How White Rice Mysteriously Threatened the Japanese Military and Caused a National Emergency

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
  • The dangers of white rice to the Japanese military
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @Linfamy
    @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +314

    10:13 Did you know about the different parts of rice?
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    • @SnugglyAdams1616161616
      @SnugglyAdams1616161616 Před 4 lety +2

      No ÙwÚ

    • @flybalbu
      @flybalbu Před 4 lety +2

      10:13 Riceeeeeee

    • @Dracopol
      @Dracopol Před 4 lety +7

      Westerners are unaware of the outer shell of a coconut, either. They only see the brown fuzzy one. The bulky inedible green husk is hacked off so that more coconuts can be transported. But this husk is great to float a seed over entire oceans and plant coconut trees all over the tropics, it did not have to be spread by man.

    • @Dracopol
      @Dracopol Před 4 lety

      @Midnight Empress Respect! Are they caught in the quarantined cities? Seems drastic to me, and China is not the most honest for medical communication.

    • @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874
      @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874 Před 4 lety +1

      @Linfamy Why does this "Edo sickness" remind me of Pelagra?

  • @youcantata
    @youcantata Před 3 lety +751

    Fun fact: Takaki is the one who is responsible for bring food "curry" to Japanese diet. He tasted the Indian curry sauce first time when he studied medicine in UK, which was part of UK navy ration food diet on board. So he introduced the curry with rice recipe to Japanese navy diet. It turn out to be effective prevention and treatment against the dreaded Edo sickness, too. And after the WW II war, the curry with rice recipe slowly invaded Japanese home and kitchen by veteran navy sailor cook. Nowadays, "curry rice" become national home food of Japan. Japanese people eat curry rice once a week, at least.

    • @thanakonpraepanich4284
      @thanakonpraepanich4284 Před 3 lety +17

      Three questions;
      1. Was nikujaga stew the early attempt to put more calories and protein into sailor's diet so they will become bigger and stronger, but curry become more popular?
      2. Yokosuka style curry of today come with green salad and a glass of milk. Did IJN serve milk to seamen for extra nutrient or this is a postwar thing?
      3. Some curry fans claimed you need to put some beef stock into curry to make a proper Navy curry. Is that a leftover habit from British naval cooking?

    • @alisonjones5175
      @alisonjones5175 Před 3 lety +1

      Oh god I’m getting some strong Unit 2 from New Horizons energy from this post🤣🌸

    • @nihilvox
      @nihilvox Před 2 lety +18

      @@thanakonpraepanich4284 I only know the answer to #1 - iirc, one of the Japanese admirals had studied modern naval tactics in Britain, and really enjoyed beef stew while he was there. Nikujaga was concocted by a chef trying to reproduce the admiral's favorite foreign dish.

    • @shingshongshamalama
      @shingshongshamalama Před 2 lety +7

      Thank you Takaki for Japanese Curry. Honestly one of my favourite things to cook AND eat.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Před 2 lety +7

      They even sell a Sonic the Hedgehog themed curry... and it's dark blue.

  • @Big_E_Soul_Fragment
    @Big_E_Soul_Fragment Před 4 lety +1215

    "Army doctors accused the Navy doctors for being deluded"
    Classic Imperial Japanese branch rivalry.

    • @AnnaMorimoto
      @AnnaMorimoto Před 4 lety +39

      @matthew styles Yes, well when the army is blinded by ambition, so much so that it shoots down and actively thwarts everything the navy does...

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 Před 4 lety +10

      Why didn't the Emperor use his Divine status and threaten them with mass seppuku if they kept squabbling like children?

    • @AnnaMorimoto
      @AnnaMorimoto Před 4 lety +39

      @@dubuyajay9964 That's not how emperors work in Japan. They have mostly been used as a figurehead, to lend credibility to whomever is ruling at the time. During the Meiji era, power was in the hands of an oligarchy, called the genro. Emperor Meiji might have had some say in the matter, but I doubt it.
      Also, Emperor Meiji was in his late 50s at the time. He was getting old. He died in 1912 from illness.

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 Před 4 lety +4

      @@AnnaMorimoto Then how was the Shogunate disbanded if the Emperor is so weak?

    • @AnnaMorimoto
      @AnnaMorimoto Před 4 lety +30

      @@dubuyajay9964 OK, lets try explaining the whole Meiji restoration.
      The shogunate was losing power and support. The provinces of Satsuma and Choshu formed an alliance to work towards overthrowing the shogunate. Under such pressure, the Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigned.
      Pro-imperial nationalists, mostly from Choshu and Satsuma staged a coup d'etat, procalaiming 15 year old emperor Meiji as their leader. A new government was formed, and the new imperial army, mostly Satsuma and Choshu soldiers, fought the Boshin war against the ex-shogunate army to strip Tokugawa of his remaining power.
      The new government was run by an oligarchy called the genro, mostly consisting of leaders from Choshu and Satsuma.

  • @Big_E_Soul_Fragment
    @Big_E_Soul_Fragment Před 4 lety +1493

    "Deaths drop to 0%"
    GOD DAMN IT.
    *restarts Plague Inc.*

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +94

      😂

    • @Dracopol
      @Dracopol Před 4 lety +90

      I especially like it in Plague Inc. when Greenland and Madagascar refuse to be infected in Zombie mode, or other countries ban shipping, so you develop the Zombie strain that bloats from putrefactive gases when they die, and other Zombies build rafts out of the bodies...bye, bye, Madagascar and Greenland!

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +42

      @@Dracopol devious

    • @Jobe-13
      @Jobe-13 Před 4 lety +3

      The 225677th Fragment of the Man-Emperor of Mankind 😂

    • @davidtitanium22
      @davidtitanium22 Před 4 lety +11

      @@Dracopol wait, I thought in zombie mode you can just wait for the zombies to walk under the sea... or wait for a random body to wash ashore

  • @Rynewulf
    @Rynewulf Před 4 lety +542

    One of the weirdest things about scurvy? The cure was accidentally found almost as early as people first became aware of scurvy itself, but was forgotten due to lack of understanding. In the late 1400s/early 1500s Portuguese voyages to east Africa and India, it was noted that sailors would get sick after too much time at sea or away from shore. It threatened and even killed off some expeditions, but some were saved by an accidental stop off in modern Tanzania. A stop full of lots of naturally occuring fruit trees. Later leaders noticed the convenient location and food so made it a regular stop off point, but as bases in India got set up and better tech and familiarity allowed for more direct sailing to India, they stopped going there and the scurvy returned

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +67

      Interesting!

