How the World’s Most Dangerous Country Solved Murder

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
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    References
    [1] diario1.com/nacionales/nuevo-c...
    [2] web.archive.org/web/201504021...
    [3] elsalvadorinfo.net/homicide-r...
    [4] insightcrime.org/news/analysi...
    [5] www.asamblea.gob.sv/sites/def...
    [6] www.constituteproject.org/con...
    [7] www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/2...
    [8] www.laprensagrafica.com/elsal...
    [9] www.laprensagrafica.com/elsal...
    [10] www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...
    [11] apnews.com/article/el-salvado...

Komentáře • 14K

  • @Throwaway-kg7ft
    @Throwaway-kg7ft Před rokem +32574

    I'm salvadoran so I will leave my two cents here. I experienced my first shoot out when I was 5 years old. I have lost people to gang violence, both family and classmates. A big chunk of my family and childhood friends had to leave the country. My generation grew up surrounded by an obscene amount of violence. Everyday you would read in the newspapers that 15-30 people were murdered by gangs in a country that's the size of Delaware.
    However, since Bukele took office: My family's small business has stopped paying protection money, the gangmembers who collected it have all been sent to jail or shot down by cops. Also, most family members have come back and are trying to make a living with the newfound peace we are enjoying. It's not much, but at least it's BETTER than the hell we were living in before. I'm not here to convince anyone about anything. Just wanted to state facts that I, as a salvadoran citizen, have experienced. Take it as you will.

    • @VileStorms
      @VileStorms Před rokem +2497

      I'm very happy to hear that life is getting better there!

    • @mwat22
      @mwat22 Před rokem +3583

      It's something people who haven't lived through it will not understand, fire has to be fought with fire, you can't negotiate with gangs that don't operate under the law.

    • @carlosbrito8147
      @carlosbrito8147 Před rokem +881

      Congratulations on your beautiful country new found peace! I hope for you and for county new economic opportunities to follow as well!

    • @prinka2096
      @prinka2096 Před rokem +57

      @@mwat22 You mean like the government?

    • @cal7281
      @cal7281 Před rokem +269

      I hope it continues to get better for you all

  • @BokuWaLee
    @BokuWaLee Před 11 měsíci +3349

    Another Salvadorean here, when you have been robbed on the street at gun point or with a knife to your ribs for DECADES, when you knew people killed by gangmembers (in my case former co-workers), when you could not visit your family out of fear due to heavy gang presence. Having Bukele as president and actually seeing the results It feels like an unreal victory for the good people. Really like something I would not see in my lifetime. You have to be insane to want to go back to the hell we were before.

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 Před 11 měsíci

      Filthy, ignorant, American scum here- was wondering if there's any particular reason behind massive gangs in the region. I understand the existence of gang *members* in such quantity, but the sheer size and scale of gangs is mind-boggling to me. Isn't there in-fighting? Why haven't they broken into several smaller gangs? If you don't have any idea, that's okay. I know not every person in a place knows everything about that place. I'd just like to understand a bit more.
      And for a lighter topic: What's your favorite local dessert?

    • @moneyman8735
      @moneyman8735 Před 11 měsíci +187

      Although I do agree with your points about how Bukele made the country peaceful again, his powerful grip on the government is scary imo. I live in algeria, where we had a president that brought peace to our country after a decade of terror attacks done by rebels. His first term was iconic, as he made the rebels come down the mountains peacefully; while he was doing that, he was slowly taking down committee's who would try and investigate funds he was smuggling and the corruption that was going on around him, his entourrage and the army. The second term was another round of trying to manipulate the info and tell people that his job is not over; it was just another term where he modified the constitution making him eligible to run for another term. The third and fourth one were just where people gave up and stopped caring because of the day to day corruption. I dont want the Salvadorean people go through the same situation we went through. Furthermore, I do hope that Bukele is not like how Bouteflika was.

    • @BokuWaLee
      @BokuWaLee Před 11 měsíci +137

      @@moneyman8735 Thank you for your thoughts and I completely respect your opinion as it's based on experience, Blessings to your contry as well! Only time will tell the outcome, hopefully it will be for the greater good!

    • @RM8666
      @RM8666 Před 11 měsíci +17

      Best of luck to you and your family, friends and most important your country. From Texas USA

    • @GDAWG1k
      @GDAWG1k Před 11 měsíci +47

      Although where i live is a lot safer, Canada still has a gang crime problem. Indigenous and black majority gangs in cities are mostly the ones causing a lot of problems crime wise. If we had a Nayib Bukele in office he would be most loved.

  • @duniel3000
    @duniel3000 Před 5 měsíci +1300

    What a great line: “Bukele has been condemned by just about anybody in the business of condemning"

    • @Bond047
      @Bond047 Před 5 měsíci +21

      Same is true for most ( not all ) countries that are blamed for human right violations.....

    • @sayedmahbub8933
      @sayedmahbub8933 Před 2 měsíci +32

      Right!! lol. The condeming party achieved little in history. Action makes history .

    • @levelazn
      @levelazn Před 2 měsíci +12

      wendover is C.I.A propaganda

    • @vdobb99
      @vdobb99 Před 2 měsíci +12

      💯 al Jazeera, BCC, CNN, UN are all good in that.

    • @Nomadonthego
      @Nomadonthego Před 2 měsíci

      @@Bond047 who cares about this human rights BS, he is getting his country together, bringing positive results and changes, protecting his own people and all these "human rights activists" only care about the human rights of criminals lol The problem in the west is we are too scared to be strict and clean things up in fear of being criticized as "unethical" and violating human rights, which is just a new western concept developed in recent decades. Criminals done wrong to people so they don't deserve rights.
      In America, cops are seen as evil, they are defunded, criticized of being "brutal" with criminals , delinquents and people who are about to commit crimes and now what has happened? Cops quit, they are defunded, more crime on the streets, criminals run around unpunished so it reinforces them to commit crimes again and again, every single city in America has a rotting city center full of homelessness, drug addicts and criminals.

  • @eduardomartins3254
    @eduardomartins3254 Před 5 měsíci +1857

    Brazilian here. Some mayors down here are following the public security Bukele playbook, and it is working.

    • @NatasPvPMontagesz
      @NatasPvPMontagesz Před 3 měsíci

      já que o presidente é um ladrão, resta pros prefeitos mexer uns pauzinhos

    • @adil.chouqui
      @adil.chouqui Před 3 měsíci

      I believe Rodrigo Duterte of the philippines who started this kind of system to fight crime.

    • @Salvadordaliization
      @Salvadordaliization Před 3 měsíci +18

      Brazilian here . This is not true 👎 Brazil it's getting worst when we talk about public security, education and economy.

    • @eduardomartins3254
      @eduardomartins3254 Před 3 měsíci +77

      @@Salvadordaliization Not true for cities which insist on the traditional approach (as Rio, São Paulo) or for cities which are taking on a more "humanized" approach (Salvador, Porto Alegre)

    • @Salvadordaliization
      @Salvadordaliization Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@eduardomartins3254 where are you from ? Bcuz I'm from Salvador ba and my mom it's from RJ .
      Ultra violent cities.

  • @HeceduHM
    @HeceduHM Před 11 měsíci +5466

    Bukele is the biggest case study in letting someone cook and them actually cooking.

    • @benoakland8805
      @benoakland8805 Před 11 měsíci +70

      So you are saying he is not russel wilson 🤔

    • @Jotsukko
      @Jotsukko Před 10 měsíci +237

      He cooking fr

    • @a-r
      @a-r Před 10 měsíci +259

      Bro fr lowered homicide rates

    • @ho-leesheet5923
      @ho-leesheet5923 Před 10 měsíci +142

      ​​@@a-ralso while being looking like giga chad

    • @carlyexnema5008
      @carlyexnema5008 Před 10 měsíci +20

      The problem was that everyone needs a president that knows what everybody wants and not what some people want and hes going to sacrifice himself for that because when hes not the president anymore hes going to be in a trial for abusing the criminals do some questionable thing its not like fujimori who did the same with terrorism but in a bad manner and deserve the time in prison bukelele hes what the people will remember as a hero

  • @elliottbeames4742
    @elliottbeames4742 Před rokem +25841

    I don’t understand how the UN can complain about undeveloped countries and then COMPLAIN more when someone figures out how to fix it

    • @alr6111
      @alr6111 Před rokem +874

      Well said

    • @tmore7364
      @tmore7364 Před rokem +2014

      cause when those countries fail it's the UN that has to send aid.

    • @saulramirez547
      @saulramirez547 Před rokem +329

      Facts. Big fat facts.

