At North Korea’s Border

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
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    The Border of North and South Korea can seem like a scary place. And yet, in the US we tend to think of everything wrong. In this piece, I jump into an alternative approach to the modern history of this conflict and try to understand why South Koreans aren’t nearly as afraid of North Korea as Americans are.
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Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @johnnyharris
    @johnnyharris  3 месяца назад +10

    Click my trainwell (formerly CoPilot) link go.trainwell.net/JohnnyHarris-cp [go.trainwell.net] to get 14 days FREE with your own expert personal trainer!

  • @jakoverslept3096
    @jakoverslept3096 Год назад +14874

    I was in Tokyo when North Korea launched a ballistic missile over Japan. My whole family had a panic attack and called me thinking I was in a crysis. Not a single person in Tokyo was panicked, just a normal day, at least as far as I could tell, I don't speak Japanese. It was a very strange experience.

    • @Arms2
      @Arms2 Год назад +1982

      Because North Koreas consistent missile testing is nothing more than posturing. It’s purely meant to freak out it’s enemies, and remind them that NK does in fact, still exist.

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Год назад +471

      @@Arms2 until one of the missile hit the city u living in.

    • @aesop2733
      @aesop2733 Год назад +369

      I feel like in the more densely populated areas there would be no point in panicking because there's nowhere to go and even if there was everyone would just get stuck in a big traffic jam, similar to those stories of crowds trying to flee a burning building. Crabs in a bucket, as it were.

    • @ForzaMonkey
      @ForzaMonkey Год назад +1

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd they wouldn’t do that because they, like everyone else, fear of Mutually Assured Destruction.

    • @maudepotvin8660
      @maudepotvin8660 Год назад +1

      It's the result of American propaganda that you ,as an us citizen, see almost every week.

  • @user-yd4yf7dp2y
    @user-yd4yf7dp2y Год назад +5092

    I'm a South Korean and I agree that US media kind of emphasize North Korea(Nuclear) threats more than South Korea Media does. We do fear north korea nuclear weapon threats, but sometimes we think others(like US or Japan) consider the threat more than we do.

    • @SEBASTIANTRUJILLOGONZALEZ
      @SEBASTIANTRUJILLOGONZALEZ Год назад +184

      Full propaganda

    • @gladlawson61
      @gladlawson61 Год назад +97

      @@SEBASTIANTRUJILLOGONZALEZ or we like hearing about those crazy koreans

    • @blarstone9322
      @blarstone9322 Год назад +258

      I don't think you should worry too much about it, but since the war in Ukraine started, people in the free world feel too comfortable assuming big wars are just something of the past. In some societies people don't see it that way, they want war to happen, especially leaders who grew up in war mentality.

    • @LuisFernando-jk8id
      @LuisFernando-jk8id Год назад +56

      Can I ask, don't you feel like Seoul is very ill fitted for the event of an attack from North Korea? These bomb shelters really do seem like some half-assed measure for a menace only 40 km away

    • @sagepark3388
      @sagepark3388 Год назад +259

      @@LuisFernando-jk8id I'm Korean and I cannot give you the perfect answer for this but from my point of view as a person living in Seoul for my whole life, what I'm thinking is ‘Oh whatever.’. NK has tones of intercontinental missiles, so they can attack anywhere in SK, and SK is tiny. So ppl(or ppl in my friend group) think like ‘Oh well, if a war occurs, then it occurs.’

  • @Ad_Astra2023
    @Ad_Astra2023 Год назад +1827

    My grandmother was from North Korea but the war broke out while she was enjoying her summer holiday in the South and she never got to reunite with her family ever again until the day she died. I feel deeply heartbroken whenever I think of her although she passed away before I was even born but also thankful that she was in South Korea as I could not have existed today if she wasn’t.

    • @danceyrselfkleen
      @danceyrselfkleen Год назад

      I hope your grandfather moved along with a new woman

    • @peacelife
      @peacelife Год назад +38

      Wish she wrote a book! It would be great

    • @Ad_Astra2023
      @Ad_Astra2023 Год назад +98

      @@peacelife Her life story was extraordinary for sure, but unfortunately she died of cancer 43 years ago. She may not be able to write the story herself but my mum, me and my son are her living legacy.

    • @tosanesoko726
      @tosanesoko726 Год назад +7

      Wow!!

    • @EpicKaiwaii
      @EpicKaiwaii Год назад +1

      Maybe more like, not be where I am today, kinda thing? 🤔 because your grandma could still have children if she was in the north. Many koreans have been separated from the war, like my side of family. Recommend watching 'ode to my father' if haven't. A korean movie.

  • @pierssteenekamp3751
    @pierssteenekamp3751 6 месяцев назад +163

    Mr Johnny Harris, I tip my hat to you. I am 73 years old and recently retired. I have been a musician, a song -writer, a pilot, a pastor and I have headed up an innovation centre at a university and been a high school teacher - but I have learned more from you than I have learned from a lifetime of formal education. You are the most gifted teacher I have ever witnessed and had the privilege to learn from. Keep up the good work. The people of the world have much to learn and you are the best person to teach it!

    • @neanda
      @neanda 3 месяца назад +2

      that's cool :)

    • @Shneakuhpuff
      @Shneakuhpuff 2 месяца назад +1

      @@neandareally cool

    • @FatFrankie42
      @FatFrankie42 2 месяца назад +4

      This is one of the nicest comments I've ever read, and probably the highest form of compliment/praise I've seen expressed to any channel that I regularly venture into the comments section. Just...kinda "wow dude" impressive. You seem like a pretty heckin decent & genuinely nice person. It's breath of fresh air in the generally toxic atmosphere of social media/internet culture nowadays. Stay safe & be well!!✌️

  • @vic5015
    @vic5015 Год назад +1644

    Personally, I suspect that many South Koreans have realized, consciously or unconsciously. That being in a constant state of panic over something they have zero control over is unproductive and even detrimental to their emotional well-being.

    • @JoeMama-eg4zv
      @JoeMama-eg4zv Год назад +68

      That's exactly how I feel, here in America! Everything, mostly, is out of my control..so I just say fk it and try to not focus on any of it.

    • @jonathanlivingston7358
      @jonathanlivingston7358 Год назад +25

      @@JoeMama-eg4zvthe problem is that here is the US there is a culture of fear about everything. We should learn from NK

    • @BeenSauce
      @BeenSauce Год назад

      Also, NK isn't ever going to do anything. Their elites just want to remain in absolute power.

    • @Skfkf1393a
      @Skfkf1393a Год назад +22

      Not really. S Koreans know that each missile fired is akin to a pan handler asking for a dollar. Just an empty threat to remind the world that they are still around and need more aid

    • @tomasbeltran04050
      @tomasbeltran04050 Год назад +4

      ​@@jonathanlivingston7358 nk or sk?

  • @VKiera
    @VKiera Год назад +2069

    Watching this makes me understand North Korea's pain and hate more, but at the same time I think the way they're holding onto that pain and trauma is the same as drinking poison and expecting the other person to die. In the end it only really hurts themselves more.

    • @rose8596
      @rose8596 Год назад +145

      I agree, it would be great to move on from the conflict and reach reunification. As stated in the video, it was a conflict started by two world powers. One of them is gone, now the other needs to leave so Korea can solve it's issues. Korea can't be healed while the U.S military stays.

    • @homiegotdough
      @homiegotdough Год назад +311

      @@rose8596 You have to understand that usa would never leave south korea bcuz it gives them a lauchpad for future military conflicts against china at the all usa cares about is its dominance over the world not the prosperity of the people

    • @HamzaKhan-ky1mt
      @HamzaKhan-ky1mt Год назад +68

      @@homiegotdough sadly, yes.

    • @barnabuskorrum4004
      @barnabuskorrum4004 Год назад +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre

    • @cherry.berry2
      @cherry.berry2 Год назад

      there was pain & trauma, but the issue is that the government is using propaganda to make sure that pain and trauma never dies out by indoctrinating children w/ it

  • @Erik_The_Viking
    @Erik_The_Viking Год назад +567

    A former colleague of mine was stationed at the North Korean border while in the Army. He said it was the most depressing place on Earth and just a 24 hour stare-down contest. Each side showing off to the other. He was so happy to get out of there.

    • @apergiel
      @apergiel Год назад +87

      Interesting...that perhaps explains the crazy border ceremonial displays betwixt India & Pakistan.....they just got too bored and decided to liven things up.

    • @Erik_The_Viking
      @Erik_The_Viking Год назад +14

      @@apergiel Probably - they put on a good show at Wagat.

    • @krishnabajpai6098
      @krishnabajpai6098 Год назад +34

      @@apergiel not that much, It's more of ceremonial, The tensions are real high at borders of both of these country (India and Pakistan).

    • @Erik_The_Viking
      @Erik_The_Viking Год назад +3

      @@krishnabajpai6098 I've heard similar about the tensions at the border, which is real. The ceremony is interesting to watch but definitely shows a lot of tension and hostility.

    • @Emmi807
      @Emmi807 Год назад +5

      ​@@apergiel but the tensions between India and Pakistan are much more serious than the world sees, wether you ask a Pakistani or an indian, each side is so hungry and just wanna blow the other side, the hatred is like pre programmed in everyone's mind and with passing time, there's more and more increase in the tensions and threats, pak India conflict is an outcome of 200 years of complete mind Washing , it's a conflict between religions more than a country and indians claiming the entire sub continent while Pakistan not backing off from Kashmir, it's a mess

  • @daveskillz91
    @daveskillz91 Год назад +471

    As a South Korean living in Seoul for the past 10 years, I can confidently confirm that an attack from the north is way at the bottom of the things to worry about if it makes the list at all. We got way more shit to worry about than that

    • @srpskaball
      @srpskaball 11 месяцев назад +49

      Yeah one of them is bts

    • @Anthony-bk4fi
      @Anthony-bk4fi 9 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@srpskaball😂

    • @djteq9
      @djteq9 9 месяцев назад +2

      Like what

    • @AnglerGangAR
      @AnglerGangAR 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes I second that Interest. Like what?! Please enlighten ! Love and blessings from us

    • @lolitsajoke77
      @lolitsajoke77 9 месяцев назад +1

      Your English is impeccable even the slang. I am surprised actually.

