The Absolute Worst Scientist Of All Time - And Why He’s Popular Again

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @vanadyan1674
    @vanadyan1674 Год назад +3212

    My Mom used the starving people in Africa line once, I asked her to name two of them and got my ass beat. Good times.

    • @stargatis
      @stargatis Год назад +252

      I always asked for an envelope so I could send food

    • @CrescentUmbreon
      @CrescentUmbreon Год назад +117

      Dang you were a sharp sassy one haha

    • @RealBradMiller
      @RealBradMiller Год назад +23

      ROFL.

    • @wild360
      @wild360 Год назад +13

      😂

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Год назад +94

      @@stargatis My mom would've gotten a box and sent me instead

  • @Emymagdalena
    @Emymagdalena Год назад +581

    The unexpected generational gap of “there are starving kids in Africa” and “there are starving kids in China.”

    • @pettykittyfam
      @pettykittyfam 5 месяцев назад +31

      Lol I thought it was a Mandela effect till I came to the comments 😂😂😂

    • @HighOnPoint412
      @HighOnPoint412 5 месяцев назад +15

      @@pettykittyfam It's just him being PC it's always been starving kids in Africa

    • @olgar.6604
      @olgar.6604 4 месяца назад

      ​@@HighOnPoint412how is it more pc that the starving kids be in China??? It's starving kids, it's not pc either way lol

    • @minigrinpins2528
      @minigrinpins2528 4 месяца назад +34

      @@HighOnPoint412*LOUD INCORRECT BUZZER* in the John Lennon song “Nobody Told Me” he says “they’re starving back in china”
      the song is about him raising his youngest son, so it can be assumed that the line is him talking to Sean

    • @gennybaratta2460
      @gennybaratta2460 3 месяца назад +10

      Right?! I was born in 96 and I always heard starving kids in Africa! For reference my parents were born in 63 and 65.

  • @TheWanderingFire
    @TheWanderingFire Год назад +849

    My father *was* a starving kid - he barely survived the Hunger Winter in the Netherlands during WWII, so when we didn't want to eat what was placed before us, we would get a lecture about his rickets and eating nothing but the cores of cabbages and tulip bulbs. There was literally no way to compromise - dinner stayed on the plate until you finished it.

    • @summersolstice884
      @summersolstice884 Год назад

      @c.j.nyssen6987 ... Holland and Europe/England to Russia, went thru horrible due to that war ... So many in today's society have no idea how lucky they are ... The farmers in the Netherlands, are currently under fire from the Deep State, that is trying to take their land, kill their herds, prevent the planting of crops ... They are TRYING to create another starvation event without a war ... Support the farmers of ALL countries ... Without them there is no food!!!!

    • @ameliaannhouck2670
      @ameliaannhouck2670 Год назад +45

      you bet it did, my father would do that, try to make me eat food that I detested and made me sick but when I refused to eat it, that old demon would say then it will be here in the morning when you get up, that was the start of the BATTLE ROYAL UNTIL THAT BASTARD DIED !!

    • @im_piano
      @im_piano Год назад +50

      That's the horrible form of domestic violence.

    • @hellohello2582
      @hellohello2582 Год назад +34

      ​@@im_pianono

    • @parisinthe30sx
      @parisinthe30sx Год назад +113

      ​@@hellohello2582wrong choice of words but it is abuse. Eating when not hungry can cause all sorts of problems. All that does is perpetuate eating disorders

  • @antonstezhkin5991
    @antonstezhkin5991 10 месяцев назад +194

    There is a legend about Lysenko and Landau (a Soviet physicist). Landau asked "if we cut off the right ear of a horse for many generations, at some point we'll get a breed of horses born without the right ear?" Lysenko answered that was true. "And how does your theory explain virgins?" Landau replied

    • @AnglephileSwedenGerman
      @AnglephileSwedenGerman 6 месяцев назад +12

      I don't get it

    • @Mommyofmeats
      @Mommyofmeats 6 месяцев назад +47

      ⁠​⁠@@AnglephileSwedenGermanLysenko basically was against the concept of genetics and believed that characteristics can be passed down to offspring as long as it has been acquired during the lifetime.
      Landau brings up the fallacy with the argument. The act of cutting off the ear doesn’t affect the next generation bc that’s not how genetics get passed down. It doesn’t cause the further generations to have clipped ears and cutting them off doesn’t increase the chances of a breed being born without the right ear.
      landau is calling out this logic as it would imply that being a virgin is “inherited” which obviously does not make sense and is not genetic

    • @AnglephileSwedenGerman
      @AnglephileSwedenGerman 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@Mommyofmeats lol ok the guy is such a crack pot that I didn't even bother to pay attention to his ridiculous ideas, it seems he is the stubborn type to never change his mind no matter what

    • @Zrunawaybride
      @Zrunawaybride 5 месяцев назад +8

      Somehow that sounds exactly like something Billy gates would say.

    • @AnglephileSwedenGerman
      @AnglephileSwedenGerman 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Zrunawaybride he would but also looking at the ponies

  • @mastergecko1178
    @mastergecko1178 Год назад +860

    My grandfather lived through the great famine in China, he told me that there were no birds in the sky and you won’t hear any crickets, frogs or cicadas during summer nights because people ate all of them or else they’d starve to death. There were also dead trees everywhere since people started eating the tree barks when they run out of stuff like rats and bugs to eat, those were some harrowing times.

    • @Geoplanetjane
      @Geoplanetjane Год назад

      Mao ordered all the birds killed so they wouldn’t eat any crops..result? Insect pests proliferated.

    • @marcpym5251
      @marcpym5251 Год назад +185

      The fact that Mao blamed the famine on an overpopulation of sparrows to disguise his own mistakes led to sparrow hunt events, where millions of birds were killed. That, in turn, created a plague of locusts in the following season that killed the rest of the crops and eradicated other healthy insect populations. So that might also be a factor why your grandfather said he didn't hear any birds or crickets in that time.

    • @mastergecko1178
      @mastergecko1178 Год назад +65

      @@marcpym5251 Not just sparrows people back then were eating any wild birds they could catch, if they can’t get the birds they’ll just look for nests and eat the eggs, that’s how bad it was. My grandfather said he saw people falling to their death because they were climbing the tallest trees in his town in hopes of finding eggs in the bird’s nest that are too tall for others to reach.

    • @McCurtainCounty888
      @McCurtainCounty888 Год назад

      I am CERTAINLY NOT an authority on China, I vacationed there once and saw or heard almost no wildlife, I saw a few wild birds once other than that, nothing

    • @richardfan7157
      @richardfan7157 Год назад +43

      Unfortunately China has a long history of poor farming methods as a result of its late industrialization. Tens of millions died during the Taiping Rebellion during the 19th century due to famines. Even during the Republican era, there were cases of villages fighting against each other, bandits and warlords stealing food, families having more children that they could feed etc that led to several regional famines. Famines come in cycles, and while there are natural influences behind the Great Famine, it is no doubt exacerbated by Mao's policies. While he was a good at planning military struggles, he really had no business managing the economy with ridiculous ideas like planning seeds together and deeper, melting household metals to produce steel etc in a deluded effort to industrialize, but only produced failed harvests and worthless iron. While the USSR abandoned Lysenkoism under Khrushchev, it remained influential in China for a few more years due to the Sino-Soviet Split.

  • @tkengathegrateful4844
    @tkengathegrateful4844 Год назад +130

    A friend of mine used to say "Drink up, there are children sober in Europe!"

  • @Judith_Remkes
    @Judith_Remkes Год назад +424

    Africa. My mom always said kids in Africa. And there are still lots of people starving in Africa today.
    OT: Can't believe I never heard of this famine before!

    • @carltuckerson7718
      @carltuckerson7718 Год назад +44

      Exactly. Kind of tripped me out he went China when 1000% everything was starving kids in Africa. All over the TV. Flies buzzing around the starving kids. Sally Struthers, everything....

    • @mrpopo8298
      @mrpopo8298 Год назад +9

      @@carltuckerson7718 100% I remember those Ethopian children. But if Joe said Africa, there's a good chance that a mob would form.

    • @darstar217
      @darstar217 Год назад +8

      Same here, my parents always said starving children in Africa

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Год назад

      Well, you are not from the US is my guess, let's remember the US had the 'red scare' which probably really, euh.. convinced, people communist country bad, thus also China bad.

    • @Elementalism
      @Elementalism Год назад +17

      Depends on age I would assume. My parents said China and Africa. But Africa was starving in the 80s and 90s. So anybody younger than 50 probably heard Africa. African famines were also similar in collectivization and state control of agriculture caused famine.

  • @rachelwebber3605
    @rachelwebber3605 Год назад +147

    Interestingly, there are some crops that actually DO grow best when crowded, like wheat and corn. If you try to plant your corn in rows too far apart, you won't get any heads because they are only pollinated by wind, but not very well. They have to be grown in clusters to get properly fertilized. And of course, the famous "Three Sisters" polyculture is very crowded, because each hole has three seeds in it: Corn, bean, and squash. It's amazingly effective, keeps the soil from drying out (squash leaves cover the bare soil, preventing water and CO2 loss), the beans add nitrogen to the soil (when the plants died back, they were often left to rot in situ, which is how atmospheric N2 gets reincorporated into the soil), and fruits from the three plants provided almost a complete protein profile (add some wild game, and you've got your missing B12). That sort of polyculture also reduced the need for weeding, as its harder for weeds to grow when almost all the available sun space was taken up. It also reduced some insect pests, as it's harder for them to locate squash and beans amidst the corn. But some fungal diseases could spread more rapidly if there was too much rain late in the season. However, this sort of careful polyculture was not a part of Lysenko's repertoire, and he likely would have rejected them, as they came from "The West" (Courtesy of many Eastern Woodlands nations in North America).

    • @emilala9049
      @emilala9049 Год назад +32

      It's the same with the cows, treating them better will net you some gains regarding milk production and weight for meat. They aren't unlimited and they don't pass down genetically. You just get a modest, limited gain for your efforts and it makes you a more ethical producer when you treat your animals better.

    • @rachelwebber3605
      @rachelwebber3605 Год назад +18

      @@emilala9049 Very true! Paying attention to the ecological niche and behavioral ecology of the organism you're trying to raise - be it plant or animal - often times increases your gains. But the key thing is, YOU have to make an effort to adapt to THEM. Some stress is good and can increase adaptability, but overstressing the organism (like keeping cows in overcrowded CAFOs, or planting seeds too deep) is generally bad for the organism and reduces gains.

    • @rachelwebber3605
      @rachelwebber3605 11 месяцев назад +13

      @@karlwithak. Ignoring ecology has never worked out for very long in agriculture. The gains we made in production during the "green revolution" are now almost entirely mitigated by evolutionary adaptation by various crop pests, and fertilizer is getting more expensive because we may be running out of phosphorus - which, unlike oil, we have no alternatives to. It's the second most limiting nutrient for plants after nitrogen, and our current methods of industrial agriculture may mean that we hit peak phosphorus by around 2030. And the phosphorus cycle is slow, as it gets deposited into rocks that we then mine.

    • @emilala9049
      @emilala9049 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@rachelwebber3605 Not to mention the state of the aquifers around the US (can't speak for anywhere else, but I bet we're not the only country with depleted aquifers). In a great many places that we used to consider prime farming land the wells are beginning to pump less water or run dry altogether. It took thousands of years to fill these aquifers, we're maybe a decade or 15 years before we'll be pumping the lot of them dry, and those will just be the ones that didn't collapse sooner.
      We should be looking for hardier varietals now. Going back into the heirloom seeds, looking for something that puts down deeper roots and has some resistance to drought. You could cross pollinate to enhance the qualities you wanted, like tolerance to temperature variations, higher yield, whatever. The problem is you can really only adapt, if you start adapting right now and a lot of people are really set in their ways.

    • @rachelwebber3605
      @rachelwebber3605 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@emilala9049 A lot of countries that underwent colonialism have depleted reservoirs and soils due to colonists importing agricultural processes that are not adapted to the specific region. What we should be doing is looking at what the practices of last culture in the area was before colonization, determine if it was sustainable practice (not all cultures in a given area had sustainable practices), and then reincorporating the best practices and using technology to augment and improve on them.

