I am from Kenya and, in my opinion, issues in Africa are due to a multitude of factors rather than ethnic divide within countries. Just like several other regions, tribal and ethnic conflicts are not unique to Africa. For instance, look at India, China, and even Belgium (the Flanders vs the Wallonia), these regions also suffer similar incompatibilities. Nonetheless, one thing that stands out from the rest is corruption, mainly due to poor policies.
Karani Desmond Europeans failed to create solid education and infrastructure for the colonies because how would they make profit you essentially started from near scratch 60 years ago. That is why the leaders are corrupt. Also resources, coups and the Cold War.
Nigeria has over 300 ethnic groups. Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa are the largest. These ethnic groups have almost nothing in common. Yorubas are a 50/50 between Islam and Christianity.
@Ancient Rageedi Are we still going to blame others for our shortcomings?. We know the corruption and abuse of power from top to bottom is a huge issue.Africa has 53 countries, if we split down by ethnic groups, then you may have maybe 100-150 countries in Africa.
I love how he emphasized on Nigeria. today in nigeria there is a distinct division of the country into three sub nations: Odudwa land (yoruba), Arewa (hausa) and Biafra (igbo). The colonizers really caused a problem because all they saw were black people rather than their different tribes and languages.
Yeah, I was looking for a comment that would talk about Nigeria, because it's like the biggest example. I'm hearing a lot of developments about this issue and the debates: each major group splitting vs. staying and restructuring Nigeria. I'm not sure about either argument, but in this crazy time, it has to be addressed. - However I think what you say about the colonizers is actually the opposite. Yes, we are all black, but the British who went to Nigeria knew that we have many obvious differences, especially in North, Southwest, and Southeast: Religion, culture, language, language group, etc. Lord Lugard reported on these differences among us. We were already divided, and The British knew exactly what they were doing when they amalgamated us into one Nigeria. They make profit from it, despite the tribalism and ethnic marginalization it's caused. So they and we are not ignorant of all this. I don't think we have truly been one as a nation but whether we will ultimately continue or all secede remains to be seen.
@@daveo2431 so what do u think is the best solution. The peaceful separation to solve problems, remarginalization or the overlooking of tribal differences.
@@alphalijahsworld9010 I'm not sure. I think if Nigeria can have a successful revolution and better management, along with an end to the terrorism and territorial takeovers then we won't really need separation. Even in hard times it wouldn't be strongly suggested. But the situation as I'm hearing is so dire and crazy, so people are pushing for separation. I think because of the situation separation is better, but I dunno how it would be maintained. So I think until there's another threat of war as one nation, then we should all split and find other ways to separately interact.
@@daveo2431 At this stage total separation is not practicable bcos Nigerians have become too intertwined with one another esp thru intertribal marriages and others. What we need now is a confederal system like it was practiced in our elders days after independence in 1960 where each region was nearly autonomous and only paid tax to the Federal Govt. Back then we had 3 regions- Western, Northern and Eastern and practised parliamentary system... Older people said that system worked but the military came and ruined it with a unitary system where Federal Govt is in charge of everything... today we can make it 6 to fit the geopolitical zones in existence. Many people including some politicians are advocating for that system and I believe in future Nigeria may likely adopt it since a lot of people are in support
The europeans were aware of the different tribes. For better or worse, the colonial administration, the missionary effort and anthropology studies conducted by universities were involved in the local populations. It just didnt factor into the border mapping at all since it was imperial in nature and the only consideration was how to divide resources between other european nations.
As an African, I have not seen a more accurate summary of our predicament. I should add the peculiar case of my country, Rwanda, which is one of the most homogeneous in the world: same language, culture and centuries of harmonious cohabitation. Also we're like 90% Christian. Luckily the colonialists didn't cram us into our larger neighbours. However, because the kingdom of Rwanda was much bigger than the current country and stretched to parts of present-day Uganda and DRC, a huge Rwandan ethnic minority was formed in those countries, which inevitably led to conflicts that still rage on today. Not to mention the ethno-linguistic uniformity did nothing to stop us from killing each other over ethnic subdivisions, so called Hutus, Tutsis and Twa. Oh well.
Please don’t ever forget that those same “ethnic” groups were a colonial construct. Those same groups were social classes prior to the experimentation of the Belgians...
slow down That’s incorrect but people will believe what they want, but only the truth shall set us free. We Rwandans shared, and continue to do so, a common national culture, language and tradition which are the basis of an ethnic group. We are one.
Oh wow this is really good. Usually geography is just an analysis of what's going on in the world, but seeing someone make recommendations and weighing the pros and cons of the recommendations goes beyond what I know as conventional geography.
I think the reason its good is because it was almost all analysis. It feels like when most people bring up the topic of african borders they complain about colonialism and conclude that the obvious solution is to let africa redraw the borders, without actually looking into what that route means.
I feel like one could also point out that in a lot of African nations, European languages of their former colonizers, like English, French and Portuguese are being used as lingua francas and thus the “language problem” is kinda circumvent. Great video! Really like how many different examples you always show.
And they'd do well to continue educating Africans in these languages. Being able to communicate adequately will lead to a more stable country and continent.
That doesn't fully circumvents the problem. You still got a clear separation between one group and another, they're just able to understand what the other group shouts at them. The point with different languages is not a barrier of understanding - everyone could learn a foreign language if he or she wants to. The point is the difference in origin and history, which builds up people's identity.
@@lonestarr1490 Or have the same enemy for the a very long time facilitating understanding and eventually desensitized to their differences if they don't have greedy leaders.
As an African I think If Africa could be redesigned with borders, possibly redesigning in terms of language groups would make sense. Despite the fact that there are numerous tribes, all tribes can be distinctly grouped into either the Bantu, Cushites, Nilotes, Semites, and Khoisan. Each of the language groups has tribes that share the same culture with slight variations and their dialects are very similar, plus each of the language groups identifies itself with a common origin e.g The Bantu say they came from the Congo Basin, the Nilotes say they came from Misri in Egypt. The language groups share a lot in common among them and would be a solid foundation to build African unity
I know people speaking Bantu Languages who can not understand even one word the other has spoken. Swazi for eg. can not understand people from Malawi etc. Take for instance greetings. Tswana = Dumela, Zulu = Saubona, Shangaan = Ousheni. Do you see the similarities ? All of them Bantu Languages and geographically not living far apart from each other in Southern Africa.
the facts and figures were of great interest, but the theory of what held africa back is bs. this only deals with post colonial africa. much of sub sharan africa was in the stone age when the europeans came in and made things worse. the bigger question is why did the millions of african tribes or groups evolve modern systems like europe, asia, north africa, and middle east?
@@jimnaz5267 Actually what you said is complete bullshit. Africa has had massive great powerful civillisations which had rich culture and history and great wealth and were definitely not in the 'stone age' as you say. Here are some examples (this is not an exhaustive list): • Kingdom Of Kush - The Nubians - Modern day Sudan and South Egypt. Known for mastered weapons and bows (Ta-Seti) . They also built pyramids like the Egyptians and had great culture, language and history. They faught off multiple invasions and once ruled over Egypt for a century. They maintained a complex economy based on trade and industry. •Ancient Egypt - Rich history and culture and wealth. everyone knows about this so no need to go into it further. •The Kingdom Of Aksum - Ethiopia - Rich culture, history, art, literature and trade and power. Aksum became a major player on the commercial route between the Roman Empire and Ancient India. The Aksumite rulers facilitated trade by minting their own Aksumite currency, with the state establishing its hegemony over the declining Kingdom of Kush. • The Mali Empire - which was ruled by Mansa Musa who is arguably the richest person who ever lived due to the mass amounts of gold he possessed and generously gave to the poor. Abubakari II, Mansa (King) of the Mali Empire in the 14th century, led Malian sailors to the Americas, specifically present-day Brazil, almost 200 years before Columbus arrived. All this was pre-colonial ✊🏾✊🏿
@@YoYo-it7ti Having a lot of tradions and gold dosent make thoose countries more developed, and also all the thing you listed were centiuries before the scramble for africa , and during the scramble european power were centiuries ahead in industrial production medicine war docrines and teconologies.
The thing is ethnic-states don't always bring peace, since ethnic minorities are often expelled to establish ethnic states. Another point I would like to make is that modern nation states are a relatively new phenomenon in Europe as well. Before the French Revolution, less than 10% of the population spoke "proper French". Many spoke regional Romance dialects with similarities to French, often unintelligible with each other. Same with the Italian unification. Only 2.5 % spoke Italian back then. They spoke regional Romance dialects/languages. These languages were in dialect continuum with each other. For example, a Lombard speaker shared more similarities with an Occitan speaker and even with a French speaker from across the border than with a dialect speaker in other ends of the country. Unfortunately, regional dialects have now gone out of use. Also, ethnicities in Europe are a result of continuous assimilation. Netherlands speaks Dutch, a Germanic language, but most of their ancestry doesn't come from Germanic tribes.
Poland got lots of German land after World War 2, and lost lots of Polish land to the USSR. So lots of Poles were forcibly expelled from their ancestral lands now in the USSR to the new Poland, and lots of Germans were forcibly expelled from their ancestral lands now in Poland to the new Germany
Some countries with different ethnic groups get along just fine but most... Example is Nigeria where the north and southern part where merged by the British. Different linguistic, religion, and ancestral heritage. Catastrophe. A ticking time bomb
@@ranmaboii Nah, Nigeria will be a powerhouse, Ghana will rise and Rwanda thanks to its president is going to be like Singapore. North African countries are already developed
What I love the most about Atlas Pro is that you explain topics in baby steps so everyone can understand. Nothing is assumed, you explain everything really well!
And he also shows quite a bit of respect, for instance, saying that we should trust the decision to stuck with the borders since there will likely be conflict by changing it.
This’s something I have advocated for during my student activism days. African independence fighters made a very grave mistake in that while seeking independence they were only interested in getting the Europeans out and inheriting the chaotic Empires they created. It didn’t occur to these freedom fighters to address the ills of colonialism by holding a confab with all the various ethnicities to correct the artificial borders that the Europeans had imposed on the peoples without their consent. Even to this day the African elites have not acquired enough sense to realize that the continent can’t move forward politically and economically without first addressing the question of borders.
Gibson Ampaw so it’s Marxist to know the history of a country now. Got it. People like you only want to know what currently going on like the past didn’t influence the state of a lot these countries.
That line you drew at the cape of southern Africa (afrikaans speakers) looks remarkably like the line drawn by the cape exit (secession movement) remarkably accurate.
I have relatives in Mozambique and recommended that they watch this video. They were very impressed with your research into the complicated politics of Sub Saharan Africa. Some things you discussed were way oversimplified, but understandable because it is a 15 minute RUclips video. According to them, you basically nailed it. Good work.