    • @metubegalvez
      @metubegalvez Před rokem

      ​@@tmore7364 yeah right.. UN dont help really... Just suck up money

    • @HappysFunPalace
      @HappysFunPalace Před rokem +1006

      There are reasons terms are capped to 4 years etc, this thing can easily lead to a dictator taking power after this guy and ruining all the good he created, through the weakening of the institutions/corruption

  • @pikebasss
    @pikebasss Před 6 měsíci +2222

    I’m an immigration attorney in New York focusing primarily on Asylum cases. Based on what I’ve heard from clients about the gang violence I can understand why the citizens would overwhelmingly follow Bukele.

    • @CandiceMMartinez
      @CandiceMMartinez Před 6 měsíci

      I'm an American engineer in NJ, and I'm somewhat jealous of El Salvador because their leader is better than our last two leaders. I wish our leader was half as good as theirs.
      Why can't we elect a strong leader who knows how to be effective?
      Our two front runners are Biden and Trump. It's official. The US people are doing too many drugs

    • @batmeme9349
      @batmeme9349 Před 5 měsíci +7

      I wish for a world with no freedom, such a place where the concept of crime is nothing but a myth

    • @davidalvarado6507
      @davidalvarado6507 Před 4 měsíci

      95% of all crimes is due because of money, get rid of the money system. See how the world changes in an instance. Noone takes anything once we are all dead anywho.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Před 4 měsíci +57

      He's far better than what was happening before with the do nothing politicians and often dealing with these ugly situations requires tough solutions. The real test will be what happens after things stabilize and El Salvador is in a good place. Will he tone down more moderate or will he go full Palpatine? The world is yet to see.

    • @Change6030
      @Change6030 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Good stick together a great president keep up the good work 🌟💯👈👍🤔

  • @KY-qy3kn
    @KY-qy3kn Před 5 měsíci +930

    "Choosing between a corrupt democracy or a virtuous dictatorship was one of the most difficult dilemmas faced by human society."

    • @joshuamercado4637
      @joshuamercado4637 Před 4 měsíci +25

      Why say it in past tense. You some kind of alien from the future?

    • @KY-qy3kn
      @KY-qy3kn Před 4 měsíci +97

      @@joshuamercado4637 It's a quote from an anime called Legend of the Galactic Heroes.

    • @joshuamercado4637
      @joshuamercado4637 Před 4 měsíci +9

      @@KY-qy3kn I actually copied it cus I couldnt find the words for this perfect dilemma.

    • @bperez8656
      @bperez8656 Před 3 měsíci +14

      He needs to leave power once his goals are achieved
      The dictatorship aspect should never ever be allowed :(

    • @MarcanaFante
      @MarcanaFante Před 2 měsíci +54

      @@bperez8656
      It's the only way to fix poor countries

  • @thescaarbo8652
    @thescaarbo8652 Před rokem +4432

    As a small business owner living here, I can say the ambience of the country has changed incredibly. The thing most people would openly and understandbley criticize Bukele about is his questionable decisions with Bitcoin, and also some accusations of corruption and lack of transparency with where some of the government spending goes. Besides that though, pretty much everyone wants him to stay as president. Businesses have been booming and so has foreign investment and tourism. The international community can lambast him as much as they want, but it's worth noting it was an autocrat that made Singapore into what it is today (it's actually something Bukele has vocally stated he wants to emulate). Who's to say El Salvador might not also go down that road in the future.

    • @blazer168
      @blazer168 Před rokem +572

      Hey if he continues to be a good leader doing his best for the people then fantastic, but history has a lot of autocrats that did good in the beginning then turned into monsters.

    • @Watermelon43564
      @Watermelon43564 Před rokem +61

      Tio Bukele 2024!!! Para adelante!!!

    • @C0mmanderX
      @C0mmanderX Před rokem

      The US and UN is scared of him not because he's a dictator. But because he showed his people that fixing a corrupt system can happen. Imaging if the us did that. How many government officials are scared to death of what happened there happing to them.

    • @elfelon9465
      @elfelon9465 Před rokem +230

      As long he is constantly being reelected and not a complete dictator. He is the best el salvador can hope for

    • @Opferklopper
      @Opferklopper Před rokem +295

      ​@@blazer168 thats true. he hasnt been the leader for that long and a lot of autocrats get way worse the longer they are in power. they may now celebrate him for ending gang violence, but what in 10 years, when gang violence hasnt been a problem for some time and the arbitrary arrests havent stopped?
      the guy has the chance to still be an overall force of good, but it will heavily depend on whether he can deal with one day not having a 90% approval rating and not having an absolute majority parliament.

  • @Jhairus
    @Jhairus Před 11 měsíci +1024

    The images of the gang members in prison clothing forced to destroy the gang monuments of their graveyards did it for me. The man delivered the strong message: no freedom, no honor, no memory for the gangs.
    I hope this can be maintained.

    • @mattpopovich
      @mattpopovich Před 11 měsíci +3

      timestamp?

    • @Jhairus
      @Jhairus Před 11 měsíci +53

      @@mattpopovich oh not on this vid, sorry. Search elsewhere. "MS13 graveyard" or something.

    • @Mordecrox
      @Mordecrox Před 11 měsíci +17

      This "no memory for the gangs" is the reason I hard dropped Netflix for Escobar alone, I both absolutely refuse to watch stuff that glorifies crime AND get said criminals paid, in the case seems the Escobar estate is still owed rights to it.
      Any "based on real facts" stuff about criminal acts should be forced into public domain to avoid "I got away for decades then got book and movie deals out of it" situations

  • @leodanbmx
    @leodanbmx Před 6 měsíci +819

    As salvadorean, Bukele is the best thing that has ever happened to our country, he has saved so many lives, hes given hope and we can finally say we are proud to be Salvadoreans, we are literaly the safest country in the entire american continent and its a FACT

    • @esskay8768
      @esskay8768 Před 5 měsíci +6

      👍💯❤

    • @thedapperdolphin1590
      @thedapperdolphin1590 Před 3 měsíci +16

      Cheering on dictators who promise easy solutions to complex problems and trampling over people in attempts to “solve” said problem has literally never worked out

    • @salahudinfarah221
      @salahudinfarah221 Před 3 měsíci +136

      @@thedapperdolphin1590 Dictatorship worked out very well for Singapore. Not all dictatorships are created equal. Most will fail, like Somalia. Some will succeed though.

    • @gearbear4530
      @gearbear4530 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Good luck with having your civil liberties back.

    • @bagtea
      @bagtea Před 3 měsíci +38

      @@thedapperdolphin1590 not all dictators are bad. Some are super progressive and do the best for their nation. lee kuan yew, Deng Xiaoping changed their country's future for forever.

  • @wilmerlopez9003
    @wilmerlopez9003 Před 6 měsíci +343

    I was born in El Salvador but fortunately my parents brought me to the US before the gang issues intensified. My mom has many aunts and nieces in El Salvador and my grandmother spends 2-3 months of the year in her hometown of San Vicente, El Salvador.
    MULTIPLE times my family in ES were robbed, beaten and taxed by the controlling gangs. My grandmother would have to call and ask the gang leaders to allow her to enter the neighborhood safely (after paying yet another tax) whenever she landed in El Salvador.
    President Bukele’s measures may be drastic but they were needed. He entered office and not only liberated the country from the terrorist gangs, he’s going after the corrupt politicians that made those “agreements” with them. He’s going after politicians who have a 30,000 salary but somehow because multimillionaires in office. He’s going after the parties that stole 265 million dollars in 20 years of power. He’s represents the people, he represents change and development in the country. Emigration levels are at an ALL TIME LOW for El Salvador. Citizens and children have access to healthcare & education that they’ve never had under and president in the history of the republic. The man is a blessing to a country that desperately needed one

    • @DameOfDiamonds
      @DameOfDiamonds Před měsícem

      Cool, now you can go back 😊

    • @nayahgomes
      @nayahgomes Před 12 dny

      @@DameOfDiamondssaying that to someone that has already built their life in the us is stupid, i’m guessing you are a white american so why not go back to england

    • @MsLuminous
      @MsLuminous Před 5 dny

      Wow!! That sounds crazy!! So glad that things are better there now. Respect from India.

  • @FreshSmog
    @FreshSmog Před rokem +4613

    As a Singaporean, yes, sometimes a single "benevolent" leader who's willing to play hard ball and clean up the country will appear, and democratic checks and balances will hold this person back.
    Unfortunately such "benevolent" leaders are once in a generation. It's unlikely the successors will be as good as he was. Lee Kwan Yew was a product of his time. Modern Singapore has been incredibly peaceful and made the small ruling elite filthy rich, hardly the ideal environment to produce a leader of LKY's calibre.
    Make sure to close up those legal loopholes and reintroduce the checks and balances after use.