  • @ElizabethVass
    @ElizabethVass Год назад +787

    I live in Kazakhstan, it's refreshing to hear someone even mention the tragedy of famine in post Soviet counties. Thanks for spreading the word

    • @kayakMike1000
      @kayakMike1000 Год назад +36

      They called it the Holodomor in Ukraine. It hit Kazakhstan a few years earlier I think, it was called the Goloshchyokin genocide, named after the Communist party leader in Kazakhstan at the time.

    • @MrDaol23
      @MrDaol23 Год назад +16

      The way he worded felt like Holodomor was "natural" or "fucky wucky" by communists and not a deliberate genocide like in Kazakhstan too.

    • @coffe2270
      @coffe2270 Год назад +1

      @@MrDaol23the word holocaust was first used by Karl Marx I’m pretty sure

    • @marcocynicalis484
      @marcocynicalis484 Год назад

      And now the famine creators are on the move again it seems,farmers under restrictions, supply chain disfunction, plans to feed people bugs,the suppression of livestock production, created malnutrition etc etc.

    • @ukraine5721
      @ukraine5721 Год назад

      Ukraine is an agricultural country and produced grain for the entire USSR, and the USSR was a major grain escort abroad
      Even with an inefficient farming system, there was enough food in Ukraine to support itself
      The USSR created repressive laws such as the "Law of Spikelets" which prohibited the use of available grain and required food coupons
      Even before the famine, as of May 17, 1932, there were no flour reserves in Ukraine, as evidenced by the resolution of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union "On Measures to Implement the Resolutions of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks on Food Aid to Ukraine": out of 6.5 million poods of grain released to Ukraine, the Politburo requested that 1.5 million be imported in flour, "in view of the complete absence of flour reserves in Ukraine."
      it was taken away from ukraine
      Not only grain, but also other foodstuffs, including food surrogates that were of little use and unfit for consumption. Not all peasants died of starvation when the procurement agencies pumped out all the bread, as even the poorest peasant households had other foodstuffs left over. The picture changed when the state resorted to confiscating food from all "debtors," i.e., the authorities carried out a terror of starvation against the "debtors." It was the confiscation of all food that caused the famine to turn into the Holodomor.
      Stalin had an obsessive idea that Ukrainians were hiding grain or living too richly, and he decided to kill them.
      (or he was a Ukrainophobe)
      The NKVD army surrounded the border along Russia and Belarus to restrict people from traveling, because the famine was only in the Hetnic lands of Ukraine and Kazakhstan.
      Timothy Snyder, an American historian and professor at Yale University, talks about this in the 15th lecture of his course on Ukraine ruclips.net/video/1dy7Mrqy1AY/видео.html.
      Of course, such repressive laws were passed not in Ukraine, but in the capital of the USSR, Moscow.
      You can also see more details in the Ukrainian video. RUclips Channel - Toronto TV
      ruclips.net/video/SnvR7HeyzTA/видео.html

  • @TheAnon03
    @TheAnon03 Год назад +224

    One thing to remember about the "wealthier farmers" is that they were just that, "wealthier" not wealthy. Maybe their small house was made of something fancy like brick or plastered wood rather than compacted earth or plain wood, roof tiles instead of straw, maybe an extra room. Excesses like that.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 11 месяцев назад

      Communism ran like a marine boot camp. Break down the individual and then rebuild him as a marine.

    • @Wulfyr
      @Wulfyr 10 месяцев назад +29

      A few more cows than average. Being able to pay one person to help get the crop in at harvest time. As you say,any small differential of wealth was enough to make one's family a target.

    • @arizona_anime_fan
      @arizona_anime_fan 21 день назад +2

      the Kulaks were essentially the most successful farmers. no farmer in the soviet union was "rich" in fact none of them had anything approaching generational wealth, until the 1919 revolution the farms were essentially owned by the nobility and the peasants leased the land at rates that effectively made them slaves of the landed nobility. so by the late 20s and early 30s the "wealthy" farmers were generally the best farmer in the area. the industrious, hard working, disciplined, skilled and intelligent ones. So when the soviets rounded them up and killed them all (usually being denounced as enemies of the people/state buy their jealous less industrious neighbors) they effectively killed all the farmers who knew how to... you know farm. and handed thier land over to people who were lazy drunks who mostly were failures at life and never worked a day in thier life.

    • @alihenderson5910
      @alihenderson5910 День назад +1

      ​@@arizona_anime_fanA certain Mr Gates would seem to prefer the soviet model.

    • @kalinystazvoruna8702
      @kalinystazvoruna8702 2 часа назад

      @@alihenderson5910 Along with many Republicans, I mean reactionaries, which is what Republicans are.

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Год назад +337

    My mother used the 'Starving children in Africa' version.
    It wasn't that I didn't like the food she made, it was the quantity she put on the plate, starting the threats when I was so full I felt sick.
    It didn't matter how much I told her I was full, she would threaten to backhand me - her ringed fingers like knuckledusters. (I bet many a person on this comments section knows exactly what it's like to get a sharp engagement ring slapped across the cheek).
    Looking around at the high number of partly finished kids meals in my local café, I would say that 90% of people just don't understand that a child can get by on a lot less food than they generally put on their plates.
    As a consequence of my mother's bullying tactics, I decided to parent 'differently.' From the beginning, I would put just a small amount of food on my son's plate and instructed him to 'tell' me 'if' he wanted some more.
    He has never had any food issues during his life so far (age 28), maintaining a good, steady average weight throughout - unlike me who has zipped up and down the scales due to crash diets and binges.

    • @tentaclesmod
      @tentaclesmod Год назад +41

      That's terrible. Both your mother's abuse (yes, that is abuse), and your weight fluctuation. Being fat is bad for the body, but is actually preferable to changing weight frequently. It puts more stress in your body than being overweight, so you might consider settling for being overweight instead of that, although ideally a slow but steady diet would be best.

    • @thehamsterarmy2380
      @thehamsterarmy2380 11 месяцев назад +19

      I was always beaten severely and forced to stay at the table until I finished. If I didn't, beaten again. I was shamed and ridiculed by my family for being skinny and forcefed mysekf until skinny fat, so still a size zero just very unhealthy fat percentage. At 18 I accepted myself and stopped. Still a size 0 but I don't hate my body or food. Thank you for treating your child so wonderfully

    • @MeeplandHeights
      @MeeplandHeights 11 месяцев назад +22

      As a nutritionist I am so glad you learned from your childhood and gave your child a good foundation for healthy eating. If you give a good variety of healthy (and of course indulgent) foods, you'll be able to self-manage and eat responsibly. A lot of people have quite messed up hunger cues because they're taught that bloat=full which causes stomachs to stretch out over the years needing more and more food. My husband had to relearn when he met me and now is able to eat much happier and even say no when more food is offered if it'll make him feel sick :)

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 10 месяцев назад +4

      Your parenting is a lot better. I grew up with a sort of mixture of the two. Like your son, I was served a little, I would have to ask for more myself. But I was obliged to eat whatever I put on my plate. And if I did change my mind, the response could be that in other places children were starving, so I shouldn't waste my own food. And certainly there was no desert for me if I didn't finish the main dish. I couldn't ditch 3 potatoes in favour of having room for icecream. Then I shouldn't have taken so many potatoes in the first place. I can only remember twice that I had no room for desert. I learned to take on my plate only what I needed, when it was needed.
      My childhood, and on occasion having tried to starve during long travels, has taught me always to eat my food, on my plate as well as in my home. Food I can't eat now, I keep for later. I never throw away good food. And I hardly have any food disposals at all. I only have, and prepare, what I eat.

    • @jacquelynsmith2351
      @jacquelynsmith2351 9 месяцев назад +9

      If my dad was out of town and I didn't eat fast enough, my food was put in the blender and I had to drink that or tabasco sauce. If he was in town, I was allowed to toss it once I'd eaten enough. I thought he was aware, but he found out just a couple of years ago and was PISSED. If he still spoke to my mom or had her phone number, shit would've hit the fan even though I'm in my 30s. My sisters and I have all had to reassess our relationships with food over the years. Even now, I feel awful if I don't eat every last scrap of food on my plate. With my sisters' kids, "take another bite of the veggies, then you can be done" is pretty much it when they want to stop eating.

  • @lonnarheaj
    @lonnarheaj Год назад +23

    During my young childhood, my Mother frequently employed the name of the currently starving nation of Biafra. "Eat your dinner. Children are starving in Biafra." One night, my 8-year-old mind and mouth responded to that by saying, "Then send this to them." I was sent to my room. Just as well. 😂

    • @michaelplunkett8059
      @michaelplunkett8059 21 день назад

      My brother-in-law packed up his green beans in a box addressed to starving children, China.
      I think his mom gave up then.

  • @McChes
    @McChes Год назад +439

    In the UK my mum used the “starving children in Africa” line. But there were actually children starving in Biafra at the time, so she kind of had a point.

    • @p.bckman2997
      @p.bckman2997 Год назад +25

      Heard that all the time too, and used to tell my own children the same thing when they wouldn't eat their greens. The Sahel Belt has been an on-and-off humanitarian crisis for decades though, so "starving children in Africa"-line is sadly correct.

    • @ukraine5721
      @ukraine5721 Год назад +15

      Ukraine is an agricultural country and produced grain for the entire USSR, and the USSR was a major grain escort abroad
      Even with an inefficient farming system, there was enough food in Ukraine to support itself
      The USSR created repressive laws such as the "Law of Spikelets" which prohibited the use of available grain and required food coupons
      Even before the famine, as of May 17, 1932, there were no flour reserves in Ukraine, as evidenced by the resolution of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union "On Measures to Implement the Resolutions of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks on Food Aid to Ukraine": out of 6.5 million poods of grain released to Ukraine, the Politburo requested that 1.5 million be imported in flour, "in view of the complete absence of flour reserves in Ukraine."
      it was taken away from ukraine
      Not only grain, but also other foodstuffs, including food surrogates that were of little use and unfit for consumption. Not all peasants died of starvation when the procurement agencies pumped out all the bread, as even the poorest peasant households had other foodstuffs left over. The picture changed when the state resorted to confiscating food from all "debtors," i.e., the authorities carried out a terror of starvation against the "debtors." It was the confiscation of all food that caused the famine to turn into the Holodomor.
      Stalin had an obsessive idea that Ukrainians were hiding grain or living too richly, and he decided to kill them.
      (or he was a Ukrainophobe)
      The NKVD army surrounded the border along Russia and Belarus to restrict people from traveling, because the famine was only in the Hetnic lands of Ukraine and Kazakhstan.
      Timothy Snyder, an American historian and professor at Yale University, talks about this in the 15th lecture of his course on Ukraine ruclips.net/video/1dy7Mrqy1AY/видео.html.
      Of course, such repressive laws were passed not in Ukraine, but in the capital of the USSR, Moscow.
      You can also see more details in the Ukrainian video. RUclips Channel - Toronto TV
      ruclips.net/video/SnvR7HeyzTA/видео.html

    • @krashd
      @krashd Год назад +10

      Yeah, I remember my mum using the Africa line, it was because we all knew about places like Ethiopia thanks to charity telethons. The "starving children in Africa" line then gave birth to dozens of politically incorrect jokes like "What's the fastest thing on Earth? .. an Ethiopian with a can of beans. What's the second fastest? The other Ethiopian chasing him with a can opener."

    • @peepeetrain8755
      @peepeetrain8755 Год назад +5

      pretty sure somalia is going through a famine right now so it's still relevant

    • @lars_larsen
      @lars_larsen Год назад +4

      these days I mostly keep hearing a "starving pensioners in the UK" line.

  • @user-md9yv7jx2c
    @user-md9yv7jx2c Год назад +397

    Lysenko was used in my horticulture classes as an example of how science and politics did not mix. We were told that he had set agriculture production in Russia back decades.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Год назад +49

      And yet we mix politics with science in the US and never give it a thought.