    • @MelbaOzzie
      @MelbaOzzie Před 4 lety +126

      Actually, the Vikings knew all about scurvy and its prevention/cure.
      That's why the Vikings always had barrels of sauerkraut on board every ship.
      The sauerkraut cure/treatment was also known to the East India company, and its ships were required to stock up on it on every voyage.
      The British Navy was aware of these facts, but in typical idiocy of intellectuals, found this somehow unacceptable and ignored this knowledge for hundreds of years. Sauerkraut was eventually reintroduced after the lime cure was "discovered" by a British aristocrat; discovery by aristocrats was OK, discovery by Vikings was not.
      "Science" is littered with this kind of idiocy.

    • @artspectrum2421
      @artspectrum2421 Před 2 lety +18

      @@MelbaOzzie egyptology still suffers from this and a lot of the old science still plagues our understanding of the world. Yeah, i am one if those open minded dudes that think the pyramids were not built egyptians, hence no hieroglyphs, they were literally scared to grafitti on them.

    • @MelbaOzzie
      @MelbaOzzie Před 2 lety +3

      @@artspectrum2421 Actually, the problem is far more profound and widespread than you allude to.
      "Science", as we know it, has long since become a political activity in support of various political agendas.
      Whether we talk about "climate change", or "Covid" or numerous other hot button issues, you can be sure that real science is at the bottom of the heap of things considered.
      Any real science that contradicts the narrative quickly vanishes and is never heard from again. This occurs in all branches of "science".
      Referring to egyptology, it is clearly obvious that an advanced civilization occurred in the Nile Valley and delta long before the dynastic Egyptians appeared on the scene.
      Similarly, it is equally obvious that a world wide advanced civilization existed on earth long before the start of the Younger Dryas period around 10,500 years ago.
      It is also obvious that survivors of this civilization seeded civilization in Mesopotamia, South America and other parts of the world. Without their intervention, humanity would still be no more than hunter gatherers.
      However, "science" as we know it, has a vested interest in maintaining numerous fictional narratives. You challenge those at your peril.
      Consequently, it seems trite but it is true, that most of what you think you know is probably wrong.

    • @laurenmary9296
      @laurenmary9296 Před 2 lety +14

      @@MelbaOzzie I like your style, but stop using quotes around words or topics, like: science, coronavirus, or climate change. It makes it sound like those things don't actually exist as facts. Sure, they've all been skewed by big money agendas, but science is still scientific, coronavirus is still a virus, and climate change is still.... well, fuck - real as fuck. Just ask Otzi The Iceman.

  • @NikkiMKarLen
    @NikkiMKarLen Před 4 lety +843

    "Scurvy is caused by the lack of loyalty on a pirate ship."
    These are the facts history books leave out.

    • @bombintheseeinq
      @bombintheseeinq Před 4 lety +7

      haha yep

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown Před 4 lety +11

      and don't forget the lack of pirates have summoned manbearpig.
      and Epstein didn't kill himself

    • @campkira
      @campkira Před 4 lety +3

      you need a vitamin.. today somepeople either don't beilve or just eat too much...

    • @brandonmckinnon836
      @brandonmckinnon836 Před 3 lety

      👍😆

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable Před rokem

      Like all diseases, if the cure isn't politically useful, it won't just be buried, but a campaign to slander and treat it as the enemy will ensue to make sure the disease stays as prevalent as possible.

  • @georgewashington938
    @georgewashington938 Před 2 lety +120

    I heard stories of Native American's suffering a similar sickness in the winter time. It is called rabbit starvation which is caused by not having enough fat in their diet. In some areas during the winter, the primary food available was rabbit, which is very lean.

    • @tilasole3252
      @tilasole3252 Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks for this. Do you know which tribes by any chance? I just got lost in a rabbit hole of research.

    • @georgewashington938
      @georgewashington938 Před 2 lety +6

      @@tilasole3252 Sorry, I don't know which tribes. I came across this info while reading about raising rabbits. My assumption would be the tribes in the north east and north central US. These are places that have both hard winters and environments that support large populations of rabbits.

    • @blackknightjack3850
      @blackknightjack3850 Před 2 lety +5

      No, that's protein poisoning which is quite different. Like you said, the problem was that rabbits were ridiculously lean and therefore were mostly protein with no fat to bond to. That's why survival experts recommend you not eat too much rabbit. It's also why I started looking up the fat content of livestock.

    • @georgewashington938
      @georgewashington938 Před 2 lety +2

      @@blackknightjack3850 right - I wasn't saying it was the same thing, but a similar in the sense that an imbalanced diet can be a problem is a variety of ways.

    • @budld2498
      @budld2498 Před rokem +1

      @@blackknightjack3850 would rabbit starvation possibly be the name of the sickness from before people knew what protein was and rabbit starvation is the same as protein poisoning

  • @unclenogbad1509
    @unclenogbad1509 Před 2 lety +72

    Takaki may have been a fan of Western medicine, but around the same time, a Hungarian medic by the name of Szemmelweis was having an equally hard time (and for similar reasons) convincing fellow doctors of the need to do something simple - washing your hands. Especially when going straight from the dissection of cadavers in the mortuary, to the labour ward.
    You'd have thought someone would have twigged this sooner, but...

    • @kawaiiskeleton297
      @kawaiiskeleton297 Před rokem +9

      Like many traditions, the long-standing practice of leaving bodily fluids and infectious matter on your hands is a hard one to shake🤷🏻

    • @unclenogbad1509
      @unclenogbad1509 Před rokem +3

      @@kawaiiskeleton297 Yes. And I wouldn't want to shake those hands, either.

