Why Revolutions Fail

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июл 2024
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    0:00 revolutions face a problem
    2:25 the three 'I's - infighting
    11:18 international puppeteers
    13:30 implementation
    22:30 the dictatorship rises
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Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @HelloFutureMe
    @HelloFutureMe  10 месяцев назад +550

    Chaos is a ladder.
    ~ Tim (well, Baelish)

    • @SuperWindsage
      @SuperWindsage 10 месяцев назад +5

      or a Napoleon. Sometimes you get a Napoleon, and hey if not for Russian Winter and health issues...... Man gave it a very good run. that Dictatorship is easier as you said.

    • @SuperWindsage
      @SuperWindsage 10 месяцев назад +2

      must stop those (former Colonies) I mean COMMUNISTS! from doing stuff!

    • @SuperWindsage
      @SuperWindsage 10 месяцев назад

      I mean that means 62% said fuck that though. Almost double have the opposite opinion.

    • @soccerandtrack10
      @soccerandtrack10 10 месяцев назад +2

      Growing is a ladder,angle numbers,vibration,and the nerve system are just metaphysical/phycoligical ladder.

    • @pyeitme508
      @pyeitme508 10 месяцев назад

      Lol😊

  • @justnormalthings1599
    @justnormalthings1599 10 месяцев назад +3202

    And with the tyrant dead, the great coalition of friends would live in peace and harmony under free and fair democracy. Nothing bad ever happened in Yugoslavia again.

    • @ashmarten2884
      @ashmarten2884 10 месяцев назад

      I mean, it very well could have worked but there were some very questionable economic decisions that gave nationalists and fascists ammunition to pull the country apart.

    • @kakkakapwppwow
      @kakkakapwppwow 10 месяцев назад +142

      Well to be fair Yugoslavia would have been alright if it wasn't for the Serbs.

    • @stananders2333
      @stananders2333 10 месяцев назад +9

      If it wasnt for all those slavs, yugoslavia would have been great

    • @sambuck4917
      @sambuck4917 10 месяцев назад +22

      ​@@kakkakapwppwow
      😊

    • @sweettaters243
      @sweettaters243 10 месяцев назад +246

      @@kakkakapwppwowdamn we still can’t get past the ethnic problems

  • @stu_1e
    @stu_1e 10 месяцев назад +868

    Tim: Imagine you're from a small, economically unstable country without much international influence...
    Me, watching from Zimbabwe: no need to imagine here😅.

    • @jonh5832
      @jonh5832 10 месяцев назад +65

      At least you badasses were cool enough to beat down your colonial oppressors. Here in Mexico we still are forced to play nice with our American oppressors.

    • @bwackbeedows3629
      @bwackbeedows3629 10 месяцев назад +40

      ​@@jonh5832 And don't forget the influences of Spain as well. Just like with the actual Native Americans, there's so much negative colonial impact in any place touched by Western European imperialism.

    • @echidnanatsuki882
      @echidnanatsuki882 10 месяцев назад +39

      ​​@@jonh5832 and look where that got them.
      And Mexico today would be an ACTUAL Cartel State if it weren't for the US so stop whining.
      Edit: spelling mistakes

    • @jonh5832
      @jonh5832 10 месяцев назад +1

      @echidnanatsuki882 Zimbabweans got freedom and sovereignty over their own land. The cartels are as powerful as they are because of the US. The US literally trained the cartels how to fight. The large majority of the firearms that the cartels have come straight from the US as well. The CIA got their undisciplined yankee population addicted to drugs so that the cartels would have a constantly growing yankee customer base. If Mexico shakes off its anglo oppressors, the cartels will cease to exist.

    • @jonh5832
      @jonh5832 10 месяцев назад +1

      @echidnanatsuki882 NATO is the world's largest terrorist organization btw.

  • @sidraket
    @sidraket 10 месяцев назад +351

    One thing that always kind of annoyed me is that historically we tend to remember revolutions for what came of them rather than what caused them. Comfortable people dont go to war over ideology.

    • @antiochus87
      @antiochus87 10 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly, it's almost as if we're sitting in a world with governments and media that actively push an anti-revolutionary narrative...

    • @drmodestoesq
      @drmodestoesq 10 месяцев назад +1

      Except the Slave owning Plantocracy of the United States. They were just a bunch of rich White dudes who didn't want to pay their fair share of taxes and wanted to steal more Indian land.

    • @user-ho4nw5sf3w
      @user-ho4nw5sf3w 8 месяцев назад +4

      Making the American Revolution different in that respect. Here we have tried to prevent the conditions that lead to our Revolution. At times that may be difficult to see I know. It is one of the reasons that our politics are so brutal. It's a kind of Revolution every voting cycle. I for one, wouldn't have it any other way. It is the price of our freedom.

    • @drmodestoesq
      @drmodestoesq 8 месяцев назад

      And in the case of the American Civil War which cost the lives of 750,000 Americans...we see that American tried and failed to prevent the outbreak of widespread violence. @@user-ho4nw5sf3w

    • @antiochus87
      @antiochus87 8 месяцев назад +75

      @@user-ho4nw5sf3w Hilarious.
      1. The American "Revolution" was not a revolution. A bunch of second sons of British aristocracy didn't want to pay taxes (more than half of whom were also slave owners) so they founded their own country. The Founding Fathers actively despised democracy (which we would call direct democracy) and James Madison (another slave owner) in particular had some very unsavory things to say about it. That is the polar opposite of the goals and nature of every real attempt at revolution a.k.a the rising up of the oppressed underclasses against an oppressive hierarchy.
      2. To compare American elections to revolutions in any way is a farce. See above. Liberal representative democracy is not meant to allow the people to actually make any radical changes, but to give the illusion of choice while keeping power firmly in the hands of the same political and economic elite.
      Why do you think there are two political parties that are near identical on economic and foreign policy? Why do you think electoral colleges exist, or the two same parties have been taking turns for over a century and a half?
      The US foreign and domestic policies are designed specifically to carry out goals for the benefit of the US corporate elite and always have been. They spend American lives like small change for the sake of corporate profit, and they slaughter non-Americans with the same brutality as any dictatorship.
      When was the last time an American was charged with war crimes or crimes against humanity?
      Why has the US spent much energy and money suppressing democracy and revolutions in other countries?
      Do you think the US government and economic establishment has any higher regard for American citizens? Then why do they keep moving American jobs abroad to be done in sweat shops? Ehy do so many Americans live poverty?
      You speak of freedom, but what you have is slavery, the sort that deserves a real revolution. The problem is the people of the USA have been conditioned to believe that what they're offered is the only choice and that slavery is freedom.

  • @kingofcards9516
    @kingofcards9516 10 месяцев назад +634

    Those who start revolutions rarely end up in power.
    It's always those who bring the revolution to a conclusion.

    • @johnynoway9127
      @johnynoway9127 10 месяцев назад +94

      if youre smart you hire or give power to a "hero" and make em a martyr.
      Then you step on the hero's corpse and sit on the throne

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield 10 месяцев назад +34

      ​@@johnynoway9127Stalin did that

    • @johnynoway9127
      @johnynoway9127 10 месяцев назад +21

      @@falconeshield pretty much every person in power has done it

    • @ShinChara
      @ShinChara 10 месяцев назад +14

      Most revolutionaries make the mistake of only leading one coup.

    • @viniciuskr8561
      @viniciuskr8561 10 месяцев назад +24

      Revolutions *happens* no one "start a revolution" they happen and someone take the power

  • @kaikalter
    @kaikalter 10 месяцев назад +1066

    Revolutions can fail for so many reasons. For writing Revolutions, it might be good to show the Revolution failing, during or before the story.

    • @tanostrelok2323
      @tanostrelok2323 10 месяцев назад +29

      @@slevinchannel7589 Under extreme circumstances, extremism always ends up displacing the moderates

    • @ryelor123
      @ryelor123 10 месяцев назад +41

      I don't think its that revolutions fail, its just that its not a quick process. However, if a revolution is conducted due to misunderstandings or for the wrong reasons, then they can easily make situations very bad. For instance, Marx argued that the main enemy of the workers was the bourgeois class. However, the bourgeois class was weak and no longer the dominant capitalistic class by the time of the Russian Revolution. The business class - often made up of outsiders and nobodies - was far more dynamic and effective than the bourgeois and many of its failings in Russia were due to the dying bourgeois and aristocracy trying to bring it down. This is why corporate free market capitalism did so well compared to Russian marxism. Marxism was superior to the bourgeois capitalism of the 1850s where the upper class in the various cities and even towns stifled industrialization in order to protect their own positions of power. However, improvements in transportation due to the Bessemer process making steel rails affordable made bourgeois capitalism obsolete and caused its fall. So when the Russians overthrew the corporate free market industrialists, then didn't destroy the thing holding their empire back but instead they themselves became the issue holding Russia back. If the revolutionaries in Russia destroyed the aristocracy and weakened the bourgeois, then Russia would've been much more powerful.

    • @ixelhaine
      @ixelhaine 10 месяцев назад +10

      Commonwealth Minutemen have entered the chat

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 10 месяцев назад

      @@tanostrelok2323 Ok but what do you think of the channel i mention?

    • @bwackbeedows3629
      @bwackbeedows3629 10 месяцев назад +19

      Or even an idealistic revolution succeeding in the Prologue, only to become the Empire to be overthrown in the rest of the story.

  • @kaitunelovemonday
    @kaitunelovemonday 10 месяцев назад +634

    As a Thai person who is living in a country that is undergoing massive social revolution, your series looking into the complexity of revolution has been very interesting to me as many of your points resonates with what is going on right now in Thailand. For example: how people who are on the same side with the revolutionaries might not even understand or be into the revolution's ideology... They just HATE the current regime who is being cartoonishly evil to the point that they are even dumbly alienating the upper class people in the society. (Many of my associates are politicians in the Move Forward Party that I guess would be the revolutionaries in our current situation. They are quite surprised that they have gained this much support this quickly as they had previously expected that it would take some times for the conservative Thai society to get behind their heavily liberal ideologies. They didn't expect that the regime will act this stupidly and become ridiculously hatable.)

    • @oremfrien
      @oremfrien 10 месяцев назад +29

      For those of us less familiar with Thai news, can you discuss a little bit about (1) what the military government did that was so farcically hatable, (2) why the Move Forward Party achieved dominance yet could not have its leader become prime minister, and (3) why the Thai military junta has not simply done what the Burmese junta did and simply ended the democratic "experiment" when it did not work in their favor.