  • @ehrenloudermilk1053
    @ehrenloudermilk1053 Год назад +1043

    I love how some of your videos have that chaotic energy of somebody who just learned something crazy and can't wait to tell everybody.

    • @-Scrapper-
      @-Scrapper- Год назад +11

      Cause that's exactly what's happening?

    • @gladlawson61
      @gladlawson61 Год назад +14

      It's annoying.... it is using music and b.s to keep you engaged. If you're older. This stuff isnt good. If you read a book. A history book. You did learn about this stuff.
      But like.. if you're a tiktok kid in a shitty place. Like most of the u.s you're not learning anything except the latest tiktok challenge.

    • @swayzee9811
      @swayzee9811 Год назад +47

      Tell me you don’t know any young people without telling me you don’t know any young people

    • @chowchowtales
      @chowchowtales Год назад +31

      @@gladlawson61 That isn't the purpose of what JohnnyHarris is doing here. He is bringing these stories to life for a quite different audience than you or those motivated to read a history book. His investigative reporting is award winning and very informative to a younger audience. Cheers

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +124

      wow I love this feedback thank you

  • @HEKC815
    @HEKC815 Год назад +777

    This reminds me of my belated grandmother who lived till 96 and passed away years ago in Busan, where she fled to during the Korean war from Pyongyang. She always told me about her fleeing story and how she lost most of her family members in NKorea for owning lands, not to mention our family tree document also has burned to ash during the war in which leads to me not knowing who my ancestors are and all. I miss her so much and still have so much respect for literally feeding her 5kids alone till they all become successful.

    • @kyh6767
      @kyh6767 Год назад +12

      Same here, but it was my grandfather

    • @jpmnky
      @jpmnky Год назад +23

      There probably are no census reports on North Korean populations over the decades for you to research. It’s great that you had your grandmother to give you an oral history. And that you cared enough to listen. My dad, he is literally the last of his family that knows the family tree in detail going back to the early 1870s. When my family came into Baltimore from Ireland.

    • @HEKC815
      @HEKC815 Год назад +17

      @@jpmnky actually lots of people paid brokers to search for their long lost families in NKorea and many of them found families but my family could not find. Last time we heard anything abt them was that they were sent to a notorious prison where NKorea send landowners and anti-communism peeps to. So now we just assume they all died from excessive labor or the starvation in the prison

    • @SongSydney
      @SongSydney Год назад +4

      Also same story here. My grandmother gave up everything to steal away from NK. She described how the entire family suffered through the snow, evading NK and Russian soldiers.

    • @communistchicken4249
      @communistchicken4249 Год назад +1

      DPRK Daily Debunks everything you know about DPRK 🇰🇵 and check out their playlists

  • @Wendypix
    @Wendypix Год назад +746

    I'm a Korean, born and raised. While this video provided insight for those on the outside looking in, it also taught me just how differently the world sees this war. Thank you for the educational content 💙

    • @rodrigojds
      @rodrigojds Год назад +11

      How do you see the war?

    • @DearMajesty
      @DearMajesty Год назад +1

      How do you see the war?

    • @scottbeaulieu8192
      @scottbeaulieu8192 Год назад +11

      He taught you how one person see this war. He generalized a lot of how others view it.... there was a lot of opinion there not necessarily many surveys of countless peoples to see exactly how they view this war.

    • @kcidd12
      @kcidd12 Год назад +15

      @@scottbeaulieu8192 You're missing the point.

    • @jaegyunkim4287
      @jaegyunkim4287 Год назад +36

      @@scottbeaulieu8192 I’m a Korean born and raised in this country. None of my friends, my parents, or even my grandparents worry about North Korea. The conflict has been there every since we were born. It’s just a normal thing for NK to shoot missiles to the East Sea or bs about their military strength

  • @rismagranger
    @rismagranger Год назад +249

    I went to the DMZ last February and you're totally right. It's rather sad than scary to be in that place, considering how many people/families have been separated from their loved ones

    • @Jews_Sumatera
      @Jews_Sumatera 9 месяцев назад +1

      DMZ is even sadder. Seeing directly, shots were fired at one of the family members as a result of fleeing his country to see his family on the other side. 😢

    • @Shlgh691
      @Shlgh691 8 месяцев назад +4

      I was just there yesterday and wholeheartedly agree. While I was there, a man in his 80’s was at the shrine. It wasn’t long before he was on his hands and knees wailing. The tour group I was with felt his pain and everyone started crying for him, knowing that he was separated from his family as a young boy in a war torn country.

    • @ELIZABETHMARLONE2005
      @ELIZABETHMARLONE2005 Месяц назад

      "Welcome to the DMZ explore and loot and complete contracts watch for enemy operators"

  • @JessieYun
    @JessieYun Год назад +1199

    As a native South Korean, I appreciate you handling on this topic in a more objective perspective. If any of my foreign friends ask if South Koreans are ever afraid of NK in the future, I would definitely show this video. Also about shelters: almost all subway stations are marked as a shelter regardless of what's inside, since they have underground bathroom and protection masks which can provide water and basic needs for protection, also a pathway to walk in railways underground to different subway stations if the current place is hazardous.

    • @ThatUkrainianGuy
      @ThatUkrainianGuy Год назад +58

      As a Ukrainian, I can say, that that's what served many people in Kharkiv and Kyiv as shelters for several weeks.

    • @twinklingwater
      @twinklingwater Год назад +30

      As a total outsider, this is not really surprising. Reserving large parts of a crammed city for a quite unlikely event is a tough sell. Establishing infrastructure that's already present for this purpose is way more acceptable. Minor tweaks to make everyday-infrastructure suitable as shelter can be easily included in the city's construction regulations. It's just the sane approach to the issue.

    • @RobespierreThePoof
      @RobespierreThePoof Год назад +2

      @@twinklingwater i would not say that a North Korean attack of Seoul has ever been "quite unlikely." It's a high risk which we've been avoiding very carefully for decades by constantly reacting strategically and defensively to every thing the North does. The minute we fail to protect the South, an attack on Seoul becomes probable.

    • @sectumsemparium
      @sectumsemparium Год назад

      Bro established title is a SCAM, can you pls do a deep dive journalism on your sponsorship before you shove it down our throats !!

    • @imtiazmahmood9324
      @imtiazmahmood9324 Год назад +7

      wow. was looking for this. in the video, i was confused that he totally shrugged off the potentiality of those shelters. those are supposed to be active as mobile app is a new thing.

  • @distiller56
    @distiller56 Год назад +278

    My grandfather was born in North Korea, came to the south during the war and decided to stay. One of his dying wishes was reunification to one day reunite with his family (voted liberal for Moon back in 2016 wishing this would come true). as my grandfathers generation passes away, the connection between the koreas are going to get more distant.. and the perception of the N.Korean threat and what war can separate from us will disappear with them..

    • @seannewell397
      @seannewell397 Год назад +7

      Heartbreaking 💔

    • @millertas
      @millertas Год назад +3

      @@andrewchung83 What will?

    • @kimchiii3200
      @kimchiii3200 Год назад

      @@andrewchung83 Moon did more than the current president, then again the current president just came in power so who knows.

    • @pridefulobserver3807
      @pridefulobserver3807 Год назад

      @@millertas You wont, they wiould kill all of you, and call it... JUST. You have to destroy them.

    • @sakshamsethi413
      @sakshamsethi413 Год назад +2

      @@andrewchung83 war will ?

  • @whatishandle
    @whatishandle Год назад +459

    a South Korean, living just 40km across the border, watching your video at 3:21 AM .. Truly inspiring piece since the last blue state opinion on NYT. You made me to rethink about the current state about Korean peninsula. ( also reminding me of old highschool history classes haha )
    Indeed, i deem that many S. Koreans just got used to N. Korean nuclear power and missile tests. Eventhough US covers those incident like upcoming WW3, here it’s just like “huh that idiot again 😂” and nobody is actually panicked.

    • @blancavelasquez9859
      @blancavelasquez9859 Год назад +39

      that’s the sense we have in the US, obviously they will never nuke us, but on slow days the media love to talk about this because it always gets them ratings

    • @alanmiller9681
      @alanmiller9681 Год назад

      Another “idiot” is named Putin. Don’t you agree? And because of Putin’s innate ability to censor and snuff out his opposition…he’s brainwashed much of the population while starting the world’s worst war in 70 years. But I suppose another reason you are not panicking is because US troops are on the ground in South Korea to protect you. Once upon a time, I was one of them defending the turf next to the DMZ.

    • @learn2237
      @learn2237 Год назад +1

      fear mongering American media. whats new??

    • @alanmiller9681
      @alanmiller9681 Год назад

      @@blancavelasquez9859 I agree that the media will do anything for ratings, deceive, lie etc.
      But a bigger problem is nuclear proliferation. One example. We were squeezing Iran dry of cash until the day Obama released $50B of frozen assets back to Iran. There was no pressure from other countries for Obama to do this. Perhaps Obama thought he could bribe the Mullahs away from violent terrorism? Nope! Didn’t work. Facts are the Iranian Mullahs transferred some of these funds to terrorist groups and for funding their WMD program. Same goes for North Korea. We need to squeeze their economy, not nurture them. Witness how a hateful MSM pilloried Trump’s courting of Rocket-man! Q: But what ultimately came of it? A: He defused the situation! Check the record! The missile test launches and nuclear tests ended that had accelerated under Obama. Now the North Korean has started missile tests again. Ask yourself why? This time Brandon is the reason. Same reason there’s a war in Ukraine and threats upon Taiwan. Ruthless dictators smell the WEAKNESS of POTUS! Putin saw the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan and said, now is the right time to attack Ukraine. Peace can only be achieved through strength. Not only did Brandon leave billions of dollars in military equipment in Afghanistan, but his weak leadership caused this Ukraine War to happen. So now we are also dumping billions of dollars of aid to Ukraine with no end in sight! And our Strategic Oil Reserves? Oh! They are drained to an all time low in a desperate attempt to win the mid-terms! It brings me no happiness to say that Brandon is the worst President of all time.

    • @vengeancewillbemine3440
      @vengeancewillbemine3440 Год назад +8

      "Normalcy bias" .

  • @Flicks_and_Pages
    @Flicks_and_Pages 10 месяцев назад +40

    "... a city that has moved on." I hope everyone realized that in life, we have no hold of our past but we can do better to make our future better. Be kind, be humble, be resilient, be loved and love. Thank you Johnny for this. Have a nice day everyone.