  • @saberwarthog
    @saberwarthog Před 4 lety +217

    About Scurvy, there is another type of food than lemons / agrums that was used in many western navies to make sure no sailors were sick : Sauerkraurt !
    It's full packed of vitamin C, and it could be stocked much easily in barrels and kept for a longer time on the boats than lemons.

    • @muhammadnursyahmi9440
      @muhammadnursyahmi9440 Před 3 lety +14

      Hmm, now i wonder about the invention of Kimchi too. Perhaps ancient Korean knew about relationship of not having vegetable (vitamin C sources) and scurvy occurances?

    • @CAMSLAYER13
      @CAMSLAYER13 Před 2 lety +4

      @Muhammad Nursyahmi it was likely coincidental, it just happens to last a long time and thus makes good travel food

    • @sarahgray430
      @sarahgray430 Před 2 lety +3

      The one drawback of saurkraut is that it also causes severe flatulence, which is highly flammable.

    • @dimasakbar7668
      @dimasakbar7668 Před 2 lety +2

      Chili contains plenty of vitamin c, but for some reason, chili sauce had only low amount of vitamin c.
      I guess having some condiments can also go a long way for people of yesteryears

    • @lamehick7511
      @lamehick7511 Před 2 lety +10

      @@dimasakbar7668 The thing with vitamin C is that it is extremely volatile. It is easily destroyed by heating it up. So only uncooked and fermented foods can contain actually worthwhile amounts of it.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache Před 4 lety +385

    White rice? Of all things, white rice? I eat a decent amount of white rice in a month and I've never even heard of this. I'm learning so much from this channel.

    • @Vivi-lm7wd
      @Vivi-lm7wd Před 4 lety +4

      Me too!

    • @kikyamart8749
      @kikyamart8749 Před 4 lety +141

      It's not the rice it's the lack of nutrition.... That's why vegans slowly starve to death and have alot of the same issues as these soliders

    • @sennaka
      @sennaka Před 4 lety +95

      White rice produced now is fortified with the missing vitamins (thiamine) that caused the problem. Along with whatever you eat....
      So you're fine.

    • @andreirafaelalias7438
      @andreirafaelalias7438 Před 4 lety +24

      Dude, Im asian. We eat white rice in all three meals in a day. And I didn't know about this. Wth

    • @vincentlee7359
      @vincentlee7359 Před 4 lety +78

      Well. The White rice back then was processed to get the fluffy soft rice. However, it lacked nutrients, specifically B12. Imagine ONLY eating rice alone.
      Today depending on the brand of rice will have the rice fortified with nutrients.

  • @danaroth598
    @danaroth598 Před 4 lety +234

    Around this same time, Americans in the South were grappling with pellagra, another B vitamin deficiency disease. (Essentially: if you want to use corn/maize as a staple food, you need to treat it with lime or something similar, because the niacin (B3) in corn isn’t nutritionally available otherwise. Native peoples in the Americas did this, but when Europeans adopted it and started exporting it all around the world, they didn’t understand why that was important.)
    There was a pretty similar pushback once a researcher figured out why so many people who had corn-based diets kept getting sick. Researchers figured out vitamins were a thing shortly after germ theory became widely accepted, and at the time there was a widespread tendency to believe every disease was infectious. Plus it says a lot of uncomfortable things about a society when their poor keep getting sick because they can’t afford variety in their diet....

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +9

      Interesting!

    • @danaroth598
      @danaroth598 Před 4 lety +15

      LagiNaLangAko23 Cassava is mostly dangerous if you’re already malnourished and you aren’t cooking it thoroughly. That’s true of a lot of food. There’s trace cyanide in sweet almonds, broccoli can interfere with the absorption of iodine, tea can interfere with the absorption of calcium, etc. etc. Almonds, broccoli, and tea are still healthy despite that. Just, you know, try to eat as varied a diet as circumstances allow and things will tend to balance out.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 4 lety +14

      Sadly, figuring out the corn-based diet was causing pellagra didn't get rid of it, the economic collapse of the agricultural system of the time (I believe it was because cotton was leeching soil fertility faster than it got restored) did.

    • @WildBillCox13
      @WildBillCox13 Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks for weighing in, Dana.

    • @neoqwerty
      @neoqwerty Před 2 lety +5

      @@danaroth598 Only tangentially related to diets, but another tricky one: milk isn't good for calcium, because you burn calcium to absorb proteins and milk has more protein than calcium. So the "drink your milk" thing is bs for calcium, it'll make you deficient in that instead.

  • @The_Practical_Daydreamer
    @The_Practical_Daydreamer Před 2 lety +22

    Christiaan Eijkman was a dutch doctor who was sent to study beriberi in the East Indies. The chickens in the army camp he worked at had developed symptoms similar to the soldiers. It was the camps practice to feed them left over rice ment for the soldiers. A new cook came and refused to waste good food on sick birds. Another source of feed was procured, and they started recovering. Eijkman changed the soldiers diet to match, and they recovered. Later on, this lead to the discovery of vitamins. Cool, huh?

  • @robertyoung5785
    @robertyoung5785 Před 4 lety +64

    The British navy actually ended up using limes because the have a longer shelf life. They got the nickname of "limees" (sp).

    • @jameskellar3026
      @jameskellar3026 Před 4 lety +2

      Was looking for this post. Pretty sure they ended up issuing lime juice daily

    • @ieuanhunt552
      @ieuanhunt552 Před 4 lety +7

      That is also why rum cocktails often have lime in it. Because they put it in the navy rum rations.

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Před 4 lety +8

      @@ieuanhunt552 Similarly, mixing gin with tonic and lime = scurvy/malaria treatment

    • @MrAranton
      @MrAranton Před 2 lety +1

      I thought they switched to limes because they didn't want to keep importing lemons from the continent and limes were a citrus found in their colonies. In fact: When they switched they didn't realize limes contain significantly less vitamin C than lemons and ran into scurvy issues again...

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Před 2 lety

      same thing with kraut's... but that's not "Germaine" to this topic 😂

  • @ChronicAndIronic
    @ChronicAndIronic Před 4 lety +114

    Here’s a thing for scurvy:
    If you out at sea
    You finna need vitamin C

    • @LadyCoyKoi
      @LadyCoyKoi Před 4 lety +8

      People would be surprised that scurvy still exists to this day. Though that disease/disorder is shown mainly in obese people who avoid eating citrus fruits.