This guy is a typical anti African superiority complex propagandist who wants you to think Africa is nothing but slums mudhuts, war and poverty, like typical western media he uses slum footage to represent Africa rather than a typical street in say Nairobi or any other African city because that looks like any city in a developed country since Africa's cities are at a developed standard some countries are middle income and not considered poor, he only shows south Africa because he's effectively beating his white chest saying what any typical neo nazi says, that the only civilized part is the white populated part, he wants you to think Africa is like Iraq or Syria constantly at war and that its history is nothing but tribes and not kingdoms when in reality, there have been few wars in Africa compared to Europe, and there are no real wars going on today, and Africans are culturally united by INTENT to unify and making solid moves to get it done, Africa has gotten read of the french colonial tax which allowed the French to take 500 billion dollars a year from Africa, and have replaced it with the Ecowas a single native currency for the whole of west Africa, and the new Africa free trade area has been established to get rid of the European division policies like not being allowed to trade with other African countries and needing a visa to travel from one to the other, but a guy like this will never tell the truth about Africa, I am not racist, but I am seriously convinced that virtually no white man is qualified to talk about Africa to a large audience without immense deprogramming and going against the mainstream, because they are all raised by their society to embrace a post colonial racist dehumanization propaganda narrative about Africa and they embrace it willingly because it stimulates ego tremendously like a dopamine drug.
@@khmur3006 Its still accurate, only a third of africa is in any way urbanized, the majority of Sub Saharan Africa is rural and those areas tend to look like shit. Maybe your the biased one.
@@saffron3113 Actually above 40% of Africa is urbanized, so almost half, "those areas tend to look like shit" And just how do you know??? Have you been there? No you haven't, typical lazy whitecentric westerner making up whatever he thinks in his head about Africa based on vague propaganda images, no actual research or traveling but claims with that moronic logic that he's the smartest in the room, you've sat on your ass and lazily regurgitated mainstream propaganda without an ounce of questioning, I've been to 4 African countries and gone to the rural areas, most of them are more and peaceful than the city, they are clean in touch with nature and great for the soul, checkout Rural villages in the hills of Rwanda the people live off grid and in touch with nature right by the lakes no bills, no stress, no poverty, everyone knows how to build a house and grow crops, just like ancient times. The places that look like shit are slum areas that are dependent on the grid, and not nature which is why they have little to noting and are total wage slaves dependent on money but born in completely government neglected areas because of IMF Structural adjustment policies, only a minority of Africans live in places like this, hardly any compared to the rural and city people, slums are a far bigger problem in asia and mexico than in Africa.
@@saffron3113 Even if that was the case (which it isn't) there is no reason to NOT show both sides of Africa, most people in Europe are poor, but we aren't representing Europe by homeless people, that is the equivalent of what the racist western media and all the people brainwashed by it do about Africa, the white media and white geopolitics youtubers intentionally want you to think all of Africa is a slum and never had a civilization, why did he only show the rich part of South Africa? Nigeria has a higher GDP and Tanzania and Rwanda are all around better more stable cleaner countries than SA, because he promotes a white egocentric narrative but uses that fake professional fake intellectual voice to give his racism clear passage right into your minds, they make me sick how badly they want to live in a fantasy land about black people, always lying to themselves and fantasizing and making claims based on their fantasies because they're ego addicts and have a sick predatory lust against black people for no reason which is why whites destroy sabotage every successful rich black community and strong leader, black wallstreet, Roswood and greenwood to name a few all bombed down by whites then after that they say blacks cannot produce a successful community, but when they do, lets bomb it down and kill everyone and make it illegal for them to learn to read and write, over 60 assassinations of good presidents in Africa, most of them done by France as they take 500 billion dollars from the continent a year through colonial tax yet with the IMF preventing African industrialization with SAPs and sanctions and credit freezes and trade cut offs, African countries still manage to produce developed standard cities and towns, yet after trying an anchor to African people its still not enough to make them look subhuman so whites have to lie and make africa seem 1000x less advanced than it actually is wile held back thousands of times from its real potential, its sick how whites are egoist vampires toward blacks, sociopathic endlessly hostile mindset.
@Ancient Rageedi finally someone understands how things are in Africa, true France still control us and we have many issues, but still we are one of the fortunate one , my brothers in the south are always suffering and struggle to have the basic needs of life , like food and water , this goes so much that the African became the image of poverty and struggle, since when Africans are poor? , most richest people in history of humanity were Africans. All i hope is freedom for both my brothers Africans and Arabs , both of them don't deserve what is happening to them .
3:53 A large portion of germany was and still is catholic. Religion didnt play that big of a role during unification compared to Nationalism. Catholics and espacially the church were fought during the "Kulturkampf" under Bismarck but they werent excluding factors for unification
@@pommeterre5198 the 30years war was 200years before the unification of germany started with the 1848 revolution and the last big religious conflict of europe. It was certainly important but the napoleonic wars which unified the germans against the french and nationalism were the main factors of german unification
If the Entente powers, the winners of WW1, had split the Catholic parts of Germany off and transferred them to Austria there wouldn't have been a second world war. Misalignment of borders is literally the greatest problem facing the world today. I'm not even kidding, the effects are that huge.
Unfortunately, colonialism in Africa has ended 150 years to early. The European powers left when the education, 'civilisation building' (= overcoming of all those ethnic--religious enmities between the Africans) and modernisation (think infrastructre, administration, policing, healthcare) was far from being complete. The situation today wouldn't be that worse if Africa would have stayed in its medieval/prehistoric ways before the colonisation. But now you have societies that aren't ready for the power they can wield. It is sad for those Africans, it is sad for the world and we will hear of famines, ethnic massacres and abhorrent poverty for many decades to come. :(
@ They were originally forced to speak Castillan by the same fascist power who had just mass murdered, raped and spoiled them.
4 года назад+27
@@ArturoSubutex Hahahahahahahahahahahahahah Yeah bro, nice fake history Daily reminder that most catalans fought in the Carlist tercios against stalin's dogs.
You forgot one major point for drawing borders: Geography, Nations having enough resources, rivers, deserts, forests and mountains are also an important part of drawing borders
@Lucas Brinster becouse there wasnt a year 0, the calendar starts with year 1, so the first decade ended in 10 ad december 31st, so the next decade starts in 2021. january 1st
I am Nigerian and your analysis was bang on correct. The borders drawn by the colonizers and accepted by our forefathers/leaders is what is causing the instability in my country. I think they should have redrawn those borderlines, take the chance. I'm sure the Biafra civil war would never have happened if they did. Again great work. cheers.
wherever Mikko comes from... obviously finnish name...seems you don´t have anything else to do, than to critize spelling. Poor you. Beside in their native language - malagasy - it is written with K.
As Madagascar is ethnically homogenuous country, there were no major conflicts inside it. So, possibly if Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo peoples had their independent countries in current territory of Nigeria might have been much more peaceful and prosperous compared to situation now.
The problem is that imperialist powers imposed the concept of a nation-state onto peoples that had no say in the matter, with the borders hungrily fought over by people who considered land a resource to extract "value" from. African problems require African solutions carried out cooperatively by African peoples.
It has very little to do with proffit and everything to do with risk of revolt. A multicultural multinational socity can not organize a rebelion. Its the same reason they are now filling Europe full of every nation, to reduce risk of revolt.
Africa is very diverse. Even in nigeria there are 250 ethnicity with only 3 being the significant ones. And they get on fine. "Filling europe with every nation"
@@anonymoust2877 Except for with the sponsored extremist Fulani groups that are encroaching on Southern territory. Nigeria is a huge example of a place that needs rebellion and a total start over.
only 300 000 congo people lived in central Africa, so 95% of lands you claim they never settled until Whites arrived and your population exploded and occupied Whites land in Africa
Yeah, the goal isn't to stop all fighting but to reduce it as much as possible. Conflict is inevitable though, and just as the nation's of Europe warred for centuries after they first started forming, Africa is probably gonna see an awful lot of awful trouble spots for a while, but it is getting on its feet, and way faster than many expected.
@Michael Ardenté no. i live in india. i studied history for five years in school. three years indian history, two years world history. barely anything about africa.
“African studies” lmao. If you went to college and majored in that, you’ll be living a pretty shit life with a college loan and a worthless degree. Unless you got a scholarship or parents paid for it.
Disclaimer at 8:23 “These don’t match up 100% perfectly. I know this . Perhaps you can see it best at lake Nasser and its corresponding language area shifted slightly above. That’s just what happens when you translate maps with different projections into this one. But as you can see they’re not all that far off., and get the idea across all the same. If you want to take a look at any of the fantastic original maps any of the maps in this video were derived from, check the description.”
@@explt9150 Dropped Christianity? You must be dumb to reject Jesus Christ and God. Your parents must not have cared for you or they do but you rejected them as well
I love how he represented Somalia as it should be along the border lines. The original greater Somalia lines including Ethiopia and Kenya and we move and appreciate you btw 😍😍😍🙏🏾
Funny things is that Ethiopia literally names its states on the names of the peoples it belongs to. Like Oromiya and Somalia are obviously Cushitic and the Ethiopians know it, just like Southern Nations and Gambela should not be part of ethiopia but part of say Kenya and South Sudan. Same thing happened with Syria, under the ottoman empire many now Turkish states were literally part of the Syria governorates yet when Turkey became a country they decided to keep them and move turks to them to make them turkish majority. Sad world we live in.
You forgot the Berber languages that are not Touareg :O They didn't come from outside like other Afro-Asiatic languages, but were always in North West Africa
@@SteveB-nx2uo _"They had resources, and they weren't using them"_ Imagine a scenario where aliens invaded our planet, dug deep into the earth's core to obtain a resource we have no use for (let's call it Earthium), and raped and enslaved humans to maximize their benefits. Us: "Hey bro, please get off our planet." Aliens: "Why? Earthium is just sitting there and you guys aren't using it lol." Us: "Still, it's our planet. We've been here since forever. Please leave." Aliens: I'm sorry. Last I checked, nobody owns the Earth's core. Us: "Fine. Take it. But please, just stop raping, killing, and enslaving us." Aliens: Hey, don't judge! If we hadn't come to Earth, you guys would just continue to rape, kill, and enslave yourselves like you humans have always done. Don't complain now that WE'RE the ones raping, killing, and enslaving you. Besides, we promise that your descendants hundreds of years from now will eventually live a better life than you. But first, we have to kill and exploit the human race in order to build a better future for your great great great grandchildren whom you'll never meet! This is literally every conversation between a rational person and a white colonial apologist.
I come from northern Sudan it took blood and civil war cuz the british colonization left them ignorant and racist against themselves adding to this the idea of trap that most colonised countries have revolutionised tendency make them try to solve problems out of diplomatic protocol.... The last illustration u can also see in cuba
@@mohamedelfatih9826 So you're saying the West made them look down on their neighbors as better than and made them think that revolution was a legitimate way to bring changes?
Yes but for a different reason. The oil field is found on the south. The west thought it would be great experience to have a deal the way it happened with south korea so lets have south Sudan and work on making it work. And for the North make them the way it happened with North korea dictatorship and poor. But what happened was shoking. Soon as south Sudan got its dependence the fought against each other which changed west plan and made them looked for the North Sudan trying to instill democracy. When i say west i mean USA in particular since most european countries have already instilled their experience in many african countries making USA the only caucasian country yet to have shown their democratic view on africa
@@seismicvertigo345 The conflict between the South and the North is very complex. In its beginning, the British conquered Sudan, and for a good 20 years established a close borders rule, wherein citizens from either side were rarely allowed to mix. During this time, the North was prospering more and had a better economy. And when Sudan gained independence, the Southerners were unfortunately denied the chance to be active in the governments/Parliaments, and thus decided to go to war. So while some people would just blame the British, I feel this one is on us as Sudanese. They should have either had a say in how affairs are run, or granted autonomy/independence early on to avoid this ridiculous 50 year war. Hopefully, our Southern neighbours can still find peace.