  • @JD-vh5sn
    @JD-vh5sn Год назад +789

    Im an Airline Pilot from the U.S. and regularly fly to South Korea. As an American, i had this underlying sense of discomfort knowing North Korea was so close by. But Im always amazed at how little the South Koreans care 😂. So glad you made this video!

    • @negar21100
      @negar21100 Год назад +2

    • @johnryan2193
      @johnryan2193 Год назад +11

      I think the poor of north Korea might not be so relaxed about their police state.

    • @zhengyuchen5786
      @zhengyuchen5786 Год назад +8

      because the South koreans can do little and NK can actually destroy them. There's no need to worry about something you can barely change. If you cannot change it, why not live happier. I guess that's the main reason SK gov want to cool things down as well.

    • @kashyap263
      @kashyap263 Год назад

      @@zhengyuchen5786 can do little ? are u trying to be funny?

    • @user-uo7ks2qc7q
      @user-uo7ks2qc7q Год назад +52

      @@zhengyuchen5786 You're wrong. The real reason is that most people are sure NK will not dare to use nuclear weapons. Even Kim Jong-un would hardly think of actually starting a war. Your opinion is quite naive.

  • @antonydandrea
    @antonydandrea Год назад +578

    He has really mastered the art of looking through piles of papers, rolling out maps, and looking in drawers.

    • @undefined69695
      @undefined69695 Год назад +59

      and regurgitating wikipedia level info with a Buzfeed like bias.

    • @malikashtar7216
      @malikashtar7216 Год назад +6

      @@undefined69695 exactly! o

    • @eepberlin7970
      @eepberlin7970 Год назад +30

      Add overly dramatic

    • @frost1183
      @frost1183 Год назад +1

      Shuk shuk shuk swish boom boom roll. ie the sounds in all these videos

    • @JaysonT975
      @JaysonT975 Год назад +4

      it was a little over the top this time lol

  • @FinancialShinanigan
    @FinancialShinanigan Год назад +127

    As a South Korean, I share other Korean's view that if they do launch an attack, there is nothing we can do to stop the initial attack so best not to worry about it until it actually happens.

    • @BeaverChainsaw
      @BeaverChainsaw Год назад +9

      Isn’t south korea’s army strong enough to stop an attack though? If Russia attack on Ukraine showed anything, big armies do not mean much when weapons are old and dysfunctional. South Korea has superior and larger Air Force, more helicopters, armored vehicles, and much more artillery. North Korea has more soldiers but South Korea has a larger population to draw from in emergency.
      Also if South Korea somehow fails, there’s always American military to rely on

    • @johnbiscuit8272
      @johnbiscuit8272 Год назад +9

      @@andrewchung83 well you gotta understand most people on the Internet don't know what it takes to start a war, the buildup, logistic, information leaks, etc. Korea can definitely stop the initial attack unless it somehow lost contact with all its satellites and America.
      If everything plays out like the Ukraine crisis, South Korea is more likely to take the military build up more seriously.

    • @austinsmith3011
      @austinsmith3011 Год назад +5

      @@BeaverChainsaw
      In a conventional war, little question that South Korea would eventually beat North Korea even without America joining in. If China joins in, gets a bit more questionable.
      But little can be done to stop the attack which would probably be the bombing and shelling of Seoul, which is very close to the border. A potential bombing and shelling of a city like WWII bad. The potential misery and death this would cause, horrific.

    • @bachvandals3259
      @bachvandals3259 Год назад

      @@johnbiscuit8272 How the fuck do you stop 50 thousands artillery shell flying toward all of your population center at x5 the speed of your fastest defense system of which you on have a dozen?
      If i tell you the date, time, location of the attack please tell me how to stop it. I will report it to my Commanders and gave you some kind of award.

    • @mtwata
      @mtwata Год назад +8

      It's 2022 and we still see how people believe the USA is around to protect the world from evil 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Kate-oi9jn
    @Kate-oi9jn Год назад +24

    I live in South Korea and I learned new things. I didn't know how North Korea got destroyed that badly. Thank you for the really informative and interesting video!!

  • @Veltree
    @Veltree Год назад +338

    Gonna hit 3M any second now. Congrats Johnny! Your hard work is paying off and your audience is well earned.

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +39

      Thank youuuuu

    • @214TwoOneFo
      @214TwoOneFo Год назад +2

      @@johnnyharris 😔 I never get a Johnny Harris heart and response 😞

    • @joeawk
      @joeawk Год назад

      Johnny? Anti China propaganda all the way.

    • @zeejoo
      @zeejoo Год назад +3

      @@johnnyharris I'd love to see a style of video where you do more talking to people. You strike me as very charismatic and well informed which is the recipe for a great interviewer. I still love the story driven content, not saying "change" but I thought the conversations you had were the most thought provoking part of the video. I think you'd be excellent at using your talents to get very unique perspectives from people directly involved in your stories. Even politicians.

    • @barnabuskorrum4004
      @barnabuskorrum4004 Год назад

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre

  • @singletrack29349
    @singletrack29349 Год назад +802

    I think you’d be interested in the sights and ideas up near the border in the smaller towns, Dongducheon, Pocheon, Soyosan, etc. There’s still fortifications all over the place and the SK military takes training and readiness very seriously. Mandatory military service is still a thing there. I think you’re seeing the results of 30+ years of living beside a violent neighbor, it becomes normal. But in my two years living there, Yeongpeong Island and the Chenoan incident happened. These weren’t “glossed over” by the population. They held civil service drills in response. Seoul is a very different culture than the countryside.

    • @Paddyea
      @Paddyea Год назад +22

      Maybe he should make a bts video of why bts needs to join the army….

    • @singletrack29349
      @singletrack29349 Год назад +29

      @@Paddyea I see what you did there… but, honestly, it would get insane views.

    • @Void-ic3ei
      @Void-ic3ei Год назад +3

      I was stationed at Camp Casey in Dongducheon less than a year ago. It was an alright area.

    • @sarabrown3183
      @sarabrown3183 Год назад +3

      OMG YOU WATCH JOHNNY HARRIS TOO??

    • @dangin5
      @dangin5 Год назад +8

      Yes! When I visited the motherland for the first time (back in 2017 such good year) I visited near the small border towns and I was really surprised at big propaganda like billboards from the 50's and dynamite loaded bridges ready to blow up to slow down NK if they ever did invade.

  • @user-sw4sw8vu6j
    @user-sw4sw8vu6j Год назад +951

    The shelters you emphasized actually have practical functions. They are underground, have multiple outlets to the outside, and are huge enough to accommodate Seoul citizens. Although they may not seem to be "perfect" as shelters, it may be too expensive to build so in a country thriving to be in top 10 GDP rank.
    It would be interesting too to see how apartments in Seoul are designed to turn quickly into military bases! (made up of concrete matters which don't easily fall, windows facing north are smaller than those facing south, etc.)
    Anyway as native South Korean, I really enjoyed watching your video.

    • @ch.6688
      @ch.6688 Год назад +56

      Also those shelters have purpose not only in the case of bombardments but in natural disasters such as earthquake, typhoon, fire, etc. As a Korean citizen, I noticed that I never thought these shelters to be a bomb shelters rather than shelters for disasters. It's funny come to think of it tho.

    • @iAmPesukone
      @iAmPesukone Год назад +32

      We have the same ideology with civil defense shelters in Finland's major cities, especially Helsinki. Most underground shelters are in constant use as sporting halls, public swimming pools, metro stations and whatnot, and can be converted into fully functional shelters for thousands of people within 72 hours. Apartment buildings in Helsinki also have their basements built as shelters with the required equipment, and are mostly used as storage spaces when not used for their shelter purpose. They're mostly a relic of the Cold War, though now they're under a renewed interest for obvious reasons, and a lot of communities are pushing money into making sure the shelters are in a workable condition.
      It's very interesting to see that the South Korean shelters are so similar to what we have over here.

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +125

      thanks so much for the added perspective. especially from a local. that means a lot!

    • @josemartymario3137
      @josemartymario3137 Год назад

      Looks like what happened to manila during ww2. The locals wanted a siege of intramuros since there are civilians still trapped inside their homes, starving because if they scavenge for food outside they will be killed by the japanese. Murica wanted a swift victory, ordered to carpetbomb the city with civilians still inside their homes. The historical center of the philippines was leveled to the ground aside from a single church before the end of the war

    • @criessmiles3620
      @criessmiles3620 Год назад

      They don’t hate the usa 🇺🇸
      They just want to be left alone like majority of the world 🌎
      Cheers from west Africa
      🦅

  • @watchit387
    @watchit387 Год назад +57

    I love how you provide the historical context and put together this bigger picture of how things came to be

  • @matthew-xr3iu
    @matthew-xr3iu Год назад +330

    As a South Korean, I love how you make these videos and how you can shed light on the history of my country. Keep making vids ilke this!

    • @laurhawk
      @laurhawk Год назад

      I would love to visit South Korea. But would feel v uncomfortable being so close to North Korea 😬

  • @will.mcgregor
    @will.mcgregor Год назад +328

    I was in South Korea in 2017/18 when every media outlet made it seem like a nuclear war was going to happen. I don’t think a single person I met even mentioned what the rest of the world thought was happening. P.s. Jeju is an amazing place to visit!

    • @scottbeaulieu8192
      @scottbeaulieu8192 Год назад +7

      Didn't bat an eye the entire time I was there too. Kinda feel bad they paid us hazard duty pay 😕 lol 😆

    • @barnabuskorrum4004
      @barnabuskorrum4004 Год назад

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre

    • @gunterthekaiser6190
      @gunterthekaiser6190 Год назад +1

      @@scottbeaulieu8192 Bonus money is bonus money.

    • @user-db1vy9pz1u
      @user-db1vy9pz1u Год назад +1

      Jeju is the most beautiful island 😆

    • @kenshin1368
      @kenshin1368 Год назад

      Look up the Jeju uprising and all the atrocities the US backed government committed to learn what Johnny is purposefully leaving out here.

  • @sasha_ptasha
    @sasha_ptasha Год назад +342

    Hey! Ukrainian here, our bomb shelters are basically the same 😅 It’s better not to count how many hours I’ve spent in random underground parking lots and basements this year. But it actually gets the job done! Our metro stations are protected from actual chemical and/or nuclear attacks but most large cities don’t have the metro system. If the war comes - it’s better to have those places than not 😊

    • @ladidaohoh3168
      @ladidaohoh3168 Год назад +12

      I saw your comment, how are you doing? Things slowing down there at all, how are the people around you holding up?