    • @kaitunelovemonday
      @kaitunelovemonday 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@oremfrien (1)
      It is hard to condense what they have done in the past 8 years into a few lines or even a few pages, so this will be a long answer. To be clear, their actions are a mixture of ridiculous evil and stupid evil. What they have done might not be the most evil thing dictators or juntas have ever done, but their actions are often farcical in a ‘why would you do that?’ kind of way which have increasingly turning off even their own supporters aside from the most zealot ones.
      .
      For example.
      - Among their numerous acts of corruption, they starved school children, literally stealing children’s lunch money while pushing the military spending on expensive military equipment that never get used as well as splurging on the living hood of the generals.
      .
      - When the military government’s salary is criticized, their people snap back that their well paid salary can’t be cut down or they won’t have enough to eat.
      .
      - Then, despite the fact that Thai people are already sensitive about the school lunch thing, people find out that there is a chapter in the current edition of elementary school kid’s schoolbook celebrating not having enough to eat with a kid character who could only afford a single boiled egg for dinner proclaiming that “being happy is about choosing to be satisfied” and her boiled egg lunch is the most delicious in the world. This really ticked people off because the military government is known to make many revisions to school books including praising ‘dictatorship’ as an act for good with the then junta as the example of a good man.
      .
      - AND THEN, one of their ministers chooses to protect the school book by saying that “there is nothing wrong with boiled egg because my boy likes it” and claiming that the opposition is brainwashing people to cancel boiled egg.
      .
      Or other examples
      .
      - The military government ironically run the military so poorly that the forcibly recruited soldiers die horribly quite often due to abuse. Not only are abuses rampant, and the recruits have to live off watery vegetable soup with almost no protein (my brother’s personal experience), the recruits are used as unpaid servants in the generals’ households. As a result, many of the soldiers have mental issue that are severely ignored. Combining that with poorly guarded weapons, some of the poorly treated soldiers turned into crazed gunmen. When violent incidents occurred, the junta prime minister and his party didn’t even try to appear sorry or sympathetic to the loss. In one of the infamous cases of “why would you do that?!” the junta made a ‘mini-heart’ pose when he had to visit the scene of the shooting.
      .
      - Despite their habit of buying expensive weapons (that either don’t work or aren’t used), they like to ignore genuine threats to the country. Many time when Myanmar army’s fight got into Thailand territory, with villages being terrorized and boats being looted, the military government did nothing with the explanation that “Oh, that’s just some silly misunderstanding.”
      .
      - Appointing an ex-drug dealer as one of the ministers who they claimed was only selling ‘powder’. Coincidentally, under the military government regime, drug price falls to the lowest in Thai history with the addicted number rising rapidly.
      .
      - Also made weeds legal with NO regulation as it is the minister of health’s financial benefit.
      .
      - Denied any rising drug issue as fake news. Said that the real problem is the youngsters being brainwashed by the westerner (AKA the Americans) to hate them.
      .
      - Oppressing creative economy with the junta himself literally said in an interview something along the line of “Thai people are only good for agricultural stuff.” It is quite common for him and other military higher ups to give interviews saying that Thai people are stupid which is why they must make decisions for us.
      .
      - THEN they claimed to have always supported 'soft power' while still oppressing the creative economy to give themselves more budget to steal from (based on the accounts of many Thai film and series directors).
      .
      ///
      .
      (2)
      The military government created a special system which they appointed 250 senators who have the power to vote for the prime minister. Their votes override the citizen votes UNLESS there is a landslide victory which didn’t happen. OF CAUSE, the junta-appointed senators didn’t vote for a Move Forward party prime minister. Many of the senators echo the junta’s sentiment that we Thai people don’t know what is good for us, which is why they need to make the decision for the country.
      .
      The Move Forward party (based on my friend’s account as one of the party members) has actually expected that they won’t become the government yet this round. They are playing the long game as more and more Thais become fed up with the old system.
      .
      ///
      .
      (3)
      The military, which is deeply tied with the monarchy with the generals including the junta proclaiming themselves to be “the king’s soldiers”, still wants to keep the illusion of democracy to appear righteous even though they are horrible at it. Also, the richest and most powerful families in Thailand, who are financial supporters of the royal family, won’t like that illusion to be gone as it will affect their businesses.

    • @kaitunelovemonday
      @kaitunelovemonday 10 месяцев назад

      @@oremfrien To add on a bit on why the gov was evil in a dumb way, their regime (including what I didn’t mention in the previous reply since … they did A LOT of things) screwed over everyone from the poor to the middle class and even some of the super riches, and their own soldiers aren’t into them (with a bunch of soldiers voting for the Move Forward party), which was indeed evil but stupid as they should have curried favor with some people aside from the hardcore royalist zealots (who make them even harder to not hate). The junta having a short fuse and zero diplomatic skill also resulted in him insulting too many people whom he would benefit to tolerate him.

    • @C-Farsene_5
      @C-Farsene_5 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@oremfrien a shame Thailand couldn’t be like Taiwan and have the dominating party allow democracy without a bloody civil war

    • @CptMerdaille
      @CptMerdaille 10 месяцев назад +43

      ​@@oremfrienI'll never be able to capture the complexity of modern Thai politics in a s8nggle youtube comment (which to my mind is still much of the old one). But to make it a bit simple.
      1. The Thai military has engineered coups all throughout Thai history. 13 have been successful, and many more unsuccessful. The Thai military is famously corrupt, with many similar business deals to most other khaki capitalist economies. but perhaps the darkest aspect is how deeply they have been involved in making Thailand into their image in their process of nationbuilding. Famous fascist dictator Phibun is the one who gave the country its name and created pad thai. We can also argue that his military camp re-instored the monarchy to full glory in the post-war period, enhanced its cult worshipping, and did everything to stop communism (with the US's support). Which in time means establishing disdain for leftist politics in Thailand, exemplary with the massacre at Thammasat University in 1976. Today the army is juggling political and economic power with oligarchs and aristocrats, which makes for an unstable political climate centered around a relatively profitable and protectionist economy.
      2. The MFP didnt get to put a prime minister in power because the army designed the constitution and appointed the senate. It didnt have enough seats to win, even with the popular vote because of those appointees. And more recently, their political allies in the opposition the Pheu Thai Party (PTP), led by the Shinawatra family and a good analogue for pro-money oligarchs decided to form their own coalition with the support of military backed conservatives. This shows that money really is all that matters, and as long as Thaksin cuts in his military allies on payouts he'll get to play with power. Something he didn't do back then, which cause the 2006 and 2014 coups in the first place.
      3. Democracy in Thailand is older than the concept of Thailand and Thainess itself. It is not an experiment by the military, but a promise from 1932 that has never been fully realised. The military is making a compromise to pacify political and economic stakeholders, including foreign powers. They also know that combat as in Myanmar is a very bad idea. They aren't smart, but they don't want outright warfare either.

  • @darksageasura5805
    @darksageasura5805 10 месяцев назад +302

    "We once fought together for an ideal with our swords. It wasn't for power or for glory, but to create a peaceful world where people could live without fear. And, if you should forget about that, then what did we fight the revolution for?" - Kenshin Himura.

    • @IliyaMoroumetz
      @IliyaMoroumetz 10 месяцев назад +9

      Maybe not quote a character whose creator is a registered sex offender, bro.

    • @darksageasura5805
      @darksageasura5805 10 месяцев назад +80

      @@IliyaMoroumetz It is indeed a shame that the creator is a registered sex offender, but that doesn't stop Rurouni Kenshin from being great. at least in my opinion.

    • @willmungas8964
      @willmungas8964 10 месяцев назад +77

      @@IliyaMoroumetzthis is a good example of ad hominem fallacy: attack the source, making no actual argument about the validity of the point made

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@IliyaMoroumetz its a good manga.

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 10 месяцев назад +6

      Considering Kenshin is a decade older than his second wife...
      We shouldn't have been surprised
      Though Kenshin's son does take an older girl as his lover so his family even things out

  • @null.psyche
    @null.psyche 10 месяцев назад +132

    I have not watched Mando, so I'm sitting here listening to you describe scientists being rolled into powerful systems during a postwar period and all I'm hearing is a fictionalized description of Operation Paperclip

    • @dawoifee
      @dawoifee 10 месяцев назад +23

      Operation Paperclip and Operation Osoaviakhim for the UDSSR were a little different tough. They took the Specialists from another state to use for their own technological advancment while the New Republic took the Scientists of their own State, formerly ruled by the Empreror, to reintegrate.
      So the more accurate comparison would be Germany and Austria after WW2 pardoning and reintegrating Scientists, Teachers, Judges, Politicians into their new democratic State. What they actually did.
      Austria because we liked the Idea of beeing the first victim of Nazi Germany and therefore are free from guilt. Ignoring thousands of Austrians serfing in Germanys Terror Machinery. We got Doctors back into hospitals who contributed in Genocide and mass murder of handicapped children. We got politicians in the government who serfed in the SS etc.
      Germany denazified better, but still there were plenty former Nazis in the Secrete Service, Teachers etc.
      And, sadly, there is a good reason to do so. Those people were well educated, well trained and experienced administrators. All the stuff you need to run a government. And this is something a revolutionary government has to consider as well. They need expirienced administrators, lawyers, judges to run the country.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier 10 месяцев назад +9

      At least to me, one of the striking things in the Andor series is just how competent and effective the high-level Imperial bureaucrats are. There's definitely a "banality of evil" angle, but the some of those characters are just awesome bosses/managers.
      ETA: In Mando, there is an Imperial character who really is reformed (and wasn't really bad to start with)... I won't spoil it. His arc isn't an explicit crossover with Andor, but that subplot is more like the tone of Andor than Mando. I wouldn't describe it as "fun".

    • @louisduarte8763
      @louisduarte8763 9 месяцев назад

      @@travcollierAnd there's another ex-Imperial working in the New Republic's bureaucracy, but is a spy for one of the ousted Imperial officers still running around.