    • @damonroberts7372
      @damonroberts7372 Год назад +31

      Not just agriculture. Medical genetics and a lot of other areas of applied biology.

    • @Rem_NL
      @Rem_NL Год назад

      But but but politicians have guaranteed that MRNA "vaccines" are safe and effective. The media agreed and celebrated the push. They gave immunity for sure, but not for the people that took the "vaccine" but the politicians gave legal immunity to these creators/distributors. Luckily the MSM and politicians give a fair look at the research not (in)directly funded by the manufacturers right? right?

    • @RichOrElse
      @RichOrElse Год назад

      politics is a science

    • @Thomas15
      @Thomas15 Год назад +38

      @@RichOrElse It’s a social science, not a hard science.

  • @syriuszb8611
    @syriuszb8611 Год назад +553

    Interesting, I live in post Warsaw Pact country, and I have never heard about "eat your food because kids in China are starving". I heard it, but not about China, but about Africa. Maybe since China was/ is communist, saying that kids are starving in China was politically dangerous, so our parents were saying it about Africa instead.
    And about main topic, it is crazy, that people try to rehabilitate him. And parallels between him and current anti science/ pseudo science movement is terrifying.

    • @galaxyanimal
      @galaxyanimal Год назад +34

      Saying starving children in Africa is pretty common in the US as well. My parents said children in Haiti, but I think that was because our church worked with a charity in Haiti.

    • @lunaticbz3594
      @lunaticbz3594 Год назад +20

      I'm American, my parents also used the starving kids in Africa line, when I was growing up also was around the time of the Somali food crisis and the failed us intervention in Somalia.. So I imagine Africa was more topical at that time.
      These days I still use that phrase, but instead of saying Africa, China I say the name of a local town as I feel that has more impact. Instead of some far away place.

    • @wtice4632
      @wtice4632 Год назад

      Pseudo science movements today like gender ideology are very concerning.

    • @klosnj11
      @klosnj11 Год назад

      The parallels that are terrifying is not that pseudoscience and anti science is a thing in society. It always has been.
      The terrifying thing is that we have state sanctioned scientists that can not be questioned, and artificial consensus by means of silencing any opposition.
      Just take a look at Anthony "I am the science" Fauchi. Take a look at the mRNA vaccines and the attempts to silence and shame anyone with concerns.
      The danger comes not from the individuals with different ideas, but from individuals given state power to force those ideas on others.

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry Год назад +20

      that's right... if you throw your food away, the same amount of food will be forcefully removed from the mouths of hungry kids on the other side of the world. and you will be directly responsible for that. now force yourself to eat that can of spaghetti-o's even though you are full from the preservatives

  • @gregorybrennan8539
    @gregorybrennan8539 10 месяцев назад +19

    I'm a biologist, and this video was clearly precise and relevant. Thank You!

  • @persephonejames8374
    @persephonejames8374 Год назад +217

    I read about the chinese famine in the book Wild Swans. The author was a child in china at the time. She talks about the horrific things her parents witnessed and how even though they were well off for the time, her parents still starved themselves to keep the children full. The things that happened during that famine were appalling

    • @jacktheaviator4938
      @jacktheaviator4938 Год назад +26

      The truly horrible part is that's only the tiny part we know about. There were repeated famines and crop shortages throughout the 20th and 21st century, but it never gets reported. The average height dropped by 2 to 3 centimeters in height for multiple generations. That doesn't occur from one short 2 year problem. It's a systematic means of control through denial of resources. There have been some truly horrific tales coming from the Muslim minority population.

    • @susantherestorer
      @susantherestorer 10 месяцев назад +9

      This is an amazing three-generation account from one family-grandmother, mother and then the author herself. Because of this multi-generation linear account, we get a much more full idea of the way this chunk of China's history came about and why it is the way it is today. One of the saddest things mentioned (among many, many others) was the amount of China's written history that was destroyed at that time (the 1960's) by Red Guards under Mao's dictatorship.

    • @IdgaradLyracant
      @IdgaradLyracant 10 месяцев назад

      "All that is a lie fabricated by capitalists." - American Schools

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz 8 месяцев назад +4

      I saw her give a reading at Prairie Lights bookstore in Iowa City. amazing stories and an impressive woman...she didn't seem to be bitter or resentful an was generally well grounded for a writer 😋. it was hard to listen to because she was there and experienced it this emoted the experience as she read.
      ✌🏻

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks Год назад +921

    This is one of your best in awhile.

  • @brycedyck8450
    @brycedyck8450 Год назад +406

    My folks never used the 'starving children elsewhere ' guilt trip. They just said, " Eat it, or you will wish that you had!"😊No guilt trips, just straight-up threats of violence 😂

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 Год назад +15

      My mom always told me that if I didn’t eat, I’d end up in the hospital with horribly low blood sugars.
      Which was accurate. Diabetes backed up Mom’s statements.
      And that’s why I don’t like eating and kind of have to be bullied into eating now. At 32!

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 Год назад +1

      @stizelswik3694 only one?
      I didn’t use any… I’m a one-man hurricane when set loose in a kitchen

    • @andriaduncan5032
      @andriaduncan5032 Год назад +3

      LOL. I just told my son, "this is what's for dinner. Eat it or go hungry!" He generally ate it. 🤣

    • @annakeye
      @annakeye Год назад +6

      As a child growing up in a family of eight other siblings, you ate or you missed out because one of the other kids would eat the food off your plate. I chose to have one child and because I knew that they didn't like cooked carrots, I gave her raw carrots. She didn't like boiled veges, so I stir fried them. I tried to never make an issue of food in any way because
      I was concerned about eating disorders that were prevalent as she was growing up in the 1990s. And still are.

    • @andriaduncan5032
      @andriaduncan5032 Год назад +5

      @@annakeye I mainly went by the very-wise Dr. Spock's book of baby and childcare -- if the kid doesn't want to eat whatever, just go on to the next thing. Then ask them to try it again some time later, etc. It worked well in most cases. But he still hates broccoli, damn it. 🤣

  • @zenzen4982
    @zenzen4982 9 дней назад +3

    I still think Thomas Midgley Jr. was worse. His body count might be harder to track, but the damage he caused to all living organisms on the planet should be unparalleled.

  • @Hakugarawe
    @Hakugarawe Год назад +1077

    To the editor: The background music makes it so that i can hardly understand Joe at times.

    • @SnarkNSass
      @SnarkNSass Год назад +23

      It is kinda on top isn't it 👂🏻👍🏻

    • @mayuh74
      @mayuh74 Год назад +15

      Just wrote the same, sorry, didn’t see your post… 😂

    • @Conorscorner
      @Conorscorner Год назад +49

      On my phone it isn't that bad... If your on a computer turn down your bass maybe.... But yeah it's just the worst when videos are like that.

    • @jessebehnke3060
      @jessebehnke3060 Год назад +70

      Also discussing a crazy amount of deaths with background elevator music makes my soul itch.

    • @scootsmcgoots1
      @scootsmcgoots1 Год назад +46

      Sorry Joe, I really don't like the background music. Super distracting.

  • @problemimentali
    @problemimentali Год назад +278

    When my parents told me about the starving kids in Africa I always thought “how does me eating this help? Give it to them then!”. I still believe that’s the most logical answer

    • @loganwolfram4216
      @loganwolfram4216 Год назад +22

      Well, first you've got to transport it thousands of miles away, probably across an ocean, into a country with very few refrigerated trucks and terrible infrastructure. Then you've got to avoid it being stolen by local watlords or organized crime. And even if you succeed at that, you haven't fixed the underlying problem that people in that region can't sustain thenselves and will immediately start starving again the moment people from another continent stop shipping them food at enormous expense. If you actually want to help people, better to ask "why were they starving in the first place and how might I fix THAT" rather than giving them food. That's why, after hundreds of billions of dollars thrown at the problem, there are still starving children. If it was so simple as "well give them some food then, idiots!" it would have been solved ages ago.
      I think it's actually a lot less scary and depressing to assume people in wealthier countries are just greedy and heartless and don't care. Acknowledging that the problem is actually difficult enough that people have tried everything that's commonly suggested and failed is a lot scarier.

    • @holy3979
      @holy3979 Год назад +16

      ​@@loganwolfram4216Basically the issue with most government handouts, they don't solve the fundamental issues, just address the symptoms at an extreme cost.

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 Год назад +27

      @@holy3979 Which is still better than doing nothing, if solving the fundamental issues is not an option.

    • @b22times
      @b22times Год назад

      okay can you cover my rent from now on then?@@lonestarr1490

    • @AD_AP_T
      @AD_AP_T 10 месяцев назад +3

      I did the same - repeatedly, and never understood why it always resulted in a smack.
      I wonder when the China-Africa switch happened, and if it was the same everywhere. (I don't remember my grandparents ever referencing starving children in China, though they did occasionally use outdated versions of other phrases...)

  • @Captaintomacus
    @Captaintomacus Год назад +32

    Vavilov was an absolute hero, he knew that Lysenko's theories would lead to starvation so he argued against them even though going against stalin was a death sentence. He also came up with the idea for the seed bank and set one up in st Petersburg.

  • @alexanderstone9463
    @alexanderstone9463 9 дней назад +2

    The fact that Lysenko is popular again demonstrates the extent to which Russia has fallen victim to its own propaganda. He demonstrably set back Soviet agriculture decades, caused it to become a net importer of food when it could have been either food secure or an exporter. We know that because Russia right now is a net exporter of food, or at least they were prior to the Invasion of Ukraine, I dunno if they still are. It goes without saying that they benefited enormously from that. Thus there is no rational political reason for trying to rehabilitate Lysenko. Not even as a means of destabilizing the west, since he was always ignored there.

  • @michaelrichter9427
    @michaelrichter9427 Год назад +210

    When I was brought up, the "starving children in China" line was the attack vector used by most parents. Then I come here and my wife was told *in the same time frame* that *she* had to eat up because there were "starving children in capitalist countries" who wished they could have it.

    • @alexp6832
      @alexp6832 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah but what capitalist county had a great famine that killed tens of millions

    • @Heathcoatman
      @Heathcoatman 10 месяцев назад +1

      Where is here? North Korea?

    • @ytcensorhack1876
      @ytcensorhack1876 10 месяцев назад +10

      North korea, home of such foods as coffee (b4 this americans just drank cups of snow) or hamburgers (invented by kim jung il personally)

    • @Heathcoatman
      @Heathcoatman 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@ytcensorhack1876 He said "but when I came here". Since here isnt a specific place, it's subjective, it was a valid question. BTW, Kim Jung Il also invented the planet, so we should all be thanking him.

    • @DaveGrean
      @DaveGrean 10 месяцев назад +10

      Here in Europe we say 'Africa'. You know, where there are actually a bunch of starving children, not just due to propaganda

  • @garretlevi
    @garretlevi Год назад +280

    The great famine in China largely happened because Mao would require unrealistic productivity (like in yhe USSR) but since China is a face-saving culture, the local government leaders would lie about their numbers. Then Mao, thinking there was a surplus of food, exported huge amounts to other countries. It was a classic example of how disasterous centralized planning can be.

