Genocide and Dreams: Iraq

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  • čas přidán 10. 12. 2018
  • Dr. Roy Casagranda is a political science professor in Austin, Texas. If you like this analysis and want more, check out Red Peace Machine weekly news podcast • Red Peace Machine

Komentáře • 310

  • @wrzffh
    @wrzffh Před 5 lety +205

    I love this guy. I have watched so many of his lectures. I am surprised he is not better known.

    • @AbdulKhader-786
      @AbdulKhader-786 Před 4 lety +4

      I like his style but the content isnt that great

    • @abdallazaher1910
      @abdallazaher1910 Před 2 lety +8

      So true he is a total nerd lol but be knows his shit i love it

    • @samlatifi3254
      @samlatifi3254 Před 2 lety +11

      Same here, odd he hasnt gone viral. And his content is great.

    • @wacirreza3573
      @wacirreza3573 Před rokem +5

      @@AbdulKhader-786 dude its a lecture what did u expect?

    • @SaddamHussain-we9ec
      @SaddamHussain-we9ec Před rokem +8

      @@AbdulKhader-786 seriously??? I haven't seen any historian better than him!!!
      Or you can suggest us a few names?

  • @MohiP
    @MohiP Před rokem +136

    As an Iraqi from mosul , I am 24 years old. I have lived through most of the events that he was talking about. I feel that I have lived enough, and I feel too old. By the way, he forgot to mention the Iraqi civil war in 2007. But he also mentioned information that I did not know He's a great teacher...

    • @eliah_B
      @eliah_B Před rokem +15

      Sorry you had to undergo the war. May you be blessed

    • @edwardjanuary1259
      @edwardjanuary1259 Před rokem +3

      ​@@monkeydluffy9011 بما انك عراقي ، ليش آخر قصة عن المراسل الألماني ، ينقطع الصوت، وممكن ترشدني ، حتة أبحث عن القصة

    • @agentsmidt3209
      @agentsmidt3209 Před 2 měsíci

      Sorry my guy. As you guys have murderous dictators , and religious zealots. We also have religious zealots, white nationalists, quarter-focused "defense" companies, media propaganda, and political psychopaths who run our government. Most Americans have zero clue about the revolving door of bloodthirsty nutjobs who are intelligencia, financial system "professionals", lobbyists , and career beltway "professionals" who concoct complex policies that an average American cannot understand. People thousand of miles away get murdered over nothing to satisfy unscrupulous intentions.

    • @Easterlingofrhun
      @Easterlingofrhun Před 22 dny +1

      Stay strong, brother. God bless you

  • @moemanm1202
    @moemanm1202 Před rokem +39

    im a muslim Egyptian. i have heard his lectures and was brought to tears. ive never heard any arab muslim so beautifully tell middle eastern history like him before.

  • @totallynameless8861
    @totallynameless8861 Před 4 lety +124

    How can Americans live with themselves after supporting this? I see so much weeping for volunteer American soldiers, and not a single thought is spared for the people those soldiers killed, or whose deaths they supported.

    • @mezm9239
      @mezm9239 Před rokem +32

      I blame the media. Here in the West we pride ourselves that we have unbiased independent journalism. This is far from the truth. Just like many other things we pride ourselves in.. the elite likes to portray we have the moral high ground but clearly in practice we are largely to blame for a lot of things.
      The general public are too naive and misplace thier trust on the very instruments in place to uphold justice and tells us the truth.

    • @arlingo
      @arlingo Před rokem +10

      1- Noam Chomsky's Manufacturing Consent.
      2- I remember mass anti-war protests in the US in 2002.
      3- 'Murica.

    • @MajdJackson1
      @MajdJackson1 Před rokem +1

      The Americans certainly have "Colonizing, wealth stealing, trouble making, divide and rule, British blood.

    • @End_Zionism
      @End_Zionism Před rokem

      Most Americans DO NOT support this that’s how they get you!!!! Don’t believe our media!!!

    • @volterizer201
      @volterizer201 Před rokem +11

      Americans have always been like this, since the Vietnam war and the Korean war. No thoughts spared for all the Vietnamese people that fell victim to CIA chemical attacks or the people that are still affected by it today. No thoughts spared for all the civilians that died in the bombing(s) of Pyongyang in Korea.

  • @user-mf7io2lx9g
    @user-mf7io2lx9g Před 6 měsíci +21

    I hope you will soon make a video about the ongoing situation in Gaza Thank you dr .Roy

    • @agentsmidt3209
      @agentsmidt3209 Před 2 měsíci +4

      This is a beaten horse. What more can you really say. We are witnessing a genocide, and ethnic cleansing as it happens. I think he talked about it a few years ago (I think in 2014, don't quote me on that...Dr. Roy saying).

    • @jerrymacabre3103
      @jerrymacabre3103 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I hope he does talk about it. The more people talk the more chances there are of people listening and making changes. Never stop talking about Palestine.

