Which way will The UK go without Europe?

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  • čas přidán 1. 12. 2022
  • The UK has cut ties with the Mainland. What should they do in a Europeless world?
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Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @raihanrusli2720
    @raihanrusli2720 Před rokem +5924

    It sounds ironic to abandon fellow continental neighbors to be "more independent" but ended up more dependent toward your former colony

    • @Tonius126
      @Tonius126 Před rokem +407

      Better to get closer to fellow anglo saxons and former colonies than closer competing powers like france and germany.

    • @laurent3760
      @laurent3760 Před rokem +491

      @@Tonius126 German Americans are the majority in the US lmao

    • @joshbentley2307
      @joshbentley2307 Před rokem +472

      @@laurent3760 no there definitely not.
      Most British Americans ancestors have been in the country for so long that they choose to identify as American rather than British.
      While people with parents who have only just immigrated are more likely to identify with there parents ethnicity.
      Also Brits are literally a mix of Celtic and Germanic people, which are the other 2 largest ethnic groups (Ireland and Germany).
      44/46 US Presidents are ethnically British (and if we include all of the British isles) 45/46.
      The only president who wasn’t was Martin Van Buren whose the USA’s 8th president, he was Dutch (which makes him Germanic).
      Ethnicity has hardly anything to do with our relationship anymore anyway, we literally watch the same shows, listen to the same music and play the same games.
      The hole Anglo sphere is United by culture and language, if everyone in the U.K. looked black and everyone in the USA Asian we’d still be extremely close.
      Millions of Brits are friends with Americans, the same can not be said about the French who are only 20 miles away.

    • @Tonius126
      @Tonius126 Před rokem +169

      @@laurent3760 America is not german, it's culture is founded in anglo saxon foundation.

    • @heello2u465
      @heello2u465 Před rokem +224

      @@Tonius126 no need to make this an ethnic nationalism thing here.

  • @babu6637
    @babu6637 Před rokem +2981

    >Brages into becoming PM of UK
    >Crashed the Economy
    >Queen died of shame
    >Refuses to elaborate
    >Resigns from PM
    🤜---Chad Liz Truss---🤛

    • @97Corvi
      @97Corvi Před rokem +320

      "I'm a fighter, not a quitter !!"

    • @l0lLorenzol0l
      @l0lLorenzol0l Před rokem +104

      Isn't it funny how she spoke about lowering taxes and reversing green energy policies and then suddenly the entire British political class turned on her and kicked her out to put a literal Banker on the job without a election?

    • @schwoondoggle
      @schwoondoggle Před rokem +103

      @@l0lLorenzol0l Without an election? Do you even look at British politics? Sunak was the runner-up to PM bro. I don't think the conservatives choosing the next most suitable candidate after the one that got in resigned makes us a dictatorship or something, especially when the alternative is waiting another month or two for another election to go through. Its just logical man.

    • @maxdavis7722
      @maxdavis7722 Před rokem +9

      @@schwoondoggle pretty sure he was elected by the Tory party tho. Not sure on that one.

    • @schwoondoggle
      @schwoondoggle Před rokem +22

      @@maxdavis7722 So was Liz Truss. It was something to do with Boris' resignation, I don't know the details though.

  • @MrAsianPie
    @MrAsianPie Před rokem +1180

    It's like an elderly father moving in with his son

    • @Web720
      @Web720 Před rokem +222

      More like an elderly father who lost everything and is trying to move back into his more successful sons.

    • @thesecondsilvereich7828
      @thesecondsilvereich7828 Před rokem

      @@Web720 if being successful means a white minority soon to become another South America state

    • @mariomouse8265
      @mariomouse8265 Před rokem

      @@Web720 A father with severe brain damage moving in with his extremely rich and violent eldest son

    • @Jesse-xg8rk
      @Jesse-xg8rk Před rokem +36

      He couldn't take it at the old folks home anymore but he doesn't have anywhere else to go.

    • @Arcaryon
      @Arcaryon Před rokem +11

      @@Web720More like an pair of elderly fathers with one just wanting to retire and the other trying to get back on track and in shape and the retirement guy won a game of rock paper scissors which decides their shared fates.

  • @dannyboielsegundo9873
    @dannyboielsegundo9873 Před rokem +380

    I love how you represent each nation with its national animal instead of the typical country balls. It's a lot more unique that way.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Před rokem +45

      They aren't always national animals (the UK's is a lion, and not all nations have officially designated national animals and plants).
      Its still a lot more creative and distinctive than countryballs. (And lends itself to better visual gags like the UK Bulldog in an infantry helmet riding on the back of the American Bison in an infantry helmet, or the bone sticking out of the greek dolphin.)

    • @dannyboielsegundo9873
      @dannyboielsegundo9873 Před rokem +6

      @@jasonreed7522 i would love to see someone create an animated series representing countries with their national animals

    • @turtlepaladin4750
      @turtlepaladin4750 Před 6 měsíci +7

      I feel that a bison represents America better. We are strong and resilient. Bison are more powerful together and they could stand for a united country.

    • @FreckleShark
      @FreckleShark Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@turtlepaladin4750 Yeah a Bison is much better. Eagles are overrated and kinda german tbh.

    • @pokemata1035
      @pokemata1035 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@FreckleShark Eagles being overrated I get but like, German? Why are eagles German?

  • @widgeman
    @widgeman Před rokem +2466

    “It’s the reason why Britain was the first place to have these towers puffing that exotic pack” has me in tears

  • @coasteraddict10
    @coasteraddict10 Před rokem +1655

    The water = industrialisation thing goes back even further than you think. Widespread watermill use for product manufacturing was widespread as early as the year 1000, with the doomsday book recording 6500 watermills within the country.

    • @Zeyede_Siyum
      @Zeyede_Siyum Před rokem +9

      Wow

    • @HANKTHEDANKEST
      @HANKTHEDANKEST Před rokem +58

      It just makes sense, and once people figured out that water going over the top of the wheel = more power than water going under it, whoa--things got *lit.*

    • @winch2342
      @winch2342 Před rokem +6

      Wow spiny thing go burrrrr

    • @JTMondal
      @JTMondal Před rokem +6

      that explains the peasants revolt

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Před rokem +4

      Still wonder why rivers arn't just covered in the things...
      there good for power generation.

  • @gallanosa
    @gallanosa Před rokem +257

    8:27 "The Queen hated [Truss] so much that she instantly died." That made the video for me. Brilliant!

  • @andresluz3664
    @andresluz3664 Před rokem +275

    As a Mexican I love and appreciate that our representative animal is an axolotl

    • @Ikbeneengeit
      @Ikbeneengeit Před rokem +20

      Very cool mascot

    • @SuperCatacata
      @SuperCatacata Před rokem +3

      As a non-Mexican. I still don't know how to pronounce that properly.

    • @nukesrus2663
      @nukesrus2663 Před rokem +9

      ​@@SuperCatacataaxe-oh-lot-ull or axe-uh-lot-ull

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 Před 11 měsíci +9

      i'm american and i appreciate ours being a bison. we are united in enjoying having an animal cooler than the government mandated eagle

    • @diodelvino3048
      @diodelvino3048 Před 9 měsíci

      Bison are so fckin cool. and Tasty@@adog3129

  • @notachinesespypleasebeliev8954

    So from what I got from this video is that we should accept the UK proudly as the 51st state

    • @SpahGaming
      @SpahGaming Před rokem +116

      more like 51st, 2nd and 3rd states, plus many other oversease terratories

    • @Orangelover-yo8gn
      @Orangelover-yo8gn Před rokem +115

      53rd state. Hot take but dc and Puerto Rico both deserve statehood

    • @ryanbrooks5482
      @ryanbrooks5482 Před rokem +46

      @@Orangelover-yo8gn Puerto Rican’s I know don’t want statehood they want independence.