    • @Fritz_Schlunder
      @Fritz_Schlunder 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think the main problem described has to do with lies, rather than centralized planning. Non-centralized planning based systems also have the potential to fail spectacularly in various ways when relying on lies. Garbage in = garbage out.
      Basically, lies destabilize the future. When someone relies on a lie to make decisions that will effect the future, those decisions are inevitably sub-optimal when based on trashy and/or intentionally incorrect input data. This typically results in sub-optimal outcomes, sometimes spectacularly so.
      At the moment, it would appear that the US government is probably lying about employment numbers and economic health. Some of the economic numbers that they are publishing do not make sense anymore and are not self consistent. If one pays attention to Joe Biden's speeches and Twitter account postings, he would basically have you believe that "Bidenomics" is working great, the economy is in excellent health, the economic future of the US is bright, unemployment is low, jobs creation is strong, everything about Biden's handling of things is profoundly awesome, etc.
      In actual reality, the US government most likely is lying about economic numbers, and the economy is not as strong as they claim, due to the natural consequences of high inflation due to COVID-19 policy associated money printing, followed by high interest rates. Consequently, many people are being squeezed and are having a hard time paying their bills, largely due to eroded purchasing power due to major inflation, and partly because of general economic weakness. Such conclusions would not be obvious if one trusts and believes the US government's "official" economic numbers and narrative, which paints an abnormally rosy picture.
      Meanwhile, the US Federal Reserve (the "Fed") is seemingly relying on the lying US government economic narrative (of a strong economy, with high employment, and good future outlook), and they appear to be trusting this false narrative, so much so that they have jacked up the interest rates very rapidly and quite far. The Fed appears to be assuming that the economy actually is strong and can handle the increased headwinds associated with high interest rates.
      In practice, this is likely a very wrong conclusion, based on trusting the economic and labor statistic lies of the US government. It may be that the high interest rates, combined with the weak overall economy, combined with already distressed banks (due to the Fed also removing money from the M2 money supply by way of shrinking its "balance sheet"), combined with other actions (like turning back on student loan repayments), could lead to widespread debt defaults and possible banking failure. The Fed may be setting the US up for major economic instability and probable catastrophe, and they are either doing it due to profound incompetence, unintentional but still major incompetence (due to relying on economic number lies of the US government), and/or intentional malfeasance.
      It may be that the US government and the US Fed actively and intentionally want people to be poor, so that they consume less energy, so as to reduce CO2 emissions, in an effort to try to help "solve" looming climate change related problems. Joe Biden has claimed in at least one speech that he considers climate change to be a bigger overall concern, than nuclear war.

    • @TueSorensen
      @TueSorensen 10 месяцев назад +39

      But the problem isn't necessarily centralized planning, but the face-saving culture!

    • @Abioticwinter
      @Abioticwinter 10 месяцев назад

      China just like the USSR didn't and doesn't give a damn about people. North Korea doesn't either. Their leaders all have food.

    • @jamesp3902
      @jamesp3902 10 месяцев назад +67

      Mao caused the famine. Selling the food was incidental to all the other causes.
      Mao pushed agricultural collectivization and placed military leaders in charge. These leaders had little to no knowledge of agriculture.
      Mao pushed the farmers to plant more than one rice crop a year, even when he was told the weather didn’t support it.
      Mao ordered deeper plowing of the soil, which destroyed the topsoil.
      Mao ordered farmers to plant seeds closer together - not allowing them the breathing space they needed.
      Mao ordered the killing of birds (sparrows) because they ate grain seeds. According to FEE, “In what is one of the most bizarre and ecologically damaging episodes of the Great Leap Forward, the country was mobilized in an all-out war against the birds. Banging on drums, clashing pots or beating gongs, a giant din was raised to keep the sparrows flying till they were so exhausted that they simply dropped from the sky. Eggs were broken and nestlings destroyed; the birds were also shot out of the air.” Without birds, the locusts and grasshoppers were free to devour crops.
      Mao militarized agriculture with forced military-like routines for farming.
      Human waste was used as fertilizer.
      Farming tools were melted down for steel, disabling production.

    • @Heathcoatman
      @Heathcoatman 10 месяцев назад +30

      @@jamesp3902 Amazing how much these things sound like Lysenko's ideas. Isnt it funny how two people can come to the same conclusion? It's almost like Mao was basing these choices on the ideas of Lysenko. Coincidence, right?

  • @daisyinthewoods9081
    @daisyinthewoods9081 Год назад +49

    "to be fair to Lysenko" I don't think anyone owes that guy a single thing, my dude. you're good.

  • @IAmMyOwnApprentice
    @IAmMyOwnApprentice 10 месяцев назад +5

    No way. Modern science would never deny genetic influence in favor of some "socially constructed" explanation of physical realities. Or say that any opposing evidence is too western and capitalist. And they certainly wouldnt use the political machinery to shut down opposing views.

    • @alaskahelo
      @alaskahelo 10 месяцев назад +4

      I see what you did there. 🙂

    • @wsteele5864
      @wsteele5864 День назад +1

      @@alaskahelome too.

  • @brettfromla4055
    @brettfromla4055 Год назад +136

    There’s a story from Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago, where a worker was given a Communist party award for his hard labor. When asked how he felt about his award, he joked that a little more food would be better than an award.
    He was immediately charged with an Article 58 violation and given a 10 year sentence of hard labor.

    • @wolfiemuse
      @wolfiemuse Год назад +2

      you don’t make jokes to guards if you’re in the gulag, even if they give you an award

    • @deptusmechanikus7362
      @deptusmechanikus7362 Год назад +13

      Lmao "Archipelago" was proven to be a collection of fictional tales time and time again.

    • @bickboose9364
      @bickboose9364 Год назад +18

      @@deptusmechanikus7362 The main things about his works that've been debunked with a high degree of certainty are the wildly exaggerated numbers.
      Everything else is anybody's game as Soviet Russia, especially of those times, is not very well documented -- as far as anyone without access to Russia's historical archives could possibly know. Also, the Gulag Archipelago resonated with former Gulag inmates immensely, to the point where they couldn't distinguish their lives from what was written there.
      If *even* a fraction of what Solzhenitsyn wrote is true it is still enough to condemn the barbarity of the Soviet judicial system, the Gulags, the mentally that led to them, and much more.

    • @amarissimus29
      @amarissimus29 Год назад +14

      @@deptusmechanikus7362 Because you saw a snarky youtube video saying just that. So now it's your unqualified retort to whoever brings it up. Well done. I think most people who talk about it haven't read it, and admittedly it's a bit of a slog and it's easy to put down and not pick up again. Much easier to pretend. Cut and paste opinions, can't beat em. Cheers.

    • @jopoveromo1054
      @jopoveromo1054 Год назад

      @@deptusmechanikus7362what do you mean by that?

  • @83shaunam
    @83shaunam Год назад +60

    My sister sometimes poured milk down the sink, because in her 5 year old mind, the drains were going downward and china was on the other side of the earth, so she was sending milk to the starving children in china 😂 None of us knew this till a few years ago, btw. She was never caught in the act.

    • @mellow_mallow
      @mellow_mallow 11 месяцев назад +7

      reminds of how I used to drop pieces of string cheese into my family's house's floor vents. i wanted to feed the mice because I was obsessed with mouse books at that age- the one with the motorcycle, the schoolhouse one, Redwall especially... probably doesn't help that my uncle was encouraging me, lol

  • @TauAlphaVu
    @TauAlphaVu Год назад +199

    I think Thomas Midgley, of leaded gas and CFCs fame, is a strong contender for being worse. Some estimates put his death toll as high as 100 million. And who knows what else he may have come up with if he didn't end up being done in by another of his own inventions, a pulley system designed to help him get out of bed.

    • @jon_j__
      @jon_j__ Год назад +30

      Yeah, I don't want to defend either Midgley or Lysenko, but I think it's worth pointing out that neither of them were in such a position of power that they can be held up as the singular cause of the mass deaths. For Lysenko, it's Stalin, Mao, and Communism in general. For Midgley, it's the various industry execs and politicians who greenlit his inventions. But even if you only allocate them 1% of the responsibility for the impact, being personally responsible for 1M deaths is a hell of a thing.

    • @wesleymatthews6356
      @wesleymatthews6356 Год назад +11

      At least his inventions worked.

    • @euan1246
      @euan1246 Год назад +1

      I was going to say exactly the same thing. I wasn't sure of the estimated deaths but know it will be high 👍

    • @hariharpuri1362
      @hariharpuri1362 Год назад +3

      Veristasium video right? And it was also a great video on the same topic

    • @Isometrix116
      @Isometrix116 Год назад +4

      @@jon_j__I was going to say this exact thing, but probably less eloquently. We shouldn’t say they weren’t terrible, they were, just that it’s only partially their fault. You need poor leadership and poor ideas to get these types of tragedies.

  • @jhill4874
    @jhill4874 7 месяцев назад +2

    Starving children in
    Still starving if I eat the food.

  • @xenoneuronics6765
    @xenoneuronics6765 Год назад +95

    You only touched on Nikolai Vavilov, who was Lysenko's teacher, and actually a very good biologist.
    Vavilov set up seed banks, and one was in Leningrad, where biologists fought to save the seeds from starving citizens.
    He died because of Lysenko, his own student. It took years for his legacy to be recognized by the Soviet State. Thanks to Khrushchev, he's now recognized as a hero of the Soviet Union.

    • @richardfan7157
      @richardfan7157 Год назад +11

      Speaking of which, several Soviet soldiers gave their lives to defend the seed bank during the Siege of Leningrad, refusing to eat the seeds even when the city faced starvation.

  • @partfish6290
    @partfish6290 Год назад +119

    To be clear about the cows, they do produce more milk when they are treated well, but the effect is not nearly as big as genetics and hormone levels. If you have a low milk-producing cow, and she isn't sick or underfed, pampering her isn't really going to make a big enough difference to validate keeping her in the herd.

    • @kiltedcripple
      @kiltedcripple Год назад +10

      But pampering your cow is fun

    • @partfish6290
      @partfish6290 Год назад +10

      @@kiltedcripple absolutely still pamper your cows!!! They're so cute and they deserve it 🥰

    • @davecasey4341
      @davecasey4341 Год назад +2

      Yes, but it will make her happy. And a happy cow is ... well ... a happy cow. ;)

    • @f36443
      @f36443 Год назад

      Don't you dare talk about eating Peppa

  • @mariajosemaranon9728
    @mariajosemaranon9728 Год назад +111

    Hi Joe, this is a great video. A bit of feedback, the background music is so loud that it's hard to know what you say several times in the video. I hope it's an easy fix that will improve its enjoyment. It's great information that deserves to be heard! I love your videos!!!

    • @lisadioguardi5742
      @lisadioguardi5742 Год назад +15

      I don't remember it having been distracting before this video, but I didn't even finish listening to this one. It isn't just people who have some hearing loss or older people who have trouble with certain tones, it's also difficult a lot of neurodiverse people who can feel like their attention is being pulled in different directions.

    • @guppy0536
      @guppy0536 Год назад

      Probably AI generated vid they are more often than you realize

    • @stellaxtine
      @stellaxtine Год назад +7

      Maybe it's cuz I was watching on my TV but it was actually too quiet for me, and not in a good way either. I kept pausing the video because I couldn't figure out where the distant ominous music was coming from and thinking I was going crazy. I don't remember any other of his videos having bg music and i feel that it better matches the style of the videos.

    • @JoshDauer
      @JoshDauer Год назад +12

      also came here to say this, the intro music was also weirdly mixed loud

    • @cannonaire
      @cannonaire Год назад +6

      I came here to say this. It's a combination of several things: Joe's voice volume is too dynamic, the music is too loud, and the script goes too fast to understand the generated subtitles with the picture. I have conductive hearing loss, which means speech is difficult to hear if there is other noise present. I'm listening on good headphones. This is the first video from Joe that has given me these issues though. Thank you!

  • @fontenbleau
    @fontenbleau Год назад +2

    Many important details were omitted: 1) during Stalin even such scarce made wheat not even used for bread, it was exported worldwide to get foreign currency (wheat was oil before oil) for buying Ford factories tech which was a cornerstone of all USSR industry, Ford likes bloody money and adored Stalin with Hitler(Adolf publicly liked soviet agriculture model of forced labor and peasant strict community which planned for new german territories, ironically Israel adopted this model with kibbutz and now can't survive without cheap labor from Asia, it's really for robots not for people, way ahead of its time), all soviet industrial giants was made by american engineers (history repeating again with China today, where even firewall made by americans). 2) After Stalin during Khrushchev the USSR got in such agricultural problems that it's officially started importing foreign wheat and it was basically golden bread. New soviet leader with Kennedy and short friendship period very liked corn production in USA, that's why in Russia he called a "corn leader" and forcefully corn adapted in soviet agriculture everywhere. American farmers which invited in Soviet union to consult with corn adaption was shocked how soviet agriculture not using fertiliser at all (presumably to save on it in planning economics) and by that destroying fertile layers of soil.
    Agriculture in USSR during all it's 70 years of existence was a mess, till USSR collapse it was forced to import foreign bread because of such mistakes during huge harvests which rotten in warehouses or lost in transit, at the same time subsidising Africa with aid by political reasons, which soviet people still can't regret (unity in hunger). It's really getting bankrupt as a project.

