The Fukushima Nuclear Disaster - Epidemic of Ghosts

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июл 2021
  • On 11 March 2011, Japan's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant experienced the worst disaster since Chernobyl. And its people...went through an epidemic of ghosts.
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Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @kylehill
    @kylehill  2 года назад +8363

    Thanks for watching, and for all the feedback. I’m really proud of this series.

    • @RealGearJammer
      @RealGearJammer 2 года назад +83

      We love the series Kyle! Keep doing these! 😎👍🏻

    • @phillip6083
      @phillip6083 2 года назад +30

      Love your work dude-bro.

    • @allamasadi7970
      @allamasadi7970 2 года назад +16

      Love this series

    • @Talia_Arts
      @Talia_Arts 2 года назад +8

      Keep up the great work!

    • @emilyr7353
      @emilyr7353 2 года назад +21

      As you should be. These are incredibly well done. Great work!

  • @theclearskyhermit6417
    @theclearskyhermit6417 2 года назад +7455

    i've heard that cab drivers who pick up ghosts still drive them to the destination even after theyve visually vanished, open the door for them to let them out, and continue on. japanese tales of spirits and their culture of respect never ceases to break my heart.

    • @AlxndrHQ
      @AlxndrHQ 2 года назад +127

      I wonder if there’s a way to set the spirit free

    • @Onii_Chan184
      @Onii_Chan184 2 года назад +376

      @@AlxndrHQ there is, the Cab driver did it.

    • @AlxndrHQ
      @AlxndrHQ 2 года назад +55

      @@Onii_Chan184 ah okay, makes sense

    • @EnormousPurpleGarden
      @EnormousPurpleGarden 2 года назад +484

      I remember reading the article about the taxi driver when it was first published. He went on to say that after his initial fear, his reaction shifted to sadness, and he said that he would gladly pick up another ghost passenger again.

    • @joltz..2042
      @joltz..2042 2 года назад +50

      .... The only thing I have to say.. and this isn't to insult anyone.. is...
      " Whhhuat thea fffucke "

  • @christianpastrano6247
    @christianpastrano6247 2 года назад +27710

    You forgot to mention the elderly people who enlisted to clean up the mess. 😢 They were willing to sacrifice themselves so young people didn't get exposed to radiation. Some true heroes.

    • @dojomojomofo
      @dojomojomofo 2 года назад +1567

      Yes, that was truly excellent of them. While if they wore good dust masks they could probably live the rest of their natural lives well, I imagine many didn't even know that. Without good masks, hopefully any cancer risk would be kicked far enough out to be negligible for them, but for younger folks, it may have well caught up to them in time.
      If it's any consolation, scientists studying Chernobyl are generally if not always just fine, because they take care not to take radioactive material into their bodies. The radiation exposure alone is liveable.

    • @downwithtrudeau
      @downwithtrudeau 2 года назад +174

      @@dojomojomofo in shorter terms all they needed is surgical masks..

    • @Remon_
      @Remon_ 2 года назад +820

      @@downwithtrudeau actually surgical masks are a horrendously bad idea for that, they arent air thight, they will let particles into your mouth and nose. Trust me, you dont need to wear even n95, which is better, for long doing something like grinding down stone to realize you're coughing pebbles.

    • @gabriellang7998
      @gabriellang7998 2 года назад +154

      @@Remon_ Any mask if not fitted well will not serve you well. There are ways to test the fit, ask your local hospital doctors if they know, or google.

    • @Remon_
      @Remon_ 2 года назад +312

      @@gabriellang7998 but you see it's practically impossible to get an airtight seal on a mask like that, for most cases it mitigates the risk enough, but you cant guarantee it will be airtight. There's a good reason why gasmasks and half face respirators exist, not only for handling chemical stuff so ABEK filters,talking about refular P3 filters

  • @CatsT.M
    @CatsT.M Год назад +1754

    There was one town who spared from the tsunami with only a single death, Fudai, Iwate. It was all because of one of the previous mayor, Kotoku Wamura's, decision to have an Extremely controversial floodgate built. It was because of him knowing how much death and distruction a tsunami could cause that he managed to save his town years after his death.

    • @thereisapricetoeverything4377
      @thereisapricetoeverything4377 10 месяцев назад +80

      This is amazing thank you for sharing it and God bless him for doing right by the community he loved

    • @toasterhavingabath6980
      @toasterhavingabath6980 9 месяцев назад +30

      i wanna see pictures of the town but its all the damn floodgate

    • @LethalJizzle
      @LethalJizzle 9 месяцев назад +14

      Wow, I had never heard of this and just looked it up. Thanks so much.

    • @LuminescentMonk
      @LuminescentMonk 9 месяцев назад +182

      Yea he was voted out of office and hated until the tsunami hit, which by then he'd passed away. Now there's a shrine for him. He'd read of a much earlier tsunami (early 1900s) of unprecedented size so he prepared to defend against that level, which caused animosity since every other city prepared for the more common ones. Those cities were destroyed, but not his

    • @KaileyB616
      @KaileyB616 7 месяцев назад +11

      That's amazing, thank you for sharing!

  • @margaretzoheir4468
    @margaretzoheir4468 Год назад +3223

    That poor man who doesn't like the rain because he sees the faces of the dead in the puddles is so chilling. It shows the trauma all survivors suffered and will suffer for the rest of their lives. The world has moved on but those survivors will always have the events of that day imprinted on their minds for the rest of their lives. God bless them all. 🙏

    • @stevethea5250
      @stevethea5250 Год назад +17

      Truly haunting

    • @hddun
      @hddun Год назад +51

      Good points. My wife died of cancer 2 years ago. We have a large home and at times while I don't see her, I am convinced she is here. It is weird as shadows bounce off walls, and the air seems to change at times for no reason...I miss her greatly...

    • @profoundlyill
      @profoundlyill 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@hddunI’m so sorry for your loss. I hope you have so many good memories with her, that at times you are able to look past the loss of her, and into those memories.
      I wish you the best ❤

    • @doggydude2668
      @doggydude2668 6 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@hddunim sorry for your wife man. God bless the two of you really.

    • @user-yy8cs6bv1u
      @user-yy8cs6bv1u 5 месяцев назад +2

      Bruh it's like 12 o clock, I'm going to have nightmares because of this.

  • @acidstrawberries7667
    @acidstrawberries7667 2 года назад +8528

    “Ghosts are more tolerable than the void created by death” *damn*

  • @Joseph-mw2rl
    @Joseph-mw2rl 2 года назад +3712

    Imagine being the enginner who built this place, you literally did everything you can, designed so many safety protocal, and nature throws a 50ft wave at your power plant

    • @NobodyUR
      @NobodyUR 2 года назад +185

      I can tell you first hand design engineers make some real common Sense blunders. It may pass code but in practice doesn't work. Not saying that was the case here

    • @NobodyUR
      @NobodyUR 2 года назад +51

      To put it in perspective they built the second stack by Me on a fault line and never used the second stack because of it and now the original is well passed it's decommission date. The only reason why it's still operating is they passed a levy to keep it going even though it is no longer generating any profit after expenses

    • @stephenm103
      @stephenm103 2 года назад +244

      Imagine making the decision to build a nuclear reactor.. next to the ocean shore, at near sea level elevation in an active earthquake zone…. Who could possibly have anticipated trouble??

    • @ambiguousduck2333
      @ambiguousduck2333 2 года назад +233

      ​@@stephenm103 Yes but also no. They anticipated trouble, they anticipated a huge amount of trouble. They simply didn't anticipate enough to match reality.

    • @LordOceanus
      @LordOceanus 2 года назад +87

      Fukushima Daiichi was well designed with the exception of the location of the diesel backup pumps. Unit 6's diesel pump was air cooled and above ground instead of water cooled in the building basement and as such survived and managed to provide cooling to unit 5 as well.

  • @Lassoloc
    @Lassoloc 5 месяцев назад +360

    "Ghosts are more tolerable than the void created by death" is such a powerful line

    • @quinnholloway5400
      @quinnholloway5400 2 месяца назад +4

      Religious or Not
      It really is
      (Note, not trying to start a conversation about beliefs and such, I am just saying the line hits hard regardless of if your spiritual or not)

  • @hedmeddig
    @hedmeddig Год назад +462

    I remember the cab driver story's end, he completed the trip as a sign of respect, and even opened the door for her to get out when he got to the area, in order to be sure to please the ghost.

    • @deniseyeaisaidit
      @deniseyeaisaidit 5 месяцев назад +14

      Wow. Thanks for sharing..

    • @jules-xy1cg
      @jules-xy1cg 4 месяца назад +8

      this is sweet. thank you for sharing

    • @abadhaiku
      @abadhaiku 3 месяца назад +6

      And then there are the New Orleans taxi drivers who never pick up anyone from some parts of town after midnight because they'll vanish and stiff them on their fare 😂

  • @arklados3596
    @arklados3596 2 года назад +6495

    The most powerful story from this disaster has got to be the legion of retirees and elderly who volunteered to do cleanup because they didn’t want youngsters to suffer the long term effects of radiation exposure.

    • @gladitsnotme
      @gladitsnotme 2 года назад +37

      But I thought none of them died?

    • @arklados3596
      @arklados3596 2 года назад +677

      That didn’t stop the old people from volunteering because right after the disaster no one really knew how bad the danger was so they went in just to be safe. After they did extensive testing they realized that the radiation was relatively minimal and they began proper cleanup.

    • @My_initials_are_O.G.cuz_I_am
      @My_initials_are_O.G.cuz_I_am 2 года назад +354

      @@gladitsnotme
      Well, the reason was that the harmful effects of the kind of exposure they were expecting,(larger doses than what ended up happening) take many years to develop, and the elderly are very unlikely to live long enough for that to happen, as they would pass away from old age, regardless.

