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@@HerowebcomicsA guy jumped into a Tiger pit at a zoo to avoid paying tickets and the Tiger killed him just like that, just saying some humans have the same brain size as Patrick Star💀
I don’t know how the sinking of the Titanic didn’t make this list. It’s the worst maritime disaster in history and it changed so many maritime safety practices that stand today.
Although not in the title of the video both the description and narrator of the video mention "modern history" so I'm assuming that they just don't consider titanic recent enough?
It is nowhere NEAR the worst maritime disaster? Now it is perhaps the best know but....? 9,400 people were killed in the Wilhelm Gustloff disaster? Almost 4,400in the Dona Paz disaster in the Phillipines?
Oh, is that nonsense on this list to? As soon as they got to the part where she talked about the famous picture of the helicopter with the line of people going up stairs to it on the roof of the American embassy in Saigon I shut it off, that picture isn't of a helicopter on the roof of the embassy picking people up, it's actually the roof of an apartment building about a block from the embassy.
I was in middle school when 9/11 happened. I’ll never forget the eerie silence throughout the whole class as we watched the towers fall. My home ec teacher was in tears, and we just couldn’t fathom what we just saw. Then the panic set in when we heard the Pentagon was hit. They let us out early that day. Flight 93 was nothing but heroes. RIP guys. We will never forget you 🖤
I was working late swing shift at Nestle so I was still asleep, and I was living with my parents. My sister was also home and let me sleep until the first tower dropped (ie. the second tower that was hit). She had gotten the call from my parents at the airport that my dad was fine as he hadn't yet left for his meeting at the WTC later that day. We watched the second tower fall (ie the first one hit) and just sat in utter shock. I worked at a shipping and distribution center and even though all our deliveries were via truck and train, it was still a mess for weeks with the precautions that were then taken. I had also started the process to cash out a 401K from a previous job just prior and by the time the stock exchange was re-opened, I'd lost half of it. Small potatoes compared to the loss of lives that day and since, but, I still remember that.
I didn't even directly hear or see anything of the 9/11 attacks until after I got home. I was in 2nd grade music class when the first plane hit. My school had 2 music teachers at the time. One for K-4 and one for 5-8. The teacher for 5-8 came into our classroom and I remember her looking pale, like something terrible had happened. She said something to our teacher, who equally grew pale. No one else really overheard what the 5-8 teacher had said, but I remember hearing "plane hit..." But, the K-4 teacher put on a brave face for us youngsters and class continued as though it were only a minor interruption. We then went to church, my school was a Catholic School, and we always went to church on Tuesdays. That was when the veil was lifted, but not entirely uncovered. We were told that there was a terrible, evil act of hatred being committed in our country that would affect all of us, and that we would have to spend recess in prayerful silence, rather than playing. We, being kids, groaned, but mostly complied. It really wasn't until we got home that we fully realized what happened. We returned to school the following day very different
Wanna know something crazy? There was a man who survived BOTH nukes. He survived the Hiroshima bombing, went to work the next day or so, told his boss what happened, and his boss thought he was lying. Then there was a bright flash and the glass in the building shattered. He sustained injuries and some radiation damage, but miraculously survived 2 nuclear detonations.
I think the world stood still in larger numbers for the 2004 earthquake/tsunami, which claimed the lives of almost a quarter million people; the earthquake/tsunami that caused the nuclear disaster in Fukushima; the 1984 Union Carbide chemical disaster that killed and/or sickened half a million people in Bhopal, India; The fire that consumed Notre Dame thankfully did not claim lives, but the world certainly stood still in horror as this treasure burned; certainly the eyes of all Europeans as well as the rest of the world were on the UK for Brexit.
It’s more important that they included hippie liberal bullshit. The Boxing Day tsunami and the Japan tsunami are way more significant than the supposed attack on the capitol building. Watchmojo sucks
@@KegOfMeat Most certainly. I remember being at my grandparents for both events and stared at the tv in horror. Surprised to not see the 2020 Beirut explosion in here though.
Um yeah no, most of these are just from the american point of view of moments that made the "World" stand still with a few exceptions, Because you left out: Indian Ocean Tsunami 2004 Tenerife Airport Disaster 1977 Mexico's Earthquake 1985 Malaysia Airplane gone missing 2014 Turkish Airlines Flight Disaster 1974 Japan's Earthquake and Tsunami 2011 I think any of those actually made the world stand still than some of these like the Capitol one or the Oj case
I was heavily pregnant when the Oklahoma City bombing happened. I remember watching as they carried out a little baby with yellow socks on, I later found out her name was Bailey. I named my daughter after her a few weeks later❤
It’s because this channel has always had insane recency bias. About a dozen of the more recent stories weren’t even big deals a year after they occurred lol. Hell, some of these were within the last year
I was a month old when 9/11 happened. My mom tells me she still remembers seeing the Twin Towers in flames as clear as the day it happened. I cannot imagine the horror everyone must have felt when it happened.
i was in elementary school at the time.. it was just a regular day and outta nowhere a bunch of kids kept getting picked up from school and i couldn't understand why.. something clearly wasn't right, after i got picked up and was able to see the news, then it all made sense... never will forget that day
I wouldn't say that the liberation of the camps was earth-shattering. Simply because it wasn't unexpected or shocking; the world was fighting against the axis to do just that. Now, the discovery and revelation that they existed in the first place would definitely qualify as a world-altering event.
6 August 1945 little boy was dropped on Hiroshima an enriched uranium gun-type fission weapon 9 August 1945 Fatman was dropped on Nagasaki a plutonium implosion-type nuclear weapon
how was the indian ocean tsunami left off this list? as an american i really dont think the jan 6th insurrection made the world stand still" only the U.S. it should have been replaced with the indian ocean tsunami.
@@grant1739 Respectfully disagree on that one. I think it's an event that had to be seen to believe. Diana was a very public icon especially with her charity work and it was shocking when she was killed. She wasn't even 40 yet.
I think Jan 6th made the intelligence and military communities of the world "stand still" not necessarily average citizens. From a diplomatic standpoint, the potential for important heads of state in the US to be attacked is something other heads of state will pay close attention to. Especially if the fallout escalated to a full blown coup that would ultimately impact global markets.
Wow, what a world huh. I had to run this back and watch again. How fortunate are we to be able to watch this in comfort. Humbled.. grateful. I wish we would put all these lessons into our todays and tomorrow’s
I am hardly grateful, or comfortable, as I live in the nation where the ring leader of the fascist attack on our capitol three years ago is running again, and with no apologies whatsoever is marshalling the same racist mobs to try to become president again, and is promising to destroy democracy and replace it with an outright fascist white nationalist state. And he's tied in the polls.
