Communists, Nationalists, and China's Revolutions: Crash Course World History #37

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
  • In which John Green teaches you about China's Revolutions. While the rest of the world was off having a couple of World Wars, China was busily uprooting the dynastic system that had ruled there for millennia. Most revolutions have some degree of tumult associated with them, but China's 20th-century revolutions were REALLY disruptive. In 1911 and 1912, Chinese nationalists brought 3000 years of dynastic rule to an end. China plunged into chaos as warlords staked out regions of the country for themselves. The nationalists and communists joined forces briefly to bring the nation back together under the Chinese Republic, and then they quickly split and started fighting the Chinese Civil War. The fight between nationalists and communists went on for decades and was interrupted by an alliance to fight the invading Japanese during World War II. After World War II ended, the Chinese Civil War was back on. Mao and the communists were ultimately victorious, and Chiang Kai-Shek ended up in Taiwan. And then it got weird. Mao spent years repeatedly trying to purify the Communist Party and build up the new People's Republic of China with Rectifications, Anti Campaigns, Five Year Plans. the Great Leap Forward, and the Cultural Revolution. These had mixed results, to say the least. John will cover all this and more in this week's Crash Course World History.
    Chapters:
    Introduction: China's Revolutions 00:00
    Calls for Reform in China 0:58
    An Open Letter to Sun Yat Sen 1:33
    Overthrowing the Qing Dynasty 2:38
    The Guomindang and the Chinese Communist Party 3:44
    Mao Establishes the People's Republic of China 6:09
    China's Soviet-inspired Five Year Plans 8:11
    China's Cultural Revolution 9:52
    Credits 11:30
    Resources:
    The Search for Modern China by Jonathan D. Spence bit.ly/3rLxlCL
    Blood Red Sunset: A Memoir of the Cultural Revolution by Ma Bo bit.ly/3EjstK4
    Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at / crashcourse
    Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
    Facebook - / youtubecrashcourse
    Twitter - / thecrashcourse
    Instagram - / thecrashcourse
    CC Kids: / crashcoursekids

Komentáře • 6K

  • @jonathanallison785
    @jonathanallison785 Před 9 lety +6141

    Im currently sitting at home in Shanghai, China watching your video. Thanks VPN

    • @jonathanallison785
      @jonathanallison785 Před 9 lety +167

      yeah

    • @b19931228
      @b19931228 Před 9 lety +418

      Jonathan Allison Currently sitting home in Taipei, no circumvention technology required to watch this video.

    • @NickWebster
      @NickWebster Před 8 lety +47

      +Arnold de Wit Hola is a bad idea. It turns your computer into a bot.

    • @bluetiger2002
      @bluetiger2002 Před 8 lety +48

      Me too, haha vpn就是好

    • @tropicislands1114
      @tropicislands1114 Před 8 lety +1

      Lol

  • @rcmini1000
    @rcmini1000 Před 5 lety +619

    John Green, if I get a 5 or higher in my IB history exams, I will read looking for Alaska.

  • @Rheologist
    @Rheologist Před 5 lety +3660

    Apparently everyone watching this is either using a vpn in China or studying for an exam

    • @rastas4766
      @rastas4766 Před 5 lety +90

      I am literally studying for an exam RIGHT NOW.

    • @mesdw4334
      @mesdw4334 Před 5 lety +77

      can't access their history in their own motherland.

    • @arlene5990
      @arlene5990 Před 5 lety +3

      lol

    • @yiwang2922
      @yiwang2922 Před 5 lety +35

      No I am Chinese who is watching in Malaysia yay

    • @sarahhe.5455
      @sarahhe.5455 Před 5 lety +45

      I am a Chinese watching this for fun in Canada lol

  • @hmmmhmmm6917
    @hmmmhmmm6917 Před 8 lety +2955

    i watched this in China using VPN :D in our school

    • @BBC.Radio1
      @BBC.Radio1 Před 8 lety +209

      You know, you could make a business out of teaching people how to get over the firewall.

    • @derektroutman4793
      @derektroutman4793 Před 8 lety +9

      Same

    • @hashimahmed6773
      @hashimahmed6773 Před 8 lety +40

      it is hard to believe that a Fin (Finnish) who lives in china and goes school there exist
      btw your name gave it away

    • @Epicdino2912
      @Epicdino2912 Před 8 lety +4

      +Hashim Ahmed was thinking the same thing but he could possibly be an exchange student

    • @hmmmhmmm6917
      @hmmmhmmm6917 Před 8 lety +37

      im half Chinese half finnish does that explain everything ?:)

  • @jcchen5356
    @jcchen5356 Před 9 lety +992

    One correction: Guangdong is not a city. It is a province. It's capital Guangzhou is a city.

    • @AlmightyAaron0423
      @AlmightyAaron0423 Před 5 lety +3

      JC Chen nobody cares

    • @xiaozhang7103
      @xiaozhang7103 Před 5 lety +224

      @@AlmightyAaron0423 based on the amount of likes, people clearly do.

    • @kianh.76
      @kianh.76 Před 5 lety +39

      @@AlmightyAaron0423 it's reached 235 likes now haha yes

    • @ScareSans
      @ScareSans Před 5 lety +27

      @Wy123 281 likes. get dunked on.

    • @kevinj.3310
      @kevinj.3310 Před 5 lety +51

      @@AlmightyAaron0423 at least i care because well facts matters

  • @eveningrice
    @eveningrice Před 9 lety +1203

    Some things that you guys should know that John didn't explicitly say:
    1. The alliance that was formed between the Guomindang and the CCP in 1923 was called the First United Front.
    2. After Sun Yat-sen died in 1925, Chaing Kai-shek attempted to purge the communists in what is known as the 'White Terror'.
    3. There was a second alliance known as the Second United Front between the communists and the nationalists in 1937-1941 in an attempt to stop Japan from invading.
    Great Video John Green. It really helped me remember stuff

    • @suzumiyaharuhi3438
      @suzumiyaharuhi3438 Před 6 lety +34

      Indeed, CCP agreed to the visions and proposals of SYS, therefore he remained the "father" of PRC even till now. On the other hand, nowadays TW politicians are denying the contributions of SYS and even considering Japanese invasion to be benevolent.

