The Mexican American Border | Manifest Destinies
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- Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
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The 19th Century was an important era in the shaping of relations between Mexico and the United States of America. Expansions West and North formed the foundation for an Imperial war of expansion between the two countries that would shape their modern border. We will deeper examine the origins of this conflict, as well as tell the story of Texan independence and how it shaped Mexican-American culture. And in the final part of this video we will also tell the story of the Industrial Revolution the Americas, and how it resulted in the creation of the dominant force of global capitalism in the USA, but in the creation of a kleptocratic failed state in Mexico.
Link to The Mexican American border | A Tale of two Colonies: • The Mexican American B...
Intro: (0:00)
ChapterV (2:35)
ChapterVI (13:12)
ChapterVII (43:25)
Outro (1:05:49)
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Research and fact checking. Many thanks to Solaris, a Mexican economist and armchair historian who helped fact check the video.
You will find Solaris on twitter here: / solairis_
And you will find him on medium here: / solairis_
Artists & Contributors!
Artists and other contributors, who supported the creation of this video can be followed and commissioned here:
Alp Mapper:
On RUclips: / @alpmapper
On Deviant Art: www.deviantart.com/alpmapper
Eko:
On twitter: Ekowastooshort?s=09
On instagram: / ekowastooshort
Teabag:
On twitter: / elpg1576
Turkbud:
On twitter: / turkbud
On instagram: / turkbud
Tanit:
On twitter: T4NlT?s=09
On youtube: / @dertanit773
Mrs. Human Car:
On discord: / discord
Her homepage: www.thewarprofiteer.net/colla...
On twitter: / mrshumancar
Nomad:
On twitter: / nomadstarr
On deviant art: www.deviantart.com/monadstar
On youtube: / @ravignonch
Jikuzen:
On twitter: / jikusen_fl
VexiSphere:
On RUclips: / @vexisphere8904
On Twitter: / spherevexi
Felipe:
On twitter: felipe5083?s=09
Instagram: felipebandeira9...
Axolotols:
His Twitter: Taured8?s=09
Porc Bun:
Her twitter: / porc_bun
Her youtube: / @porcbun
Many thanks to the following creators for contributing voice lines for quotations:
Patta History:
On RUclips: / @pattahistory
On Instagram: / pattahistory
Jenny Bell:
On youtube: / @olyvegardyns
On twitter: / ther00mie
Hey it’s Vadim:
On RUclips: / @heyitsvadim
On twitter: / heyitsvadim
Jangles Science Lad:
On: twitter: / sjwdebates
On RUclips: / @janglessciencelad
Books:
Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson
American Nations by Colin Woodard
American Character by Colin Woodard
The Forgotten Continent by Micheal Reid
A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn
These truths by Jill Lepore
The Contemporary History of Latin America by Tulio Halperin Donghi
The Narrow Corridor by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson
The Origins of Political Decay by Francis Fukuyama
The Age of Walls by Tim Marshall
Harvest of Empire by Juan Gonzales
Thank you all for watching I hope to see you all soon again for the next video.
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Translations:
Portuguese translation: ruclips.net/video/-MXvMXxJiSg/видео.html
For translations of the video, check this video on instructions: ruclips.net/video/atCkDQ3Ce68/видео.html
Video for translations with my audio removed: ruclips.net/video/aogR9VeHEzc/видео.html
You said you don't want advertisements lol.
Nah, it's OK, educate us pls. Your shift to evidence based & geopolitic based educational video is one of the reasons the political dramas on RUclips ended and switched to a more realistic based worldview.
You literally helped Gen Z raised their attention span level.
@@icefl4re597 well if Kraut accepts the sponsorship then he is well on the first step to becoming a "Real RUclipsr", which is what I like to call RUclipsrs like AlternateHistoryHub, The Armchair Historian, CGP Grey, etc.
@@arnilbiswasreborn3799 Well it's OK nonetheless lol. Extra money
At last! I can enjoy the fruits of my waiting
Since you are German:
Have you seen the video "Ante Portas" by der Schattenmacher?
How do we solve the drug crisis in Mexico?
Is that even possible?
Would legalization in the US solve anything?
"He founded the republic of Freedonia... Where he legalized slavery." Seems about right
Hypocrisy is a human right
@@spartanx9293 I mean, you're not wrong
seems about white
@@doc.l nice pun
Dude literally founded Ancapistan
Oh god, his "short 20 min" project has evolved into a 3 and a half hours documentary again
And I am loving it lol
*4 hours in total now. No complaints here
Mexico is complex, and the border much more so.
@@Native_Creation Just be thankful he didn’t tackle the entirety of revolution era and post-revolution Latin America
"Europe at the end of the war, went back home. And then proceded to take its frustrations out on Africa, and themselves"
I had to pause cause i started laughing too much at that line.
"As is tradition." would have been great.
Seems just about right.
Themselves? Hehe world wars
You fell for this Chinese propaganda piece really easily, huh?
@@penskepc2374 How is this a Chinese propaganda?
i just love this sentence "mexico banned immigration but amerians kept coming"
Oh how times have changed 😂
How the tables have turned.
Oh the irony...
but the amerians keep coming and they dont stop coming. Hopped in their wagons and they hit the ground runnin'.
@@AG-JustYourAverageGuy It didn’t make sense to keep sharing Mexico, when they outnumbered them more than 60 trillion to zero!
The transformation of your channel from argumentative shitposting to long-format in-depth documentaries is one of the greatest success stories in the history of RUclips.
@@virginiasaintj What happened about discord servers?
@@virginiasaintj Yeah what happened?
We need explanations
We may never know
we demand the truth!
Haha, amazing.