  • @colonelweird
    @colonelweird Před 10 měsíci +21

    Notice a pattern: when this video came out, people in the U.S. were still talking about ISIL. Now it has vanished from all discourse. Similarly, I remember that after the first Iraq invasion, Desert Storm vanished from public discourse, and has never returned. Most of us who lived through that event never heard most of these details at the time, and haven't heard them since (apart from this video). The second Iraq war is also quickly vanishing down the memory hole. This is what it's like to be American: we are a culture of extreme violence, but no memory.

    • @paulmusyk4lyfe51
      @paulmusyk4lyfe51 Před 7 měsíci +7

      It’s horrible! Yet Islamic civilization was the most tolerant in history since the Prophet (pbuh.) True Sharia law has a lot of mercy and what you see in parts of the Middle East even the Prophet (pbuh) only did a few times. I wish Islam had a better reputation but I WILL say, Muslims are VERY loyal and are probably the last nation to desist from the West and not compromise. May all people be guided to God and do right by one another

    • @uzairakram899
      @uzairakram899 Před 6 měsíci

      reminds me of 1984

  • @isar3153
    @isar3153 Před rokem +19

    One of the most informative and interesting lectures I've ever listened to.

  • @genevasantiago213
    @genevasantiago213 Před 7 měsíci +12

    Thank you for this incredible lecture. As an American, I have been completely ignorant to the atrocities we committed on Iraq and Iran (watched both : )) Thank you again, I have learned so much from you.

  • @dawoodinformations7323

    Thank you, Professor Roy. It was an excellent lecture ❤

  • @lidahamedani8055
    @lidahamedani8055 Před rokem +12

    Thank you for your comprehensive, sincere, informative and caring lecture. Great to know there are decent people left on this planet. Zan Zendeghee Azadi

  • @abearawad1985
    @abearawad1985 Před rokem +16

    Thank you for all these videos, I been watching one every day. Your amazing and I enjoy and learn so much from you. 😊

  • @ONLYFACT_X
    @ONLYFACT_X Před 20 dny

    Beautiful. Thank you professor.

  • @muhammadsharif7990
    @muhammadsharif7990 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Wonderful lecture! Thank you Professor Roy

  • @rick91443
    @rick91443 Před 5 lety +10

    Enjoy Professor Casagranda's presentations...rr Normandy, Fra

  • @HojoSell
    @HojoSell Před 17 dny

    this was sad but truth to be told. THANK YOU SOOOO MUCH about those history reports.

  • @rosesandsongs21
    @rosesandsongs21 Před 5 lety +5

    Captivating, thank you.

  • @goatmoag
    @goatmoag Před rokem +5

    Funny, I was just looking up April Glaspie right before this lecture caught my attention (after watching the one on western civ). The lecture certainly conforms with my understanding of the events, and certainly fills in some too.

  • @nobaso620
    @nobaso620 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This lecture was fun to watch

  • @user-gi9ek3so1v
    @user-gi9ek3so1v Před 15 dny

    I have never been interested in war but this was soo fascinating to watch his voice just pulls you and he keeps his students engaged throughout.

  • @coleKE
    @coleKE Před 4 měsíci +2

    This is one of the most traumatic stories I've ever heard

  • @agentsmidt3209
    @agentsmidt3209 Před 2 měsíci +2

    "That's BAD" That gets me everytime.

  • @haythemlutfi
    @haythemlutfi Před rokem +9

    I respect the knowledge in your videos and try not to miss any of your new videos. However, the name Iraq is older than 1400 years because it was called Iraq even before Islam. Many saying of Prophet “Mohammad peace be upon him” mentioning Iraq in details. I hope this piece of information is helpful.
    Thanks!

  • @musmerized658
    @musmerized658 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I’ve been binge watching these amazing lectures for the past two weeks. A note though, Abadan in arabic does mean never, but the city of Abadan takes its name from persian. The word Abad and Abadan in persian mean prosperous.

  • @totallynameless8861
    @totallynameless8861 Před 4 lety +12

    Sounds cuts out at the end. Amazing, very educational. Thank you for sharing.

    • @syedfaizanali367
      @syedfaizanali367 Před 10 měsíci

      i think/guess it was done on purpose, to avoid youtube infringements

  • @SofiaOHabib
    @SofiaOHabib Před 8 měsíci +3

    Doctor Roy, in one of your videos, you said 84 & 16% concession and today you said 95 & 5 % concession on British & Iran oil deal.

    • @Toaster-911
      @Toaster-911 Před 2 měsíci

      dont look at the numbers try to understand what he is trying to say

  • @cultureclique2173
    @cultureclique2173 Před 7 měsíci +4

    You see how the British effed this world?!

  • @LeeBotsios
    @LeeBotsios Před měsícem +2

    Gallipoli is our Gettysburg. Well said legend 👍

  • @adanaladdin2807
    @adanaladdin2807 Před 5 lety +10

    Release the Egypt lecture too.

  • @mohamedyaseenhoosain7649
    @mohamedyaseenhoosain7649 Před rokem +14

    Mr Roy Casagranda , A true professor! Thank you. Can someone please put me or him in a jet travel continuum so he can educate the world LOL keep up the great work.