    • @theautisticartist9370
      @theautisticartist9370 Před 3 lety +2

      This is why I’m glad my mother buys tons of oranges all the time. Scurvy does not sound fun, and I don’t think a child would survive.

    • @davidbryden7904
      @davidbryden7904 Před 2 lety

      @@LadyCoyKoi so , rich white men ? Lol

  • @vakvanya1
    @vakvanya1 Před 4 lety +360

    "The Edo disease was made up by Takaki to sell more Barley!" - the japanese military, probably, at some point (maybe not). Also Kanto Region

    • @UnintentionalSubmarine
      @UnintentionalSubmarine Před 4 lety +20

      The Edo Disease is made up by Big Barley!

    • @lordpowell3788
      @lordpowell3788 Před 3 lety +3

      Lols big barley i like how there's an evil big anything big oil, big tech, big electric, big soda, big water, big apples. Haha xmass is propped up by a conspiracy between big trees and big lights.

    • @Mephitinae
      @Mephitinae Před 2 lety

      @@lordpowell3788 Big Trees is paying MrBeast to plant trees, so they can sell more Xmas trees. Big Soda is sponsoring the Olympics, so people will think that soda is a part of a healthy lifesty... no wait, they actually do that :(

    • @lordpowell3788
      @lordpowell3788 Před 2 lety

      @@Mephitinae Are you implying that there's something wrong with that and that because they do it it must be a conspiracy is that action the definition of a conspiracy. Toilet paper companies plant 2 trees for everyone harvested for toilet paper to ensure that they can continue selling product in the future is that a conspiracy where do you draw the line is a plan that's not known by the general public a conspiracy.
      There's literally nothing wrong with what you just said. If the regular persons too ignorant to recognize patterns in their life that's their problem

  • @turtlepenguinXkizuna
    @turtlepenguinXkizuna Před 4 lety +137

    I foolishly let my guard down and “they were barley in time” gave me a coughing fit. DAMN YOU!! 😂

  • @JasperJanssen
    @JasperJanssen Před 4 lety +61

    “Takako later revealed that he would have committed ritual suicide if the experiment had failed”. Well, duh. That is what “he promised the emperor” means. He staked not just his career but his life on being right. Otherwise it would have been an assurance, not a promise.

    • @gateauxq4604
      @gateauxq4604 Před 3 lety +10

      Fortunately he was a smart man and wasn’t just right but SUPER RIGHT. Any scientist would die to get almost 100% cconfirmed test results and lowered the mortality rate to 0

  • @rosswebster7877
    @rosswebster7877 Před 4 lety +37

    Kanto Region. Thanks again for another great little known story from Japanese history! Reminds me of a similar story in Vienna around the same time where there was a hospital that had a maternity ward with high infant/mother mortality rates. One doctor suggested that the staff practice hand washing after every delivery. For this suggestion the doctor was fired from the hospital. He would go on to start his own clinic which had record successful deliveries, while the older hospital continued to have high fatalities for several decades.

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +5

      I love stories like that! =D

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately that Viennese physician Dr. Semmelweiss ended up in a lunatic asylum, after his former coworkers conspired to have him declared mentally unstable.

    • @hananokuni2580
      @hananokuni2580 Před 6 měsíci

      I think his name was Ignaz Semmelweis. He is famous for his germ theory and his recommendation to maternity ward workers to wash their hands frequently to prevent the transmission of the pathogens responsible for the death of many a woman giving birth at maternity wards. Unfortunately he died in an insane asylum from gangrene of a wound received during an altercation there.

  • @ABCantonese
    @ABCantonese Před 4 lety +270

    BeriBeri is a disease that would've been cured with some Peri Peri, though I don't associate Japanese food with spice...
    That would've cured the Edo sickness, named after the biggest city of the region that it is located in, the city that would become the future capital of Tokyo, that region being where Taira no Masakado once created his mini-state: Kanto

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +31

      Oh look at you connecting the video topic to the quiz answer ;)

    • @ABCantonese
      @ABCantonese Před 4 lety +12

      @@Linfamy Why yes, of course!
      And gong hey fat choi, are you going to do a video on Japanese new year?

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +6

      @@ABCantonese that'd be a good idea... if I had any planning skills 😅

    • @ABCantonese
      @ABCantonese Před 4 lety

      @Random username Don't know and didn't matter since they didn't exist in Japan.

    • @ABCantonese
      @ABCantonese Před 4 lety +2

      @Joakim von Anka Wait... WHAT?! Wow, they really were poor, or cheap... Won't even buy soy sauce... Come on, soy sauce and rice is like a childhood delicacy. Not to sure they are out at sea. Go fish. These guys had prime sushi real estate! That better be some damn good white rice.

  • @SollomonTheWise
    @SollomonTheWise Před 4 lety +304

    Smugness still plauges Japan today and even more so in their legal system.

    • @storiesmore2451
      @storiesmore2451 Před 3 lety

      ? ??

    • @gooseintheshell1290
      @gooseintheshell1290 Před 3 lety +27

      Many Japanese professionals seem to struggle to entertain new concepts, it's quite frustrating to see firsthand.

    • @artspectrum2421
      @artspectrum2421 Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah the conviction rate there's crazy

    • @yoface938
      @yoface938 Před 2 lety +5

      @@artspectrum2421 it’s because in practice they can jail you without trial indefinitely so they keep you locked up until you submit a admission of guilt.

    • @GeraltofRivia22
      @GeraltofRivia22 Před 2 lety +3

      @@artspectrum2421 but also a bit misleading. Most cases don't make it to trial.

  • @ella_komiya
    @ella_komiya Před 4 lety +45

    Can confirm as someone living in Britain, British food isn’t the best.

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 Před 4 lety +1

      "WHERE'S THE LAMB SAUCE!?"