I'm Mexican and when I went to primary school the history classes were taught in confusing ways to not make the kids realize how Mexico is always full of injustice because its own people and leaders wanted it that way. Imagine learning history but your country is a perma-victim with no hope, it was confusing and depressing af. I hope history is taught differently now and more kids learn through interesting videos like these ^^
@Smunstu Stinkymonster Although the elite were instrumental in even starting the uprisings...
Sometimes the righteous are meek, and not the ones fighting. Sometimes the righteous bring change quietly, sometimes loudly. Sometimes quick, and others slow.
" perma-victim with no hope" as a brazilian,i feel you bro
"perma-victim with no hope" you just have described my Polish history lessons
@@xXUnknowPersonXx I'm starting to see a pattern here
@@xXUnknowPersonXx Came to the comments to say the exact same thing. "Poland is the Christ of Nations", "Gloria Victis" etc.
With so many YT channels going for a "simplified" and "easily digestible" approach to historical topics I really appreciate your thoroughness.
Both have their place:
Oversimplified approach gives the basics
Thorough approach fills in the details that weren’t covered
Even the oversimplified YT channels generally have more detail and accuracy than the old TV documentaries. We are spoiled for choice on that front.
This is simplified, but not oversimplified. I think domain experts could make scores of arguments over fine points, what was omitted, what might be overemphasized, etc., but given the limitations of the medium (including audience attention spans), Kraut has done a commendable job of cramming a lot of history into 68 minutes while keeping a coherent narrative.
Yeah. Also, these videos take a LOT of time to make already
@@MarcosElMalo2 Compared to everything else on youtube, this is the EXACT OPPOSITE of simplified. 3 hour long series on history like this with this many intricate details, connecting paths and references to other world events, with hyper detailed research, combined with well written scripts and nice visuals just does NOT exist anywhere else on youtube...
Dont downplay stuff like this, its fucking annoying.
This is far better than some short, simplified Johnny Harris video on "HOW THE US STOLE MEXICO" or any other superficial popular media. I love your videos so much for showing just how nuanced and complex history is.
YES, FINALLY SOMEONE SAID IT. Also hate his video on the Philippines, it's literally as nuanced as his Mexico video and literally blames it all on US. When the Philippine elite leadership is similar (though not as bad as Mexico) outright fell into infighting amongst themselves. Sure the US would have won, but betrayals among the Filipinos literally made it effortless.
Yeah, he’s a moron appealing to the lowest common denominator, even if that does include college educated students unfortunately.
On a sidenote, it was conquest, which is different from stealing, which legally can only apply if something is being violated within a particular state’s jurisdiction. All of history doesn’t get to be retroactively put under UN standards and international law just because we live in the present. And ironically that only came about because the USA in particular was strong enough to force it into being.
It's literally veiled Chinese propaganda.
@@penskepc2374 what, kraut’s videos? if you watched the first part of this series, you’ll see that china is used as an example of a ultraauthoritarian leviathan state
@@4bhin4v maybe he means Johnny Harris, who’s entire fan base is basically tankies even tho Johnny is too dumb too notice
I'm mexican and growing up my father loved to pick one of his several history books and read to me one of his favorite chapters on the history of México. He would usually go in tangents and go deep in how certain events happened and their backstory, the cultural background and the future ramifications. He would say that every moment in history is connected and that you can always see where history was going if you look back farther enough. He still loves to talk about history even now in his older age, and your videos have been the closest I have to the way he talks about the way events happen. Most people like to simplify history, yet nothing is ever simple, specially this. Thank you for your hard work, and the work of all the artists that make this video possible!
You’re lucky. My father only told me stories about the times he got wasted at parties and such.
your Dad sounds based af!
You should show ur dad these vids
SalvaPot Andale paisa porfas dime que libros de historia son los de tu papá andale no seas gacho que yo solo terminé la primaria y los libros que obtuve en la escuela están bien gachos y no sé en dónde encontrar unos que estén buenos y en castellano :'v
Well, with history being all connected, it depends; with some threads it can be, others not, sometimes it all comes together, other times events happen out of nowhere. It’s also easy to see overarching narratives and story arcs in hindsight, which can themselves sort of simplify history. But still your dad sounds awesome. Was the history he told accurate? Or was it more like folklore? Either way I wish my dad was like that too. I’ve always loved history, those would have been awesome bedtime stories lol. Then again I’m Japanese, and like, I’d say 70% of the Japanese population their historical perspective is... questionable. Not like outright racist, but questionable. I mean at least they’re not as ignorant about the world outside of Japan as most of my countrymen, but still.
I'm from the Mexican North in the State of Baja California, and as recently as my grandfather's time was the Norteño attitude still prevalent. Throughout his life he would cross the border, make his way to Texas and serve in the U.S. Army as a mechanic, come back, and buy land atop the mountain overlooking the city he grew up in. While he lived, he could only be described as Libertarianism personified, believing heavily in Old Republican values, and dying due to distrusting doctors (while over-trusting lemon baths).
“Died mistrusting doctors and overtrusting lemon baths”
His hgravestone probably
North America is superior specifically Canada,USA and Mexico
@@Student0Toucher
Can u Uhhh, shut the fuck up?
@@Student0Toucher ummmm.... okay🤨
@@Student0Toucher based
33:23 Sonora and Baja California weren't popular revolts. Those were invasions by William Walker. He didn't really control much outside of La Paz. Walker was a big believer in America's idea of Manifest Destiny. Even the US declared his acts illegal, though he was never punished for it. He even invaded Nicaragua soon after.
I was going to write the same thing. Thankfully I found your comment before.
He did have decent, or at least some, support among Mexicans in those areas, same thing with Nicaragua and Nicaraguans. Doesn't take away from what you said though.