    • @boopie6635
      @boopie6635 Před rokem +39

      It won't happen to be honest. The british public and Labour won't accept lowering food standards to give into American trade deals. We'd have to massively lower our food standards to get a stable deal with the Americans. Something the public isn't willing to do. There was a big protest about Brazilian food coming into McDonald's UK and they had to back down. This is just a taste of what would come if we gave into American demands.

    • @notachinesespypleasebeliev8954
      @notachinesespypleasebeliev8954 Před rokem +80

      @@ryanbrooks5482 not true, majority of the population wants to become a state

  • @FreddieHowe2806
    @FreddieHowe2806 Před rokem +327

    My town in the East Midlands was first a coal mining village then a huge cotton town. Not any more. Those mills are long since abandoned and a part of our town hall is burnt down. Now all we make money off is tourists and sweets. R.I.P industrial Britan

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 Před rokem +5

      Your currency is so overvalued nobody is going to buy your cotton because they are so expensive.

    • @FreddieHowe2806
      @FreddieHowe2806 Před rokem +32

      @@harukrentz435 It wasn’t long ago when the purge off mills happened. Only in the 50s.

    • @tbr7035
      @tbr7035 Před rokem +5

      @@FreddieHowe2806 Yeh when the Empire collapsed and we couldn't exploit the colonies anymore. The cotton industry isn't coming back. Coal should though - its not like we are cutting back on using it.

    • @balls9420
      @balls9420 Před rokem +10

      Similar situation in my town in Cornwall. In the 1800's and 1900's it was a tin mining town. But since the closing of the last of the mines in the 1990's it has huge areas of land with bare concrete and abandoned buildings. Along with the surrounding area being one of the poorest places in the UK. As for the tourists... well... they just go and visit St Ives or Newquay instead.

    • @leonethomas4163
      @leonethomas4163 Před rokem +2

      We made your history if it wasn't for us you would exist show some respect

  • @chrisfarquhar2033
    @chrisfarquhar2033 Před rokem +305

    I wish I could go back to when England wanting the leave by EU was the biggest international issue at the time..

  • @Fullchristainname
    @Fullchristainname Před rokem +721

    As someone who knows European history, it’s weird to hear someone call Britain and France “friends” even if it is technically true.

    • @KyotoSong2
      @KyotoSong2 Před rokem +64

      Actually, as a French person I can tell you that we don't talk too much about the UK (the news almost never mention the UK). It's quite "odd" for us to see the British ppl so focused on France tbh

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před rokem +1

      @@KyotoSong2 France is probably too focused on its neo colonies in Africa and appeasing Putin.

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +11

      Current politics have made the two not so friendly. Worst the relationship has been in decades. French have refused to stop illegal immigration and started fights over fishing (again). Technically friends, but not enthusiastically lol

    • @KyotoSong2
      @KyotoSong2 Před rokem +44

      @@silverhost9782 Actually I think it's more complicated than this "licence dispute". France has never wanted to be a pawn of United States, (US doesn't have a welfare system, treats its own workers poorly (those who are at the bottom of the social pyramid), and unleashed a French-bashing because France didn't support Georges Bush Iraki's war). To sum it up, US is France's ally but not a "modele" for us. So when UK, an European Country, decided to go "Brexit" and left the EU to get closer to the US (that's how we see it), you can't expect France (and probably the others European countries) to be "lenient" toward the UK.
      Plus don't forget France shares its border with 8 countries (+ Brasil with French Guyana), so we obviously have been influenced by all those countries. That's why we don't focus so much on Great Britain (I think we focus our attention equally on Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Switzerland, etc.)

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +9

      @@KyotoSong2 In reality, France has been hostile to the UK for a long time. It took years to get into the EU because of France- and there will be years of hostility now that we're out of it. That's fine, because France things the UK is a threat to its EU, the political entity that it created and led (arguably still does). But let's not pretend it's any more than that

  • @BatteredWalrus
    @BatteredWalrus Před rokem +886

    Problems with making a trade deal with the US:
    the US wants to get a deal with EU first.
    UK would have to lower food/produce standards massively, something that the British public will not accept

    • @outrageddeer2101
      @outrageddeer2101 Před rokem +148

      That and Britan knows they would be overtly subservient in that role as they would rely on America economicly for everything. So it's tough question for Brits be under French and German influence or American.

    • @Hession0Drasha
      @Hession0Drasha Před rokem +1

      If the tories are in charge of any voter reform, they will rig it so they can get in on a smaller and smaller minority. They will try to force lower standards on us, and the press will lie and say it's for our own good.

    • @Hession0Drasha
      @Hession0Drasha Před rokem +135

      @@outrageddeer2101 at least with europe we'd have a seat at the top table.

    • @picalc314
      @picalc314 Před rokem +96

      honestly the food standards argument is such a weak argument, the fda has extremely strong standards. sometimes too strong, as the baby formula shortage showed.

    • @wantrcy
      @wantrcy Před rokem +6

      Unlike europe the uk gets lots of tourists because he still have a monarch even though he a terrible person and London has a big bank area filled with lots of banks

  • @herlescraft
    @herlescraft Před rokem +122

    UK big brain move: you can't collapse along with the EU if you collapse before all by yourself

  • @nromk
    @nromk Před rokem +417

    The problem with the UK is that it wants to act as if it's next to the USA, Australia, and North America (USA and Canada).

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +91

      It worked well 50 years ago, until they broke off the relationship and left Canada, Australia and NZ out to dry to join the EU...

    • @billclinton3862
      @billclinton3862 Před rokem +12

      we are not acting we are a financial Arnold Schwarzenegger, the issue is our politics

    • @Venenata
      @Venenata Před rokem +6

      Check our GDP mate ... how can 60 million people on a island match other countries GDP .. Just better bro dont hate

    • @terrysmyth4277
      @terrysmyth4277 Před rokem +20

      @@silverhost9782 tbh that was inevitable after India left the empire after the conclusion of ww2 when the entire ship was broke as fuck. Once the Indian master log was removed, the rest of imperial dam was going down. Plus it definitely wasn't helped by the presence of 2 very clearly stronger powers now at the main table of global affairs

    • @terrysmyth4277
      @terrysmyth4277 Před rokem +43

      @@billclinton3862 not wrong but you are missing the bigger point at large. The UK is small subregional power trying to act like it is a continental power with whatever imperial power is left in the tank. Only all of our closest neighbours and even the US dislikes us at best or severely distrust us at worst now, and we have figured out the hard way that there is no imperial power in the tank anymore. And yes, our politics in that time definitely hasn't helped either

  • @Indicant
    @Indicant Před rokem +840

    We hate the polish? Are you for real? I love the poles, you'll never find a bunch of harder working individuals, fantastic employees with a great work ethic!

    • @sdprz7893
      @sdprz7893 Před rokem +256

      Not every single brit of course but a large chunk of anti-immigration rhetoric in the UK was against the poles and Eastern Europeans in general, today it's more so the Albanians

    • @redhead9253
      @redhead9253 Před rokem +33

      @@sdprz7893 The main problem wasn't the Polish, it was the large number coming in that was kinda exploited by being part of the EU (free travel)

    • @sotch2271
      @sotch2271 Před rokem +6

      Heard that outside london they are paid illegaly (400 pounds for the family 6)and live in shack or a roof the farmer give him (for the most i've hear)
      The farmer need to do that because of the articial low price of food from foreign country like pakistan russia canada france etc
      The poles need that for various reasons coming for most of poverty
      And the englishmen suffer unemployment and all the problem that come with it since the farmer aren't employing 1 english but 4 poles instead

    • @davidhitchcock6599
      @davidhitchcock6599 Před rokem +26

      I am a Pole and am proud to be Polish. We are a very strong people, we can survive any hardship. Coincidentally, I am also British. 😅

    • @kitkat47chrysalis95
      @kitkat47chrysalis95 Před rokem +7

      lol imagine having polish problem and not a el habenero de mucho gusto latin american problem

  • @barrybeebenson8102
    @barrybeebenson8102 Před rokem +1332

    Honestly speaking as a Brit first time I’ve gotten a good understanding of what we have to do to move forward
    Edit: how the hell did people move on to Ukraine

    • @Tonius126
      @Tonius126 Před rokem +85

      Stay close to the Americans. Better than France and Germany imo.