  • @aasifmahgoub364
    @aasifmahgoub364 Před 2 lety +36

    It's rarely to see a western speak facts ,well done .

    • @End_Zionism
      @End_Zionism Před rokem +2

      The “middle east” IS the west, pay attention!! Lol but I know what you meant

    • @zack2804
      @zack2804 Před 3 měsíci

      @@End_Zionism Says who? Most of us consider ourselves culturally Asian. We have much more in common with the east than the west.

    • @f4wnz132
      @f4wnz132 Před 17 dny

      @@zack2804 Dr. Casagranda actually said that. He meant that the Middle East inspired today's West.

  • @muhammadaziz6383
    @muhammadaziz6383 Před rokem +7

    One mistake that I noticed, the city name Abadan meaning is not never
    although he is pronouncing it like ابدا which correctly means 'never' as he mentioned
    the correct city name is عبدان which is a different word
    the confusion is due to the pronounciation of letters 'ا' and 'ع' is 'a'

    • @RahellOmer
      @RahellOmer Před rokem +4

      And I think your confusion is due to the fact that it's a Persian city and they actually use "A" instead of 'ain.

  • @zainabyousif2553
    @zainabyousif2553 Před rokem +14

    Excellent lecture Sir. although it reminded me of the horrible history of my country. Millions of educated Iraqis fled the country

  • @tijubrain7501
    @tijubrain7501 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you sir

  • @user-ul5pt1yb8z
    @user-ul5pt1yb8z Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks a lot

  • @jocelynburrell9174
    @jocelynburrell9174 Před 3 lety +8

    May the angles gently take Our Souls and on the Day of Justice Resurrect those who harmed the past and now and do not repent !

  • @aloosh3308
    @aloosh3308 Před 3 měsíci

    Professor kept talking about history trauma, i was doubtful but after listening to this now I understand.

  • @Hazewala
    @Hazewala Před 15 dny

    in regard to the oil concession, i've heard you drop a few different splits 85/15 and now 95/5?

  • @adanaladdin2807
    @adanaladdin2807 Před 5 lety +13

    Absolutely love this man lol

  • @thesentry8981
    @thesentry8981 Před rokem

    The delivery of this is hilarious to me but serves a point. 1:29:00

  • @rishabhm10
    @rishabhm10 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Excellent as always Sir but why mute the Prison Camp Experience ? Now I am left with suspense.

  • @sultana_467
    @sultana_467 Před 6 měsíci +1

    His memory is insane. How does he remember so much and in chronological order, Masha Allah