  • @JinKee
    @JinKee Год назад +58

    My grand parents would never ask "how are you?" And they'd always ask "have you eaten?"

    • @redwingsbaby
      @redwingsbaby Год назад +16

      My grandmother was not satisfied unless you accepted something to eat. “What’s wrong? Why aren’t you hungry?” And then she’d list a dozen things she could either serve or cook for me, until finally I’d agree to something

    • @klondike444
      @klondike444 Год назад +3

      "Sec fan?" (Eat rice?)

    • @klondike444
      @klondike444 Год назад

      @@TheWatchernator 不,肯定是英語. No, definitely English.

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Год назад

      @@redwingsbaby 🤗

  • @johnopalko5223
    @johnopalko5223 Год назад +74

    Allan Sherman did a funny spoken-word piece about the "clean your plate because there are starving people in China" exhortation. He said words to the effect of, "So I cleaned my plate. Four, five, six times a day. But the people kept starving and I got fat."
    He finished up with, "Hail to thee, fat person! You kept us out of war!"

  • @taun856
    @taun856 Год назад +45

    My parents never used the "Starving children" line on us. They would just say, "Okay. Don't eat it. It will be your breakfast in the morning." It didn't take us long to just shut up and eat - except my oldest sister.. She was always a bit hard headed.

    • @therealdeal3672
      @therealdeal3672 11 месяцев назад +6

      Instead of using guilt they just used outright threats! 😂

    • @CraftyVegan
      @CraftyVegan Месяц назад +2

      This is the way. My mom tried the “starving kids in Africa” line once… I told her she could send my food to Africa then.
      After that, she would just cover what we didn’t eat and have us eat it at the next meal and the next meal until it was gone.
      For my own kids, I just don’t make them eat foods they don’t want. They eat pretty much everything, but sometimes they’re just not in the mood for some foods… and I get that. If they specifically ask for a special food, they have to eat most of it though. I’m not about to cook a special thing and then have it not eaten 🤨
      Normal days get them a choice between two meals. For example:
      Breakfast: oatmeal or cereal
      Lunch: grilled cheese or pbj
      Dinner: noodles and red sauce or mac n cheese
      Changed up every day of course, but 99/100 times if they pick what they want, they eat it all.

  • @JosephGiannelli-eu6os
    @JosephGiannelli-eu6os 7 дней назад +1

    Many, many years ago, while I was earning my MBA, I had a roommate from China. She spent Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc, with my family. She was shocked at what many things cost here. After she returned home, I received a box from China filled with new clothes she bought for me and some trinkets she thought I might enjoy. Having also heard the "starving children in China" comment frequently as a child plus seeing the TV commercials for sending Care packages to China. So, I was both touched by her thoughfulness in sending me her gifts from China, but I was very aware I'd been sent a Care package from China to help me here in the US. Diane, using Joe's tablet.

  • @Freakinout14
    @Freakinout14 Год назад +94

    I'm pretty sure the phrase "starving kids in africa" was more popular. My parents said that all the time but it was also said a lot in movies and tv shows. This is the first time ive ever heard of the phrase "starving kids from china"

    • @Shanghaimartin
      @Shanghaimartin Год назад +6

      Yeah, don't let my RUclips name fool you, it was always starving in Africa for me growing up :)

    • @VoodooCosmonaut
      @VoodooCosmonaut Год назад +20

      China was the typical trope for alleged starvation until the 1980s when popular culture shifted attention to the struggles of Africa. For those of us who grew up at a certain time, China was more commonly used as an example of government gone wrong. So while Africa was probably used more during your generation, it was more common to mention China from the 50s through the mid 1980s.

    • @MusicMissionary
      @MusicMissionary Год назад +10

      ​@@VoodooCosmonaut yup. For me it was always China. I grew up in the 70s.

    • @21jimmyo
      @21jimmyo Год назад

      Grew up in the 70s, it was always China. @@VoodooCosmonaut

    • @anarchords1905
      @anarchords1905 Год назад +6

      Me too. However, barring a progressive change, I forsee a day soon when the appropriate idiom will be "Eat your dinner, there are starving kids in Britain who would kill for that". I wish that was just a humourous exaggeration.

  • @MrSkoresh
    @MrSkoresh Год назад +106

    Neither Lysenko himself, nor his ideas are in any way popularized, all his works are considered anti-scientific in Russia.
    These stories about "Lysenko's popularity in Russia" are not new, they did not appear after the start of the war, they are already more than 6-7 years old, but I still have not seen a single example proving any popularity of his ideas among anyone in scientific circles or among the Russian authorities.
    The last article about Lysenko in the Russian media, dated December 4, 2022, calls Lysenko a "charlatan and obscurantist".

    • @Vova__
      @Vova__ Год назад +24

      Yes, i was very confused by this. Could not find anything related myself either. My guess is he is trying to sprinkle some "juicy" misinformation related to the current events in an attempt to increase the perceived appeal of the video.

    • @AlessandroGenTLe
      @AlessandroGenTLe Год назад +5

      That's a sin... I'd love to see orcs starving. Again.

    • @JamesChurchill
      @JamesChurchill Год назад +8

      He didn't say "All russians are Lysenko fans now", it's just what the lunatic fringe is doing.

    • @Vova__
      @Vova__ Год назад

      @@JamesChurchill no, he said that lysenko "is presented as a hero to the russians" and that russia wants to shake science as the "bedrock of the western culture". This claim is at best a delusion and is honestly borderline dehumanizing. With his rhethoric and the putins picture attached, his implication, whether intentional or not, is that it is a state agenda.
      And even if i were to assume your point corresponds to what he said in the video, i could not even find any fringe source. He should have provided one in the description like educational channels do, otherwise i have to assume he invented it.

    • @MrSkoresh
      @MrSkoresh Год назад +11

      @@Vova__ In Joe's defense, such articles about Lysenko have appeared many times in the press over the past 5 years, mainly in Radio Liberty and its affiliated media, so he just might have stumbled upon them.

  • @StEvEn-dp1ri
    @StEvEn-dp1ri Год назад +31

    What the Hell is this cheerful music of sheer dread overpowering your voice Joe?

  • @clutchyfinger
    @clutchyfinger Год назад +13

    Its gone from "science is too capitalist" to "science is too woke". But the effects are similar.

    • @IAmMyOwnApprentice
      @IAmMyOwnApprentice 10 месяцев назад +1

      Really? Woke science seems pretty Lysenko to me. Dismissing genetics, censoring opposition, elevating or demoting scientists based on their political alignment, subverting the peer review process.. Aside from all the starving people and gulags on one hand and mutilating the kids while destroying the parents' economy on the other, I'm not sure there is much to distinguish them.

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 9 месяцев назад

      Wokeness is the new communism. You're not seeing the full picture here, you're focusing on a small minority of religious people who are reacting to woke provacations.
      Make no mistake, wokeness is as anti science as old school communism was, in that it loves science when it fits the agenda, but hates it if it conflicts with the agenda. And if science doesn't fit the woke agenda, guess what happens?
      What effect are you even talking about? Where are these mysterious 10s of millions dying because of people claiming science is too woke?

  • @thomascreeden9650
    @thomascreeden9650 Год назад +313

    I never heard of this guy before, but I do remember my mother saying "Think of the starving kids in China". Never knew that there was such a horrible famine there. I grew up hearing of the communist purges, but not the famines. The only famine I ever heard spoken of was the Potato Famine in Ireland.

    • @johnstrawb3521
      @johnstrawb3521 Год назад +23

      @thomascreeden9650 The famines in Asia were overwhelmingly the result of Western and of British policy. In India alone, Dr. Gideon Polya in Countercurrents estimates that from 1765 through 1938 the British killed 1.8 billion (with a "b") Indians while reducing India's share of global GDP from 25% to 4%.

    • @talkingmudcrab718
      @talkingmudcrab718 Год назад +5

      If you're GenX or elder Millennial maybe your parents got the line from "A Christmas Story?"

    • @Soletestament
      @Soletestament Год назад

      @@johnstrawb3521 Weird that you're claiming billions of people died when the world population at the time was barely 3 billion. It didn't start ballooning until the discovery of penicillin and the invention of Vaccines. Not disputing that the British killed millions of people during colonialization.... just that you're hyper inflating the facts to make a what-aboutism.
      To answer Thomas' question. You don't hear about it because the current Government in China intentionally downplays the communist famines as it hurts their feel goods to admit that Communism failed its own people that hard. They still celebrate Mao in China and any failings that man made are downplayed or censored outright. As China extended its influence overseas it actively sought to minimize these facts and histories from being recounted. As a result its not taught with any major depth or detail in a lot of places. Rather it gets glossed over if it's mentioned at all. In much the same way the US massacres in the Philippines, Koreas and even at home against black and Native Americans, tends to get lost in the education system. It's not that any of these events are denied. It's just not looked at or scrutinized strongly to protect those individuals and power structures that ultimately depend on people not looking too deeply at things.

    • @Danarogon
      @Danarogon Год назад

      ​@@johnstrawb3521the Chinese famine was entirely China's fault.

    • @MusicMissionary
      @MusicMissionary Год назад +4

      We're fixing to learn a lot about famine.

  • @JonathanLivni
    @JonathanLivni Год назад +126

    Feedback for the audio:
    The threatening soundtrack used when Stalin was presented was too loud compared to your voice. Later the optimistic audio track when presenting the scientist felt misplaced, because of the context of this scientist causing so much death. The first point is about audio mastering, the second is about audio track choice...

    • @ryan.s.h.
      @ryan.s.h. Год назад +21

      I fully agree, it was distracting both times. Other than that I love the video as with all your content!

    • @Docx9184
      @Docx9184 Год назад +12

      I also noticed the past few videos Joe’s voice has been kinda echoey or something. Not a dealbreaker but definitely distracting.

    • @caixiuying8901
      @caixiuying8901 Год назад +10

      turn that atmospheric track during Stalin down like 4db LMFAO

    • @Attika
      @Attika Год назад +19

      To Joe: There wasn't any problem with your videos without the music. IMO the music is just disturbing. Still, apart from the melodic bit your vids are great.😊

    • @anyflippingthing
      @anyflippingthing Год назад +16

      Yep, my thoughts exactly. Doesn't really need the music at all.

  • @hikosaemon
    @hikosaemon Год назад +22

    Love ya Joe.
    The background music however is distracting, not working for me. Especially ominous Stalin music. I like the idea but it's better just letting us here you speak man!
    Thanks appreciate all your vids!

  • @madelinegolding4969
    @madelinegolding4969 Месяц назад +2

    Born in 2004, lived in Hawaii, my mom decided to tell me there were kids who didn’t have a single grain of rice so I should always finish my rice. Now I know it’s because she didn’t want me filling up on crazy expensive meat since living on a small island meant the groceries in the stores had to be shipped in.

  • @kstricl
    @kstricl Год назад +25

    After reading a bunch of the comments, and knowing WHEN the Chinese famine occurred, I would suggest that the reason more people in modern times say "in Africa" is simple - the famine in Ethiopia was very public and much more recent.
    The scary thing is that Trofum could become popular with people in the west and other areas as well; simply because of the distrust in good science that is growing again.

    • @EKVideogames
      @EKVideogames Год назад

      Was going to say the same thing, yeah. Later generations after that it was always 'africa'

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Год назад +2

      Yes, the famine in China was almost unknown in the West until 20 years or so later. I first heard of it on some TV show where one or two Americans were asking why so many truckloads of food were being sent to South China.
      Lysenkoism is alive and well in the West but it no longer has a name and is not talked about. It's an assumption that's one of the bases of some political systems. Assumptions are never questioned or acknowledged in politics. It is no longer considered science - it's a tenet of faith.
      Yes, I know I'm conflating science, religion, and politics. That's what it looks like to me: They're converging.