    • @hongeast5174
      @hongeast5174 Před 6 lety +15

      SYS want rebulit KMT as a Lenin style socialist party, and adopt socialism ideology. That's why CPC agreed to merge into KMT. SYS in his final life is a socialist. However not all the old KMT agree to switch to socialism. The KMT adopted socialism for compromise because of SYS's great reputation in the party. So when SYS died, the old KMT's split into right wing(nationalism) and left wing(socialism) is inevitable.

    • @ryhanzfx1641
      @ryhanzfx1641 Před 6 lety +2

      Arikawanda
      Lol are you kidding?
      The communist backstab the nationalist after 1945! The KMT already give them a compromise to let them form their own wing Kuomintang faction, but they kept resisting!

    • @oc6617
      @oc6617 Před 5 lety +3

      +Arikawanda Are you a mainlander? You provided no more evidence than Raiyhan did. All both of you did was state your own opinions. No sources/links/etc to back up either of your points. I'm ethnically Chinese too btw, if that helps any.

    • @junkscience6397
      @junkscience6397 Před 5 lety +3

      the Communists, from the Hangzhou Plenum in 1922 until Chiang crushed the uprising in 1927 and pushed them into the hills for years, were forced by Stalin's Comintern representatives, especially Marin, to publicly join the KMT (but still SECRETLY organize Communist cells within the KMT.) They all had to swear a KMT oath promising not to belong to any other Party, and every CCP member, from Chen Duxiu to Mao Zedong, promised they would NOT do exactly what they planned to do! That's the perfidy of the Communists. They LIE, CHEAT and STEAL if it helps them get closer to their murderous totalitarian goals!

  • @99mrslang
    @99mrslang Před 7 lety +557

    I went to China my Freshman year of high school as an exchange student. One day after school my host brother took me out of his way to show me "old China", and we rode our bikes to the outskirts of town to a small restaurant with bamboo walls and a shingled roof awkwardly crammed between two lifeless concrete structures. Seeing the inside was chilling; it was like stepping into a forgotten world.

  • @marcustavern2191
    @marcustavern2191 Před 6 lety +615

    I've been trying to find a documentary or review of the Chinese civil war that isn't reminiscent of 1950s anti-communist propaganda. This is the only video on youtube I've been able to find that is relatively neutral and honest about its content, without constantly referring to one part or the other as barbaric or whatever bad term you want to insert.
    Thank you for this video. I appreciate history for the sake of history MUCH more than propaganda I agree with.

    • @ramisgoogleacc702
      @ramisgoogleacc702 Před 4 lety +4

      Jay Blake I read on contradiction first, but thats just me.

  • @mangamongot
    @mangamongot Před 9 lety +75

    Am I the only one who always tear up a bit by Johns serious finishing lines? They're so powerful!

  • @al-sadata.sabtula3680
    @al-sadata.sabtula3680 Před 8 lety +1713

    Democratic Dictatorship - You get to vote but there is only one choice. Lol

    • @al-sadata.sabtula3680
      @al-sadata.sabtula3680 Před 8 lety +22

      The point is that there still voting going on. :D

    • @wouldyouliketomeetkenbamba9495
      @wouldyouliketomeetkenbamba9495 Před 7 lety +58

      So does the US since the one that voted is actually the state not the people

    • @chenyeetoh7024
      @chenyeetoh7024 Před 7 lety +26

      Al-Sadat A. Sabtula US democarcy , u get to vote, but two choice.

    • @PeterLiuIsBeast
      @PeterLiuIsBeast Před 6 lety +112

      Actually Democratic Dictatorship is misleading. Read up on Marxism and you'll find something called the dictatorship of the proletariat. In this view the people own the means of production. It does not actually mean rule by one person who is a tyrant.

    • @ehomejoe9613
      @ehomejoe9613 Před 5 lety +5

      This vote means that you agree or disagree with this choice.

  • @nanaadu8604
    @nanaadu8604 Před 5 lety +292

    This man speaks so fast it's like he's rapping. Seriously, someone put a beat behind him and remix the whole video. It would be fyre.

    • @ADeeSHUPA
      @ADeeSHUPA Před 4 lety +1

      Nana Adu wkwkwk

    • @donttalkcrap
      @donttalkcrap Před 4 lety

      @itz GliTz to fastly??? .. you means TOO FAST

  • @IKanTowtallySpel
    @IKanTowtallySpel Před 8 lety +1227

    To everyone like myself studying for AP World, good freakin luck.

    • @williamhoganson4995
      @williamhoganson4995 Před 8 lety +4

      +Vincent Mangano Thanks

    • @13Day131
      @13Day131 Před 8 lety +7

      good luck to you too 😭

    • @christinale1700
      @christinale1700 Před 8 lety +9

      amen

    • @salvadorpereyra3795
      @salvadorpereyra3795 Před 8 lety +26

      +Vincent Mangano Literal test tomorrow and i'm not ready to fail my class :)
      Good luck to everyone else though who actually applied themselves! Hopefully your essays will get you that passing score or higher!

    • @martinconway8174
      @martinconway8174 Před 8 lety +5

      yep, i have this test on wednesday........ tomorrow

  • @cragnog
    @cragnog Před 9 lety +32

    i do love your ability to summarise an encyclopedia's worth of info into 12 enjoyable minutes

  • @Life_Weekend
    @Life_Weekend Před 5 lety +51

    Sun Yat-sen is still considered as the founding father today in mainland China. In high school history book, it is also taught so.