I can’t wait to see the episode on the Revolution. I hope Kraut mentions the Magonista rebellion in Baja, where the anarchy-syndicalist Magonistas controlled TJ and Mexicali for 6 months before they were put down by Madero. In the overall scheme of the Revolution it wasn’t that important, but it illustrates that there were many competing interests and demonstrates how chaotic the Revolution was.
Baja California had several revolts before and after that.
40:46 As an Asian American I appreciate the asterisk next to the check for the Chinese ball, the state of California in general was formed with the political exclusion of Asian Americans in addition to the Indigenous Californians.
Yeah wasnt there A ban of Chinese immigration?
@@looseygoosey1349 Yep
Neither Spanish nor Mexican California had slavery and there was no dealing in a "Trans-Pacific slave trade" including that of Filipinos.
There was blackbirding but that was mostly Pacific Islanders and was not really a thing until after Mexico became independent.
What's your point?
@@looseygoosey1349 There was a series of bans. There were also pogroms and massacres against Asian immigrant communities across the Western U.S. during the later half of the 1800s.
One of the few channels who's advertisement is as based as the content
thank you for contributing your artwork to this video.
@@Kraut_the_Parrot No problem friend, i really enjoyed drawing for this :)
@@OneFlyingTonk, Your artwork is fantastic, Mr. Tonk !
China will collapse
Please don't say based, it makes you seem like a redditor
I'm glad you talked about the inital loyalists in Texas that wished to remain in Mexico. My great great great grandafther was Agustín Viesca y Montes, who was governor of Texas y Cohauila, he was a defendant of Federalism, and went Santa Anna rose to power he called on Texans to go to war to defend the 1824 constitution, he eventually got captured in 1835 but would manage to get freed by Texan rebels on the same year, eventually he pretty much got betrayed by Stephen Austin as he refused to acknowledge him as governor of Texas and would die in Mexico City in 1845. I always found that history really interesting, and was really surprised to find out im related to him
Thats amazing to find out your lineage goes back to someone like that. While it's frustrating knowing the betrayal he ended up facing, I'm sure you're proud of the strength he showed.
@@kyleuhlig1529 Yes, his history is one i find really amusing but kind of sad at the same time, he fought in the war of independence, he fought against the monarchists and was elected in the first ever Mexican congress in 1824, so i feel like he got betrayed by both the country he tried to help make and by the state he tried to protect
My respect to your grandfather, he is on the same rank as Andres Quintana Roo for defending the republic, for defending Mexico from both separatists and the centralist dictator Santa Anna.
as a mexican, I didn't really know my own history before your series. you've really helped me see about my heritage and I thank you for that
As someone who spent their formative years in California, it's weirdly cathartic to see someone talk about it. I come from an anglicized Irish-German family, but though being protestant and very white, it wasn't unheard of or uncommon for people like us to go to catholic mass on christmas, use bits of spanish in our daily lingo, or cook mexicano food.
As such when I moved to Canada, I definately felt like a stranger in a strange land even though I am nominally a "Anglo" by the standards of most Canadians. It just goes to prove your point that borders really aren't drawn by states but by the ppl living there. Thanks for that.
Yes! I love those christmas mass, they are called "Posadas", here in Tijuana are so traditional that they're even practiced in schools and that's so blessed because after school you can come to the parish and celebrate one more time!
And then, there's another one on January 5 "Reyes magos", and another one but smaller on February 2 "La Candelaria", that's why winter is my favorite season, even more here in the south!
I don't really know if you would count as "Anglo" tbh.
Were your Irish ancestors Protestant or Catholic?
Irish faced a lot of discrimination in Canada, which is why my grandparents moved to the States (Irish/German), they were not considered Anglo back then. There's a lot of German and Irish heritage embedded in what is now considered "Mexican" culture due to Catholic traditions. From Visigothic roots of the Spanish monarchy, to the Hapsburg and Austrian cultural influences, to the migration of the 1800s that gave us Nortenyo music, flour tortillas, and Cerveza.
19:11 I love the segments that were drawn on paper
thank you for contributing your artwork to this video.
Thanks for letting me contribute my voice! I'm new to voiceover and super grateful for the opportunity to participate in such an informative video!
I live in the West Texas town of El Paso, where like Nogales de la Norte (Nogales north of the border) we are primarily Latino and majority Catholic. Here in El Paso that Tejano spirit lives in the rancho towns that emerged on the outskirts of urban downtown evolved from an American settlement known as Franklin. Yet on the southern parts of town in Segundo Barrio, the Lower Valley, and the missions of Ysleta del Sur and Socorro the spirit of Mexican-American Tejanos lives on through our culture, I happen to still dress in the classic vaquero y caballero outfits that are common down here and there are parts of town that we annexed more recently than others and that feeling is evident in the landscape as there are some sections that are primarily English speaking yet in others less than a mile away primarily Spanish. It is in that mix of culture that the West Texas town of El Paso thrives, in its chaos and glory of the West🇺🇸🇲🇽
Kraut his explanations are so clear and to the point, he might actually even be able to explain the political landscape of the Dutch Republic, something even the Dutch themselves do not understand to this very day.
Ohh that'd be wonderful. I'm dutch and I despise the lack of discourse on the Republic in our schools. The 20th century is important, yes, but so wete the 16th and 17th
So far from God and so close to the USA.
thank you for contributing your artwork to this video. I look forward to working with you on your future projects as well.
@@Kraut_the_Parrot no problem happy to help, if you ever need me just shout,
Quite the curse
@@Kraut_the_Parrot do you have a parrot?
@@Kraut_the_Parrot do you have a parrot?
I like how you didnt sing the praises of Porfirio Diaz, you have no idea how many people literally FELLATE him as the holy savior we didnt appreciate.
Really? What kind of propaganda are they mentally digesting?