    • @kstricl
      @kstricl Год назад

      @@neilreynolds3858 Conflate away. To try and separate the three in the mind of the average individual is a fools errand.

    • @DR3ADER1
      @DR3ADER1 Год назад

      Coincidentally, Ethiopia in the 80s was also an ally of the Soviet Union, as it was run by a communist military junta. One/The ONLY key difference between far-right policy and far-left policy is that the far-right mould their ideology around an idea(ie the Nazis moulded their beliefs around Eugenics and the idea of an intellectual elite ruling the land via direct rule, the politics of the land are only governed by the ideas of the elite and the traditionally-minded, so to speak), whereas the far-left mould an idea around their ideology(ie Lysenkoism and the Great Leap Forward, where communists and socialists would mould any idea around their ideology, under the mindset, approach and premise that EVERYTHING must be and to that end, IS politicised and political). Furthermore, the reason why people distrust Science is thanks to its corporatisation and hyper-industrialisation. This has led to the rise of the Sackler Family and the greater Opioid Epidemic that began in the 1990s, as well as the ironically government-managed botching of COVID-19 in 2020. The rise of Social Justice and greater Far-Left beliefs within younger people especially online has led to a lot of Lysenkoist-adjacent beliefs and applications. It's why you hear idiots say "but Science DOES care about your feelings" and "Body Language is not reliable" or "x is a Social Construct".

    • @Pushing_Pixels
      @Pushing_Pixels Год назад +1

      @@DR3ADER1 Your comment was almost insightful but didn't quite get there. The political distortions of science in the USSR pretty much began and ended with Stalinism. Once he was out of the picture science mostly got back to normal. So, your "theories" about ideologies and science are not based on good information. Almost like you're moulding your idea around your ideology.

  • @FVanth
    @FVanth Год назад +54

    For me it was my maternal grandmother and it was Ethiopia.
    I also believe this verbal abuse led directly to eating more than my fill and ignoring my body's signals that it was full and done eating and that uncomfortably-overfull feeling was normal which led to me being at least 100lbs overweight as a teen and Type-II Diabetes as early as my 30s and me struggling to manage my A1C and loose weight in my 40s.

    • @debbiehenri345
      @debbiehenri345 Год назад +4

      I've just added a similar comment. I developed food issues and went on crazy diets with punishing exercise routines that ended up helping to further damage my joints (since I was already a gardener and didn't need the extra exercise).

  • @wiseoldfool
    @wiseoldfool Год назад +35

    His approach to science seems very like that of Ancel Keys. And yeah, growing up in England in the 60's, we had to eat everything on our plate because children were starving in Africa. I told my parents they could send what I didn't eat to Africa, but I got a smack on the head and got sent to bed for suggesting it. I suspect I only suggested it once.

    • @henrytang2203
      @henrytang2203 11 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for the Keys reference. Arguably, Keys' negative impact on nutrition persists to this day. 12 servings of grain a day = diabetes, obesity, mental illness, and cancer galore.

    • @wiseoldfool
      @wiseoldfool 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@henrytang2203 Unfortunately, that appears to be the case.

  • @vzzniko
    @vzzniko Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for voicing the atrocities commited by soviet union. My family miraculously survived multiple famines created by soviet union. The actual yield was not that bad actual. The worst part is that soviets took everything from people to fulfill the 5 year plan. Everything was sold to Western countries. While Westerners and Russians were fed well, Ukrainians and Kazakhs were starving. Free Ukraine!!! Free Kazakhstan!!!

  • @Fanaro
    @Fanaro Год назад +7

    0:30 My answer to that was "ok, so how do I send this food to the starving children in China?"

  • @TheKatieLea
    @TheKatieLea Год назад +145

    Lysenko sounds like the kind of guy who would proudly proclaim to others "I am science!"

    • @efovex
      @efovex Год назад

      Pretty much. Fauci was also hilariously wrong about the origin of AIDS among other subjects - didn't stop him from gaining more and more powerful political positions, and being more and more blindly worshipped by people who claim to "follow science".

    • @robertogonzalez1907
      @robertogonzalez1907 Год назад +16

      And then he scienced all over the place.

    • @calinculianu
      @calinculianu Год назад +26

      Yep.. parallels to Fauci for sure.

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Год назад

      Fauci's predecessor. Remember, it was Fauci who bungled the AIDS crisis in the 80s.

    • @codetech5598
      @codetech5598 Год назад +13

      Trust the science!

  • @jrkorman
    @jrkorman Год назад +111

    I first learned of Lysenko just over 50 years ago in my mid teens while in High School. I've come to find that there are two broad categories of people. Those who are good examples and those who are bad. Much can be learned from the study of each type. Needless to say, the study of Lysenko's example tells us to beware when politics and science bed down together.

    • @129jasper1
      @129jasper1 Год назад +21

      Yes- climate hysterics, wu-flu hysterics, lying gender hysterics etc. etc. they form what one might call "The Beast" system.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Год назад +4

      We didn't put them in bed together, we fund science through politics. It's basically the same system that the Soviets had.

    • @lajoswinkler
      @lajoswinkler Год назад +8

      @@neilreynolds3858 If by "we" you mean "Americans", then yes. Breaking news: America is not the only country in the world!

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Год назад

      @@neilreynolds3858 Its not politics if a private company pays for it.

    • @akidodogstar5460
      @akidodogstar5460 Год назад +6

      This was a case of BAD science though. But yes I agree, learn from both good and bad examples.

  • @paull8678
    @paull8678 10 месяцев назад +1

    One of my grade school teachers used the "starving children" argument on me once. My response was, "So they'll starve if we eat all the food?" She didn't use it again after that.

  • @GregsWildlife
    @GregsWildlife Год назад +86

    My parents would always say there were starving kids in Africa. I actually found out about China's Great Famine earlier this year. I made a video about it, focusing on the killing, and near extinction, of the sparrows, which was another contributing factor. And, because I'm a wildlife guy, I liked that angle.
    Awesome video, Joe.

    • @hafor2846
      @hafor2846 Год назад +4

      Thank you for your comment. I just watched it and it was really interesting. I am looking forward to see the rest of your videos aout happier topics :)

    • @GregsWildlife
      @GregsWildlife Год назад +3

      @@hafor2846 Thank you so much! I really appreciate that.

  • @ivana6382
    @ivana6382 Год назад +110

    Loved the video, but the music was very loud at times which made it more difficult to follow what was being said. Not sure if that was just me but wanted to let you know!

    • @iNuchalHead
      @iNuchalHead Год назад +15

      Not just you. Sounds wrong.

    • @thomasvaughan294
      @thomasvaughan294 Год назад +12

      Yeah, very off putting.

    • @paulbradford6475
      @paulbradford6475 Год назад +15

      You're right. The background music was unnecessary.

    • @DavidGravesExists
      @DavidGravesExists Год назад +8

      Yeah, the music was very distracting in this video. Didn't fit and was often too loud.

    • @noudsch
      @noudsch Год назад +7

      Yeah, music was far too loud.

  • @gjlite4947
    @gjlite4947 Год назад +66

    Superb explanation of Lamarckism. I remember learning about this in JHS. Supposedly the story goes, he was getting his horse reshoed when he noticed the 4-5 year old son of the blacksmith was very muscular. Rather than realising that this was the result of the boy working the forge with his father, Lamarck came up with his "theory".

    • @adamwu4565
      @adamwu4565 Год назад +9

      There are lots of stories bumping around about Lamarck and his theories, but it doesn't actually seem like Lamarckism was actually HIS theory. As in, he's not the one who came up with it. It now looks like that the basic premise was developed by someone else, whose name is now lost to history. Lamarck heard about it, liked it, and added it to a book he was writing, and maybe included a few additional speculations of his own to flesh out the idea. That book, which was targeted at lay audiences, became something of a fad at the time, almost like Hawking's "A Brief History of Time" which resulted in the theory getting popularized, and Lamarck's name getting attached to it.

    • @Volkbrecht
      @Volkbrecht 10 месяцев назад +8

      The thing is, Lamarck isn't totally wrong. We know about eqigenetics now. We also know individual specimen actually do adapt in certain ways to external stimuli, like food supply. But going from there to assumig how you can force those changes onto plants without going through the research of finding out if and how they will react to the specific stimuli you want to expose them to? Not to speak of the narrow-mindedness with which Lysenko assumed it could be only the one or the other. Two things can be true at the same time. And then you'd have an even harder job figuring out which effect, if any, is the dominant one.

    • @MrKotBonifacy
      @MrKotBonifacy 10 месяцев назад

      @@Volkbrecht That would be ePigenetics...

  • @timothyclark-sl4il
    @timothyclark-sl4il Год назад +2

    Don't want no Captain Crunch, don't want no Raisin Bran
    Well, don't you know that other kids are starving in Japan?

  • @charlessalvia7176
    @charlessalvia7176 Год назад +31

    Fortunately, we've all learned our lesson from Lysenko's antics, and nobody ever mixed science with politics again. Ever.

    • @pandakicker1
      @pandakicker1 Год назад +1

      🥲

    • @bb5242
      @bb5242 9 месяцев назад +2

      clotshot 😂

    • @AuntieMamies
      @AuntieMamies 8 месяцев назад

      ouch

    • @ankhpom9296
      @ankhpom9296 6 месяцев назад

      But it’s happening again in Russia.

    • @brettpalmer1770
      @brettpalmer1770 5 месяцев назад

      Science isn't the issue, dogma is the issue. Christian nationalism has more in common here by wanting to throw out science of evolution for young earth garbage.

  • @christophercrowder872
    @christophercrowder872 Год назад +21

    His rehabilitation is just another sign that the world is regressing when it comes to the general populations understanding and acceptance of science.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Год назад

      There's also the part about "science" becoming so politicized that nobody believes anything that a scientist says just like we can't believe anything a politician says. Since so much of "science" is funded by the state, it has become an arm of political parties. The only way to regain trust is to stop taking money from the sciencist-politicians who control the funding. We know that's not going to happen so "science" will not be trusted.

    • @MynameisBrianZX
      @MynameisBrianZX Год назад

      Political regression as well. Takes a horrendous worldview to glorify Lysenko as a defier of “Western” science rather than who he really was: a killer of colleagues and fellow countrymen.

    • @davecasey4341
      @davecasey4341 Год назад +4

      It's not just the sciences where the world is regressing.

    • @_nebulousthoughts
      @_nebulousthoughts Год назад +5

      It's because people like comforting lies more than they like harsh truths.
      The earth is in desperate need of some tough love.

    • @DR3ADER1
      @DR3ADER1 Год назад +1

      @@_nebulousthoughts The ironic fact about that is that the only reason why we know this point about people choosing comfort over truth is thanks to Science and the findings produced by various psychological studies.

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 Год назад +64

    Hi Joe!
    I got that same admonishment from my parents, and one day I replied: "Why do you just ship it to them?"
    I got my ass beat and sent to my room for sassing.
    Now I always finish what I am served whether I am still hungry or not.
    All hail Zoe!

    • @andrasbiro3007
      @andrasbiro3007 Год назад +20

      And while that attitude is understandable, it also contributes to the obesity epidemic. When food is scarce, it makes sense to eat as much as you can, but with abundant food that's extremely unhealthy.

    • @MyFaithfulSword
      @MyFaithfulSword Год назад

      Clean your plate culture directly fuels our obesity epidemic

    • @Elementalism
      @Elementalism Год назад +11

      Haha I was about 10 years old when my mom said "There are starving kids in Africa" and my response was "Yeah? Well why don't you ship this meal to them". She laughed and never used that guilt trip again.

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry Год назад +7

      i used to force myself to eat everything whenever i went out to eat because i overpaid for it directly. then i started realizing that it's not benefiting me at all and just making me miserable over something i should be enjoying. whether i throw it away or force myself to eat it and it turns to poop later, it doesn't affect ANYBODY but me

    • @saturationstation1446
      @saturationstation1446 Год назад

      they actually got violent at your suggestion to help them.. because they arent europeans and we only help europeans....