And to think to this day, The words of the "I have a dream" speech hasn't lost it's relevance I mean the man who spoke those words may no longer be with us, But the words that MLK spoke on that day will always be remembered!
….to BLACK AMERICANS NOBODY LIVING OUTSIDE THE STATES CARES. You do realize those people too have civil rights leaders that fight for them, right? The joke here is America is a racist country. Compared to other places in the world, America is one of the most progressive countries on the planet. Signed a black man.
I remember in 8th grade when my band teacher told my class that we were not coming back to school for a couple weeks due to quarantine. I was in the nearby bathroom when I heard shouts and cheers, completely unaware that those couple weeks of quarantine turned into two fucking years.
The next video should be the Top 50 Moments That Made The World STAND STILL, because things like The Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami (2011), The Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami (2004), The Mumbai attacks (2008), The Invasion of Iraq (2003), The Columbine School Shooting (1999), The Black Death (1346-53), The (Sinking of The RMS) Titanic (1912), The Crusades (1095-1300 CE), The Rwandan Genocide (1994), World War I (1914-18), and even The Holocaust (1941-45) are not featured in this Video
I agree with some of these, but some of them (while definitely having a HUGE impact) are too big to be considered "moments"- like World War I, The Crusades, and the Holocaust.This is also why I think the current wars (Israeli-Hamas and Russia-Ukraine) shouldn't be on the list either. The Cuban Missile and Iran Hostage crises ride the line to me, since they lasted a while, but could still be classified as a single event.
This happened once before, don't recall exactly when, but you AGAIN reversed the names of the atomic bombs dropped on Japan. "Little Boy" was dropped 8/6/45 on Hiroshima; "Fat Man" was dropped 8/9/45 on Nagasaki
Look for "Top 20 Moments That Made The World Stand Still." Almost 2 years ago... Same as the top 20 in this list; possibly the same video recycled, with 10 more events added.
My father worked with Kennedy. He has a special pass to drive right up to the steps of the Eterna Flame Memorial. He took me there once but refused to get out of the car. He said he didn't think he could control his emotions and didn't want me to see him cry. Many people alive still feel that way about JFK.
9/11 literally made the world stand still. Flights all over rhe world were grounded. I remember the store in my neighborhood had a corkboard with an aerial photo of the Halifax airport on 9/11
Come from Away is a great musical documenting just how great Easterns can be. Proud to be Canadian and glad to be able to have a heart warming story come out of such a tragedy. I was too young to remember my school day but I remember that evening with my parents and watching the rerun footage. Living in Ontario it was close to home for us.
Things I learned from this video: 1) Watch Mojo will believe anything they see on TV 2) They will repeat everything that they are told to repeat 3) They do not know how to read a dictionary to know the definition of words they use
This is the moment that made the US stand still, not Australia. In Australia, it would be 2nd Tuesday in November. More serious note, Port Arthur Massacre and 1975 GG sacking PM, would rank higher than Bushfire.
I wasnt alive when the challenger shuttle exploded, but i was when the columbia shuttle did. Before then, i wanted to be an astronaut when i grew up. After that, i definitely changed my mind.
9/11, i was in second grade class and we were dismissed early that day. Had a relative stuck in the Chicago airport because all flights were forced to land and cell phones weren’t as big then, so we didn’t know they had traveled and all.
It's always interesting to hear people talk about 9/11, being someone who was born a few years later. Even with some of the more recent events, I can't even begin to comprehend what 9/11 must have felt like
I was 16 when it happened. It was indescribable and still is. Everyone was just in utter disbelief. It was so surreal. I remember feeling like I would never feel safe again. It gave me bad anxiety for awhile, wondering if/when something similar would happen again. However, as horrible and nightmarish that day was, Americans all over the country came together and volunteered and did whatever they could to help. There were thousands of people, standing in long lines, waiting to donate blood. Countries around the world showed beautiful displays of sympathy and compassion for us. And none of it felt fake or forced or done for show. You could literally feel them sharing our disbelief and sorrow. There's a stark demarcation in time: there was life before the attacks and then...there was everything that came after. As horrific as it was, there were massive, global displays of love and solidarity shown to the US. And monumental acts of courage and resilience as everyone pitched in to help in any way they could.
I was 15 at the time and had just entered my first year of high school. Some of my teachers even turned their classroom TVs on so we could watch what was happening. Even today, it is still hard to watch news footage of the event (including the opening of the 9/11/2001 episode of Live With Regis & Kelly where Regis and Kelly kept their audience to date with what was going on).
On 9/11 my sister, a flight attendant , was on a flight into DC. When the 2nd plane hit, I fainted. I’ll never forget watching that happen or wondering if my sister was alive, hijacked? Hurt? 😓 The irony? We aren’t American. It was truly a world tragedy.
Dude, it was the other way around with the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Little Boy was dropped on Hiroshima, while the Fat Man was dropped on Nagasaki.
Good list, but as an Australian I think that they forgot to include the Black Saturday bushfires in 2009. It completely destroyed the town of Marysville as well as severely damaging Kinglake and also Churchill. It killed around 170+ people.
The Challenger Disaster was caused by an eroded o-ring that made it so there wasn't a proper pressure seal in one of the rocket motors, causing it to explode at the higher altitude. Apparently it was looked over so it wasn't fixed, and people paid the price with their lives.
It wasn't overlooked. When they were deciding whether to launch that morning, they were told that it could be too cold to launch because the O rings could fail if they were frozen. The launch committee's groupthink overruled the engineers because they thought it was more important because of the publicity.
@jeanninepetriel7114 you're correct on that (used wrong wordings in my comment) and the fact it was too cold so the o-rings stiffened, causing them to fail, but they were also eroded and they caused blow-by, plus it was only the ones in the shuttle's right solid rocket booster. If it was primarily caused by the cold that day it would've been all the o-rings, not just the ones in that SRB. And yeah they were pressured to do many flights a year (around 24), which led to unsafe launch operations. Like the JFMM (Joint Fleet Maintenance Manual) says, "the safety and technical requirements became secondary to operational commitments." The Challenger Disaster, the USS Thresher (SSN 593), and the USS Iwo Jima (LPH-2) are 3 examples in our Quality Assurance/Maintenance program (JFMM) to show how import QA is, even with the smallest pieces of equipment. The Challenger happened because of an o-ring, the Thresher happened because of a piping failure causing flooding in the engine room which led to the ship being lost, and the Iwo Jima was because of incorrect bonnet fasteners placed on a root valve in the engine room, which when it got to a high enough temperature with the steam, causing the valve to blow off the pipes, killing 10 watchstanders.