    • @Yadobler
      @Yadobler Před rokem +419

      Yup I wanted to comment, this is LKY pt2. LKY was notorious, he had the balls of the army, police, courts, parliament, ministers, and the big corporates / infrastructure leaders wrapped up and leashed
      But boy did he bring this slum, literally kicked out, into a world power. And then dropped dead at a ripe old age.
      Very controversial in his continuous terms and limited freedom and confucious-esque sentiments and crackdown on oppositions
      But to most, he did his job.
      Honestly, I can't think of many cities that exist where I can live without fear, go down and eat, take a bus or train to literally every public part of the city.
      Heck, the fact that I know I can call the police and not expect to be dead or falsely imprisoned, is truly remarkable as a minority. Even with the microaggression and whatnot.

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před rokem +1

      thats because the new leaders betrayed LKY and is now turning singapore into a neo liberal shithole instead of the planned economy based on china.
      and slowly Singapore is becoming an American vassal completely different than what LKY imagined the country to be

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před rokem +1

      @@Yadobler china is just a larger singapore lol, theres a fuck ton of propaganda about planned economies to make it look bad, thats why smaller countries are looked at in the west as an interesting experiment in autocracy working, except big countries work to, its just a threat to the west so they spew out propaganda daily.
      its the reason why yugoslavia got torn apart.
      they are trying to do the same to china now but failing which is why the propaganda is on full force

    • @bustavonnutz
      @bustavonnutz Před rokem +175

      @@Yadobler Even though I prefer republics, now you see why most nation-states start off as absolute monarchies.

    • @johnathandaviddunster38
      @johnathandaviddunster38 Před rokem +63

      @@Yadobler you are risking the death penalty for the possession of a pound of weed in Singapore, unreal ......

  • @CharlieSFer
    @CharlieSFer Před rokem +3524

    I'm form El Salvador too, and I'm really impressed at how fairly you spoke about Bukele. It's hard to find anything that doesn't depict him as a saint or a demon. This video made me even tear up a little because of how much our country has gained in safety, but also how much it cost in terms of democracy and wrongful imprisonments. Thankfully no one close to me has been taken but I know people who have relatives they haven't heard of in months. It's horrible, but the improvement in safety is undeniable. I myself have a hard time supporting Bukele due to his blatant disregard of the law, but at the same time I wouldn't want to go back to the way it was before.

    • @hgbugalou
      @hgbugalou Před rokem +373

      Interesting and real perspective. It's nice to see someone like yourself that acknowledges the sacrifices made and not just the good that came from it. I get situations can get so dire, things like this are needed. I just worry what happens when someone less capable or that is corrupted takes his place.

    • @Ace-cc1em
      @Ace-cc1em Před rokem +155

      The only problem is that what would happen when the crackdown is lifted or Bukele leaves office? Unless successive politicians down the line continue to place the country under a constant police state, this doesn't really solve the problem of gang violence, not to mention that this would likely create new gangs within his wake. As someone else in the comments pointed out, gangs in El Salvador have operated as protection rackets. Now the police are operating as protection rackets.

    • @ginwilliams4202
      @ginwilliams4202 Před rokem +102

      How many innocent men and boys are being raped and traumatized by the gang members in his stadium-sized jails? What if it was your son who was randomly picked up by police with no basis or evidence of gang activity? What horrors will happen to the wrongly accused trapped in that hellish prison?

    • @CharlieSFer
      @CharlieSFer Před rokem +78

      ​@@Ace-cc1em Absolutely agreed, and that is something I'm personally worried about and that have had to consider when planning for the future with my family. I do feel that at this point police and military personnel that patrol the streets are now the people we fear the most, at least for me and my circle. But it's not as bad as gangs were up until recently. Can't speak for everyone in the country, though.

    • @CharlieSFer
      @CharlieSFer Před rokem +292

      @@ginwilliams4202 you are very right, but I think unless you have lived through something similar, you can't really understand the other side. How many innocent men, boys, women and girls have to suffer all over the country before we really do something about the violence? How many murders? How many people have to live in fear? How many youths have to be lost to the gangs? How many smal businesses have to close? I don't know a single person, not one, who has a business in a physical space who hasn't had to pay "renta" to the gangs before all this. Gangs we're squeezing money out of everyone, and they killed people who didn't pay up. I personally have many friends who have fled the country due to gang threats. Half my wife's family had to escape where they lived. We're not talking about a number going down. Yes, the cost is measured in lives, but so is the benefit. And no, I'm far from a supporter of Bukele, but I can't just ignore the greatness of both sides.

  • @kristofervasquez3935
    @kristofervasquez3935 Před 7 měsíci +435

    Let me clarify two things. Gangs had a 18 or MS tattoo that only they could have, as if you had it, and you were seen with it by the other gang, your life would be a risk, not to say that if by accident you were in a town from the other gang you would be 100% dead. I remember having a shirt with a 18 number in the middle (nothing related to gangs, it was just the name of the commerce) and I was advised to get ride of it as I could get in troubles.

    • @isaacmendes1926
      @isaacmendes1926 Před 2 měsíci +5

      looks like brazil's gang culture

    • @mendezfocus
      @mendezfocus Před 2 měsíci +4

      The same to me in San Francisco I was wearing a not a T-shirt but I didn't call that like a sweater. It was red and my godmother says you're not Going Out with this thing. Are you? She made me take it out or take it off whatever

    • @jeffjousnaus3529
      @jeffjousnaus3529 Před 2 měsíci +2

      he isnt interested in facts, only false words to make his video seem correct

  • @EmilyLucille523
    @EmilyLucille523 Před 6 měsíci +584

    I’ve been going to El Salvador all my life to visit my parent’s family and my husband’s family and for vacations. I just came back this weekend and I can say this was the first time ever in 48 years where I have gone and never once in these past 2 weeks was I scared for my or my family’s safety. Great feeling! Go El Salvador 🇸🇻!

    • @AlexP-jz9sg
      @AlexP-jz9sg Před 4 měsíci +18

      If it continues this course El Salvador’s will be the Latin American Singapore. Big things coming in the future.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Před 4 měsíci +6

      ​@@AlexP-jz9sgnot really since it will lose the internet freedom it already had for data centers and anonymous offshore bank accounts and shell corporations. Which is what Singapore is actually well known and profits well for.

    • @katfig8926
      @katfig8926 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Wonderful! Last time I went I was 14. I’m 36 now and hope to take my family to see my beautiful country. So proud of what it’s become.

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu Před 2 měsíci +1

      I'm most concerned about the Covid arrests.

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu Před 2 měsíci

      Btw, look up the School of Americas.

  • @chemiuxqwerty1647
    @chemiuxqwerty1647 Před 10 měsíci +3933

    I'm from Mexico, also a crime-ridden state, and I literally cried over hearing that it's possible for a violent country to find peace. Thank you for sharing

    • @jaimea.riverol.3015
      @jaimea.riverol.3015 Před 10 měsíci +139

      We, sí aquí hacemos esto, nunca nos vamos a poder a quitar un presidente así del poder. Igual y les tocó mucha suerte en El Salvador (basándose en info del video) pero creo que la cantidad de control y poder que tiene es súper peligroso en manos de alguien menos noble.

    • @rubendiaz2117
      @rubendiaz2117 Před 10 měsíci +46

      @@jaimea.riverol.3015 igual se vale soñar :(

    • @beam1k
      @beam1k Před 10 měsíci +141

      Incomparable, gang members in el salvador don't have military grade weapons, or military training, cartel has ex military soldiers and mexico is way too massive

    • @GhostyOcean
      @GhostyOcean Před 10 měsíci +102

      ​@@beam1k just because *this* implementation won't work doesn't mean there isn't one that will. There *is* hope, we just need to work hard enough to find it.

    • @beam1k
      @beam1k Před 10 měsíci +8

      @@GhostyOcean did I say theres not a single on that could work or did I say this specific one wont? Youre making assumptions, I hope for the best too

  • @aldomartinezjimenez2646
    @aldomartinezjimenez2646 Před rokem +2779

    Is more than just the violence that he has fixed. He still prioritizes and has invested heavily in education, while also trying to modernize the country.

    • @williamapple7705
      @williamapple7705 Před rokem +267

      If he rules for 20+ years but never invested in education then the country will just fall back.
      If he can keep the country running much more safe and efficiently, while also providing much better educational opportunities for the next generation, he can help guarantee a positive future for the country.