    • @SollomonTheWise
      @SollomonTheWise Před 4 lety +6

      Gordon is your only culinary saving grace

    • @Youtubecensoredmyusername
      @Youtubecensoredmyusername Před 4 lety

      Ella Komiya shut....up

    • @ella_komiya
      @ella_komiya Před 4 lety +4

      Phuck Onyou - a Yorkshire pudding with a sausage and gravy. Jellied Eel. Mushy peas. Pickled onions with chips. Cauliflower baked with melted cheese. Boiled vegetables for a roast with just a bit of salted water.
      To name but a few.

    • @Youtubecensoredmyusername
      @Youtubecensoredmyusername Před 4 lety +1

      Ella Komiya we moved to us. Now it’s all cardboard with GMOs and blended chicken pieces and cherry coke

  • @kyleglenn2434
    @kyleglenn2434 Před 4 lety +57

    I remember my mother telling me a slang term for Beri-beri was itai- itsi. It means pain pain, not a pleasant way to go.

    • @campkira
      @campkira Před 4 lety

      don't had that problem when you are in big family.. all vitamin covered...

  • @traceyrossmann2989
    @traceyrossmann2989 Před 2 lety +24

    I know I'm late. This man was a legend! Absolutely legendary to have such a profound impact on so many people. The fact that he pushed fo what he knew was right, and basically staked his life on it. Thank you for teaching me about this awesome human being!

  • @ilianceroni
    @ilianceroni Před 4 lety +83

    7:20 well… what a kinky Pikachu we have here!

    • @prophetkat
      @prophetkat Před 4 lety +3

      Like chance the rapper but less deadly 🤣

  • @CrayvenCarnage
    @CrayvenCarnage Před 4 lety +34

    Heard a similar story that happened in the southern US. Except it was from eating corn that had been processed which removed some of the vital nutrients.

    • @emperortbw402
      @emperortbw402 Před 4 lety +21

      Quite the opposite in fact, pellagra was caused by a lack of processing. Corn is naturally quite nutritious, but a lot of that nutrition isn't readily digestible, so in mexico and the American gulf south corn was boiled in an alkali which made niacin and other nutrients easier to absorb. In the early 20th century, the gulf south began importing cheap unprocessed cornmeal from the midwest which displaced their own alkali processd hominy thus causing pellagra. This also happened earlier in europen countries which adopted corn as a staple crop, but failed to import the traditional methods of preparation.

    • @wetcanoedogs
      @wetcanoedogs Před 3 lety +1

      @@emperortbw402 Wonder Bread......

    • @hpdpco6634
      @hpdpco6634 Před 2 lety

      Niacin deficiency

  • @askhowiknow5527
    @askhowiknow5527 Před 4 lety +76

    It’s funny how in the past more nutritious food tended to be lower class

  • @Linfamy
    @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +322

    Pika! ChuUuUuUuuuu..

  • @Pers0n97
    @Pers0n97 Před 2 lety +10

    The number of death from that "decease" in the army was insane.
    Thanks for the knowledge.

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 Před 4 lety +44

    The PIkachu recharging picture earns you x100 Interwebs.

  • @samuelkearns3521
    @samuelkearns3521 Před 4 lety +47

    Love this channel it’s so informative and funny

  • @psyxypher3881
    @psyxypher3881 Před 4 lety +34

    "We abuse chibis in the interest of learning."
    [draws surgical tools] Where do I sign up?

  • @MrOlgrumpy
    @MrOlgrumpy Před 4 lety +20

    It was actually lime juice used,hence the yanks nickname of "Limeys" for the British

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +6

      At first it was melon, then they switched to lime ;)

  • @Nine-Signs
    @Nine-Signs Před 4 lety +31

    Pregnancies are often a shock to most Japanese as the first notice that Japanese families get of the near arrival of a child is a large fruit appears.

  • @clairemariep.garciano4613
    @clairemariep.garciano4613 Před 4 lety +12

    The power of rice compels you!

  • @Lilitha11
    @Lilitha11 Před 4 lety +13

    This is what happens when you have poor leadership and poor management. All they think about is reducing food cost and making things cheaper but you are most definitely spending far more treating all those injuries than the improved food would cost.

  • @LadyCoyKoi
    @LadyCoyKoi Před 4 lety +3

    Ironically enough... today brown rice is more expensive than white rice. Though the free food centers still hand out bags of brown rice, which I prefer due to the flavor being more intense than the plain white rice. My favorite rice though is Jasmine rice. I just love how it scent spreads through the house. Anyways, rice is my favorite food, so seeing this video and learning more about its involvement in history fascinates me. Thank you so much.

  • @CaRaMeLlDaNsEnShOw1
    @CaRaMeLlDaNsEnShOw1 Před 4 lety +4

    Annnnnnd this is why I love this channel. I love history and I dont think I would have ever learned this if not for this channel.

  • @anastasiap6253
    @anastasiap6253 Před 4 lety +13

    I know about different kinds of rice(like wild, red and forbidden) and I had a discussion about beriberi in Biology class :)
    Props to the doctor for pushing through and showing the snobs who is boss ;)

  • @nicholashodges201
    @nicholashodges201 Před 4 lety +23

    Given the number of times this sort of thing has happened, you would think that the medical profession would have learned some humility, and to listen to outsiders. This video has played out on every continent in nearly identical ways. It has also played out w germ theory, several drugs and treatments.
    Expertise bias is kind of frightening...

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Před 2 lety +2

      Beri~Beri true.

    • @aceofswords1725
      @aceofswords1725 Před 2 lety

      Follow "the Science" lol.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Před 2 lety +1

      "If we lock down for just two weeks, we will stop this disease in its tracks"

    • @mathiasbartl903
      @mathiasbartl903 Před 2 lety +3

      This sort of stories are basically used to justify whatever quackery.

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable Před 10 měsíci

      Humans choose not to learn. The reason humans always repeat history is because they either choose not to learn, or actually want it to repeat because they think the people who failed the first time were just bad and that they can do it better.

  • @_PM__
    @_PM__ Před 4 lety +4

    Masakado's mini-state was in the Kanto region. Thanks to this channel, my knowledge of Japanese history is way more than it should be for your average non-Japanese person.

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +1

      Glad you like the vids =)

  • @marvinkitfox3386
    @marvinkitfox3386 Před 4 lety +10

    4:21 Stargazy pie... didn't help, it just made the Cooks start dying mysteriously.
    .
    .
    here i had a small...episode, and after righting my chair and wiping the spit off my screen, i had to rewind...