My dad tells me the story of when he asked someone how the challenger flight went and the person said “it blew up” and he thought they were joking but when he got home and turned on the TV it’s all they were talking about
I laughed during the capital building. I laughed so hard. I thought it was the greatest television show ever. I just thought there needed to be a little bit more
@@SpEdMice yeah because it wasn't an insurrection under the statute implemented after the Civil war it was a riot and the protesters were waived in by the Capitol police
I honestly keep forgetting about the Hindenburg Disaster when thinking about 'shocking' moments. Bu it could be because I'm not American and was never told about it so...I think it proves a point. Surprised the invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 isn't here because that changed the trajectory of the Middle East to where it is today.
A war in the middle east, Berlin Wall, Paris terror attacks, End of WW2, Tiananmen Square, British singer assassinated, German olympics, Ukraine war, South African apartheid, global pandemic. Are you really this fucking dense?
Paris attacks happened in France John Lennon is British and was most popular in Britain the Chinese massacre says it itself the Israel hamas war is in Israel and Palestine hurricane katrina also affected the world because it approved hurricane/typhoon/nad cyclone research because it proved how rapidly tropical cyclones can strengthen what and what not to do in a disaster and what greed in natural disaster protection can do may I go on
I promise you people in the hills of India did not know about the Capitol building riot or the OJ Simpson trial. They did know about the moon landing for example
I still remember the BP oil spill happening. I was in the sixth grade, and it was mere days before I turned 13. The nativity and animal lover in me felt horrible for all of the animals who were affected
Half of the worlds population lives in the area of South Asia and South east Asia combined , and still they mentioned OJ Simpson case and left out 26/11 attacks and 2004 tsunami 😂
I know right?? And to put Jan 6th in out of everything even though people rarely gives a crap about it is laughable. The Blm riots was more memorable yet never made the list😂
I was working security at the checkpoint at the Love Field Airport in Dallas, Texas when that happened. The news people were coming through with their equipment, and I asked them what was going on, they told me to watch the news on my break and that is when I learned about Oklahoma City. I had a niece and nephew living up there. Thankfully they were okay but scared. I saw the memorial to the victims, and the tree that survived, but I broke down crying when I saw how many children had died because of backward thinking fools. 😢😢😢😢❤❤❤❤
Id probably add the day Saddam was finally captured by US forces. I have only ever seen my late father pray twice. Once, when mum's platelet count was below 10000 and we thought she was going to die. He begged. The other, was when Saddam was captured. Now, im an Indian citizen but he was born an Iranian subject, and was an Iranian citizen at that time. Many scores of Iranians had died in the war against saddam, many to poison gas, as had many, many more Kurds. He cinsidered a victory for humanity. Worth remembering.
@@BillyBall35 platelets in your blood. They're there to stop you from bleeding to death too easily. They're supposed to be at a minimum of 150,000 per microlitre of blood. Mum's were dangerously low, and had she had a small cut on her skin or a hemorrhage in her brain she could have died. Faulty platelets is what causes hameophilia, the disease of inbred royals where every small bruise or wound starts gushing and is really hard to control. The condition is treatable but not curable.
The Jonestown Massacre happened in November 1978!!! I was living in San Francisco during this time, with my former jr. high school a few blocks from their church. I remember everything like it was yesterday, and have read lots and LOTS of articles and books on the subject.
Major of the events were US-related & US allied, where as there many more which were not even mentioned in the list. Like the 26/11 Terrorist attack on Mumbai, India which brought the country to a stand still which was far more dealier than some mentioned in the list with all due respect to them and lives lost, the Assassination of Mahatma Gandhi similar to JFK Assassination in some terms more significant as without being a politican had brought freedom to India. Have many from other countries events as well, but only if you would consider other countries as well. Or you dont consider the above mentioned events as tragedy.
Speaking of Covid… I was watching an old RUclips video and at the end of the video the guy said something to the effect of I know things are a little crazy right now but don’t worry because 2020 is right around the corner. Looking at what happened in 2020, that comment did not age well.😂
Watching the Challenger explode on live tv in 4th grade still sticks to me this day. It’s vivid. RIP all who were affected. It was my introduction to how fragile life really is.
The fact that people have to praise these brave souls and give honor to them in secret is the issue and should really show how they have no liberty to freedom over there... It is sad...
Other events are: - The malvinas/falklands war. - the tsunami in south-east Asia. - the chapecoense plane crash. - George Floid murder. - the armero tragedy. - the death of Pablo Escobar. - the Yugoslavia war. - the Rwanda genocide. - The discover of the holocaust and the concentration camps. - the Panamá invasion. - the juventus vs Liverpool champions league final tragedy. - avengers Infinity war, endgame and Spiderman no way home movies.
I was probably the only black guy in America who was appalled, horrified, and outraged by that O.J. Simpson verdict. I still get upset all these years later.
When looking back, I've always felt his slow speed chase in the white bronco was the stand-out moment in the whole thing. That shit was breaking news on every channel you couldn't turn a TV on without seeing him and the cops cruising down the highway.
I remember my reaction to the manachester arena bombing.I went to the kitchen fell to me knees and cried out loud.Did it make the world stand still?No.Because the world doesn't stand still.But that is not the important part.It's what happened what is happening and showing humanity, compassion and kindness instead of screaming for blood and causing more pain for the victims.It's not easy but I hope I don't forgot this.That others won't forgot it to.
The Apollo missions actually have a link to my family; my Grandfather was a Gunner’s Mate on the USS Hornet when the missions were picked out of the ocean. The Hornet is now a Naval, Air, and Space Museum docked in Alameda, California. Whenever he’s in our city we all troop across the bay to visit the Hornet
"The manhunt went on for a decade." Be honest. We weren't looking for him. We spent a decade in Iraq going after Hussein who had nothing to do with 9/11.
If i remembered hearing it right, the aromic bombings could of never happened. From what i heard, japan did indeed offer up a surrender in back channels, with the condition that the emperor stay in power. The us declined.
Yes and no. They were offered a surrender, but they refused to give up the emperor system, plus they wanted to run their own war crimes trials. Plus at that point, there was so much momentum behind the Manhattan Project that dropping a Bomb was inevitable
30-21,19-17, 14, 12, 10-7, 3-2 I feel sad to be human 20, 16, 15, 13, 11, 6, 4, I feel happy to be human 16 I feel icky to be human 5, 1 I'm scared to be human
I was in school when 9/11 happened and most parents didn’t want to tell their kids about the terrible attacks so that wouldn’t frighten their children.
9/11 is something I vaguely remember, but I was in 1st or 2nd grade when it happened, I think I heard the news over the PA system and I was sorta clueless cause I was just going on like it was a normal day, then I went home that day, my mom was sitting in the living room crying, and I was watching TV with her and I became utterly shocked. #neverforget.