    • @SatchelChannel
      @SatchelChannel Před rokem +1

      @@Tonius126 absolutely not. Americans are too unpredictable and warmongering to be trusted

    • @alexzavala5078
      @alexzavala5078 Před rokem +64

      @@Tonius126 but even still us Americans have a weird relationships with you guys. Our government is best friends with you guys but the people still very much see you guys as the enemy that needs defeating “eventually” and this is also pushed kinda by the government in the school system they make sure too tell us of y’all’s atrocities in colonization. They kinda gloss over ours lol

    • @soffren
      @soffren Před rokem +33

      @@SatchelChannel America is also the only friend the UK has, and without that relationship, Brexit wouldn't have even been an idea.

    • @themageofspace5516
      @themageofspace5516 Před rokem +75

      @@soffren what about us aussies and the rest of the commonwealth? what about the canada we fought in both world for them and we arent their friends?

  • @sandrotabatadze1918
    @sandrotabatadze1918 Před rokem +67

    Man my country is stugling to join eu for decades and my guy just left with no plan

  • @mikev4135
    @mikev4135 Před rokem +72

    If you want to look at it from a historical perspective, for a long time the UK has generally wanted to stay out of continental affairs, aside from when one nation became too powerful and upset the fragile balance of power. Think about pre ww1. The uk were keen to stay out of the growing alliance blocks until Germany sought to challenge british naval dominance. So with the emergence of the US as a great power, it made perfect sense for the UK to be friendly with them. Outside the politics of the continent, reliable trade partner, similar language/culture/cultural values. Also importantly even though the US eclipsed them in power, they are still too far to directly threaten the UK with invasion

    • @cerdic6305
      @cerdic6305 Před rokem +10

      That's all true, but Britain's foreign policy of trying to stay away from the continent whenever possible was only in place when we were the greatest naval and economic power on Earth. The reason for it was that the government didn't want to be dragged down by commitments in Europe, which would prevent them from focusing on the empire and the colonies, and also because they wanted a reasonably peaceful bloc of countries to sell stuff to. Pretty much none of that is true anymore, so I don't think it can really be said to have a significant effect on current policy.

    • @guydreamr
      @guydreamr Před rokem

      Indeed we would experience in a British Invasion in the 60s.

    • @Ryandeanchickenpeen
      @Ryandeanchickenpeen Před 9 měsíci +3

      Why would we ever feel like invading our best friend to the East lol

    • @cantin8697
      @cantin8697 Před 3 měsíci

      10%. We just want peace and quiet, man...

  • @realengineer.
    @realengineer. Před rokem +54

    "I do.", "I'll do it for the bag." has been the most accurate depiction of the relationship between Scotland and England i've seen.

  • @corymorimacori1059
    @corymorimacori1059 Před rokem +260

    “Your whole miserable country is the size of one state!” Theodore Roosevelt

    • @Ninja-gt3zi
      @Ninja-gt3zi Před rokem +15

      Nothing to boast about in US

    • @SpahGaming
      @SpahGaming Před rokem +55

      "the us is 50 countries (a third of which created by britain) in a trenchcoat"

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před rokem

      @@Ninja-gt3zi yeah ok we have a gun problem and homeless crackheads we get it.

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/owTPZQQAVyQ/video.html

    • @MalfosRanger
      @MalfosRanger Před rokem +2

      ​@@SpahGamingA third? Not sure about that math.

  • @jamesanderson3633
    @jamesanderson3633 Před rokem +143

    As a bri' I really like the Scandinavian countries and I think they're cool both literally and figuratively

    • @jamesanderson3633
      @jamesanderson3633 Před rokem +11

      @In Wellens we trust 1 like = 1 sheep saved from the Welsh

    • @chozer1
      @chozer1 Před rokem +17

      dont drag us into your brexit thing stay away!

    • @jamesanderson3633
      @jamesanderson3633 Před rokem +5

      @@chozer1 don't worry Norway is the coolest anyway

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Před rokem +8

      @@jamesanderson3633 Norway doesn't want the UK to join EFTA. Norway doesn't even like the UK

    • @jamesanderson3633
      @jamesanderson3633 Před rokem +2

      @@jasonhaven7170 I'm not surprised they don't like us. I don't like the uk

  • @highlander8402
    @highlander8402 Před rokem +118

    As a Brit your analysis on the country and its future is pretty accurate. There's no way that we get to rejoin the EU with the same privileges we had before. Its also likely that Ireland reunifies, but Scotland I'm not so sure on as while support for Scottish independence seems to be growing, it's economic suicide for Scotland and besides, who says that the EU will even let them in?
    Long-term we're probably going to become a de-facto US territory, but in general as a country we'll be fine and I mean that in the sense that it won't collapse.

    • @tempest5736
      @tempest5736 Před rokem +19

      Same here, from my understanding, Irish unification is inevitable and would probably benefit Northern Ireland in the long term. As for Scotland, immediately joining the EU would most certainly be potentially suicidal, it would be the equivalent of someone who hasn't gone swimming before jumping in the deep end and just hoping for the best not to drown, although if Scotland were to join EFTA that could be more financially feasible for them.

    • @maxdavis7722
      @maxdavis7722 Před rokem +5

      I disagree that they were privileged, the UK was getting the least out of being in the EU so it makes sense that the economic burdens were reduced. Not really privileges when every other country was finding far more value.

    • @witthyhumpleton3514
      @witthyhumpleton3514 Před rokem +22

      @@maxdavis7722 There was a lot of countries investing into the UK because it was "the english country in the EU" though. That was worth a lot of money.

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před rokem +6

      @@tempest5736 Irish reunification would probably benefit Britian as Northern Ireland is in economic deficit and has been for decades. But for Ireland, well there are about 1 million unionists that don't want to join - whether Ireland could handle the security challenges of 1 in 6 people being possible dissidents is questionable. What's stopping Northern Ireland turning into a bloodbath? Britain at least had an army they could send to stop that, Ireland's military is too small to keep order.

    • @gnenian
      @gnenian Před rokem

      It's not the Scotland Nationalists. Those types are just Anti-English and not even British.

  • @sirborkington1052
    @sirborkington1052 Před rokem +146

    I grew up in England and I didn't even know we are supposed to not like the Poles any more than other nationalities. Didn't get that inpression growing up and I was in a relatively diverse area.

    • @kyzantia8884
      @kyzantia8884 Před rokem +5

      Its a stereotype

    • @kpeyton3
      @kpeyton3 Před rokem +10

      I find it ironic that some Brits think that Poland is a backwards state with no opportunity. It has the 3rd best education according to PISA, it has lots of available jobs and it's affordable which means the average Pole can afford unlike cough cough London. The UK is going down the drain.