  • @VWYL900802
    @VWYL900802 Před 7 lety +5

    Finally! You nailed everything about PRC and the Republic! Very few foreigners can nail our history with that well understanding!

  • @adriankai3420
    @adriankai3420 Před 5 lety +225

    If there are any IB history testers cramming, good luck

    • @pinkusekk
      @pinkusekk Před 5 lety +3

      any predictions on the topics of paper 2?

    • @adriankai3420
      @adriankai3420 Před 5 lety +8

      @@pinkusekk I'm not a teacher just a tester, but I'm focusing on Mao v Hitler for authoritarian leaders and WWI and WWII

    • @sebmontgomery7787
      @sebmontgomery7787 Před 5 lety

      @@pinkusekk how'd it go

    • @mazzinez.f.6071
      @mazzinez.f.6071 Před 5 lety

      Not studying for my papers yet, but doing summer homework for my Junior year. I fear the worst is ahead of me.

    • @edgelord0923
      @edgelord0923 Před 4 lety +2

      studying for quiz in ib history two thx depew

  • @CaptainSkeletor
    @CaptainSkeletor Před 11 lety +33

    Damn...sometimes I just have to pause in life and really think about the amazing things that I can choose to partake in. The access of this kind of information is truly astonishing. I'm so lucky to live in this time! Thank you Crash Course!

  • @rockmakesme
    @rockmakesme Před 9 lety +114

    Why don't you make a video about the "new China", concerning Deng Xiaopeng and his reforms? How far was the Chinese communist model kept and how far was it altered? China may look like a capitalist country today, but there is a lot more behind it.

  • @sran438
    @sran438 Před 4 lety +14

    I just went on a crash course marathon cause I’m a sucker for history and John Green’s comedy.

  • @rng7486
    @rng7486 Před 7 lety +7

    That Mortal Instruments reference at 0:43 though. Nice one, John.

  • @georgelei3537
    @georgelei3537 Před 7 lety +375

    Actually most of my friends can see this video in China as it is easy to get a VPN

    • @khanhsp
      @khanhsp Před 7 lety +36

      That's illegal

    • @mingyiliu3436
      @mingyiliu3436 Před 7 lety +42

      I am committing crime! ;p

    • @Cutter0908
      @Cutter0908 Před 7 lety +14

      No name that's not illegal!

    • @Eric-eb6gk
      @Eric-eb6gk Před 7 lety +1

      George Lei 舔的好!

    • @patrickwilliam344
      @patrickwilliam344 Před 7 lety +32

      Well, as I major in Chinese Law, I have to say that it is never illegal to use a VPN in China, and my Chinese friends told me that in university you even do not need a VPN at all.

  • @PrimusProductions
    @PrimusProductions Před 10 lety +56

    I wonder how Sun Yat-sen would react to the situation in Asia today.

    • @zeiitgeist
      @zeiitgeist Před 10 lety +7

      Doesn't matter since his 2nd (not counting Kaoru Otsuki) wife Soong Ching Ling (one of the Soong sisters) joined the Communist Party. Lots of people don't know much about Sut-Yat Sen dealings with underground triads/cults (look for the triad three rituals), warlords (e.g. Yuan Shikai), he ran to Japan to *"study"* (forming the TongMengHui), criminal acts and accumulated wealth from oversea Chinese to buy weapons, better yet he divorced his first wife without reason after he married a 13 years old Japanese Girl against her father's wishes and had a child with her then returned to China while she was still pregnant. Lastly, his right hand Chiang Kai Shek (fascist nut-job) and nutty wife, Soong May Ling who loved power so much that she went against her sisters. Moreover, Taiwan, Kinmen and Matsu (they always forget about Kinmen and Matsu =_=||| ) in short the Republic of China only got their democracy after 1988 with a new crazy party called DPP (Democratic Progressive Party).
      Also know this the three principles of KMT is Nationalism, Socialism (not democracy), Social welfare of the proletariat. Furthermore, the KMT had so much in-fighting and defecting personnel (at one point communist members and KMT members switch between each side). However, if it was Song Jiaoren (founder of KMT and president which after his death deteriorate into power struggles) that was alive than maybe something would be different.

    • @andrewchang6143
      @andrewchang6143 Před 10 lety +2

      zeiitgeist You do realize the DPP has won the presidential election only once since its inception and that very president is now in jail for life because of laundering money...

    • @zeiitgeist
      @zeiitgeist Před 10 lety +1

      Yes I am aware, but I do hope they do not get the upper hand ever again if KMT makes poor decisions in future solely on their vision.

    • @andrewchang6143
      @andrewchang6143 Před 10 lety +1

      zeiitgeist I agree.

    • @arthurxie1655
      @arthurxie1655 Před 10 lety +10

      Sun Yat-Sen will never let China fall into parts. Taiwan would be united.

  • @stockholmsyndromeself-trea7517

    How did you manage to find all the archive footage. Amazing.

  • @Titoyayo02
    @Titoyayo02 Před 6 lety +7

    Im from Spain and your videos helped me a lot for the school, thank you so much for making awesome and interesting videos.

  • @ambergong7201
    @ambergong7201 Před 9 lety +73

    I started to want to throw in the half of the video because I start to really the stories my mother and grandmother told me. This wasn't even history for them, it is their childhood, adulthood.
    The sick feeling of the pain they suffered.
    I could not even imagined.