    • @Zack-fu4lo
      @Zack-fu4lo 2 года назад +44

      @@My_initials_are_O.G.cuz_I_am thats just sad

    • @O_Ciel_Phant0mhive
      @O_Ciel_Phant0mhive 2 года назад +81

      heros...heart breaking

  • @jttcosmos
    @jttcosmos 2 года назад +2021

    With regards to TEPCO and trying to sit it out: the prime minister at the time (Naoto Kan) drove to their head-office (unannounced), walked in, and proceeded to shout at the representatives in frustration over their lack of action. Pretty much unheard of in Japan, but at least it got them to slowly start doing something.

    • @scalpingsnake
      @scalpingsnake 2 года назад +213

      It's just insane to think they got payed for this disaster after ignoring all the warnings. I doubt it's ideal for them but it just feels like the 'bad guys' won

    • @noesunyoutuber7680
      @noesunyoutuber7680 2 года назад +288

      Can that be a thing that world leaders do now? Can the President of the United State's job description now include "telling companies to stop fucking around to their faces?" That's badass.

    • @justsomeguy6336
      @justsomeguy6336 2 года назад +26

      Should’ve hanged all the executives publicly.

    • @probablythedm1669
      @probablythedm1669 2 года назад +163

      @@scalpingsnake it's more like they got partially bought, because they failed so hard the government had to take over to ensure Tokyo still had power (which is exactly the kind of thing a government is for).
      Punishment for their failures is for the courts to sort out, as there is likely to be a lot of people over several years making the wrong choice, maybe not all for bad reasons at the time. Hence why we have courts and hearings, because emotional driven punishments are just lynchings and most people don't want witch burnings, they want justice.
      Justice takes time, because guilt must be proven before a punishment can be decided. And you don't want to miss any guilty or punish the innocent.

    • @danstrikker6465
      @danstrikker6465 2 года назад +45

      @@noesunyoutuber7680 everyday people need to do this with both the government and companies

  • @debadityanath5558
    @debadityanath5558 Год назад +761

    The last minute story not only gave me chills, but broke my heart into pieces... I'm so deeply sorry for everyone who's lives changed by the unforseen disaster😭

    • @gupadre8255
      @gupadre8255 Год назад +1

      That emoji use is highly disrespectful

    • @artifalse
      @artifalse Год назад +63

      @@gupadre8255 diagnosis: terminally online

    • @skoovee
      @skoovee Год назад +9

      @@gupadre8255 how lmao, are you ok??

    • @gupadre8255
      @gupadre8255 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@skoovee no. But at least I ain't living in a 3 St the best. Okaym?

    • @skoovee
      @skoovee 11 месяцев назад +18

      @@gupadre8255 Coherent sentences please

  • @aaarrrggghhhh
    @aaarrrggghhhh Год назад +516

    I was in Chiba, Japan when this happened, I was trapped on a train for an hour and then had a 3 hour walk home as all the trains stopped. My wife had a seven hour walk home from Tokyo. As she left her work building she saw huge pieces of concrete that had fallen off the building. Luckily not hitting anyone. I remember the train screeching to a halt then rocking so violently I thought it would roll over. The lamp posts I could see on the street outside were vibrating very quickly. We all then got off the front of the train and had to walk along the tracks to the nearest station ahead. It had severe damage to the signs, roof, a lift had fallen through the shaft and water was pouring out of walls and pipes. I then went down on to the street and it was eerie, no electricity, cars bumper to bumper and not moving, buses packed like sardine tins and women buying pairs of trainers to walk home in from the few shoe shops that were still open and discarding their high heels. People were on the street with hard hats on. I got home to my 9th floor flat and the place looked like it had been in a washing machine. All night long there were aftershocks and the building was swaying. No sleep that night. The next morning I stood on the balcony as an aftershock hit, it was like a roller coaster and a few hundred metres away a neighbours old wooden house burst into flames. They must have been cooking breakfast and spilt oil or a gas pipe burst. What made things worse was a law that said a national disaster couldn't be announced until all parliamentary members were present in the diet building and agreed to it. This slowed things down somewhat as politicians had to travel to Tokyo to declare this and travel was severely restricted. However, they did manage to sneak in a law overnight that made the radiation level in a nuclear reactor the same legal level on the street anywhere in Japan. Then they could say everything was safe and therewas nothing to worry about. Radiation was found all over the country, in grass, in cows milk and in human breast milk. People who had money quickly fled to Okinawa. The French Government laid on planes for it's citizens to get out. The UK government advised it's citizens to get out then did absolutely nothing to help them. There are stories of how calmly people reacted but believe me it wasn't like that. I remember standing in a queue outside a supermarket to buy a bag of rice and as the doors opened at 10am, people just rushed in and grabbed what they could. A free for all. Supermarket shelves were empty and opened only for a few hours each day. They put limits such as one bag of rice and one loaf of bread per person but people got round that by having families spilt up and target different supermarkets. They had to ban shellfish for a time and tuna in America was found to have radiation in it as it is a fish that travels back and forth across the Pacific. Then other fish that feed on tuna were found to have radiation in them. The terrible thing was that not one prefecture in Japan agreed to take the waste from Fukushima for recycling or disposal. It had to shipped out of Japan to developing countries who agreed to take it. People were homeless for years and lived in school sports halls. The Government really failed people and still are. I did a radio interview with a station in the UK explaining how the immigration office was packed with people trying to get re-entry visas, which were required at the time for people to leave Japan and come back later if you were a resident. Usually the wait for a re-entry visa was half a day but they were smashing them out in 30 minutes at about £30 a pop. On my walk home I saw lots of damage, a burning oil refinery, burst water mains, cracked walls. I remember the newspaper story about a building site that had a crane overhanging a main road in Tokyo, a really brave Korean worker climbed the tower crane as it was shaking and turned it round so if it fell, it wouldn't fall across the main road. We should remember the Fukushima 57. They knew they would die shortly after going in to clear the site at Fukushima but they still did it.
    The part about ghosts reminds me of all the ghost sightings during WWI and WWII. People just trying to make sense of things and their imagination takes over.

    • @Autonimaatio
      @Autonimaatio 11 месяцев назад +42

      Thank you for your comment. This is a very enlightening street level view of what really went on there at the time. I'm a finnish man who watched it all unfold live on youtube.
      The stream was pushed hard on the very top edge of the front page as a "breaking news" kind of banner. Me and my friend could not believe what we were seeing. It was also the first livestream of any major news event we had seen on the internet, so it had a certain sense of realness and rawness that we hadn't experienced before.
      I remember that day in the same kind of detail as the 9/11 attacks. Rest in peace to all the victims, bless their eternal souls. May God grant strength to all those left reeling from those events.

    • @phamthanhtung6921
      @phamthanhtung6921 11 месяцев назад +17

      Thank you for your insights and I wish you all the best.

    • @ksalarang
      @ksalarang 11 месяцев назад +11

      Underrated comment

    • @firstworldproblems6064
      @firstworldproblems6064 10 месяцев назад +3

      you think a taxi driver who probably drove for decades hulicinated and imgagined the girl in back seat or was on drugs in japan

    • @littlekishmish
      @littlekishmish 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for sharing your story.

  • @Warrior00013
    @Warrior00013 2 года назад +3711

    I never realized a scientist could be so great at telling ghost stories. This gave me chills.
    Also, thank you for mentioning that part about "ghosts are real enough to the people who [experience] them." When my sister passed, hearing her laugh was the only peace I knew for months.

    • @117Dios
      @117Dios 2 года назад +230

      @@Selfinflictedhummusrocket Hearing the laugh of a lost loved one is not schizophernia. Pull your head out of your ass

    • @bobiboulon
      @bobiboulon 2 года назад +259

      @Eizak Hearing sounds that are not real doesn't mean that you are ill. Talk to young parents who sometime hear their baby crying while in fact (s)he sleeping peacefully: Would you say they suddenly became schizophrenic for a period of their lives, and then magically heal afterward?

    • @lamia197
      @lamia197 2 года назад +23

      Maybe cause you did not expect a scientist would tell something that would normally go against them?

    • @kylehill
      @kylehill  2 года назад +545

      I'm so sorry for your loss.

    • @sethmiller2532
      @sethmiller2532 2 года назад +128

      I had a similar experience after I lost my dad. One night shortly after he passed I felt a gentle, very warm hand on my side like he had come to comfort me (I'd been bawling my eyes out, as you can imagine). I don't know that it was a real sensation that I was actually experiencing, but what I do know is that it helped me sleep that night.

  • @Jared14385
    @Jared14385 2 года назад +1882

    “A sign at the front forbids playing Pokémon Go”
    Nature is healing

    • @KC-il6we
      @KC-il6we 2 года назад +7

      🤣🤣

    • @hankscorpio42069
      @hankscorpio42069 2 года назад +152

      "But there's a Gengar in the basement."

    • @Renrang
      @Renrang 2 года назад +51

      You can accidentally catch a ghost.

    • @jmorenocy3
      @jmorenocy3 2 года назад +58

      @@hankscorpio42069 Cancer for a Gengar!? Fair Trade...

    • @bromicorn
      @bromicorn 2 года назад +7

      But that duxkclops looks really tempting

  • @viagragaming
    @viagragaming 9 месяцев назад +76

    I feel like with this being such a small and subtle meltdown compared to Chernobyl, and it being the second worst nuclear disaster in human history, it speaks to how stable and controlled nuclear power plants have become, when handled properly. Especially since this was set off by a natural disaster.

    • @MrFelblood
      @MrFelblood 2 месяца назад +3

      It's because of what we learned from failures like Chyrnobyl, that we know what to do when things get really bad.

  • @COLMWALSH07
    @COLMWALSH07 Год назад +124

    Watching this reminded me of how I was seeing my deceased friend for 3 months after his death.He took his own life violently and we were close. I saw him in car windows as I walked by and in water reflecting on the ground when it rained. He was always smiling and it never scared me. In fact it helped me grieve to know he was alright. I think of him every day.