@Sh Sh you know there is a part called north africa where the native there are of light skin because they come from amazigh and berber tribes, and then mid africa is for all the sahrawis and the bottom half is where you'll find the more dark colour.
@@yonastewelu294 exactly, this is the racism thats been growing inside our continent, i am an amazigh berber from morroco we were always the native people of morocco before there was any arab invasion. Anyway africa is where life started so no matter what colour you are it all started here !
lol Asia is the most diverse, Muslim Arabs, communist Eastern Asia, brown Hindu south Asians, southeast Asians, pale Russians, Mongolians, Asia has the continent with most atheist, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism lol. Same goes with climate, cold tundra of Siberia, high mountains of Tibet, dirt rivers of India, ancient Mesopotamia, holiest sight for 3 monotheistic religion, tropical jungle of indochina, orangutan of Borneo, Asia has once largest empire mongol empire, Silk Road etc. Asia is more diverse than Africa and Africa haven’t done dog shit to world history.
I love how you compared the redrawing of borders/ building of nations with the building of the German national state. Giving examples like this helps to grasp the proposals and also shows that the solution you presented has worked before! Thank you for this insightful video!
The answer sadly is no. There are FAAAR too many small ethnicities and as long as resources are so scarce, killing the other guys is always an option. Even if we split africa into lots of tiny countries, they would still invade each other and instability would persist.
It's kind of ironic how the same people who advocate for multiculturalism in Europe and America say that Africa is a failed continent because borders made African countries multicultural.
"So imagine someone and drawing a country that only included half of Spain, half of France and also all those other guys." Not hard to imagine, The history of Europe is full of weird border cuts between cultures. It happens whenever someone invades like during the Mongol invasion back in the 1200s and when the Moors invaded in the 8th-10th centuries. Look at the history of the Armenian Genocide. Armenia was chopped up by invading forces and a portion was given to the Ottomans by Iran in 1566. This "problem with European borders" led to the creation of the word Genocide to describe what happened.
The Basque people don't have to imagine that either. France and Spain: "Your land is now split between two countries neither of which is controlled by you!" The Basque: "Wait, what?!"
0:08, I think you mean Ghana not Guinea; Guinea is more west and closer to the Atlantic Ocean. Plus Ghan was called the Gold Coast🇬🇭( I’m from there btw)
The eastern half of Ethiopia(as its recognised today) the Ogaden region was given to the Ethiopian empire illegally by the British in the 40s after many years of it being colonised It’s ethnic Somalis lands This cause the 1977 wars between Somalia and Ethiopia
Leonis Krigorian I didn’t say that about the border problems(which I don’t think are Africa’s biggest problem anyways) I wasn’t sure about your comment that Africans couldn’t fix their problems themselves. I don’t think that the results of accepting Europe’s “help” on any issue would create an outcome that you or anyone would want for Africa. European and American imperialism is the root cause for many of Africa’s economic and political instability issues and since political instability in Africa is profitable to the western world(since it allows for the destabilization of liberation movements and getting cheap labor from desperate people which many industries exploit) it’s unlikely that any European and American interference in Africa will be positive for them.
@@sapphireblaze7681 Oh right, all the African sweat shops.Some populations are OK with genocide.If that's what you consider Africa solving it's own problems then have at it... I guess?
My sister had a classmate that moved to America from what she calls simply ‘the Congo’. Rather, this girl’s entire Congo village moved to America to feel safe and have water security. They moved at roughly the same time, and so there’s an area in or near Denver that’s this relocated Congo village. They all speak French, English, the know Xhosa, and their own unique language. They prefer French and their own thing, and are happy to teach outsiders the basics.
@Alex Mercer Yup, Partition is standard policy for withdrawing from a former colony. Draw the new borders half-way down any given ethnic, religious, or language group to maximise conflict within them (draw the borders first, then 'grant' each region 'independence' separately as you withdraw your administrations from each one at a time, otherwise they'll just redraw the borders peacefully after you've gone), then exacerbate resource 'scarcity' by funding ard arming the lowest bidders to export all their stuff to you.
mfaizsyahmi. It was intentional. It was thought by the Europeans that allowing multiple ethnic group instead of one majority ethnicity would cause disunity. Making them more likely to work with the Europeans than each other.
@@kingchubs It was a well-planned strategy....now we facing too problem to handle. They knew no matter how long it takes for us to get to civilization, we will be too strong for them to control. This is why whenever they see that you are building a technology that can overpower them, they kill you. Some people still don't know.
I love your videos because of how informative yet unbiased they are. They always take a more positive outlook without sacrificing talking about the issues faced.
An outstanding documentary, thank you. A very harsh reality for our African friends yet it's nice knowing that you ended things with an optimistic perspective. I'm sure they will flourish. And we all must help. We are all Africans.
You are forgetting the context of the phrase. He decides not to include it because it's not only just isolated to one state, but is a small minority in said state
@@EntropicMalevolence there are minorities in nearly all African regions. I guess it's more relevant which mentality the people developed towards each other and the other ethnicities. After all, according to the ethnic maps, Kenya should be in total anarchy while Somalia should prosper.
The reason Islam spread in North Africa was because of many different Empires and Caliphates. *Shows the Roman Empire* Me: So anyway, I started Crusading.
@@more2much696 Iraq didn't exist until after WWI and Mesopotamia before the spread of Islam had mostly traditional, polytheistic religions as well as Zoroastrianism, the OG monotheistic religion. The Assyrian Orthodox Church is mostly in the North.
this is really late, but this video and the us one were both really great! if you enjoyed making them, it would be wonderful to see more videos in this series. there are lots of poorly drawn borders in the world
Oh man, if you only knew how costly is to arrange an expedition for exploration or conquest you would realize why they tried to hold on to their colonialism as much as they could.
Well international law of the day said if you cannot defend your territory it's free real estate. It was all done within international law of the time. China is doing the exact same thing right now in Africa
I love how you put all this time and effort into researching the culture of these people just to throw it out and trust their decision to keep it as it is. It shows a lot of respect and trust for the people involved with those nations.
Alice 5 who are “these people” believe it or not, the various leaders of Africa aren’t just gonna all come together and rearrange Africa’s borders because someone made a RUclips video. The leaders of African countries don’t all work together, they’re not all one hivemind. If you want things to change you have to force it, the current leaders will probably be too invested to start completely rearranging the entire continent.
The end was very encouraging. Hope people in Africa will keep on moving forward and build a brighter future for themselves. Thanks for helping non Africans to better understand how incredibly diverse this continent is!
People often overlook the importance of infrastructure and logistics. Local industry, commerce and economy cannot function without the proper means to distribute resources. It literally connects the people to employment opportunities and unify the communities into one functioning nation. Represent cultural heritage in provinces or prefectures if need be.
Redrawing Africa's borders is problematic both because there is so much to fix and also because of the disruption it would cause. The best way to resolve the issue is to weaken the internal boundaries to the point of meaninglessness via free trade and a common market, free movement, common citizenship, common institutions and improvements in inter-national infrastructure, better connecting the economies and peoples of the continent. Anything less than such unification is at best a half-solution.
@@sareeyemanusqaame8723 The EU has prevented war within its borders for 70 years. Is it working perfectly? Of course not, these things take time, as long as it takes to create a common identity, and for this identity to strengthen sufficiently to supercede the national identities, but I wouldn't call it a failure either. I'd also suggest that Africa's chances are no worse, possibly somewhat better, due to the rather blurry nature of most of its borders, and commonalities in its history over the past couple centuries. Give it a century or so, the important thing is to get the ball rolling sooner rather than later. Thus far I would say that the ball has been created, in the form of the AU, at risk of expanding this metaphor probably too far, but has been allowed to grind to a halt in the mud, with only tentative efforts having been made to get it on the road for the most part, having only just reached it recently with the agreement of the AfCFTA. With the EU we might say that the ball got onto the road back in 1957 with the Treaty of Rome/ EEC and has been pushed half of the way to the finish line but is wobbling a bit and at risk of falling off the side into a ditch, but it is still more or less on the road and can be brought back on track albeit with much momentum lost. I hope that both the EU and the AU succeed in forging new, common identities, and ultimately unify under single federal governments, as the U.S. did.
@@sareeyemanusqaame8723 Well, first, it's been working fine for the Europe, Europe is now more peaceful than is has ever been. Second, Africa is fundamentally different to Europe. Yes, the people are still just normal people, but the continent itself is different: the weather is far more erratic. This makes agriculture far less viable, it makes cities far less viable, it makes staying in one place far less viable. There's a good reason why the most successful nations to come out of Africa, historically, either had a small, stable, rich area for agriculture OR were primarily trading empires. A LOT of Africa has classically had a slow, but nomadic tradition, allowing them to stay in the areas where agriculture is largely viable by moving with those areas. The concept of borders at all doesn't necessarily work for all of Africa, after all, they are a fairly arbitrary concept made up by Europeans to end the various religious wars tearing it apart. Borders, as we think of them today, were designed as a solution to end Europe's wars. That doesn't mean they'll end all of them.
And when a bunch of nomads invade agricultural regions or people of different religions and ethnicities flood more prosperous regions, what happens then?????
That was an insane amount of work put into one video. Thank you very much for this. Very interesting stuff! What a complicated area in comparison to North America!
Yeah, he glossed over quite a bit of Germany's diversity/overhomogenized it, so it's to be expected. Germany's unification was used as one of the opening examples in support of the argument, so it really stands out. He used it as an example of factors that reduced conflict, but Germany's borders are _much more_ a product _of_ conflicts, _hundreds of years of conflicts_ .
@@FireRupee You are the snowflake in an avalanche, happy for not being the one who caused it, but blind to your own participation :D I read the comments you know, so I already know what you are telling me.
Hey Atlas Pro! This video is my favorite of all of your creations so far!! Your research seems thorough, and it looks like you really deliberated the way you conducted it carefully. Plus I like the new intro!! This episode seems to have seen a major increase in production quality from your previous vids (which were also quite good). Additionally, you chose a very interesting topic, and I am leaving this video feeling like I have really learned more about the fundamentals behind African demographics and politics. Thanks for making these videos!
I keep learning about AFRICA my Continent... Thanks for the Convid-19 which made us stay at home and learn about our Continent Even now the lockdown has ENDED... I'm more conscious of my continent since this 2020 than I was. ❤️❤️🇳🇬
Africa is going through its own middle ages, 1000 years ago Europe was exactly the same. maybe 100 years from now Africa will be a far far better place.
Emperor Penguin This medieval condition has been created by Europe - larger national development in the Southern part was halted by North Western European colonialism ...