    • @t1isdream
      @t1isdream Před 9 lety +14

      silver gong Learn from their experience and never let what happen to you mom and grandmon ever happen to you or your children. :)

    • @Gunnarr123abc
      @Gunnarr123abc Před 9 lety

      silver gong Maybe you can share these stories

    • @mikuhatsunegoshujin
      @mikuhatsunegoshujin Před 6 lety

      They are just stories, I'm not sure if you should trust them.

    • @corneliali7747
      @corneliali7747 Před 6 lety +6

      I feel you. My great grandpa was indirectly killed by the communist party because he was a "bourgeoisie" ( he owned a small convenience store)

  • @KkllerSnake
    @KkllerSnake Před 8 lety +114

    God Bless all, T - 13 hours until the AP World Exam. good luck all

    • @emhamp303
      @emhamp303 Před 8 lety +1

      😓😓😩 u too man

    • @floridianzach2277
      @floridianzach2277 Před 8 lety +1

      +HaZerD Same m8 Ap world in 9nth is spooky good luck

    • @ScareSans
      @ScareSans Před 5 lety

      @Zach Hohl good luck in "ninnth" XD

  • @FlandraLabs
    @FlandraLabs Před 7 lety +443

    I watched this in China. When one has a need, one will always find a way to satisfy it. Love watching ya John :)
    Loving it in China,
    Eric

    • @johnarbuckle2619
      @johnarbuckle2619 Před 7 lety +12

      Eric Jiang love you Eric

    • @FlandraLabs
      @FlandraLabs Před 7 lety +8

      The Anime Drummer EYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY SAMMMMMMMMMM

    • @TheAwesomePieGuy
      @TheAwesomePieGuy Před 7 lety +10

      11:28 Thank goodness for VPNs! Good to meet someone else who live in China!

    • @catice1205
      @catice1205 Před 7 lety +2

      In fact,a huge part of Taiwan's economy comes from Chinese traveller....

    • @skyacaniadev2229
      @skyacaniadev2229 Před 6 lety

      They would be quickly overrun and shoveled into the ocean if anyone would let this happen...

  • @holly.lawton97
    @holly.lawton97 Před 7 lety +8

    Chairman Meow is a great name for a cat, and I'm thankful that Magnus Bane was a character to do so XD

  • @loganulery9863
    @loganulery9863 Před 7 lety +5

    THANKS! Last minute preparations for AP exam these are a life saver!!!

  • @HaydenLau.
    @HaydenLau. Před 7 lety +916

    I'm watching this in China

    • @sakketin
      @sakketin Před 7 lety +6

      Hayden Lau How?

    • @HaydenLau.
      @HaydenLau. Před 7 lety +106

      Jamming InDaStreets I live in Hong Kong

    • @worsethanjoerogan8061
      @worsethanjoerogan8061 Před 7 lety +78

      I was going to guess you were using a VPN, but I guess living in Hong Kong is the easier solution. :D

    • @HaydenLau.
      @HaydenLau. Před 7 lety +81

      Dean Cutler If it makes you feel better i am also using a vpn. Borading school wifi blocks youtube

    • @SilentSniper-zn7eu
      @SilentSniper-zn7eu Před 7 lety +13

      Hayden Lau Rest In Peace then

  • @Koenentom
    @Koenentom Před 6 lety +2

    Just wanted to show my appreciation! 3 years and it is still a really good video. Really helped me for my politics class

    • @donttalkcrap
      @donttalkcrap Před 4 lety

      3 years?
      It was made in 2012
      You responded in 2019.
      That is 7 years
      Your next Crash Course should be Simple Arithmetic

  • @winniehwm
    @winniehwm Před 6 lety +5

    I’m so proud that Dr. Sun Yat Sen and I are both Cantonese. In Guangzhou, there’s a memorial hall of him. And until today, many Chinese (including those in Mainland China) still think Dr. Sun is the father of Modern China.

  • @darrishawks6033
    @darrishawks6033 Před 4 lety +3

    last thing: it's not illegal to access CZcams. The site is blocked, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's illegal to circumvent that block.

  • @julesxaxp3745
    @julesxaxp3745 Před 7 lety +5

    Its the night before the AP, and here i am, binge watching all the crash course videos. Good luck, my friends.

  • @brucefrizzell4221
    @brucefrizzell4221 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for the many subtitles .

  • @xiaoyanhuang6664
    @xiaoyanhuang6664 Před 8 lety +8

    OMG, the speed that talk is supper fast. I have to pause for so many time in order to understand what did u say and then move to the next one. However, ur video is helpful😄

  • @passionforlearning5099
    @passionforlearning5099 Před 7 lety +4

    Thank you so much Crashcourse for all the help! You were a lifesaver for me during history classes, and I hope that my own learning/help channel can be as helpful and beneficial to students as yours one day.

  • @UnHermitano
    @UnHermitano Před 7 lety +15

    I would like to see you talk about Deng and China between 1980 and today

  • @satrap2364
    @satrap2364 Před 4 lety

    Appreciate the video Mr. Green you are awesome

  • @insatiabletechfetish9843

    Well done, my good man! Keep it up!

  • @erichuang5785
    @erichuang5785 Před 4 lety +4

    The failure of the "self-strengthening" was majorly due to the reactionaries in the Qing central authority. The boxer rebelling played only a small part of that.

  • @TheCorrectSadists
    @TheCorrectSadists Před 9 lety +3

    Love this channel. I'll practice being awesome today by sharing my favorite video on Facebook and Twitter. Thanks for consolidating history into entertainment for more to enjoy.
    If you have a chance it would be great if each video came with a website that included references and resources to the information here.
    I am sure it's a matter of time and cost and value, but if that stops you and you have the resources available in any form I would love to contribute by organizing it, creating the websites and hosting (as well as all the costs involved in hosting and web dev)

  • @najeeford923
    @najeeford923 Před 6 lety

    Life saving video thank you!!!