    • @MrReese
      @MrReese Před rokem +21

      Have you actually watched the video or only the title? He said and even started out with this in the video.

    • @jaykebird2go
      @jaykebird2go Před rokem +202

      @@MrReese actually, the second half of the video doesn't talk about any continuing investment in education, so this comment is helpful to give extra context

    • @KingYahshua
      @KingYahshua Před rokem +83

      Yes! People tend to think policing on its own can solve systemic problems (as many in the USA think). Investing in infrastructure, public health initiatives, and education is the key-not bailouts for multinational corporations, useless global conflicts, or more prisons. The whole point is to crack down on the societal issues that make people commit crime, which is poverty, lack of education, and a lack of opportunities. Imagine if individuals in these communities had educated role models to look up to and not just notorious gang members.

    • @millie8311
      @millie8311 Před 11 měsíci

      that is why he is treat to these develop nations he is making his people educated look at US they education system is a joke and politics also

  • @Kchellz
    @Kchellz Před 5 měsíci +338

    Im 16 years old I was born and Raised in El salvador till 2014, i experienced shoot outs since i was a baby, i lost my uncle to gang violence, i lost my friends who were also kids no older than 10 due to shoot outs, i lost family i lost neighbors, we were forced to flee the country by these gang members or we were gonna die. I was no older than 8… seeing how my country has changed brings sm tears of happiness. I do hate seeing how
    some people get to visit but im stuck in another country since i am still undocumented. Even tho my country was dangerous, it was beautiful. and i miss it everyday. and i miss my family i havent seen them in almost a decade . hopefully one day i’ll be able to experience the peace my president has achieved🇸🇻🫶🏻💓😊

    • @acanadianfarmgirl2667
      @acanadianfarmgirl2667 Před 5 měsíci +15

      I sincerely hope you get to back home!🙏

    • @Kchellz
      @Kchellz Před 5 měsíci

      @@acanadianfarmgirl2667 Thank you sm 🫶🏻☺️maybe one day it’ll happen i cant lose hope

    • @duckymomo7935
      @duckymomo7935 Před 3 měsíci +8

      I’m from Latin America and I’m happy that El Salvador is changing for the better

    • @marvinwilliams7938
      @marvinwilliams7938 Před 2 měsíci

      how exactly did he do it?

    • @ProudSalvadorianGuy2008
      @ProudSalvadorianGuy2008 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@marvinwilliams7938are you trying to be rude?

  • @zioncityofgod4818
    @zioncityofgod4818 Před 6 měsíci +90

    He is not a dictator. He is an excellent administrator.

    • @RicoTonetti
      @RicoTonetti Před 2 měsíci +8

      Well actually he is a roman dictator

    • @UltimateWaifuXD
      @UltimateWaifuXD Před 2 měsíci

      Completely overriding the federal government and the supreme courts using the military and ignoring people's constitutional rights is definitely signs of an authoritarian dictatorship. Just wait till his term ends, I doubt he will give up power.

  • @Mytoothmission
    @Mytoothmission Před 8 měsíci +2394

    People don't understand the amount of violence these people endure. He is doing a great job

    • @Playerz714
      @Playerz714 Před 5 měsíci +13

      LMAO if you think being a dictator is okay lol

    • @craterus5249
      @craterus5249 Před 5 měsíci +94

      Unless you know what those people have endured your opinion is invalid

    • @gubermon5903
      @gubermon5903 Před 5 měsíci +178

      @@Playerz714 It actually is, a benevolent dictator is the best form of government. Only solution for the problem they were enduring.

    • @Playerz714
      @Playerz714 Před 5 měsíci

      At first but then how does it usually go from past @@gubermon5903

    • @iancenteno2724
      @iancenteno2724 Před 5 měsíci

      @@craterus5249 I think being the country with the most murders in the world is good enough you don’t need opinions from the people to know the fucking answer of what they’ve endure

  • @jorge86rodriguez
    @jorge86rodriguez Před rokem +3839

    As a Salvadorean this is one of the most fair videos about bukele, they usually praise bukele like a god or they go to the other extreme and think is the devil. Your conclusion is super fair both what bukele has done right and the possible risk of having a dictator. I feel way safe in El Salvador now that gangs have been dismantled, in the past I had to take so many precautions because of the high criminality rates, I lived in fear and that is gone.
    However if our own history and the ones from other Latin American countries has taught us, dictators are super volatile, they can start "good" and at any moment they can flip the switch and destroy a country. And bukele has the power to flip the switch since it has destroy all democratic institutions, you mention the supreme court and that is the biggest one but it has destroyed all institutions, he has complete control of the country without having to respond to anyone, we are completely in the dark about the financial state of the country and our debt just as an example.
    The only thing I can hope is that bukele stays sane and doesn't do something stupid.

    • @christiangoulden4399
      @christiangoulden4399 Před rokem +13

      What is your countrymen/woman opinion on executing any identfiable gangmember?

    • @jorge86rodriguez
      @jorge86rodriguez Před rokem +366

      @@christiangoulden4399 I am not sure probably in favor but is hard to know since we are a very religious country, there were some talks in the past but it never came to anything. That said bukele is smart and instead of approving death penalty and the political cost of that, he is executing them silently by putting gang members in infra human situations, I have seen the state of jails in El Salvador ( I am a lawyer) and I am not exaggerating I rather be dead than being on prison, gang members frequently die of a simple infection.

    • @Fitmoos
      @Fitmoos Před rokem

      El problema es el futuro. No puedes mantener toda esa gente en la carcel y encarcelando a personas que nisiquiera sabes si son pandilleros, puedes estar creando un reclutamiento masivo a estas. Cuando vuelvan a integrarse socialmente estas personas, van a tener estigmas por ser pandilleros, y su una vía de salida va ser ... efectivamente ser pandilleros. Asi que la solución a corto plazo, (y que no es ninguna solución, ya que cambio "asesinatos" por "bajas" a lo que considera arbitrariamente "pandilleros" y violaciones masivas a los DDHH, o sea tecnicamente cambio crimines comunes por crimenes de estado), finalmente va llevar a tener más violencia en un futuro. Despues de que el estado este desfinanciado con uniformados fuertemente armados, estos mismos van a comernzar a ser el problema, esto sumado de que las pandillas van a ser más grandes gracias a que Bukele los esta uniendo a todos dentro de las carceles. Esto ovbiamente va a llevar a más violencia aun, ya que Bukele no esta solucionando problemas sociales, y esta implementando una dictadura neoliberal. Siendo muy sincero, creo que Bukele a transformado a El Salvador en un pais peligroso a bomba de relojería.

    • @bloodfiredrake7259
      @bloodfiredrake7259 Před rokem +60

      ​@Jorge Alejandro Rodríguez It is good to know that the gang members are suffering in hell, even if it is on earth.

    • @Azurethewolf168
      @Azurethewolf168 Před rokem +26

      It’s gonna happen, we are human after All so he’s going to make a mistake, it just matters how bad that mistake is and if he can recover from it

  • @jayscott9860
    @jayscott9860 Před 5 měsíci +68

    Desperate times call for desoarate measures. This young man seems truly exceptional and a godsend to the country.

    • @thedapperdolphin1590
      @thedapperdolphin1590 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Falling for the oldest authoritarian play in the book

    • @chinesecovidanalswabs4752
      @chinesecovidanalswabs4752 Před 3 měsíci

      @@thedapperdolphin1590 The US is authoritarian unironically as well. They just keep you fat and dumb to do anything. The whole democracy thing is a scam.

    • @brianyegerlehner9157
      @brianyegerlehner9157 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@thedapperdolphin1590 what else you want them to do? They had NO CHOICE. And if it take one man and one party to fix things, then so be it. The will of the people.

    • @bunille
      @bunille Před 2 měsíci

      @@thedapperdolphin1590 Good luck being stabbed if you don't want it

    • @nicholasleow6692
      @nicholasleow6692 Před měsícem +1

      @@thedapperdolphin1590 For an extreme problem, extreme measures had to be taken.

  • @Dr_Weirdoo
    @Dr_Weirdoo Před 6 měsíci +80

    All of those gangs act like the toughest guy around until they meet someone who has genuinenly no empathy for them nor their existance

  • @Thing-vc2qm
    @Thing-vc2qm Před rokem +7981

    I hope it ends well. I can totally understand that people would vote for anyone that let them not be murdered in the streets.