    • @d.prymaka9884
      @d.prymaka9884 Před rokem +31

      @@kpeyton3 dude i have delt with this for 19 years, everyone thinks poland is some backwater and worst of all, any racism towards poles are "ok" cause we are white - oh well in 3 years I am moving back to poland so i cannot complain :)

    • @sirborkington1052
      @sirborkington1052 Před rokem +4

      @@kpeyton3 Yeah none of us were saying that I think

    • @MooseCastle
      @MooseCastle Před rokem +1

      Because it's not true.

  • @iangeraldking
    @iangeraldking Před rokem +52

    The portrayal of Canada was hilariously accurate.
    As an aside, if you combine the America plan with the CANZAUK plan, that’s essentially just extending the Five Eyes into the economic domain, beyond the original military/intelligence aspects.

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +1

      Thankfully the USA wouldn't be part of CANZUK if it ever happens. They'd ruin it

    • @mobo8933
      @mobo8933 Před rokem +5

      @@secretname4190 I mean doesn't it make sense to call it a British Empire because then you would just be joining back with your British family

    • @leisti
      @leisti Před rokem

      That "just" is carrying a lot of weight.

    • @iangeraldking
      @iangeraldking Před rokem +5

      @@leisti My assumption is that the levels of trust needed for an intelligence alliance far exceeds the threshold required for an economic alliance. The devil is in the operational details in terms coordinating an expanded NAFTA, so to speak, but the base level inter-state trust is an enormous hurdle already overcome due to common cultural and historical elements.

  • @MrMarinus18
    @MrMarinus18 Před rokem +136

    9:20
    The industiralization of Scandivania was quite similar to Britain though in a slightly different way. Scandivania was a very strong village based society and industrialization happened usually by those villages one by one. Even now most Danes, Swedes and Nords live in large towns and usually the capital is the only large city. It was very bottom up with most old social structure being preserved and evolving with industrialization.
    This is very different from the top-down industrilization of Germany or Russia. Where the central authority pushed industrilization by moving people into cities and destroyed most social structures.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Před rokem +8

      And the way Scandivania industralized laid the groundwork for social democracy in that region.

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 Před rokem +8

      @@souvikrc4499 Well it's more so the reverse. Social democracy already was a thing and guided industrialization. In Germany and Britain nobility and the government bought up huge amounts of land and displaced farmers and craftsmen sometimes by force.
      In Scandivania though that didn't really happen as the peasants had too much power in the government. So the industrialization happened gradually due to market forces.
      The US industrialization is somewhat similar though it did happen a little faster.

    • @EvillAnime
      @EvillAnime Před rokem

      @@MrMarinus18 and then Finland got independence, copied their homework and joined the council.

    • @unsrescyldas9745
      @unsrescyldas9745 Před rokem +1

      @@MrMarinus18 What do you mean USA's industrialisation was similar? how so? it wasn't as bad as Germany's sure but still pretty bad.

    • @algernonsidney8746
      @algernonsidney8746 Před rokem +4

      The industrialization of Britain was very top down. Millions of peasants and artisans are evicted from their houses and farms and hurled into factories and mines. These were funded by taxpayer money from India thanks to the conquests of the East India company.

  • @TheArctofireHD
    @TheArctofireHD Před rokem +232

    Great video. As somebody who is British, I think outsiders really overestimate the prospect and pull of CANZUK on British politics. It's nothing more than an imperial-nostalgia Brexit fantasy. Would it be nice for it to happen? Yes, I feel great cultural affinity with other Anglosphere nations. But it's barely mentioned at all by politicians and does not seem realistic.

    • @cerdic6305
      @cerdic6305 Před rokem +23

      Yeah I’ve never heard it mentioned except on the internet

    • @terrysmyth4277
      @terrysmyth4277 Před rokem +35

      It also literally makes zero economic and political sense for both the UK and the other 3 supposed partners' point of view. The other 3 clearly (mainly Australia and Canada) are far more concerned about trade with the US whereas even after leaving the EU, the UK's largest trade partner is still the EU. It's basic geographical reality more than anything else

    • @terrysmyth4277
      @terrysmyth4277 Před rokem +4

      And on the basic point of trade deals after leaving, the deals have been basically totally worthless for the UK to the point where even former Tory ministers are saying so in Parliament

    • @ed-b8045
      @ed-b8045 Před rokem +2

      That is true like the most we do have a strong alliances with the angloshpere (and also the commonwealth) we have a strong alliance with most countries (NATO)

    • @terrysmyth4277
      @terrysmyth4277 Před rokem

      @@ed-b8045 tbh what strength is there in shit like the commonwealth? The UK gave up on trading with it for free by the 1960s when the EU was starting up and now the organisation is literally just nothing more than copium for the empireboos who delude themselves into thinking the empire isn't dead and buried and for the post-colonial countries it is a possible breadline for badly needed investment that they probably won't get from us lot 1) because we don't give a shit about them outside of humping dead glory and 2) we don't have money to invest considering we got did of the department of international development and we export barely anything bar financial and general services to the world around us and even that is badly failing currently.

  • @guardianofthetoasters2323

    12:25 idk why but UK riding on top of US like a stead looks adorable

  • @dragenmaster5385
    @dragenmaster5385 Před rokem +160

    as a military nerd i def say royal navy isnt second strongest on earth, its more like top 7 on earth, but they are ongoing modernization this decade

    • @joshbentley2307
      @joshbentley2307 Před rokem +60

      Depends on how you rank navies.
      China has a far stronger Navy than the U.K., but if we went to war Britain could attack China while China wouldn’t even be able to reach the U.K.
      Other than the USA there’s not a single country that has more reach than the U.K. militarily.
      Just depends on what you value, but by pure fire power you could argue that we’re not even top 5 (if nukes are banned.

    • @dragenmaster5385
      @dragenmaster5385 Před rokem +11

      @@joshbentley2307 having the reach means nothing when you cant defeat your enemy, royal navy can bully some third world country sure but they cant do shit against japan or china

    • @joshbentley2307
      @joshbentley2307 Před rokem +94

      @@dragenmaster5385 as a self proclaimed “military nerd” your understanding of navies and global supply chains is laughable.
      The U.K. can literally send one of its nuclear submarines (which is currently in the Sea of Japan) and just go and bomb Beijing, Hong Kong, Shanghai.
      China wouldn’t be able to attack the U.K. conventionally because they literally can’t reach the island.
      Of course that would be ridiculous for the U.K. to do due to the sheer size of China’s economy and nuclear weapons.
      U.K. has 14 overseas territories (most are massive military bases) and 145 (the second highest amount in the world) known overseas military bases.
      Along with being able to use USA military bases (800+) U.K. can attack any country.
      China has 1 overseas military base in Djibouti which is surrounded by bigger NATO military bases (USA, U.K. and France) Japan also has 1 overseas military base which is also in Djibouti. Military bases are placed there to fight of pirates and defend global shipping lanes.

    • @schwoondoggle
      @schwoondoggle Před rokem +19

      @@joshbentley2307 damn you know your shit my guy. Bravo.

    • @atinofspam3433
      @atinofspam3433 Před rokem +3

      We don’t have a strong navy, rather, it’s far reaching. We have a small presence everywhere rather than a large local presence like China.
      And bear in mind, it’s very unlikely we’d be fighting a war without the help of the US or someone else.

  • @kearinroberts9127
    @kearinroberts9127 Před rokem +68

    Great video, just a minor correction. Ireland is dependent on the UK in a variety of sectors but food is certainly not one of them. Ireland is a food stable nation and is a large exporter of agrigoods.