    • @sasha_ptasha
      @sasha_ptasha Год назад +49

      @@ladidaohoh3168 Hi! Thanks for asking 😊 Not really, it’s basically the same - military actions in the east and bombings throughout the country 🤷🏼‍♀️ We just kinda got used to this, hoping that the rocket wont ruin your house and living on 🙃

    • @ladidaohoh3168
      @ladidaohoh3168 Год назад +6

      @@sasha_ptasha I’m sorry that is brutal!!! What would we all do without shitty politicians to make all our lives miserable. I hope you and your family stay safe and this all ends soon. Sending you prayers ❤️

    • @cigareteking1882
      @cigareteking1882 Год назад +3

      @@sasha_ptasha call of duty irl

    • @Lat0m6
      @Lat0m6 Год назад +3

      @sasha one day when everything over I hope to see Ukraine and Russia 🥲

  • @pslinky
    @pslinky Год назад +78

    My late husband was stationed about 25km from the dmz from 93-94. My infant daughter & I moved over there with him and lived in a tiny village off post. We were on alert a lot, there were a lot of false scares, we were really worried 2x, once when Kim IL sung died, our post was on high alert jic, & once some south Korean fishermen were drunk and in an area they weren't supposed to be, and originally they thought the men were north Korean spies. When we'd call home our families would be freaking out over something they heard on the news, and we were always shocked at how blown out of proportion things were. They were always more freaked out from the news than we were living right there. Thank you for making this , it's a fresh new perspective, I have always been fascinated by both Koreas since I lived there, I watch a lot of documentaries on every aspect I can think of, and I appreciate this one, I found it super interesting. 💜

    • @alvinmokhram
      @alvinmokhram Год назад

      Dang are you sure you are north Korea? I have trust issue. If So speak Korean.

    • @pslinky
      @pslinky Год назад +1

      Uh idk if youre just trying to be funny or not but I'm not Korean, never been to the north, love south Korea. I can speak some Korean, understand some Korean, & am trying to learn it. Cannot write or read hangul yet, though if I see a word romanized I can usually know what it means and how to spell it.
      (Example: saranghae = I love you, dasi= again, kamsamnida is ty) none of that makes me Korean in either way. And you should stop writing xenophobic things. There are good people in both countries. Many have defected from the north and their stories are horrible yet inspirational. I have good friends from the south. Have a lovely day 💜

    • @jackgunn8112
      @jackgunn8112 Год назад

      I mean, it's not that crazy for external news sources to "blow things out of proportion", but at the same time, to assume just because you were there/lived there, that the things you heard on the news may be exaggerated is somewhat naive, given the extremely small density of land you probably were in and had an understanding of.

    • @laurhawk
      @laurhawk Год назад +1

      I can’t imagine how high strung everyone who works on the border is, that’s not disrespect btw, just how anxious they always are 😢

  • @shawnhampton8503
    @shawnhampton8503 Год назад +188

    Great video. Totally confirms what I learned in International Conflicts course years ago: saturation bombing does not defeat an enemy, but only increases their anger, hatred, and resolve to fight back. Thank you so much, Johnny!!

    • @shaec3405
      @shaec3405 Год назад +11

      This IS ALREADY AGING WELL

    • @gunterthekaiser6190
      @gunterthekaiser6190 Год назад +4

      We can see that in Europe too.

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Год назад +5

      Cambodia is a good example of this from the Vietnam War

    • @Hunt2EatWild
      @Hunt2EatWild Год назад +1

      It kills a lot of twats though.

    • @homie89916
      @homie89916 Год назад +14

      Iraq, syria and Afghanistan are examples. It seems the US just never learns it's mistakes.

  • @Blindriverside
    @Blindriverside Год назад +99

    Also, everyone who appreciates the sourcing please give Johnny a shoutout. It’s incredibly important & the fact that you do it now deserves praise 🙏🖤

    • @barnabuskorrum4004
      @barnabuskorrum4004 Год назад

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre

    • @angryagain3801
      @angryagain3801 Год назад +1

      Yea it's a well done video.

    • @feelincrispy7053
      @feelincrispy7053 Год назад +1

      Should be the standard

    • @aeway_
      @aeway_ Год назад

      It shouldn't really be praised, it's expected in any form of academia after high school lol

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +3

      Thank you. It’s a big effort. But the right thing to do. Thanks for appreciating it.

  • @Zeus_9137
    @Zeus_9137 Год назад +32

    21:06 I guess I don't have to worry when a south Korean citizen is more afraid of a pigeon than North Korea 😭

  • @cdsmock4512
    @cdsmock4512 Год назад +37

    That's what most "bomb shelters" are. Publicly accessible areas that are low/underground, can hold many people, and are stronger than normal structures just by the nature of their construction...subways, parking structures, etc. My elementary school had a section of basement off of the gym designated as bomb shelter, undoubtedly from the Cold War era when it was built.

    • @montamiddleton9318
      @montamiddleton9318 7 месяцев назад +1

      Now it's probably used as a tornado shelter.

    • @cdsmock4512
      @cdsmock4512 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@montamiddleton9318 Indeed, probably what they call most of them now because "bomb shelter" or "fallout shelter" sounds scary. We don't get real tornadoes here where I am in Michigan, but they probably call it a "storm shelter" now. Not that it ever gets used for such a purpose, but it exists. 😂

  • @sidiox7857
    @sidiox7857 Год назад +449

    This is the type of content that is really required to see how people of different areas being affected by the conflict, have such different perspectives on the same matter. This video was very well produced and I appreciate you bringing the situation with a different perspective so that the general person can really comprehend how different people feel.

    • @reneellakvere7507
      @reneellakvere7507 Год назад

      Johny Harris is a world economyc forum slave ,he sold out ,and he will own nothing and be executed for his crime againts humanity .

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +34

      that's the goal! if a video like this helps widen even just a few perspectives then its a success. thank you for the kind comment/feedback. it means a lot. Hearing this is a major encouragement for me to making this kind of stuff.

    • @JayM-
      @JayM- Год назад

      @@johnnyharris JOHNNY CAN YOU DO A VIDEO ON USA 🇺🇸 EDUCATION SYSTEM PLZ 🙏?

    • @JayM-
      @JayM- Год назад

      @@johnnyharris JOHNNY CAN YOU DO A VIDEO ON USA 🇺🇸 EDUCATION SYSTEM PLZ 🙏?

    • @JayM-
      @JayM- Год назад

      @@johnnyharris JOHNNY CAN YOU DO A VIDEO ON USA 🇺🇸 EDUCATION SYSTEM PLZ 🙏?

  • @victormuwonge
    @victormuwonge Год назад +435

    Can we appreciate the amount of work he actually puts in to his videos. I have seen documentaries from big companies not half as informative and as well done as this.

  • @OmarOmar-ud5ip
    @OmarOmar-ud5ip Год назад +148

    You have no clue how much I appreciate your content, the world would be a better place if more journalist like you were out there, thanks a lot 🙏.

  • @Anugita
    @Anugita Год назад +81

    As a Norwegian, I can't remember learning anything about this is school. We in the west think of the North Koreans as brainwashed, but they might see us the same way. This is the only teaching I have ever encountered of what happened, and why. Great video! Giving me a new understanding of history, and how the winners always narrate the history in their favour.

    • @victorvargas4274
      @victorvargas4274 Год назад +3

      Is why this war is dubbed "the forgotten war"

    • @26michaeluk
      @26michaeluk Год назад

      They've been brainwashed to see us that way. We on the outside aren't brainwashed about them.

    • @daffedavidsen6306
      @daffedavidsen6306 Год назад

      jupp we didnt learn nothing about the history of it! espacially not the war in the 50s.

    • @krombopulost4699
      @krombopulost4699 Год назад

      Govt propaganda works both ways. No one owns up to their ugly truth. They cover it

  • @Zeyev
    @Zeyev Год назад +56

    We were living in an American village in Tokyo at the start of the war. The US evacuated us because my sister was ill and they wanted the medical staff to be solely dedicated to active-duty military and not military dependents. My only memory of the departure was being on a ship from Yokohama during a typhoon. I suppose the evacuation was scary for my parents but they never shared any sense of fear with the three of us even when we were old enough to understand. We landed back in San Francisco on August 19, 1950, according to the family passport.

  • @ujanbiswas7150
    @ujanbiswas7150 Год назад +19

    21:18 woman is scared more of the pigeons than North Korea. Well done Kim(s).

  • @jaesunsuh4802
    @jaesunsuh4802 Год назад +269

    As a dual citizen born in the states and grew up in korea for the most of my lifetime, I love that you finally get to do story over my country! I love an amount of research you've done for this video, as well as holding on to the firsthand experiences traveling around Seoul. Never doubted peace even in my days in the Korean military, and impressed that you even got to the point that koreans don't give a ** about the war. Again, thnx Johny for the production!

    • @drbh6331
      @drbh6331 Год назад

      basically Japan and Korea are still bases to the American gov. They can't be an independent nation

    • @storagecrafter5701
      @storagecrafter5701 Год назад +2

      how did you got both of citizenship anyway?

    • @shannonkirkness5372
      @shannonkirkness5372 Год назад +1

      So cool :)

    • @Esta_Chan
      @Esta_Chan Год назад +9

      @@storagecrafter5701 US use where you were born based citizenship. While Korea use bloodline based citizenship.
      So if one of your parents is Korean who immigrated to the U.S she/he is still considered being a Korean citizen. And if you were born BEFORE your Korean parent change his/her citizenship the Korean govt immediately recognize you as theirs because of bloodline. But since you were born in the US, the white house labelled you as theirs.
      Sorry for bad English xixixi

    • @jaesunsuh4802
      @jaesunsuh4802 Год назад +1

      @@Esta_Chan exactly! thnx for elaborating it, Muhammad. To go further, by serving the military duty for Korea, I acquired the Korean citizenship permanently as well. Otherwise, I automatically lose it.

  • @CV_CA
    @CV_CA 9 месяцев назад +16

    I was in Soul, South Korea. I have great sympathy for that country. No graffiti, no garbage, everyone dressed nice. Hard working people.

