly the images do not relate to the script correctly. Please, verify.

    • @BearMeOut
      @BearMeOut Рік тому +1

      Which one, with time stamps please

    • @thiagoalmeida3140
      @thiagoalmeida3140 Рік тому +1

      @@BearMeOut It's hard to say. The thing is that the slides stay a very long time on the screen, when the narrator has aready stopped to talk about the subject. Compared to the other videos of the channel, it seems that the slides are running much slower than the narration. But, maybe it's only my impression.

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Рік тому

      m8 a lot of the information in this episode is just a flat out lie, meth is synthetic not natural, the chemistry was entirely misunderstood and huge historical contexts were just left out, like when japan was targeting koreans with the help of the americans, and the americans were running the iran contra shit

  • @partickaljamested5146
    @partickaljamested5146 Рік тому

    very interesting and well put together.

  •  Рік тому +3

    Oh, that's probably why Japan is so strict about ADHD medication to this day.

  • @GiantGroundSlothAvo
    @GiantGroundSlothAvo Рік тому +1

    Thanks for creating this. I hope you continue to create

  • @the-quintessenz
    @the-quintessenz Рік тому +14

    Well, that explains Yoko Ono.

  • @Whomobile
    @Whomobile Рік тому +1

    I like how you had to clarify the bottle was empty

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и Рік тому +3

    Alright I finally watched it

  • @thorbrandal1870
    @thorbrandal1870 Рік тому +1

    Please add one more request to your Japanese Nisei video that you may be thinking about in the future. I'm sure I speak for many when I say I would enjoy hearing your point of view and research on this subject. Thank you in advance.

  • @hugod2000
    @hugod2000 Рік тому +3

    Fascinating video. Superb research.

  • @massivereader
    @massivereader Рік тому +2

    All the services of all major combatants in WWII depended on amphetamines and methampetamine for soldiers on watch, in active combat, and on extended missions. The increase of paranoia and aggression resulting from prolonged use was considered a plus at the time, not a dangerous side effect. It's only after the war was essentially won that the allies stopped widely issuing the drugs to combat troops, although i beleive they were still in approved use by the Air Force for extended missions during the Cold War througout Korea and up until Vietnam.

    • @michaelfuseau5391
      @michaelfuseau5391 Рік тому

      usaf & other branches have recently used provigil, a non-geeky stimulant, to combat fatigue. not sure if it's still around