    • @thenickstrikebetter
      @thenickstrikebetter Před rokem +26

      Good to see they've made a recovery since the incident

    • @petermaguire8139
      @petermaguire8139 Před rokem +20

      @@thenickstrikebetter Recovery might be a stretch - more like 'fewer people to feed'

    • @Smooy1111
      @Smooy1111 Před rokem +2

      Most cheese in the UK comes from Ireland 👀

    • @kearinroberts9127
      @kearinroberts9127 Před rokem +3

      @@Smooy1111 I heard a stat a few years ago (so could be well dated) that 1/4 of all beef burgers in Europe are Irish.
      I think what the other commenters are missing also is that even during the famine there was more than enough food in Ireland to go around. Instead it was used to feed the empire.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Před rokem +1

      @@thenickstrikebetter the incident only happened because of Britain

  • @bkk208
    @bkk208 Před rokem +23

    i like how the title and thumbnail went from "can Britain survive without eu" to "why is britain in chaos rn"

  • @Patangy
    @Patangy Před rokem +21

    "The queen hated her so much that she instantly died"
    I'm trying to eat lunch while watching the video and choking on food from laughing 😂

  • @RamunasNN
    @RamunasNN Před rokem +15

    Since you mentioned Lithuania, I think now its time to make a video about it!!
    Great content!

  • @megadick6000
    @megadick6000 Před rokem +9

    "The queen hated her so much she instantly died" im deader lmao 💀

  • @5erase
    @5erase Před rokem +13

    I enjoy your style of videos, thanks for posting keep it up!

  • @dkaloger5720
    @dkaloger5720 Před rokem +20

    The speed of industrialization as an explanation for some ascpects of the population pyramid is a very interesting idea I hadn’t though of

    • @seanj4119
      @seanj4119 Před rokem +8

      Basically, slower industrialization creates good-paying industrial jobs at a slower rate, so instead of all the kids in a rural family of ten moving to the city, only one or two actually do. Since rural families tend to have more kids than urban families, the siblings on the farm go on to have more kids while their urban siblings have fewer kids. Peer pressure from the family may help in encouraging the city folk to have more kids as well. Over time, urban couples get used to having larger families, especially if there's sufficient space for suburban housing. Replay this scenario every generation and you'll likely get a stable population pyramid.

  • @iamsomeone8175
    @iamsomeone8175 Před rokem +11

    i don’t like how people use england, britain and the uk as if they are the same thing. same as europe and the european union

  • @pottertheavenger1363
    @pottertheavenger1363 Před rokem +28

    Sounds like a good opportunity for Mexico, which already jumped on with a trade deal 🇲🇽🤝🇬🇧

    • @looseygoosey1349
      @looseygoosey1349 Před rokem +6

      You really think Mexico would act without the US?

    • @redhead9253
      @redhead9253 Před rokem +14

      Honestly, British humour and Latino humour slaps.

    • @pottertheavenger1363
      @pottertheavenger1363 Před rokem +12

      @@looseygoosey1349 It does. It trades and deals with whomever they want

    • @TheGreatOne-gw7xh
      @TheGreatOne-gw7xh Před rokem +3

      @@redhead9253 British “humor.”

    • @jalenr.6542
      @jalenr.6542 Před rokem +3

      That would make the British look extremely desperate, considering that the Mexican cartel has more power and influence than the government

  • @onecertainesquire486
    @onecertainesquire486 Před rokem +16

    Actually, England's agricultural ability used to be incredibly well regarded before the industrial revolution.

    • @stewroo
      @stewroo Před 9 měsíci +6

      Whether or not we are good at farming is irrelevant when we haven't the space to grow enough food for our population.

    • @Elenrai
      @Elenrai Před 5 měsíci

      @@stewroo That honestly seems really weird.
      Denmark is almost able to feed itself and all of Norway with the surplus, like 85-90% coverage of 11-12 million people, Norway got fishing, and Sweden is big enough with a small enough population to feed all of the UK in theory(if impractical due to economics and common sense, holy shit it would require so much reshaping of nature)
      So how come the UK cannot realistically feed itself? I mean fucksakes Denmark used to be so shit we had to import wheat while them English ones could even grow wheat in their paradise of not too rainy and warm weather....instead of the literal frozen swamplands of pre industrial Denmark....and now we can feed as mentioned, a shitload of people.
      So how the fuck can big ass UK not feed itself? As a state it seems to have plenty of space on the world map, relatively speaking.
      Is it all woodlands or just big rocks? Like....I do not comprehend it! How do you fuck up food, it should be the first fucking thing on your mind EVERY DAY....like....come on! This is how you get bullied by danish and norwegian farmers and end up with Manchester.....and York....

    • @mal_3157
      @mal_3157 Před 2 měsíci

      Yep the population isn't that dense just because of immigration.

  • @juliane__
    @juliane__ Před rokem +64

    Yeah, just France has a better dmographic than Britain and Germany catches up. It is projected, that Germanys population will grow to 86 Mio the next few years. There is a new legislation modeled after the canadian immigrant law. So Britain sems to become, or stays, the weirdo between Europe and the US with no big trade agreement so far. Also it is highly questionable that the former colonies will suddenly give Britain a first in any regard, just because they are not EU now. What shall be the upsides to this?

    • @Andrew-gn9qp
      @Andrew-gn9qp Před rokem +11

      Commonwealth realms (UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) already cooperate with each other in each level of government, the only thing missing is an economic agreement. Here in Canada we have close relations to the UK even at a municipal (city) level, since the Crown is involved with local charities and institutions.

    • @MooseCastle
      @MooseCastle Před rokem

      A better demographic in that it has more Africans?

    • @Bruceboot
      @Bruceboot Před rokem

      France has the same demographics as the UK and Germany is literally going to lose 20 million people by 2100

    • @joeyenniss9099
      @joeyenniss9099 Před rokem

      They don't have to pay money to the EU that's pretty much it. I think the UK was giving more to the EU than any other country.

    • @joeyenniss9099
      @joeyenniss9099 Před rokem

      @@Andrew-gn9qp There is economic agreement, just the UK apart of it. Its between the US, New Zealand, Canada, and Australia. He mentioned it in the video, it would probably be good for them to get in on it if they can.

  • @brailyndsummers
    @brailyndsummers Před rokem +42

    Just curious, what were your criterion when you chose the animals to represent each country/union? I've always thought they were pretty spot on and wondered how you decided on them. Probably a fairly useless question, but I must know the answer.

    • @thedukeofchutney468
      @thedukeofchutney468 Před rokem

      I always thought that NATO should be the Lion and not the EU as the former is far more powerful and kind of rules the world like, ya know, a lion.

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro Před rokem +3

      Check on Wikipedia. Every country has official National animals

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Před rokem +3

      ​@@ShubhamMishrabroalthough the UK claim's the Lion as its national animal (a species that doesn't even live there). So not all of them are national animals but are closely related to the national identity of the nation (a bulldog has represented Brittain in political cartoons since the 1900s).
      And some have multiple national animals like the USA having both the Bald Eagle and the American Bison/Buffalo. (I think a buffalo better represents our actual behavior on the world stage)

  • @euanstokes2828
    @euanstokes2828 Před rokem +45

    1:30 The 'Firth of Forth' isn't actually a river, Firth is Scots for Estuary, the Forth is a river that runs from the Southern tip of the Highlands into the Firth of Forth.
    The river itself is actually very meh, with little on it other than Stirling. The Firth however provides calm seas and shelter for the capital, Edinburgh. But I'd say if you want an example of an OP river in Scotland, see the Clyde, which runs from southern Scotland through Glasgow and out West, and it was the river where most of the ships of the Royal navy were built.

  • @isiahjean-baptiste434
    @isiahjean-baptiste434 Před rokem +2

    This is a fantastic channel, humorous and educational at the same time.