    • @aluisious
      @aluisious Před rokem

      Has voting for a powermad despot ever ended well? Italy got the trains running on time in the 30s. Ten years later the country was destroyed by war. It's never worth it to give up your authority over your own life.

    • @stormjet814
      @stormjet814 Před rokem +222

      @@aluisious idk man, those gangs seemed to be taking a lot of authority over other people's lives before...

    • @ctg4818
      @ctg4818 Před rokem +46

      In some places the gangs are the only thing protecting you from the cops

    • @bestof3994
      @bestof3994 Před rokem +420

      ​@@ctg4818 Yeah right lol

    • @alqaas1948
      @alqaas1948 Před rokem +295

      look at Haiti. Same exact issue, the government however has become too weak and corrupt to stop the gangs. Vigilante behaviour is common and recently even gang members got cremated alive .

  • @jaimem35jm
    @jaimem35jm Před 11 měsíci +820

    I traveled in 2019. Had to pay ms13 to allow me entry to my grandmas house. They were also charging a monthly business fee to allow her to sell bread and make a living. She tells me how every week there was a rival gang member dead in the neighborhood. I just traveled may 2023. No killing. No gang fees. Streets are clean. Economy is flourishing. Can’t blame the ppl for not being blind to positive change. Let’s go EL SALVADOR

    • @maaz322
      @maaz322 Před 11 měsíci +33

      He is a modern day Caesar

    • @b.richardsalas1393
      @b.richardsalas1393 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Your statement on the economy is BS though.

    • @iwankazlow2268
      @iwankazlow2268 Před 11 měsíci

      @@maaz322 Exactly. And his opposition, especially those from around the world, are mad and in panic because they hadn't the opportunity to stuff some daggers in his back.
      Ceasarian figures are a danger for all those that manage problems instead of solving them.

    • @matiasd.c9949
      @matiasd.c9949 Před 11 měsíci

      They had to mobilize the entire army to stop this homicide epidemy something not sustainable over the long haul......

    • @87mrreynolds
      @87mrreynolds Před 11 měsíci +2

      Wonderful to hear my friend the whole world needs to copy his policy’s

  • @themasonjars267
    @themasonjars267 Před 5 měsíci +41

    I just visited El Salvador. I only visited the beach, for surfing. In talking to a friend who lives in the city and others i met, they stated it is amazing to open small businesses now and enjoy life in the city without fear. Everyone i met was awesome. Would love to return

  • @3_Dogs_In_A_Trench_Coat
    @3_Dogs_In_A_Trench_Coat Před 6 měsíci +59

    "Bukele has been condemned by just about anyone in the business of condemning..."
    This must be the phrase of the year.

  • @joelalvarez9147
    @joelalvarez9147 Před 11 měsíci +1976

    As a Salvadoran, I will say that I was skeptical about him since the beginning. However, he won me over the work that he has done and how El Salvador has improved during his presidency. Yes what he did was sketchy but it needed to be done for the good of the people. My country had been ravaged by the gangs for decades. I lived in El Salvador up until my teenage years and as a teenager who was raised to do the right thing by my parents you’d be scared because any moment the gangs could force a young kid to join just for the safety of their families. All of those politicians were all talk and nothing ever got done. Human Rights Watch can say whatever they want but what about all the people whose innocent blood was just spilled on the streets? Nobody ever said anything then. Entire families just murdered because the gangs just wanted it to do it. Bukele can be criticized because of the way he’s doing it but every Salvadoran lives in peace without the fear of just going outside and enjoying life.

    • @danny208YT
      @danny208YT Před 11 měsíci +51

      Your president is doing an amazing job!

    • @danmorgan712
      @danmorgan712 Před 11 měsíci +48

      I understand why the fears exist from those who rightfully see the actions as problematic, but they seem to also be either oblivious to the past or indifferent to it. I am certain that he has done things that I dislike happening, however I am uncertain of what alternative actions could be taken to produce the same result. I am open to the arguments of those who complain if they will then also attach their suggestion for how the same thing could be done better.

    • @MrPaukann
      @MrPaukann Před 11 měsíci

      ​​@@danmorgan712 that's exactly the rethoric Putin and his supporters had for years. Look what it has come to. Total control of all three branches of government and tolerance of human rights violations is a very, very dangerous mix that builds dictatorships. Changing the constitution to be the President again and then again, and then again in a never ending cycle is a very bad sign.

    • @TheEDFLegacy
      @TheEDFLegacy Před 11 měsíci +52

      Personally, I am of the opinion that extreme situations sometimes require extreme measures. When the government itself is corrupt, sometimes you have to do things to overthrow it. Your current president was smart enough to be able to do it democratically. He was also smart enough to deal with the issue with gangs in such a way that didn't completely turn into martial law.
      I look at it very similarly to how the Canadian government under Pierre Trudeau enacted martial law agaijst the FLQ. Such an extreme step was looked at with great hesitation and fear, because not once in modern Canadian history have we ever enacted martial law in peacetime. Even today there is a lot of discussion about whether it was truly necessary.
      But the results speak the truth: Without those powers, the FLQ would have likely lasted for years. Instead, within a week, it was wiped out as an effective terrorist group.
      I will say that your leader is the type that I wish more western leaders were willing to do when facing country-crippling issues of the scale El Salvador was dealing with. But at the same time I would also be very careful about what he does once these major issues are dealt with. If he returns the checks and balances, everything is fine. But if he doesn't, or he gets assassinated, his replacement has a open door to dictatorship.

    • @joelalvarez9147
      @joelalvarez9147 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@TheEDFLegacy if there’s a worry right now is that the US might get involved in some way because they don’t have the best relationship as of right now… El Salvador and China have actually developed a closer relationship. Not long ago was announced that China was building a new soccer stadium for El Salvador as a gift and they’re also building other things in our country.

  • @tarsierontherun
    @tarsierontherun Před 8 měsíci +1980

    Bukele is a fascinating guy. How he managed to take control of a democratic country from total obscurity in a decade should be written in the history books.

    • @Manx123
      @Manx123 Před 8 měsíci +11

      Meh, much more impressive examples of this exist, e.g., Putin.

    • @CarlMarxPunk
      @CarlMarxPunk Před 8 měsíci +44

      He used populism and short term solutions in an country that had an exhausted political class. It's nothing new.

    • @nileprimewastaken
      @nileprimewastaken Před 8 měsíci

      @@Manx123 + hitler, pretty much (although he didn't get VOTED in)

    • @nukeputin420
      @nukeputin420 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@Manx123 Putin can't even release real statistics about how his people are suffering. Not to mention he's thrown 3 million of his people into a meat grinder over the past few years because he needs more land. 😂

    • @jankopandza1072
      @jankopandza1072 Před 8 měsíci +73

      @@CarlMarxPunk Populism is a term used by individuals that have no structure in their debate . For example marxist..

  • @User1975-
    @User1975- Před 3 měsíci +24

    I am at loss for words. My heart is affected by this here balanced video because I was born in this tiny, long tormented country decades ago and even though I never had the experience of living there, my loved ones did and endured the decades before this change !
    That is, however, the past which has all but left us.
    All I wish to state is that reading some of these comments that are full of praise is of the greatest heartfelt joy for me personally!
    On the other hand, the catastrophising commenters who , just like the condescending and patronising UN, have the audacity to make wild and flippant remarks about a country that now finally has a leader that, through great integrity, has raised the profile of his people, is beyond my comprehension!!
    All I will say is that I feel blessed to have lived long enough to see the day that the world isn’t looking down on this beautiful humble country.
    God bless El Salvador and this awe inspiring president!

  • @MediaSock
    @MediaSock Před 6 měsíci +19

    I'm El Salvadorian, and I can tell you that what Bukele has done in El Salvador is astonishing!!!, people were afraid to go outside even during the day unless necessary, there's gates & bars on every window & door in everybody's house who can afford it, there was murders, kidnappings, assassinations, executions & dismembering's of civilians, politicians, police officers, military personnel, even pregnant women & children, he is the greatest president we've ever had not because he's popular but because he did what had to be done to make it safe for citizen's after decades of living under corruption & the threat of death, fear & intimidation, the gangs would gun down entire buses full of people in broad daylight with impunity & without fear, just like terrorist's except there's millions of them, they charge a tax to every poor street vendor & business owner, failure to comply means death to you & most likely your family, you can't criticize unless you've lived there & lost countless family & friends, everybody in El Salvador without exceptions including children have seen the dead bullet riddled bodies on the street, it's just a part of life in El Salvador, everybody knows multiple people who ware threatened, kidnapped or murdered, it was a hopeless, depressive, insane hellhole full of danger at every turn, but it almost feels like the people we lost did not die in vain because of Bukele, he gave us back our country & our sanity, criticize all you want but remember you don't have to live here, we do, it's our country, do you wish it had stayed the way it was?, Bukele found the only peaceful way to make it work, in a country hopelessly corrupt like El Salvador you can't just do things the way they are done in countries like the US, UK or Australia, if you think you could you're living in a dream world, I hope Bukele is allowed to keep fighting the good fight against the status quo that's destroying not just El Salvador but the world as a whole.