  • @ninjanoodle2674
    @ninjanoodle2674 21 день назад +1

    As far as scientists that left a legacy of death in their wake, Lysenko is right up there with Thomas Midgley (lead developer of leaded gasoline and Freon/CFCs), Shiro Ishii (horrific experiments on humans), and Josef Mangele (the 'Angel of Death' from Auschwitz).

  • @mtamerlan
    @mtamerlan Год назад +16

    I’m a longtime fan of your channel from Azerbaijan, a former Soviet Union country. Frankly speaking, I am impressed by the level of research and insights you got on Stalin-era Soviet Union. Very well done!

    • @estebancorral5151
      @estebancorral5151 Год назад

      So are farmers allowed private farm ownership in Azerbaijan?

  • @NATESOR
    @NATESOR Год назад +25

    As a sort of sarcastic riff on that phrase my brother and I used to just say, "You better eat that. There's kids in China!" Leaving out whether they are or are not starving.

    • @smoguli
      @smoguli Год назад +7

      The Schrödinger's Chinese kids, who are in a superposition of starving and not starving

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry Год назад +4

      @@smoguli you'll never know unless you check. let's install surveillance cameras everywhere to make sure

    • @sudonim7552
      @sudonim7552 Год назад +1

      Every time I see a friend waste food I tell them "kids in Africa could've eaten that plate"

    • @Arkantos117
      @Arkantos117 Год назад +1

      There are still starving kids in China.
      The government doesn't really look after people not in the cities.

  • @galdutro
    @galdutro Год назад +8

    I’m from Brazil and my parents would say this about starving children in Africa. But what is more sad is that there were children in food insecurity back home. :(

    • @angelachouinard4581
      @angelachouinard4581 Год назад +1

      Yes and there were and still are areas with food insecurity in the US. I will say I've had Brazilian food and I think it's delicious.

  • @paddyodriscoll8648
    @paddyodriscoll8648 Год назад +5

    Very well done. I was so afraid you were going to say at the end that epigenetics was synonymous with Lysenkoism, but you explained the difference well. Kudos…

  • @Avendesora
    @Avendesora Год назад +127

    The generational trauma of food scarcity is a massive factor in the obesity epidemic that I really don't think gets enough attention. Being raised to think that you're doing something wrong if you don't finish everything on your plate is bad for everyone.

    • @virionspiral
      @virionspiral Год назад

      That coinciding with pushing the ass backwards food pyramid in the 80s. Also it's easier for corporations to mass produce the foods that cause obesity.

    • @肉骨粉
      @肉骨粉 Год назад +37

      You should, generally, finish everything on your plate. The problem is in ordering or cooking more than is good for you in the first place. And also the establishments that encourage that behavior.

    • @karlhungus545
      @karlhungus545 Год назад

      I get what you're saying, but corporate corruption around the world is more to blame...and our primal nature. The US is obviously the worst case scenario where political bribery is legal. Have a hard look at Monsanto and their history of influencing the food pyramid and the FDA. Pure evil. There's a reason they get sued continually and always lose. So much land wasted on corn, soy, and canola...all useless, empty calories.

    • @edenisburning
      @edenisburning Год назад +12

      That's makes no sense from a US perspective, which is where the obesity crisis is centered. The last Americans to suffer food scarcity grew up in the 30's, and are dead or extremely old. Their children are the baby boomers, who are all getting older. Boomers endured little to no such food scarcities, and they raised the millennials in an environment of indulgence. Obesity amongst the youngest generations of Americans is truly at an epidemic level, and they were raised by millennials and gen Zers, who've only experienced an abundance of food.

    • @Gods-bad-boy
      @Gods-bad-boy Год назад +1

      I kinda agree actually. But once you're an adult you know whats good for you and not good for you.

  • @bookphilos
    @bookphilos Год назад +18

    As a decendant of one of those 'kulaks', I still remember my grandfather tell the story of how he and his siblings ate grass and stole eggs to survive after their farm was taken away and they became homeless. Since we're of german decent, we were then declared 'enemy of the state' and banned to gulags in central asia.

  • @estraume
    @estraume Год назад +36

    This is why we need international research collaboration and peer review of research articles. Maybe it is time to make a video about the two weeks everyone thought the South Korean researchers had found a room temperature superconductor, which, after the experiments had been repeated by multiple international research groups, turned out to be a result of magnetism due to iron pollution in the sample.

    • @Geoplanetjane
      @Geoplanetjane Год назад +9

      Peer reviewed research-that’s how science works

    • @StillGamingTM
      @StillGamingTM Год назад +1

      Yes, and as your example makes clear, it’s just as needed in the so-called “hard” or “objective” fields of science. Errors, falsehoods, oversights, misinterpretations etc can always happen

  • @patchvonbraun
    @patchvonbraun 4 месяца назад +3

    Reminds me of a truly-dreadful sociology paper I once read. The premise was that science and mathematics are lacking in "feminist perspective". Which was a stunning position. It wasn't about the*practice* of science and mathematics, or the *institutions* that have grown up around it, but the science and math itself. Lysenko's position that genetics was "too western" reminds me of that awful paper very much. "I'm sorry, but he 1.602176634 × 10−19 coulomb charge on the electron is far to penile, please vaginalize it...".

    • @ncdave4life
      @ncdave4life 3 месяца назад +1

      That's just the tip of the iceberg. It's not just sociology which has been infected. _EquitableMath_ is a project funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which advocates _“shifting_ [mathematics] _instructional practices to provide meaningful access to priority content while ensuring that those practices are research- and assets-based, and culturally responsive.”_
      In case you have trouble translating eduspeak gibberish, here's an excerpt: *_“White supremacy culture shows up in math classrooms when... Students are required to 'show their work.'”_*
      Worse yet, believe it or not, the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NAS) has published a gruesome 386-page tome entitled _A Framework for K-12 Science Education: Practices, Crosscutting Concepts, and Core Ideas," which explicitly opposes teaching the foundation of science, itself: the Scientific Method.
      The Scientific Method is what distinguishes science from all other scholarship. But the NAS's _Framework for K-12 Science Education_ attacks *“the mistaken impression that there is one distinctive approach common to all science-a single 'scientific method.'”* (doi:10.17226/13165.)

  • @triaxon3791
    @triaxon3791 Год назад +154

    He seems like a hero figure to the uneducated promoting non-education right here in the States. Idiocracy is growing extremely close. ☮

    • @JoshuaTootell
      @JoshuaTootell Год назад +4

      We are post Idiocracy.

    • @richardvinsen2385
      @richardvinsen2385 Год назад +42

      @@JoshuaTootellMillions of republicans are planning to vote for trump in the primaries. I think we’re still in peak idiocracy.

    • @michelleg9194
      @michelleg9194 Год назад

      So true!!

    • @LATAMbiker
      @LATAMbiker Год назад

      I think you've got this backwards. It's the Left that promote the policies of Central Planning that cause these massive ways of starvation in Socialist Countries. This is one of the main points of this video. Every time Socialism has been tried, it has resulted in many forms of disaster. Starvation, police states, loss of freedom, reeducation camps, or all of the above.The USSR, Cuba, North Korea, China, Nicaragua, etc. Capitalism, despite its unequal sharing of blessings, has raised more people out of poverty than any form of political order ever tried throughout history. The Left doesn't promote education, it promotes indoctrination, and low or no standards of accomplishment at all education levels.

    • @richardvinsen2385
      @richardvinsen2385 Год назад +26

      @@hazyhalfmoon Thank god for that. Trump would have completely destroyed the country by now had he managed to win in 2020.

  • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
    @davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад +46

    With my parents (I'm 67 now) it was "Eat it. Or don't. You get nothing else until breakfast."
    That tended to be pretty effective most nights. It didn't help that after one or two coaxings my dad, who worked all day to support the family, would take the plate of the child who didn't want to eat, and gobble it down himself. He wasn't trying to prove a point, though -- he was just REALLY hungry and didn't care a whiff if one of us willingly starved. Ahhh.... precious childhood memories.

    • @enviritas9498
      @enviritas9498 Год назад +4

      My mother grew up during post-WW2 UK, where things like meat became a luxury. So not eating our food wasn't an option in my house.

    • @slaplapdog
      @slaplapdog Год назад +9

      Your parents actually seem pretty reasonable...

    • @lisaphares2286
      @lisaphares2286 10 месяцев назад

      I think your dad was awesome. He obviously needed more food but he made sure his children got enough. If you weren’t hungry enough to appreciate the food then it went to the one that needed it more.

  • @mossyfriends1911
    @mossyfriends1911 Год назад +8

    I also used to get the “kids in china would love that food” lecture when I was little. But the thing is, my undiagnosed autistic 5yr old self didn’t get it and would always respond with “Then why don’t you sent the food to china since I don’t want it?” lmao.

  • @KenCunkle
    @KenCunkle 2 часа назад

    My father was a kid back in WW 1. HIs mom used to guilt him about not eating with this phrase: "Think of the poor starving Belgians!" So there's nothing new in parents using this same tack. Fortunately, the Belgians are no longer starving.

  • @markorr7125
    @markorr7125 Год назад +22

    My parents got married as soon as my father got home to the UK from WW2. Rationing was stric, and getting worse, as my two older sibling were born. Although rationing was just coming to an end by the time I was born I well remember my mother sometime becoming almost hysterical if we did not eat every last bit of food that was put before us.

    • @kitefan1
      @kitefan1 Год назад +4

      Did they have anyway to keep it if you didn't eat it? A refrigerator? My mother grew up in a city. My father in the rural Southern US. I'm not sure my Dad had a refrigerator all the time as a kid. They did live in a small town, so I think they may have had an ice box rather than a propane refrigerator. Because he didn't have electricity until the Rural Electrification Act, 1936. When he was a teenager.

    • @ckl9390
      @ckl9390 Год назад

      @@kitefan1 I think it has more to do with rationing being a "use it or loose it" system. if you didn't consume what was allocated to you then your allotment was decreased next time.

    • @kitefan1
      @kitefan1 Год назад

      @@ckl9390 Makes sense, thanks.

  • @gmcanepa
    @gmcanepa Год назад +9

    Mom also whipped out the "starving kids in Africa" phrase and I honestly couldn't figure out why she wasn't giving my food to them instead of me.

  • @CAMacKenzie
    @CAMacKenzie Год назад +10

    I first heard of Lysenko in the mid '60s, in an article in Reader's Digest. I sort of half dismissed it, since everybody KNEW Reader's Digest was a right wing publication that had nothing good to say about the Soviets. But, then, I began to see articles that were saying essentially the same things about him in other magazines, like Natural History, which, at the time, was a serious layman's scientific magazine. Seems to me it was an essay by Stephen Jay Gould, whom I respected. I took notice. Lysenko and the starvation he created, and Stalis's purges, were the reason many Ukrainians welcomed the Nazis when they invaded the Soviet Union, giving Putin credibility in Russia today when he accuses Ukraine of harboring neo-Nazis.

    • @arkamukhopadhyay9111
      @arkamukhopadhyay9111 Год назад

      What gives Putin credibility is the fact that Ukraine does, in fact, harbour Neo Nazis.

  • @Ozzyfrog78
    @Ozzyfrog78 Год назад +6

    He definitely wins his place in the Pantheon of bad scientists alongside Thomas Midgley jr (leaded fuel and CFC's)

  • @AntCooke
    @AntCooke Год назад +30

    Really interesting stuff. I had no idea about the Chinese famine.
    The audio was borked on this one Joe, background music too loud and your voice really echoed (with respect and admiration).

    • @garromanv9430
      @garromanv9430 Год назад +1

      Yeah Dude, pay a little more attention to your audio mix

    • @57hound
      @57hound Год назад

      Background music was very distracting and completely unnecessary

  • @garysheppard4028
    @garysheppard4028 Год назад +26

    What is it with RUclipsrs who set their voice levels to 1 and their intro music to 11?
    Seems to happen everywhere.
    FFS equalise your sound levels.

    • @britzkrieg2
      @britzkrieg2 Год назад +3

      Yeah, I found that really jarring, too.