  • @rachelkzhang7971
    @rachelkzhang7971 Před 6 lety +15

    I'm an International student from Canada who is in Shanghai, China watching this video at the moment! Thanks to VPN

  • @cristallachesis
    @cristallachesis Před 6 lety +3

    Sorry about Sun and his lack of luck and Warhol portraits - greetings from Beijing after enjoying the US history crash course - well done Dr. Green!

  • @s02229
    @s02229 Před 10 lety +6

    I am a Chinese in Hong Kong, i have learnt that the cultural revolution was initiated partly because Mao fell out of power after the unsuccessful Great Leap Forwa and he wanted to regain it by making the one in power Lao miserable, so the motives weren't pure at all

    • @succeedinternationel6616
      @succeedinternationel6616 Před 6 lety

      教科書沒有告訴我們當時中共和中國面臨著多麼大的危機,毛想要力挽狂瀾,可惜他失敗了

  • @lettersandnumbers21
    @lettersandnumbers21 Před 7 lety +5

    @3:35
    "It is a general truism of the world that a thing long scattered will surely unite, and a thing long united will surely scatter."

  • @ChinaIcons
    @ChinaIcons Před 8 lety +1

    Loved this, thank you John! Please do more crash course videos about China!

  • @archvermin
    @archvermin Před 10 lety +8

    Am I the only guy who find that angry Chinese lady at 7:40 really scary?

    • @heronofheaven
      @heronofheaven Před 10 lety +3

      The whole cultural revolution is far more scarier than that. You can find pictures of thousands of people insulting 5 to 10 victims in a court, and most of the victims were bruised and with a "dog punishment signs".

    • @oneapple
      @oneapple Před 10 lety +1

      the sad thing that this mad lady/guy happens everywhere in china during cultural revolution

    • @LouieConstantine
      @LouieConstantine Před 9 lety +1

      HeronOfHeaven muh western propaganda.

  • @vuvuvu6291
    @vuvuvu6291 Před 7 lety +28

    can't watch in my school too...
    Not because it's blocked, but the internet connection really suck

  • @kitludd465
    @kitludd465 Před 7 lety +72

    "democratic dictatorship" isnt a contradiction whatsoever when dictatorship is used in the marxist sense, i.e. the domination of one class over the rest of society not the liberal sense of a single person being in total control of government without chance for them to be voted out

    • @LuckyNorwegian
      @LuckyNorwegian Před 7 lety +19

      Kit Ludd didn't think i'd see anyone who actually understands this on the crash course channel

    • @Jim63071
      @Jim63071 Před 7 lety +2

      And where does the "democratic" part come in?

    • @kitludd465
      @kitludd465 Před 7 lety +17

      Jim63071 in the use of democratic means of decision making, I'm not interested in defending maoist China here I'm just pointing out that the words democratic and dictatorship aren't contradictory in marxist theory, like it would be accurate to describe modern America as a democratic dictatorship of the bourgeoisie for example

    • @mikukurasawa4485
      @mikukurasawa4485 Před 5 lety +8

      Yeah. For Marx, democracy is not absolute. There is this notion of democracy of the bourgeoisie, which is their freedom to exploit. Democracy for the proletariat, is their freedom to acquire the means of production. This "democratic dictatorship" refers to the dictatorship of the proletariat (working class). The context of dictatorship in Marx's theory is the liberalization of the working class to acquire the means of production. It's not our common understanding of the dictatorship wherein there is a 'one-man rule' .

    • @user-by1sm4mt1i
      @user-by1sm4mt1i Před 5 lety +1

      finally someone who knows this show up

  • @evankimori
    @evankimori Před 4 lety +1

    Only after I watch the latest videos from from this channel in 2019 do I realize how fast John Green speaks in these older videos. XD

  • @ahmedsaif2598
    @ahmedsaif2598 Před 5 lety +6

    Hi John, I really like your videos and the way you present them is lovely. I also appreciate the team working behind the scenes. Would like to see more of them. BTW, could you do a video on the Spanish Inquisition. THANK YOU

  • @ittdust
    @ittdust Před 10 lety +77

    I'm watching this in China, but I'm using a VPN.

    • @alivejai
      @alivejai Před 10 lety +3

      Borrow my gun.

    • @enriqueuret
      @enriqueuret Před 10 lety +6

      I'm watching this in Venezuela, but I'm using a VPN.... ='D

    • @enriqueuret
      @enriqueuret Před 10 lety +9

      communist partners? :'D

    • @sidra8987
      @sidra8987 Před 10 lety +1

      me too!

    • @ittdust
      @ittdust Před 10 lety +1

      *****
      A way of getting around servers that block particular websites.

  • @jeremymorrison263
    @jeremymorrison263 Před 4 lety

    The script is written by your high-school history teacher! Too awesome! love the videos.

  • @jonahstaskel9618
    @jonahstaskel9618 Před 7 lety

    this really helped me thats SO much!!!!!!!!!

  • @homerchiu
    @homerchiu Před 11 lety +10

    hats off to you John! (and your team!)
    As a western history you have an amazing grasp of the Chinese history!
    (And your pronunciations are surprisingly good too!)

  • @SpyFromMarsZeus
    @SpyFromMarsZeus Před 9 lety +48

    Read through the comment section and a question came to me.
    Why does a nation has to destroy another nation in order to be strong? This mentality gotta stop.