    • @Rocko1atatime
      @Rocko1atatime Před 2 měsíci

      Protect him coz the so called “human rights defender” all over the world are the one who condemned him & don’t even live there. Same goes in our country Philippines. Oligarchs, drug lords, crooked politicians, international media, other countries, leftist, etc are ganging up on him now that he’s not in office anymore.

  • @pixeltaco9782
    @pixeltaco9782 Před 8 měsíci +961

    This guy has been a godsend for the country. approval ratings that high are unheard of. sometimes, drastic action is required to solve drastic issues.

    • @Goldo97
      @Goldo97 Před 6 měsíci

      Dictators always have high approval ratings. I wonder why and how? 😂

    • @firstperson7602GMAIL
      @firstperson7602GMAIL Před 6 měsíci +17

      Stalin had higher, so did: Pol Pot, Hitler, Mao and all three Kim’s.
      Starting to see the pattern?

    • @johnt3606
      @johnt3606 Před 6 měsíci

      @@firstperson7602GMAIL All of the ones you mentioned either fucked up the country or killed a massive amount of people. Or both.

    • @zidhaanabdulla8735
      @zidhaanabdulla8735 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@firstperson7602GMAILcry more

    • @matasa7463
      @matasa7463 Před 6 měsíci +66

      ​@@firstperson7602GMAILindeed, though he is different in that he has actually focused on doing things that help his people, rather than helping himself to the people. It is also slightly hopeful in that he is still largely acting in line with what the voters want him to accomplish - clean up the gang problem, improve their lives, change the corrupt system...
      But he also has gained basically dictator level powers while doing so, and I can't help but wonder if one day he'll start to help himself to the people, while holding them at gunpoint, using that loyal police and military...

  • @Mankorra_Gomorrah
    @Mankorra_Gomorrah Před rokem +1202

    The craziest part is, all of this was homegrown. Outside of providing loans here and there, all of this came from local politicians and law enforcement. Decades of people calling for large western nations to intervene in poor nations to “fix them” have done little to aid a laundry list of countries and then El Salvador just woke up one day and decided to start fixing its issues at break neck pace almost completely by itself.

    • @christopherg2347
      @christopherg2347 Před rokem

      Ceasar in Rome.
      NSDAP in Germany
      Nothing here is new. All just repeating history.

    • @maniacpwnageking
      @maniacpwnageking Před rokem +188

      Dictatorship has always been the fastest way to solve large scale problems, there's a reason most people are against it though.

    • @enrymion9681
      @enrymion9681 Před rokem +17

      ​@mechupaunhuevon7662 "No it hasn’t" yes it has, "dictators fixinn problems is the exception not the norm" And? That wasn't what he claimed at all.

    • @DrBernon
      @DrBernon Před rokem

      This just shows you how the real cause of the problems is corruption of the elites.

    • @theholypotato7763
      @theholypotato7763 Před rokem +6

      Yeah but does that mean you should ignore all the bad that came with it? If other countries helped then El Salvadore wouldn't need to surrender it's democracy.

  • @louiszhang3050
    @louiszhang3050 Před 5 měsíci +20

    This is one of the best coverages of the El Salvadoran situation I've seen. I can completely understand why the El Salvadoran people love Bukele, he has done a lot for his country. It is better that the country decides for itself the future, because foreign intervention clearly hasn't worked. Power does corrupt a person, however, and it'll be interesting to see what the future holds for El Salvador. I hope El Salvador continues to keep its peace, and Bukele continues to do what is best for his people, even if that involves giving his power to others.

  • @Seevawonderloaf
    @Seevawonderloaf Před 5 měsíci +102

    As an Indian, his speech on little countries absolutely stole my heart. I felt like we are a poor, weak country against the world but this man has improved a country everyone else has ruled out. I ONLY heard about this when amnesty threw a fit that he jailed gang members

    • @necromax13
      @necromax13 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Human Rights watch's "fit" over el Salvador's handling of due process is warranted.
      Also, let's remind ourselves about Bukeles reluctancy to modernize the penal system or to separate his decisions from his own religious beliefs.
      On the flip side, i don't really believe there was a way to solve the intensity of el Salvador's violence other than indiscriminate human rights violations, so there's that.

    • @ttttttttttttttttist
      @ttttttttttttttttist Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@necromax13barely human rights violations, and there are innocent people in prisons around the world. Go help the ones in your own country before whining about this.

    • @b_jain137
      @b_jain137 Před měsícem

      True man as an indian I think we can relate how only the BAD things like slums, violence, dirtiness is highlighted in our country when it exists everywhere and USA too (per capita our country is lower than USA). Its indeed need to be corrected but I am done with this negative potryal of my country and then modi comes into Power and takes some steps all these "human rights organisations" ( they are a joke) says he is a dictator lil

    • @user-xw3vi4nk2y
      @user-xw3vi4nk2y Před měsícem

      ​@@necromax13 if Human Rights Watch is saying something that the opposite is true. That is what we Indians have learnt. 😂

    • @necromax13
      @necromax13 Před měsícem

      @@user-xw3vi4nk2y Who?

  • @metsdudenj
    @metsdudenj Před 9 měsíci +244

    I fled for my life from El Salvador in the 80s from Civil War. I have never been able to return and now I am excited to go back to see my country for the first time in almost 30 years.

    • @erenjaeger1738
      @erenjaeger1738 Před 7 měsíci

      U there already?

    • @aalluunaa
      @aalluunaa Před 7 měsíci +8

      my parents are in the same situation :( they want to go too. hopefully you’ve been or are going soon!

    • @mogaman28
      @mogaman28 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Me alegro mucho por usted.

  • @dynextv123
    @dynextv123 Před 11 měsíci +914

    My family is from El Salvador. I think it is safe to say that if it wasn’t for Bukele and the things he did for El Salvador, the country would be in a far worse spot. For the first time can people walk the streets they’ve been so scared to walk. When I would go visit back home people would be in their houses by 7pm streets were empty. Now you see families out and about at night, it’s beautiful. People in developed first world countries live that luxury everyday not knowing how good they have it. The Salvadoran people have been deprived of this for too long. It was about time a true leader took action. I don’t know where Bukele will take El Salvador but what I do know is that he is a man of God and he truly cares about the people of El Salvador and wants the best for them.

    • @infidelheretic923
      @infidelheretic923 Před 11 měsíci +22

      Thats great and all.
      But he won’t be able to stay in office forever. All the checks and balances have been removed in order to carry out these reforms.
      What if his successor doesn’t care as much as he does or doesn’t do as good a job?

    • @whatthepick
      @whatthepick Před 11 měsíci

      @@infidelheretic923 It's a risk worth taking 30 years under Mara Salvatrucha aka MS13 Endless murders and gang violence in the streets daily and becoming the murder capital of the world , to civil life and people able to live safely its a big mental shift and was needed, criminals never respect human rights, sometimes society needs a hard reset to fix broken values. Fighting fire with fire is needed and a tradeoff the people themselves wanted.

    • @emanueldelacruz1101
      @emanueldelacruz1101 Před 11 měsíci +60

      ​@@infidelheretic923
      It will not matter. Ppl will be so used to this level of peace that they will fight to keep it

    • @Chris_Serrani
      @Chris_Serrani Před 11 měsíci +5

      How is the economy? The human development index? Poverty and the failing cryptocurrency? Your country kicked the rats out of the house but forgot the roaches.

    • @LouieOcean2
      @LouieOcean2 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Fascism is never the answer and his day will come

  • @mortgagemartin3987
    @mortgagemartin3987 Před 4 měsíci +23

    What a man, he has single handed changed the country for the better

  • @doriszelaya1230
    @doriszelaya1230 Před 6 měsíci +38

    I was born in El Salvador, during the civil was as teenager it was horrific and violent times I wish to forget, what came after was gruesome by the crime the gang activity inflicted in the poor torn country:/ I left the country at a very young age and I thought I would never return, but I never lose hope someday somebody good and decent will come to govern with heart and soul for the good of the country, I prayed for years to see this coming to fruition, I am static to see it in my lifetime, I support Mr.Bukele from the bottom of my heart and I he is a Godsend and who cares what others say, he is the perfect leader to bring change and a bright future to El Salvador and to an example to other nations that it is possible to have good people in government, outsiders not the carrier politicians most countries have! He can stay in power as long as the people want him to be!!!