I was really expecting the 2004 Indian ocean tsunami to be number 1.Being 11 at the time I can’t think of anything else that made as much of an impact, 9/11 being a close second.
Can you recall your feelings during any of these major world events? Let us know in the comments below.
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What about the London bombing
Love It WatchMojo.
I have a video idea
I am 81....born in 1943. Most of these incidents I remember vividly. Maybe some in the time
If it's not taught it's forgotten. America's schools don't teach history.
Did they really leave off the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake/tsunami that killed almost 250,000 people?
@benarizola6609 for real. they put the Oklahoma City bombing over this. I doubt anyone outside of America is familiar with that.
Titanic was bad but did not make the world stand still.@benarizola6609
lmaooo they didnt put that but somehow the capitol building attacks made it on here
I noticed that too. They made sure to put Trumps speech in it. I guess i know which side mojo's on @kevinsitashi7345
They need to put the Jan 6, MLK that people don’t even know who he is, and OJ Simpsons another who knows
What I learned from this video.
1. People are stupid
2. There will never be peace.
3. Repeat 1 & 2
I also learned that people can survive almost anything!😎
You should swap the two points.
1. There will never be peace because of point 2
2. People are stupid/religious
3. Infinite loop of 1 and 2
@@HerowebcomicsCAP humans are built like jello🤣
@@JGMGamer07 Physically yes,but not mentally!😎
@@HerowebcomicsA guy jumped into a Tiger pit at a zoo to avoid paying tickets and the Tiger killed him just like that, just saying some humans have the same brain size as Patrick Star💀
Lots of the facts can be considered as US domestic events things that didn't really mark the world, but the US world
Yep. Too many are just U.S.
@@lynnhettrick7588 That's cause no one gives a fuck about shitholeistan lol
Probably because what happens to the u s also massively affects how they react with the rest of the world... *Points to 9/11*
WatchMojo's Canadian
@@thedude3065 I know that's what makes it even funnier
I don’t know how the sinking of the Titanic didn’t make this list. It’s the worst maritime disaster in history and it changed so many maritime safety practices that stand today.
Although not in the title of the video both the description and narrator of the video mention "modern history" so I'm assuming that they just don't consider titanic recent enough?
It is nowhere NEAR the worst maritime disaster? Now it is perhaps the best know but....? 9,400 people were killed in the Wilhelm Gustloff disaster? Almost 4,400in the Dona Paz disaster in the Phillipines?
Uhhh, they forgot. It’s about of moments that made America stand still so ye
But OJ Simpson's trial makes it? WTF?
2:48 “Jeez I just came here to get some illegal fireworks”
I can assure you that the capitol building attack did not make the world stand still
But still definitely had a huge impact definitely going to be a day in the history books that will live in infamy
Oh, is that nonsense on this list to?
As soon as they got to the part where she talked about the famous picture of the helicopter with the line of people going up stairs to it on the roof of the American embassy in Saigon I shut it off, that picture isn't of a helicopter on the roof of the embassy picking people up, it's actually the roof of an apartment building about a block from the embassy.
Some people are still standing still over 1/6...the sort of people who think it was the thing since the Civil War.
Them white ppl ain' have nobody to blame that shit on so they felt embarrassed completely... No blacks were involved at all. Take your lick
I think the riots that plundered businesses and properties of the common people did.
Correct title: Top 30 Moments That Made US STAND STILL
Cope
B
It’s always the Indians hating lmao
well, yeah, cause lots of Americans think they're the world, so...
And even some of these, no one gave a rats ass in the US.
I was in middle school when 9/11 happened. I’ll never forget the eerie silence throughout the whole class as we watched the towers fall. My home ec teacher was in tears, and we just couldn’t fathom what we just saw. Then the panic set in when we heard the Pentagon was hit. They let us out early that day. Flight 93 was nothing but heroes. RIP guys. We will never forget you 🖤
I was 21 at home with a toddler and I called my parents in tears. They didn’t know what was happening either. We were all crying. It was horrible
I was working late swing shift at Nestle so I was still asleep, and I was living with my parents. My sister was also home and let me sleep until the first tower dropped (ie. the second tower that was hit). She had gotten the call from my parents at the airport that my dad was fine as he hadn't yet left for his meeting at the WTC later that day. We watched the second tower fall (ie the first one hit) and just sat in utter shock.
I worked at a shipping and distribution center and even though all our deliveries were via truck and train, it was still a mess for weeks with the precautions that were then taken.
I had also started the process to cash out a 401K from a previous job just prior and by the time the stock exchange was re-opened, I'd lost half of it. Small potatoes compared to the loss of lives that day and since, but, I still remember that.
I was in 2nd grade in speech when it happened
We'll never forget, cause we don't care enough to know. Lol
I didn't even directly hear or see anything of the 9/11 attacks until after I got home. I was in 2nd grade music class when the first plane hit. My school had 2 music teachers at the time. One for K-4 and one for 5-8. The teacher for 5-8 came into our classroom and I remember her looking pale, like something terrible had happened. She said something to our teacher, who equally grew pale. No one else really overheard what the 5-8 teacher had said, but I remember hearing "plane hit..." But, the K-4 teacher put on a brave face for us youngsters and class continued as though it were only a minor interruption. We then went to church, my school was a Catholic School, and we always went to church on Tuesdays. That was when the veil was lifted, but not entirely uncovered. We were told that there was a terrible, evil act of hatred being committed in our country that would affect all of us, and that we would have to spend recess in prayerful silence, rather than playing. We, being kids, groaned, but mostly complied. It really wasn't until we got home that we fully realized what happened. We returned to school the following day very different
Seeing a still unknown person put themselves in front of a tank... brings me to tears because there aren't a lot more people like that in this world.
But the computers on which you and I type these comments are made in the halls of the powers that dispatched the tanks, not the power of that man.
He was high as kite..no idea what he was doing.fact
there sure are. People who don't have a lot to live for. Actually there's a lot of them right there in China.
I've often wondered what happened to the man who stood in front of that tank.
@@gaylasmith5279probably hasn’t been seen around China since
Wanna know something crazy? There was a man who survived BOTH nukes. He survived the Hiroshima bombing, went to work the next day or so, told his boss what happened, and his boss thought he was lying. Then there was a bright flash and the glass in the building shattered.
He sustained injuries and some radiation damage, but miraculously survived 2 nuclear detonations.
Still think I'm lying ~ The Man
Death - Come with me, your time is done
Man - I respectfully disagree
I think the world stood still in larger numbers for the 2004 earthquake/tsunami, which claimed the lives of almost a quarter million people; the earthquake/tsunami that caused the nuclear disaster in Fukushima; the 1984 Union Carbide chemical disaster that killed and/or sickened half a million people in Bhopal, India; The fire that consumed Notre Dame thankfully did not claim lives, but the world certainly stood still in horror as this treasure burned; certainly the eyes of all Europeans as well as the rest of the world were on the UK for Brexit.