  • @GodsWheat
    @GodsWheat Před rokem +26

    what can I say I moved to Britain in September this year from the EU and it's like the perfect shitstorm but still life isn't awful

    • @atinofspam3433
      @atinofspam3433 Před rokem +17

      The classic british saying, “still, could be worse”, which sums up life here pretty well I think

  • @nightking8490
    @nightking8490 Před rokem +43

    So you are telling that if I set trading barriers between my country and my economically strong neighbours, my economy would take a hit ?

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +8

      Apparently, someone should tell Nicola Sturgeon real quick

    • @nightking8490
      @nightking8490 Před rokem +5

      @@silverhost9782 before she does referendum.. Haha true

    • @MooseCastle
      @MooseCastle Před rokem +4

      That's not what leaving the EU was.

    • @yoyo-lf3ld
      @yoyo-lf3ld Před rokem +7

      Yeah it's crazy everyone knew that would happen. The problem with much of the analysis against brexit is that its always on an economic pov. Many people didn't vote for that reason.

  • @Lotuzyo
    @Lotuzyo Před rokem +5

    I love all your videos. Keep it up!

  • @callumhall3872
    @callumhall3872 Před rokem +2

    I really do want to give a shoutout to all the animals country depictions. They are so spot on and must've taken a good amount of time to complete. Well done!

  • @pop3501
    @pop3501 Před rokem

    Just found your channel and already know it's gonna be gold

  • @IdealKangaroo
    @IdealKangaroo Před rokem +6

    Finally he did a video on my countries horrible economy and government.

  • @lucianoosorio5942
    @lucianoosorio5942 Před rokem +180

    The UK is like this person who was rich, spoiled, and the guy who would threatened you if you never pay him. He was super muscular and powerful. He was a captain the seven seas, a businessman with a huge company, and an inventor. He had a company but lost it due to extreme competition from other companies. He raised his son even though they had their moments. The son would also meet his mother (France) sometimes since his father and mother don’t get along well (Until way later), but now his son is way richer and powerful than him. He got rich, but not as rich as his glory days. He would follow along with his very rich son since he’s the most trustworthy guy to rely on in the family. Tell me what the UK is like in your opinions. Pls don’t be offended. I did these comments before.

    • @Sceptonic
      @Sceptonic Před rokem +33

      Aka they are a bit bitter they aren't number 1 anymore

    • @shutupMaji
      @shutupMaji Před rokem +42

      Uk is like a spoiled dad who's had a falling out with the neighbours in the area they've lived comfortably in for a long time and has now decided to drag his unwilling family out of the area to live on the streets for a while whilst claiming it was a family decision and the right thing to do

    • @jack1701e
      @jack1701e Před rokem +13

      Chasing old glories while ignoring new problems right?

    • @lucianoosorio5942
      @lucianoosorio5942 Před rokem +5

      @@jack1701e sounds true, but I’m not British. Also not living in the UK.

    • @atinofspam3433
      @atinofspam3433 Před rokem +17

      We’re a victim of our own culture. We’re known stereotypically for our stiff upper lip and the “keep calm and carry on” slogan. This is a true stereotype, we’re so used to living in tough times we just carry on and little changes. Although thankfully it seems people are finally fed up with the tories and things might begin to change.

  • @Roberto-REME
    @Roberto-REME Před 11 měsíci +7

    Love your program, Hoser. It is informative, well presented, excellent narration and hilarious commentary. Great work!

  • @thestoic4629
    @thestoic4629 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Thumbnail is amazing

  • @Spelunkid
    @Spelunkid Před rokem +10

    Scotland be like: Can I leave yet? Can I leave Yet? Can I leave yet? And so on

  • @nikolozgilles
    @nikolozgilles Před rokem +16

    I love your videos they're a funny and engaging way of teaching geopolitics and history with memes

  • @JudoChamp1000
    @JudoChamp1000 Před rokem +1

    This was a good video. I liked the quick wit interspersed in the video.

  • @tuskutin
    @tuskutin Před rokem

    such great quality as always

  • @cebonvieuxjack
    @cebonvieuxjack Před rokem +14

    could you do one about France next ? Im curious to see what you think of it lol

  • @ibisskb
    @ibisskb Před rokem +14

    As a EU citizen, I had other reason to suscribe to this channel:
    The frickin' animal flags. They are like the dinosaur nuggets of flag representation, once you know about them, there's no valid alternative to them.

  • @Starbat88
    @Starbat88 Před rokem

    I love your vids. Very informative, and your humor is very entertaining.

  • @MrLondonUK
    @MrLondonUK Před rokem

    Really great and informative video! I'm impressed at your knowledge

  • @carlosanderson4479
    @carlosanderson4479 Před rokem +14

    The water made them great, and kind of screwed them too. The Anglosphere must stick together.

  • @operationeel4196
    @operationeel4196 Před rokem +17

    After this I think it's only fair we get an EU video too :)

  • @ethangoncalves12
    @ethangoncalves12 Před rokem +1

    Really funny video 😂. Keep up the good work h0ser!

  • @Gammxa
    @Gammxa Před rokem +5

    somehow im learning more about nations' national animals than actual information

  • @averagelithuanian2751
    @averagelithuanian2751 Před rokem +11

    Why he diss Lithuania like that bruv 0:42

  • @sheep6938
    @sheep6938 Před rokem +3

    That naval shot hot me laughing way too hard

  • @TotalWarTotalMobilization

    Almost 200K subs! Good luck on the path!

  • @CrimsonsDeath12
    @CrimsonsDeath12 Před rokem +2

    Oh my god 9:06 "Markus Bjarkus and Klarkus" made me laugh so hard as a Norwegian, this video is spot on 😂

  • @karolinakuc4783
    @karolinakuc4783 Před 7 měsíci +3

    7:23 I like that Poland is represented by żubr (European Bison). I also like that England is represented by hedgehog

  • @DisKKJ
    @DisKKJ Před rokem +10

    You missed such a chance to make wales literally dragon.

    • @guydreamr
      @guydreamr Před rokem

      A certain Far Eastern giant objected.

  • @exit-bag
    @exit-bag Před 5 měsíci +5

    bro UK and India need to merge together, thats how we can become superpower again

    • @mazlxm
      @mazlxm Před 5 měsíci +1

      😂 you indians are funny

    • @Adam-wg2rf
      @Adam-wg2rf Před 4 měsíci

      If india agrees to be a kingdom under an old brit we may have an agreement

    • @RealLifeFactionsLore-iz3ml
      @RealLifeFactionsLore-iz3ml Před 2 měsíci

      Only if India wants to be a dominion under British rule again. But we’re not joining countries 👎

  • @joylessmonkey5714
    @joylessmonkey5714 Před 6 měsíci

    Dude, love you content. The editing, the voice over, its just mmmmhmmmm

  • @vicarious7858
    @vicarious7858 Před rokem +5

    As a Brit from the Midlands I can confirm that that picture is extremely accurate.

  • @simeonbradstock4214
    @simeonbradstock4214 Před rokem +3

    NGL this video was filled with a lot of flaws and inaccuracies but still pretty good. Thanks for even more content keep up the work

    • @DaDARKPass
      @DaDARKPass Před 6 měsíci

      Ok, name some innacuracies.

  • @furinick
    @furinick Před rokem +2

    This video really is more unhinged than usual
    I live it

  • @theonemark
    @theonemark Před rokem

    God i love how you put Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul memes into these

  • @derss7260
    @derss7260 Před rokem +3

    Great Video agian! 💯👍🏼

  • @user-gr9fq9gt9w
    @user-gr9fq9gt9w Před rokem +67

    Can you make videos about Singapore, Nauru and Israel? They have interesting economic history, present and future.