  • @kittykuroki
    @kittykuroki Před rokem +4192

    As a salvadoran, this was extremely balanced and neutral and really well made!

    • @kittykuroki
      @kittykuroki Před rokem +254

      @Michael my whole family is pretty middle class, I believe it when people are afraid of the police, but I think it is more a problem with the poor who dont have much of a voice and live in slummy villages. But I do not have the perspective to really say. I think what is happening is extremely complex and I do not know what to think right now.

    • @TheGrumbliestPuppy
      @TheGrumbliestPuppy Před rokem +192

      @Michael The issue of kings and dictators has always been a double edged sword. On the one hand, aa benevolent, good king can quickly change the country for the better. Far more than a democratic system could. The price for that is stability. When the good king dies, if the next king is bad the country's screwed. The checks and balances that the old king dismantled are no longer there to limit how much damage a bad ruler can do in a short time. Removing them will take bloodshed. I absolutely understand why Salvador's people took that deal, they were dying in the streets, but I worry for the next generation.

    • @logixthreesome298
      @logixthreesome298 Před rokem +2

      Damn, love your pfp)

    • @jaad9848
      @jaad9848 Před rokem

      How is it extremely "balanced and neutral"?
      Some quotes "journalists are hard pressed to find a single person in the town in the town he became mayor at have a bad thing to say about him" ? Seriously in real life there is always some people who have something bad to say about you even Jesus himself?
      Also in another part they quote the numbers for murders in the town provided by the mayors campaign. How is that not a biased source?

    • @chrishayes8197
      @chrishayes8197 Před rokem +23

      @@TheGrumbliestPuppy - well put. It's nice and all for "your guy" to swing a big hammer, but folks forget that they've now handed over Big Hammer usage to whomever is able and willing to slit the most throats to get that power. Sure sounds like Bukele = Machiavelli

  • @finneganfox6470
    @finneganfox6470 Před 8 měsíci +918

    As a Salvadoran, thank you for covering this. I am very happy with how far my country has come since the Civil War. I was born 13 years after it, but my grandpa is still heavily scarred for life . God bless El Salvador 🇸🇻

    • @rorypaul153
      @rorypaul153 Před 7 měsíci +15

      You just gave the president basically all the power, get the wrong guy in, and you will be back in hell.

    • @kingiam9271
      @kingiam9271 Před 6 měsíci +64

      ​@@rorypaul153worth it since they were already in hell

    • @rorypaul153
      @rorypaul153 Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@kingiam9271 promise you that hell under an authoritarian dictator is worse

    • @kingiam9271
      @kingiam9271 Před 6 měsíci +68

      @rorypaul153 Yes, worse than hell under a ruthless thoughtless gang that kills people for literally just looking in their direction. They should of just done nothing and kept everything the same. Said every coward that ever existed

    • @tamimatharemadi
      @tamimatharemadi Před 6 měsíci +20

      ​@@rorypaul153are you a citizen of El Salvador. No right? Then keep your head out of it. Actually I am also not a citizen of El Salvador, that's the reason I didn't command people and condemn then for making decision for their benefit

  • @John.McMillan
    @John.McMillan Před 6 měsíci +18

    This is a great example of a man getting in to power who genuinely loves and wants to fix his country.

  • @TT-Hester
    @TT-Hester Před 3 měsíci +12

    I just came back from visiting El Salvador. And while I was only there for a few days, my first impression was impactful in a beautiful way. I’m very impressed with the turn around this little Nation has made, and I’m seriously considering making El Salvador my home in retirement.

  • @Lcon2012
    @Lcon2012 Před 11 měsíci +1508

    My family moved from El Salvador when the civil war was going on. This man has been the best thing that has happened to El Salvador in a long time. He has been doing things that have improved the country. El Salvador is quickly becoming a great country again. He has legitimate aspirations for the country. The majority of the people support him because they can see all the good things.

    • @captainminecraftist
      @captainminecraftist Před 11 měsíci

      All well and good until a bad version of Bukele comes in the future, and theres a precedent already set where you can apparenty just remove the whole supreme court if they disagree with you and walk armed pol;ice into parliament to get what you want. If you have a benevolent leader like Bukele its great, but if its a bad one your FKED and the country goes back down the shitter

    • @captainminecraftist
      @captainminecraftist Před 11 měsíci +18

      I mean good luck but your putting all your eggs in one basket,. if that basket ever turns on you youll be senht back to the stone age, thats what im worried about

    • @KearneyZzyzwicz-nu5op
      @KearneyZzyzwicz-nu5op Před 11 měsíci +149

      @@captainminecraftistyou’re simping for gangsters and criminals. Cease.

    • @Lcon2012
      @Lcon2012 Před 11 měsíci +65

      I not sure if you know what it’s like to live in fear of gangsters, I’m thinking probably not. I can tell you one thing. The people in El Salvador are happier today then they were before.

    • @maxipadthai
      @maxipadthai Před 11 měsíci +12

      Adolf Hitler was pretty popular among the Germans too.

  • @jonathanvilario5402
    @jonathanvilario5402 Před rokem +880

    I would've liked it if you mentionted that tattoos typically mean you've already committed a Crime in El Salvador. Its very common for gang members to tattoo themselves for every crime that they committed, with face tattoos meant to scare people to let everyone know that they'll kill anyone without remorse. I feel that without this fact, its implying that tattoos aren't a dangerous signifier in El Salvador, or that its culturally equivalent to how American tattoos are utilized

    • @V.E.R.O.
      @V.E.R.O. Před 11 měsíci +35

      There is a difference between regular tattoos and gang tattoos, not everyone who has a tattoo is a gangster. One of the government officials even mentioned that he had tattoos.

    • @wildcard1696
      @wildcard1696 Před 11 měsíci

      @@V.E.R.O. EVERYONE KNOWS THAT. But in El Salvador people did not just get a tattoo because it was dangerous. DONT ASSUME the freedom was the same as other countries. The ones who had tattoos would cover them up. NOW everyone can do it and the police will check to see if they are gang tattoos. If not, then you wont have a problem.

    • @njorogeh.muganda6225
      @njorogeh.muganda6225 Před 11 měsíci +93

      @@V.E.R.O. Special Caveat: His mention of tattoos was in reference to gang-affiliated tattoos. You should have granted him the grace of not taking his claim to hold such simplemindedness. 😊😉This information on gang cultures and their customs is quite ubiquitous on the internet.

    • @V.E.R.O.
      @V.E.R.O. Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@njorogeh.muganda6225 🙄 No need to tell me as I'm from there. I clarified for the benefit of anyone who doesn't already know.

    • @timesthebear
      @timesthebear Před 11 měsíci +3

      That dude clearly had a tattoo from the alien movie "Arrival". Any body that just thought for 2 seconds would realize this guy is probably a nerd not a gang member

  • @lecreclecrec4816
    @lecreclecrec4816 Před 6 měsíci +14

    Amazing documentary. Couldn't have said it better! As a Salvadoran who lived civil war and a gang infested country and now an American Citizen I agree 100% with the creator of this video. Keep up the good work 👏

  • @carloslara8117
    @carloslara8117 Před 5 měsíci +19

    As a Salvadorean I can say I lived the worst moments of my life when I was there in 2008 I was in a bus while 4 gang members of the MS-13 took over and stole everyone in the bus their mobile phones and left everyone without their cell phones I was so scared they had guns and knives I felt terrified

    • @MsLuminous
      @MsLuminous Před 5 dny +1

      Wow!! Can't imagine. Had heard about gangs but didn't know it was this bad. So happy for your country. The world needs more politicians like Mr Nayib.

  • @Minotaur-ey2lg
    @Minotaur-ey2lg Před 9 měsíci +1945

    The problem isn’t giving this much power to the government. It’s whether or not they’re willing to give it back. I hope it all works out for the citizens of El Salvador.

    • @williamkerwin9543
      @williamkerwin9543 Před 8 měsíci +81

      It's already given back . Gangs are no longer in control.

    • @lorenzooliveira1157
      @lorenzooliveira1157 Před 8 měsíci +140

      @@williamkerwin9543 the government needs to make sure the future peace sticks, so that when new leaders come, it just doesn’t come back, with new experience in how to deal with them

    • @truthmonster3290
      @truthmonster3290 Před 8 měsíci

      Bukele has no more power than the failed communists before him.