Do you expect watch Mojo to care about things happening outside of the us
Yeah that should have been on the list, I didn't give a shit when Diana died
Glaring oversights for sure.
I was looking for your post. Thank you.
Who on earth outside of Europe actually cared about Brexit name one person
Am I the only one who caught a major misspeak on the Japanese bombings pick? Little Boy was the Hiroshima bomb, and Fat Man was the Nagasaki bomb.
I caught that too.
I thought so... looked it up to confirm.
I thought it was
I caught that as well
They should have rectified the mistake after the earlier video titled the Top 20 Moments That Made The World Stand Still !
Surprised the Boxing Day Tsunami wasn’t on here. That was catastrophic and profoundly shocking.
@@Richard_the_lionheart75 America is not the world, America is in the world.
@@WhatIfWeAreCharactersso you don't understand sarcasm?
That and the 2011 Japan tsunami definitely should have been on here.
It’s more important that they included hippie liberal bullshit. The Boxing Day tsunami and the Japan tsunami are way more significant than the supposed attack on the capitol building. Watchmojo sucks
@@KegOfMeat Most certainly. I remember being at my grandparents for both events and stared at the tv in horror. Surprised to not see the 2020 Beirut explosion in here though.
Um yeah no, most of these are just from the american point of view of moments that made the "World" stand still with a few exceptions,
Because you left out:
Indian Ocean Tsunami 2004
Tenerife Airport Disaster 1977
Mexico's Earthquake 1985
Malaysia Airplane gone missing 2014
Turkish Airlines Flight Disaster 1974
Japan's Earthquake and Tsunami 2011
I think any of those actually made the world stand still than some of these like the Capitol one or the Oj case
True
Amen!
Indeed!
Indeed!
I would also make an argument for the 7/7 attacks in London
I was heavily pregnant when the Oklahoma City bombing happened. I remember watching as they carried out a little baby with yellow socks on, I later found out her name was Bailey. I named my daughter after her a few weeks later❤
That was a great way to remember her
❤ how is Bailey doing and does she know you named her after that poor girl
Awe, that's really sweet!
Here's my last fuck.
There; I'm officially out of fucks to give.
I’m 36 & It’s crazy to see half this list was in my lifetime
It's crazy how alot of these moments occurred from 1985 to now. I'm 36 myself and this is more crazy than it really has to be.
I'm 43 and it IS crazy.😢😮
39, almost 40... am proud to have recollection of most of these events
It’s because this channel has always had insane recency bias. About a dozen of the more recent stories weren’t even big deals a year after they occurred lol. Hell, some of these were within the last year
I’m 40 turning 41 in May and I’m surprised also.
I was a month old when 9/11 happened. My mom tells me she still remembers seeing the Twin Towers in flames as clear as the day it happened. I cannot imagine the horror everyone must have felt when it happened.
It makes you feel old.
i was in elementary school at the time.. it was just a regular day and outta nowhere a bunch of kids kept getting picked up from school and i couldn't understand why.. something clearly wasn't right, after i got picked up and was able to see the news, then it all made sense... never will forget that day
Ud be surprised the amount of people didn't even blink a eye
My daughter was 4 months old on that day. I cried, wondering what kind of world I’d brought her into.
I don’t really remember 9/11 but I was about 5
I didn’t even thinking about Covid being on this list, genuinely forgot it happened
Odd but true!
Yeeeeeah I agree. It was a long & sustained not a big one day event like the others
How on earth could you forget the liberation of the Nazi death camps? This changed the world forever
True, but that's not one single event. There were numerous camps throughout Europe that were liberated at different times.
@@mastermuke411 but Covid was?
@@joelmbaumgartner ok...take covid off the list.
@@joelmbaumgartneri Think they meant the moment covid became a pandemic
I wouldn't say that the liberation of the camps was earth-shattering. Simply because it wasn't unexpected or shocking; the world was fighting against the axis to do just that. Now, the discovery and revelation that they existed in the first place would definitely qualify as a world-altering event.
29:37 Actually, the bomb that leveled Hiroshima was named “Little Boy” and the bomb that leveled Nagasaki was named “Fat Man”.
No
@@bubbasvega2316 the commenter is right
6 August 1945 little boy was dropped on Hiroshima an enriched uranium gun-type fission weapon
9 August 1945 Fatman was dropped on Nagasaki a plutonium implosion-type nuclear weapon
how was the indian ocean tsunami left off this list? as an american i really dont think the jan 6th insurrection made the world stand still" only the U.S. it should have been replaced with the indian ocean tsunami.
Diana should have been left off too
@@grant1739nah
Diana was very respected and well known throughout many nations, she was probably equally as popular as the queen and more beloved.
@@grant1739 Respectfully disagree on that one. I think it's an event that had to be seen to believe. Diana was a very public icon especially with her charity work and it was shocking when she was killed. She wasn't even 40 yet.
I think Jan 6th made the intelligence and military communities of the world "stand still" not necessarily average citizens.
From a diplomatic standpoint, the potential for important heads of state in the US to be attacked is something other heads of state will pay close attention to.
Especially if the fallout escalated to a full blown coup that would ultimately impact global markets.
Wow, what a world huh. I had to run this back and watch again. How fortunate are we to be able to watch this in comfort. Humbled.. grateful.
I wish we would put all these lessons into our todays and tomorrow’s
I am hardly grateful, or comfortable, as I live in the nation where the ring leader of the fascist attack on our capitol three years ago is running again, and with no apologies whatsoever is marshalling the same racist mobs to try to become president again, and is promising to destroy democracy and replace it with an outright fascist white nationalist state. And he's tied in the polls.
It’s a gnarly rock… we are gnarly creatures… it is amazing what we have been through and what we have done and continue to do to each other….
What we’ve learned from history, is we do not learn from history.
@@nonenone7761 Regrettably, that is true.
And to think to this day, The words of the "I have a dream" speech hasn't lost it's relevance I mean the man who spoke those words may no longer be with us, But the words that MLK spoke on that day will always be remembered!
Amen
Facts
….to BLACK AMERICANS
NOBODY LIVING OUTSIDE THE STATES CARES.
You do realize those people too have civil rights leaders that fight for them, right?
The joke here is America is a racist country. Compared to other places in the world, America is one of the most progressive countries on the planet.
Signed a black man.