  • @charlotte_8814
    @charlotte_8814 10 месяцев назад +45

    "if we kill one dictator, what stops another from taking their place?"
    -random rebel from ghost recon wildlands

  • @Volnas97
    @Volnas97 10 месяцев назад +41

    I like how in Doctor Who, in best speech called Scale Model of War, he asked rebelling alien what she'll do about people like her, the troublemakets, after she wins and what her new world will look like? Will there be music, movies, etc. and she didn't have any answer, she was just saying we'll win and then we'll figure it out.
    Also in Eragon they devoted over 100 pages to: Well, we won, now what? And they were supressing rebellions, arguing between allies,... and it even ended with new ruler saying"I don't think I'll have a calm day till the rest of my life, but maybe my children will inherit peaceful kingdom.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 9 месяцев назад +1

      Much like the Quellists in the Takeshi Kovacs novels, who preferred to go down in a blaze of glory......and the first families came back out of the ashes again...

    • @animalia5554
      @animalia5554 24 дня назад +1

      In the original Mistborn trilogy, the first book deals with the overthrow of the Lord Ruler, while the second two books deal with the aftermath of

  • @freedomforsychicgoats7664
    @freedomforsychicgoats7664 10 месяцев назад +402

    I love these multi part series on geopolitical functions(like the empires one and this). Like all of these videos they really help with research for my political fantasy setting. There really is nothing else that goes into such detail and stays understandable. Thanks so much!

  • @miaththered
    @miaththered 10 месяцев назад +274

    Failure to gain a competing claim to monopoly of force, treason from within, apathy from without, there is a list of variables. Looking forward to your thoughts.

    • @quickcube2834
      @quickcube2834 10 месяцев назад +6

      treason within depends about the theme of rebellion.

    • @buddermonger2000
      @buddermonger2000 8 месяцев назад

      Well it seemed the video more discussed the aftermath of revolutions rather than the revolutions themselves

    • @nickcara97
      @nickcara97 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@quickcube2834perhaps a more precise choice of words would be “perceived treason from within,” since there’s almost always a paranoid sentiment of internal treachery at some point, whether it happens to be substantiated or not.

  • @SebastianJArt
    @SebastianJArt 10 месяцев назад +150

    The Hunger Games is written in the present tense. It really pulled you into the experience of the characters. Glad to see it appreciated on this channel

  • @eos_aurora
    @eos_aurora 10 месяцев назад +250

    I feel like Disco Elysium does a really good job of covering a time of postrevolution

    • @Jszar
      @Jszar 10 месяцев назад +18

      It's one of my favorite things about that game setting.

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  10 месяцев назад +78

      I've only be able to play a little bit of it and didn't want to spoil it for myself in research but I *love* it so far. And some really insightful political commentary too.
      ~ Tim

    • @eos_aurora
      @eos_aurora 10 месяцев назад +14

      @@HelloFutureMe yes!! It’s a really good and (in my opinion) fairly realistic portrayal of how people live in, with, and around competing ideologies.

    • @eos_aurora
      @eos_aurora 10 месяцев назад

      @@Jszar yeah it’s so goooood

    • @Hawkatana
      @Hawkatana 10 месяцев назад

      Bringing up DE is basically cheating.

  • @vv-zp1eu
    @vv-zp1eu 10 месяцев назад +16

    I came to Egypt a couple of months ago as a refugee and the first thing I noticed were the armed police forces occupying every street corner, when I asked about it I was told that 'he who must not be named' has placed them as a preemptive warning in response to the rising frustration due to inflation and increased prices. My own country's revolutionary history mimics that of Egypt, and as someone who has worked in the civilian government after the military regime was ousted I have come to realize that revolutions rarely work without international support and international actors (and their citizens) rarely care about the developing world, elite in fighting and failed promises has led my own civilian government to be ousted in 2 years and replaced once again by a military coup. History always repeats itself.

  • @Johnrich395
    @Johnrich395 10 месяцев назад +94

    The end reminded me of the Whiskey Rebellion, where President Washington sent the US Army to put down a rebellion about taxation on whiskey. Yeah, everyone can hear the historical parallels.

    • @gabrielespana319
      @gabrielespana319 10 месяцев назад +8

      Not really, the colonies rebelled over being taxed without representation. The people who revolted over the whiskey tax did have representation in congress.

    • @Johnrich395
      @Johnrich395 10 месяцев назад +36

      @@gabrielespana319 no 2 problems are ever the same, and I don’t condemn Washington for his actions. The problem with the “post-revolutionary period” is that no matter how legitimate or secure that you claim to be, you have just proven that a revolution is POSSIBLE AND ACCEPTABLE, in fact when you have been in power for so short a time you don’t have the cultural solidity to be presumed to be the right kind of government. You have to secure your new government against the exact same kind of people you were just working with.
      For example, Patrick Henry was a massive influence for independence. When the Constitutional Convention was held he refused to attend because as he said, “I smell a rat!”

    • @heaththeemissary3824
      @heaththeemissary3824 9 месяцев назад +4

      To his credit, Washington personally led the army to stop the Whiskey Rebellion. Not that he was some great guy, but at least he had some accountability.

    • @dantecarangelo1083
      @dantecarangelo1083 9 месяцев назад +1

      Apparently by the time his army got there, his negotiators had already resolved it. The ultimate result was that this proved the post-convention U.S. government could solve these sorts of problems without having to resort to violence.

    • @ckl9390
      @ckl9390 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@dantecarangelo1083 The threat of violence was there and almost certainly played a part in the Whisky Rebels accepting the terms that Congress "negotiated".

  • @ratska96
    @ratska96 10 месяцев назад +11

    Ngl I was part way into the video and you were like "when you're writing a revolution" and I was like "oh yea, this video is about writing, not doing"

  • @CliffCardi
    @CliffCardi 10 месяцев назад +63

    In the Discworld series, the dictator of the power city state Ankh-Morpork is Havelock Vetinari. He rules with an iron fist, but he stays in power because all the rival factions hate each other more than him. Vetinari made himself so indispensable that he’s the only one who can fix whatever chaos comes the city’s way. In fact, life in the city state got horribly worse when he got deposed; so much so that the protagonists begged him to come back to power.

    • @porkerpete7722
      @porkerpete7722 10 месяцев назад +5

      Classic divide and conquer

    • @lupaswolfshead9971
      @lupaswolfshead9971 10 месяцев назад +7

      And the best part of it was he was the leader of the revolution overthrowing himself

    • @stalfithrildi5366
      @stalfithrildi5366 9 месяцев назад +8

      He had unlocked the most amazing power possible: he could see the present.
      Vetenari the real Kwisatz Haderach.

    • @kernelpanikk5151
      @kernelpanikk5151 8 месяцев назад +1

      Not a Dictator but a Tyran....Absolutely not the same, XD

    • @CliffCardi
      @CliffCardi 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@kernelpanikk5151 potayto potahto

  • @mcbruh14
    @mcbruh14 10 месяцев назад +109

    The failure of Indonesian Communist Party's revolution (and it's complete failure and subsequent annihilation) can also be an interesting case study

    • @brunoactis1104
      @brunoactis1104 10 месяцев назад +33

      As far as i know, it was basically western imperialism, right? Like most communist movements

    • @jagowestaway2503
      @jagowestaway2503 10 месяцев назад +22

      Which one? The PKI tried a revolution, failed horribly and got purged twice, once at Madiun against Sukarno's nationalists in 1948 and once against the rising power of the military nominally alongside Sukarno in 1965. It was after the latter that 1.5 million of them were killed by the New Order in their third, largest and final purging. It was also the latter, @brunoactis1104, where the forces of reaction had Western backing and CIA interference on their side - the former was entirely an internecine dispute between nationalist revolutionaries of different political bents.

    • @glizygxbler3131
      @glizygxbler3131 10 месяцев назад +40

      @@kingofcards9516yes cheering on the deaths of 1.5 million people is good

    • @TSZatoichi
      @TSZatoichi 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@kingofcards9516- Only the evil-minded would revel in the evil deeds of others.

    • @kingofcards9516
      @kingofcards9516 10 месяцев назад

      @@glizygxbler3131 oh please, acting as if I wanted 1.5 million people dead simply because I don't like authoritarian communist states is stupid.
      Should I say you are cheering on the deaths of millions if you wanted the Nazis destroyed?
      Communism has killed millions more than they ever helped but go on being a bootlicker.

  • @IsaaaValorant
    @IsaaaValorant 7 месяцев назад +49

    blackshirts and reds is needed 😂

    • @Limbo-99
      @Limbo-99 6 месяцев назад +6

      Desperately

    • @delb2192
      @delb2192 6 месяцев назад +1

      Parenti is a gem, one of the best leftist American writers

  • @TheSingularityReport
    @TheSingularityReport 10 месяцев назад +99

    I’ve been seeing tons of Revolution/rebellion based videos lately 👀 feels like we’re bound for some historical moment this decade

    • @Beergardening
      @Beergardening 10 месяцев назад +56

      Well even ignoring any country specific politics, climate change is about to cause A LOT of strife and conflict.

    • @TheR00k
      @TheR00k 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@BeergardeningI live in Russia. Climate change is great. Removes the permafrost bit by bit, makes the northern territories more fertile, the heat makes it more comfortable over here.
      I see more and more people on the internet hating Russia and Russians so I care less and less what happens to the rest of the world.

    • @Sacchi682
      @Sacchi682 10 месяцев назад +25

      I'm sick of living through historical moments

    • @trashpanda684
      @trashpanda684 10 месяцев назад +14

      @@Sacchi682 I'd rather live through them than die because of them

    • @relight6931
      @relight6931 10 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@trashpanda684As Serbian living though them, since I was born, only for first war to start when I was six, they still take a big toll on you. I do think the OP you are commenting on, just wished for some boredom when it comes to large, tumoltuos events that affect whole regions and millions of people. As others already suggested, I doubt we gonna get lucky.

  • @jhustmyles275
    @jhustmyles275 10 месяцев назад +20

    One of my favorite recent revolution stories is actually from the Snow version of Snowpiercer. It has a revolution that, spoiler alert, goes well. But it also puts a lot of focus on the Rebels leadership post revolution, and how they tackle a lot of the same/similar problems the old guard had to face.
    The writing wasn't always there, but still a really fun and interesting show.

  • @Cheddarcheesemonkey
    @Cheddarcheesemonkey 10 месяцев назад +100

    As maybe the only person other than Martin who's ACTUALLY interested in Aragorn's tax policy, thank you, Tim. These videos are always amazing and inspiring and I thank you for what you do for the writing community.