    • @gilgamesh2399
      @gilgamesh2399 Před 9 lety +3

      It is not to be strong, any nation that ways that is a liar. All wars and conflicts are for the collection of resources, control of trade routes, projection of hard (military and administration) and/or soft(flow of money, ideas and resources) power. If a nation is claiming to fight for a religion, strength, honor and even freedom, their statements should be taken with care. The mentality has already stopped, just abused propaganda. No America citizen would accept the cause of war in the second Iraq War as to secure vital trade routes and ports within the persian gulf for the export of oil, ideas, artifacts and the set up of a potential American puppet state in the Middle East to replace Israel and Iran.
      For more info on Geopolitics, look up BBC, The Economist, Al Jazeera, Caspain Report, Test Tube, Frontline.
      For History: BBC, PBS, and Wikipedia (actually a good source in this respect)
      Be careful of ABC, NBC, MSNBC, Discovery Channel, History Channel, BBC (there bias really only comes through in areas that were once under British Control)
      Pure facts, CIA world factbook (yes, it is public)

    • @LaputanMachad
      @LaputanMachad Před 9 lety +2

      Yuwen Taiji It isn't for strength, its for Resources.

    • @markvalebcia8750
      @markvalebcia8750 Před 9 lety +3

      Its make sense if you have more land you have more resources more resources to selled to make money. :)
      Land=resources=$
      And the world runs on $.

    • @yifeixie206
      @yifeixie206 Před 8 lety

      Hahahaha. You have a potential to be a communist! A communist wants to end this endless competition of resources and believe there is an alternative system to achieve this. When communism comes true, the globe would be united and there shall be no more conflict/war because "country" does not exist any more. By the way, China and Soviet Union's communism is phony. What they are doing is totally socialist.

    • @LeoStudies
      @LeoStudies Před 8 lety +1

      +Yuwen Taiji An idiotic concept called social darwinism

  • @chairmanimao7982
    @chairmanimao7982 Před 4 lety

    Good work kid, thank you!

  • @TheRussellforbes
    @TheRussellforbes Před 8 lety

    High school history would be awesome learning this!

  • @timhernandez9353
    @timhernandez9353 Před 10 lety +10

    You can't skip China! You forgot the Tiananmen Massacre and Deng Xiaoping's reforms!

  • @rfimor
    @rfimor Před 8 lety +202

    In general very good episode but unfortunately with some inaccuracies. It's partly because modern Chinese history is intertwined with propaganda from both the communists and the nationalists. It's oftentimes hard even for native Chinese people to uncover the historical truth. For example, communists were never better at fighting Japanese, but they were better at avoiding Japanese partly because the Imperial Army didn't consider them a serious menace.

    • @aachenmann
      @aachenmann Před 8 lety +32

      The communists were never better at fighting Japanese, but they were better at avoiding Japanese because that's the strategy of Mao and the communists to let the nationalists bear the brunt of fighting the Imperial Army and defending the country so that they can and will fight the weaken nationalists in the future civil war with huge help from the Soviet Red Army. So if the enemy of my enemy is my friend, then no wonder the communists were hiding in the mountains to avoid battle.

    • @dixcico5052
      @dixcico5052 Před 8 lety +2

      meh, we know the truth, we just don't say it.

    • @aachenmann
      @aachenmann Před 8 lety +7

      meh, you have the right to remain silent as a fly on the wall.
      But as noted unequivocally in the article of the Diplomat.
      === The CCP Didn’t Fight Imperial Japan; the KMT Did ===
      thediplomat.com/2014/09/the-ccp-didnt-fight-imperial-japan-the-kmt-did/
      Extremely compelling and readable, Lays to rest the charade that the Chinese Communists aggressively battled the Japanese when, in fact, were it not for the Japanese, Chiang Kai-shek and the Nationalists would likely have defeated Mao and his forces. The PRC today owes the Japanese a debt of gratitude.

    • @jessechen6541
      @jessechen6541 Před 8 lety +3

      As a Chinese, I totally agree with you. And there were on famous communist party slogan that goes,"10%fight Japanese, 20%brush-off, 70%development." You can clearly tell that they weren't really trying to do that.

    • @tommo9176
      @tommo9176 Před 8 lety

      what other inaccuracies are there in vid? or is that the only one?

  • @xRS23x
    @xRS23x Před 4 lety

    The end left us a good point to reflect on

  • @anthonyferris727
    @anthonyferris727 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thanks!

  • @Bribri-us9yh
    @Bribri-us9yh Před 9 lety +4

    This is a great video! Gave me a basic understanding of Chinese history that I didn't have before as well as some explanation about the creation of Taiwan. This region's history has always been somewhat confusing to me, lol! Thanks for clearing it up a bit:)

  • @MaverickBos2Ny
    @MaverickBos2Ny Před 7 lety +3

    Hey CrashCourse! Can you do a video on the history of Tibet? It would be awesome since there are not a lot of sources anymore since it was captured by China.

  • @xiaohongchu384
    @xiaohongchu384 Před 5 lety +2

    My Grandfather Chu, Dagao was one of the 8 brave heroes from the Normal University arrested on May 4th 1919. I'll be commemorating that day on the 100 year anniversary next year 2019.

  • @KUSHWORLDKOLEY
    @KUSHWORLDKOLEY Před 5 lety

    This is phenoemal. What books do you suggest I read to get more depth on the subject?

  • @309387421
    @309387421 Před 8 lety +41

    Really disappointed he didn't continue to talk about the most important modern revolution, Deng Xiaoping's 1976 Restructuring and Economic Reform. This essentially paved the way for modern Chinese prosperity. Arguably one of the most important, since it's the reason there's McDonalds, IKEA and iPhones in China. Without the reform China wouldn't be much different from North Korea.

  • @qx102
    @qx102 Před 4 lety +32

    "Chairman Meow" is the name of a cat, not would be.

  • @archanamohan7424
    @archanamohan7424 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for helping me get my History degree Crash Course!