I remember in 8th grade when my band teacher told my class that we were not coming back to school for a couple weeks due to quarantine. I was in the nearby bathroom when I heard shouts and cheers, completely unaware that those couple weeks of quarantine turned into two fucking years.
lmaoo bro how it feel we graduate in 2 months ? shit is crazy
Me to
I remember I felt weird having to wear masks but I was fine with it then it happened
The next video should be the Top 50 Moments That Made The World STAND STILL, because things like The Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami (2011), The Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami (2004), The Mumbai attacks (2008), The Invasion of Iraq (2003), The Columbine School Shooting (1999), The Black Death (1346-53), The (Sinking of The RMS) Titanic (1912), The Crusades (1095-1300 CE), The Rwandan Genocide (1994), World War I (1914-18), and even The Holocaust (1941-45) are not featured in this Video
I agree with some of these, but some of them (while definitely having a HUGE impact) are too big to be considered "moments"- like World War I, The Crusades, and the Holocaust.This is also why I think the current wars (Israeli-Hamas and Russia-Ukraine) shouldn't be on the list either. The Cuban Missile and Iran Hostage crises ride the line to me, since they lasted a while, but could still be classified as a single event.
So percentage wise @@rbrainsop1, How much do you agree with me on this?
@@JeffreyBarkdull I guess I'd have to say approximately 70%, taking out the ones I listed
@@rbrainsop1 What if you included the ones you listed, then what would your percentage be?
@@JeffreyBarkdull I don't quite understand why you need a percentage, but I'm saying I agree with you except for the ones I listed. So still 70%
This is very American based tragedies rather than world horrors.
As usual. White USA is the only group that matters.
Lie
This happened once before, don't recall exactly when, but you AGAIN reversed the names of the atomic bombs dropped on Japan. "Little Boy" was dropped 8/6/45 on Hiroshima; "Fat Man" was dropped 8/9/45 on Nagasaki
Look for "Top 20 Moments That Made The World Stand Still." Almost 2 years ago... Same as the top 20 in this list; possibly the same video recycled, with 10 more events added.
Everytime they do videos on unsolved mysteries,crimes and murders they literally talk about the same people and events
Always wrong information on topics they pick.
Anyone else see JFK's grave at Arlington cemetery? The eternal flame is such a powerful testament to how well remembered JFK was, and still is.
My father worked with Kennedy. He has a special pass to drive right up to the steps of the Eterna Flame Memorial. He took me there once but refused to get out of the car. He said he didn't think he could control his emotions and didn't want me to see him cry. Many people alive still feel that way about JFK.
@@lyn9291 indeed. When I visited it was raining pretty hard and yet the fire was still going as strong as ever.
Watchmojo forgot the earthquake 2004 at indian ocean creates tsunami hitting multiple countries in asia.
or the Fukushima nuclear accident
@danielivanov930 the tsunami and earthquake weremore devastating
@@suryamgangwal8315 it was pretty much one entire bad event with earthquake,followed by tsunami and then the npp disaster .
Merry Christmas 2004
doesn't involve america, doesn't make this list
Did you really forget about the tsunami in 2004?
Too busy thinking about JaNuArY 6tH
Too busy discussing American problems.
Since it didn't happen in USA so Mojo is not concerned..... So pathetic of them
I was not around when it happened but the Tsunami in 2004 made the world stand still more than 25 moments that were put on this list
2:44 I was in college, watching this in our student union. It was a powerful moment. Everyone around me watched in silence.
9/11 literally made the world stand still. Flights all over rhe world were grounded. I remember the store in my neighborhood had a corkboard with an aerial photo of the Halifax airport on 9/11
Na bro..dont even remember it happening
Come from Away is a great musical documenting just how great Easterns can be. Proud to be Canadian and glad to be able to have a heart warming story come out of such a tragedy. I was too young to remember my school day but I remember that evening with my parents and watching the rerun footage. Living in Ontario it was close to home for us.
I remember the crying women and speechless men quite well, hubris.
Not really no. The ISIS bombings a few years ago did worse and for longer.
10:43: the Jonestown massacre occurred in November 1978, not 1972.
It said founded not when ur happened
Things I learned from this video:
1) Watch Mojo will believe anything they see on TV
2) They will repeat everything that they are told to repeat
3) They do not know how to read a dictionary to know the definition of words they use
I saw 9/11 at 2.. and i was like. Wait whats #1? 😭 i forgot how big covid was
No chance you thought a terrorist attack would be one. You American?
I saw it in high school 😢
@@spartannige3296a terrorist attack
that forever changed the world is probably high up there
@@spartannige3296💀 bro doesn’t know the impacts 9/11 had on the world
9/11 really didn't impact the world that much bud. It was a big thing in America, and that's it, eveyone else basically reacted with a "oh no. Anyway"
Australian bushfires 2019-2020. The whole country was on fire.
This is the moment that made the US stand still, not Australia. In Australia, it would be 2nd Tuesday in November.
More serious note, Port Arthur Massacre and 1975 GG sacking PM, would rank higher than Bushfire.
@@hojinlI don’t think anybody in America heard about the Australian bushfire j just heard about it
I lived near monroe louisiana when katrina hit, and even us further up north were hit reall hard. It was absolutely terrifying.
I wasnt alive when the challenger shuttle exploded, but i was when the columbia shuttle did. Before then, i wanted to be an astronaut when i grew up. After that, i definitely changed my mind.
9/11, i was in second grade class and we were dismissed early that day. Had a relative stuck in the Chicago airport because all flights were forced to land and cell phones weren’t as big then, so we didn’t know they had traveled and all.
It's always interesting to hear people talk about 9/11, being someone who was born a few years later. Even with some of the more recent events, I can't even begin to comprehend what 9/11 must have felt like
I was 16 when it happened. It was indescribable and still is. Everyone was just in utter disbelief. It was so surreal. I remember feeling like I would never feel safe again. It gave me bad anxiety for awhile, wondering if/when something similar would happen again. However, as horrible and nightmarish that day was, Americans all over the country came together and volunteered and did whatever they could to help. There were thousands of people, standing in long lines, waiting to donate blood. Countries around the world showed beautiful displays of sympathy and compassion for us. And none of it felt fake or forced or done for show. You could literally feel them sharing our disbelief and sorrow. There's a stark demarcation in time: there was life before the attacks and then...there was everything that came after. As horrific as it was, there were massive, global displays of love and solidarity shown to the US. And monumental acts of courage and resilience as everyone pitched in to help in any way they could.
I was 15 at the time and had just entered my first year of high school. Some of my teachers even turned their classroom TVs on so we could watch what was happening. Even today, it is still hard to watch news footage of the event (including the opening of the 9/11/2001 episode of Live With Regis & Kelly where Regis and Kelly kept their audience to date with what was going on).
I was 14 and it was so surreal and terrifying. Life as we knew it would never be the same safety wise.