  • @zgoodt
    @zgoodt Před rokem +18

    for any of you youngsters and people who were not in the middle east when all this happened, I was born in Egypt in 1997 years after the first American war on Iraq, I heard my father and mother speaking about it so i had little perspectives as well as our president at the time Muhammed Hosni Mubarak said when Saddam invaded Kuwait "This is gonna open the gates of Hell on us in the Arab world".
    911 happens and i was just a child, so I ofc had no clue also what's going on, then the invasion of Iraq happens I only saw it on TV with my family, they were very sad, the entire Arab world was in Shock.
    We were struck by a Trauma that whenever we hear the word American we freak out.
    WE hated the west at this point, we resented them, They colonized "Destructionized" our nation left it divided into 24 countries, then came back with more destruction and Chaos.
    2010 Comes, I am in the 6th Grade a minor civil war happens in my city Al bajour between 4 of the biggest families, all of them brought weapons, gas containers and hell went loose. the police came and things calmed after they gave their word they would fix the bad blood peacefully and head home, then bam they hit a police officer, word was sent to the governate main police station, 2 big police Vans filled with those shield carrying troops with sticks came, they literally stopped 3 streets away from the fight, went out of their trucks you could hear their organized foot hits on the ground from that distance, and they would do 4 Steps then yell very loud this "Haaah", in less than 3 minutes the 4 families were surrounded, and got beaten so hard, i freaked out at that sight of the troops and ran away, my house was literally less than a minute walking, just in the next street XD.
    they sent them to jail ofc.
    2011 comes, and Jan 25th 2011 hits i was in the 1st year of my prep school (middle school) was about 12 years old or so
    the shit day where the Arab spring(Arab autumn more like it) hit us "it was so systematic as it happened in all these arab states in a weird systematic way u can tell the intelligence of many nations planned it", Mohammed Hosni Mubarak could see what's happening so he stepped aside as a president and put himself under the justice system saying "History will give its witness about me and others with what's for us and what's against us" and stopped a civil war like that in libya and syria from happening to Egypt.
    WE fell under the Rule of a terrorist organization called "Muslim brotherhood" an organization made by the British intelligence when they evacuated from Egypt "they never left without leaving a permanent disease that would benefit them on the long run"
    till this day btw that organization is supported and hosted by the UK.
    that organization was as bad as ISIL (ISIS), we went on a revolution in 2014 against them to over throw them and we elected our current president Abdulfattah Al Sisi, an intelligence genius and a military man who studied what a country means for 20 years, he took us out of chaos and did lead the fight against them and terrorism in Sinai.
    Now back to the point and I know this is long, but you know when ISIL hit the middle east, I felt as though I was without cover without safety, like I was drowning in a lake in the middle of the night where it is not only impossible to breathe but also to see.
    The MBH (Muslim Brotherhood) the other side of the ISIL Coin did the same exact horrible acts to us they did to the Iraqis and Syrians, but luckily we had an army and a police, and we still had what the professor called "a state organization" or a half state.
    I have been watching this on live TV our police men and people fighting them off, we made what we call "the people's Check points" they are like the police ones, but made by the people, they would block a street and stop cars and investigate them, they used machetes, knives, shotguns and pistols to keep order, and to guard their homes and neighborhoods.
    The Police and the Army took the most Damage and we saw their battles on TV.
    I also remember that things were awful for the Libyans, and ISIL was there, they captured 20 Egyptians and idc about religion but i will say it "Coptic christians" not that it matters they are still Egyptians, they slaughtered them on live TV, to fill us with fear.
    our President said "I don't fear anyone but God, and whoever comes near her "Egypt" I will remove them from the face of the earth" in no time, our Air forces "the Eagles in the sky" wiped them out in Libya, this action made them stop messing with us for years.
    I would then watch our military and police fighting in Sinai, removing mines, and capturing terrorists, criminals and drugdealers ,and weapon dealers.
    also saw our "Fallen" Martyrs.
    they did many horrible things, like attacking a small village in Sinai hitting the Mosque on Friday when all of them were at the mosque praying the friday prayer, resulting in almost wiping out the males of that village.
    anyways the year 2021 hits, I had just graduated and we were internally safe, except for Sinai, and I hit the Mandatory Service requirements, I had to turn myself in to the recruitment offices to do my mandatory service of 1 year.
    My luck put me in Sinai, when I knew this I am not gonna lie "I cried, with all I saw on TV, I was just ready to die, but I was sad that my life didn't even start, and it is over" my father called me and said while laughing "yo recruit, do you know where u were put in?"
    I said "since you are laughing then it is indeed Sinai, don't tell my mother, just tell her I serve in Ismailiyah away from any harm"
    i was a soldier in the Artillery branch of the army, in a unit of Humvees (The High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV)) mounted with TOW launchers XD my role in war was literally the commander of the crew, and the one to use the TOW launcher XD was fun to train on it tbh.
    the role of my unit was "Guided Anti Tank Missiles" basically hunt tanks down and since terrorists don't have tanks in Sinai, we basically were useless in this war so they used us on check points, without cars ofc just our hand arms hemls and on check points.
    my luck put me in "Khafif el Harakah" unit which means "Light movement" unit which has the nick name "Mashrou3 Shaheed" meaning "A Martyr project"... in Sinai they are made to Quickly engage enemies, Secure Patrols and to Quickly support and Relief Checkpoints that are under attack as well as go on missions to scout, secure and assault terrorist nests.
    I saw death many times, and i was not even in the hot zone.
    I also served on a check point which was spotted and targeted by terrorists, I had an AK47, also was appointed on a light Machine gun, and on an RPG.
    the last month of my service they did a simultaneous attack on two check points one that was at the beginning of the road we secure which was in ismailliyah but the sinai part of it "literally in the city" and the other was 20 minutes away from me.
    the one in ismailliyah was wiped out sadly, the one near me repelled the attack with no casualties.
    we were informed right way on raido that we are Targeted and to be at the highest level of readiness for battle.
    We had a month of sleepless nights, we spotted enemy scouts, scouting our check point, and we yelled curses at them, "Come here ye dogs, come here if you got balls, fight us you cowards."
    the check point was never attacked, just coz we were always able to spot them and report it right away.
    moral of the story, this is all a result of American and western plans to fuck us up.
    you guys have a lot of hate here in the middle east waiting for u and don't blame us, u took our lives away from us, and u are as guilty as your governments and troops for supporting this and never standing against it.

    • @zgoodt
      @zgoodt Před rokem

      @@user-bn2nv5mx2g no we didnt elect them actually.. and they didnt win the elections.. the usa sent a secret threat of invading if we gave the presidency to shafiq who actually won these elections.
      Sisi didnt back stabb them, in fact he kept warning them to stop their corruption and they didnt.
      I dont need an outsider to talk to me about my own history and country.. you are ignorant in our matters.