    • @FatFrankie42
      @FatFrankie42 2 месяца назад

      Seoul* just fyi no insult intended ✌️

    • @DarrenANgo
      @DarrenANgo 20 дней назад +1

      I love graffiti, art that humanizes the concrete jungle

  • @euphoria2339
    @euphoria2339 Год назад +649

    This has to be one of your top videos. Very informative and helped me understand the Korean War even more. Like you said idk why our schools didn’t teach us about the war. I always heard the Korean War but never understood what happen until now. As someone who is into history, thank you!!! Would love to see more of these great videos :)

    • @RabidDogma
      @RabidDogma Год назад

      That's sad, considering that the conclusions drawn make no sense and the Jeju Massacre was just completely ignored. South Korea started the war.

    • @bobbob-gx1iq
      @bobbob-gx1iq Год назад +9

      It is not really taught in history class as besides all the people that died on both sides it did not really change anything. The only thing that changed is South Korea moved on and thrived while North Korea stayed in the 50s.

    • @martinjohnson2486
      @martinjohnson2486 Год назад

      As with the native Americans they don't teach the truth

    • @kingace6186
      @kingace6186 Год назад

      I agree. And the quality of this JH video is cutting-edge.

    • @agenius4399
      @agenius4399 Год назад

      @@bobbob-gx1iq North Korea was doing okay until the US sanctioned it to hell actually

  • @heart-and-seoul
    @heart-and-seoul Год назад +312

    This video was well done. I’m Canadian living here for 7.5 years now, and I remember the first time NK was doing their missile routine, my family calling me telling me to get on the next flight home 😂. And me like “why?” Yea there’s really no worry here, but also I did have a conversation with a Korean coworker about what they would do if North Korea invaded, and the response kind of made sense. She said “I’ve never thought of a plan because I don’t have somewhere else to go.” I think as foreigners or westerners, we think about these scenarios because we have our home to return to. But for Koreans, this is their home, and why would they want to think about leaving it? They already lost part of it and their families ㅠㅠ

    • @rayrayray7494
      @rayrayray7494 Год назад +1

      true but why did he talk about leaving ? it would never be an option for me either but i would like to be prepared to fight back and survive has long has i could if it did happen

    • @rayrayray7494
      @rayrayray7494 Год назад +1

      has a canadian i think about the very same thing about americans everyday my bunker under my home is built and im ready bring it on yanks, know your neighbour gentlement and always always keep a close eye on them especially when they are volatile like the US and NK, its a miracle US hasnt tried since 1812 to overtake us in canada but the day might come again for now they too busy with the oil out east because its cheaper to extract and get it ready to sell then our oil sands but dont underestimate the power of money

    • @heart-and-seoul
      @heart-and-seoul Год назад +2

      @@rayrayray7494 My coworker was a She. And the question wasn’t “what would you do?” It was “do you have an escape plan?”

    • @minmogrovingstrongandhealthy
      @minmogrovingstrongandhealthy Год назад

      When people will stop spamming clickbait information and lies forged by Vatican, USA and EU then all world conflicts will stop too.
      USA alone dropped more nukes and carpet bombed many other nations even themselves more then anyone else did or ever will. USA is this planet's biggest parasite pillaging Europe and Africa now attacking Russia. USA have the most starving population on Earth. Their medicine, food and overall corporate system is poison and they are poisoning themselves and pushing this same flawed ways of life onto others. The list goes on and on.
      Let these FACTS sink in before some of you even think of talking something against someone else.

    • @MrLylehammer
      @MrLylehammer Год назад +14

      @@rayrayray7494 That's very silly. The US military & government has absolutely NO interest in attacking or invading Canada. Your paranoia is ridiculous and frankly stupid. The US & Canada are neighbors and have very close, friendly relations. The US & Canada share the longest border in the world and are extremely similar culturally. Many Americans have family that live in Canada (and vice versa). Furthermore, the US & Canadian militaries/governments co-operate closely on multiple levels (NORAD, NATO, Five Eyes, etc). A war with Canada is not even a remote possibility. The US is not a "volatile" neighbor either, comparing America to North Korea is crazy. There's no comparison. So, I hope that you get rid of whatever delusions that you have about the United States and Americans.

  • @yui7star
    @yui7star Год назад +37

    It's actually similar in Japan. They tell us to find "shelters" if a missile from North Korea ACTUALLY hits Japan, but the shelters are just.... subway stations. Basements are also really rare here. It's so weird as someone who grew up in Switzerland, where basement bunkers are normal.

    • @user-qn7dy4sp4k
      @user-qn7dy4sp4k Год назад +6

      It's hard to take that massive 30million Tokyo population into a legit shelter. It is literally impossible. Korea too, if we account all the metropolitan cities of Seoul, it is 25million. So, we and Japan use normal city infrastructures like subway stations or school basements, park basements as a shelter instead.

    • @iainbagnall4825
      @iainbagnall4825 Год назад

      @@user-qn7dy4sp4k Even if you had the shelter space, realistically the use for that shelter space is in case of nuclear attack, and in case of nuclear attack, you could have all the shelter space you like but that doesn't mean you have enough food to sustain the population for months afterwards, so.... probably better just to prevent the nuclear war from happening in the first place?

    • @user-qn7dy4sp4k
      @user-qn7dy4sp4k Год назад

      @@iainbagnall4825 yes. In case of nuclear war, the shelther need to have at least 2weeks of foods and water because that's the time when the nuclear goes down. But it is kinda impossible to have 2week water and foods for 25 and 30million I guess. If nuclear attack comes, what I can do is just pray.

    • @trolltoll440
      @trolltoll440 Год назад

      pretty sure its just a storm shelter not a nuclear bunker

    • @2401ja
      @2401ja Год назад

      @@iainbagnall4825 If a nuclear weapon falls in the center of Seoul, it is the same to die as any shelter. Stockpiling of supplies doesn't mean anything. In fact, it doesn't make sense to prepare for nuclear missile by shelter. Only thing is interception.

  • @CableAnna
    @CableAnna 11 месяцев назад +10

    I was in South Korea in the beginning of June 2023 and about the time I arrive, there was a national alert saying that there might’ve been a missile launch by the North Korea and apparently that had never happened before and people were panicking because they didn’t know what was happening. Very scary and surreal.

    • @macgyversmacbook1861
      @macgyversmacbook1861 9 месяцев назад

      ICBM aka missile launches are/were pretty common and are honestly to be expected from North Korea, it’s just been almost two years since they last had a test is all

  • @umeshbatura5807
    @umeshbatura5807 Год назад +219

    I got introduced to you via your Borders series with vox, it was so refreshing to see you go back to a border, explain why it was created and the consequences it’s had. I hope you do more videos about borders! I love to see you speaking to actual people and giving us a glimpse into their lives and teaching us history that was neglected.

    • @kingace6186
      @kingace6186 Год назад

      Exactly. JH is at his very best when he is on the ground near, by, at, or in a border.

  • @ArborProTriCities
    @ArborProTriCities Год назад +42

    Thank you Jonny💚🇰🇷.
    My mother is a Korean war orphan. I was raised with American and Korean values and Korean family as well as her adopted American family. We pray for resolution moving into the next century.

    • @janetpmoore5708
      @janetpmoore5708 Год назад

      My uncle was a veteran of the Korean War and told me many experiences of that conflict. Thanks for sharing meaningful incite on how this War continues from N Korea's perspectives. Unfortunately another War could happen globally with Kim Un Jung's mentality. To assisted kids for watching Crash Landing on You! 😪😪😪

  • @GowthamNano
    @GowthamNano Год назад +179

    The reactions of South Koreans at the end of the video are priceless and show how well the country and people moved on! Thanks for yet another great video Johnny.

    • @giannitedesco6153
      @giannitedesco6153 Год назад

      They really haven't moved on. They are still fighting to get justice from japan for the enslavement of koreans, including sexual enslavement. The families of the massacred at eg. gwangju still do not have justice for their dead children. When a government is elected on a strong mandate to do something about this, a massively reactionary backlash happens, and they elect the idiot Yoon... It's still all ongoing, we just chose not to bother looking.

    • @jacksevert3099
      @jacksevert3099 Год назад +10

      I just wish Johnny pointed out the fact that the only reason South Koreans feel safe now is because of American brutality.

    • @SEAZNDragon
      @SEAZNDragon Год назад +4

      I wouldn't call it "moving on," more like acceptance. Remember this is a nation that still has mandatory conscription that rarely exempts anyone. And as bewildering as those shelters looked I wouldn't be surprised if like Ukraine there were laws and policies on how to refit those shelters and the ones Johnny went to may have been more the "get cover ASAP" shelters for a complete out of the blue attack.

    • @kenshin1368
      @kenshin1368 Год назад +6

      @@jacksevert3099 he completely left out the Jeju uprising, the horrific US backed government in the South, and how much support there was for reunification in the South. It's just another example of the US completely stealing a country's ability to self determine.

    • @nivlacsenoj6264
      @nivlacsenoj6264 Год назад +2

      @@jacksevert3099That’s what happens in war you can’t invade another country then cry victim afterwards. North Korea had to learn the hard way.

  • @hamtons1990
    @hamtons1990 Год назад +28

    I'm amused by the fact that people in Seoul aren't aware there were bomb shelters everywhere. As a Singaporean who has the same thing, that was one of the first "weird" things my wife pointed out when we were there last week - and I commented we're very near North Korea that's why. It happened as we're getting daily alerts on our iPhones about NK's ballistic missile tests overhead

  • @sahilharidas7172
    @sahilharidas7172 Год назад +215

    If anyone asks me why i love Johnny Harris this is the video i'm going to show them. We really need different points of view in today's world where there seems to be only the right perspective and the wrong perspective. Keep up the good work!

    • @stxfdt1240
      @stxfdt1240 Год назад

      He is a whiteboy.