    • @logicplague2077
      @logicplague2077 10 месяцев назад +11

      I'm sorry for your loss, I hope he found the peace he never found in life.

    • @DergPH
      @DergPH Месяц назад

      I hope...we hope.... for you and him

  • @trixton6592
    @trixton6592 2 года назад +2472

    “The man now hates the rain, because he sees the faces of those who’ve died, in the puddles”
    This quote is enough to send chills down anyone’s spine

    • @blakethebadger1
      @blakethebadger1 2 года назад +10

      Yeah that was hard hitting

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 2 года назад +7

      They just in recent weeks announced they will dump the rest of the wastes into the ocean since they so called don't have anywhere else to put it all.

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 2 года назад +21

      Nuclear is one of the cleanest and cheapest sources of energy, when done right.

    • @bread-jr9yw
      @bread-jr9yw 2 года назад +1

      do i not have a spine or a soul

    • @elfbrownie7226
      @elfbrownie7226 2 года назад

      Indeed

  • @dr.greenthumb5874
    @dr.greenthumb5874 2 года назад +2948

    I love it that they ran the scenarios and assesst the risk and 5 years later it happened. I guess it doesn't matter where you live, your boss never listens.

    • @conors4430
      @conors4430 2 года назад +219

      More like, your boss views safety measures as a cost, and he’s in the business of making money, not thinking long-term safety.

    • @SonicBoone56
      @SonicBoone56 2 года назад +199

      @@conors4430 and there lies the problem: Utility companies should never be for-profit.

    • @PsiChaos2701
      @PsiChaos2701 2 года назад +223

      @@conors4430 the funny thing is, spending a little bit of money to improve safety feature would have saved them the entire reactor, and thus money. Had they taken the suggestion, Fukushima would have been regarded as an example of the safety of Nuclear energy, that it withstood the worse nature could throw at it and still go strong. But, because the folks running TEPCO were interested in maintaining short term profits rather than spending a little for long term safety goals, Fukushima now serves as a tale to scare folks from nuclear power; the one power source that has a realistic chance of reducing carbon emission while still being able to power our modern lives.

    • @nicholasfeiock7873
      @nicholasfeiock7873 2 года назад +11

      Haha Japanese missing something techinical? I don't think it's culturally possible. They knew. Calculated risk.

    • @Breedlovej1
      @Breedlovej1 2 года назад +7

      Love seems like an ill-fitting descriptor.

  • @thesoundpurist
    @thesoundpurist Год назад +442

    Chilling story at the end. My cousin saw a deceased relative on the side of the road with his wife. They didn't talk the whole way back home cause they knew what they saw. They are both down on earth and would never normally tell me this kind of story.

  • @ashleycook300
    @ashleycook300 Год назад +129

    As someone suffering from PTSD, I am not surprised to hear that survivors now see "ghosts." In a way flashbacks are like the ghosts of memories, coming back to haunt us. Sometimes mine are so real I can see, smell, hear, and feel everything that happens in a flashback. So seeing and speaking to the "ghosts," of potential victems in the water could easily be flashbacks of the tradgedies they've endured.

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 2 года назад +2466

    “Ghosts are more tolerable than the void created by death," what a powerful quote

    • @captainspaulding5963
      @captainspaulding5963 2 года назад +86

      Yep. The human brain is capable of amazing things, especially when faced with a tragedy of that magnitude.

    • @robertforster8984
      @robertforster8984 2 года назад +9

      Keep it in perspective though, it is just a quote.

    • @shotakonkin2047
      @shotakonkin2047 2 года назад +24

      Not even science is sure that an afterlife is impossible, best we know is that our technology cannot determine auditory and visual paradolia from what could be a spiritual energy; I don't think we really can detect ghosts with our current technology I think it's just it detecting something unusual but not paranormal and our minds puts false meaning on the supposed findings, at least for the most part, still could be the possibility of life beyond this one we just won't know until our inevitable demise.

    • @ls200076
      @ls200076 2 года назад +16

      @@shotakonkin2047 The real scary thing to imagine is, what if there's nothing after death.
      For example, imagine if a machine had sentience and suddenly gets destroyed by something. Will it go to the afterlife? No, it's gone.

    • @halphantom2274
      @halphantom2274 2 года назад

      @@captainspaulding5963 , and it is capable of huge hubris, that is often the predecessor to such tragedies.

  • @DownWithBureaucracy
    @DownWithBureaucracy 2 года назад +895

    "The man now hates the rain, because he sees the faces of those who died in the puddles."
    An incredibly apt statement about trauma

    • @captainspaulding5963
      @captainspaulding5963 2 года назад +48

      After going through Hurricane Michael, I can't stand thunder storms or the smell of pine trees, that particular part of the video really hit home for me.

    • @bethmoore7722
      @bethmoore7722 2 года назад +39

      Trauma may be the most active ingredient in the production of ghosts. Add survivor’s guilt, and you’ve got a haunting.

    • @argenta7658
      @argenta7658 2 года назад +18

      That shook me. I’m not sure if he was talking about friends or random people and to be honest I don’t know what would be worse to see.

    • @SuperAmaton
      @SuperAmaton 2 года назад +1

      This reminded me about SCP-2316
      Perhaps the Writer had a simular Trauma?

    • @Extremeredfox
      @Extremeredfox 2 года назад +12

      @@bethmoore7722 For some yes for others not so much. There have been plenty of people that weren't in positions of trauma or grief that saw spirits or ghosts.

  • @high_drivexxx
    @high_drivexxx Год назад +446

    I was stationed in Japan for 4 years up as a Marine, up until last year. This is just my opinion and observation: Japan has an eerie, calm, and often depressive atmosphere to it that I could never quite explain. It seemed that no matter how positive the occasion was, something still lingered in the air. This, plus the fact that there are often more cloudy/rainy days in that region compound to the austere atmosphere.
    I befriended some really great young Japanese friends out there obviously and many would confide and tell me they were not happy with life or the country. I believe that this country-wide feeling is what primarily explains the "ghosts". Rampant depression + environmental conditions + traumatic events. The mind is a powerful thing.

    • @wellthisisinteresting4912
      @wellthisisinteresting4912 11 месяцев назад +21

      its quite dismissive to tell people that their experiences are just the result of mind tricks. we are energy and it seems arrogant to completely dismiss the possibility of spirits living after the body stops breathing, whether you are religious or not. the laws of physics say that energy is never destroyed, only recycled.

    • @swagtachiuchiha1501
      @swagtachiuchiha1501 11 месяцев назад +28

      ​@@wellthisisinteresting4912well how would you expect someone to believe sightings of "spirits" unless they've seen them personally. When someone would tell me they saw their dead long dead uncle in the crowd I'd expect them to be mentally unwell, grieving and by extension mistaking them due to similar looks or just simply on drugs. People underestimate how much your mind can fuck with you

    • @NoobieToob
      @NoobieToob 11 месяцев назад +15

      how dare you try to bring logic to good ghost stories

    • @firstworldproblems6064
      @firstworldproblems6064 10 месяцев назад +3

      its just one of those countries who knows. maybe the ancient samaurai put a curse on it. look what happened in ww2. i suspect its seasonal depression. their culture doesnt really flourish its neon lights but not alot of concerts i suspect. its just that part of the world where its very cloudy and rainy and foggy alot im guessing. or the land really does just have an energy about it.

    • @firstworldproblems6064
      @firstworldproblems6064 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@swagtachiuchiha1501 sounds like you're trying every exucuse possible to rationalise someone (infact most peoples) experience. you sound terrified of life after death and are trying to calm yourself and come up with reason to which even your precious science can't explain

  • @RedDawn141
    @RedDawn141 Год назад +67

    My Buddy was one of the Marines that went to help. He fell and got impaled by rebar while looking for survivors. He lived but had a gnarly scar.

  • @gembocobo9484
    @gembocobo9484 2 года назад +2103

    ghost stories told by a scientist who respects the context of the story hits extra hard because it leaves you mind racing with more thoughts and questions

    • @BuniorTech
      @BuniorTech 2 года назад +18

      Demons are real. People call them ghosts…

    • @gembocobo9484
      @gembocobo9484 2 года назад +133

      @@BuniorTech they are also known as politicians

    • @MrSuperG
      @MrSuperG 2 года назад +2

      @@gembocobo9484 😋

    • @emiliosalazar9962
      @emiliosalazar9962 2 года назад +29

      @@BuniorTech Demons aren't real, the word demon comes from the ancient greek word that mean ''lesser god, guiding spirit, tutelary deity, guardian spirit'' it had no evil connotations, it was the same thing as a guardian angel.

    • @raphyjr920
      @raphyjr920 2 года назад +11

      @@emiliosalazar9962 when people perform witchcraft spirits show up, why on earth would you call those guardian angels? Would they show up to save you or hunt your soul? Angels are one thing and Demons are another. Good and evil and 2 different things. This is found in the Bible - For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. - Ephesians 6:12
      Notice how it mentions "against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms".

  • @Crypttv
    @Crypttv 2 года назад +12949

    The ghosts are real enough to those who see them. This doc gave me chills

    • @bulletproofwhale5869
      @bulletproofwhale5869 2 года назад +172

      Did not expect Crypt to be here

    • @Crypttv
      @Crypttv 2 года назад +357

      @@bulletproofwhale5869 Where there are ghosts we appear

    • @MahmoudElgassier
      @MahmoudElgassier 2 года назад +154

      Actually getting CRYPT to admit that you gave them chills is a feat of monumental proportions to say the least!

    • @figo3554
      @figo3554 2 года назад +13

      Yoooo didn't expect you guys to be here

    • @tj323i
      @tj323i 2 года назад +68

      They are hallucinations brought on by trauma. The simplest explanation is with few exceptions the truth.