    • @salahelhaddad4872
      @salahelhaddad4872 Před rokem +1

      Lol Sisi is a genius? Ya felol 😂 Muslim brotherhood is not related to isil at all .
      And if Sisi is so good why has the Egyptian economy collapsed that 1 dollar is sold now for over 30 pounds

    • @zgoodt
      @zgoodt Před rokem

      @@salahelhaddad4872 collapsed eh ya shrmt.. 😂

    • @zgoodt
      @zgoodt Před rokem

      @@user-bn2nv5mx2g because he himself cursed :D
      I am not required to tolerate every idiot that passes by.. nor am i required to explain orbprove anything to anyone.
      If cursing an idiot that cursed me is a legit reason to refute me.. go on idc 😅

    • @zgoodt
      @zgoodt Před rokem

      @@user-bn2nv5mx2g yes, it is that word, it is a word used to describe anyone that is a part of the Mubarak regime, or supports it, and it became an insult over the time.
      He obviously supports the Muslim Brotherhood and that is why he is attacking me and trying to defend them.
      The issue with his logic is that be it that the Muslim Brotherhood related to ISIL or not, doesn't change the fact they are terrorists. anyways the leaders of that group said it on live TV "that all the fighting happening in Sinai will stop the moment El Sisi leaves the seat of presidency and puts Morsi back." Morsi was their puppet in rule and basically the ones fighting the army in Sinai were ISIL so in short they are the same shit.

  • @jocelynburrell9174
    @jocelynburrell9174 Před 3 lety +1

    A blessing

  • @VoodooToad
    @VoodooToad Před měsícem

    As an australian, hey haha.
    The gallipoli joke caught me off guard.

  • @BAlavi-tl5sg
    @BAlavi-tl5sg Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the interesting lectures. FYI ONLY - the IRAQ (عراق )name existed locally. A 12th Century Persian Poet has been known as "Iraqi" ( عراقی)

  • @delmejacobs9236
    @delmejacobs9236 Před rokem +3

    So sad that the audience dont get the humor...especially the part about Salad and Dinners! lolz!

  • @tehreemamitha8524
    @tehreemamitha8524 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Why has part of his last answer been muted?

  • @al-mamluk
    @al-mamluk Před 2 lety +5

    What the Americans did to Iraq makes Saddam Hussein look like an angel.

  • @NFZ138
    @NFZ138 Před 2 měsíci

    What is the final story it got cut off!!

  • @JamesPeach
    @JamesPeach Před 11 měsíci +1

    The ending was cut short and muted.

  • @aneeseldeen3467
    @aneeseldeen3467 Před 21 dnem

    At the 28th minute ,56 sec.
    Roy dropped a bomb shell without explanation.
    Professor. You need to make a special one on the topic of this list.

  • @ShakeOneOfficial
    @ShakeOneOfficial Před rokem +2

    The Elephant in the room he forgot to mention is that the Americans gave the Shia Iraq on a golden plate, who massacred the Sunni population, the real reason 151L was successful unifying the sunni masses.

    • @f4wnz132
      @f4wnz132 Před 17 dny

      Who massacred the Sunni population, even though it was a back and forth, mostly tribal (except 2006), was outsiders. People who either left Iraq, came from Iran, or neighboring countries and caused fitnah.

  • @danielmillerii6278
    @danielmillerii6278 Před měsícem

    Anyone else notice the guy in the black backwards cap fall asleep right at the hour mark?

  • @christiansmith-of7dt
    @christiansmith-of7dt Před měsícem

    I put myself through a rigorous assortment of test and came to the conclusion that I can't do it , im just not good enough

  • @whitepawn4443
    @whitepawn4443 Před měsícem

    The last part was muted

  • @shamoney992
    @shamoney992 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Alhamdulillah for Islam

  • @nobaso620
    @nobaso620 Před 3 měsíci +2

    God this world is one hell of a soap opera

  • @jocelynburrell9174
    @jocelynburrell9174 Před 3 lety

    When was the first car?

  • @cultevo1
    @cultevo1 Před rokem +1

    The truth is usually Not Allowed!

  • @abdullahabushanab9755
    @abdullahabushanab9755 Před 3 měsíci

    How can I listen to it translated into Arabic? 😢

  • @danielthuku8192
    @danielthuku8192 Před 2 dny

    I understand why Scott Ritter is against the US imperialism. he saw the results of it with his own two eyes!

  • @colibri1
    @colibri1 Před 5 lety +15

    Americans may be "illiterate" today, but they weren't so much back in the 1890s. The extreme anti-intellectualism of today dates in its present form mostly to the 1980s, when you first started hearing Americans bragging that they don't like to read, the implication being that reading and pursuing knowledge would interfere with the pursuit of money-making and buying status possessions. And of course with the advent of the internet in the 1990s, Americans' 1980s resistance to reading devolved into a belief that everything is just an opinion or a point of view, that there are no facts, and they had largely stopped reading and studying so they couldn't learn otherwise. In the 1890s, though, Americans did like to read and study, a fact that lasted well into the twentieth century, with the generations of the 1960s and 70s noted for being especially learned and well read.

    • @thegardenoffragileegos1845
      @thegardenoffragileegos1845 Před 5 lety +9

      Actually, in the school system you saw anti intellectualism culturally start in the 1970's. It hadn't reached the curriculum or the teaching professions yet, but school had been reduced to a pathetic catwalk culture of social snobbery based upon fashion and how rich one's parents were. Once the Reagan era started, new school books were issued, 1/3 to 1/5 the size of their predecessors, and the reading curriculum replaced ideas based stories (stuff about the slave trade, scientific achievements, Robert Frost, etc) with commercial corporate propaganda, such as stories and articles about rock stars, sports figures, and television shows. I experienced being repulsed by the changes in curriculum as I was 11 when it started, old enough to notice and not like it. Celebrity worship was being forced down the throats of kids and most didn't seem to notice. You can definitely see the effects in American culture today where nobody is psychologically over the age of 12 and celebrity worship has inverted inward to showing your ass on Instagram.