    • @jgzales1
      @jgzales1 Год назад +16

      He literally agrees with every mainstream media. Tf are you talking about

    • @nicholas_scott
      @nicholas_scott Год назад +10

      I don't agree with some of his opinions, but he always makes it clear that its HIS opinion. Never condescending, or elitist. and because of that, it is one of my favorite channels. But in regards to this video, my impression was that NK "rattles the sabre" every few years because they want more aid, more money, more food, etc. Once the USSR ended, and stopped supporting NK, it became clear that they are a failed state, and can not support themselves .... so its basically just global blackmail

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +13

      Very kind of you Sahil thank you

    • @SAHIL-mc3hl
      @SAHIL-mc3hl Год назад +1

      @@johnnyharris
      Welcome 😆

  • @peterzeller5736
    @peterzeller5736 Год назад +155

    Props to whoever Johnny hires to just film him haphazardly look at old maps and letters 😂

    • @scoops2
      @scoops2 Год назад +4

      I always assumed it was Iz doin it lol

    • @annejia5382
      @annejia5382 Год назад

      @@scoops2 same haha

  • @AltafNanavati
    @AltafNanavati Год назад +550

    This was great. I'm embarassed of how little I knew about the Korean war and you explained in such a easy to understand way. Are there any other readings on this subject matter that you'd recommend?

    • @alanmiller9681
      @alanmiller9681 Год назад +13

      Go to the Korean War Museum in Seoul. Book a tour that includes the 3rd Invasion Tunnel along the DMZ.

    • @rose8596
      @rose8596 Год назад +9

      I think Bruce Cummings' book on the Korean War is the best I've read. It doesn't really talk about battles but is mostly focused on the history and aftermath.

    • @jcastro000
      @jcastro000 Год назад +26

      He left out a lot stuff as well (Chinese entered the war, US general wanting to use nukes etc). This war is forgotten in US education

    • @rose8596
      @rose8596 Год назад +16

      @@jcastro000 Yeah, I also think things like the jeju massacre and the post war military dictatorship in the South were too important to be left out, but I understand that youtube videos need to be a certain length in order to reach an audience.

    • @barnabuskorrum4004
      @barnabuskorrum4004 Год назад

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodo_League_massacre

  • @daynoart
    @daynoart Год назад +202

    Love the content my guy! Lookin like a captain from a Wes Anderson film while learnin’ the crap outta some people. Well done 🤘 subscribed!

    • @Joe-go9vq
      @Joe-go9vq Год назад

      Dayno is here!?

    • @alexsheadspace
      @alexsheadspace Год назад

      ive been loving your content man, what a coincidence

  • @dejbus
    @dejbus Год назад +454

    This is one of the most impressive narration of war history I’ve watched. This channel is literally developing my knowledge in so many ways

    • @johnuy2369
      @johnuy2369 Год назад +2

      I, agree!

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +51

      damn what a generous comment thank you! hearing stuff like this gets me excited to keep going!

    • @thefelicits
      @thefelicits Год назад +1

      That's really sad, please diversify your information sources because this guy has an agenda. Never listen to him re geopolitics, or at least be sure to fact check his narrative for yourself

    • @criessmiles3620
      @criessmiles3620 Год назад

      They don’t hate the usa 🇺🇸
      They just want to be left alone like majority of the world 🌎
      Cheers from west Africa
      🦅

    • @ClevelandTerry
      @ClevelandTerry Год назад +4

      @@thefelicits or you could just not watch his channel and let people who enjoy his content…enjoy it.

  • @philipvincent3342
    @philipvincent3342 Год назад +295

    Thank you for covering this topic! The Korean War has influenced so much of why we are the way we are in today’s world and economy.

    • @bonifaciomazzanti1251
      @bonifaciomazzanti1251 Год назад

      Inflation hits people more complex than a crashing stock or housing market as it directly affects people's cost of living and they immediately feel the impact. It's not surprising negative market sentiment is so high now. We really need help to survive in this Economy. The fin-Market;s have underperformed the U.S. economy as fear of inflation hammers the prices of stocks;s and bonds. My portfolio of $250k is down to $192k any recommendations to scale up my return's during this crash will be highly appreciated.

    • @jorjabertie3466
      @jorjabertie3466 Год назад +1

      You’re right! The current market might give opportunities to maximize profit within a short term, but in order to execute such strategy , you must be a skilled practitioner.

    • @younglee-segredo831
      @younglee-segredo831 Год назад +2

      @@jorjabertie3466 _Having an investment adviser is the best way to go about the market right now, especially for near-retirees, I've been in touch with a coach for a while now mostly cause I lack the depth knowledge and mental fortitude to deal with these recurring market conditions, I netted over $220K during this dip, that made it clear there's more to the market that we avg joes don't know.>

    • @elizabethangus6628
      @elizabethangus6628 Год назад +1

      @@younglee-segredo831, that's impressive! I could really use the expertise of these advisors, my portfolio has been down bad....who’s the person guiding you?

    • @younglee-segredo831
      @younglee-segredo831 Год назад +2

      @@elizabethangus6628 _The advisor I use is Cintra V. Bedassie, she's verifiable.>

  • @tuams
    @tuams Год назад +167

    It is ridiculous how lucky we are to live in an environment where the regular person can learn what is behind the curtain of how things work in our world. More than just the official perspective. Amazing!

    • @bazle64
      @bazle64 Год назад

      This is Anglo saxon lies

    • @whyareyoueven_here
      @whyareyoueven_here Год назад +5

      @@bazle64 care to explain why?

    • @sebakat1993
      @sebakat1993 Год назад +3

      @@bazle64 well, we are here to learn. Got anything to share?

    • @j.j.1753
      @j.j.1753 Год назад

      @@bazle64 That's the pot calling the kettle beige.

  • @josieadkins6847
    @josieadkins6847 Год назад +6

    I wasn’t particularly interested in this topic before I watched this. But because you produced it and the quality is so damn impressive, now I’m captivated.

  • @FacterinoCommenterino
    @FacterinoCommenterino Год назад +3650

    Today's fact: The most popular item at Walmart is bananas. They sell more bananas than any other single item they have in stock.

    • @everythingisscience658
      @everythingisscience658 Год назад +144

      I wonder why people buy soo many bananas

    • @SaniRattani
      @SaniRattani Год назад +86

      First comment which isn't the traditional, asinine "FiRsT" comment! Respect! 👍

    • @rob6850
      @rob6850 Год назад +67

      Counting individual bananas or bunches?

    • @shahzadi.zafira__
      @shahzadi.zafira__ Год назад +12

      @M.C 🅥 lmaooooo

    • @joshelguapo5563
      @joshelguapo5563 Год назад +47

      That makes sense to me. I like bananas, they're cheap, I need them often. So I probably buy a lot of them.

  • @oneUTD22
    @oneUTD22 Год назад +304

    Hi Johnny, thanks for the great content. I was born and raised in South Korea but lived mostly in North America and Europe. I think the issue of biased journalism and education is not limited just to foreign countries but also in South Korea. So your approach of sharing the telegram exchanges between Kim Il-Sung and Stalin was super interesting.
    I would be interested if you can extend this topic into issue of reunification and the geopolitics surrounding this topic.
    Loving your contents and thanks for this video especially

    • @johnmarston5600
      @johnmarston5600 Год назад

      How interesting. Can you share one or two examples of the biased education in SK?

    • @4kwalkingtravel576
      @4kwalkingtravel576 Год назад +5

      @@johnmarston5600 is there any education that is not biased? why do I have to teach you to turn against the system? the only truth is your personal experiences, other than that you just living in others plans.

  • @mazmurelvictory5755
    @mazmurelvictory5755 Год назад +55

    On a tangent here.
    I have a funny feeling that as the wealth disparity between South and North Korea widens, due to the North keeps pouring the little resources they have towards their army, that South Korea would actually reject reunification due to the sheer economic burden it would pose on the their economy in trying to lift North Korea into the 21st century.

    • @mikewinburn
      @mikewinburn Год назад +8

      I see your point.
      I would surmise they would still unify to have free access to their family and the dissolving of martial hostilities.
      I say this because the choice is the same one east Germany and west Germany faced and agreed to make.
      Yes, they reaped the benefits, but also the consequences. The allied West Germany needed to support the poor economy of the Russian communist east germany. Sadly, to this day, the two sides clearly haven’t leveled and mindsets remain distant from unity.

    • @stefankoltz4705
      @stefankoltz4705 Год назад +10

      @@mikewinburn the difference is that as time goes on families due out. You no longer have many families with some in the north and some in the south, at least family members they know of. The generation alive at the time of the division are at youngest in their 70s (those born in the 50s and small children at the time). East and West Germany also had a bit more communication for families to stay connected, North and South Korea have been pretty walled off from each other. The era of family reunifications is closing on this conflict just from the hands on time moving on. Economic matters would be more on the forethought of younger Koreans than reuniting with long distant family members most likely

    • @mikewinburn
      @mikewinburn Год назад

      @@stefankoltz4705 - true this, my friend; true this.

    • @fan8706
      @fan8706 Год назад

      Weirdly enough I think if North Korea would pour resources to grow their economy instead, their military would be much stronger than it is now.

    • @mazmurelvictory5755
      @mazmurelvictory5755 Год назад +2

      @@fan8706 But you have to remember it's next to impossible to grow your economy if you're still technically at war with the world's largest economy.

  • @CallMeJoy_wastaken
    @CallMeJoy_wastaken Год назад +5

    My grandpa (born in 1932, and alive) when he was 16 (in Korean age) he decided to go to the Korean war, to fight North Korea, and my grandma (1940, alive) was a Northern Korean but her and her family decided to escape.

  • @scottlanin
    @scottlanin Год назад +17

    Interesting video and analysis. I trained in korean karate and taekwondo for 38 years. My first instructor came to America in the early 60's. He told me that during the Korean War his brother was located in the north and he never saw him again. The war divided families.

  • @followtheleader5279
    @followtheleader5279 Год назад +35

    I did a project on North Korea for school (I had a few good months to prepare for it) and it sure would have been nice to have this video back then! After reading through many websites, books, and endless documentaries--I arrived at the same conclusions you did. The world is far more worried about an upcoming war than South Koreans. I also delved into the perspective of the people of North Korea's side on this, and they aren't as hopeless as my American History class taught. The more generations of the dynasty pass, the less faith North Koreans have in it. The younger generations are starting to peek out into the rest of the world the more technology advances and slips into the country. It's my belief that there will be a time when the people of North Korea earn peaceful prosperity, but that will have to come from themselves. Not the USA, or any other country.
    Very awesome video!! I look forward to others!