    • @valerynorth
      @valerynorth 10 месяцев назад +13

      I have always been curious about the economic and social policies of Middle-Earth's nations and rulers!

    • @annamelvina216
      @annamelvina216 10 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@valerynorthI know there was wealth and treasures in Middle Earth. The dwarves definitely had coins and gold. But, it's so weird to think of Elrond or Galadriel ever needing to think about money. Was there a vault of gold underneath Lothlorien? Or did Galadriel just trade fancy rope and potions to people in order to get whatever she wanted?

    • @valerynorth
      @valerynorth 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@annamelvina216 Also - where did the Lothlorien elves get the grains for the bread they made? No farming that we can see, and we know they were by 3rd Age Middle-Earth an insular people. Similar questions about the metal for their arrowheads. The Hobbit at least depicts the trade relations of northern Middle-Earth and how the overthrow of Smaug affects them!

    • @italianserge
      @italianserge 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@valerynorthThe bread is actually explained. It is made from a special corn gifted to the Elves by the Valie Yavanna, and only Elven matriarchs are allowed to make the bread or teach how the bread is made.

    • @valerynorth
      @valerynorth 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@italianserge That doesn't explain where they *grow* the corn, though, which is the economics question that bothers me about Elvish society.

  • @Nik6644
    @Nik6644 10 месяцев назад +84

    Have you watched Andor? I think you'd like it, they tell the story of rebellion but from the perspective of individuals, how does one go from keeping their heads down to fighting oppression head on.
    I think it has some really nice themes

    • @d.rabbitwhite
      @d.rabbitwhite 10 месяцев назад +18

      Agree. It is also really good at showing the process of a nuance of oppression scattered through out the environment developing into full on fascism.

    • @deriznohappehquite
      @deriznohappehquite 10 месяцев назад

      @@d.rabbitwhite well fascism in Star Wars is tied to Satan worshippers; whereas Nazism in real life was created by… a Gnostic race cult…. Hmmmmmmmm.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@d.rabbitwhite
      It's interesting to compare Andor with The Mandalorian, which emphasizes how dysfunctional The New Republic is.
      Things are unlikely to get much better in the short term so revolutionaries need to be patient and take a long view.
      But if they were patient would they be revolutionaries?

  • @karmagator2312
    @karmagator2312 10 месяцев назад +75

    "Chaos is a ladder" is such a good quote

    • @karlwilker579
      @karlwilker579 10 месяцев назад +2

      I think it's more like
      "Chaos is a laddah!"

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti 10 месяцев назад

      Also an overused quote

    • @kingofcards9516
      @kingofcards9516 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@balabanasireti because it's so good.

  • @MrQuantumInc
    @MrQuantumInc 10 месяцев назад +22

    This is a great look into some of the reasons revolutions are more complicated in real life than in fiction; though I think there is perhaps a good reason few fictional stories explore the subject properly, and the main reason is that complexity. Usually a story has a protagonist who is a specific person, or at most a half dozen people, but a real revolution requires a significant chunk of the population to be involved. The antagonist is normally also a single individual, but in a real revolution it is the existing institutions, often inherently impersonal. A lot of revolution are really just power fantasies, a protagonist overcoming the authorities that frustrate us in the real world. Most of the rest work on the level of metaphor. The government does things in such a bizarre way and unrealistic way because it is a metaphor for something else; it might not even be about government policy. A dystopia where people are separated into castes might just be a metaphor for how people are forced into certain social roles because of they rely on stereotypes and assumptions to understand others and themselves. The authority of a government works as a metaphor for how difficult it is to resist the widespread human tendency.

  • @wjzav1971
    @wjzav1971 9 месяцев назад +7

    Also keep in mind, the faction that overthrows the dictator might not be the one to rule afterwards. There might be a different faction that has hidden in the shadows and now uses this moment of weakness to barge in and take power themselves.

  • @elperrodelautumo7511
    @elperrodelautumo7511 4 месяца назад +5

    The American revolution to me is the most romanticized revolution of human history. 🇺🇸

  • @minaDesuDesu
    @minaDesuDesu 10 месяцев назад +12

    I really-really love these newer type of video ideas from you. Youre (not) comparing fantasy/sci-fi world building to real life, rather, you show how some of those concepts have inflicted people irl. Based

  • @Peter-hx3im
    @Peter-hx3im 10 месяцев назад +8

    Thank you. I was stuck and hadn't written in weeks, and this episode sparked ideas that added complexity to my story that got me writing again.

  • @pyeitme508
    @pyeitme508 10 месяцев назад +79

    Well that's an interesting video, which be useful for both real & fictional scenarios.

  • @Daniel_Jones
    @Daniel_Jones 10 месяцев назад +29

    Victory breeds division. When revolutionaries no longer have a common and obvious enemy, it is likely to spiral into infighting and massive power struggles

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 9 месяцев назад +2

      Tocqueville remarked something to the effect of "After victory, one needs to face oneself"

    • @animalia5554
      @animalia5554 23 дня назад

      @@paavobergmann4920”The world became ours, and we lost it. Nothing, it appears, is more challenging to the souls of men than victory itself.
      Or was that victory an illusion all along? Did our enemies realize that the harder they fought, the stronger we resisted? Perhaps they saw that the heat and the hammer only make for a better grade of sword. But ignore the steel long enough, and it will eventually rust away.”
      The back cover of The Way Of Things.

  • @mga149
    @mga149 10 месяцев назад +73

    I really wish the creatives at Disney Star Wars had employed people with actual writing skills/knowledge like this for the Sequel Trilogy.
    Rebels, Rogue One, and Andor lay the groundwork for what's explained here, expanding on all the different factions that made up the Rebellion. Mon Mothma's & Bail Organa's disillusioned senators, vs Saw Gerrera's whatever it takes gorilla fighters, vs the industrial interests of worlds like Corellia & the Mon Calamari, etc. These groups have vastly different goals, power bases, and obligations.
    Even the remnants of the Empire are a much more dynamic and interesting, as shown in Battlefront 2 campaign and with Mayfeld in Mandalorian. Providing even more opportunities for great story telling.
    That's not even touching on the ethical problems around droids...
    Instead we just got; hey the Empire 2.0 is here... and they brought yet another bigger, badder Death Star.

    • @runajain5773
      @runajain5773 10 месяцев назад +6

      Yeh like it feel you destroy powerful empire then defeat his reminant weaker empire faction become way stronger than older one like wth

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 10 месяцев назад +6

      And then at the end, every enemy ship is a Death Star too.
      Yeah, they really really screwed the pooch with the sequel trilogy. The additional travesty is that there were so many plots available from the Star Wars novels; not all canonical of course, but people would have responded much better to some variant of those plots, instead of the garbage ideas they did some up with.
      I still feel sorry for the young actors, having their careers tainted by the shitty plots & egomaniac executive negligence, which they were asked to hold together.

    • @Delicious_Oreoz
      @Delicious_Oreoz 10 месяцев назад +2

      Imagine if The Force Awakens was this intense spy film where people wanna overthrow the Republic and Luke etc. Are having to sort of deal with the dillema of being a super power being and whether they should interfere or if his duty is to just see what the people want etc. Couldve been interesting and maybe explained Kylo Rens fall to the dark as him seeing the jedi as this overpowered institution or something. No Emperor, you could have Imperial Remnant maybe trying to take advantage of the turmoil etc.

    • @CantoniaCustoms
      @CantoniaCustoms 10 месяцев назад +1

      And the cherry on top,
      Somehow, palpatine survived.

    • @karlshorstzwei
      @karlshorstzwei 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@wyldhowl2821From what I've read it's because Disney gave the creatives very little time compared to even the prequels, and meddled in everything out of a desire to squeeze every last dollar out of it, even if it creatively doomed the franchise.

  • @cubancavalier3051
    @cubancavalier3051 10 месяцев назад +7

    This is extremely helpful and well timed for me! I’m working on building a faction heavy warring kingdoms world right now and learning more about revolutions and dictatorship is super useful!! Thank you!!

  • @cmd31220
    @cmd31220 10 месяцев назад +6

    Something you really have to remember is that with outlandishly rare exceptions, the dictator isnt overthrown unless the military ALLOWS the dictator to be overthrown.
    The peasants storming the palace is a nice trope, but a mob of unarmed or melee armed peasants loses to a handful of well-fed palace guards with machine guns 10 times out of 10. Which is whybwith every irl revolution mentioned, the leader is only deposed once the generals join the revolutionaries and the soldiers either lay down their weapons or actuvely join the mob.

    • @cmd31220
      @cmd31220 10 месяцев назад

      @@runajain5773 can you try that again in English? I have no idea what you just said

    • @runajain5773
      @runajain5773 10 месяцев назад

      ​​​@@cmd31220sorry i a m not good at english i am just saying hitler was soldier in ww1 army when germany was defeated in ww1. he went bavair when he enter politics he already had good relationship militry when he become there is coup basically saying militry will not coup you .if you have good relationship militry and general no fear of coup but is not so stalin did purge militry gereneral
      Also there great video how hitler enter in politics so you understand

    • @cmd31220
      @cmd31220 10 месяцев назад

      @runajain5773 yes but none of that changes the fact that the revolution doesn't succeed unless the army allows it to happen. Stalin purged generals in part BECAUSE of this.
      He purged generals that were more loyal to Trotsky and replaced them with those loyal to him. Same with bureaucrats, party officials, governors, everything. Hitler did the same. It's what every good dictator does when they take power because right after your ascension is when your hold on power is the weakest.
      It's also the same reason revolutions so quickly devolve into dictatorships of their own. Those that help you win power aren't necessarily the ones that help you KEEP power and the history of politics is the balancing act between those two groups

    • @FirstnameLastname-bp2pg
      @FirstnameLastname-bp2pg 10 месяцев назад +2

      One thing Trump proved though was civilians can do a LOT of damage before the military shows up.

    • @cmd31220
      @cmd31220 10 месяцев назад +3

      @FirstnameLastname-bp2pg lol what damage? I mean seriously in the grand scheme of things what damage was caused and if the the capitol police actually felt like shooting how many would have even gotten to the barriers, let alone in the building?

  • @The_Throngler
    @The_Throngler 10 месяцев назад +8

    The Goblin Horde reside within the nearby Goblin Kingdom where they review books and get really hype doing silly bits.