    • @anjumshahzad8612
      @anjumshahzad8612 Před 2 lety

      Shut up mate. Make your own lecture then

  • @colonelweird
    @colonelweird Před 10 měsíci +1

    I enjoyed this lecture, but then I started doing some digging to find out some more background details about some things discussed here. I'm afraid I have to say, there seem to be significant inaccuracies in this recounting of events. For example, the discussion of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, and the US response, is very odd. I looked up two different sources and found that the two sources disagree both with one another, and with Dr. Roy.
    The first source is wikipedia, which seems to be edited so that its description of these events stays with the bounds of what mainstream American policy finds acceptable. So, for example, it takes a very negative approach to Iraq while largely exonerating Kuwait.
    The second source is, I suspect, the most accurate -- William Blum's Killing Hope, chapter 52. Blum argues that the US deliberately manipulated Iraq into invading Kuwait because it needed a pretext for a new war. With the end of the cold war, US defense budgets were in danger of being cut, so the US needed another war to keep the money flowing from Congress. Blum shows that Bush immediately condemned the invasion and started sending the US military to the region within 24 hours. This makes sense if Bush knew the invasion of coming.
    But Dr. Roy seems to think Bush was oblivious to the invasion until Thatcher straightened him out. He presents no evidence for this claim -- if any exists, I'd like to see it -- and it really doesn't make sense.
    Blum also describes Saddam's actions in Kuwait as "sacking and pillaging." Yet Dr. Roy bends over backwards to suggest Saddam was as gentle as humanly possible, and caused no damage in Kuwait whatsoever. That is surely an absurd statement. Saddam launched an invasion of another country. That is, a war. Wars are not gentle. One doesn't have to accept all the ridiculous American propaganda about Iraq to admit they were not always very nice.
    I suspect these problems are not alone. Throughout much of the lecture I found myself wondering whether the reality was a bit different from what Dr. Roy described. But even so, the broad outlines of the history are, I believe, accurate. Unfortunately, if I wanted to actually use this information, I would have to double check every single statement in the lecture, since Dr. Roy has demonstrated that he cannot be fully trusted. That makes this lecture considerably less valuable than I had hoped it might be.

    • @AJ-pc9gu
      @AJ-pc9gu Před 6 měsíci +1

      You disagreed on minutae, if you want to blow it out of proportion and say that the whole lecture "cannot be fully trusted" then go ahead. Minuate will vary and that's why everyone ought to listen to multiple historians, you can come to your conclusion. I disagree with your findings, more importantly the sacking of Kuwait. He never said kuwait wasn't sacked, he just said it was a highly disciplined force and that Saddam wanted to integrate them into Iraq proper; the complete opposite of what US media was presenting at the time, such as where they suggested fetuses were being ripped from pregnant women. Afterall the invasion only killed 1000 kuwaiti civilians, this is nothing compared to even the most gentle of USA military actions.

  • @Featherdsun
    @Featherdsun Před 5 měsíci

    4 years after isn't the name of raquiees ( which mean expansive in arab)the base for the name of this territorie

  • @man33li41
    @man33li41 Před rokem +1

    Is he narrating political history or an epic. This is crazier than fantasy or a Hollywood movie

  • @shmeckle666
    @shmeckle666 Před 5 lety +3

    Pity he doesn’t even mention the Zionist-Neocons in the executive and Pentagons office of special plans (OSP, creates by Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz, headed by Douglas feith-and whose civilian analysis, Lawrence Franklin was indicted by the FBI for spying for Israel via AIPAC) which bypassed the traditional intelligence apparatus that the executive relays on, and acted as the main information conduit to the executive.
    You can even watch the public committee on pre-Iraq war intelligence where the intelligence members say “we had no idea the OSP existed, etc.,)
    That leak to the New York Times was from Judith Miller-married the Scooter Libby who got this information from the Zionist Neocons in the OSP. So, the media leaks and the executive says “see, the media reaffirms this (because it was a “leak”). Etc., etc.
    There’s also Iranian agent (Iraqi exile creator of the Iraqi National Congress, INC), Ahmed Chalabi and how he played the Zionist Neocons for fools.
    The blame for the Iraq war rests on them in the OSP.
    Likud got Saddam, Iran got Iraq.

  • @MoAmmarHasan
    @MoAmmarHasan Před 3 lety

    1:22:40 spotted "the Flash" :p

  • @ehsana.al-karadi5352
    @ehsana.al-karadi5352 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Good lecture, just I don’t think that the us bombed iraq with more tnt than world war 2 including the two nukes , it is not possible, entire cities have been destroyed and levelled to the ground in germany and japan , we didn’t have the same thing in iraq

  • @4k4b0sh1
    @4k4b0sh1 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Ohh man... I felt like born again with all of this info's.. And my views to American government now, its so bad that I'll never believe anything thay gonna say now..