    • @mremu4358
      @mremu4358 Год назад +1

      I Remember when I was in the Marines during Trumps term when people said it was about to go nuclear, many of my peers from what I can tell didn't want that war to break out but we were ready to go if needed, our higher ups however were foaming from the mouth for a new war to start.
      Then on one Friday after PT I went back to my shop then went to the smoke pit and one guy looked on his phone and said "oh shit, north and south Korea signed a peace treaty finally" it was just a few of us there and after he said that it was quiet for a sec, it sounded unthinkable yet so believable, I just said "really, huh, cool" in a settle acceptance of knowing everything was gonna be ok. We got further confirmation later that day from our higher ups during our safety brief for the weekend but it was quite a peaceful day.

    • @sangbeom6245
      @sangbeom6245 Год назад +1

      North Korea is extremely complicated and if the war ends it won't be pretty afterwards either

  • @auntyfluffy
    @auntyfluffy Год назад +106

    My late father was a young Marine in Korea, he always encouraged me to learn more, though didn't always like to discuss himself. I've been missing him and this episode really, truly, gave me joy, though not a most happy topic. Thank you for a piece of my Dad.

    • @DadWil
      @DadWil Год назад +1

      Thank you for your Dad and his service. I'm glad he made it back home. My Dad served in the Army during the start of the Korean war. Because of his proficiency with the M1 Garand he was kept back state side to teach marksmanship skills. Like your Dad he does not talk of his service much other than to say he thinks it was a mistake to have been kept state side and not go with the others.

  • @terryhale9006
    @terryhale9006 Год назад +103

    I lived in South Korea beginning in 1958 and leaving in 1969, visiting again in 1971 and 1974. Congratulations on a good presentation summing up the history. A few of my own perspectives/opinions: The North Korean government needs to have the fear of the US as a means of blaming their problems on some outside entity. Many in the US want to see the North Korean government overthrown to free its citizens from their enslavement. The NK government knows that and sees nuclear weapons as a way of making sure the US doesn't try to act militarily to overthrow them. When I was there we gave jobs to a couple of Korean women who had no idea what had happened to their husbands. They had been forced into the NK army and their wives never saw them again. They never remarried as they had no idea whether their husbands were alive or not. Most of the direct familial attachments between the north and south have aged out, leaving a South Korean population that is happy with the country they have and doesn't see huge motivations to reunite with the North Korean disaster zone.

    • @Jews_Sumatera
      @Jews_Sumatera 9 месяцев назад

      But in reality, the North Korean government has never been afraid of America. They have always carried out propaganda about America since the past. They also think that South Korea is being colonized by America. This is what makes North Korea more aggressive towards South Korea. The DMZ is a silent witness that separates families in two Koreas.

  • @mcjollirogers
    @mcjollirogers Год назад +79

    From what a local told me when I visited Seoul, they mostly told me that there's a reason why the subway is so deep, so that it doubles as a shelter and that there are connecting channels for escape when underground in the subway. Your take on this piece of history has been really informative and interesting to watch.

  • @erinsjourney315
    @erinsjourney315 Год назад +144

    As usual you make news digestible and interesting. There hasn’t been a time where I’ve happened upon one of your stories thinking I’ll just watch a few minutes and end up binge watching several episodes. What you do is important. Thank you.

  • @sewh5726
    @sewh5726 Год назад +17

    I'm South Korean. In my memories, in 90's (when I was a teenager), there were several times in which I couldn't go to sleep because of anxiety and many people bought groceries for the war. As time goes by, we kinda get used to threats.

  • @timmartin997
    @timmartin997 Год назад +30

    Absolutely the most informative and entertaining history lesson I have ever had in my entire life, and I would just like to say thank you. For real.

  • @Caalim
    @Caalim Год назад +62

    " It's not scary or threatening to be here, it is plain sad to see 70 years of this standoff, created by foreign powers"
    The simplest summery of 70 years Korean standoff.

  • @heekyungkim8147
    @heekyungkim8147 Год назад +142

    As South Korean… this documentary is very interesting. Great 👍🏽 work.. Johnny. When i was little. I used to get afraid at night thinking north can bomb us anytime…. All war is horrific. I hope there will be never another war in Korea.

    • @gringostarr69
      @gringostarr69 Год назад +2

      But you have USA's nukes aswell? Why the fear?

    • @JCGeography
      @JCGeography Год назад +4

      @@gringostarr69 they don't have them on the Korean Peninsula.

    • @nachobroryan8824
      @nachobroryan8824 Год назад +3

      @@gringostarr69 When I was stationed there in the 90s in the US Air Force they had monthly air raid drills in Seoul. Now they only have air raid drills once or twice a year. If she was a kid in the 80s or 90s I could understand why.

    • @yeti9369
      @yeti9369 Год назад

      I’m k 😊

    • @himesilva
      @himesilva Год назад +7

      ​@@gringostarr69 I mean... if North Korea sent missles or a nuke to Seoul no one would be able to stop them before the city is flattened. There would of course be retaliation afterwards, but that wouldn't make a difference to you if you're already dead (to put it crudely).

  • @berttorpson2592
    @berttorpson2592 Год назад +58

    I was stationed in Seoul. It was amazing, I'd go back in a heartbeat. I don't think I ever even had a conversation about North Korea the entire time I was there.

    • @singletrack29349
      @singletrack29349 Год назад +4

      I was stationed at Camp Casey, north of Seoul, 2009-2011… while I was there NK sank a SK ship and shelled Yeongpeong Island. We trained close to the border and with the SK military frequently.

    • @berttorpson2592
      @berttorpson2592 Год назад +1

      @@singletrack29349 I went to camp Casey for EFMB

    • @singletrack29349
      @singletrack29349 Год назад

      @@berttorpson2592 that’s a brutal course. Congratulations.

  • @ewu77
    @ewu77 Год назад +1

    19:17, I can imagine when the bombs are flying and people are in the shelter, someone saying "Can I have a tall java chip frappuccino?" "Wait, these straws are plastic, where are your paper straws?"

  • @dandreen9801
    @dandreen9801 Год назад +26

    As someone who is half Korean, half German, I often think I have quite a different "outside" kind of view on this. Especially considering Germanys history and the fact that this country used to be divided in a similar kind of way until the end of 1989. I really hope that I will live to see the country of my ancestors in its entirery someday.

    • @yaseencygra2127
      @yaseencygra2127 Год назад

      Damn you wouldn't be accepted either by nazi Or kim jong! Whatchu gonna do?

  • @adina1291
    @adina1291 Год назад +96

    it is kind of surprising to see the seoul citizens are not that afraid of all these threats from the north, while we at the other parts of the world are very much horrified by the nukes developed by the Kims of the north

    • @DanielFenandes
      @DanielFenandes Год назад

      Thats because the nuclear bombs are for the usa

    • @Nordicsz
      @Nordicsz Год назад +14

      It is probably hard to be constantly terrified for 70 years. They had to continue life even if there was a threat at their border.
      And let's not forget that the US needs to remind its own population why it has military bases around the world. As soon as the population thinks nothing is happening abroad, they'd start demanding the demilitarization of those bases.
      Most countries deal multiple times a year with Russia, China, NK and other oppressive countries entering their airspace for example. In those countries it barely makes the news if at all. Cause at this poibt it's just a chararde, where we call their consulate and ask wtf explain, and they call back saying, sorry we had a malfunction.
      The US though does not deal with those kinds of threats, and still they have a big military and need to give reasons for why they still have it. So they use these threatless shows of power for those.

    • @favorsthebrave1005
      @favorsthebrave1005 Год назад

      Kim jung eun is nervous about that NK might collapse soon.
      That's why he keeps firing missiles at japan.
      Kim is sending signal to SK&USA> Please help me maintain system in NK by providing food aid.
      NK also asked Vietnam and India for food aid.

    • @feline3462
      @feline3462 Год назад

      Why North Korea want nuked their peoples?

  • @tradingarsenal9767
    @tradingarsenal9767 Год назад +12

    20:30 - Damn, she's SO BEAUTIFUL!!!

  • @weeguy52
    @weeguy52 Год назад +75

    If you keep making threats on a daily basis then no one will take you seriously and they get fed up with it so it becomes more of annoyance than anything

    • @Micg51
      @Micg51 Год назад +5

      That’s how I’m starting to feel about Putin’s nuclear threats too.

    • @weeguy52
      @weeguy52 Год назад

      @@Micg51 true👍

    • @dom1abc1mbc
      @dom1abc1mbc Год назад

      the US makes threats on a daily basis too, no one takes them seriously either

    • @weeguy52
      @weeguy52 Год назад

      @@dom1abc1mbc actually they do because they know america can invade them lol and it depends on the threat as america rarely threatens using millitary force or nukes like what NK does(only sanctions)..if america made the threats NK says to know it's sh!t is going to go down

  • @Buiserd
    @Buiserd Год назад +53

    This sentiment about people in South Korea not being that worried about the North is something I really recognize from my Korean colleagues when I worked at a KR company that was in Amsterdam. Their relatives were way more worried about terrorism in Europe or how ''''unsafe'''' it was here. And if I'd ask them about treats from North Korea it was always something like 'oh yeah they do that more often, we don't really pay attention anymore'.

    • @telegram3467
      @telegram3467 Год назад

      Thanks for watching, Download the Telegram app and send a DM. I will love to hear your thoughts on this and for more enlightenment☝️*

    • @ky1ebetts
      @ky1ebetts Год назад

      Its a little hard for South Korea to be so extremely worried when they know they have the most powerful military on Earth (U.S.A.) backing them.

    • @lorsheckmolseh3345
      @lorsheckmolseh3345 Год назад

      Kim Jong-un owns much sympathy in the South. [time, 2018, "Kim Jong Un Now Has an 80% Approval Rating in South Korea"]

    • @philw8704
      @philw8704 Год назад

      I understand your thoughts and concerns being stationed in Korea at the DMZ. Yes, North Korea is a constant threat to South Korea but whenever the Kim” family did something it appeared it was for attention and finally something from South Korea or the UN like food or lifted sanctions. The unfortunate part of the Dictatorship up North is the suffering the citizens of North Korea must go through by the leadership. Simply easing the tension and begin trades would help their economy and perhaps begin relatives to meet and ease their pain. It is too bad the situation continues to drive separation between one people.

  • @dgenmaxi
    @dgenmaxi Год назад +3

    21:10 Are you more afraid of pigeons than NK? LOLOLOL

  • @MasonHarman
    @MasonHarman Год назад +29

    Growing up in Australia and knowing of the Korean War but never actually learning about it, it's eye opening to see how much I was ignorant about. It's incredible to think that such an inane thing as putting a line through a map has ended up creating two such incredibly different cultures.