  • @daelee772
    @daelee772 Před 6 lety +1

    Besides climbing the wall...there is also a large number of mainland Chinese studying or traveling abroad that can get access to youtube(the number may exceed some nations' population ). Many colleges and institutions' internal network also have official access to some 'foreign websites'
    the monitor isn't THAT strict, to be honest, it works like a filter rather than a block...

  • @bingbingzhou1405
    @bingbingzhou1405 Před 6 lety +135

    Thanks to VPN. And thank you John for providing a point of view of how other world view China. It’s hard to keep an objective view about its current government if you’re living in China due to the internet blocking and massive propagandas.

  • @MichaelAllenWilder
    @MichaelAllenWilder Před 7 lety +4

    Surely CrashCourse would never be biased. /s

    • @Mattthechessplayer
      @Mattthechessplayer Před 7 lety +2

      "How can you have a 'Democratic dictatorship,' amirite?" It isn't surprising his high school history teacher wrote this. Actual historians would never spew out such unfounded garbage

    • @Krashnachen
      @Krashnachen Před 7 lety +1

      Could you elaborate ?

  • @kalpbhavsar
    @kalpbhavsar Před 7 lety

    could u guys make a video on Germany between the wars covering the Weimar republic. (1918-1939)

  • @muyun9525
    @muyun9525 Před 5 lety +2

    Watch this on May fourth in 2019!100 hundred years😊Science and democracy spirit of this movement!

  • @kemchobhenchod
    @kemchobhenchod Před 7 lety +24

    thank you, chinese leaders, for having catchy 3 syllable names for easy memorization

  • @reubenm.d.5218
    @reubenm.d.5218 Před 4 lety +15

    Hi John,
    I know you're aiming to provide an overview here but I do think you could have been a little more specific about the CCP's role in WWII. Specifically, while it is true that the Communists' guerrilla tactics were more effective than Jiang Jieshi (Chiang Kai-Shek)'s, it's also true that the forces they faced were different. Whilst Jiang faced the vast majority of the IJA's attacks, Mao Zedong and his allies were in the mountainous, rugged, and economically bereft region of Yan'an, in which Japan was uninterested. Thus, the CCP were able to choose their battles (and, when the CCP tried set-piece fighting, such as in the Hundred Regiments Campaign, it went terribly), while the GMD had to fight Japanese along the entirety of the front.

  • @AkashKumar713
    @AkashKumar713 Před 7 lety

    Thanks for yet another summarized lecture.There is one thing that i doubt..was it that Great Leap Forward under Mao based on Soviet model or was it carried out differently??

  • @topumasum
    @topumasum Před 7 lety

    I always have to watch your segments on 1.5

  • @TheMizpah2000
    @TheMizpah2000 Před 8 lety +10

    Chairman Meow would be an excellent name for a cat;D

  • @GiantToad666
    @GiantToad666 Před 10 lety +6

    In 1947 China exported grain to USSR in exchange for weapons, that action saved many soviet citizens, but killed many chinese.
    Thank you Chinese for the help.

  • @seanzhang8182
    @seanzhang8182 Před 6 lety

    谢谢你

  • @jhopetrash9336
    @jhopetrash9336 Před 6 lety

    谢谢🙏

  • @jackuncles6233
    @jackuncles6233 Před 9 lety +50

    In my home in Beijing, watching this with VPN.
    China doesn't block VPN, but they block any VPN that is free.
    As long as the VPN cost money, you can use it.
    So you can basically go on youtube freely as long as you pay a little fee
    (BTW, the vpn I use cost 120 RMB per year; that is around 20 USD)

    • @matthewleemle
      @matthewleemle Před 8 lety

      +Shengzhi Wang™ Not anymore. The CCP recently cracked down on the free VPN's and basically none are usable

    • @matthewleemle
      @matthewleemle Před 8 lety

      Shengzhi Wang™ Really? Which one? I guess probably it differs by city

    • @jackuncles6233
      @jackuncles6233 Před 8 lety +2

      Shengzhi Wang™ I mean they do block free VPN if they FIND IT OUT. But I guess world is a big place, they don't have time to block everything. And yes, free VPN are always kinda slow.

    • @rickr9435
      @rickr9435 Před 8 lety

      +Shengzhi Wang™ hey, can you tell me which vpns you are using? Im going back china for winter break but i really need to check my gmail. please.

    • @otonashihanoka7938
      @otonashihanoka7938 Před 8 lety +1

      +jack uncles that is just a bunch shit load of fuck.

  • @kaileybowsh6246
    @kaileybowsh6246 Před 4 lety +11

    I literally have to turn the playback speed to .75

  • @JesusDominguez-Perez
    @JesusDominguez-Perez Před 4 lety +1

    I’m currently flying over the Pacific Ocean on my way to Shanghai watching your video ;)

  • @paigeboswell7071
    @paigeboswell7071 Před 4 lety +1

    Thx to my Social Studies teacher... I literally just watch this channel when I'm bored

  • @munstrumridcully
    @munstrumridcully Před 10 lety +14

    I remember how in my world history class in high school (junior year I think) gave one version of Chiang Kai-sheck and the nationalists vs Mao and the communists in China during WW2, where Mao was the devil incarnate and Kai-shek was a champion of democracy and human rights in his role as leader of the group favored by the Allies to rule China(after removing the Japanese occupation of parts of China). I was still young and naive enough to be surprised when I found out the truth of the matter was more...*nuanced*, and that while Mao was a cruel and deranged bastard with a god complex, Kai-shek was no angel himself, and about how Western ideals and values played much less of a role in the Allied support of the nationalists than pure strategic concerns and realpolitik, when I studied 20th century history in college.

    • @EzeHSK
      @EzeHSK Před 10 lety +9

      Chiang Kai Shek and later his son, ruled Taiwan as a dictatorship until the late 80s.