  • @apulejo
    @apulejo Год назад +65

    This is no mumbo jumbo. It is real. When I visited NYC after 9/11 I walked toward Ground Zero, at that time already completely excavated, but I still felt the presence of people who have lost their life there without being able to say goodbye to their loved ones. I felt the dispair and a huge pressure on my chest.

  • @KidarWolf
    @KidarWolf Год назад +167

    That taxi driver story just gave me chills. Whether you believe in ghosts, or you don't... I hope that girl finds some peace in whatever is beyond.

    • @user-zb8tq5pr4x
      @user-zb8tq5pr4x 11 месяцев назад +4

      There is no such thing as ghosts

    • @wellthisisinteresting4912
      @wellthisisinteresting4912 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@user-zb8tq5pr4x what proof do you have

    • @Supernova2464
      @Supernova2464 11 месяцев назад +5

      That’s the eeriest story in the video

    • @Suchsdirhaltaus
      @Suchsdirhaltaus 11 месяцев назад +16

      While I don't belive in ghosts directly I belive we all leave something behind, the living still have memories of the dead and with a tragedy this big it is clear our brain can't cope with it so seeing so called ghosts is natural. For us they might be ghosts shadows of the past, for them they were their children, parents, loved ones or the people they hated and this tragedy had to leave a mark in everyone's mind.

    • @user-zb8tq5pr4x
      @user-zb8tq5pr4x 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Suchsdirhaltaus You literally believe in ghosts

  • @Garfuck
    @Garfuck 2 года назад +1486

    After my grandpa died, my grandma saw him sometimes, for a few weeks. She knew it wasn't real, she always said. One morning for example, she walked into the living room, he was just standing at the window, looking outside. She asked "What are you doing" and he answered "Just looking." She closed her eyes, opened them again and he was gone. She knew it was just in her head but had no control over it.

    • @YouMakeMyMotorRun
      @YouMakeMyMotorRun 2 года назад +148

      The way I see it, ghosts are a projection of our memories of loved ones. I don't know if there's a spirit behind it, an energy, or just plain psychology... but none of the possible explanations makes them any less real, especially for those who experience the sightings. I'm a skeptical person, but I'd never disregard or disrespect people for seeing a ghost, as I'm sure whatever the reason is, it meant something to them and left an impact on their lives. I hope your grandma's sighting left a good impact to help her cope, and I hope everyone who loved your grandpa keeps on remembering him fondly

    • @johanna5688
      @johanna5688 2 года назад +37

      @@YouMakeMyMotorRun The psychology babble is BS. Now the ghosts I do believe in.

    • @trashaimgamer7822
      @trashaimgamer7822 Год назад +8

      @@YouMakeMyMotorRun It is plain psychology.

    • @trashaimgamer7822
      @trashaimgamer7822 Год назад +63

      @@johanna5688 Ah yes, physics defying entities make sense but simple psychology is bs... logic.

    • @elizabethcompton738
      @elizabethcompton738 Год назад +38

      @@johanna5688 I've seen ghosts my entire life. It amazes me how people deny their existence.

  • @thymewizard
    @thymewizard 2 года назад +974

    well okay, I guess I can mark "Kyle Hill made me ugly-cry on my lunch break" on my list of things I never saw coming but happened anyway.

    • @zidini
      @zidini 2 года назад +22

      Also on my lunch break. Trying to rally myself rn

    • @erinkarp6317
      @erinkarp6317 2 года назад +10

      nice pfp. Red Pandas are cute

    • @doublej42
      @doublej42 2 года назад +5

      Not alone

    • @ussxrequin
      @ussxrequin 2 года назад +2

      Yep...same.

    • @riseuplights5017
      @riseuplights5017 2 года назад +5

      I almost cried, exactly on my lunch break too.

  • @a_literal_brick
    @a_literal_brick Год назад +97

    I forgot what it was, but I was watching a docuseries set in Japan a year ago, and it didn't really have anything to do with natural disasters, but they were in that area for an episode and they interviewed a woman who had lost her husband and most of the rest of her family in the tsunami. The way she talked about the ocean was so amazing to me. The Japanese, especially along the coast, have always had a deep and complicated relationship with the ocean. For thousands of years, it's been a source of food and life and protection from foreign invaders, but it has also rained down death and destruction from time to time. They have a deep love and respect for it, but they also know and fear what it can do. It's beautiful in a bittersweet sort of way.

    • @CaptainTexas92
      @CaptainTexas92 10 месяцев назад +1

      James may from top gear/grand tour spoke to the restaurant owner mentioned in this video in the exclusion zone. It’s in the video series our man in Japan on Amazon prime.

  • @riley5541
    @riley5541 9 месяцев назад +25

    I was in rural coastal Japan not long ago and was shocked and impressed by the sheer size and scale of the tsunami protection along the coastline. Every single town near there is virtually abandoned, but those who aren’t have heavy duty and large scale tsunami barriers, fencing and signage. Was a very eerie feeling driving through those areas

  • @user-fn3py8hv9p
    @user-fn3py8hv9p 2 года назад +2351

    Engineers: hey, uhh, the generators might be vulnerable to waters specially in an event of flood
    TEPCO: just install a door to prevent it
    Engineers: ohh, you mean water tight doors?
    TEPCO: no, just doors

    • @theghosttm8245
      @theghosttm8245 2 года назад +233

      Should’ve used some flex tape

    • @richardscathouse
      @richardscathouse 2 года назад +39

      Designed and constructed by GE of America

    • @user-fn3py8hv9p
      @user-fn3py8hv9p 2 года назад +5

      @@richardscathouse the doors or the entire thing

    • @W0lvesKey
      @W0lvesKey 2 года назад +19

      @@theghosttm8245 Or some Gorilla glue!

    • @averagejoe112
      @averagejoe112 2 года назад +19

      @@richardscathouse GE did not design the sea wall.

  • @sadmermaid
    @sadmermaid 2 года назад +3777

    The elderly people who came back to feed the stray cats/dogs (pets?) in the area daily have my eternal respect and admiration.

    • @paulthrutner9114
      @paulthrutner9114 Год назад +12

      Why would something that’s complete bollocks “break your heart?”

    • @cocaineblossom
      @cocaineblossom Год назад +77

      @@paulthrutner9114 when did they say it broke their heart?

    • @spiralrose
      @spiralrose Год назад +34

      YES!
      God bless them.. amidst all the death, horror and overwhelming hopelessness they chose to make a difference in some of the most helpless lives.

    • @OtomoTenzi
      @OtomoTenzi Год назад +4

      @@paulthrutner9114 Now you know why people like her are so GULLIBLE...

    • @tpeterson9140
      @tpeterson9140 Год назад +29

      @@paulthrutner9114 its bollocks to feed animals?

  • @AwokenEntertainment
    @AwokenEntertainment 10 месяцев назад +27

    there needs to be a movie made about this mass haunting.. just listening to the facts gave me such an eerie feeling..

  • @jessicaavery1080
    @jessicaavery1080 Год назад +62

    Having lived in Japan, there's something there that makes it easier to experience the paranormal I think. In my 4 years in Okinawa I had 4 separate experiences, my friends had several others (with us sharing 1) and none of us were really believers up to that point. I've lived a lot of places, but that's the only real place I experienced anything like that

  • @pdk005
    @pdk005 2 года назад +376

    I was living in Tokyo when the earthquake hit. It was my five year wedding anniversary. The next several days and months were some of the most surreal of my life. Thank you for making this. Amazingly well done.

    • @dawnmacdonald7334
      @dawnmacdonald7334 2 года назад +22

      I was living in Nagoya. It was terrifying and heart breaking. I will never see nuclear power the same way again.

    • @kylehill
      @kylehill  2 года назад +38

      Thank you for sharing this

  • @Enoo-Wynn
    @Enoo-Wynn 2 года назад +1483

    The bit with the taxi and the young woman asking "have I died?" strikes me as so immensely sad.

    • @bina7513
      @bina7513 2 года назад +3

      Same.

    • @kevin42
      @kevin42 2 года назад +2

      Ditto

    • @randomkid9911
      @randomkid9911 2 года назад +33

      that part of the video gave me massive chills

    • @arganelichens1713
      @arganelichens1713 2 года назад +45

      It's called Yurei or unrestless spirit who's still looking for their death cause

    • @OliveTheWitch
      @OliveTheWitch 2 года назад +12

      I'm legit teared up and the hair on my body is standing up

  • @thousandcranescloth
    @thousandcranescloth Год назад +22

    Thank you to our elders for making the ultimate sacrifice in order to prolong our youth. Thank you, Kyle, for highlighting that as well. As a Nikkeijin, I am always proud to represent my Japanese brothers, sisters, jii-chans and baa-chans. Our elders’ actions repeatedly exemplify, in times of desperation and crisis, how brave and honorable they/we are as Japanese. I hope it injects inspiration in others to be courageous in crisis.
    “You may abandon your physical body, but you must always preserve your honor.” - Miyamoto Musashi

  • @giusepperesponte8077
    @giusepperesponte8077 11 месяцев назад +12

    “This unfathomable energy fathoms below the ocean surface.” I’m having a tough time fathoming that.

  • @KevinDavis1
    @KevinDavis1 2 года назад +668

    This is my favorite so far of the half-life histories. This event hasn't been covered much on youtube, not nearly as popular as Chernobyl. It has unknown dangers to it, so I think it's important for people to understand what happened and what problems it could cause in the present and future.

    • @Rabbitsliver
      @Rabbitsliver 2 года назад +9

      One of the reasons that not many talk about Fukushima is that the Japanese leading administration historically has been really good at covering and turning people's eyes to other issues. The current Tokyo Olympics games for example have political motives (ofc all countries do). One being to convince its people and other countries that Fukushima is not as serious. Much of the food supplies the olympic athletes get come from Fukushima region. It is a huge region but I am not sure if it can still be trusted.

    • @boristiosavljevic4672
      @boristiosavljevic4672 2 года назад +3

      Geographics and Plainly Difficult have covered the Fukushima disaster quite well, check it out.