The Hoplite Lol - trying to be provocative - actually, you do not deserve an answer - please check under what conditions the independence of African states came into being - payments and European investor and trade monopolies stipulated - plus neocolonial brainwash ... these Chinese loans were and are absolutely unnecessary financially only for the benefit for the nepotistic and egomaniac elite ... a sign of mental Trauma which will probably never he overcome ... Chinese are merely reaping the fruits of this insanity ... Europe planted the seeds ... Good day
@@simon8242 :) it's best to not feed the trolls, sadly. There are plenty of maps and documents that contradict that (likely to be blocked) poster. I mean, Mansa Musa is one easy famous example :)
There are also other things to consider: Europe also experienced a lot of violence of various kinds (ethnic, religious, resources, etc.) and nationalism that was supposed to unite people in theory often resulted in dividing them as well. It's just the European borders reflect the consequences of those conflicts rather than being the source of the conflicts, like in some places of Africa. Furthermore, languages and religions often change throughout history, so uniting nations based on those values might not be a good choice for many African countries. Rather, they can use shared historical events and ideas to strive for in order to build their nations. There are a lot of countries that are very diverse linguistically, racially and religiously like Russia or India which are relatively at peace. Alternatively, you can have a very charismatic and charming leader or very tyrannical one who will unite the country with his/her leadership skills or with an iron fist (although having latter one is not preferable).
@@alyssashady "came from a higher educated society. Africa so far doesn't have such a tradition." How so? There are lots of people who have pursued or who are pursuing higher education in Africa.
Europe's nations tended to expand up to natural borders. Look at the topography of Romania, Spain, and Italy - all are protected by mountain ranges on their borders. This barrier to movement allowed the nations a relative safety, and they had more chances to develop without exogenous shocks. Now look at Africa's topography - it's mostly flat. People can easily move around - this means it's significantly easier for bandits or invasions to wreck a nascent country. Now, if you're clever, you'll point out that from France to Russia is a relatively flat land, so maybe that invalidates the above. Sort of. Armies did tend to move East-West along this broad route - in ww2, the name of the game was moving tank divisions across this route. But historically, winter would make invasions infeasible for something like half the year. Africa doesn't have such severe winters. So my conclusion is that ease of movement causes instability. Now go ace that essay test, my young padawans.
I started yesterday watching literally every single Atlas Pro episode in order... hard to believe it took me this long until he had an intro animation.
@@timteichmann6830 Saying "half of Germany is catholic" presents the catholic at almost twice its actual size. That's a big difference, and based on the idea that "half of Germany is catholic", the catholic church has way more influence than it should have according to the number of people it represents.
@@cam4234 Deutsche in itself means the citizens of Germany. A word with Deutsche in front of it makes it an adjective. Lastly the language germans speak is Deutsch
@@cam4234 Yes, he probably google translated "German". If you say "German car", it would be "Deutsche Auto" in German. Whereas "German" the language is "Deutsch". I'm Danish, not German btw.
@@teamoptimistic9440 the coptics are a minority in several mostly muslim nations, which is why there is currently what can reasonably be called a Genocide being emacted against them.
I am from Kenya and, in my opinion, issues in Africa are due to a multitude of factors rather than ethnic divide within countries. Just like several other regions, tribal and ethnic conflicts are not unique to Africa. For instance, look at India, China, and even Belgium (the Flanders vs the Wallonia), these regions also suffer similar incompatibilities. Nonetheless, one thing that stands out from the rest is corruption, mainly due to poor policies.
Karani Desmond Europeans failed to create solid education and infrastructure for the colonies because how would they make profit you essentially started from near scratch 60 years ago. That is why the leaders are corrupt. Also resources, coups and the Cold War.
And what about East African Union? It sounds like a good way forward. What do you think about it?
Nigeria has over 300 ethnic groups. Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa are the largest. These ethnic groups have almost nothing in common. Yorubas are a 50/50 between Islam and Christianity.
@Ancient Rageedi Are we still going to blame others for our shortcomings?. We know the corruption and abuse of power from top to bottom is a huge issue.Africa has 53 countries, if we split down by ethnic groups, then you may have maybe 100-150 countries in Africa.
@Bazagi Derp *cough cough*
Holy hell he has an intro now!
what a badass
As soon as it played I scrolled down to see who was talking about it lol
@@reidmaxwell8874 same me too haha
I feel like it should be shorter tbqh
Feel like it should come earlier in the video
I love how he emphasized on Nigeria. today in nigeria there is a distinct division of the country into three sub nations: Odudwa land (yoruba), Arewa (hausa) and Biafra (igbo). The colonizers really caused a problem because all they saw were black people rather than their different tribes and languages.
Yeah, I was looking for a comment that would talk about Nigeria, because it's like the biggest example. I'm hearing a lot of developments about this issue and the debates: each major group splitting vs. staying and restructuring Nigeria. I'm not sure about either argument, but in this crazy time, it has to be addressed.
- However I think what you say about the colonizers is actually the opposite. Yes, we are all black, but the British who went to Nigeria knew that we have many obvious differences, especially in North, Southwest, and Southeast: Religion, culture, language, language group, etc. Lord Lugard reported on these differences among us. We were already divided, and The British knew exactly what they were doing when they amalgamated us into one Nigeria. They make profit from it, despite the tribalism and ethnic marginalization it's caused. So they and we are not ignorant of all this. I don't think we have truly been one as a nation but whether we will ultimately continue or all secede remains to be seen.
@@daveo2431 so what do u think is the best solution. The peaceful separation to solve problems, remarginalization or the overlooking of tribal differences.
@@alphalijahsworld9010 I'm not sure. I think if Nigeria can have a successful revolution and better management, along with an end to the terrorism and territorial takeovers then we won't really need separation. Even in hard times it wouldn't be strongly suggested. But the situation as I'm hearing is so dire and crazy, so people are pushing for separation. I think because of the situation separation is better, but I dunno how it would be maintained. So I think until there's another threat of war as one nation, then we should all split and find other ways to separately interact.
@@daveo2431 At this stage total separation is not practicable bcos Nigerians have become too intertwined with one another esp thru intertribal marriages and others.
What we need now is a confederal system like it was practiced in our elders days after independence in 1960 where each region was nearly autonomous and only paid tax to the Federal Govt.
Back then we had 3 regions- Western, Northern and Eastern and practised parliamentary system... Older people said that system worked but the military came and ruined it with a unitary system where Federal Govt is in charge of everything...
today we can make it 6 to fit the geopolitical zones in existence.
Many people including some politicians are advocating for that system and I believe in future Nigeria may likely adopt it since a lot of people are in support
The europeans were aware of the different tribes. For better or worse, the colonial administration, the missionary effort and anthropology studies conducted by universities were involved in the local populations. It just didnt factor into the border mapping at all since it was imperial in nature and the only consideration was how to divide resources between other european nations.
As an African, I have not seen a more accurate summary of our predicament.
I should add the peculiar case of my country, Rwanda, which is one of the most homogeneous in the world: same language, culture and centuries of harmonious cohabitation. Also we're like 90% Christian.
Luckily the colonialists didn't cram us into our larger neighbours.
However, because the kingdom of Rwanda was much bigger than the current country and stretched to parts of present-day Uganda and DRC, a huge Rwandan ethnic minority was formed in those countries, which inevitably led to conflicts that still rage on today.
Not to mention the ethno-linguistic uniformity did nothing to stop us from killing each other over ethnic subdivisions, so called Hutus, Tutsis and Twa.
Oh well.
your country is well respected compared to your neighbors, congrats
rodan293 it’s neighbours are respected to , Kenya and Tanzania
Please don’t ever forget that those same “ethnic” groups were a colonial construct. Those same groups were social classes prior to the experimentation of the Belgians...
@@Shukamimana they're not colonial constructs, but colonialism profited from them
slow down That’s incorrect but people will believe what they want, but only the truth shall set us free. We Rwandans shared, and continue to do so, a common national culture, language and tradition which are the basis of an ethnic group. We are one.
Oh wow this is really good. Usually geography is just an analysis of what's going on in the world, but seeing someone make recommendations and weighing the pros and cons of the recommendations goes beyond what I know as conventional geography.
well this is really geopolitics,geography is more physical based.
I think the reason its good is because it was almost all analysis. It feels like when most people bring up the topic of african borders they complain about colonialism and conclude that the obvious solution is to let africa redraw the borders, without actually looking into what that route means.
I feel like one could also point out that in a lot of African nations, European languages of their former colonizers, like English, French and Portuguese are being used as lingua francas and thus the “language problem” is kinda circumvent. Great video! Really like how many different examples you always show.
And they'd do well to continue educating Africans in these languages. Being able to communicate adequately will lead to a more stable country and continent.
That doesn't fully circumvents the problem. You still got a clear separation between one group and another, they're just able to understand what the other group shouts at them.
The point with different languages is not a barrier of understanding - everyone could learn a foreign language if he or she wants to. The point is the difference in origin and history, which builds up people's identity.
@Xxx Xxx four???? Africans speak at least six. I myself speak 5. French, Italia, English, Creole, Portuguese
@@lonestarr1490 Or have the same enemy for the a very long time facilitating understanding and eventually desensitized to their differences if they don't have greedy leaders.
@@tamaralaird3389 What kind of creole? Your native language with a mixture of Indo-European?
I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL! THE SUBJECTS ARE ALWAYS INTERESTING ✌🏽
Yep me too i love history science and geography
chity Man
I LIKE YOUR ENTHUSIASM, KEEP IT UP CHAMP
His channel rocks!!!! Love his videos !!
GO CITY!!
As an African I think If Africa could be redesigned with borders, possibly redesigning in terms of language groups would make sense. Despite the fact that there are numerous tribes, all tribes can be distinctly grouped into either the Bantu, Cushites, Nilotes, Semites, and Khoisan. Each of the language groups has tribes that share the same culture with slight variations and their dialects are very similar, plus each of the language groups identifies itself with a common origin e.g The Bantu say they came from the Congo Basin, the Nilotes say they came from Misri in Egypt. The language groups share a lot in common among them and would be a solid foundation to build African unity
Tbh we need to create a language that will be forced upon the African children..the way china forces Mandarin on foreign students
The issue is that no one is willing to give up land just like that
Theres pros and also cons with that plan
@@leafeatingcow1109 more cons tbh
I know people speaking Bantu Languages who can not understand even one word the other has spoken. Swazi for eg. can not understand people from Malawi etc. Take for instance greetings. Tswana = Dumela, Zulu = Saubona, Shangaan = Ousheni. Do you see the similarities ? All of them Bantu Languages and geographically not living far apart from each other in Southern Africa.
I learned more about Africa in the last fifteen minutes than I did in all of my schooling.
the facts and figures were of great interest, but the theory of what held africa back is bs. this only deals with post colonial africa. much of sub sharan africa was in the stone age when the europeans came in and made things worse. the bigger question is why did the millions of african tribes or groups evolve modern systems like europe, asia, north africa, and middle east?
@@jimnaz5267 elaborate
@@jimnaz5267 Actually what you said is complete bullshit. Africa has had massive great powerful civillisations which had rich culture and history and great wealth and were definitely not in the 'stone age' as you say.
Here are some examples (this is not an exhaustive list):
• Kingdom Of Kush - The Nubians - Modern day Sudan and South Egypt. Known for mastered weapons and bows (Ta-Seti) . They also built pyramids like the Egyptians and had great culture, language and history. They faught off multiple invasions and once ruled over Egypt for a century. They maintained a complex economy based on trade and industry.
•Ancient Egypt - Rich history and culture and wealth. everyone knows about this so no need to go into it further.
•The Kingdom Of Aksum - Ethiopia - Rich culture, history, art, literature and trade and power. Aksum became a major player on the commercial route between the Roman Empire and Ancient India. The Aksumite rulers facilitated trade by minting their own Aksumite currency, with the state establishing its hegemony over the declining Kingdom of Kush.