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +1

      lol YES! And sorry about the mess.

    • @molybdomancer195
      @molybdomancer195 Před 4 měsíci

      As someone with a Cornish mother I must defend star gazey pie. It has an interesting back story and the village of Mousehole celebrates this annually

  • @unknownz1238
    @unknownz1238 Před 4 lety +3

    Imagine you study your whole life on stopping a disease and you find a cure and then you are to be told that you're "not legit enough" for you be taken seriously because you didn't work at this one place.

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +3

      I'd be so mad that I'd save the entire military

  • @AnxiousFly
    @AnxiousFly Před 2 lety +7

    Yeah, I can really relate to that. I tried to tell some friends of mine who are living in the African bush, they could simply dig a hole for their trash, so the animals wouldn't die from eating it anymore. They just refused bc they said that wasn't the way they were doing things.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Před 2 lety

      that sounds like a lot of garbage to me...😂

    • @AnxiousFly
      @AnxiousFly Před 2 lety

      @@JTA1961 na, mostly just plastic bags. Everything organic is fed to the animals and they barely consume a lot of plastic packed things.

  • @Chris-ut6eq
    @Chris-ut6eq Před 2 lety +2

    I could barely contain my excitement in learning that one can not live by endosperm alone!

  • @chanbaekshipper9513
    @chanbaekshipper9513 Před 4 lety +6

    12:57 They where "barley"(barely) in time.

  • @macnutz4206
    @macnutz4206 Před 4 lety +3

    It is funny how similar ideas appear in different people. I grew up in Alabama, in the south east portion of the States. I am ancient of days. I remember my mother saying, many times that "brown bread is for poor people". Brown or whole wheat bread virtually disappeared from grocery stores in the south until just a few years ago. My mother's ideas about brown bread and poor folks was around for a long time. My mother had gotten the idea in the 1930s. In the sixties, she still held that opinion.

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +1

      That's interesting! Nowadays, I always eat wheat bread. White bread is so bland.

    • @macnutz4206
      @macnutz4206 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Linfamy Yes, that has changed. I don't remember the last time I bought a loaf of the white bread.
      Its not only bland, it melts like paste in your mouth. I cringe to remember the "Wonder Bread" garbage I grew up on.

  • @theresawebb8164
    @theresawebb8164 Před 3 lety +2

    You crack me up!!!!
    Your sense of humor is so awesome I wish that you would run your own stand-up comedy.
    Hilarious & informative!

  • @Larkinchance
    @Larkinchance Před 3 lety +2

    Good writing! Your pieces are educational, informative, entertaining and at times, very funny...

  • @historysquad
    @historysquad Před 4 lety +13

    When you said "Pikachu" it heard like you're recording an ASMR video

  • @dorylavetta423
    @dorylavetta423 Před 4 lety +20

    9:51 I can't breathe....I can't breathe....!!! 😂😂😂😵💀🤣🤣🤣❤

  • @trextraining7116
    @trextraining7116 Před 2 lety +1

    Dude, you are awesome! Thank you for being on the planet.

  • @davidbryden7904
    @davidbryden7904 Před 2 lety +2

    "..people gonna people." LMAO 🤣

  • @divyanshushete5772
    @divyanshushete5772 Před 4 lety +26

    Kanto Region is the answer. I always wanted to know how and when all these deficiency diseases were found and cured. Thanks for Info.

  • @JankieHands
    @JankieHands Před 3 lety +5

    I've been asian my whole life and i didnt know rice wasn't white and didn't come in bags with elephants on it

  • @jojor9766
    @jojor9766 Před 2 lety +2

    In America there was a very similar case with pellagra which is a different vitamin B deficiency. Like your story it was a battle between an outcast doctor and the medical establishment.

  • @theautisticartist9370
    @theautisticartist9370 Před 3 lety +2

    TIL brown rice not only tastes better than white rice, it’s also more nutritious.

  • @BuildingCenter
    @BuildingCenter Před 4 lety +3

    It's official: Linfamy confirms that the Impossible Burger is Soylent Green.

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +2

      The world needs to know

    • @DiscoChixify
      @DiscoChixify Před 3 lety

      They’re really good hot, but when they get cold they don’t quite taste right

  • @viiiderekae
    @viiiderekae Před 4 lety +16

    Haha i grew rice as a house plant X3
    I found some whole rice grains after some prayers in the temple.
    brought some home. I found an old ice cream container and filled it with dirt and water and planted the seeds. They grew and i replanted them. After like a few months they produced the grain. And i did it all in my bed room X3
    I managed to get 1 harvest from it.
    But i didnt have the means of processing it.. so it ended up pounding it into flour Xp

    • @vielenkaat497
      @vielenkaat497 Před 4 lety +2

      my stroke riddled grandma can spell better than you

    • @viiiderekae
      @viiiderekae Před 4 lety +2

      @@vielenkaat497 try typing on a phone with tiny letters. They are just typos
      Rude ass.. cannot mind your own business

    • @WingMaster562
      @WingMaster562 Před 4 lety +1

      Here's a tip in case you get another harvest. You can remove the rice husk without any machine, you just need a wide circular basket, aka 'bilao' here in Philippines. I remember the older folks and farmers here do it. First, they would dry the rice through exposure to air or sunlight, then using a bilao they would thresh the rice over and over then manually pick the husks away as well the unwanted dirt and stones.
      Some video references for ya:
      czcams.com/video/9qe5SzHyHJo/video.html
      czcams.com/video/x45b-s_Ygi8/video.html

  • @THETRIVIALTHINGS
    @THETRIVIALTHINGS Před 2 lety +1

    I learnded something today. Tank you!

  • @fadlya.rahman4113
    @fadlya.rahman4113 Před 4 lety +2

    This fact also explain the high mortality rate of Allied prisoners in Japanese POW camp. The prisoners were given exclusively rice diet. The Japanese guards also receive only rice. But the guards cultivated a small vegetable plot to add to their rice diet. Also, a major source of atrocities of Japanese Soldiers against the native Pacific Islanders was a dispute over a farming land.