    • @owenbrandon8370
      @owenbrandon8370 Před rokem +5

      Is would like a video on Israel, it is a relatively new country, but a quite interesting one

    • @Konkov
      @Konkov Před rokem +9

      @@owenbrandon8370 can’t say bad things about Israel so not gonna happen

    • @james2be916
      @james2be916 Před rokem +1

      Nauru is a sad story

    • @trunksbrief6728
      @trunksbrief6728 Před rokem +1

      @Owen Brandon it isnt a country

    • @user-gr9fq9gt9w
      @user-gr9fq9gt9w Před rokem +2

      @@Konkov
      Most countries in the world are new

  • @diegoaespitia
    @diegoaespitia Před rokem +34

    right on, American here and honestly Brits are my favorite Europeans. love the music, the food, the accents. all great

    • @coleheilgeist
      @coleheilgeist Před rokem +12

      Same, love the Brit’s. Our cousins across the water

    • @sssd3461
      @sssd3461 Před rokem +14

      the food, the accents
      Sure 🤮

    • @funnelingspace9268
      @funnelingspace9268 Před rokem +19

      The food??? Bro it must be because I'm Latino but spain and Italy have the better foods compared to the UK

    • @atinofspam3433
      @atinofspam3433 Před rokem +9

      british food is good for certain things, I’d say if you want simple, yet delicious and filling, go for british food. Nothing beats a shepherds pie on a winter evening. That being said, europe does better summer food, it’s lighter and more exotic.

    • @jacobbeck5511
      @jacobbeck5511 Před rokem +3

      As I british person I'm confused as to why you would like are food

  • @shadowleon659
    @shadowleon659 Před rokem +92

    Brexit was a terrible idea. It's badly crippled Great Britain's economy and its made travel across the EU more difficult.

    • @l0lLorenzol0l
      @l0lLorenzol0l Před rokem

      Brexit didn't cripple shit. The UK government crippled itself by stalling Brexit as hard and long as possible, then refusing to put a stop on immigration and now refusing to drop the retarded green policy shit with talk of paying 3rd world countries for climate change.

    • @drkevinsmithFRCPath
      @drkevinsmithFRCPath Před rokem +17

      The EU is slowly imploding, in a tremendous debt with high unemployment rates and poor stability in the EU countries such as Italian government changes and the Russia Ukraine war. It actually feels like a relief leaving also travel to the EU countries hasn't become that more difficult, this year I travelled to Italy and stayed there for 80 days without even having to apply for a visa.

    • @DivinesLegacy
      @DivinesLegacy Před rokem +3

      Long term it will be beneficial trust

    • @_CaptainCookie
      @_CaptainCookie Před rokem +8

      @@DivinesLegacy source: trust me bro

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +8

      Turning the economy off for a year over COVID whilst not funding public services for 15 years was much, much worse than Brexit has been (so far)

  • @aidan-4759
    @aidan-4759 Před rokem +43

    Great vid, though I disagree about the future of the UK.
    Firstly, in the short-medium term a US-UK trade deal is unlikely as the Americans don't really care about getting one and it would require lowing UK standards on things like food which is both unpopular and would make trading with the EU much harder. Secondly, most British voters already think Brexit was a bad idea (57% think leaving was a bad idea) and this number will only increase as the younger pro-EU generations become key voters. This will almost inevitably lead to rejoining the single market or customs union with a good chance of fully rejoining the EU in a decade or two.

    • @jonassavimbi4795
      @jonassavimbi4795 Před rokem +1

      Voters aren't gonna wanna wait that Long for change

    • @aidan-4759
      @aidan-4759 Před rokem +6

      @@jonassavimbi4795 I think with fully rejoining they will wait but I think rejoining the single market is likely within the next 2 parliaments

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před rokem +3

      @@aidan-4759 Do you think the EU would actually let Britain back in after all the chaos before?
      I think on a democratic level rejoining would settle the EU problem for the UK - as a lot of the problem was British politicians signing EU power expansion treaties without British votes agreeing to it which obviously pissed people off - most notably Tony Balir promising a referendum on Lisbon and then cancelling it. Joining again would allow people to actually have a say, which would improve perception of the EU in Britain.

    • @aidan-4759
      @aidan-4759 Před rokem +5

      @@jgw9990 Yes but they will wait for British politics to stabilize. We will only be able to rejoin the EU once there is again a consensus between major parties that we should rejoin as rejoining will take multiple parliaments. Though I do think the process will be much faster if we get proportional representation as that way the split left wing vote (e.g. LibDems and Greens) will matter much more. And the swing voters in swing seats (who don't want to rejoin) will matter less. That would make the main political parties more likely to be pro-EU.

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +3

      Feels like a cope to me, unless things get significantly worse the UK parties aren't going to try to rejoin. The likelihood of things getting bad enough for that to actually be on the cards is low, despite what some (mostly foreign) people might want to believe

  • @SSRDezmondia
    @SSRDezmondia Před rokem +4

    1:29 Made me sad as an Edinburgh resident

  • @DRCHENZO
    @DRCHENZO Před rokem +3

    3:50 - That Jamaican bird!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @torinjones3221
    @torinjones3221 Před rokem +19

    Bah Britain just needs to throw a curve ball and side with best Korea 🇰🇵

  • @jaymistry3281
    @jaymistry3281 Před rokem +5

    You just taught me a lot about my own country. 😂

  • @anamixicato670
    @anamixicato670 Před rokem

    I FRIKING LOVE THE SONG
    IT FITS SO GOOD ALONG WITH THE ANIMATION

  • @vahagnmkhitaryan9909
    @vahagnmkhitaryan9909 Před rokem +2

    The sight of Chuck against the background of a Magna Carta makes me both happy and sad

  • @DeerMapping
    @DeerMapping Před rokem +35

    I'd say one of the reasons Brexit hasn't gone so well is because it was implemented by politicians who didn't want it themselves, many of them have stalled the process or actively worked against it. Also being hit by crisis after crisis wont help either (COVID, Ukraine, whatever the fuck is going on in parliament rn, etc). I just don't think it's had a chance, like it's said in the video, the UK's future should be secured

    • @aidan-4759
      @aidan-4759 Před rokem +12

      No, there is no world in which placing trade barriers with by far your biggest trade partner would ever work unless you made major sacrifices like lowering standards for the US or befriending authoritarian nations like China.
      You cant blame global issues for the reason why we have much worse problems than other comparative countries as they are global issues. According to the CER which looked at similar advanced economies we know that Brexit has cost the UK around 5.2% GDP in 2021. COVID does not explain why we lagging far behind all our EU peers
      Brexit hasn't gone well because it wasn't implemented hard enough, Brexit didn't work because its a fundamentally bad idea.

    • @AnyVideo999
      @AnyVideo999 Před rokem +7

      @@aidan-4759 "putting up trade barriers" many of which could have been avoided by Brexiting harder. Of other countries can make it outside of the EU, I don't see why your island cannot. Sure, there's bound to be turbulence in upsetting existing agreements, but overall should be fine and should see small barriers to trade.

    • @aidan-4759
      @aidan-4759 Před rokem

      @@AnyVideo999 Could you explain how putting up trade barriers with the EU would have been avoided if we Brexited harder?