• The Mali Empire - which was ruled by Mansa Musa who is arguably the richest person who ever lived due to the mass amounts of gold he possessed and generously gave to the poor. Abubakari II, Mansa (King) of the Mali Empire in the 14th century, led Malian sailors to the Americas, specifically present-day Brazil, almost 200 years before Columbus arrived.
All this was pre-colonial
✊🏾✊🏿
@@YoYo-it7ti Having a lot of tradions and gold dosent make thoose countries more developed, and also all the thing you listed were centiuries before the scramble for africa , and during the scramble european power were centiuries ahead in industrial production medicine war docrines and teconologies.
@@bandrea432 ahem zulus.
The effort put into research and editing of this video is just unbelievable, keep up the good work!!
AMEN!
Yep..whole lotta info. Good job.
I like the new intro.
ng zhongde u can read one article and get all this info
@@jennyappletree8839 please share 🙏🏼
Europe: So anyway I started drawin'
lmao Why does this only have 1 like
lol
With the cunning use of flags
Dead.
@@Psycandy NO FLAG NO COUNTRY, THATS THE RULES WHICH... I JUST MADE UP AND IM BACKING IT UP WITH THIS GUN LENT BY THE... NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION
The thing is ethnic-states don't always bring peace, since ethnic minorities are often expelled to establish ethnic states. Another point I would like to make is that modern nation states are a relatively new phenomenon in Europe as well. Before the French Revolution, less than 10% of the population spoke "proper French". Many spoke regional Romance dialects with similarities to French, often unintelligible with each other. Same with the Italian unification. Only 2.5 % spoke Italian back then. They spoke regional Romance dialects/languages. These languages were in dialect continuum with each other. For example, a Lombard speaker shared more similarities with an Occitan speaker and even with a French speaker from across the border than with a dialect speaker in other ends of the country. Unfortunately, regional dialects have now gone out of use. Also, ethnicities in Europe are a result of continuous assimilation. Netherlands speaks Dutch, a Germanic language, but most of their ancestry doesn't come from Germanic tribes.
Poland got lots of German land after World War 2, and lost lots of Polish land to the USSR. So lots of Poles were forcibly expelled from their ancestral lands now in the USSR to the new Poland, and lots of Germans were forcibly expelled from their ancestral lands now in Poland to the new Germany
By the way, the French are also a Germanic people, but they speak a Latin Romance language
Some countries with different ethnic groups get along just fine but most... Example is Nigeria where the north and southern part where merged by the British. Different linguistic, religion, and ancestral heritage. Catastrophe. A ticking time bomb
@@user-dg5vx8li8f The Gauls were Celts
@@chuckghaly The celts were conquered by a Germanic tribe, the franks, which largely replaced or assimilated the gauls
"The continent still has its brightest years ahead of it"
I like the sound of this.
Amazing Tunisia روائع تونس HHHHHHHHHHH capitalism baded countries will never let that happen
@@ranmaboii Nah, Nigeria will be a powerhouse, Ghana will rise and Rwanda thanks to its president is going to be like Singapore. North African countries are already developed
WALTER WALTER South Africa is developed also
China has entered chat.
@Indian Stars US GDP is also greater than that of all of Europe combined LOL. California alone has a bigger GDP than the UK so it's not just Africa.
What I love the most about Atlas Pro is that you explain topics in baby steps so everyone can understand. Nothing is assumed, you explain everything really well!
And he also shows quite a bit of respect, for instance, saying that we should trust the decision to stuck with the borders since there will likely be conflict by changing it.
This’s something I have advocated for during my student activism days. African independence fighters made a very grave mistake in that while seeking independence they were only interested in getting the Europeans out and inheriting the chaotic Empires they created. It didn’t occur to these freedom fighters to address the ills of colonialism by holding a confab with all the various ethnicities to correct the artificial borders that the Europeans had imposed on the peoples without their consent. Even to this day the African elites have not acquired enough sense to realize that the continent can’t move forward politically and economically without first addressing the question of borders.
Very thoughtful comment Daniel! You can still work towards building an economic union among African states
daniel chukwu I’m not saying all their problems are solved but money African nations are growing really fast. They aren’t exactly not moving foward
Gibson Ampaw Madagascar was Colonized by the French, exploiting its people and resources.
@daniel chukwu what are your opinions on the AU
Gibson Ampaw so it’s Marxist to know the history of a country now. Got it. People like you only want to know what currently going on like the past didn’t influence the state of a lot these countries.
That line you drew at the cape of southern Africa (afrikaans speakers) looks remarkably like the line drawn by the cape exit (secession movement) remarkably accurate.
Is nogal né? Maar kwit ons het darem ook groot dele van die Noorde gekoop ook..
I have relatives in Mozambique and recommended that they watch this video. They were very impressed with your research into the complicated politics of Sub Saharan Africa. Some things you discussed were way oversimplified, but understandable because it is a 15 minute RUclips video. According to them, you basically nailed it. Good work.
This guy is a typical anti African superiority complex propagandist who wants you to think Africa is nothing but slums mudhuts, war and poverty, like typical western media he uses slum footage to represent Africa rather than a typical street in say Nairobi or any other African city because that looks like any city in a developed country since Africa's cities are at a developed standard some countries are middle income and not considered poor, he only shows south Africa because he's effectively beating his white chest saying what any typical neo nazi says, that the only civilized part is the white populated part, he wants you to think Africa is like Iraq or Syria constantly at war and that its history is nothing but tribes and not kingdoms when in reality, there have been few wars in Africa compared to Europe, and there are no real wars going on today, and Africans are culturally united by INTENT to unify and making solid moves to get it done, Africa has gotten read of the french colonial tax which allowed the French to take 500 billion dollars a year from Africa, and have replaced it with the Ecowas a single native currency for the whole of west Africa, and the new Africa free trade area has been established to get rid of the European division policies like not being allowed to trade with other African countries and needing a visa to travel from one to the other, but a guy like this will never tell the truth about Africa, I am not racist, but I am seriously convinced that virtually no white man is qualified to talk about Africa to a large audience without immense deprogramming and going against the mainstream, because they are all raised by their society to embrace a post colonial racist dehumanization propaganda narrative about Africa and they embrace it willingly because it stimulates ego tremendously like a dopamine drug.
@@khmur3006 did you hear the last 3 mins of the video?
@@khmur3006 Its still accurate, only a third of africa is in any way urbanized, the majority of Sub Saharan Africa is rural and those areas tend to look like shit. Maybe your the biased one.
@@saffron3113 Actually above 40% of Africa is urbanized, so almost half, "those areas tend to look like shit" And just how do you know??? Have you been there? No you haven't, typical lazy whitecentric westerner making up whatever he thinks in his head about Africa based on vague propaganda images, no actual research or traveling but claims with that moronic logic that he's the smartest in the room, you've sat on your ass and lazily regurgitated mainstream propaganda without an ounce of questioning, I've been to 4 African countries and gone to the rural areas, most of them are more and peaceful than the city, they are clean in touch with nature and great for the soul, checkout Rural villages in the hills of Rwanda the people live off grid and in touch with nature right by the lakes no bills, no stress, no poverty, everyone knows how to build a house and grow crops, just like ancient times.
The places that look like shit are slum areas that are dependent on the grid, and not nature which is why they have little to noting and are total wage slaves dependent on money but born in completely government neglected areas because of IMF Structural adjustment policies, only a minority of Africans live in places like this, hardly any compared to the rural and city people, slums are a far bigger problem in asia and mexico than in Africa.
@@saffron3113 Even if that was the case (which it isn't) there is no reason to NOT show both sides of Africa, most people in Europe are poor, but we aren't representing Europe by homeless people, that is the equivalent of what the racist western media and all the people brainwashed by it do about Africa, the white media and white geopolitics youtubers intentionally want you to think all of Africa is a slum and never had a civilization, why did he only show the rich part of South Africa? Nigeria has a higher GDP and Tanzania and Rwanda are all around better more stable cleaner countries than SA, because he promotes a white egocentric narrative but uses that fake professional fake intellectual voice to give his racism clear passage right into your minds, they make me sick how badly they want to live in a fantasy land about black people, always lying to themselves and fantasizing and making claims based on their fantasies because they're ego addicts and have a sick predatory lust against black people for no reason which is why whites destroy sabotage every successful rich black community and strong leader, black wallstreet, Roswood and greenwood to name a few all bombed down by whites then after that they say blacks cannot produce a successful community, but when they do, lets bomb it down and kill everyone and make it illegal for them to learn to read and write, over 60 assassinations of good presidents in Africa, most of them done by France as they take 500 billion dollars from the continent a year through colonial tax yet with the IMF preventing African industrialization with SAPs and sanctions and credit freezes and trade cut offs, African countries still manage to produce developed standard cities and towns, yet after trying an anchor to African people its still not enough to make them look subhuman so whites have to lie and make africa seem 1000x less advanced than it actually is wile held back thousands of times from its real potential, its sick how whites are egoist vampires toward blacks, sociopathic endlessly hostile mindset.
I never really understood African politics and this helped me understand it much better. Great video!
No one does , even politicians here don't understand what are they doing
@Mwaniki Mwaniki Algeria , i know we are close to Europe and we have arab heritage, but we are the same as any other African country.
@@rainvast8982
Same in germany... Our politicans doesen t care about the young generation.
@Ancient Rageedi finally someone understands how things are in Africa, true France still control us and we have many issues, but still we are one of the fortunate one , my brothers in the south are always suffering and struggle to have the basic needs of life , like food and water , this goes so much that the African became the image of poverty and struggle, since when Africans are poor? , most richest people in history of humanity were Africans. All i hope is freedom for both my brothers Africans and Arabs , both of them don't deserve what is happening to them .
@Ancient Rageedi Not really, African problem is mainly governance and resources. When resources are evenly distributed you normally have peace.
3:53 A large portion of germany was and still is catholic. Religion didnt play that big of a role during unification compared to Nationalism. Catholics and espacially the church were fought during the "Kulturkampf" under Bismarck but they werent excluding factors for unification
Yes it was like 50/50 before the Second World War, when people became less and less religious and left catholic and protestant church organizations
@@maxx1014 more like 2/1 but yeah
They had a world war because of religion (the 30 year war, 1618) so it played a big role just they didn’t manage to unify around it
@@pommeterre5198 the 30years war was 200years before the unification of germany started with the 1848 revolution and the last big religious conflict of europe. It was certainly important but the napoleonic wars which unified the germans against the french and nationalism were the main factors of german unification
If the Entente powers, the winners of WW1, had split the Catholic parts of Germany off and transferred them to Austria there wouldn't have been a second world war. Misalignment of borders is literally the greatest problem facing the world today. I'm not even kidding, the effects are that huge.
Africans: we want of own nations.
European: give me a ruler and a pencil.
They only needed a pencil to draw random lines 😂😂😂
This border mad by colonial is note africains
Lol
More like it. Lol
Lool
So can we redraw Africa 's borders?
Atlas pro : well yes but actually no
P.s. cool intro though
I dont think anyone should do that except the african them selfs
France: no way bitch! Neo colonialism is our expertise in west and central Africa
Unfortunately, colonialism in Africa has ended 150 years to early. The European powers left when the education, 'civilisation building' (= overcoming of all those ethnic--religious enmities between the Africans) and modernisation (think infrastructre, administration, policing, healthcare) was far from being complete. The situation today wouldn't be that worse if Africa would have stayed in its medieval/prehistoric ways before the colonisation. But now you have societies that aren't ready for the power they can wield. It is sad for those Africans, it is sad for the world and we will hear of famines, ethnic massacres and abhorrent poverty for many decades to come. :(
For K-drama lovers: No... but yes- eggsactly!