  • @williamfavre4239
    @williamfavre4239 Před 4 lety +2

    Very very instructive video i knew nothing about :D And I would be very curious to dig deeper in medical history ^^: I would love to see one the cases of Goto Shinpei and Noguchi Hideyo :))

  • @MrCoach1957
    @MrCoach1957 Před 4 lety +5

    “Costed” really?

  • @backgroundmusic8567
    @backgroundmusic8567 Před 2 lety +2

    I have never heard someone describe rice so sexually...

  • @bajogeez
    @bajogeez Před 4 lety +2

    13:14 He conquered shimotsuke and kozuke and claimed him self emperor or something like that, it’s also worth mentioning that he used to have control over the kanto region

  • @ghewins
    @ghewins Před 2 lety +3

    Linfamy, I would very much appreciate a video that addresses how various traits of Japanese culture cam together to produce a lust for empire that almost destroyed Japan

  • @AbundantCheez
    @AbundantCheez Před 4 lety +4

    I wonder if that has anything to do with School lunches in japan serving Mugi Gohan (Barley Rice) all the time

  • @EvilGrin
    @EvilGrin Před 2 lety +1

    "Happy as Pikachu in a battery factory" really made my day...

  • @MXFmedia
    @MXFmedia Před 2 lety +2

    I couldn’t stop laughing when he stated that your dead to him if you are Asian and don’t know how white rice was made!

  • @bearrett_8783
    @bearrett_8783 Před 4 lety +4

    Military: *Exists*
    White rice: Imma end this man's whole career.

  • @user-du8wu1ym7e
    @user-du8wu1ym7e Před 4 lety +4

    The Army suffered a lot of leg damage because Ogai Mori criticized the Navy's theory of rice food.
    Beriberi, it was known as Edo disease. It is a disease that does not occur in rural areas. If you eat brown rice, you won't suffer from Beriberi

    • @eri7-11
      @eri7-11 Před rokem

      if i eat brown rice i can't poop! Even I drink lots of water, even a small amount of brown rice! Poop you brown rice!

    • @user-du8wu1ym7e
      @user-du8wu1ym7e Před rokem

      @@eri7-11 It's just that you don't eat high-fiber foods. It's too obvious

  • @Mamii363
    @Mamii363 Před 2 lety +1

    Dr House wasn't born a Dr, he was born a House. ...I'll see myself out.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 Před 2 lety +1

    Captain James Cook allowed his officers to eat German pickled cabbage. The men asked for it too. His crew had no scurvy.

  • @OmarSlloum
    @OmarSlloum Před 4 lety +5

    answer to the question: In the Kanto plain

  • @notyue3747
    @notyue3747 Před 4 lety +14

    Im asian and i eat rice everyday but when we ate at a japanese restaurant their rice is hella delicious! Idk whats the difference tho but if that rice can kill me well 😏

    • @inthefade
      @inthefade Před 4 lety +3

      Buy high quality rice, cook it in a pressure rice cooker. Source: I work at a poké bowl restaurant and our rice is superb.

    • @joestrummer4106
      @joestrummer4106 Před 4 lety

      There’s generally more rice gluten in Japanese rice than other types

  • @molybdomancer195
    @molybdomancer195 Před 4 měsíci

    4:24 no there is no link between star gazey pie and the navy. It’s a traditional dish from the Cornish fishing village Mousehole. The story goes that one years there were long-lasting storms that stopped the fishing boats from going to fish. The villagers were beginning to starve until one man braved the storms and came back with a catch of seven types of fish. These were made into the first star gazey pie.

  • @BigAeth
    @BigAeth Před 4 lety +1

    When you’re scrolling through the comments and an unskippable ad starts

  • @magnvss
    @magnvss Před 3 lety +4

    Never underestimate the stubbornness of the Japanese, even today. Thing are "like they have always been" (even if this is untrue) unless a huge event or a huge pressure subjects them to change. Even their writing system is a sign of this.

    • @muhammadnursyahmi9440
      @muhammadnursyahmi9440 Před 3 lety +1

      You weren't wrong there. There's still Japanese companies that adamant that you fax documents to them, even though the prevalence of PDFs thesedays.

  • @Linfamy
    @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +6

    Arrrr!

  • @jonathantan2469
    @jonathantan2469 Před 2 lety +1

    Even today in Asia, brown rice is still culturally regarded as a lower status food for the poor. Ironically, it has a higher price because of the much lower volumes of production. That view is slowly changing with people becoming more health conscious.

  • @Sprecherfuchs
    @Sprecherfuchs Před 4 lety +2

    Barley Baron, what a badass name! And Taira no Masakado had his ministate in the Kanto region

  • @duchi882
    @duchi882 Před 4 lety +4

    White rice is a staple food for Asians
    I can't imagine what else I'd be eating if not Rice

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +3

      Do you eat rice by itself? :p

    • @duchi882
      @duchi882 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Linfamy, no but a food isn't usually considered complete without the rice. :)

    • @GhostOfBr
      @GhostOfBr Před 4 lety +3

      @@duchi882 if you consume some protein to go with rice it's alright. Rice is not the problem. It is the lack of variation.

    • @idraote
      @idraote Před 4 lety +1

      As was bread for Europeans. White bread, because brown bread is for the poor (people used to think).
      Only, brown bread is rich in nutrients while white bread makes you fat.
      I eat brown rice and it is delicious. If Asian governments wanted they could encourage the use of brown rice.

    • @dithiasofyan6648
      @dithiasofyan6648 Před 4 lety

      Just eat cassava, sweet potato, taro, or corn

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 Před 4 lety +4

    Infected food items are the *best* way to destruct entire communities ! 💀

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +3

      Speaking from experience?

    • @ADeeSHUPA
      @ADeeSHUPA Před 4 lety

      The DORUK hmm

    • @nomblob5592
      @nomblob5592 Před 4 lety +1

      Linfamy China atm. They eat bats which is one of the most common vector for disease thus... Corona aka C-virus as the RE community called it

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 Před 4 lety

      @@Linfamy Corona virus from literal infected bat flesh: allow me to introduce myself(!)