@@gaber7113 like Kraut says, the old powers that benefit from the past are still in power (this will probably show in his third video), and in control of media and companies. They spend a lot of money in propaganda, claiming Porfirio Diaz was great (because they were greatly benefit from those times), Maximilian of Habsburg was an underappreciated king, and most important of all, Benito Juarez, the first indigenous president we got, national hero, who separated church from government, and introduced a lot of constitutional reforms, was a megalomaniac who was nothing short of a disaster for mexico =/
@@Yagamimoon Don't agree with those people but I can get their points. Maximilian was indeed a good king/emperor, yes he was a puppet from french imperialists but he did try to improve Mexico.
Right? Although I think Maximilian was a good guy, they just didn’t give him a chance because he was a foreigner...and also a king trying to rule what was supposed to be a republic.
I can understand most of the thing you said but Maximilian wasn't all bad though. He truly brought the progressive ideals of then modern Europe to Mexico and tried to uplift the country by and large. Though all that is overshadowed by the fact that he was a French puppet. Though in time he could've turned that around as well, given he didn't get murdered. Mexico at least could've kept him as a Constitutional Monarch like that in the UK.
One of the rare cases of the Amparo used as it was intended (protection of the marginalized) is what is now the "legalization" of same-sex marriage in Mexico. When same-sex couples were denied marriage licenses, they filed these amparos, claiming their rights to enter in a marriage contract were violated. Many appeals failed, but some won. Enough of them were successful that in 2015 the Supreme Court (SCJN) analyzed these successful cases and ruled that restricting the right of marriage to only heterosexual couples was unconstitutional. Now, even if it's not codified in each states' or federal laws, same-sex marriage is de-facto legal in the entire country and cannot be legally denied by a lowly municipal clerk. Funnily, this happened exactly two weeks before the American Supreme Court's own ruling (12 June 2015 vs. 26 June 2015).
More reason to abolish Amparo.
Even in Arizona the base school curriculum is still either a basic Anglo or Spanish perspective on westward expansion, so many students unless they dive into history themselves will never know the true story of the region they and often their entire family live in.
This is true, but you really only get so much time in class with a lot to cover, especially with specific subjects such as history in a public school setting. Really only can do a more deep dive or nuanced learning when one can do elective courses specifically targeting what looking for, if those courses exist at all. Easier to do once in secondary education or as you said, do it on your own.
Kraut is one of the few YT channels where you can confidently drop a like even before the video's actually posted, because quality is a guarantee.
ye
exactly
True along with people coming together and having a mature dialog on history.
Thank god he severed his ties with reactionary anti sjw/skeptic channels and lost those idiots for good
@@ClearPathBeats well, being anti SJW is one thing and may occasionally(!) be justified - endorsing racists/white supremacists/fascists/outright neo-nazis is however very common in those circles, and to get into anti SJW content often leads to someone being gradually pulled into the nutjob section - got a couple former friends who fell down that rabbit hole, only a few made it out to see what shit is in there...
Everyone nailed it with their artworks, wonderful video
thank you for contributing your artwork to this video.
I'm Mexican and I thank you for your effort teaching me and the world about such important topics. If only public education would teach us history this way, this deep, and with full context, I think more Mexicans would be aware of the struggles their ancestors had trying to get a real change. And if that was the case, maybe such change would have either already happened, or on it's way to happen. But considering everything that has happened to Mexico, I think that the fact that public education in Mexico doesn't encourage politic-historical critical thinking is no coincidence. Sadly, the dictatorship will continue for the foreseeable future.
Yup, as a Mexican myself, I can totally say that I've never had a good history teacher, they would just explain the first settlers of Mexico, then the Spanish conquest, and some would even skip from independence to the modern day, so lame...
Like the series showed, there was a lot of important things going on in the past two centuries and oversimplify or even try to make everything like if there were "good and bad guys" it's simply very wrong.
They skipped Porfiro? En serio? What the hell. He’s one of the most interesting figures in Mexican history, and as you know, there are a ton of interesting historical figures. Kraut’s portrayal of him is a little one dimensional (and yet factually correct). Diaz was definitely a fcukhead, but he’s a complicated figure.
I'm still undecided on whether Spain was a uniquely bad role model for a former colonial nation, or if Britain was a uniquely good one. Unfortunately none of the major French or Dutch colonies survived in a meaningful enough form to provide us with a point of reference. All we really have as an alternative example is Brazil, the former possession of Portugal, which is kind of like Diet Spain.
Well on one side, most former colonies of Britain mainly the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand are one of the most prosperous nations in the world, while most former Spanish colonies don't prosper as much and the rest stay as a middle power.
But for what is worth though, both along with France as well definitely caused most of the political instability in the world whether in the Middle East, Mexico, South America and the Philippines.
Well Spain had a policy of assimilation (half assed) with native population while britain's was a policy of genocide and segregation, surely something about that had an effect over the countries we have today
You have India tho
If an empire is based on genocide, slavery, piracy, usury and lies sure thats a good role model.
About British ex-colonies, besides Canada, Australia and NZ (the US doesnt count since only the east was part of it, which was less that a 1/3, the 2/3 were parts of Spain or France) the rest like India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Jamaica... in short the majority of its former colonies were and still are poor, much poorer than Spanish ex-provinces, in fact before the 20th century, México, Perú, Chile, Argentina, Cuba, Venezuela and others were much richer than even other European nations and closely tied with the US.
And last but not less important, the Spanish werent colonizers, but conquerors like the Romans did, integrating the people into its culture and law (and even much better than Roman law treating slaves, thanks to "Leyes de Indias" among other reforms).
Mexico: "oh you're approaching me"
USA: "I can't manifest my destiny without getting closer"
@Nilesh Kumaraswamy
Unfortunately; Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, Chicanos, and Indigenous Mexican Americans don't speak Jojo's Bizarre Adventure. They speak Knight of the Zodiac-Saint Seiya.