  • @TahaAlZadjali
    @TahaAlZadjali Před rokem +1

    This is a great lecture.. but , i need to go look for what he said about the US reports regarding weapons of mass distruction in Iraq and Kuwait stealing of Iraqi oil.

    • @yadbayad
      @yadbayad Před rokem +1

      did you find anything on Kuwait stealing oil or the UN investigative team? I couldn't find anything about this online..

    • @AJ-pc9gu
      @AJ-pc9gu Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@yadbayad Yea I coudn't find anything either, it seems to be wrong. All I found is that American oil companies said slant drilling is not necessary to extract oil from Rumaila "Some Iraqi officials have accused Kuwait in the past of using advanced drilling techniques developed by American oilfield specialists to siphon oil from the Rumaila field, a charge that American drillers deny, noting that the oil flows easily from the Rumaila field without any need for these techniques."

  • @obymo.7321
    @obymo.7321 Před 3 měsíci +1

    He looks like the dude from big Lebowski

  • @amandaa3713
    @amandaa3713 Před rokem

    Dr. Roy Casagranda

  • @samlatifi3254
    @samlatifi3254 Před 2 lety

    1:15:30 It was worse. She said its difficult but... ITS WORTH IT

  • @aramali636
    @aramali636 Před rokem +1

    I respect your knowledge and ability to present, you messed up the end of the story. Kirkuk and half of Musil are called the disputed areas according to the Iraqi constitution. When ISIL attacked Iraq, there was a vacuum in the disputed areas and Kurdish Peshmarga had to go down and protect those areas. They didn’t immediately claim land which they didn’t own, they reclaimed their territory which is now called the disputed areas! And some other parts of the ending of the story was kinda messed up!

    • @Isreal.Isnotreal
      @Isreal.Isnotreal Před rokem

      But the Kurds didn't own the lands...? It is Iraqi lands.

    • @Dronevvvvv1
      @Dronevvvvv1 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Isreal.Isnotreal Iraq is a made up country by the europeans my friend. Did you not listen to the lecture? Never in history ever have Basra had something to do with what is today ”northern Iraq”. Just as Basra & modern day Kuwait was the same region before the britts cut it.

  • @ShamrozeKhan
    @ShamrozeKhan Před 2 měsíci

    If someone could make an animated timeline of this entire video

  • @sgransar
    @sgransar Před rokem

    What a tragedy of epic scales.

  • @isooo8175
    @isooo8175 Před 4 měsíci

    Irak was a name used before. There was Irak-i Acem (Iranian Irak) and Irak-i Arab (Arabic Irak). 16th century Ottoman campaign against Safavids, which resulted in Iraq to become part of Ottoman Empire, is called Irakeyn (2 Iraks) Campaign.

  • @fernaoorphao
    @fernaoorphao Před 11 dny

    Great lecture as usual. Just a minor comment, well, not so minor since 2022: The claim that Russians weren't into imperialism after 1917 is dead wrong - just ask the Crimean Tatar, the Kalmyk, the Chechens, Lithuanians, and just about every non-Russian group in "the prison of peoples". Moscovites were just busy with imperialism (say, forced collectivization) elsewhere ;)

  • @saadoa4969
    @saadoa4969 Před 11 měsíci +1

    At 1:33:35, The answer to the ISIL/ISIS question is because the Levant (L in ISIL) is called Sham in Arabic so ISIS, Islamic State In Sham

  • @user-yk8bj5wq6g
    @user-yk8bj5wq6g Před 3 měsíci +2

    And,we're the terrorist?

  • @EmaratyAUH
    @EmaratyAUH Před rokem

    Hossni Mubarak actually witnessed a meeting between Saddam, Yaser Arafat, King Hussain of Jordan and Hafidth Al Assad where they discussed how to divide the GCC countries among them.

    • @raedahmed3819
      @raedahmed3819 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Was there any source for this?

    • @ramyfever
      @ramyfever Před 5 měsíci

      Lol

    • @f4wnz132
      @f4wnz132 Před 17 dny

      Emarati playing the victim card? Typical LOL

  • @aydinpiriyev1499
    @aydinpiriyev1499 Před rokem

    Big Man

  • @PabloEscobosa
    @PabloEscobosa Před 2 měsíci

    "But the British, they could read"

  • @Oners82
    @Oners82 Před 5 lety +7

    At 23:00 he is wrong. There was no Faisal III, there were only two Faisal's who ruled Iraq and it was Faisal II who was assassinated in 1958.

    • @jamesbrown2761
      @jamesbrown2761 Před 4 lety +5

      Is that your sole comment on a 2 hr lecture?? an error in numbers??

    • @RAmeer-nn5wz
      @RAmeer-nn5wz Před 4 lety +4

      @@jamesbrown2761
      Faisal I is the first King of Iraq, after he passed away his son Ghazi was in charge , and last Ghazi's son Faisal II.