    • @SimonReeves2
      @SimonReeves2 Před rokem +7

      @@aidan-4759 @deermapping2158 I think we're falling into the trap of false dichotomy here where it's either (Brexit is the problem) or (Bad Leadership and Confounding Variables are the problem). The more likely option is both. There is no denying that leaving the EU and losing the free flow of trade + economic leverage to regulate world commerce has been bad for the UK, but with better leadership and luck we could have left without nearly as much economic hardship as we have currently.
      Secondly, people are not looking at trade deals with the U.S. with enough nuance. The food standards issue is basically the Remain campaigns equivalent of the Brexit bus and has just kind of been accepted by the mainstream. Yes, there are chemicals that the U.S. puts in their food that are banned by the EU, but the opposite is also true, in fact many chemicals used in EU countries' food productions are prohibited by the FDA in America, so it's not this black and white situation where the EU's safety standards are better;
      more so that they are just different and each are better in different circumstances.
      This same logic applies to the other industries as well, but food was an easy point for remainers to score and I don't blame them for taking that shot, but we _are_ out now, so if we could play our cards right America can be almost as good as the EU (unfortunately distance will always be a problem).
      On the point of global crises, we can absolutely say that they affected the UK differently from the rest of the world, since our economic system is not identical to everyone else. An analogy I would use is like a wrecking ball hitting two different walls. One of those walls is a newly built concrete wall with steel reinforcements, and the other has been built a long time ago with just iron reinforcements.
      They might have been hit with the same wrecking ball (COVID, Ukraine, Inflation, Cost Of Living etc.) but the old wall breaks in some places.
      The point is that the UK's economy has been stagnant more than the EU big boys have (Germany and France) since 2008; hence the wall being older, and the wrecking ball hit the UK right at its most delicate moment (during and immediately after leaving the EU), hence why the old wall only has iron reinforcements, to simulate the relative weakness of the UK's economic legislation and policy which was, and still is chaotic during and after the leaving process.
      These laws and policies are designed to bring order to the economy, so that businesses are able to predict how it will behave, and also to help the economy hold together during hard times.
      The reality is no two walls are the same, even if the wrecking ball is, the effect on the walls will never be the same.
      Besides, to look at Brexit from this purely economic perspective is to miss most of the point of it in the first place. Brexit primarily was a dispute over legislative and political authority. To be part of the EU is to agree that EU law supersedes national law with mind to some specially agreed upon exceptions and exemptions. The UK had a lot of these exceptions and exemptions, which already shows that there was friction between UK and EU authorities to begin with.
      The fact is that the UK has some pretty big disagreements with EU laws, and would prefer to have our own laws take precedence, but we can't do that whilst also remaining part of the EU.
      Immigration is one of the most pressing issues, and the UK _did_ have control of their borders within the EU; we were never part of the Schengen Area so we were able to turn people away at sea, but IIRC there were European Union laws which forced us to offer asylum to migrants we didn't want if they actually landed on UK soil.
      See, when we left the EU the Conservatives were actually supposed to suppress immigration to the UK with the new legislative power they had, and they ALWAYS talk big but do nothing as more and more visas are accepted year after year, and more and more illegal crossings pile up. We've seen this with the Rwanda plan, which they talked endlessly about and hyped it up as much as possible but then only a minuscule fraction were actually put on planes to Rwanda.
      This is because almost ALL of the UK's institutions are corrupted from within by pro-immigration sentiments and put up as many barriers to change as possible, and the Conservative party just LET'S IT HAPPEN.
      With respect to this, and other situations like it, it's no wonder many Brexiteers are so demoralized to the point that some have switched sides because they've realized just how compromised British institutions are, including the Conservatives themselves.
      From an economic perspective alone, leaving the EU is a fundamentally bad idea, but it is a great idea if you understand it from a legal and political perspective, and to most Brexiteers that independence was the core reason for leaving and we are willing to deal with economic hardship to satisfy that. To any pro-Brexit people here; don't forget this.
      The current ruling class in the UK won't be in power forever, and when they are finally pushed back maybe we can actually live up to the positive legal and political expectations that Brexit was supposed to be about all along.
      P.S. I hear that Germany and France are having some kind of energy disagreements which could rock the EU to its core, so rejoining is likely an even worse idea than continuing on our current trajectory with America.

  • @themadsuika3909
    @themadsuika3909 Před rokem +50

    Man when i was a little kid i wanted to live in Europe or in the USA, but now with all the trouble in the world… Perharps i treated Mexico too harshly.
    Probably i won't get a lot of money but this feels comfortable

    • @uponthebay
      @uponthebay Před rokem +12

      The UK is not Europe. There are plenty of great places to live on the continent. I wouldn't suggest you move here though.

    • @themadsuika3909
      @themadsuika3909 Před rokem

      @@uponthebay Well… thanks for the advice

    • @looseygoosey1349
      @looseygoosey1349 Před rokem

      oof dont go to Mexico buddy. Just recently the Cartels shut down a couple of cities when the Federal Government arrested
      a big boss. The Federal government in Mexico right now is a complete joke with Trump lite in office.
      Mexico is a different beast

    • @themadsuika3909
      @themadsuika3909 Před rokem +4

      @@looseygoosey1349 My brother in christ… I live in Mexico, and yea it is crap but as long as someone doesn't kick de hornets nest civilians will be ok-ish

    • @mobo8933
      @mobo8933 Před rokem +2

      @@themadsuika3909 that's pretty much everywhere tbh

  • @leoperez6737
    @leoperez6737 Před rokem +2

    About Nafta, I'm not sure Mexico would be eager to have a trade deal with the UK, I mean Mexico is looking to expand it's manfucaturing industry that's why an agreement with South Korea was made, the EU trade agreement is mostly about Germany looking someone to build their cars. I'm not sure what's in it for the UK.

  • @beholdenpie
    @beholdenpie Před rokem

    I loved this video more than the others

  • @spacecanuk8316
    @spacecanuk8316 Před rokem +9

    Yeah, as a half Dane living in Denmark atm, I can say that as much as we like the Brits we are way too prudent to cut our links with the rest of Europe for them. That said, if they're up for bending the knee we could try that North Sea Empire again...

    • @frozenuruguayball6436
      @frozenuruguayball6436 Před rokem +3

      Dam your Danish? Get well soon I’m praying for you 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @lawbringer9857
      @lawbringer9857 Před rokem +1

      Space Canuk Would you really pick the French and the Germans ahead of us Brits? As probably the only other Europeans that we like and respect I expected more from you Scandinavians

    • @spacecanuk8316
      @spacecanuk8316 Před rokem +2

      @@lawbringer9857 We pick what works when it works, and trade with 26 other moderate to rich nations is more useful than aligning with a single country on the decline. Nothing personal, and I say that as an anglophile who was raised in old BNA loyalist country.

  • @inosuke2679
    @inosuke2679 Před rokem +5

    Tbh will be fine this is just a small shift in our economy due to the exit from eu we still have great relationships with European countries plus we have the commonwealth and the USA is always a good country to have on our side

    • @cerdic6305
      @cerdic6305 Před rokem

      The US isn’t “on our side”. They are on their own side, and tolerate us when we go along with their plans

    • @inosuke2679
      @inosuke2679 Před rokem +1

      @@cerdic6305 same ideals same plans same side

  • @mjarmes
    @mjarmes Před rokem

    Love yours vids! Would be so amazing if you could do one about Portugal sometime ❤️ 🇵🇹

  • @S0LIDUSS
    @S0LIDUSS Před rokem

    this some of the most beautiful artwork

  • @GameCrafters11
    @GameCrafters11 Před rokem +3

    I can't believe a dragon isn't what represents Wales in this video

  • @jackmclaughlin9911
    @jackmclaughlin9911 Před rokem +7

    Hold strong britian, don’t let the fourth reich (EU) get to you.

  • @abelsechabamothlele5635
    @abelsechabamothlele5635 Před 3 měsíci +1

    😂 Hoser makes politics and economics sound like comedy gold. I really like how unorthodox his presentation is.

  • @historyking9984
    @historyking9984 Před rokem

    They could always try to focus and connect to more of the commonwealth countries but I don’t know how well that would go

  • @tombblades
    @tombblades Před rokem +6

    Our country will make it through, as a nation we have been through worse.