  • @joshbowen8052
    @joshbowen8052 Před 11 lety +5

    China is awesome, although I myself have never been there. My Step-dad is Chinese, and I do enjoy watching these. Crash Course seemed to make my Social Studies class today when I watched this. Although you could actually elaborate on some topics, for example, the Opium War and how they helped the North Koreans in the Korean War

  • @libbyevans1186
    @libbyevans1186 Před 6 lety

    I'm sorry but did John make a mortal Instruments reference with chairman meow?

  • @mxRian4
    @mxRian4 Před 6 lety

    OMG, the tiny Richard Simmons? Gold.

  • @toastandplants
    @toastandplants Před 8 lety +136

    I read somewhere that the communist party was able to conquer China after the war with Japan, because the nationalists had fought most of the battles. They saved their troops to strike when the time was right. Not because they were better. Would be nice to know which version is true.

    • @boblaryson3621
      @boblaryson3621 Před 8 lety +28

      The Nationals fought most of the battles and took over 90% of the casualties . The communists defeated nationalist China after ww2 because they didn't have the manpower and experienced troops that communist China did because they took less casualties and focused on more training

    • @mahnoortahir3446
      @mahnoortahir3446 Před 8 lety +34

      +Christian Müller Because the communists were constantly killed and persecuted by the Nationals, the communists relied on guerilla warfare while the nationals or Guomindang relied on more conventional styles of warfare. They would fight by attacking behind military lines and in strategic ways and retreat if there was a direct confrontation while the GMD just attempted to fight off Japan head on. So technically, the GMD did end up fighting more battles but in a sense the communists adapted a strategy better suited since Japan had superior military power.

    • @michaelger3164
      @michaelger3164 Před 8 lety +5

      +Christian Müller Strange because I remember that the Nationalist still had more troops than Communist after WWII. By the time the civil war ended the statistics were reversed.

    • @RPclone
      @RPclone Před 8 lety +16

      +Christian Müller The government KMT(nationalist)had its well trained elite part of the military participated in major battles at the very start of the japanese invasion and those troops basically got wiped out due to poor strategy and overall outnumbered since the well trained divisions/brigades(german equipment and doctrine) were so little in number.
      While communist were well adapted to rural survival and guerilla fights long before the war started, they took less casualties and got more experience.
      The vet, better equipment(obtained from japanese), better sustain(like most rural area support communist due to ideology, closer relationship built during the war when KMT retreated and communist stayed and fought, corruption of KMT) make the number difference between 2 faction really not so matter

    • @toastandplants
      @toastandplants Před 8 lety

      *****
      I was actually on the opposite side, as most ressources I have read state what you said. Thanks for your long explaination.

  • @euso2008
    @euso2008 Před 7 lety +74

    Marxists use different meanings for certain words, any form of government is considered a dictatorship, which explains the "dictatorship of the proletariat".
    Also, you have several choices when voting, but they're all from the CCP.

    • @popopop984
      @popopop984 Před 5 lety +8

      Then what’s the difference between one choice and multiple choices if they all follow the same party?

    • @Matt-ox4gz
      @Matt-ox4gz Před 4 lety +31

      @@popopop984 What's the difference between Donald Trump and Mitt Romney? What's the difference between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders? You get the idea.

    • @parkercushingable
      @parkercushingable Před 4 lety +8

      There's not really two parties in the US they're just two sides of the same coin. There's no room for dissent.

    • @ramisgoogleacc702
      @ramisgoogleacc702 Před 4 lety +7

      Armindo Ribeiro the CCP has conflicting lines within itself which is why u can choose candidates w different views. This video is just garbage as he clearly doesn’t know what the marxist phrase “Democratic dictatorship” or “dictatorship of a class” means. With that said theres still debate within the wider marxist movements on whether china is a dictatorship of the proletariat (Which I won’t bother getting into).

  • @TheUnknown-px1lb
    @TheUnknown-px1lb Před 7 lety +1

    I learnt more in this video than my entire Chinese history course...

  • @sambhrantagupta3522
    @sambhrantagupta3522 Před 6 lety

    The irony at the end was amazing

  • @user-kf6yp1zq9k
    @user-kf6yp1zq9k Před 7 lety +73

    actually im watching in china

  • @bloodyvlady1818
    @bloodyvlady1818 Před 9 lety +57

    I am currently watching this video from China... by using a special program to which I pay a monthly fee.

    • @zihaozhang3318
      @zihaozhang3318 Před 9 lety

      you are paying for it? I think if you go to "baidu", you can search some free methods of getting to CZcams.

    • @bloodyvlady1818
      @bloodyvlady1818 Před 9 lety +8

      William Zhang Yes but baidu is all in chinese and........... 3 words, ZERO.NET.NEUTRALITY. which is very annoying at times. I use VPN which is not that expensive and work quiet well.

    • @dwrussell96
      @dwrussell96 Před 9 lety

      I thought almost all media such as CZcams, Google, Facebook, Yahoo, etc. was banned in China? I must be wrong. Will you please explain?

    • @bloodyvlady1818
      @bloodyvlady1818 Před 9 lety +3

      John Marston I pay a monthly fee to a program called VPN that allow me to connect to other countries. all the sites you enlisted before are in fact blocked in china the net neutrality is completely absent. For example, I need half an hour to open the site of Thatguywithglasses but steam downloads with 1MB speed per second. overall if you go to China use VPN, its cheap and allow you to do whatever you want. Just dont use the Hong Kong portal, as on youtube you will be bombarded with 15 seconds adds that you will not be able to skip.

    • @dwrussell96
      @dwrussell96 Před 9 lety +1

      Vladyslav Zvolsky Is it illegal to use VPN?

  • @sophiacai8157
    @sophiacai8157 Před 5 lety

    Kudos to Crash Course for mentioning the CZcams thing.