You'll need a Dragon Ball and Sailor Moon translators to decode what they're saying.
@@whathell6t every Latino is a dragon ball, sailor moon and saint Seiya enjoyer
@@marcoarana2773
Plus! They’re hype since Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca made appearances in Saint Seiya Next Dimension and Lost Dimension mangas, way before Yu-gi-oh and Fate/Grand Order
Mexico: Jajaja, then come as close as... *33:40*
Mexico : "Ho ho. Then come menifest. I'll show you what I'm made of."
As a New Englander I understand why they wanted to leave so bad, our ground is just rocks.
I live in New England and the soil is actually really good, though I also live in a valley.
the mountainous portions of New England are basically useless for anything other than hiking and skiing
I stayed in New Hampshire for a month, and all I saw was Granite.
Damn glaciers stole your soil. And here in the Midwest it gave us a bunch.
@@Jiji-the-cat5425 If you’re far enough north, super coastal, or in a river valley the soil isn’t very bad, but the northern bits have a short growing season, there isn’t a ton of land in the river valleys, and the coastal soil is too saline for super intensive agriculture.
Once you’re slightly West of Appalachia you have the biggest river system on the continent (or second if you think the Americas are one continent), and enough space for actual productive crop growth.
-an Ohioan who is openly biased
As Mexican is amazing how well you explain the issues of our country, and how our history shaped the (broken) politics of Mexico, keep it up
"Mexico banned immigration" The irony uwu
In all seriousness, thank you for making this informative video. As a Latina, I grew up believing that what I learned in school is true but now I know.
Honestly happy to be a part of this. Epic content.
thank you for contributing your artwork to this video.
@@Kraut_the_Parrot thank you for letting me be a part of it. :)
@@Kraut_the_Parrot kraut how did u upload this an hour ago but the comments are over 20 hours
@@bojarckhoosemanschnarf5851 1) it was a premiere
2) patreons had access to it 24h early
@@cee20.5 oh ok
Hope on the next episode you mention Woodrow Wilson's 1914 US invasion of Veracruz. Even most mexicans dont know of it
Woodrow Wilson was awful not just cause of his invasion of mexico, he also funded the kkk
@CamelMan302 yeah people seem to not know about the bad stuff he did
USA and Mexico are superior countries to the rest of the world and North America in general is a superior continent
@@Student0Toucher why?
@@Student0Toucher ...bot
As a resident of New Mexico, I can't tell you how much I've appreciated this series. It's made me so much more aware of the history of my people.
I think you've reached a point now where people who have dedicated their lives to the presentation of history need to be taking notes from your contextual approach that goes beyond singular topical presentations. In a single hour I have learned more about history than I thought would be possible. You need to be hired as a producer and director, given a healthy budget and creative control over teaching people their history which you do with great care and consideration for objectivity. I'm watching a completely unrelated series called Murdoch Mysteries, set in the 19th and early 20th century and there was an introduction of a conflict between him and the dominant protestant faith when it came to him being promoted within his department of law enforcement. And now I know why because you've been extremely thorough in a completely unrelated presentation because you understand the entanglements that exist within a particular time period and you make sure that they are shown so people have a clear picture that overrides our modern lens. This is unparalleled work. Congratulations to you and your team for making such an outstanding presentation.
@Kraut - thank you very much for mentioning our channel about Sri Lankan History. Your channel is a goldmine and we look forward to watching your videos and learning much! 🙏
No. Thank you, for making such amazing videos. I wish you all the success in the world in all your future endeavors. And I am happy and proud to have helped you a little.
@@Kraut_the_Parrot damn
I'll be checking yours, patta..
If it turns out to be cup of tea...
Well
Sorry kraut if I don't watch your stuff for a bit due to being preoccupie
Yep, as a Mexican all of those bits about Mexico's past are about right. Like you said in your part 1, we're HELLA LUCKY we're still a country to this day. I guess one of our most valuable traits as Mexicans is that we're stubborn as hell, can resist a lot, and still be here lol.
Hopefully both our nations US and Mexico can continue to stabilize and grow stronger ties.
@@dkoda840 honestly, racism against Canadians needs to be normalized and replace the racism against those south of the border. South Park has it right
@@itchyscientist0576 Racism overall needs to be eliminated neither is justified one bit. We need to cooperate as one together and imo form a stronger union between the three nations somewhat like the EU.
@@dkoda840 to be honest.you Mexicans,Yankees and canucks have a lot in common.
@@zlatko8051 We do just need to acknowledge and embrace it.
When you talked about Spain and the reason for them to be a more of a "failed state" made me remember that we, their "Iberian brothers", haven't also been destroyed. We were in a dictatorship and we still have the problems that you listed about Spain. What makes Portugal a little bit better (if we focused only in the problems) is that fact that Portugal is more Unified
“Eh, oof, bruh, BRUH” honestly one of the funnier visuals in the video
Another great video Kraut, but there is just a detail I feel like needs to be clarified.
What you call a "recurso de amparo" it's actually a "juicio de amparo", which literally translates as "trial of appeal", it is even common here in Mexico to confuse an "amparo" with an ordinary resource, when it is actually a new trial when your human rights have been violated by any government official.
But you are very right how it has been used, even to this day, in a very despicable way.
thank you for the clarification and correction.
@@Kraut_the_Parrot Thank you for such an excellent content, keep it up.
@@Kraut_the_Parrot Hmmm so you made a mistake, how typical, Didn't you call me alt-right despite I being one of the first to defend you from the alt-right. I guess throwing your friends under the bus is alright in your mind
@@thedarkmasterthedarkmaster What are you talking about?