    • @danieljensen2626
      @danieljensen2626 Год назад

      Lol, yeah, intro music was really loud compared to his talking on this one

    • @bzuidgeest
      @bzuidgeest Год назад

      Relax, I have been watching this channel for years and this is the first time I noticed this. Must be a simple editing mistake, it happens.

  • @akipan
    @akipan Год назад +30

    Great video as always but as some of the others commented the music is a little bit too loud. There is a good technique called ducking in the audio engineering that remedies that thing. And again great video!

    • @MOSMASTERING
      @MOSMASTERING Год назад +1

      Ducking is done with a compressor. I think it's built into AE

  • @madnessbydesign1415
    @madnessbydesign1415 Месяц назад +1

    My parents told me there were starving kids in India. I got up and proceeded to look for a box to send those starving kids the crap my parents were trying to feed me. That was the last time my parents used that line on me... :)

  • @Moonman63
    @Moonman63 Год назад +9

    When the ruling class think they know better than the peasants…. Sound familiar?

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Год назад

      The rulers always know better - ours went to college.

  • @Luzgar
    @Luzgar Год назад +26

    The wild thing, is that any uneducated Russian farmer could have told him that it was completely wrong and would not work.
    We have been cultivating crops as a species for 11 000 years, selective breeding on animals and plants have been a thing for thousands of years. Farmers might not have known why, but they definitely know how it worked.

    • @precisedime1377
      @precisedime1377 Год назад +6

      Reminds me of how today we're firing medical doctors because the doctors kept telling the bureaucrats that they're wrong.

    • @KateeAngel
      @KateeAngel Год назад +2

      oh, the farmers in Kolhoz were certainly not following those rules all the time! Often they followed rules imposed on them only on paper, and often did the right thing in practice. Otherwise, the results would be even worse

    • @DrachenGothik666
      @DrachenGothik666 Год назад

      *BREEDING. Breading is the crumbs or batter you put on food you're going to fry.

  • @LinasMukaltinas
    @LinasMukaltinas Год назад +13

    Great video as always. Not sure about the decision to add loud dramatic music though

  • @poopsmith6853
    @poopsmith6853 Год назад +1

    Lysenko alone cannot be blamed for the famines of communism. Communism caused these famines, by design, to purge sectors of the population. The holodomor occurred before lysenko was in a positon of real power. The chinese famine and many of the soviet union were primarly caused by forced collective farming by people who arent farmers. Going to a feudal style agriculture will not feed as many as industrialized farming.

  • @PierreChe
    @PierreChe Год назад +112

    Very interesting video. A follow up on epigenetics would be amazing ! As a quick little CC, the background music was quite distracting, came in a bit abruptly and covered your voice quite a bit. I think 3/4 db less would be good and also, doing an EQ on the track to create a dip of frequence where your voice sits would help spread out and get more clarity. The track was nice otherwise but being so present made it harder to hear you clearly and a little too dramatic. I tried listening both on my macbook pro M1 (decent speakers for videos), and Bose headset. Same issue. Hope that can be useful. Cheers and thx for the video !

    • @JimWilbourne
      @JimWilbourne Год назад +7

      Agreed on all points

    • @aboyer111
      @aboyer111 Год назад +10

      Also agree. Especially the too loud background sound

    • @alonealien1474
      @alonealien1474 Год назад +3

      I agree. The bgm was distracting.

    • @mjmulenga3
      @mjmulenga3 Год назад +3

      Agreed on the unnecessary music.

    • @Antony_Jenner
      @Antony_Jenner Год назад +2

      Specially on YT audio is hit and miss, having said that my aural experience of this video was quite good as I run an EQ and I am constantly adjusting for different videos. This one of Joe's as per normal was good as I didn't have to touch my EQ and remained on a preset. I don't have flash sound just an old laptop and a 2000s Sony wiz bang stereo via a headphone amp for a bit of gain. My speakers are bass heavy so anything under 60hz is cut by my EQ.

  • @asiabrew81
    @asiabrew81 Год назад +35

    How many times have I read about modern famines that weren't caused by stupidity and hubris and the squandering and denial of resources? The last 5 minutes really reminded me of how the further distance society gets away from a horrible tragedy, or person, the more you see weird fringe people start to make statements about how "it actually wasn't as bad as they want you to think" or "there were some good parts". NO! There are no good parts! Shout that down every time.

    • @stevengayler8447
      @stevengayler8447 Год назад

      Starvation is good for the planet! Real communism hasn't been tried! Lol

  • @Souredsoup
    @Souredsoup Год назад +18

    Haha. My parents used to pull that "there are starving children in China" thing on me too. But I started retorting with things like, "Then lets package this up and send it to them" and they stopped doing it.

    • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
      @davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад

      Yeah. I tried that once with MY dad. He quietly got up from the table, came back a few minutes later with a large cardboard box, set it on the floor, and looked straight at me.
      "Yep. This should do. Get in. You should arrive in a couple of weeks. But don't worry about starving; we'll put the rest of your dinner in with you." Believe me when I say that I had long before learned just how serious my old man could be. He was Lord and Master, and God help the kid who questioned his decisions. I think I finished my dinner in less than a minute.

    • @CKLee-rs4kl
      @CKLee-rs4kl Год назад

      yeah, I used that retort once but the damage was done; I felt very guilty.

  • @garyperkins3304
    @garyperkins3304 Год назад +2

    Yup, he was a good Party official. It wasn't just a political movement, it was a way of life in the Socialist Republic. It was glorious, at least for a while, to think those days were past. Unfortunately, I think it's slowly coming back, like a frog in boiling water.

  • @cudaman-yq7pq
    @cudaman-yq7pq Год назад +13

    Thomas Midgely has to be up there in terms of scientists whos discoveries caused a lot of harm (tetraethyl lead, CFCs).

    • @josephglatz25
      @josephglatz25 Год назад

      Him and half the researchers at Dow Chemical for having invented PFAS and fucked up practically all water everywhere. Across the whole of the United States, rainwater is considered unsafe to drink due to PFAS contamination. All so eggs won't stick to a frying pan. The people behind PFAS ought to go to prison for a very long time if you ask me.

    • @alastairward2774
      @alastairward2774 Год назад

      I was thinking the same, strong competition.

    • @Valisk
      @Valisk Год назад

      First one that jumped to mind. Hasn't Joe already done a vid on him?

  • @ThunderApache
    @ThunderApache Год назад +32

    I am from India and fortunately me and my generation living in the 2nd tier cities never faced acute food crisis but my parents’ generation has literally seen people ending up dead as well as riots being instigated because of acute food shortage.
    So growing up, my generation, who were born in the ‘90s have always been warned of the “Karma” that follows, if we waste food by their parents.
    It’s still a misery to see even on the 76th Independence day of my country, so many people getting preventable diseases like Tuberculosis and Rickettsia because of poor nutrition.

  • @Elbereth42
    @Elbereth42 Год назад +7

    Love your content, and I like all the changes you've been making, but I wanted to chime in and say that the music is way overpowering starting in the Great Purge section. I don't separate audio channels very well, and it was very hard for me to hear what you were saying.

    • @yondie491
      @yondie491 Год назад

      100% hope Joe sees this. The music was ABSOLUTELY overpowering at times.
      And frankly... that's not something that should be able to happen with a team as professional as what Joe presumably has.
      As a recreational editor... syncing audio is one of the last things I do in all of my work... and it's something that I *never* skip.
      I'm not a big fan of the changes that took place a few months ago (I DESPISE unmotivated zooms... with a passion... but I understand why he made those changes. Honestly, I'd love if there was a "here's the same video with absolutely no zooms" option, but I'm realistic about that not being an option. People like the unmotivated zooms for... WHATEVER reason... so be it.
      But the audio? That's inexcusable. *IF* this was intentional... I may have to go elsewhere. And that will make me friggin sad.

  • @madalayna9478
    @madalayna9478 Год назад +3

    I love your channel so much, it's very informative and entertaining. I've been watching for quite some time and I appreciate all the hard work that goes into it. Unfortunately, I'm growing increasingly hard of hearing these days and the background music played under your voice lately makes it very difficult to hear what is being said. Even with the closed captions helping me, it's very distracting and almost louder than your voice. Just letting you know for myself and for those of us in the audience who may have difficulty hearing. It might help if the music were just a touch softer or more melodic. I think it's the bigger highs and lows of the synth music and the occasional sustained bass instead of a more steady, mid-range melody that makes it so difficult to hear over. Again, thank you so much for your wonderful, intelligent content, which I will keep watching even if I have to turn the volume down and just read the captions. XD

  • @FVanth
    @FVanth Год назад +7

    Joe, I love that you or your sound editor is experimenting with putting music and sound effects into your videos, but this one was particularly distracting from the important part of your videos.
    I even played with the settings on my T.V. (turning off all the enhancements) and I still found myself wrestling to hear your voice.
    I'm sorry if I come across as critical.
    I did still find this topic fascinating and enjoyed, just the audio balance was a little off.
    Thank you for all of everyone's hard work.

    • @cheets8279
      @cheets8279 Год назад

      Me too, i spent some time triyng to EQ it out, then i gave up, I used to work in sound and the distraction made me lose track of Joe too often so I gave up. LOVE JOE btw!

  • @Pretermit_Sound
    @Pretermit_Sound Год назад +6

    I always thought my parents should had sent the food to those starving kids, instead of trying to guilt me into eating something I don’t want 🙄

  • @andyjohnson4907
    @andyjohnson4907 Год назад +24

    It was always Africa that was referenced when i was a kid in the 80s in the UK. At the time there was a lot of drive to help people in Ethiopia. I didn't realise it was different in the US.
    As a side note, if a friend doesn't finish their beer, to make them feel bad, I tell them that there are sober children in Africa.

    • @cbpd89
      @cbpd89 Год назад +2

      It wasn't different in the US. When I was a kid people said Africa, when my parents were young it was China.

    • @marcusott2973
      @marcusott2973 Год назад +2

      I'm stealing that, it's brilliant. Thx

    • @Erin-000
      @Erin-000 Год назад +1

      I'm from US in the 90's/00's and never have heard it with China only Africa like you. The beginning of this video bamboozled me, I thought he made a mistake so I had to come right to the comments

    • @antikommunistischaktion
      @antikommunistischaktion Год назад

      @@Erin-000 Maybe it's a generational thing with GenX parents on the younger side referencing Africa, and the older GenX parents referencing China. I heard Africa growing up, but my mother was born in 1978 which pretty much places her right at the end of GenX.

    • @stargatis
      @stargatis Год назад

      My parents said Africa too

  • @student99bg
    @student99bg 17 дней назад +2

    Collectivized agriculture performs better than the one with individual owners. When Gorbachev and Yeltsin tried to get rid of it they destroyed agricultural production. Even in Western Europe there are capitalist versions of collectivized production where private farmers are still able to turn a profit for them and have private property. That was done because it was obvious and still is obvious that collectivized agriculture is superior in every way.
    But go on, be a good dog and repeat whatever the West wants you to say.
    As for poor rich farmers that had to give away their private property you presented it as "imagine if you worked on your field your entire life and then the government tells you it is no longer yours" in order to present it as a bad thing. Oh, no, poor rich people were no longer able to make massive amount of money because of what they own and from then on they would become regular workers and earn based on how much they work, not based on much how they own. How about presenting that situation like this "You employed dozens of people to work on your property and by doing so generated massive profits every year, not because you worked more, but because you had a big field and money to invest, now the evil government came and from this point on you will only get as much money as you earn with your own work".
    As for Russian psuedoscience that imbeciles Lenin and Stalin followed, sure it was embarrassing, just like many other things Soviets and Maoists have done. I don't like those two (Lenin and Stalin I mean, I also don't like Trotsky either) and I don't like Soviets and I hate Maoists with every bone in my body. I disagree with Marx and Marxism on some things too. I don't like almost all communist movements, but that doesn't mean I will lie and do Western propaganda.
    Not you though, you are a good boy, a good dog that will say whatever Western propagandists want you to say. Next you will tell us how public housing, paid vacation time guaranteed by law and extremely cheap sea vacations were actually bad things and that most people should suffer and only the small number of rich people should enjoy summer vacations, not pay rent nor mortgage etc.