    • @MrCreamster20
      @MrCreamster20 2 года назад +12

      This episode is quite good as it puts into proper context the true scale of both of the worst nuclear disasters. Within lvl 7 disaster rating itself Chernobyl sits around 85/100 and Fukushima sits around 20/100. Both are bad but 1 of the 2 was so much better handled and to this day has been rectified way beyond the other easily by a magnitude of 10 in a significantly shorter timeframe; and that is the main takeway from this. TEPCO refusing to acknowledge the genuine international nuclear council security concerns about backup systems is well; negligent at best, but no-one ever could've predicted and prepared for 2 1-in-10000 year highest scale rated natural disasters to occur simultaneously in a one-two punch fashion on an un-precedented scale.
      Japan as a whole doesn't get enough credit for how they have handled and still handle this disaster and it ought to be recognized the steps they have taken and will continue to take to fully rectify this.

    • @alendonvaldor5808
      @alendonvaldor5808 2 года назад +1

      Also check out AbroadInJapan Chris did an insanely good documentary on the disaster.

    • @alendonvaldor5808
      @alendonvaldor5808 2 года назад +4

      He even interviewed some of the people who returned. One was a sweet middle aged woman who reopened her.... I think bar? After returning. Her whole family was lost in the disaster if I recall right, but she keeps working hard instead of falling to despair. It is heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time.

  • @maxstewart6183
    @maxstewart6183 2 года назад +823

    "Im afraid of the rain because I see the faces of the dead in the puddles"- that one gave me chills

    • @ChaolaoFueChi
      @ChaolaoFueChi Год назад +1

      This is one's that scares me..

    • @mathesu4167
      @mathesu4167 Год назад +1

      at first, i read "in the poodles". that was a fun timeline.

    • @patterdale4332
      @patterdale4332 Год назад

      It's a load of shite

    • @Eoraph
      @Eoraph Год назад

      I cried after that line.

    • @Chazza_1201
      @Chazza_1201 Год назад

      Same !! They were deep words

  • @yoda0017
    @yoda0017 9 месяцев назад +9

    That final anecdote you shared at the end - absolutely haunting.
    I hope all those who survived can eventually find peace. May those who perished in the disaster be able to rest easy.

  • @vulcan4d
    @vulcan4d 6 месяцев назад +8

    Nuclear power has a bad rep because of a few events. To date it is still the safest and cleanest source of energy. The only mistakes are human error.

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko 2 года назад +776

    “unfathomable energy fathoms below”…nice touch.

    • @janekalbinsky
      @janekalbinsky 2 года назад +6

      That got me, too!

    • @JarodM
      @JarodM 2 года назад +11

      "Earth shattering earthquake" and "active reactors"

    • @kg4boj
      @kg4boj 2 года назад +2

      Well it is... all of our energy reserves released in a few minutes. That's an almost impossibly huge amount of energy to picture,

    • @starsilverinfinity
      @starsilverinfinity 2 года назад +5

      Sounds like a Terraria boss announcement

    • @derpythedaedra4194
      @derpythedaedra4194 2 года назад +1

      someone could shoehorn a Shin Godzilla reference in there

  • @bradyweed4124
    @bradyweed4124 2 года назад +810

    To people saying “he shouldn’t have insinuated that ghosts are real”,
    1) it’s a big metaphor
    2) he said it himself: it’s besides the point. No matter if you believe in real ghosts, the grief of Japan is a ghost that haunts the public. Grief manifests in strange ways, and Kyle was simply pointing out a trend of ghost stories among people who were affected by the Tsunami.

    • @anthonyward8853
      @anthonyward8853 2 года назад +3

      Metaphor or not, the title of this video is massively misleading. The one and only reason I clicked on this video is because I noticed it was from Kyle Hill, he has my trust. If this video had come from literally anyone else, I would have passed on it without a second thought.

    • @shadowgod1009
      @shadowgod1009 2 года назад +75

      @@anthonyward8853 How is it misleading?

    • @BruceCarbonLakeriver
      @BruceCarbonLakeriver 2 года назад +50

      @@anthonyward8853 How is this misleading ?!

    • @asherikamichaela8425
      @asherikamichaela8425 2 года назад +77

      @@anthonyward8853 Ghosts/hauntings can have a few different meanings, you know. And Kyle touched on all of those. It's not click-bait or anything. Just appropriately named.

    • @Destroyer_V0
      @Destroyer_V0 2 года назад +65

      @@anthonyward8853 Ever heard the term, Ghosts in the machine? How about inner demons? And how the English language can have multiple definitions of the same word? Or aforementioned sayings are not literally, you have a bloodthirsty, evil creature inside you, or that your computer has a mind of it's own.
      In this case. The ghosts, as far as I am concerned. Is the lingering mental trauma of a people. How it manifests itself is besides the point.

  • @Herculesbenchpress
    @Herculesbenchpress 7 месяцев назад +10

    I've been learning more and more about the Japanese culture while learning the language, and something I found interesting is that Japan has a sort of time period where they are visited by their ancestors. I had discussed this with my tutor and it was explained to me that it's usually about a few days or a week long where for example, say, at dinner they have a framed photo of someone who has passed on at the table and will still be served food as though they were visiting. That it's a period to be visited by those they have lost and it is typically during the changing of the season. So hearing stories about people in Japan seeing ghosts of family/friends/loved ones after such a tragic event isn't a big surprise, at least to me, since they have a culture in which they are concious of those that have passed on. Perhaps it's because of that, they may be more susceptible to experiencing these events?

  • @avoton6020
    @avoton6020 Год назад +4

    I really have to say, this video touched me. I remember watching this closely as a child as it was happening. This was really an amazing video, and had one of the best first minutes I've seen in a piece of media. Thank you.

  • @lavasharkandboygirl9716
    @lavasharkandboygirl9716 2 года назад +4436

    Dude I think I speak for everyone when I say we love these documentaries. Could you do 3 mile island next?
    Edit: thanks for the gold kind stranger!

    • @marsar1775
      @marsar1775 2 года назад +16

      I think he did

    • @tardvandecluntproductions1278
      @tardvandecluntproductions1278 2 года назад +41

      The US doesn't really have a cultural history around spirits and ghosts as much as Japan has

    • @Jasondurgen
      @Jasondurgen 2 года назад +41

      You do speak for everyone

    • @philipdmiller
      @philipdmiller 2 года назад +25

      He's on it, he mentioned it in a recent live session, his Office Hours videos, and agreed they're great

    • @whoahanant
      @whoahanant 2 года назад +55

      @@tardvandecluntproductions1278 the US has alot of people who believe in ghosts but not the same way as Japan does. People aside these are about nuclear accidents not ghosts anyways.

  • @lonestarmelting9728
    @lonestarmelting9728 2 года назад +1198

    I was stationed in Japan when the disaster happened. I gained so much respect for the Japanese people. Their resilience is unmatched in the face of death, starvation & dehydration. I'll never forget the faces on the bodies I moved.

    • @jacksonpettit4690
      @jacksonpettit4690 2 года назад +5

      The Germans are

    • @stephentymcio8856
      @stephentymcio8856 2 года назад +153

      @@jacksonpettit4690what? GTFO. "the germans are" ...what?
      It doesn't help anyone to compare tragedies and act like one country handled their history better or worse than another. we don't need historical dick measuring here buddy, so again, GTFO

    • @hanywhiskey
      @hanywhiskey 2 года назад +20

      @@jacksonpettit4690 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @Lazer-bp9lf
      @Lazer-bp9lf 2 года назад +27

      @@jacksonpettit4690 Wtf?

    • @jacksonpettit4690
      @jacksonpettit4690 2 года назад +3

      The Germans and their former colonies are good at rebuilding a peaceful nation with an economic powerhouse keeping the euro afloat

  • @Holychickendinner
    @Holychickendinner Год назад +10

    This was absolutely fascinating and very well done! I have so much respect for RUclipsrs like this.

  • @Liz-cmc313
    @Liz-cmc313 Год назад +6

    My first visit here, and impressed on how well you told the story and facts that were told. I can only imagine the nightmare those people suffered.

  • @MrSilentfire11
    @MrSilentfire11 2 года назад +491

    I was very close to someone in the military, they were stationed in Japan when this happened. He told me how horrible it was, for over a week he and other units were fishing people out of irradiated water. Just trying to help damage control while their government figured out what to do. Out of everything he had seen from tours elsewhere he said this was the one of the worst because this wasnt a warzone. This was were he lived.

    • @supergirlysofia3054
      @supergirlysofia3054 2 года назад +24

      I am so sorry for him and the others. Mad respect for those who work in that field. I wouldn't be able to do it.

    • @dankacocko4642
      @dankacocko4642 2 года назад +6

      Damn, no wonder why people saw ghosts after that

    • @bluepvp900
      @bluepvp900 2 года назад +6

      I hope your friend is still alive, because that would be a miracle for anyone fishing people out of irradiated water.

    • @010203109
      @010203109 2 года назад +5

      @@bluepvp900 It's unlikely they were in truly irradiated water. Now if they were in a large, flooded solar power array, Cadmium and other heavy metals could be leaching into the water like crazy. Among wind turbines? That would be challenging work trying to use air units to rescue people stranded on roofs.

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 2 года назад +4

      They just in recent weeks announced they will dump the rest of the wastes into the ocean since they so called don't have anywhere else to put it all.

  • @M2ofEMMM
    @M2ofEMMM 2 года назад +2535

    "It doesn't really matter whether or not you think ghosts are real or whether spirits exist. They were and are real enough to the survivors." This is the correct response. Whether something spiritual really is going on or if we're simply seeing a response that the human brain fabricates to deal with overwhelming trauma and loss, the important thing is that we meet and accept grieving people wherever they are in their grief.

    • @yesterdayitrained
      @yesterdayitrained Год назад +33

      Wise and well-said.