@@abhinavmelathil366 I'm simply pointing out a mistake Kraut made
Parrot man go squawk
thank you for contributing your artwork to this video.
We are all always glad to help you.
I can’t overstate how grateful I am for this representation of my countries history. There is so much propaganda wound up in the historical “facts” that are presented to us as children.
Thank you Kraut!
As a Canadian looking watching the history of both my southern neighbours I find this fascinating.
Also after other recent viewing of other history videos I am realizing one important thing. All modern nations and states have some kind of bullying or victimhood or a combo of both. We all come some some sort “bad times legacy “
Big hugs to all, and let’s hope that humanity can smarten up in the future. Or at least learn from the past. Learn by watching animated ball people reenact history with awesome narration. 👍🙂🌟
Studying history I feel like I keep seeing cycles of violence where imperialist powers impose their wills onto colonies who then rebel and continue the cycle of violence by practicing their own forms of imperialism.
I hope that we can break this cycle and learn to engage with one another as equals rather than "superiors and inferiors." I would love if we could model this in the Americas with greater cooperation between Canada, Mexico, and the United States. We can do so much more working together as brothers and sisters than we can competing with and undermining one another as unequals.
@@jonhanson8925 Brother, you just described NAFTA
You know it’s highly anticipated when I get more excited at seeing the premiere screen than I do for most other full videos.
I'm a mexican and i thank you for teaching me the history of my country. P.S. you should call the PRI "El pree".
El peepee
a mexican mexican or an illegal immigrant mexican?
@@uzochiokeke4328I live in Sinaloa, México
@@aitormenta3633 ete sech
Check out "og del Rancho". Hes has a response video.
I love the fact that the same day this video was released, Juan Seguín was added to the Wikipedia page for the Battle of San Jacinto.
The level of quality from this channel makes me wanna dive deep into my own interests.
Kraut, you’ve honestly blown my expectations out of the water these past few months/year or so.
I’ve consistently referred people to your videos, and countless times I find myself using your videos as a supplemental source in conversation. Thank you. Keep up the amazing work. I’m here to watch, multiple times over.
Edit:
I hope you go into the later years of the manifest destiny. I read a novel about a year ago called How to Hide an Empire. Touches upon the “post-manifest destiny” conditions that America paved itself. Very good read.
In Chapter VI, it’s interesting that you give the examples of the stories of Texan independence as either “whites liberating Texas from the Mexicans” or as “whites stealing Texas from the Mexicans”
Here in Texas, they don’t even talk about the fact that whites were involved with liberating Texas
Actually, until I saw this video and went to look it up, I never realized that people like Stephen F Austin and Sam Houston *weren’t* Texan
It’s not really mentioned, and I’d always assumed that they were from Texas, that they were Tejanos, even if in hindsight that doesn’t really make sense...
It’s taught as “Texas is so awesome that we liberated ourselves from the Mexicans and we joined America because they were begging to have us and offered us a good deal”
My vague memories of history class from my time in Texas definitely had the undertones of "we" being the white land ownin' men and such, and "them" being a somewhat confusingly vague concept of Spain or Mexico. Heck even my "good" history teacher still framed it as the more-correct-but-still-wrong version of the land being stolen from Mexico. Perhaps things have changed in Texas education in subsequent decades...
I think it was pretty obvious that they were white to me even as a kid lol
Wow. The history of Texas is even more Twisted in texan taught history
My teaching was that Americans moved to Tejas and brought their slaves. When Mexico made slavery illegal then they rebeled. I was not taught about the recentment of the mexicans in Tejas to rebel against mexico. Their decision to fight side by side with the white immigrants I did know about but not that they were at the Alamo. The betrayal is new to me and hope that it gets changed.
@@looseygoosey1349 This is more or less how I was taught in my Texas history classes as well, which was in the mid 00's. Not sure how it's taught now.
Welcome to a history lesson from a history teacher you wished you had.
That's why I'm glad I dropped out! Who wants to spend time in government institutions anyway
Kraut keeps failing to make a 1 part video on a topic and ends up delivering us a 3 part masterpiece part 2
At 4:12 I like the how you (or one of your artists) put 13 stars into the 11. With the research and amazing attention to detail in these videos, I can say without a doubt that each release exceeds my expectations by miles. The patients and effort by you and your team is always preferred, this is some of the highest quality content on RUclips.
His voice is so hypnotising I watched the whole advert without even realising I was watching an advert.
Here's an idea for a potential future video: The History of Poland. Its one of those nations with an uniqie history that not many know (except of course of the doble occupation WW2 stuff) Religious tollerance (Polish diplomats in the Council of Constance in the late middle ages said that pagans should get equal rights to christians) , a 500 year old Parliment, both a great power, that conquered and held Moscow and a partitioned subject. You make videos with such historical accuracy and details, that a video about Poland from you would be a delight for every historian.
I, a Polish person, aprrove this messege
I'd love to see that
I dont know. So far Kraut stayed away from Europe. I could imagine thats because to show the history of Poland you would need to explain so many backgrounds and developments all over europe. Personally I believe Kraut will focus more on places outside of europe, concentrating on nations conncted to europe like turkey, mexico or Quebec. I think its easier to tell their stories.
You should try making it. We need more people making quality content like that
@@abrakadabra2192 That might be the case. I do enjoy his current contet, because from a perspective of a European, we didn't really talk much about the Americas, except that "USA independence, ok next lesson"
But Poland could also fit into this narrative. Not many People know about it, besides WW2 and that there were some funny winged horsemen. But not many People know, that Poland had an elective monarchy, religious tollerance even for Islam, that it invited Jews instead of exiling them. Maybe in the future Kraut might make some videos about it, and belive me - that'd be hell of a story.
PLEASE BRING US A NEW TRILOGY!!!