On 9/11 my sister, a flight attendant , was on a flight into DC. When the 2nd plane hit, I fainted. I’ll never forget watching that happen or wondering if my sister was alive, hijacked? Hurt? 😓 The irony? We aren’t American. It was truly a world tragedy.
Sorry to hear about your sister
It really wasn't, you're just paranoid af
2004 Boxing Day Tsunami? Queen Elizabeth passing away? McCann disappearing?
Dude, it was the other way around with the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Little Boy was dropped on Hiroshima, while the Fat Man was dropped on Nagasaki.
Yep, we dropped the little one first.
Think Apollo 13 needed at least an Honorable mention
Good list, but as an Australian I think that they forgot to include the Black Saturday bushfires in 2009. It completely destroyed the town of Marysville as well as severely damaging Kinglake and also Churchill. It killed around 170+ people.
And/or the 2019-2020 bushfires
The Challenger Disaster was caused by an eroded o-ring that made it so there wasn't a proper pressure seal in one of the rocket motors, causing it to explode at the higher altitude. Apparently it was looked over so it wasn't fixed, and people paid the price with their lives.
It wasn't overlooked. When they were deciding whether to launch that morning, they were told that it could be too cold to launch because the O rings could fail if they were frozen. The launch committee's groupthink overruled the engineers because they thought it was more important because of the publicity.
@jeanninepetriel7114 you're correct on that (used wrong wordings in my comment) and the fact it was too cold so the o-rings stiffened, causing them to fail, but they were also eroded and they caused blow-by, plus it was only the ones in the shuttle's right solid rocket booster. If it was primarily caused by the cold that day it would've been all the o-rings, not just the ones in that SRB. And yeah they were pressured to do many flights a year (around 24), which led to unsafe launch operations. Like the JFMM (Joint Fleet Maintenance Manual) says, "the safety and technical requirements became secondary to operational commitments."
The Challenger Disaster, the USS Thresher (SSN 593), and the USS Iwo Jima (LPH-2) are 3 examples in our Quality Assurance/Maintenance program (JFMM) to show how import QA is, even with the smallest pieces of equipment. The Challenger happened because of an o-ring, the Thresher happened because of a piping failure causing flooding in the engine room which led to the ship being lost, and the Iwo Jima was because of incorrect bonnet fasteners placed on a root valve in the engine room, which when it got to a high enough temperature with the steam, causing the valve to blow off the pipes, killing 10 watchstanders.
My dad tells me the story of when he asked someone how the challenger flight went and the person said “it blew up” and he thought they were joking but when he got home and turned on the TV it’s all they were talking about
I was only 28 days old when the challenger exploded
32:05: Boris: “We will immediately… have parties here in 10 Downing Street.”
Sponsored by tax*
@@joermnyc Who’s Boris?
@@JordanS-ww4eu former PM Boris Johnson
watchmojo seems to have confused "the world" with the united states
🙄
You all claim USA is me me me so don’t get mad when we are me me me
@@gee1271 so... basically they are correct if they say you are all "me me me" because you all are? , thats what i got
@@nono_please_dontyou literally have a American RUclipsr as your profile picture SHUT UP
Oh yea the Paris attacks definitely happened in Paris Texas oh yea John Lennon is definitely American oh yea China is also American
I laughed during the capital building. I laughed so hard. I thought it was the greatest television show ever. I just thought there needed to be a little bit more
Wait !! no boxing day indian ocean tsumami !!! ! I would trade it for the hindenburg disaster
I 1000% agree!! It's sad it's not here
Totally could’ve replaced the “insurrection“ that nobody else in the world cared about.
Yes!
@@SpEdMice yeah because it wasn't an insurrection under the statute implemented after the Civil war it was a riot and the protesters were waived in by the Capitol police
I honestly keep forgetting about the Hindenburg Disaster when thinking about 'shocking' moments. Bu it could be because I'm not American and was never told about it so...I think it proves a point. Surprised the invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 isn't here because that changed the trajectory of the Middle East to where it is today.
Title should be the ones that make America Stand still not the world
A war in the middle east, Berlin Wall, Paris terror attacks, End of WW2, Tiananmen Square, British singer assassinated, German olympics, Ukraine war, South African apartheid, global pandemic.
Are you really this fucking dense?
Paris attacks happened in France John Lennon is British and was most popular in Britain the Chinese massacre says it itself the Israel hamas war is in Israel and Palestine hurricane katrina also affected the world because it approved hurricane/typhoon/nad cyclone research because it proved how rapidly tropical cyclones can strengthen what and what not to do in a disaster and what greed in natural disaster protection can do may I go on
Most of the Time America stands still by itself. And it's pretty good at it.
I promise you people in the hills of India did not know about the Capitol building riot or the OJ Simpson trial.
They did know about the moon landing for example
I still remember the BP oil spill happening. I was in the sixth grade, and it was mere days before I turned 13. The nativity and animal lover in me felt horrible for all of the animals who were affected
Half of the worlds population lives in the area of South Asia and South east Asia combined , and still they mentioned OJ Simpson case and left out 26/11 attacks and 2004 tsunami 😂
One thing that the world can pay attention to what’s really happening in the world (especially the United States).
This list is very United States Centric
I know right?? And to put Jan 6th in out of everything even though people rarely gives a crap about it is laughable. The Blm riots was more memorable yet never made the list😂
Also this is very very American oriented
The Jonestown Massacre actually happened in 1978, not 1972
I was working security at the checkpoint at the Love Field Airport in Dallas, Texas when that happened. The news people were coming through with their equipment, and I asked them what was going on, they told me to watch the news on my break and that is when I learned about Oklahoma City. I had a niece and nephew living up there. Thankfully they were okay but scared. I saw the memorial to the victims, and the tree that survived, but I broke down crying when I saw how many children had died because of backward thinking fools. 😢😢😢😢❤❤❤❤
Id probably add the day Saddam was finally captured by US forces.
I have only ever seen my late father pray twice. Once, when mum's platelet count was below 10000 and we thought she was going to die. He begged.
The other, was when Saddam was captured. Now, im an Indian citizen but he was born an Iranian subject, and was an Iranian citizen at that time. Many scores of Iranians had died in the war against saddam, many to poison gas, as had many, many more Kurds.
He cinsidered a victory for humanity. Worth remembering.
Timeout. What's a platelet count?
@@BillyBall35 platelets in your blood.
They're there to stop you from bleeding to death too easily. They're supposed to be at a minimum of 150,000 per microlitre of blood. Mum's were dangerously low, and had she had a small cut on her skin or a hemorrhage in her brain she could have died.
Faulty platelets is what causes hameophilia, the disease of inbred royals where every small bruise or wound starts gushing and is really hard to control. The condition is treatable but not curable.
I remember watching Japanese vids , seeing them wearing their facemasks and thinking - " bruh I would never " ...........