@@chrishieke1261 it's not all doom and gloom things are getting better.
“Imagine cutting Spain in half”
Catalonia: Hold my sangria
TBF, they do speak a different language
@ Don't they speak catalan?
@@xxxBradTxxxthey speak both
@ They were originally forced to speak Castillan by the same fascist power who had just mass murdered, raped and spoiled them.
@@ArturoSubutex
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahah
Yeah bro, nice fake history
Daily reminder that most catalans fought in the Carlist tercios against stalin's dogs.
Bob the builder: CAN WE FIX THIS!?
*sees Africas borders*
Bob: 😬
Yes after a chaos, lol. People are already doing fine, just find a way to work together.
Fuck sakes I was really counting on bob this time
No
666 likes
@@akibharford2923 not any more 🙃
8:42, damn, he droppin' them beats.
You forgot one major point for drawing borders: Geography, Nations having enough resources, rivers, deserts, forests and mountains are also an important part of drawing borders
Snick Dave if you look at borders in Europe you’ll see they’ll all formed from Geography, mainly rivers, seas and mountains.
He also already did a video on that.
I feel like he is drawing borders to stop conflict, not start them for other reason
I guess that's implied in the _resources_ part of the video. I still liked your comment, clarifications are always handy.
One of the most important factors and they leave it out completely.
The better question is what isn’t the problem with Africa’s boarders.
Ny friend made ur pfp and now its everywhere
Sayonara Issa made it, Spoodah popularized it
Ayy #dogwifhatgang
🙄🙄
pikaJ
Borders mate B O R D E R S
Welcome to the new decade Atlas Pro!
What? It's not a new decade. It's still the old decade.
"new decade"
well, yes, but actually no
@Lucas Brinster becouse there wasnt a year 0, the calendar starts with year 1, so the first decade ended in 10 ad december 31st,
so the next decade starts in 2021. january 1st
@@henrik1220 Thank you! I hate when people say "Its a new decade" when its really not.
@@twowaymaxey5400 lol the majority of people think the new decade already started
I am Nigerian and your analysis was bang on correct. The borders drawn by the colonizers and accepted by our forefathers/leaders is what is causing the instability in my country. I think they should have redrawn those borderlines, take the chance. I'm sure the Biafra civil war would never have happened if they did. Again great work. cheers.
Watch the video again, you did not get the point.
It's not about the borders watch the video again.
Madagascar being avoided all thru this video...
🤣 🤣 🤣
You forget about Cape Verde, The Seychelles and the Comoros.
That Flippin Guy Mate... that’s the joke..
Here's an F for all the island nations.
because it was an uninhabited island like Cabo Verde
Madagaskar during the whole video:
"Am I joke to you?"
For Mikko here yes since he doesn't know the correct spelling of Madagascar.
Edit: I wa wrong.
wherever Mikko comes from... obviously finnish name...seems you don´t have anything else to do, than to critize spelling. Poor you. Beside in their native language - malagasy - it is written with K.
It's the biggest island there.
So no problem whatsoever concerning land borders...
As Madagascar is ethnically homogenuous country, there were no major conflicts inside it. So, possibly if Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo peoples had their independent countries in current territory of Nigeria might have been much more peaceful and prosperous compared to situation now.
Khalil Hamza is Mauritius having land border issues?
Europeans drawing the borders of Africa:
"I'm not very good at it. But it doesn't matter."
Plot twist: It did matter
Not yet
Same attitude applied to the middle east...
Sykes-Picot have entered the chat
The problem is that imperialist powers imposed the concept of a nation-state onto peoples that had no say in the matter, with the borders hungrily fought over by people who considered land a resource to extract "value" from. African problems require African solutions carried out cooperatively by African peoples.
Make no mistake, they knew what they were doing, and that they could profit from those conflicts for many generations.
It has very little to do with proffit and everything to do with risk of revolt. A multicultural multinational socity can not organize a rebelion. Its the same reason they are now filling Europe full of every nation, to reduce risk of revolt.
@@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 in nigeria the cultures get on very well. Africa is an insanely diverse and multicultural place
Africa is very diverse. Even in nigeria there are 250 ethnicity with only 3 being the significant ones. And they get on fine. "Filling europe with every nation"
Give this man a shield.
@@anonymoust2877 Except for with the sponsored extremist Fulani groups that are encroaching on Southern territory. Nigeria is a huge example of a place that needs rebellion and a total start over.
Kongo people were divided between:
French Congo
Belgian Congo
Angola (Portuguese colony)
Somalia was divided 5
British Somalia
Italian Somalia
French Somalia
Kenyans Somalia called NFD
And Ethiopian Somalia
There are also Kongo people in Gabon
@@despertar777 Oh interesting!
I also know that there are baTeké people in Gabon too. As well as in both Congos.
Not just individual tribes but unfortunately Bantus in general are divided between 20 countries.
only 300 000 congo people lived in central Africa, so 95% of lands you claim they never settled until Whites arrived and your population exploded and occupied Whites land in Africa
I mean, until about 1945 getting in big ass fights with each other was a pretty common occurrence all across the European continent too...
Still didn’t stop in Eastern Europe lol.
Eat Europe and many parts of Asia is still unresolved
Yeah, the goal isn't to stop all fighting but to reduce it as much as possible. Conflict is inevitable though, and just as the nation's of Europe warred for centuries after they first started forming, Africa is probably gonna see an awful lot of awful trouble spots for a while, but it is getting on its feet, and way faster than many expected.
@@osedebame3522лол
well, people will be people.
The German Language in German is just "Deutsch". The people that live in Germany are called "Deutsche". And nice new Intro! 👍
Deutschlanders
> The people that live in Germany are called "Piefke".
FTFY ;)
And not all Germans are Protestant, either
They're called SCHLAAANDS
Nothey are called Katoffeln
The worst thing about social sciences in school is that they don't teach anything about Africa.
exactly. you don't hear anything about the natural resources, ethnic groups, history, languages, vast landscapes, etc.
@@laurendilaurentis6467 seriously. in my case, not even the basics.
@Michael Ardenté I mean that the perspective of World History is too Europe-centric.
@Michael Ardenté no. i live in india.
i studied history for five years in school. three years indian history, two years world history. barely anything about africa.
@Michael Ardenté we learnt social studies from grade 6 to 10.
This video was amazing. I am a student in African studies and I really appreciate the accuracy of your analysis, I'm learning a lot from you.
“African studies” lmao. If you went to college and majored in that, you’ll be living a pretty shit life with a college loan and a worthless degree. Unless you got a scholarship or parents paid for it.
@@ancellery6430 nobody asked
@@ancellery6430 Proof?
Disclaimer at 8:23
“These don’t match up 100% perfectly. I know this . Perhaps you can see it best at lake Nasser and its corresponding language area shifted slightly above. That’s just what happens when you translate maps with different projections into this one. But as you can see they’re not all that far off., and get the idea across all the same. If you want to take a look at any of the fantastic original maps any of the maps in this video were derived from, check the description.”
The problem is that every 60 seconds in Africa a minute passes..
every 60 likes this comment receives, a comment is made in Africa, together we can stop this!
U dumb
@@explt9150 Dropped Christianity? You must be dumb to reject Jesus Christ and God. Your parents must not have cared for you or they do but you rejected them as well
@@explt9150 Idi Amin. Now that's one tough African.
Exp LT you are arguing inside of a joke comment, lmao
I love how he represented Somalia as it should be along the border lines. The original greater Somalia lines including Ethiopia and Kenya and we move and appreciate you btw 😍😍😍🙏🏾
Funny things is that Ethiopia literally names its states on the names of the peoples it belongs to. Like Oromiya and Somalia are obviously Cushitic and the Ethiopians know it, just like Southern Nations and Gambela should not be part of ethiopia but part of say Kenya and South Sudan.
Same thing happened with Syria, under the ottoman empire many now Turkish states were literally part of the Syria governorates yet when Turkey became a country they decided to keep them and move turks to them to make them turkish majority.
Sad world we live in.
I had a friend that thought africa was just one country.
'oMg'
Many people think that unfortunately
hopefully one day it will be :smile:
I knew someone who had thought that Mexico and Canada were U.S states
Us-american?
You forgot the Berber languages that are not Touareg :O
They didn't come from outside like other Afro-Asiatic languages, but were always in North West Africa
Theres like 2 million different tribes and languages, he cant cover them all in this short video
Africa: *exists*
Europe: Yo guys you like geometry?
they had resources, and they weren't using them.
Joshua Gordon that’s just how the world works
@@SteveB-nx2uo _"They had resources, and they weren't using them"_
Imagine a scenario where aliens invaded our planet, dug deep into the earth's core to obtain a resource we have no use for (let's call it Earthium), and raped and enslaved humans to maximize their benefits.
Us: "Hey bro, please get off our planet."
Aliens: "Why? Earthium is just sitting there and you guys aren't using it lol."
Us: "Still, it's our planet. We've been here since forever. Please leave."
Aliens: I'm sorry. Last I checked, nobody owns the Earth's core.
Us: "Fine. Take it. But please, just stop raping, killing, and enslaving us."
Aliens: Hey, don't judge! If we hadn't come to Earth, you guys would just continue to rape, kill, and enslave yourselves like you humans have always done. Don't complain now that WE'RE the ones raping, killing, and enslaving you. Besides, we promise that your descendants hundreds of years from now will eventually live a better life than you. But first, we have to kill and exploit the human race in order to build a better future for your great great great grandchildren whom you'll never meet!
This is literally every conversation between a rational person and a white colonial apologist.
@@CedricThePlaystation You know what they Say, what goes around comes around
@@bluebird5173 I assure You, any life form intelligent enough to travel the vast distances of space wouldn't share the cave ape demented mindset.
"South Sudan successfully separated itself" How many takes did that take?
I come from northern Sudan it took blood and civil war cuz the british colonization left them ignorant and racist against themselves adding to this the idea of trap that most colonised countries have revolutionised tendency make them try to solve problems out of diplomatic protocol.... The last illustration u can also see in cuba
@@mohamedelfatih9826 So you're saying the West made them look down on their neighbors as better than and made them think that revolution was a legitimate way to bring changes?
Yes but for a different reason. The oil field is found on the south. The west thought it would be great experience to have a deal the way it happened with south korea so lets have south Sudan and work on making it work. And for the North make them the way it happened with North korea dictatorship and poor. But what happened was shoking. Soon as south Sudan got its dependence the fought against each other which changed west plan and made them looked for the North Sudan trying to instill democracy. When i say west i mean USA in particular since most european countries have already instilled their experience in many african countries making USA the only caucasian country yet to have shown their democratic view on africa
@@seismicvertigo345 The conflict between the South and the North is very complex.
In its beginning, the British conquered Sudan, and for a good 20 years established a close borders rule, wherein citizens from either side were rarely allowed to mix.
During this time, the North was prospering more and had a better economy. And when Sudan gained independence, the Southerners were unfortunately denied the chance to be active in the governments/Parliaments, and thus decided to go to war.