  • @petrosstefanidis6396
    @petrosstefanidis6396 6 месяцев назад +13

    Shallow and ahistorical at best

  • @EcthelionOTF
    @EcthelionOTF 9 месяцев назад +2

    I’m just working through Volume #1 of On Writing & Worldbuilding and you have done a fantastic job! Huge help with defining the techniques, features and styles of writing

  • @zacharyorr8075
    @zacharyorr8075 10 месяцев назад +4

    I have listened to a podcast about revolutions and as soon as you were talking about the splits in the alliance after overthrow the regime my immediate thought was “yup, there’s the entropy of victory from all of them

  • @wagahagwa6978
    @wagahagwa6978 10 месяцев назад +85

    are there dystopian books where the main character's do overthrow the dictator or big bad guys, but end up becoming the very same thing they destroyed? it happens in real life, it should happen in fiction

    • @bwgaming-lq4gd
      @bwgaming-lq4gd 10 месяцев назад +64

      Animal farm is kinda of what your looking for

    • @MisterSquid1
      @MisterSquid1 10 месяцев назад +43

      Spoilers for books from the 60's and the movies releasing currently
      Dune

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul 10 месяцев назад +31

      Dune.

    • @APGfuntimesandlols
      @APGfuntimesandlols 10 месяцев назад +13

      Dune Sequels.

    • @torshavnnewell
      @torshavnnewell 10 месяцев назад +2

      The B plot to Solar Opposites

  • @theprofessionalfence-sitter
    @theprofessionalfence-sitter 10 месяцев назад +7

    One of the main problems that revolutions face is that the revolutionary forces need to be a minimal coalition in the sense that, once they take power, the support of every constituent group is necessary to maintain the government and that swapping any one of them for some other faction would also hurt one of the other original groups. If this is not the case, then the other factions would be tempted to remove said other group in order to claim more power for themselves and the government would devolve into infighting (as a side note, that is why I consider corporate governments as portrayed in many cyberpunk stories to be unrealistic: shareholders rely on the legal system for their power and so, after the company takes over, they would be easily moved out of the way without risking a loss of control (unless they have the backing of some foreign government), but that means that they would want to prevent the company from getting into a position where it might take power, in the first place). At the same time, the revolutionary forces also need to be strong enough to even remove the current government, but the revolution will likely change the balance of power between the factions and so it is very difficult to meet both of those requirements, at the same time. The 'traditional' solution to this problem is to have the revolutionary forces be composed of very similar groups (so the balance of power is unlikely to shift much, between them), but then it is also very easy for them to set up a dictatorship, rather than anything bordering on democracy, to benefit themselves at the expense of the general populace.

    • @ExeErdna
      @ExeErdna 10 месяцев назад +2

      That's why in a lot of cyberpunk there's no "winning" just surviving long enough to understand the scope.

  • @shadowguy321
    @shadowguy321 8 месяцев назад +5

    As an Egyptian, for anyone interested, even though Sisi technically took power through a military coo. Morsi (of the Muslim Brotherhood) was a corrupt leader just as bad if not worse than Mubarak, who was quite openly corrupt. As a Coptic (we are a minority race in Egypt...we trace our ancestry back to Pharaohs, although obviously bloodlines have absolutely mixed over the years) there was genuine and true fear that Morsi would take power. Copts were persecuted and murdered quite regularly throughout Egyptian history by extremists (from which Morsi identified) and government officials (ala Mubarak, Sadat, and Nasser) to pit Copts against Muslims. The revolution bridged quite a few gaps between the 2 groups. Sisi has thus far shown more willingness to not murder us than previous rulers of Egypt. Forget equal treatment, we would just like to not be killed. E.g., Sisi popped into an Easter mass, this has never happened by an Egyptian leader. By doing that he acknowledged us as humans. In the new Cairo museum, Copts have a spot for their heritage artifacts, as well.
    Things are not perfect and I won't sit here and tell you Sisi, is a nice or even perfect ruler. However, this is one of those EXTREMELY RARE cases where the military coo was actually better than the "elected government." Again I put that in quotes as Morsi's election was extremely corrupt, and people were threatened with violence, death, or destruction if they did not vote for Morsi. It's a very layered situation there and it goes back very far. The west saw military coo and instantly said "bad", understandably but it came from a place of ignorance.

  • @SDarkelmer
    @SDarkelmer 10 месяцев назад +5

    That bit about idealizing the past really hit home. In Portugal it´s still common to see older people idealizing Salazar´s regime as a time of order and stability, when the government wasn´t corrupt and was efficient, as opposed to today. Hell , even young people grow up hearing this kind of crap and they also come to idealize or respect the figure of Salazar as an efficient leader, despite being able to search on the internet the data that contradicts all the points mentioned above.
    Really sad to see near-fascism (or just straight up fascism) resing up again in my country, supported not only but the old, but the young too.

    • @runajain5773
      @runajain5773 10 месяцев назад +1

      You can personality of cult it happen when one politician hardcore popular with his regime so people will always support even you did worse when person like you said

  • @lilbrother21
    @lilbrother21 10 месяцев назад +76

    Feel like all these revolution videos have you on some kind of list now

    • @brunoactis1104
      @brunoactis1104 10 месяцев назад +12

      And what does that say about the "free world"? Because what you're saying might not even be a joke.

    • @SGR403
      @SGR403 10 месяцев назад +2

      List of what?

    • @CarrotConsumer
      @CarrotConsumer 10 месяцев назад +24

      A Cia recruitment list maybe.

    • @Imbatmn57
      @Imbatmn57 10 месяцев назад

      Especially russia/north korea they don't like "american propaganda"

    • @runajain5773
      @runajain5773 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@CarrotConsumer think he do not know about cia back on dictatorship everyworld

  • @MandosDestiny
    @MandosDestiny 10 месяцев назад +12

    On of the struggles I've had lately, especially after watching some of these recent videos, is a feeling of displaced hopelessness in my ability to ever properly/compellingly write a lot of these topics. There are just so many factors to track even before you put characters into the story.

    • @michaelronqedar7919
      @michaelronqedar7919 10 месяцев назад +5

      Don't give up! It's a lot, but you don't have to do everything all at once. Write what you like, little by little, and then you'll write a masterpiece (or at least something you live) in no time🙃

    • @uyenst
      @uyenst 9 месяцев назад +6

      Also don't let these things distract you from the real goal: making an awesome emotional experience for the readers. Your world building and political maneuvers might not be the stuff of pentagon case studies, but as long as the overall story is a powerful emotional experience, it worked

  • @gregourious9190
    @gregourious9190 6 месяцев назад +5

    The fact that the October Revolution was not touched upon even once

  • @shinyacorneee1620
    @shinyacorneee1620 6 месяцев назад +9

    Not going to lie, I love this stuff, it’s great for world building and writing stories. However every time that he says liberal in the same breath as revolution I have to do a double take. From the perspective of studying revolutionary ideologies that are all inherently revolutionary, calling something like an insurrection against an authoritarian dictatorship just to install another hierarchical government feels redundant. Why would we ever fight for possibly a lifetime if just to end up with the perfect breeding ground for the same system we just “escaped”. There’s nothing revolutionary about replacing one ruling class with another, it’s insurrection sure but for something to be truly revolutionary wouldn’t it change the base idea or social structure in the region?

    • @thenightwatchman1598
      @thenightwatchman1598 6 месяцев назад +8

      he cant commit to his premise. because that would undermine his own position given he exists on youtube and makes money off of google. no one like a hypocritical hand biter. so he is going to go in with as much of a smokescreen of plausible deniability as he can muster to play both sides and not take a hard stance on anything.

    • @darksaint0124
      @darksaint0124 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@thenightwatchman1598So in other words, the liberal stance.

    • @thenightwatchman1598
      @thenightwatchman1598 5 месяцев назад

      @@darksaint0124 Exactly.

  • @MrARock001
    @MrARock001 10 месяцев назад +155

    A good counter question would be: How have revolutions in the past succeeded? Why are Cubans so happy and satisfied with their government, despite crippling sanctions?

    • @chlve
      @chlve 10 месяцев назад +48

      Or the Vietnamese

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 10 месяцев назад +5

      Part of it is their belief in Fidel Castro as their protector and liberator.

    • @ninjashot37
      @ninjashot37 10 месяцев назад

      Cubans happiness with their current system is due to entrenched censorship & surveillance.
      Cuba is famously known as the place where a doorman earns more than a doctor.
      This is only possible if you hide alternatives outside the country or restrict freedom of movement.

    • @thrawncaedusl717
      @thrawncaedusl717 10 месяцев назад +32

      By most standards, they haven’t. I have looked, and have yet to find a violent revolution which left its people better off in terms of personal freedoms, standard of living, or life expectancy. Even the most justified revolutions in history (ie Haiti) just make things worse for the people they claim to fight for.

    • @MatthewSmith-sz1yq
      @MatthewSmith-sz1yq 10 месяцев назад +51

      ​@@thrawncaedusl717I mean I hate to be the stereotypical American, but the American revolution turned out pretty well, all things considered. Granted, it was a bit different, as we already had quasi-local governments and were fairly autonomous overall, and the "revolution" was mostly just removing the colonial overseers. We kind of already had governments in place, so there wasn't as much of a power vacuum.
      To be fair, the articles of confederation were kind of a disaster, and I'd argue that Washington almost singlehandedly prevented the executive from becoming a dictatorship (they literally wanted to appoint him king, and he turned it down, instead going for an (at the time) extremely informal term, "president," as well as establishing all sorts of other norms for the presidency like term limits). There is a perfectly plausible future where the US government either collapsed under infighting between states, or Washington could have easily become a dictator if he had wanted to.

  • @ayandadlamini2127
    @ayandadlamini2127 10 месяцев назад

    Your video was amazing man its been 10 days since you posted man please post again soon man we miss your content!
    I also write video essays and your videos really inspire me

  • @bleachelf
    @bleachelf 10 месяцев назад +4

    A great taste of the complexity of revolutions. It's not a subject I want to tackle in my own writing, just because of the sheer level of complexity, but I did like how a previous video mentioned it can just be a sort of set piece or trope, depending on the tone and focus of the story. Thanks for using a variety of real life and fictional examples! That helps a lot!