You’re lectures are so good. And the visuals go hand in hand. I watched most of your content twice over, over the last couple years. Really hope to learn more from you guys soon.
One day in the future this guy is gonna be the world's history teacher, it's gonna be on his headstone.
Spoilers for the end:
Oh boy, I can't wait to find out how this revolution fails to improve the situation and still leads us to the terrible state of Mexico today!
Will we get a Sergio Leone reference?
Polandballs did more in helping me learn and retain information about history than my history teachers. Kudos
Why do Internet people always have to whore out their History/Math teachers for mere Internet points? Dude, if you are a persistent enough there are no dispassionate teachers anywhere
A lot of Historian/Teachers were specifically not educated on the casual data we have access too.
In an incredibly diverse public school of a major city, I was being taught "War of Northern Aggression against States rights" in the mid 2000's
This channel remains some of the best history content on RUclips. Your depth of discussion and very objective descriptions of highly morally charged topics is much appreciated.
41:04 The idea of oil being "worthless" in this time is hilarious in retrospect
The whole gang is here x
Did you draw that profile picture yourself? I feel like I recognize it from somewhere.
Wonderful video, glad to see her out again.
This is better than most documentairies I've seen! I absolutely love your work kraut!
I come into most of these videos wanting to watch History and achieving that but also the professionalism of this creator drives me emotionally constantly come back to someone who I know has character and puts that character into this video's. I am not a person who usually donates as a patreon but due to the way that kraut has done his videos he might have just turned me into one
Please don’t ever compromise your quality no matter how much time it takes, truly amazing.
Not a full day after this video's release, and Juan Seguin's name is now among the commanders and leaders of the Texan forces at the Battle of San Jacinto on its wikipedia page.
Let's goooooooooo
Kraut you really found your calling with these videos. Ace work
Thank you for creating such a rich historical video describing the evolution of both the United States and Mexico.
Kraut the video is just as great as ever, but I think that you missed the point that the reason that México is so divided and prone to corruption is that there is no unifying myth that created a unified Mexican identity, I've lived almost my whole life in México and the reason that 99% of corruption happens is because the loyalty to your family and your socio-economic group is much larger than the loyalty to some vague idea of "Mexican identity".
thanks for this input, that makes a lot of sense.
Very good point, Mexican Identity itself is the myth created after the Mexican Revolution and the only real connection comes from the Spanish influence. Many regions of Mexico are still insular to their own traditions and beliefs that are rooted in the indigenous identity.
Really? That's kind of surprising because in the US, you always see Mexican flags flying. Especially on Mexican holidays in Chicago
As someone who’s lived in Texas their whole life and San Antonio for 2 years it makes me happy to see that the Latino and Latina population are starting to pick up more Tejano‘s ways. Especially in San Antonio the culture mix there is so neat you see Tejano‘s men and women giving tours and lectures at their historical sites while wearing old cowboy getups. if you just take a walk down the river walk you can see that a ton of the historical sights are constantly being restored and worked on.The city feels really historical in and of itself and they only work to keep it that way. I may live in a small town off of Dallas called Garland now but in a more modern way the cultures are still integrated here. Still got your bodega across the street from the US post and frankly as a non Hispanic American I wouldn’t want it any other way. I love their nice peoples,culture,music and especially food it upsets me to see constant hardship and hate for them in others places. I guess what I’m trying to say is Thank you Tejano‘s keep making Texas better!
Unpopular opinion from the rest of my Chicano/Latinos. I dont like bodegas.
@@looseygoosey1349 well, they're from New York and Puerto Rico
Do you mean Mexican-Americans when you say Tejanos? Because Tejanos are a separate but related group of people.
Otherwise, you're right that it's nice that historical and cultural work is being sustained. I wish the same could be said for Anglo/Southerner part of Texas as well.
@@ibrahaaliragheb1670 Right my mistake didn’t mean to offend just expressing passion.
Thank you. There's definitely a lot of history that even us Tejanos are still learning, for instance the State of Texas likes to emphasize the Battle of the Alamo, when in reality it's just a footnote in Texas history in what would be the 2nd Texas Revolution. The Battle of Medina was a much bloodier battle that also involved American filibusters after the initial First Texan Revolution. The current trend is that we're learning more about our indigenous roots with DNA testing, and how connected to Mexico we really are. I'm from SA, have family from Oak Cliff and grew up in Ft. Worth, there's a big Puerto Rican population up there now, so thus Bodegas. Mexican "bodegas" would just be Taquerias.
I've really been enjoying the geopolitical videos and history videos. I find these videos very interesting, as Kraut seems to do a lot of research and incorporate niche, little known findings from experts that give an extremely interesting change in perspective on many well known topics. Also I admire the honesty of Kraut to say at the start that profits of the sponsorship will be going to the artists. The production value is great on the artwork that was commissioned, and I want to give high praise to the artists. I have seen on Kraut's twitter that he wants to take a break from these long form videos, as they take a lot of time to make, which makes sense and I understand the decision, but I'll be eagerly awaiting an announcement for the next video!
Best channel on RUclips, another incredible video, great work!
The effort and quality put into just the sponsorship segment of this video is more than most videos i see on RUclips.
I'm from new mexico and this series is a truly fascinating perspective on the history of this region.
I know you are going to cover the Mexican Revolution of 1910 next video but there is something I want to say. There was this historian that I can’t remember that commented that it was one of the few revolutions that truly started from the bottom layers of society. Most revolutions started by disgruntled middle class or elites. But the Mexican rev started because the poor where so poor that they could not hold up the power structure of the rich anymore.
I doubt it, there many actors at play both from lower class citizens like the Villa and Zapata armies, while the Carranza army and later the three sonoran generals de la Huerta, Obregon, and Calles were fighting for the interests of the mexican elites.