So while some people would just blame the British, I feel this one is on us as Sudanese.
They should have either had a say in how affairs are run, or granted autonomy/independence early on to avoid this ridiculous 50 year war.
Hopefully, our Southern neighbours can still find peace.
@@mohamedelfatih9826 stop lying my friend marginalization of South by the north yet the oil is in South which led to war and eventually seperation
Inarguably the most diverse race and continent on earth. I love my continent and am a very proud african
That's why it's the Motherland ❤❤❤
@Sh Sh you know there is a part called north africa where the native there are of light skin because they come from amazigh and berber tribes, and then mid africa is for all the sahrawis and the bottom half is where you'll find the more dark colour.
@@adobelightroomphotography4730 you have the full right to call it the motherland!! i am light skinned and from Ethiopia/Eritrea, so i am not African?
@@yonastewelu294 exactly, this is the racism thats been growing inside our continent, i am an amazigh berber from morroco we were always the native people of morocco before there was any arab invasion. Anyway africa is where life started so no matter what colour you are it all started here !
lol Asia is the most diverse, Muslim Arabs, communist Eastern Asia, brown Hindu south Asians, southeast Asians, pale Russians, Mongolians, Asia has the continent with most atheist, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism lol. Same goes with climate, cold tundra of Siberia, high mountains of Tibet, dirt rivers of India, ancient Mesopotamia, holiest sight for 3 monotheistic religion, tropical jungle of indochina, orangutan of Borneo, Asia has once largest empire mongol empire, Silk Road etc. Asia is more diverse than Africa and Africa haven’t done dog shit to world history.
I love how you compared the redrawing of borders/ building of nations with the building of the German national state.
Giving examples like this helps to grasp the proposals and also shows that the solution you presented has worked before!
Thank you for this insightful video!
This is the most interesting question I've seen ask on RUclips:
Can the borders of Africa be fixed?👍
Keep up the good work guys
Yes, it can become part of the Chinese empire. Fixed.
They tried fixing the borders already. It's called colonization.
The answer sadly is no. There are FAAAR too many small ethnicities and as long as resources are so scarce, killing the other guys is always an option.
Even if we split africa into lots of tiny countries, they would still invade each other and instability would persist.
It's kind of ironic how the same people who advocate for multiculturalism in Europe and America say that Africa is a failed continent because borders made African countries multicultural.
@@pobaeas7326 Well, SJWs are known for their double standards
Oh yessss mr Atlas is backkkkk
Edit: damn this was one of the best yet! Love it!
"So imagine someone and drawing a country that only included half of Spain, half of France and also all those other guys."
Not hard to imagine, The history of Europe is full of weird border cuts between cultures. It happens whenever someone invades like during the Mongol invasion back in the 1200s and when the Moors invaded in the 8th-10th centuries.
Look at the history of the Armenian Genocide. Armenia was chopped up by invading forces and a portion was given to the Ottomans by Iran in 1566. This "problem with European borders" led to the creation of the word Genocide to describe what happened.
its called the EU
@@covfefe1787 whats called EU ?
@@baarth8305 I think he is talking about the strategy game called Europa Universalis 4.
Ok boomer.
The Basque people don't have to imagine that either.
France and Spain:
"Your land is now split between two countries neither of which is controlled by you!"
The Basque:
"Wait, what?!"
0:08, I think you mean Ghana not Guinea; Guinea is more west and closer to the Atlantic Ocean. Plus Ghan was called the Gold Coast🇬🇭( I’m from there btw)
The entire region was once called Guinea (that's why there's Guinea, Guinea-Bissau and Eq. Guinea all far away from each other)
ivory coast too, most of the west side was considered the gold coast no?
Even you are from there... you should know the history of West Africa...
“They never got Ethiopia.”
@@triatic9476 aaaand they retreated. Good talk
@@triatic9476 Ethiopia never got colonized.
The eastern half of Ethiopia(as its recognised today) the Ogaden region was given to the Ethiopian empire illegally by the British in the 40s after many years of it being colonised
It’s ethnic Somalis lands
This cause the 1977 wars between Somalia and Ethiopia
Ethiopia was working with the British colonisers against their fellow Africans. For instance, they helped the English to defeat the Somali resistance.
@@YJ970 and now god punished them by not giving them a sea
"A lot of research into this one." - quite an understatement! Brilliant vid. Thank you.
Kind regards.
Agree bro🙌
If you like colors but if you go behind what you see, you ll find very bad DIVISION
1:43
Video: imagin someone drawing a country half of Spain...
Catalan independentists: I like that
LMAO
Solo dentistry?
@@ericclements9104???
Lol 😅
INDEPENDENTISTS
Por tu nombre yo diria que eres catalan
Europe: “Hey. We’d like to fix our border mistakes bro.”
Africa: “Uh uh. Nope. You’ve done enough.”
Leonis Krigorian not sure about that bro
Leonis Krigorian I didn’t say that about the border problems(which I don’t think are Africa’s biggest problem anyways) I wasn’t sure about your comment that Africans couldn’t fix their problems themselves. I don’t think that the results of accepting Europe’s “help” on any issue would create an outcome that you or anyone would want for Africa. European and American imperialism is the root cause for many of Africa’s economic and political instability issues and since political instability in Africa is profitable to the western world(since it allows for the destabilization of liberation movements and getting cheap labor from desperate people which many industries exploit) it’s unlikely that any European and American interference in Africa will be positive for them.
@Leonis Krigorian I'm not sure if you realize this or not, but 80 - 100 years ago is pretty recent...
@@sapphireblaze7681 Oh right, all the African sweat shops.Some populations are OK with genocide.If that's what you consider Africa solving it's own problems then have at it... I guess?
@@sapphireblaze7681 >> So Africa is fuxked up. Nice.
My sister had a classmate that moved to America from what she calls simply ‘the Congo’. Rather, this girl’s entire Congo village moved to America to feel safe and have water security. They moved at roughly the same time, and so there’s an area in or near Denver that’s this relocated Congo village. They all speak French, English, the know Xhosa, and their own unique language. They prefer French and their own thing, and are happy to teach outsiders the basics.
Video title: “The problem with Africa’s borders”
British people: W E C A N F I X T H A T
Cyril Radcliffe: "Hold my cup of tea. And my glasses. And my bar cert."
Hey, want me to carve up your borders? I got a knife, it's right here!
@Alex Mercer Yup, Partition is standard policy for withdrawing from a former colony. Draw the new borders half-way down any given ethnic, religious, or language group to maximise conflict within them (draw the borders first, then 'grant' each region 'independence' separately as you withdraw your administrations from each one at a time, otherwise they'll just redraw the borders peacefully after you've gone), then exacerbate resource 'scarcity' by funding ard arming the lowest bidders to export all their stuff to you.
@Cosmic Landscape bruh its sarcasm
Unironically, Africa needs help, bro. They can't govern themselves right now
Cant believe this is somehow free content! So much effort and so well done
Somali people were divided into kenya ethiopia djibouti
Somali people 5 country Somali Ethiopian Kenya djabuti end Somaliland
@@eskilman676 😅😅Also julbaland and puntland
@@eskilman676 Don't forget Khatumo state.
@@ciceroalexandar6184 nah not those yesterday made states
Our grandfather's fight for freedom of ogaden so they are free ppl so stop mention ethiopia
10:24
I was about to comment that these "borders" do not account for resources, but that's exactly what was discussed later.
Everything cuts in half perfectly. It's like Thanos is doing all this.
mfaizsyahmi. It was intentional. It was thought by the Europeans that allowing multiple ethnic group instead of one majority ethnicity would cause disunity. Making them more likely to work with the Europeans than each other.
@@kingchubs It was a well-planned strategy....now we facing too problem to handle. They knew no matter how long it takes for us to get to civilization, we will be too strong for them to control. This is why whenever they see that you are building a technology that can overpower them, they kill you. Some people still don't know.
@Anonymous Take ya meds
I'm so happy with how much coverage you give Africa.
I love your videos because of how informative yet unbiased they are. They always take a more positive outlook without sacrificing talking about the issues faced.
An outstanding documentary, thank you. A very harsh reality for our African friends yet it's nice knowing that you ended things with an optimistic perspective. I'm sure they will flourish. And we all must help. We are all Africans.
I've noticed the strange pattern of these borders for a while and much love from Namibia!
Namibia has an interesting shape. Lovely country.
This guy sounds like the more human, less text-to-speech, version of Real Life Lore
He’s better but he still speaks with that weird narrator inflection that some RUclipsrs have.
I was thinking CGPGrey
@@sirmount2636 I like real life lore, but his narration is a bit jarring. This guy is alright.
5:08
Talking about Latin America.
Showing picture of Barcelona.
Bro, RealLifeLore made the same mistake in a video that he posted today. I mean, wtf dude, why?
Well done keep up the good work. Don't normally comment but this is good content.
6:11
"They don't have a majority there, so I'm not going to talk about them."
That's literally how state building fails in a nutshell...
You are forgetting the context of the phrase.
He decides not to include it because it's not only just isolated to one state, but is a small minority in said state
There is muslims in the south but he did not talked about them.
@@EntropicMalevolence Yeah, I think it's a joke.
@@EntropicMalevolence there are minorities in nearly all African regions.
I guess it's more relevant which mentality the people developed towards each other and the other ethnicities.
After all, according to the ethnic maps, Kenya should be in total anarchy while Somalia should prosper.
No its not.
The reason Islam spread in North Africa was because of many different Empires and Caliphates. *Shows the Roman Empire*
Me: So anyway, I started Crusading.
lol i noticed that too
HERESY
E
R
E
S
Y
Because the Africans were sold away into slavery, areas depopulated and Immigrants came in from the nations of the slavers..!
This is true Iraq was originally a Christian country, many people don't know this
@@more2much696 Iraq didn't exist until after WWI and Mesopotamia before the spread of Islam had mostly traditional, polytheistic religions as well as Zoroastrianism, the OG monotheistic religion. The Assyrian Orthodox Church is mostly in the North.
As an African, i approve this massage. Well done!
this is really late, but this video and the us one were both really great! if you enjoyed making them, it would be wonderful to see more videos in this series. there are lots of poorly drawn borders in the world
So African countries are basically like Middle Francia, then?
France no Francia amigo
hola adios2 he’s not talking about france
@@unphase. ah true bro, thanks for the warning
They're like the Western Roman Empire in the 450s.
Africa: Exists
Europeans: *It's free real estate.*
Shaka Zulu: Modern problems require tribal solutions.
Shaka Zulu's sub commander: So anyway I started blasting.
Oh man, if you only knew how costly is to arrange an expedition for exploration or conquest you would realize why they tried to hold on to their colonialism as much as they could.
@Brett Kavanaugh
I don't know why you came up with that... I'm only responding to the "free" part of "free real state".
@@Miolnir3 well... If not that then they seen it as FREE RESOURCES. Nobody forced them to go to Africa to steal
Well international law of the day said if you cannot defend your territory it's free real estate.
It was all done within international law of the time.
China is doing the exact same thing right now in Africa
*Africa Exists*
Europe: Allow me to introduce myself
Edit: I wanted this to be a joke, but you all turned it into a racist race topic. Please don’t.
brentonz The devils are full of tricks
Ethiopia and Libera:Allow me to introduce to never being part of European country
@Kushite God Faraji I would argue that USA has taken that title from Europe long, long time ago.