  • @Ichigo90
    @Ichigo90 9 месяцев назад +3

    Dr. Who gave a brilliant speech on this topic. Somewhat paraphrased(because, you know, it’s Dr. Who. Aliens are involved) it goes:
    “It’s not fair? Oh, well, goodness me, I didn’t realize it was unfair! And when the war is over? What, are you gonna have a homeland, free from your oppressors? Will people live in houses? Will people have jobs? Oh, do you think there’ll be music? Will people be allowed to play violin? Who’s gonna make the violins? You don’t know, do you? Let me ask you a question about this brave new world of yours. When you’ve killed all the bad guys, and everything is perfect, and just, and fair, and you’ve got everything exactly the way you want it, what are you gonna do, with the people like you? The troublemakers? How are you going to protect your glorious revolution from the next one?”

  • @YTHandlesWereAMistake
    @YTHandlesWereAMistake 10 месяцев назад +4

    I wrote this almost a year ago after digging deeper into history of my birth-country. I think it fits here.
    Identity crisis of a russian-born man.
    We're raised to European level standards of quality, rights, freedom of speech and belief, yet encounter a spiraling history of conflicts, bloodbaths, treason, militant groups all over the past century and present. Fighting those who were our allies, forfeiting treaties right after signing them, not even ceasing the fire in the middle of the talks, scamming entire nations - not to mention, our own people. Fake it till you make it.. we never did - only a handful of people, and yet those have the most blood-stained hands, shirts, and bills.
    The attempts at hegemony and control of the region and repeated collapses of it are comical when viewed from an outside perspective. You can't make a sweet treat out of poo - it may even look like one for a short while, but will never taste the same.

    The core issues are in how things are done, played even, inside the people, their principles.
    Lack of motivation, some say. We were born this way. Raised mostly, too. Accepting what's available and too scared to achieve more. Only anomalies are able to stand their way through such - and what for?
    The state is "in shambles", the potential heroes - killed or silenced. They don't see support from the people as the people have no more will. The people want to be Left Alone.
    It's no surprise that the only chance to survive is to remove themselves from the immediate threat, trying your best remotely, only keeping the exposure via a distanced one (it too, at times, being closer than one hopes for). That, however, eases further distancing from within and opens up new opportunities to silence the whole ordeal, spreading further lies.
    Nobody can be trusted, they say. "Truth is more complex than that."
    It's the winners who write the truth, but the tactics are outdated, so the state actually loses. But only so for those who actually seek the truth.
    The commoner doesn't do it intentionally, there's no culture for it - instead, they try to keep up with enough to make somewhat of a guess out of the specially prepared food for thought, with spices and variety of just the right way to not be able to definitively say: "This is the position, the flavor of this place and cuisine." - instead, it's a mixture from all the sources available, a never-ending semi-improvised series where mishaps are common but forgotten, where the ingredients have rotten all the way down but have decently looking make up.. Sometimes, not even that.
    Systemic and planned bullying, setting up nations against each other in an attempt to worsen the consequences of the inevitable.
    The further blindness to it lead to what was planned but forgotten.
    Next, you're turning onto your brother, your farther, your mother, as "They don't understand. They're wrong, and need to be treated. Repaired. Fixed.", based on doctored claims that just so happen to align enough to make some resemblance of sense and then allow one to hypothesize their own findings. Oh so convenient, isn't it?
    A hilarious comparison comes to mind, as nowadays it's almost like some want this people to feel like Israelites, in a way. The "true inheriters", the "righteous", "with God on their side". And yet the religion is contradicting itself in the most awful way, praising those who go into battle. Promising heaven. And this is mere dozens of years after eradication of the institution of church altogether, spreading "scientific" beliefs, an attempt to nurture at least some sense. It's obviously another tool, used when it fits. Though sometimes you use an axe to nail things as you don't have a hammer. One wonders - when the handle scatters in pieces, what will get cut off by it's falling head?
    Everyone's at fault. And little to nobody blame themselves. Some do, but it won't reverse the action. A solution is necessary, yet nobody has one, apart from learning from the mistakes.

    • @KaterynaM_UA
      @KaterynaM_UA 10 месяцев назад +2

      Paraphrasing Churchill: if you were given the choice between war and dishonour and chose dishonour, you will have both. All those people who try to be left alone and choose humiliation of living in a society like this in exchange for safety they won't be safe, they are signing their own sentence and reckoning is coming.

    • @user-vc2ku6hl1k
      @user-vc2ku6hl1k 9 месяцев назад

      @@KaterynaM_UA Well, sometimes you could choose war and get both.

  • @VolcyThoughts
    @VolcyThoughts 5 месяцев назад +2

    There was a show on FX a few years ago called Tyrant which dealt with this exact issue. The main character overthrew an Islamic state and tried to implement reforms and release political prisoners. But one of those same prisoners then launched a counter revolution against his secular government so in order to gain back control, he became a tyrant. The same one he overthrew before

    • @rbgerald2469
      @rbgerald2469 Месяц назад

      The story is loosely based on the life of Bashar-Al Assad of Syria

  • @Historyfan476AD
    @Historyfan476AD 10 месяцев назад +3

    We must also remember as well, that to people looking at democracies from outside view, sometimes all you can see or hear is the fact that is about 600+ elected MPs (UK as example) all who seem to be caught in scandals half the time, and seem to just push policy anyway even if the public don't support the policies. And in reality you have have two choices to choose from in who runs the Nation, a two party state which is not really democratic when you only have two options who seem be just as bad as each other. To an outsider they might think," Well this is silly, why have 600 corrupt leaders, when we already have one corrupt leader, likely cheaper too".
    We must also admit the fact that some democracies today have been sliding towards more controlling, right limiting, freedom of speech suppression policies recently (USA,UK). I mean once those virtues of freedom are started to be eroded by elected governments, at some point people might just wonder what's the point of electing people if they're corrupt and will just limit our rights anyway. A democracy can be as authoritarian and tyrannical as any Monarch or Dictatorship. Just look at Athens and even the Roman Late republic.
    The dark secret is, most revolutions are either squashed, or just morph into a monster as bad as the old system. The American Revolution is actually a rarity in how it came out as a stable and actually decent place to live. I think Modern Hollywood and Americanism has kind of infected the idea of revolution in the eyes of western people and media, making it seem like they're always noble and actually win. When historically there are countless attempts of revolutions or rebellions that are put down in the end, or are just as bad people getting in power.
    The Arab Spring is for example in the end a failure as well, it did not achieve much since either the old powers stayed in place, the country collapsed or worse people got in. Look at when NATO helped rebels overthrow Gadhafi, in the end Libya is still in a much worse state than it was before, It's a failed state now still with divided groups competing for control.
    Cruel to say this but sometimes, better the dictator you know, than the one who could be.

  • @jewellier
    @jewellier 10 месяцев назад +26

    Man you really took a deep dive into revolutions

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 10 месяцев назад +2

      Extremism needs to be learned about and 'Some More News' is literally an entire channel about local and global issues, bad systems, and Extremism

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 10 месяцев назад +3

    the splintering of factions spawned out of Poland's Solidarity movement is facinating

    • @karlshorstzwei
      @karlshorstzwei 9 месяцев назад

      Right - both major Polish political parties are descended from rival factions of Solidarity.

  • @MrDDiRusso
    @MrDDiRusso 10 месяцев назад +3

    It's easy to overturn the apple cart.
    It's quite another thing to pick up the pieces.

  • @johannapyle-carter8223
    @johannapyle-carter8223 10 месяцев назад +2

    One thing that was interesting to learn from history is that there is rarely *A* revolution. They usually come in pairs/trios. It's not unusual to see a liberal revolution face its own revolution that lands a country far more conservative than it was before.

  • @quadstar4382
    @quadstar4382 8 месяцев назад +64

    Are you suggesting current Russia is better than the former USSR? Wild take

    • @dankovskimark4540
      @dankovskimark4540 6 месяцев назад +3

      Capitalist: *comits more crimes crimes against humanity than Austrian Moustache* Hero of Free World(tm), Paragon of Virtue, Second Coming of Jesus.
      Communist: *coughs* Enemy of mankind, most vile being on Earth, Satan made flesh.

    • @alondvorkin2762
      @alondvorkin2762 6 месяцев назад

      Current Russia is a direct result of the USSR betraying the revolution and maintaining state capitalism.

    • @jakestaheli8532
      @jakestaheli8532 Месяц назад +4

      I think he's saying stability-wise, not morally.

    • @Rikken552
      @Rikken552 Месяц назад

      I'd argue they're around the same

    • @quadstar4382
      @quadstar4382 9 дней назад

      @@Rikken552 Russia is worse off economically

  • @alexkats30
    @alexkats30 10 месяцев назад +5

    Brilliant video. I don't think that necessarily revolutions are that impossible, but they're certainly much more complicated than people think

    • @lcg3092
      @lcg3092 10 месяцев назад +5

      The world we live in is the result of a revolution, a bourgeois/capitalist revolution, and it had it's fair share of setbacks before becoming the norm, a decade after the French revolution was cutting the heads of nobility, France was a monarchy again. Our world history is just a series of revolutions, doesn't mean any of those are simple, but also proves they are anything but impossible.
      The issue is people think history is a series of static events that happen in specific dates and suddenly everything changes, that the middle age peasent suddenly woke up a renaissance painter, when actually history is a much more gradual process, sometimes with 1 step forwards and 2 back.

  • @wile123456
    @wile123456 10 месяцев назад +2

    You should get more light on your face or turn of your cameras auto focus feature. It gets constantly confused and leaves your face blurry more often than sharp

  • @valerynorth
    @valerynorth 10 месяцев назад +2

    Brilliant video as ever! I've been reading a lot of contemporary sources on the Communist revolution in Russia, and it's interesting to see the continuity that was felt with the failed 1905 revolution, as well as how the February Revolution was overthrown by the Bolsheviks in the October Revolution. Then, how the Bolsheviks immediately found themselves up against those challenges of meeting their promises, faced with huge interference from the Entente powers in WW1 (backing the White army in the civil war), the German and Austrian aristocrats looking for major gains from the revolutionary promise to end the war, and the desperate need to rebuild and then supply an army that they could rely on. In amongst all of which (as mentioned in the video) factional disputes and Stalin's machinations were already shaping up.
    I've wanted to write some kind of management sim video game about being a victorious leftwing revolutionary trying to keep a lid on all this, and many of the issues I've been thinking about how to frame in that way are covered. (A video game that does it from a more interactive novel kind of angle is Suzerain, which gives you options of which global/foreign powers to align with, as well as internal business leaders.)