  • @fennex2000
    @fennex2000 Před rokem +2

    Iraq was always named Iraq it is mention in islamic history poetry and even in 1001 night

  • @mohammedfaqih499
    @mohammedfaqih499 Před 8 měsíci +1

    1:44:15 Shame

  • @alihussein7806
    @alihussein7806 Před rokem +1

    Iraq is an old name and is not created by the British, the uprising in 1920 forced the British to rule iraq indirectly through an Arab monarchy, history told here has many inaccuracies

  • @fennex2000
    @fennex2000 Před rokem +2

    the greatest country in the world my ass

  • @nassehk
    @nassehk Před rokem

    The oil deal with Qajar Persians was 84% Brits and 16% Persians not 95-5.

  • @chrisgilbert7877
    @chrisgilbert7877 Před 4 lety +4

    Australian watching

  • @asimjabbar8445
    @asimjabbar8445 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Yeah one of the US tomahawk cruise missile dropped into Pakistan unexploded. So Pakistanis did return the debris to the US but after carefully studying them, reverse engineered and made Babur cruise missile with Ukrainian engines in it 😜

    • @batyr123_
      @batyr123_ Před 6 měsíci

      They named it after Babur Shah?

  • @akramkafi350
    @akramkafi350 Před rokem +2

    Dr. Roy, I am highly disappointed to find you having not even the slightest idea about nither Iraq as a country, nor the origin of its name, yet dare to say that the country and its name were created out of thin air by the Brits!!! ... How come you say that?!!! ... Please reffer to the Arabic history and litreture and you will find out that the Arabs have always called that region between and surrounding the Tigris and Euphrates rivers "IRAQ". The name is at least 2200 years old. The name is pre-islamic and always been there. The Ottomans divided Iraq into three provinces, that's correct. Yet, those three provinces all together still called "IRAQ". The Governer of Baghdad was the Supreme Governor of the entire three provinces, supervising the other two governers of AlBussra and AlMousel ... Accordingly when the Brits came they didn't creat anything new at all, they just used what has been already thier.

  • @salahdin007
    @salahdin007 Před rokem +1

    Iraqi 'shia' soldiers left their bases on purposes and gave their equipemnt on purpose to ISIl, it was an order. They wanted them as an ennemy to commit genocide to the sunni muslims.

  • @aranhaydar9195
    @aranhaydar9195 Před rokem +2

    38:00 I'm from halabja 5000 people died, and a lot more have respiratory diseases. The bombing was done by MIGs and we never left the town to begin with, Iranians have reached the borders and that was it (there are videos and documentaries that are captured in the exact date of
    15/march/1988)

    • @RahellOmer
      @RahellOmer Před rokem +2

      It's actually more nuanced than this.
      The PUK (under Mam Jalal's leadership) had a deal with the Iranian Military to flank the Iraqi forces from Halabja. They did this to undermine the Iraqi army and hopefully weaken them enough so that we, Kurds, get some sort of autonomy from Iraq. Mam Jalal was indubitably notified that in the event of such an arrangement, then Iraq would use chemical weapons against them (this was later confirmed - just a few months ago in an interview in NRT - from a PUK leader of that time) and that Mam Jalal dismissed it as being fluff/Iraq didn't have chemical weapons (spoiler: they did have it)
      As to the order of events, I'm not sure, but I believe there is footage of Irani forces *inside* Halabja. The Peshmerga opened the front for them. So Iraq sent a telegram to the Kurdish leaders, asking them to evacuate the civilians because they are going to bomb Halabja using chemical weapons. But the Kurdish forces did not do this (I vaguely believe that they even prevented the civilians from fleeing, but I'm not sure). So that's what happened.

  • @TruthShallSetYouFree2023

    The Majority of Isil was the ex Iraqi army. 1400 Mujahideen took Mosul, they only went to release their prisoners, when the army heard they ran. Nobody wants there heads chopped off. 😂😂😂 So, indirectly Usa created ISIL and then paid the price. Just to add, ISIL took Mosul central bank and gave all the money to who it belonged to (citizen’s) They made over a Billion that day.:). and this was told to me buy a Christian living in Mosul who came to the UK and then moved back whilst ISIL was in charge. A doctor no less. So, all the stories about ISIL … surprise, surprise will one day be known.. The People Sunni backed them and 84 countries bombed everyone to the stone age. Funny how nobody talks about the genocide committed by The west.

  • @wishiwsthr
    @wishiwsthr Před 3 měsíci

    This guy seems to be a great lecturer but a lot of his information is very questionable

  • @johnbarnesNnaptown
    @johnbarnesNnaptown Před měsícem

    If foreign words were meant to be pronounced differently then spell them differently.

  • @christiansmith-of7dt
    @christiansmith-of7dt Před měsícem

    I guess this is just part of dying , it hurts alot more than it should

  • @FirdousAhmedLone
    @FirdousAhmedLone Před 28 dny

    26:05
    30:42
    33:10
    58:45 Iraqi parliament was 34% women

  • @NFZ138
    @NFZ138 Před 2 měsíci

    1123 am Teulon Manitoba