@ there the most racist people on Earth lol😂
@@Bruh-jr2ep Grandchildren usually learn the ways of their elders..
I really appreciate putting the ad break exactly between the vid and the credits.
You opened my eyes 👀. I never thought about this.
I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS VIDEO MY ENTIRE LIFE.
I love how you put all this time and effort into researching the culture of these people just to throw it out and trust their decision to keep it as it is. It shows a lot of respect and trust for the people involved with those nations.
Alice 5 who are “these people” believe it or not, the various leaders of Africa aren’t just gonna all come together and rearrange Africa’s borders because someone made a RUclips video. The leaders of African countries don’t all work together, they’re not all one hivemind. If you want things to change you have to force it, the current leaders will probably be too invested to start completely rearranging the entire continent.
The end was very encouraging. Hope people in Africa will keep on moving forward and build a brighter future for themselves. Thanks for helping non Africans to better understand how incredibly diverse this continent is!
People often overlook the importance of infrastructure and logistics. Local industry, commerce and economy cannot function without the proper means to distribute resources.
It literally connects the people to employment opportunities and unify the communities into one functioning nation. Represent cultural heritage in provinces or prefectures if need be.
The problem is the insane amount of corruption in Africa. There's a great doc about truck drivers in west Africa on Vice.
Redrawing Africa's borders is problematic both because there is so much to fix and also because of the disruption it would cause. The best way to resolve the issue is to weaken the internal boundaries to the point of meaninglessness via free trade and a common market, free movement, common citizenship, common institutions and improvements in inter-national infrastructure, better connecting the economies and peoples of the continent. Anything less than such unification is at best a half-solution.
That doesn’t work for the Europeans why do you think it will work for the Africans?
@@sareeyemanusqaame8723 The EU has prevented war within its borders for 70 years. Is it working perfectly? Of course not, these things take time, as long as it takes to create a common identity, and for this identity to strengthen sufficiently to supercede the national identities, but I wouldn't call it a failure either. I'd also suggest that Africa's chances are no worse, possibly somewhat better, due to the rather blurry nature of most of its borders, and commonalities in its history over the past couple centuries. Give it a century or so, the important thing is to get the ball rolling sooner rather than later.
Thus far I would say that the ball has been created, in the form of the AU, at risk of expanding this metaphor probably too far, but has been allowed to grind to a halt in the mud, with only tentative efforts having been made to get it on the road for the most part, having only just reached it recently with the agreement of the AfCFTA. With the EU we might say that the ball got onto the road back in 1957 with the Treaty of Rome/ EEC and has been pushed half of the way to the finish line but is wobbling a bit and at risk of falling off the side into a ditch, but it is still more or less on the road and can be brought back on track albeit with much momentum lost.
I hope that both the EU and the AU succeed in forging new, common identities, and ultimately unify under single federal governments, as the U.S. did.
@@sareeyemanusqaame8723 Well, first, it's been working fine for the Europe, Europe is now more peaceful than is has ever been.
Second, Africa is fundamentally different to Europe. Yes, the people are still just normal people, but the continent itself is different: the weather is far more erratic. This makes agriculture far less viable, it makes cities far less viable, it makes staying in one place far less viable. There's a good reason why the most successful nations to come out of Africa, historically, either had a small, stable, rich area for agriculture OR were primarily trading empires. A LOT of Africa has classically had a slow, but nomadic tradition, allowing them to stay in the areas where agriculture is largely viable by moving with those areas. The concept of borders at all doesn't necessarily work for all of Africa, after all, they are a fairly arbitrary concept made up by Europeans to end the various religious wars tearing it apart. Borders, as we think of them today, were designed as a solution to end Europe's wars. That doesn't mean they'll end all of them.
And when a bunch of nomads invade agricultural regions or people of different religions and ethnicities flood more prosperous regions, what happens then?????
This makes me think of that comment about some people being more willing to change an economic system than keeping their own room clean
Amazing video. I've learn more in 14 minutes 16 seconds than in the rest of my week. Thank you , AtlasPro.
Excellent video, thank you. Speaking as a European, European colonialism has A LOT to answer for.
That was an insane amount of work put into one video. Thank you very much for this. Very interesting stuff! What a complicated area in comparison to North America!
Everybody in the comments: talks about Africa
Germans: LET ME TELL YOU ABOUT GERMANY!!!
Sebastian Nordlund fr tho lol
Yeah, he glossed over quite a bit of Germany's diversity/overhomogenized it, so it's to be expected. Germany's unification was used as one of the opening examples in support of the argument, so it really stands out. He used it as an example of factors that reduced conflict, but Germany's borders are _much more_ a product _of_ conflicts, _hundreds of years of conflicts_ .
@@FireRupee You are the snowflake in an avalanche, happy for not being the one who caused it, but blind to your own participation :D I read the comments you know, so I already know what you are telling me.
@@FireRupee and the "Spanish" still aren't entirely getting along.
"Let me show you its features" -Joerg Sprave
Hey Atlas Pro! This video is my favorite of all of your creations so far!! Your research seems thorough, and it looks like you really deliberated the way you conducted it carefully. Plus I like the new intro!! This episode seems to have seen a major increase in production quality from your previous vids (which were also quite good). Additionally, you chose a very interesting topic, and I am leaving this video feeling like I have really learned more about the fundamentals behind African demographics and politics.
Thanks for making these videos!
A very controversial topic too. 😐
I keep learning about AFRICA my Continent... Thanks for the Convid-19 which made us stay at home and learn about our Continent Even now the lockdown has ENDED... I'm more conscious of my continent since this 2020 than I was. ❤️❤️🇳🇬
Africa is going through its own middle ages, 1000 years ago Europe was exactly the same.
maybe 100 years from now Africa will be a far far better place.
Emperor Penguin This medieval condition has been created by Europe - larger national development in the Southern part was halted by North Western European colonialism ...
Ardi80 I’m sure Estrucans thought that when they controlled Rome..
The Hoplite Lol - trying to be provocative - actually, you do not deserve an answer - please check under what conditions the independence of African states came into being - payments and European investor and trade monopolies stipulated - plus neocolonial brainwash ... these Chinese loans were and are absolutely unnecessary financially only for the benefit for the nepotistic and egomaniac elite ... a sign of mental Trauma which will probably never he overcome ... Chinese are merely reaping the fruits of this insanity ... Europe planted the seeds ... Good day
Hopefully corruption will be gone by then or Africa will go nowhere
@Reminder to stay hydrated! That's an oddly long way if saying "I hate Africans". Did one take your wife or something 😂
Great Video! As an African, I've learnt alot about about myself from this video. I like your idea of the countries. WELL DONE. Thanks!
I wish he had briefly covered the old kindoms and empires. That would have added a lot of value.
you mean "kingdoms" and "empires"
@@gorthind No, Kingdoms and Empires.
Simon there were no kingdoms nor empires in sub saharan africa. North african kingdoms were dominated by arabs and whites anyway
Maybe he will in another video
@@simon8242 :) it's best to not feed the trolls, sadly. There are plenty of maps and documents that contradict that (likely to be blocked) poster.
I mean, Mansa Musa is one easy famous example :)
As an african i will appreciate your effort and the helpful information
There are also other things to consider: Europe also experienced a lot of violence of various kinds (ethnic, religious, resources, etc.) and nationalism that was supposed to unite people in theory often resulted in dividing them as well. It's just the European borders reflect the consequences of those conflicts rather than being the source of the conflicts, like in some places of Africa. Furthermore, languages and religions often change throughout history, so uniting nations based on those values might not be a good choice for many African countries. Rather, they can use shared historical events and ideas to strive for in order to build their nations. There are a lot of countries that are very diverse linguistically, racially and religiously like Russia or India which are relatively at peace. Alternatively, you can have a very charismatic and charming leader or very tyrannical one who will unite the country with his/her leadership skills or with an iron fist (although having latter one is not preferable).
Yeah and with modern nationalism came from a higher educated society. Africa so far doesn't have such a tradition.
@Kazakh Doge Agreed.
@@alyssashady "came from a higher educated society. Africa so far doesn't have such a tradition." How so? There are lots of people who have pursued or who are pursuing higher education in Africa.
Europe's nations tended to expand up to natural borders. Look at the topography of Romania, Spain, and Italy - all are protected by mountain ranges on their borders. This barrier to movement allowed the nations a relative safety, and they had more chances to develop without exogenous shocks. Now look at Africa's topography - it's mostly flat. People can easily move around - this means it's significantly easier for bandits or invasions to wreck a nascent country.
Now, if you're clever, you'll point out that from France to Russia is a relatively flat land, so maybe that invalidates the above. Sort of. Armies did tend to move East-West along this broad route - in ww2, the name of the game was moving tank divisions across this route. But historically, winter would make invasions infeasible for something like half the year. Africa doesn't have such severe winters. So my conclusion is that ease of movement causes instability.
Now go ace that essay test, my young padawans.
FireRupee yes and there are lots of people who have participated in the Olympics.
Last time I was this early Africa hadn't been scrambled yet!
@@AmgineIX I-it's a joke
@@jameshoad8970 a bad joke
@@youwilldie8835 ur a bad joke
@@biliminsrlar5752 learn to write before commenting.
Bilimin Sırları *EXISTINSE*
it’s existence
perhaps you can make a video re-drawing africa's borders by your personal opinion.
the video and the new into was awesome too! :)
I started yesterday watching literally every single Atlas Pro episode in order... hard to believe it took me this long until he had an intro animation.
4:01 you know that half of Germany is Catholic ?!
(Half of all non Atheists)
He messed up there.
Nope, just half of the religious people in Germany are catholics. 40% are listed as not following any religion.
@@MrAranton That's right, but does it change anything ?
@@timteichmann6830 Saying "half of Germany is catholic" presents the catholic at almost twice its actual size. That's a big difference, and based on the idea that "half of Germany is catholic", the catholic church has way more influence than it should have according to the number of people it represents.
MrAranton Keep in mind, we’re talking about over two centuries ago, not today’s religions in Germany
5:00 Didn't know Peterson was spreading Christianity in africa
RadnessDivine lmfao it’s Jordan *B* Peterson.
A small remark: the language is called "Deutsch", not "Deutsche". Anyways, great video!
Is "Deutsche" like the English equivalent of 's?
Or like "German house" for example
@@cam4234 Deutsche in itself means the citizens of Germany. A word with Deutsche in front of it makes it an adjective.
Lastly the language germans speak is Deutsch
@@AnjaliSmith. are you German
@@cam4234 Yes, he probably google translated "German". If you say "German car", it would be "Deutsche Auto" in German. Whereas "German" the language is "Deutsch".
I'm Danish, not German btw.
If I am not wrong, this is the first video with that dope and super cool intro
"The coptocs dont have their own country, so we are not going to talk about them."
Good god if anyone needs their own country its the coptics.
Who and where is the majority population of the coptocs?
@@teamoptimistic9440 the coptics are a minority in several mostly muslim nations, which is why there is currently what can reasonably be called a Genocide being emacted against them.
@@silverd20 they fall under christianity so they dont fucking matter( anger and sarcasm)
@@silverd20 edit your original comment *coptics
@@Dmdm_dm I considered it but I like my speling better.