    • @PubicGore
      @PubicGore Год назад +19

      That's idiotic. We should not accept something that definitely does not exist.

    • @M2ofEMMM
      @M2ofEMMM Год назад +79

      @@PubicGore Can you prove that they don't?

    • @PubicGore
      @PubicGore Год назад +1

      @@M2ofEMMM No one can prove anything about anything (except in math). We can only demonstrate accuracy beyond reasonable doubt. There has never been any sort of scientific evidence for ghosts. Additionally, all explanations of ghosts we've seen so far can be explained scientifically via things completely unrelated to ghosts. It is not reasonable to believe in ghosts anymore.

    • @M2ofEMMM
      @M2ofEMMM Год назад +92

      @@PubicGore I fail to see why it matters if it's reasonable, especially in the context of being part of the grieving process after a mass death event.

  • @zziyanxxeno
    @zziyanxxeno Год назад +5

    this was so difficult to watch because my grandparents and aunts/uncles and cousins was getting hit hard during those times while I was in Hawaii crying with my mom when we saw it on the news. they were running out of food and it was frustrating that we couldnt send anything until things were cleared.

  • @danielreynolds9631
    @danielreynolds9631 Год назад +5

    That last cab story gave me goosebumps. Love your videos. Thank you!

  • @SovereignwindVODs
    @SovereignwindVODs 2 года назад +220

    I don't know why, but the comment about the clock nearly had me crying. I saw another video on this topic, but it focused almost solely on the plant and the workers rather than the surrounding area. The people who worked around the clock to suppress and contain the reactors are heroes.

    • @pottingsoil723
      @pottingsoil723 2 года назад +19

      Don't forget the liquidators, may they rest in peace and their memory live on as the courageous heroes they were.

    • @KevinAccetta
      @KevinAccetta 2 года назад +3

      It actually made me tear up.

    • @kylehill
      @kylehill  2 года назад +35

      I wanted to capture the real trauma here

    • @omarpadilla8033
      @omarpadilla8033 2 года назад +7

      @@kylehill mission accomplished

    • @argenta7658
      @argenta7658 2 года назад +5

      @@kylehill You did. Fucking brilliantly too. I think this is personally your best video to date.

  • @heavencanceller1863
    @heavencanceller1863 2 года назад +1476

    I can't even comprehend how traumatic this must have been for the people affected even to this day. My heart goes out to them

    • @bkp8345
      @bkp8345 2 года назад +6

      I've been all about this recently after I watched a Japanese show that mentioned 3/11 and made me wonder.
      3/11 for them is 9-11 for the US. RUclips search some of the videos, clips of them are included in this video. It's humbling and makes you really empathize for Japan.

    • @YouMakeMyMotorRun
      @YouMakeMyMotorRun 2 года назад

      @@bkp8345 3/11 is an amazingly tragic date for recent Spanish history as well... hm... I wonder if there's a pattern there?

    • @yuriscynicism
      @yuriscynicism 2 года назад

      Your heart going out to them will do jack shit

    • @heavencanceller1863
      @heavencanceller1863 2 года назад

      @@yuriscynicism Pretty hypocritical of someone with a jack shit comment

    • @johanna5688
      @johanna5688 2 года назад

      I don't think in their way of thinking that they'd be traumatised. They would see it as their lot to bear.

  • @Alitmos
    @Alitmos Год назад +7

    I don’t know much where to start but I have so many emotions flooding back after these years.
    I remember where I was standing when the earthquake hit. I remember seeing hundreds of people people sway back and forth like dolls as the floor beneath me rumbled violently. I remember the sirens blaring and announcement made as the tsunami approached. My luck was my location within a shipyard in Tokyo Bay, which was fairly well sheltered from any direct impact. We did, however, have ships with thousands of tonnage swung around like plastic in the wind, brows collapsing and the impact absorbed by rubber guards on the pier. I remember bracing as the swells impacted our vessel. I remember the news reports constantly flooding in over the next few days. I remember receiving our orders to cease repairs and get to sea to avoid further contamination. I remember, a few years later, visiting the evacuated areas around the plant. I remember observing the takeover of plants and animals and witnessing the black mountains of contaminated top soil which had been bagged and stacked in fields and stadiums. I remember seeing remote monitoring stations staged around the town as me and a friend drove around. Most of all, I remember seeing a few other people- the locals who remained- driving around as well. Almost seemingly out of place in a place which looked as abandoned and desolate as it was. Walls still collapsed. Rubble still littering the roads and sidewalks. Bags on porch stairs which were left in the rush to evacuate. Quite and eerie sight.
    I also, however, greatly appreciate you bringing to light some of the hard facts about the scales comparison, or lack thereof, to the Chernobyl event and how it’s really hard to remotely make that comparison. As someone who understands nuclear power after being involved in operation of a power plant, I appreciate that an awareness can be made to both how well in the present and how horribly in the past that this was handled by TEPCO despite the glaring disaster that it was. I mere 3 years from the anniversary of a day I will never forget I was able to get within 3km of the plant. Much closer than anyone could say of a place like Chernobyl and Pripyat.
    I hope the souls and spirits less fortunate on that day can find peace once again.

  • @BaconJets
    @BaconJets Год назад +8

    This might be your best work yet. Got literal chills from the ending.

    • @zoy13
      @zoy13 Год назад

      Really sad

  • @Sirscrubbsalot
    @Sirscrubbsalot 2 года назад +494

    This series really does wonders for hitting that science craving, and that gritty realism behind legitimate tragedies

    • @davedee6422
      @davedee6422 2 года назад +1

      your science craving makes you believe all their lies

    • @aaroncastilleja162
      @aaroncastilleja162 2 года назад +1

      @@davedee6422 I think this was from HAARP

  • @shitmandood
    @shitmandood 2 года назад +184

    “Every man is put on earth condemned to die. Time and method of execution unknown.” - Rod Serling

  • @pumpkintrees
    @pumpkintrees Год назад +2

    I was waiting and waiting for the ghost stuff and heck you delivered with that story at the end. I'm tearing up.

  • @thomaswwhitten
    @thomaswwhitten Год назад +6

    I miss your old "Because Science" videos, but I'm really enjoying these longer form informational/documentary store videos. Keep up the good work my dude!

  • @Kiterpuss
    @Kiterpuss 2 года назад +644

    I've never heard someone talk about this disaster in a way that gave me chills. Something about how you tell stories just hits harder than most, Kyle.

    • @RobertSeeJen
      @RobertSeeJen 2 года назад +7

      I feel his voice has a sense of investment, and care. I think that'll set his voice apart from others who do this kind of thing.

    • @SenketsuFi
      @SenketsuFi 2 года назад +4

      i cried a little

    • @davidtoddmickens5558
      @davidtoddmickens5558 2 года назад

      The inhumane ignorance total lack of Common Sense

    • @jordanfelt5978
      @jordanfelt5978 2 года назад +2

      @@davidtoddmickens5558 honestly I'd say it's mostly ignorance. If you're at all interested in the idea let's say of 'common sense' You should look up the book 'common sense isn't common'. I can't remember the name of the author but I read most of the book a few years back. It's written by a sociologist and it's actually really interesting to realize (as he explains in detail backed up with evidence) That common sense isn't actually common, especially when it comes down to different cultures and different parts of the world. And also just general human ignorance, I mean do you have any idea how many people almost just lack the ability to think to themselves "hey maybe, just maybe I'm somewhat wrong in this situation"? Like not to make it about politics but it's very common amongst the politically charged type, whether that be on the left or the right doesn't matter. So that's just one glaring example of how people are really ignorant of things that probably make a lot of sense to you and me. I mean it's ironic how we have y'know THE internet with the wealth of basically endless knowledge and people are still ignorant as hell, still relying on the very first Google result that pops up. It's like oh snap we kind of missed the fucking point, and It's funny in kind of a twisted way.

    • @jordanfelt5978
      @jordanfelt5978 2 года назад +1

      Honestly this is the first time I've ever heard of this event. It's kind of a damn shame because this is a really big deal, actually. Just holy cow, And maybe a good portion of it is in his presentation but this is like a really big deal. A Moment of silence for all the people who had no idea that they were going to just be gone forever this day. Really puts mortality into perspective.

  • @meridien52681
    @meridien52681 2 года назад +1141

    "Ghosts of the Tsunami" by Richard Parry is an unforgettable book. In it he explains, in part, the problems that a parent group encountered bringing to justice a cowardly teacher who abandoned children to be swept away, make a local school board aware and confront them, and many more individual stories. Japanese cultural norms and customs were examined in their responses and actions, and then, the psychological role of ghosts is examined. Excellent book that lets you into an intimate lives of a culture of privacy, propriety and scrupulous regard for one another, facing disaster and crisis.

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII 2 года назад +7

      Similar experience in Thailand after the 2004 tsunami. Reports of ghosts were common.

    • @skibuttman08
      @skibuttman08 2 года назад +20

      There is no way I was the only one to read Tsushima.

    • @celestia277
      @celestia277 2 года назад +3

      @@skibuttman08 you are not the only one

    • @Eviltower101
      @Eviltower101 Год назад +3

      Thanks for the recommendation. I'll add it to the list.

    • @spaghattie2080
      @spaghattie2080 Год назад +2

      yes i read about that, it was tragic

  • @meredithlawson9777
    @meredithlawson9777 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for taking the time to make these videos, you make it convenient and fun to educate myself on history and I appreciate that!

  • @prabhakarrao4922
    @prabhakarrao4922 Год назад +6

    A very sad and tragic day for the people of Japan. Thanks for putting this video together.