  • @dshock85
    @dshock85 Před 3 lety +1

    The irony that now brown/red/black rice is more expensive...... sigh

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 Před 2 lety +1

    When I first heard of beriberi, I was a kid in the mid 1990s, and there was a fairly popular cereal called "Berry Berry Kix". I used to joke that beriberi was caused by eating too much of that kind of cereal...

  • @Rohit-uy5xv
    @Rohit-uy5xv Před 4 lety +4

    I saw this sickness in one piece 😂

  • @patmcnamara9081
    @patmcnamara9081 Před 4 lety +3

    There was also a doctor in Dutch Indonesia that had the same issue by feeding the prisoners at the penal colony he was responsible for they return to health

    • @angelkitty11
      @angelkitty11 Před 4 lety +1

      Yep, Christiaan Eijkman!

    • @rumpelpumpel7687
      @rumpelpumpel7687 Před 3 lety

      and while the prisoners got sick from malnutrition, the chickens that were roaming the prison yard did not show signs of it, because they got fed the left-overs from the rice whitening process/or just brown rice along with other left-overs from the kitchen. So he compared the chickens diet to the prisoners diet and eventually cured the prisoners so they could life a long healthy life behind bars xD (at least thats what we were taught in 7th grade)

  • @SosigSozzle
    @SosigSozzle Před 4 lety +2

    I'm ethnically Filipino but I never really knew the rice crop naturally had layers like onions

  • @tilasole3252
    @tilasole3252 Před 2 lety +2

    Southern states used arsenic in their pesticides for their cotton fields. Once cotton became less favorable they eventually switched to rice. But the man made arsenic stayed in the soil. Rice in general collects natural arsenic to begin with. Brown rice due to the extra bits, holds arsenic even more.
    The US generally does not tell people where it was produced, only "Grown in the US". Well there is fifty states, which one was it? California does tell you on the bag if it was grown in California and they are on par with safer parts of the world for natural arsenic levels. But they are also quite a bit more expensive as well.
    I am pretty sure the government takes the rice grown in the south and mixes it with rice grown from the other states so that a person buying a bag of rice is not necessarily buying a pound of arsenic. Regardless I do not buy rice from the US, since they do not care to tell you which state it is grown from.
    czcams.com/video/9XK66S50oas/video.html
    TED Talk - How much arsenic is in rice? - Dr Tiffany Berg
    czcams.com/video/my_yHc9MgQ8/video.html
    Nutrition Facts Org - Which brands and sources of rice have the least arsenic?
    czcams.com/video/bpUP-ezwblQ/video.html
    Marketplace - Food Safety: What's lurking in rice?
    This discusses processed baby foods and formulas... quite sad...

  • @azazzelx
    @azazzelx Před 4 lety +4

    Well, since they're ganged up in a metal floating object,
    their are other ways o get some 'milky protein shake' 😏

  • @thedorku9500
    @thedorku9500 Před 4 lety +3

    For some reason, I thought your profile pic looked like a mugshot

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +1

      Someday, probably :p

    • @thedorku9500
      @thedorku9500 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Linfamy I'll bail you out if it happens

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +1

      @@thedorku9500 deal!

  • @MrGregory777
    @MrGregory777 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I subscribed because of this video 3 years ago

  • @killeanmcchesney5138
    @killeanmcchesney5138 Před 3 lety

    Good job very informative, keep up the great work bud.

  • @anthonyj606
    @anthonyj606 Před 4 lety +3

    First, wait nvm

  • @Dracopol
    @Dracopol Před 4 lety +2

    7:10 "Costed"? No, the verb "cost" is still "cost" in the past tense. Cost, cost, had cost...

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety

      Ah damn, I knew it sounded wrong...

    • @Dracopol
      @Dracopol Před 4 lety +1

      @@Linfamy English is a funny old language. You think you had gotten it right, but you're wrong. Never say what sounds reasonable, lol!

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety

      @Joseph Wilson 💗

    • @Linfamy
      @Linfamy  Před 4 lety +1

      @@Dracopol I actually Googled it when I was making the video and saw that costed was the past tense of cost, so I figured it was correct. If only I had read into it some more, I'd have found out that costed meant something different 😂

    • @auscountryguy30
      @auscountryguy30 Před 4 lety

      That was killing my ears too !

  • @benwagner5089
    @benwagner5089 Před 2 lety +1

    I didn't realize I was watching NSFW material lol. First we had Pikachu having a little too much fun with batteries and nipple clamps. Then we get a strip show from a rice kernel, even showing the naughty bits before they're broken off.

  • @internetuser3578
    @internetuser3578 Před 3 lety +1

    This was wicked informative. Cool

  • @rainbowfury1019
    @rainbowfury1019 Před 4 lety +2

    Welcome to the ricefields!!!

  • @manofcultura
    @manofcultura Před 2 lety +1

    One day while evolving humans lost their email password to the ability to make your own vitamin C.
    Same thing happened to cats, but they lost the ability to make their own taurine.

  • @ProjectEnglishII
    @ProjectEnglishII Před 3 lety +2

    Impossible burger comes from babies? OMG, I cried with laughter!

    • @rumpelpumpel7687
      @rumpelpumpel7687 Před 3 lety

      as long as it's free-range-babies i'm fine with it...

  • @asgautbakke8687
    @asgautbakke8687 Před 3 lety +1

    The story goes that the explanation to beriberi was also discovered a few years before by a dutch doctor in colonial Java. The colonial authority was building up transportation at the island, a railway line. The construction company was appalled by the death rate among the navvies, they died in droves from beriberi, so a doctor was sent from homey Amsterdam to discover the germ causing beriberi, remember that this was the age of Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch... But however much he studied ill navvies, no germ was found.
    The pay the navvies got was poor but they had one perk, they ate white rice instead of peasant brown rice. The rice shell was done in the company's own rice mill. What the doctor noticed was that the hen of the mill, who were fed the shells, were healthy as dandelions. So he made an experiment, he forced the navvies to eat "peasant rice" against much grumbling. But the beriberi disappeared almost overnight.

    • @goose4919
      @goose4919 Před 2 lety

      Christian Eijikman was his name