    • @runajain5773
      @runajain5773 10 месяцев назад +1

      Suzerain yeh it tough to communist dictator because military ups hate communist and their political parties has a less so it could turn sordland into socialism democracy I did playtrough I did great run I become ssp

  • @user-tl6yo5pi1v
    @user-tl6yo5pi1v 8 месяцев назад +3

    Whaat No mention of mistborn trilogy by Brandon Sanderson? This was the example where i learned that time after the revolution is even harder than the revolution itself.

  • @TheKrstff
    @TheKrstff 10 месяцев назад +4

    Watching this reminded me of a political science professor I had who raved about military coups. He had nothing but good things to say about times when the military would take over a government.
    He was from Eritrea, so from his lived experience being from an unstable part of Africa, the military were the ones deposing corrupt governments and restoring democracy. The way he explained it, solders are the lower classes and no one joins the military to get rich. When they take over, it's the common people ousting the corrupt upper class.
    And since the military already has a built in command structure and established organization, you don't have this post revolution chaos talked about here.
    As an American, this perspective was wild.

    • @derpherp1810
      @derpherp1810 10 месяцев назад

      Huh makes you wonder if Hello Future Me knows what he is talking about and isn't just some neoliberal cuck with zero class consciousness.

    • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl
      @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl 10 месяцев назад

      As a egyptian. He doesn't know what he is talking about

    • @TheKrstff
      @TheKrstff 8 месяцев назад

      @@MohamedRamadan-qi4hl To be fair, he was from Eritrea and was probably living there during the war for independence.

    • @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl
      @MohamedRamadan-qi4hl 8 месяцев назад

      @@TheKrstff and I am from Egypt and he doesn't has authority to talk about the entirety of Africa as a piece of land especially about my country
      Because he wasn't talking about just his country but the entirety of Africa

    • @TheKrstff
      @TheKrstff 7 месяцев назад

      @@MohamedRamadan-qi4hl he wasn't talking about Africa, he was talking in general that military coups tend to oust corrupt regimes.

  • @seniorss2401
    @seniorss2401 10 месяцев назад

    Is there a difference between the new version of your books and the old ones? I've got the 2019 mobi format

  • @RogueLeaderEcho
    @RogueLeaderEcho 10 месяцев назад +17

    From a more leftist perspective, I'd argue that while international pressure is obviously covered here, too much credence is given to natural division within revolutions and not enough credence is give to manufactured division. The short way of phrasing it is thus: if revolutions were really super prone to failure and return to autocracy, the United States would not have to be so darn good at regime change.
    The non-short way of putting it, because I'm a leftist: there are plenty of counter examples to the idea of authoritarianism naturally arising out, or being easier to arise out of left-wing revolution, especially in South and Central America. Take 1950s Guatemala. The dictator was overthrown by 2 military officers, and a formerly exiled professor became the democratically elected president, the first in the history of the nation. Guatemala had no history of any kind of democracy, they had just thrown out their old constitution and put in a new one like 2 days before the new president's inauguration, the old bureaucracy which formed the new congress had no real history of experience governing because they were purely figureheads in the previous regime, and the new guy was backed by the military. All the features of "meet the new boss, same as the old boss," all the trappings of the makings of a dictator. But no! The new president helped instill democracy, helped guide congress to co-equal power, and began instituting reform. He didn't even particularly like the candidates to replace him at the end of his term, but he respected the 1 term (in 12 years) limit. Now, international (aka just the United States, acting on the behalf of one fruit corporation) influence did manage to overthrow the 2nd democratically elected president via *extensive* financial, military, and diplomatic support for an external, right wing military group, but it was neither the common people nor the original revolutionaries falling from grace that ended liberal democracy in Guatemala at that time.
    My argument would be that all of the factors that made revolution possible also make international influence easier, more pervasive, more systemic. And if you're the international influencer, it's also easier to make it look like natural division by bribing a few elites with the right passport or funneling weapons, money, and connections to the paramilitary group with the right looking leader.
    Although I should say, I don't disagree with the premise of the video, which is very good overall. I don't disagree with the fact that revolutions can be splintered, I just disagree with the source of division.

    • @silasrogan241
      @silasrogan241 9 месяцев назад +1

      Very well put.

    • @user-vc2ku6hl1k
      @user-vc2ku6hl1k 9 месяцев назад +1

      The answer is better than the video itself.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 9 месяцев назад

      Where is the manufactured division in 1917 Russia? Who paid the Bolsheviks to convince the Meniviks at literal gunpoint, to then start going after each other, ahemm, trotzki, ahemm, ice pick...? Where is the manufactured division in 1919 germany? Why were different leftist groups butchering each other in the streets instead of preventing the rise of fascism? Nothing you wrote about Guatemala is wrong, but you picked one fitting example to argue for an alternative "general rule" that I don´t really see. I would say both can and did happen in history. And I would argue, most of the time, both happen. You need some kind of initial crack to drive a wedge in. And in terms of the certain Fruit Company, I think Guatemala is by far not the only country they had their greedy fingers in.
      I remember there was also a military coup in Turkey in the eighties, that ended in the military forcing reelections and then stepping back. But then again, we had Gadaffi, who started out not all that bad if you look into his early days, and then simply couldn´t let go, and it went down from there.

  • @pyrobeingpyro
    @pyrobeingpyro 10 месяцев назад +5

    American revolutionaries (1776), french revolutionaries (1789), british revolutionaries (1688), spanish revolutionaries (falangists are technically revolutionaries), latin american revolutionaries (1800-1980) and Botswana chilling:
    *I N T E R E S T I N G.*

  • @emma5757
    @emma5757 10 месяцев назад

    Do you know if any NZ stores carry your books? would love to get them and if possible support stores here?

  • @taragonleaf8005
    @taragonleaf8005 10 месяцев назад +1

    What film/show were those scenes of military rule in New York City from?
    Found it, its the Siege (1998)

  • @timothymiles2851
    @timothymiles2851 10 месяцев назад +17

    There is a TV show I watched a while ago called ‘Tyrant’. It shows a reasonably good example of this with a brother going home to his family who runs a dictatorship. And this brother wants to change it to a democracy because he’s lived in America and seen the freedoms. It’s a good exploration of how it’s just not so simple.

    • @karlshorstzwei
      @karlshorstzwei 9 месяцев назад +3

      It's actually based loosely on Bashar al-Assad, back during the mid-2000s when it seemed he would be a reformist force.

  • @user-yw8lj6io6l
    @user-yw8lj6io6l 10 месяцев назад +6

    love your cinematic intros. and your videos in general. you’re such a master of atmosphere, your nonfiction feels like fiction!

  • @nataliel1806
    @nataliel1806 10 месяцев назад

    Where did the raintrack at the end come from lol i want to listen to it for bedtime

  • @averygoldfish7028
    @averygoldfish7028 10 месяцев назад +2

    Splinter revolutions where the empire loses pieces but still remains are interesting too

  • @Limbo-99
    @Limbo-99 6 месяцев назад +12

    Your analysis of this topic is a great disappointment. I enjoy most of your videos and they've improved my writing, but these political, and philosophical videos have been unwatchably bad.
    You fail to understand the most basic nuance to any of the topics you discussed here. You seemingly don't have a working understanding of what a revolution even is. You constantly confuse revolutions and coups, as well as missuse and missunderstand other terms. You can't see past decades old red scare propaganda. And you're completely unaware of your own ideology and how it shapes your lackluster analysis.
    I hope you're future videos will be better. And that you won't be afraid to consult others when talking on a subject you know little too nothing about.

    • @scaryari1403
      @scaryari1403 8 дней назад

      I feel like the red scare definitely affects how discussions of revolution are discussed.
      Can you explain some of the nuances you're thinking of?
      As an american living in a time divided by extremism, lack of education (devoid of capitalistic conditioning & propaganda), I often find these discussions to be one-sided.

  • @davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244
    @davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244 10 месяцев назад +3

    0:04 Saw this and yeah, the Disheveled Goblin being unable to hold onto much territory makes sense, however what is the gverment system in Merphy Land

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 10 месяцев назад +2

      A textatorship? Per laweveryone has to read a book,or audiobook per week, muhahaha 😂
      Oh and undulated is banned

    • @davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244
      @davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244 10 месяцев назад

      @@marocat4749 Their chief import are book reviews and scholars

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244 Makes sense,isuspect the duche with domes mighthave historians,and dome architects of course,
      And goblins hae a book review rivalry in export

    • @davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244
      @davidmauriciogutierrezespi5244 10 месяцев назад

      @@marocat4749 i actually picture the duche of The Dom exports swords and fine tailored suits apart from historians
      The goblins have a review rivalry but they're network of infromants is without par, therefore having the best News of all.

  • @ElijahVillanueva-cf5tz
    @ElijahVillanueva-cf5tz 10 месяцев назад

    Anyone know what map maker he used at the beginning? Used it before, just forgot.

  • @lk_3099
    @lk_3099 10 месяцев назад

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but have you made a writing video for character emotions?
    I'm mainly confused about crying and the countless places I hear don't write more than 2 crying scenes in one book, otherwise it's bad.

  • @kid14346
    @kid14346 10 месяцев назад +3

    This is honest to god how the game Frostpunk works. The game is basically what if SimCity but everyone is starving and freezing and will publicly execute you if you don't fix their issues.
    They always start with things like, "Okay we will be ethical and make the right decisions!" followed by "Oh god we have a resource shortage... Child Labor or 24 Hour Emergency Shifts?" and then at the end of the game it is like, "Do we just make it legal for people to Duel in the streets and kill each other to keep the Discontent under control?"
    It gets even better in the DLC scenario The Last Autumn where you have to manage a work site and you can legitimately have a communist or fascistic revolution occur on the jobsite depending on your decisions. "Yeah we should have a Union of the workers! Oh god... the workers are suggesting dumb changes that will slow down the project. Well let's make a council for the workers... aaaand now they are corrupt power mongers..."

  • @NinjaGidget
    @NinjaGidget 10 месяцев назад +29

    Might the propensity to idealize an autocratic past have an element of survivorship bias? The people most severely oppressed by such systems may well be no longer able to object. The rise of neo-facism coincides with the passing of the generation that directly experienced what OG racism meant. It's not the only factor, but it seems to be *a* factor.