  • @316lvmnoneofyourbusiness7
    @316lvmnoneofyourbusiness7 2 года назад +1701

    This was very well presented and I thank you for that.
    You captured the essence of the Japanese people, the culture, and the tragedy.
    My mother was Japanese. I'm 1/2 Japanese born in Japan but raised in the States.
    My mother very seldom talked about her childhood living in Tokyo during the war, but she did one day after having a bad argument with my father.
    She said that he would never know what it would be like, as a 6y/o child running through the streets of Tokyo trying to make it to the bomb shelter. Her father and brother were carrying her mom and they were jumping and running over dead bodies. Or the sound of grasshoppers jumping against a pan lid while being cooked 'cause that was the only thing to eat.
    Her father sent her to her grandparents farm in the country just before Hiroshima and Nagasaki were bombed. Friends and family lost. The horrors that she eventually saw.
    She passed away many years ago, but she is always with me. Her altar (per Buddhism) sits in my husband's great, great grandparents china hutch in our dining room. She eats with us, hears our stories and days events, her grandson (our son) always talks to her....
    Again, thank you.

    • @desirosethorne4429
      @desirosethorne4429 2 года назад +47

      That's so bittersweet. I also feel that I have a strong connection to my ancestors, though I've never had anyone visit me or let me know that they're here. I suppose it's a spiritual thing, maybe your mother was more suited for the afterlife than my ancestors were? Not sure.
      She's probably very proud of you. ❤️

    • @emilyspector2728
      @emilyspector2728 Год назад +13

      Her spirit is always around you. If you feel a ice cold feeling, she is there (my late grandpa chose this way to “hug” me). Grandpa was the word that popped my head. So I knew it was him. Sometimes you may smell her perfume. Your mom’s experience was showing how strong she is, how the family were heroes. ♥️

    • @stephaniecoggins733
      @stephaniecoggins733 Год назад +3

      So sad 😢 but at least she's still with you 🙏

    • @overmind06
      @overmind06 Год назад +2

      The yankee did not go home...

    • @teoleno4019
      @teoleno4019 Год назад +7

      Sounds like what my grandparents and parents went thru over USSR russian colonization of my country!

  • @marcusbudde1944
    @marcusbudde1944 2 года назад +869

    When reading all the times T.E.P.C.O had ignored the warnings, you sounded mad like it was personal. I liked it, that's how it should be. That might be the bigging intentional fuck up ever.

    • @anthonyward8853
      @anthonyward8853 2 года назад +104

      This is is how EVERY corporation handles EVERYTHING. If the cogs are turning, everything is good, no action required. Potential problems in the near future? Are the the cogs still turning? Yes, everything is good, no action required. Imminent destruction expected. Are the the cogs still turning? Yes, everything is good, no action required. Catastrophic failure? "We responded rapidly to this completely unforeseen disaster" "Aren't we the heroes"

    • @LakanBanwa
      @LakanBanwa 2 года назад +35

      @@anthonyward8853 What about Tohoku Electric that built the Onagawa Plant, taking these warnings seriously? Its reactor 2 is scheduled to restart this year, despite the entire plant being far closer to the epicenter than Fukushima Daiichi yet avoiding much of the same disaster.

    • @asherikamichaela8425
      @asherikamichaela8425 2 года назад +46

      I wouldn't go so far as to say "intentional," but it was absolutely negligent af, like it should be on a criminal level. It's basically the Titanic of nuclear disasters, minus the loss of life (radiation-related, at least)

    • @gateauxq4604
      @gateauxq4604 2 года назад +40

      ‘Move the generators to higher ground’
      ‘No’
      ‘Move the generators to higher ground’
      ‘No’
      ‘Move the generators to higher ground’
      ‘No’
      ‘Move the generators to higher ground’
      ‘No’
      ‘Move the generators to higher ground’
      ‘No’
      Well done TEPCO 😐

    • @ILEFTCAPS0N
      @ILEFTCAPS0N 2 года назад +48

      Safety regulations are written in blood.

  • @MC-ri9ol
    @MC-ri9ol 11 месяцев назад +1

    Absolute chills as you talk about that clock I had never thought about ghosts like that.

  • @snoski
    @snoski 4 месяца назад

    I've enjoyed all of your HLH episodes, but this one is a real work of art. I learned something, and I'm in tears.

  • @thepawchoe2749
    @thepawchoe2749 2 года назад +631

    The clock being stuck at 2:47 in itself is probably the biggest of ghosts. I'd do the same as the man if I was in his place only I'd never reset it even if people returned. It would serve as the reminder of how precious our lives are and serving others is a humble honor.

  • @bojournersouthern2641
    @bojournersouthern2641 2 года назад +509

    I can't believe it has been 10 years since this happened. I still remember it well.

    • @theresurrectionmen8707
      @theresurrectionmen8707 2 года назад +8

      Yeah i was 10 years old when it happend saw it on the news remember exactly where i was and what i was doing

    • @markberryhill2715
      @markberryhill2715 2 года назад +12

      It's like the 2004 Indonesian Tsunami and the Russian meteorite a few years ago. Unforgettable.

    • @qkings_Roblox
      @qkings_Roblox 2 года назад

      Same....

    • @wolfenstarnice4821
      @wolfenstarnice4821 2 года назад

      Damn, ten years

    • @15o5z5
      @15o5z5 2 года назад

      It sure has been a while.::

  • @mattgilbert7347
    @mattgilbert7347 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is an excellent RUclips channel. Subscribed. Thank you, this is genuinely informative material.

  • @ItalianAvalanche
    @ItalianAvalanche Год назад +1

    This is really incredible work. Thank you.

  • @RessG
    @RessG 2 года назад +153

    17:56 "A sign at the front entrance forbids playing Pokemon Go"
    There's always that one guy who tries to catch them all.

    • @KingNedya
      @KingNedya 2 года назад +15

      Looks like they're trying to catch more than just pokemon.

    • @HiopX
      @HiopX 2 года назад +8

      what Pokémon would you even find there? Yveltal?

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 2 года назад

      Nuclear is one of the cleanest and cheapest sources of energy, when done right.

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 2 года назад

      They just in recent weeks announced they will dump the rest of the wastes into the ocean since they so called don't have anywhere else to put it all.

    • @dudeman4514
      @dudeman4514 2 года назад +4

      @@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked I agree but that's completely unrelated to the comment you're replying to

  • @JustAnotherAccount8
    @JustAnotherAccount8 2 года назад +258

    Man it was such an unfair tragedy against japan, huge earthquake and tsunami is beyond devastating by itself, but to then have a nuclear meltdown.
    My heart goes out to all that died from that

    • @Destroyer_V0
      @Destroyer_V0 2 года назад +7

      Preventable, nuclear disaster is what makes it so much worse. Predicted, natural disaster causing exactly the situation that lead to the meltdown, and nothing had been done.

    • @Lucy-yf7re
      @Lucy-yf7re 2 года назад +5

      I know Kyle said we shouldn't compare chernobyl and Fukushima, but in terms of pure human stupidity, they are almost the same, but Japan handled the aftermath much better imo

    • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl
      @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl 2 года назад

      Meltdown only caused one death

    • @thearisen7301
      @thearisen7301 2 года назад +4

      @@MohamedRamadan-qi4hl Zero, actually. There was one guy they thought might of gotten cancer but it turned out his cancer pre-dated the disaster.

  • @EverydayKitten
    @EverydayKitten 4 месяца назад

    The amount of research in all your videos is OUTSTANDING! this one made my heart hurt for those souls who were ripped too fast.

  • @origaminosferatu3357
    @origaminosferatu3357 Год назад +3

    This series is so fascinating and thought provoking and genuinely human. How did I just find out about it??

  • @Gabriel87100
    @Gabriel87100 2 года назад +695

    "The cab driver, now terrified, turned around to look at the young woman, but no one was there until next time." Commas can turn this bit into a horror plot.

    • @TaranTatsuuchi
      @TaranTatsuuchi 2 года назад +86

      Punctuation can save a person's life...
      It's the difference between...
      "Let's eat, Grandpa!"
      "Let's eat Grandpa!"

    • @ryanm8529
      @ryanm8529 2 года назад +8

      I don't get it my brain is being fried

    • @Ludwig_Perpenhente
      @Ludwig_Perpenhente 2 года назад +29

      @@ryanm8529 Basically, Punctuation has changed the original meaning of the sentence into something else. Much like capitalization. It's the whole
      "I helped my Uncle Jack off a horse" (Helping his uncle off a horse)
      "I helped my uncle jack off a horse" (helping his uncle masturbate a horse)
      Or
      "Let's eat, grandma" (inviting grandma to eat)
      "Let's eat grandma" (inviting everyone to eat grandma)

    • @Flitalidapouet
      @Flitalidapouet 2 года назад +3

      @@TaranTatsuuchi LOL

    • @goldfish-bloopbloop
      @goldfish-bloopbloop 2 года назад +1

      @@TaranTatsuuchi holy shit

  • @blueman688
    @blueman688 2 года назад +533

    This was like watching a love letter, poem and a horror story being read all in one I loved it

    • @francescagreetham1804
      @francescagreetham1804 2 года назад +8

      That’s such a good summary of it

    • @serenityflies1462
      @serenityflies1462 2 года назад

      You're weird. Nothing to love here.

    • @domonicsalinas2547
      @domonicsalinas2547 2 года назад

      the tuna or whater fish you might eat that is caght in the pacific now has higher than normal radioactive levels...increasing the you will have cancer

  • @curtthechameleon
    @curtthechameleon 9 месяцев назад +2

    So glad i found this channel. So good.

  • @xSRVx
    @xSRVx Год назад

    I love how you narrate and give info. Subscribed!

  • @derrickbennett935
    @derrickbennett935 Год назад +2239

    I'm skeptical when it comes to ghost stories. However. My grandpa died in 2009. He owned a manufacturing plant that made doors for mobile homes. After he died ownership shifted to my dad who kept the plant running. In the following years leading all the way up to 2018 when the plant shut down many workers mentioned an old man walking up to the open doors leading in and watching them work. Some even said he'd ask them questions relating to their work. When they mentioned it to my dad they described the man wearing overalls, a t shirt, old tattered brown boots and a hat with a logo for some old hunting supply store that used to be in our town. These were the kind of clothes my grandpa wore on a regular basis. Most of them said they didn't see his face but some mentions being able to see that he had beard. And these employees were new hires. People who had never even met my grandpa. And they described him nearly perfectly. After a while everyone who worked there and new about it would joke "not even death can keep him from working". It's stories like this that challenge my skepticism towards ghosts.