The Paris attacks also included the detonation at the Stade de France after France and Germany played out an international friendly football match
The Jonestown Massacre happened in November 1978!!! I was living in San Francisco during this time, with my former jr. high school a few blocks from their church. I remember everything like it was yesterday, and have read lots and LOTS of articles and books on the subject.
I’ve watch the Deepwater Horizon movie like hundreds of times now, it still gets me every time
Major of the events were US-related & US allied, where as there many more which were not even mentioned in the list. Like the 26/11 Terrorist attack on Mumbai, India which brought the country to a stand still which was far more dealier than some mentioned in the list with all due respect to them and lives lost, the Assassination of Mahatma Gandhi similar to JFK Assassination in some terms more significant as without being a politican had brought freedom to India. Have many from other countries events as well, but only if you would consider other countries as well. Or you dont consider the above mentioned events as tragedy.
Speaking of Covid… I was watching an old RUclips video and at the end of the video the guy said something to the effect of I know things are a little crazy right now but don’t worry because 2020 is right around the corner. Looking at what happened in 2020, that comment did not age well.😂
How did the 2004 tsunami not make the list ?
Watching the Challenger explode on live tv in 4th grade still sticks to me this day. It’s vivid. RIP all who were affected. It was my introduction to how fragile life really is.
US thinking it's the world
Then don't watch it. Problem solved.
@@crazy1234573 yes, the naive american perspective
Yes LOL
We are
What about the year 2000, when the Aztecs predicted the end of the world and when computers were suppose to stop working.
You meant 2012 and it was Mayans..., year 2000 was the Y2K flop...
This whole thing is mostly about the USA except for the covid 19
That Hurricane Katrina was a real eye opener.
We felt that all the way up through Mississippi.
I love how, as opposed to other 30+ count downs, they spent a respectful time on each entry.
I have specific memories of many of the moments.
The fact that people have to praise these brave souls and give honor to them in secret is the issue and should really show how they have no liberty to freedom over there... It is sad...
#1 I took that one personally, because I got a strain of it, and I thought I was dying because of the symptoms.
Other events are:
- The malvinas/falklands war.
- the tsunami in south-east Asia.
- the chapecoense plane crash.
- George Floid murder.
- the armero tragedy.
- the death of Pablo Escobar.
- the Yugoslavia war.
- the Rwanda genocide.
- The discover of the holocaust and the concentration camps.
- the Panamá invasion.
- the juventus vs Liverpool champions league final tragedy.
- avengers Infinity war, endgame and Spiderman no way home movies.
I was so made when the tsunami nor Rwanda made the list
The Hindenburg disaster led to one of the coolest album covers in history tho
I can't believe it's been almost 20 years since Hurricane Katrina, let alone over 20 since 9/11. Man time flies
change the title to moments that made the america stand still
The oil spill on the Gulf of Mexico was on Smoking Day (April 20). There was too much smoke to make it a maritime match!🔥
I was probably the only black guy in America who was appalled, horrified, and outraged by that O.J. Simpson verdict. I still get upset all these years later.
When looking back, I've always felt his slow speed chase in the white bronco was the stand-out moment in the whole thing. That shit was breaking news on every channel you couldn't turn a TV on without seeing him and the cops cruising down the highway.
I was 8 when the verdict came out and was too young to understand. But now at 37, I feel too that was the wrong verdict
He's dead now
I remember my reaction to the manachester arena bombing.I went to the kitchen fell to me knees and cried out loud.Did it make the world stand still?No.Because the world doesn't stand still.But that is not the important part.It's what happened what is happening and showing humanity, compassion and kindness instead of screaming for blood and causing more pain for the victims.It's not easy but I hope I don't forgot this.That others won't forgot it to.
The Apollo missions actually have a link to my family; my Grandfather was a Gunner’s Mate on the USS Hornet when the missions were picked out of the ocean. The Hornet is now a Naval, Air, and Space Museum docked in Alameda, California. Whenever he’s in our city we all troop across the bay to visit the Hornet
"The manhunt went on for a decade." Be honest. We weren't looking for him. We spent a decade in Iraq going after Hussein who had nothing to do with 9/11.
Yeah we were going after oil
If i remembered hearing it right, the aromic bombings could of never happened. From what i heard, japan did indeed offer up a surrender in back channels, with the condition that the emperor stay in power. The us declined.
Atomic bombs are a hoax
Yes and no. They were offered a surrender, but they refused to give up the emperor system, plus they wanted to run their own war crimes trials.
Plus at that point, there was so much momentum behind the Manhattan Project that dropping a Bomb was inevitable
@@Shinzon23 i sort of like to think the us dropping the bombs was them showing how big of dicks they have.
You know if Martin Luther king was alive today he would be sick
Says someone who never met him or knew his personality. 🤔
Really? Chernobyl made the cut but Fukushima didn’t? Whaaaaaaaaaat?
There’s a few that shouldn’t be up there at all…
How the flying fuck is V-J day not even mentioned
Uhh sorry but, what’s that
@@garrylarry890 when imperial japan surrendered FULLY ending world war II
30-21,19-17, 14, 12, 10-7, 3-2 I feel sad to be human
20, 16, 15, 13, 11, 6, 4, I feel happy to be human
16 I feel icky to be human
5, 1 I'm scared to be human
Hurricane Katrina and the Hawaiian fires have a lot in common. The speed in which they used the tragedies to land grab....
...and government incompetence, don't forget that too!
@@MarVin-db2tu it wasn't incompetence. That was all part of the land grab, easier to steal land from dead families. Unfortunately.
I was in school when 9/11 happened and most parents didn’t want to tell their kids about the terrible attacks so that wouldn’t frighten their children.
I was in 3rd grade when the challenger exploded. Live on tv in school. Everyone just started silently crying.
9/11 is something I vaguely remember, but I was in 1st or 2nd grade when it happened, I think I heard the news over the PA system and I was sorta clueless cause I was just going on like it was a normal day, then I went home that day, my mom was sitting in the living room crying, and I was watching TV with her and I became utterly shocked. #neverforget.
They really put jan6 on here lol
Why shouldn’t they?
@@skwisgarskwigelf7191because it didn’t make the world stand still
@@garrylarry890 it was still a pretty major event
@@garrylarry890In a world list, probably not. But on an American list, it's probably at the top
U forgot Waco,Sandyhook& New Valde &Heaven gate & House of Horrors also Joplin tornado& Mass shooting in Vegas
All American
Watchmojo is the only one that can make a video of shocking events without inclunding ww1
I was really expecting the 2004 Indian ocean tsunami to be number 1.Being 11 at the time I can’t think of anything else that made as much of an impact, 9/11 being a close second.