    • @blartversenwaldiii
      @blartversenwaldiii 10 месяцев назад

      you might be onto something

    • @ryelor123
      @ryelor123 10 месяцев назад +6

      The problem is understanding who the actors are. The rise of neo-facism is real but its not due to the very people and groups accused of it. Neo-facism exists to try to strengthen the bourgeois class. So while the bourgeois class in America and Europe, for instance, may publically express seemingly leftwing views, in private and through nonprofits they express neofacist and racist views. Most people in America considered rightwing can't stand the neofacists and fight them all the time. This conflict isn't seen by people who just assume both rival groups are instead just one group. So while you may feel that giving money to a nonprofit organization that claims to "desire peaceful coexistence" will result in them spending the money pushing love and tolerance, its often more likely that the money is spent spreading racism and conflict. There is no doubt that the neofacist groups are coordinated and paid since they just don't act like people with strongly-held views. When you argue with them, its like you're arguing with someone who doesn't care about the truth but instead just speaks their lines. However, they are doomed since their groups are infiltrated.

    • @laecard1778
      @laecard1778 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@ryelor123 Nice conspiracy theory you’ve got there, it’d be a shame if someone applied critical thinking to it.

    • @dallowfusionblast
      @dallowfusionblast 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@laecard1778 It's literally not

    • @joao.fenix1473
      @joao.fenix1473 10 месяцев назад +1

      There is no such thing as neo fascism

  • @shauntait3223
    @shauntait3223 10 месяцев назад

    Do you need to buy both world building books, or just the most recent?

  • @LordOfAllusion
    @LordOfAllusion 10 месяцев назад +1

    I’m surprised you went through this whole thing without referencing Brent Weeks’ Lightbringer saga which explores these very ideas in TWO different revolutions, one with Dazen Guile, and one with the Color Prince.

  • @thebrokenpuppet2714
    @thebrokenpuppet2714 10 месяцев назад +7

    Very interesting concept to go very in depth in.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 10 месяцев назад

      Extremism needs to be learned about and 'Some More News' is literally an entire channel about local and global issues, bad systems, and Extremism

  • @BloomerMedia
    @BloomerMedia 10 месяцев назад +78

    The glamour of revolution really dies when you realize how emotionally driven and how cruel they can be (sometimes even crueler than the very institutions they want to dismantle)

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 10 месяцев назад +3

      @BloomerMedia
      Extremism needs to be learned about and 'Some More News' is literally an entire channel about local and global issues, bad systems, and Extremism

    • @brunoactis1104
      @brunoactis1104 10 месяцев назад

      The one revolution that actually succeded and wasn't overly emotional was the russian revolution. Too bad research is complicated, as half the literature is anti communist propaganda from the red scare onwards.

    • @ryelor123
      @ryelor123 10 месяцев назад +14

      Much of our view on revolutions is tainted by the environment we live in. The fact that revolutions happen is proof that the underlying system failed. However, its far easier to hear about a thousand people being imprisoned and executed than to see the daily pain and suffering that might've otherwise occurred had a revolution not happened that was far worse in the long run. Yeah, some revolutions can be evil(just look at Germany with Hitler) but those revolutions are often the result of a faction trying to protect a ruling bourgeois class is failing due to its own internal problems. The problem revolutionaries face in those situations is that they find out its much harder to fix their bourgeois's internal problems than it is to try to wipe out potential adversaries of that bourgeois. And that's why the atrocities start.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 10 месяцев назад

      @@ryelor123 Germany? There was no revolution. There was a successful coup. Beginning with Hitler being assigned Chancellor by President Hindenburg, in an orderly democratic process. Then through a series of machinations, Hitler gradually acquired ever more power.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 10 месяцев назад +11

      Nobody in a revolution situation, none of the participants, think it's glamorous; but they do think it's necessary and the only way out. Because all attempts to affect the system from within have failed.

  • @bwgaming-lq4gd
    @bwgaming-lq4gd 10 месяцев назад +2

    Azgaars map generator is very pog

  • @milkman9239
    @milkman9239 10 месяцев назад +1

    What's the movie in the background at 16:08 from?

    • @hothoploink1509
      @hothoploink1509 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thats from "The Siege" from 1998 with Bruce Willis and Denzel Washington

    • @milkman9239
      @milkman9239 10 месяцев назад

      @@hothoploink1509 much love, thanks dude

  • @LirumLarumLarum
    @LirumLarumLarum 10 месяцев назад +7

    Ah, yes, a brain on liberalism

  • @BeyondYore
    @BeyondYore 10 месяцев назад +6

    Hi Tim, I've been enjoying your channel for some years now, but of late your videos have become even more interesting and serious (I think since the video about Unit 731). It's really captivating content. Keep it going!
    Love that you included Paul Artreides in the conclusion about the righteous revolutionary becoming the new repressice regime. Many people don't realize how deep Frank Herbert's analysis on this topic goes.

  • @theogarbutt1232
    @theogarbutt1232 10 месяцев назад

    where's this footage from at 16:11.

  • @alexadams7998
    @alexadams7998 10 месяцев назад

    whats the film at 16:03 with Bruce Willis?

  • @kaikalter
    @kaikalter 10 месяцев назад +3

    Tim's revolutionary arc

  • @wile123456
    @wile123456 10 месяцев назад +26

    It's a crime Disco Elysium isn't mentioned once as an example
    Edit: I just wanted to mention disco elysium has very thoughtful writing on ideology and revolution and then I get a dude in my replies who is a proper communist from the game: complains only that others aren't communist enough while contributing nothing to the conversation.

    • @bluexephosfan970
      @bluexephosfan970 10 месяцев назад +2

      I know right

    • @panoskatrin4910
      @panoskatrin4910 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@bluexephosfan970 its because its pro comunist and the video is actively anti revoloutionary itself

    • @bluexephosfan970
      @bluexephosfan970 10 месяцев назад

      @@panoskatrin4910 that's a misreading of the video tbh

    • @wile123456
      @wile123456 10 месяцев назад

      @@panoskatrin4910 you sound like a salty tsnkie lmao.
      Disco elysium was written by socialists, hence why communism and socialism is the most made fun of and critiqued ideology of the game. Other ideologies flaws are self évident, but you know a game is made by socialists when the line "communism has only succeeded 0.000% of the time in the world" exists because its the exact same as our own world.
      Only tankes and red-fascists who simp for Stalin, China or other genocidal states disagree.

    • @panoskatrin4910
      @panoskatrin4910 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@bluexephosfan970 the video is devoid of any class analysis while also promoting the idea that revoloutions fall because of great men like stalin or mao.Disco elysium was filled with class struggle not once kras mavoz(marx and lenin) and ignus nilsen(engels and stalin) are portrait to be as these massive figures who somehow had the entire country be their property as stalin or mao are presented here.All this while the game dives into actual revoloutionary subjects!it was a game made by communists for communists who live in coutntries that experienced communist revolutions that were crushed like myself and you can so cleary see that and i am in love with harry because so much of revachol reminds me of my country
      As for the video no analysis of actual revolutions he brings up egypt ,keep in mind the arab spring at the end of the day was still a reformist capitalist movement seeking to establish democratic institutions without any attack on the political and economic structure of the country!The same capitalists who ruled under the dictatorship still do even in to this day in the democratic tunis or other succeful democratic arab spring countries(i dont think they are any) and the model to follow as a country for Tim is what?Our liberal western countries?
      When he talks about mao or stalin being autocratic no actual source is presentor analysis of why the infighting was happening just the claim what it was done due to ideological diffrences and it was used by stalin to gain autocratic power.Obsviously this falls into the category of the great man theory its the reduction of soviet revolutionary history the struggle of building socialism reduced to individuals who control entire nations, while of course not having any source.I know the aim of the video is not to be a history documentary but we cant talk about all these without examining historical sources.Workers councils(soviets) the diffrent factions within the communist party and their disagreements are not presented, the structure of the soviet system is not analysed of course its just simply autocratic with not needing to question anything simply relying on our already extisting biases which are created by the very capitalist society that we live in, we have all heard that the ussr was evil and that revolutions fail why provide a source?Why care to actually seek out a way to change the world for the better?I dont think tim is doing it on purpose but its a video that simplifies revolutions to such an extend that makes it anti revoloutionary not challenging our biases and instead conforming them while activly spreading anti communist propaganda this is what anti communist propagandas are at the end of the day a terrible simplification of past socialist experiements to a character of an evil nazi totalitarian kingdom

  • @issacthompson330
    @issacthompson330 10 месяцев назад

    I would read your book but they have not arrived from Amazon just yet. Should have it on Monday.

  • @Lovehandels
    @Lovehandels 9 месяцев назад

    So I put this on my watch later when this was first uploaded and I'm just now getting to it. This subject is very topical right now.

  • @popepiusxv
    @popepiusxv 10 месяцев назад +7

    7:56 liberal ??? what ??? lenin was against liberalism its bourgeois politics
    😭

    • @Somebodyherefornow
      @Somebodyherefornow 10 месяцев назад +1

      this whole channel is 💀
      not malinformation (i dont think he wants to soread propoganda), not disinformation, but pure white misinformation

  • @user-vc2ku6hl1k
    @user-vc2ku6hl1k 9 месяцев назад +2

    Er... Not a single word about means of production ownership? Well, sounds like 'Why Hello future me fails'

    • @MistyShadowsXX_Valdemar
      @MistyShadowsXX_Valdemar 4 месяца назад +1

      This video was about revolutions, not the ideology of a specific one.

  • @MrocnyZbik
    @MrocnyZbik 10 месяцев назад +2

    Azgaar's fantasy map generator, very nice

  • @ScarletEdge
    @ScarletEdge 10 месяцев назад +3

    You ally with Goblin Kingdom, provide them access to raid other countries around Futurestan, in exchange have percentage from Gold and Gem mines in Goblin Kingdom. Use that money to create Swedish Syle Welfare state, have Goblin Kingdom train your army. Fortify like Switzerland. Success.

    • @mikel9138
      @mikel9138 10 месяцев назад +2

      Based Foreign policy maker

  • @bencochrane6112
    @bencochrane6112 10 месяцев назад +6

    Terry Pratchett put it best. When revolutionaries do things for the people they quickly find that they've got the wrong type of people.
    How you respond to that is how you find out where you are on the morality scale.

  • @raymondyee2008
    @raymondyee2008 Месяц назад

    “Gundam Seed Freedom” needs references from this.