    • @gonzalodavidvazquezgonzale5796
      @gonzalodavidvazquezgonzale5796 Год назад +134

      Great story sounds like your grandpa was a respected hardworking man. Sorry for your loss. I agree with you, I mean we are energy, and we left residues of this kind of energy werever we go, i think your grandpa left a lot of his energy in the plant he owned and thats why it kept manifastating. Let me tell you a quick story about this kind of energy. My mom was a chemistry teacher in a high school, in mexico. One day, on a weekday we were running errands until past dusk; when we arrived home she realized that she had forgotten her house keys in the lab at school. So we had to go get them. When we arrived to the school and greeted the night guard, we headed down to the lab. And as we were walking down the aisle i can swear on my fathers grave that we could hear people, students inside the classrooms. Chatting, yelling, moving desks even laughter and scoldings, but as if you heard all of this through a tv or an old speaker.
      Like distant, i dont know how to explain but my 8 year old brain inmediatly realized those were not "human" interactions plus the late hour. Naturally, i shat my pants and asked my mom wtf was going on. She tried to calm me explaining about this energy. "Teenagers have a lot of energy", she said, "and I think some of that e energy does not escape the classroom and resonates when everything is quiet". It made sense to me; and this came from an educated, skeptic professional. i calmed down a bit and we found the keys and left with no issue. Since then i think apparitions, ghosts and these kinds of manisfestations are just residues of the energy we once exuded. But what do I know? :)

    • @VMM34
      @VMM34 Год назад +19

      ​@@gonzalodavidvazquezgonzale5796 that's so interesting. Thankyou for sharing your experience

    • @JavelinAngel1295
      @JavelinAngel1295 Год назад +88

      For me, I'm not a skeptic. I used to be one until I saw it with my own two eyes. But for the rest of the skeptics out there, I don't care if any of you take my word for it, I don't even wanna prove it to you at all. I would actually recommend for you guys to stay away from it. Because if you actually came across it, you would be wishing you hadn't.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Год назад +28

      ​@@JavelinAngel1295 what's the worst thing a ghost has ever done? Knock things off of shelves and counters, make aome annoying noises, and at worst thrown things or flipped channels on a TV. My cat does all of that and sometimes scratches me or leaves mice on my floor.
      And I'd be grouchy too if people screamed and ran every time they saw me, and tried to exorcize me from my home.
      *I don't actually believe in real ghosts

    • @JavelinAngel1295
      @JavelinAngel1295 Год назад +38

      @@atashgallagher5139 Believe what you want man. I only spoke my story.

  • @santiagogustavoo
    @santiagogustavoo 2 года назад +354

    Yet, even with all of the neglection from TEPCO the disaster was professionally contained and life was just shortly affected with what could've become a nuclear crisis greater than Chernobyl. Props to those engineers and workers that actively shortened the meltdown and did not commit errors to the handling of dangerous materials.

    • @crayzkato6607
      @crayzkato6607 2 года назад +24

      yes, there is a infographics show episode that showed how courageous those workers were, and how much the leaders tried their best to choose the lesser of two evils; pump seawater into the reactor and potentially cause damage and contamination, or let it sit, releasing the steam that the remaining water was generating

    • @ThaFKINman
      @ThaFKINman 2 года назад

      🤣🤣🤣 sounds like you think they ever contained it.. they still can't get equipment in some areas because radiation is still out of control

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 2 года назад +1

      If it were bigger than Chernobyl it would cut Japan in half with a Fallout Zone so thank God it wasn’t

    • @YouMakeMyMotorRun
      @YouMakeMyMotorRun 2 года назад +2

      They did play with the advantage of knowing Chernobyl beforehand... also, there's the geographical location, the professionalism of those engineers, and the fact that the meltdown itself wasn't as sudden -- I think -- as Chernobyl's...
      Basically, the workers had to put everything at risk to cover for the fuck-up of the higher-ups. As it usually happens

    • @OzixiThrill
      @OzixiThrill 2 года назад +3

      @@ThaFKINman Do you have any actual evidence of that? As in, that it's not contained.
      Because the most I could find was that it was contained, but cleanup efforts without using humans was meeting some challenge due to robot designers forgetting that shielding is important when dealing with ionizing radiation, especially for sensitive electronics.

  • @trj1442
    @trj1442 Год назад +2

    Wow, this was an excellent episode. Great graphics and great narration.
    Definitely a new sub in me.

  • @willyong7901
    @willyong7901 10 месяцев назад +1

    Love this format of video !

  • @Catman2123
    @Catman2123 2 года назад +496

    “TEPCO installs doors.”
    What a reaction.

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 2 года назад +20

      They were reinforced waterproof doors. It was a reasonable compromise between preparedness and cost-effectiveness, given how unlikely the event was. In most parallel universes, that tsunami never happened. Our timeline was unlucky.

    • @kotori87gaming89
      @kotori87gaming89 2 года назад +11

      They *were* supposed to be waterproof doors. They just weren't rated against the kind of fury that was unleashed that day, hence the failure.

    • @boxed_in4357
      @boxed_in4357 2 года назад +7

      @@deusexaethera how do you know that MOST pararell universes never had the tsunami?

    • @Eargesplitten-Loudenboomer
      @Eargesplitten-Loudenboomer 2 года назад +8

      The biggest mistake was not installing the "No Water Area" signs next to them.

    • @optimus2200
      @optimus2200 2 года назад +1

      they must be critical roll fans and thought that doors can defeat anything XD XD XD

  • @ggcgcgcg
    @ggcgcgcg 2 года назад +476

    I was on the navy when this happened and my ship was one of the first responders. Probably the worst thing I've ever seen in my life. This brought back memories I didn't wanna remember...

    • @rer4472
      @rer4472 2 года назад +3

      wow how did the navy react to it?

    • @ggcgcgcg
      @ggcgcgcg 2 года назад +48

      @@rer4472 it was pretty Much a "rescue" mission. Save who we could

    • @abloodygenderfluidmaniac979
      @abloodygenderfluidmaniac979 2 года назад +17

      @@ggcgcgcg sorry for having to see everything that happened there it was truly horrific.

  • @bendyer1465
    @bendyer1465 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very informative, interesting, entertaining, and somber. Your videos are great!

  • @ryanrodriguez6219
    @ryanrodriguez6219 Год назад

    This video is chilling. Incredibly informative and chilling. A+

  • @Sebachile
    @Sebachile 2 года назад +221

    "Ghosts are more tolerable then the void created by death"
    That sentence put a tear in my eye.

  • @FlagCutie
    @FlagCutie 2 года назад +82

    I appreciate the respect with which you presented the ghost stories of those whose lives were obliterated by the disaster. I know that you are a man of hard facts and science, but none of us can imagine what it is like to have a life change so drastically and so suddenly.

    • @MrJcTTK
      @MrJcTTK 2 года назад +16

      I recall reading about how people stuck on a bridge could hear the voices of thousands of people screaming for help as they got dragged out into the ocean to die. If that doesn't fuck you up nothing will.

    • @professionaldisappointment1654
      @professionaldisappointment1654 2 года назад +1

      @@MrJcTTK holy shit that is horrifying

  • @brahCren
    @brahCren Год назад +1

    You just gained a new subscriber! Great approach. Very informative! Keep it up!

  • @fernwebb5568
    @fernwebb5568 Год назад +1

    Good video. Tasteful and informative. Really well done!

  • @katherineheasley6196
    @katherineheasley6196 Год назад +616

    I was living along the Tohoku coast when the tsunami hit. I watched the wave come in. The first clip you see of black water overwhelming a roadside barrier? That was from my town. To say it haunts me to this day, eleven years later, is an understatement.

    • @fizzy_buzz
      @fizzy_buzz Год назад +13

      thank you for sharing your story, it is very interesting to me. I hope you and your family, friends, and the local people of your town can recover soon.

    • @overmind06
      @overmind06 Год назад +5

      Yeah. Sure you were. Everyone down the comment section were there and seen it personally, very dramatic. We have half japanese, quarter japanese, tohoku residents, power plant engineers, plane pilots, everyone and their mother came to see the tsunami. Have another like, if that's what you want.

    • @spiralrose
      @spiralrose Год назад

      😢❤️

    • @judeblack4360
      @judeblack4360 Год назад +21

      I bet you’re fun at parties. Are you this senselessly cruel to everyone you don’t believe?

    • @kristinab1078
      @kristinab1078 Год назад +55

      @@overmind06 Ever think that people who were in the northern region of Japan at the time are more likely to search for this type of content due to their intense personal experiences? Or, are you too busy policing the comment section and responding as though you know who they are, where they are from, and what their intentions are?

  • @ikijiigoku
    @ikijiigoku 2 года назад +288

    "A sign at the front gate that forbids playing Pokemon Go." I did not expect that little bit of levity. Amazing series Kyle.

    • @clairekholin6935
      @clairekholin6935 2 года назад +6

      Well of course. . .

    • @JusNoBS420
      @JusNoBS420 2 года назад +8

      Don’t try and get those mutant Pokémon. Not worth it

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 2 года назад +3

      Because Japan.

    • @kylehill
      @kylehill  2 года назад +9

      I try to write these in a way that keeps the audience in mind -- I gotta give you a little levity before hitting you with that ending

    • @JusNoBS420
      @JusNoBS420 2 года назад

      @@kylehill 💜 your content!!

  • @Dark_nightsky
    @Dark_nightsky 5 месяцев назад +2

    Not me taking notes for my school project on ghosts
    I failed-