Yeah not exactly, the Mexican Revolution is also tied to San Antonio, TX. It was kicked off by the manifesto known as "Plan of San Luis Potosi" by Francisco I. Madero, a social advocate who challenged then president Porfirio Diaz. Madero was a businessman from a wealthy Coahuilan family (also Nortenyo). A lot of the poor, mostly indigenous farmers, could still not read or write.
I'm elated every time I see a Kraut video on my feed, it's like going to the theatre.
I cannot describe with words the feeling of excitement I get when Kraut posts another video. It continues to amaze me how great they are. But what amazed me when more is the fact I can continually rewatch them without losing interest.
The video format you've been doing for the last 3 years is simply jawdroppingly great
The way you give credit to the people who made your artwork (additionally to the insane content of course) definitely shows how this has become an incredibly professional channel
By far one of the greatest history channels I’ve ever seen, thank you for making great education and history teachings more readily available for all.
Can’t wait for part 3, and all the art and artists in this video is superb. Also I really enjoyed on how this came out on my birthday
Deine Videos sind an Qualität kaum zu überbieten, zudem sind sie absolut unterhaltsam und informativ. Ich freue mich immer wieder sehr auf deine Videos. Grüsse aus der Schweiz!
da du ja Deutsch sprichst:
Kennst du das Video Ante Portas vom Schattenmacher zu dem selben Thema?
Das war mMn auch sehr hochwertig.
Ich bin gespannt, wie Kraut das Thema behandeln wird :)
@Anonymer Nutzer Alles gut :)
Aber es gibt (entgegen der allgemeinen Wahrnehmung) doch relativ viele hochqualitative Videos auf RUclips, wenn man nur weiß, wo man gucken muss.
Empfehle den Kanal (der Schattenmacher), und insb. die Videos zu Mexico (Ante Portas), Ted Kaczynski, das Kunst Video (entARTet) und das Video Einwanderung und Immigration
I'm always sorry because I keep starting these videos at night and then falling asleep, it took me until now to watch it all.... But I guess it helps you with watch time ;) You're doing great work here, I learned a lot and I am happy that I can look forward to part 3. Servus aus München!
Please consider making a saga about Brazil!!!
"why Brazil failed to be a superpower" is a theme that I dream of seeing in your vision!
Congratulations on the great job!
One of my favorite videos to work on, history and storytelling was phenomenal.
You know he's a pro when he even uses country balls for sponsored material
Thank you Kraut for this wonderfully informative video! No one quite puts out the kind of quality content that you do! Cheers!
Kraut is one of the only content creators I have bell set for. His content is just that good. Thanks for all the quality vids Kraut!
I remember being told something about Mexican-Americans in a phrase that went like this, “Too integrated with America to want to be Mexican too Mexican to be integrated with America.”
Not entirely true im living proof of that I consider myself integrated with America culture assimilation takes time
@@spartanx9293 Not me.
An uncle in Mexico once told me.... In the eyes of Mexicans, you will never be "Mexican" and in the eyes of Americans you will never be "American".
Implying that i didnt have an "Identity"
@@erniegutierrez2288 I have a different perspective on this I am an American nuts to what anyone else says
@@spartanx9293 LOL you and I share the same perspective. That comment just sticks with me because it gives great insight into what matters and seems to be most important to some people.... "Ethnic Identity"
Im just glad i can find a person who doesn’t just recycle content and pump out shitty low effort videos daily.
Love your videos. Im also proud that you’re half Welsh
I know this is just my experience, but throughout all of my travels in the US, my favorite peoples and regions have been precisely Appalachia (I've been in the Smokey and Blue Ridge Mountains many times) and the South ( the Carolinas, Georgia, and northern Florida).
Very warm and loving people. I've always liked the feeling of absolute unnaccessability/isolation you get in the Appalachian Mountain Range. It's an absolutely beautiful place and you just genuinely feel like you could just bushwack until you find a nice stream/brook in the middle of nowhere, build a cabin and no one would ever find you again. In all fairness, the Arizona desert and the great prairie also give off that feeling.
I've never liked New England. Don't get me wrong, Maine, Vermont and Massachussets are beautiful states and I've also met great people in my travels through new england, but overall I've always gotten the impression that people mind their business more and that they appreciate government presence and involvement more.
My point with all of this is that in my travels through the US, I've noticed the tropes you mentioned. The people in Appalachia tend to be more isolationist (the place almost begs/tempts you to it), and the people in New England tend to appreciate more government involvement. The way it manifests itself in the people is funny too. New englanders mind their own business more (which is to be expected of a place with high a population density since it will be more impersonal) and the appalachians are warmer and possibly more welcoming because in such a hard to reach place, they don't get outsiders THAT often.
All fun to think about.
I like the use of Dvoraks F-major "American" string quartet (nr. 12). Even though it was intended as a sort of "tribute" to his time spent in the USA, I can see why you apply the music when talking about Mexico (especially since this series intends to explore the relationship between Mexico and the USA). Good choice of music. And an amazing series. Thank you for your work!
I was just thinking about how WWII was so apocalyptic that it created a whole new mythology and origin story for so many cultures, and then you explained modern European governments. I feel vindicated
Truly amazing
Thank you for contributing your artwork. :)
Rewatching for a second time, keep up the great work
Every time you raise the level of quality, astounding work
To be honest, I’ve been checking your channel more times a week to see if second part is coming, and I’m beyond happy to finally see it
I really love the fact these videos aren't littered with ads every 5 minutes. It makes it much more pleasant to watch and keeps it from losing the flow.
Just found your channel the other day and I got to say that it's been a great watch. Also, the Malaysian artist was great! Hope you commission them for future videos.
Well done! Great job with the research and structure of this video. Looking forward to the third part.