    • @EchoBravo370
      @EchoBravo370 Год назад

      And had America not taken NK on when it invaded SK, it too would possibly be part of NK and like NK today. History is amazing.

  • @MazMozdy
    @MazMozdy Год назад +132

    Dear Johnny, Thank you for your sharing those stories with us and allow us to experience the world from the people's perspective. You're such an amazing journalist and always looking forward to see your videos!!!

  • @jacquesdekock4624
    @jacquesdekock4624 Год назад +35

    In 2011, my wife and I went to teach English in Korea. In December of that year, we went to Pyeongchang (in the Northern Eastern Province of South Korea) on a skiing vacation. After a day on the snow (17th of December 2011) I checked my email to find frantic messages from my mom asking if we were fleeing the ski resort as Kim Jong il died earlier that day. I looked up and everyone was just continuing with life as normal. When we Skyped with them a few days later, they were under the impression that we in a war zone... or so they thought watching news reports.

    • @nuttyknowledge17
      @nuttyknowledge17 Год назад +2

      You are from the States?

    • @olajong2315
      @olajong2315 Год назад +2

      @@nuttyknowledge17 most likely. South Korean English teachers are mostly American.

    • @tcmpaw
      @tcmpaw Год назад +1

      With a name like Jacques de Kock, I'm going to guess South African!

    • @nuttyknowledge17
      @nuttyknowledge17 Год назад

      @@tcmpaw Any specific reason?

    • @jacquesdekock4624
      @jacquesdekock4624 Год назад

      @@tcmpaw that would be correct!

  • @my13elieve
    @my13elieve Год назад +32

    Thanks for such an insightful video. Remember being in Seoul multiple times and it's really quite interesting how the people there are just living their lives. They are more bothered by other issues as compared to those in the North. I believe there is still a part of them that feel threatened but they also understand that living in constant fear might be what the North wants so why not continue with life and show them that they are not bothered?

  • @chriszhu8
    @chriszhu8 Год назад +24

    I was there just a couple weeks ago. It's true, the younger generation of South Korea doesn't care so much about the North side and has mostly moved on. It's one of the last things on their mind! I think this may be due to the fact they havent been experienced the devastation and impact of this separation first hand. The older generation, however, experienced their families torn apart literally, parents and siblings physically divided between North and South and are unable to see each other again even if they wanted to.

    • @CBRN-115
      @CBRN-115 Год назад

      The north koreans are basically aliens. Completely separate species at this point
      I do not consider them as kindreds. Unless they adopt our ideology, they are not welcome. Brainwashed or not, it doesn't matter.

  • @KissMyBiscuits
    @KissMyBiscuits Год назад +9

    I hated history in school & I’m not much for watching the news but something about your style & the way you explain things keeps me glued to your videos. As a result, I understand this world & why things work the way they do in a way I never could have before finding your channel. Thank you, Johnny Harris, for helping me understand things I never even knew I wanted to understand!

    • @Lisah707
      @Lisah707 Год назад

      Easy to understand, educating, great graphics, and great intonation. The best

  • @cameroncunningham4520
    @cameroncunningham4520 Год назад +26

    Just thought I would drop in here to say these videos are absolutely incredible. Some of the best edited and non biased explanations of confusing events that could ever have been produced. Great job.

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +3

      Thanks so much for the generous comment. It means a lot to hear this encouragement

    • @darshilshah2728
      @darshilshah2728 Год назад

      @@johnnyharris you’re amazing. I hope to be like you.

  • @defipunk
    @defipunk Год назад +3

    I assume you've been, but the museum about the "American war" (or vietnam war for the US) in Hô-Chi-Minh city / Saigon is very similar in the levels of atrocities portrayed. Many of my American friends had tears in their eyes. But what is (maybe?) beautiful about it is that it aims to heal and bridge the divide. Truly a great people

  • @blacksnow879
    @blacksnow879 Год назад +7

    This is the kind of guy I was looking for for years, not biased, not referencing the media and propaganda for the truth, but looking for real evidence.

    • @Otome_chan311
      @Otome_chan311 Год назад

      Wait until you realize the capitalists are the baddie :P. The USA is the enemy, not the soviets or north koreans. When has north korea ever invaded another country? Never. When has the USA? Damn near every single year.

  • @theomulder247
    @theomulder247 Год назад +19

    This has to be your best video yet man. Changed the way I look at the entire situation in the Korean peninsula. The music throughout was also so so good!

  • @neilpeal6938
    @neilpeal6938 Год назад +23

    This is genuinely without doubt one of the best videos I have ever seen. If I was face to face with you Johnny I would have shaken your hand. Please keep making such amazing content.

    • @awapuhi9
      @awapuhi9 Год назад

      Pushover

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад

      Wow. Thank you. Very kind of you to leave this generous comment. Lots more to come!

  • @MM-th4vu
    @MM-th4vu 6 месяцев назад +3

    I'm hooked on this channel. The content that Johnny and his team brings out is incredibly good. Shout out for making this available on RUclips

  • @user-zk4ng1zo7p
    @user-zk4ng1zo7p Год назад +36

    와우. 한국에서 사학을 공부했던 사람인데 한국전쟁에 대한 이해와 현 남북 및 북미 간 정세를 그 누구보다 잘 파악한 점 정말 인상적이네요. 동시에 한국인들이 북한의 군사적 위협에 대해서 실생활에서 전혀 신경쓰지 않는 모습까지 정말 잘 담았다고 생각합니다

  • @ajslobig
    @ajslobig Год назад +124

    You literally create some of the greatest content I get to watch. Thank you for not only being an incredible storyteller, but also a meticulous film maker.

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Год назад +12

      Wow and thank YOU for taking a moment to express that.

    • @lanefoxly6814
      @lanefoxly6814 Год назад +1

      I mean it’s all just a bunch of half truths and lies but his production is on point. Boys got maps.

    • @inyrui
      @inyrui Год назад

      @@lanefoxly6814 yep. People should watch The Present Past video on Harris. He gets so much shit wrong. Not to mention his bullshit "I haven't used shampoo in years" video lmao

  • @warrent1490
    @warrent1490 Год назад +14

    When I lived in South Korea 20 years ago. It was same way. My friend and family would call about all the horrible news being reported about NK. But my life was normal, and at times I had not even heard about what was being reported in the USA, and I lived in Seoul and north of Seoul.

  • @riskyridge1177
    @riskyridge1177 Год назад +5

    Johnny and Company,
    The information you're sharing is so important for people to learn it's hard to put in words. I just hope that you do everything you can to expand your reach. It may seem like your channel has reached equilibrium in production output and profit, and that's probably true. But I've never found a source that provides such important education about human history and current geopolitics and that's unfortunate in todays world. I would trade 90% of American education for the knowledge on this channel.
    We all know we could ask most of our family members about these conflicts and they wouldn't have clue. The patience and theatrics you apply to these videos makes it unbelievably difficult day to pay attention, I've never felt so smart and also so aware of what's happening with our world
    Anyways thanks for all the time you guys put in, you're changing history more than you might know

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +237

    After loving the video about South Korea and hearing that you have a video on North Korea, I was intrigued. So excited to see this!
    Also, Afghanistan and Korea are some of the biggest casualties of the Cold War.
    Correspondence between Stalin and Kim Il-Sung? Johnny is really upping his game here 👏🏽
    Clearly I’m new to the channel but its interesting to hear your grandfather had a picture with a Soviet Soldier.
    Either people are lying about not knowing about the bomb shelters and or the government has bomb shelters that are hidden from public. Too many theories.
    Quote of the Day: “Are you more afraid of pigeons than North Korea?”

    • @williamcondon7729
      @williamcondon7729 Год назад +3

      Latin America and Africa: do we mean nothing to you?

    • @JrareProductions
      @JrareProductions Год назад +1

      My fiancé works at one of their distribution centers. They gave 50+ft tall vaults full of Them.

    • @PokhrajRoy.
      @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +1

      @@williamcondon7729 That’s why I said ‘some of them’ but yes, you’re right.

    • @maplobats
      @maplobats Год назад

      @StarВоу ТV music🅥 Not sure I agree with everything in the video, but it definitely has some good points to make.

  • @sammy961119
    @sammy961119 Год назад +130

    One thing to note is that Seoul's subway infrastructure as a whole gets utilized as bomb shelters since the platforms and rail network are massive enough to transport goods safely across and deep enough to be safe from bombardment. While a lot of people might not realize, there are CBRN gas masks and other emergency kits (not to mention public restrooms, water fountains, and storage areas that can be quickly repurposed for stocking emergency supplies in these stations) placed on those subway platforms, albeit limited and not well-maintained. Similarly, some portions of Gyeongbu Expressway (main highway line in South Korea) were built to be utilized as emergency airstrips for fighter jets in case of invasion.

    • @nerooeeroo
      @nerooeeroo Год назад +1

      Pyongyang subway in the north is deepest in the world for the same reason!

    • @hey__you
      @hey__you Год назад

      There are so little amount of Gas masks tho lol

    • @sammy961119
      @sammy961119 Год назад +2

      @@hey__you that’s why I said “albeit limited and not well-maintained” 😓

    • @ROBLOXGamingDavid
      @ROBLOXGamingDavid Год назад

      During World War II, the British were able to make use of "the Tube"/London Underground as bomb shelters.
      (but what the hell am I thinking, this is NOT 1940's ANYMORE.....)

  • @ideatorx
    @ideatorx Год назад +34

    Johnny this one was extremely good. 10./10. I always had thought this was a war between two Koreas, I'd never realized that its a war between us and north Korea. mind blown. extremely eye opening.

    • @MrEazyE357
      @MrEazyE357 Год назад +2

      Are you saying that you didn't know that the US participated in the Korean War?

  • @hannahr5037
    @hannahr5037 11 месяцев назад +2

    I want to say that we in Ukraine also did not expect Russia to [try to] do a full invasion. Even though they practically started invasion in 2014 and gathered so much military next to our borders.
    I think it's natural for people to deny the worst that can happen.

  • @j3rka
    @j3rka Год назад +25

    I hope you never stop uploading these masterpieces! Thanks for teaching us about everything!