    • @Snarf_Le_Wombat
      @Snarf_Le_Wombat Před 8 měsíci

      Reminds me of all the American citizens liberties stolen with no hope of restoration. They've eliminated any independent analysis of their crimes during their ongoing "lockdown". This is the NewNormal.

    • @natsuds1071
      @natsuds1071 Před 8 měsíci +21

      Agree, they will need to right the checks and balances, and have contingency plans incase something happens to him. Cause if they don't then he'll can easily break loose

  • @abigailfezer177
    @abigailfezer177 Před 11 měsíci +1168

    When my husband and I met, he would tell me about how hard it was in ES, that his friends were dying, that his sister has been robbed… For them to now feel that their country is safe, that they can live and breath in their home. Even if it doesn’t last he gave the people a new life.

    • @kimberiysmarketstrategy
      @kimberiysmarketstrategy Před 11 měsíci +27

      At least tried. I’d be surprised if he lives to see it get better people don’t like good things.

    • @joseph-vw1wm
      @joseph-vw1wm Před 10 měsíci +2

      Except for all the innocent people he killed

    • @weymardammbedoya
      @weymardammbedoya Před 10 měsíci

      @@joseph-vw1wm and the 4.8 innocents killed per day before... let me guess american?

    • @marlomagallanes6144
      @marlomagallanes6144 Před 10 měsíci +20

      @@joseph-vw1wmwho killed?

    • @andosrailway2369
      @andosrailway2369 Před 10 měsíci +10

      @@joseph-vw1wmHow many off those people he kill?

  • @KevinJGamez
    @KevinJGamez Před 6 měsíci +19

    As a Salvadoran from San Miguel, I hope bukele remains in power for the next 50 years

  • @miguelrosales6667
    @miguelrosales6667 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Very well explained. Thank you for taking the time to learn about the story that took place.

  • @Joseperez-oz7to
    @Joseperez-oz7to Před 11 měsíci +1365

    As a Mexican I am in full support of the Salvadoran president. It is a country that has been forgotten for years! And now when someone is finally doing something people are criticizing and condemning for trying to improve his nation and get rid of all the ignorance and violence.

    • @dgillies5420
      @dgillies5420 Před 11 měsíci +25

      He's taking too many shortcuts. It will not be sustainable.

    • @espermeadows1882
      @espermeadows1882 Před 11 měsíci

      He’s doing good, but he’s making his seat in to a dictatorship, so even if he’s a saint the future presidents can take that brand new seat with dictatorship powers and use the same police that took out the gang members on them. It was a trade off that needed to be done but in the future it can be even worst in the wrong hands, but like I said it was basically a terrorist dictatorship by the gangs already, so, it’s not like the people had a better option.

    • @EnveeH2
      @EnveeH2 Před 11 měsíci +80

      Every Latin American country deserves a Bukele.

    • @mr.poon.tang.92
      @mr.poon.tang.92 Před 11 měsíci +61

      @@EnveeH2 Yes, but this wouldn't work in bigger countries without a real war. He's lucky El Salvador is a small nation, and is up against gang member instead of cartels. Good for El Salvador though, they deserve the peace.

    • @JohnDoe-vc5qb
      @JohnDoe-vc5qb Před 11 měsíci

      Bruh like 3/4 states in Mexico have crime rates lesser than Vermont why would they care about the ones who are causing all the trouble 😂

  • @nocommiesallowed7637
    @nocommiesallowed7637 Před rokem +770

    Cant deny that the man is master political strategist and have the balls to execute solutions at all cost.

    • @tantaluzrantonio9959
      @tantaluzrantonio9959 Před 11 měsíci +12

      Truly genius and dark of him to use the owns peoples power and law agains the so called law makers

    • @ailediablo79
      @ailediablo79 Před 11 měsíci

      I would still say, it was dangerous and there is other solutions. Not to mention you putting a big chunk of the country population in prison. Alot of those did not want to do crime. You need alot of power to show and try to inforce the government laws but at sametime this is too much.
      A better solution is to make your own gangs backup by the government and send those gangsters money and try make them snich on eachothers. Play gang maifa game and the government representatives become top maifa and gang leaders and dismantle it from inside from the top and middle. When strong make few strong moves. At sametime make alternatives and opportunities duch as free cheep courses and other support in education and advice them. Tell them to change. The big fishs are not going to listen this but all the goblins are going to leave. You can use your imagination about the rest. Then later on any reminders few years later to be sinped and declare war on them. Then ,after the small war win and any reminder big group dismantled, arrest the rest. So instead of 50k+ we would be talking about 5k if not less.
      What government did was more than bold and potentially dangerous.
      Because if this was USA or Iraq the gangs would have made a revolution and turns country into like Syria.

    • @FEMGAY
      @FEMGAY Před 11 měsíci +1

      I’ve heard this all the time with other world leaders with no competence

    • @nocommiesallowed7637
      @nocommiesallowed7637 Před 11 měsíci

      @@FEMGAY Judging by your name , seems like youve been kissing Leni and Aquino's incompetent liberal a$$ so your opinion is invalid

    • @tantaluzrantonio9959
      @tantaluzrantonio9959 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@FEMGAY mmhmm sure bro. This one isn’t doing to take over land or to starve their people tho he using it to make a better quality of life.

  • @anthonycruz1122
    @anthonycruz1122 Před 3 měsíci +6

    I have asked every Salvadorian person i know about this situation and they have experience the differenced and are very happy with how this is all turning out for el Salvador. A sense of relief on their voices. So happy for El Salvador.

  • @ausgang9495
    @ausgang9495 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Great video. Learned more about Bukele and El Sal here than from the patchy coverage elsewhere.

  • @tayzonday
    @tayzonday Před rokem +9961

    These are consistently some of the best documentary episodes on CZcams

    • @carlossantin7718
      @carlossantin7718 Před rokem +113

      John Oliver’s show “Last Week Tonight” has used video clips from this channel so I’m inclined to agree

    • @substatikvideos
      @substatikvideos Před rokem +44

      Hello, nice to see you here.

    • @justmo8523
      @justmo8523 Před rokem +62

      Thanks for providing some of the best pieces of internet history. ❤

    • @FelixPisecker
      @FelixPisecker Před rokem +18

      eyyy it's you

    • @RossTheNinja
      @RossTheNinja Před rokem +31

      Wait. Locking up criminals works? Who knew!

  • @saldarriagafam
    @saldarriagafam Před 9 měsíci +797

    I am a Salvadoran that has lived in the states since i was 8. I have a lot of family there. As a first grader there I experienced a bombing near my school. The panic caused 5 children and 2 adult to die at the school,. (1-8th grade) I remember how scary it was and vividly remember squeezing through bodies of older kids to get to the fence of the school to climb over it. My uncle was at Archbishop Romero funeral in the capital. I saw people coming into the neighborhood with blood on their clothing and bullets in the arms and legs. My uncle escaped by going into a manhole that people were diving into. I am just skimming the surface on the things I experienced. And that is before it got “bad”.
    Most of my mom’s siblings are here but one. He has been struggling and we do what we can to help with the situation. But when you have to give gang members a portion of your paycheck just to be able to walk into your home or they beat you up that says something about the state of a nation. When my cousins were afraid of going to school because gang members would jump you just for going to school…?
    Yeah critics can sit in the safety of their homes and criticize as much as they want but until you are in the same situation you really cant judge. I can’t either because my experience is so small compared to what people there suffered and what my family went through and still struggle through. Because though now the country is relatively safe, Jobs were lost, malnutrition still left lingering effects, thousands still suffer from trauma and lives were lost to name a few. I hope that though this president has made an impressive impact on the nation, he does not become a dictator and still holds the values of a democratic nation.

    • @sopiananwari2766
      @sopiananwari2766 Před 8 měsíci +17

      Please all please none..no need to please the criminal or killers

    • @bouji_
      @bouji_ Před 8 měsíci +62

      I know a few individuals from El Salvador myself here in CA. They work as milkers at the same place I go to every Monday/Tuesday for work, and they all love Bukele. I actually think it's quite funny considering how much the mainstream press hates the man. There does seem like a real disconnect between what day to day reality is like in El Salvador, and the articles people write for publications like the Economist, the Atlantic etc.

    • @billbauer9795
      @billbauer9795 Před 8 měsíci

      Would you say that the vast majority of those who got arrested are criminals?

    • @Dingle.Donger
      @Dingle.Donger Před 8 měsíci

      The cowards criticizing him don't understand what real violence is like. Their idea of conflict is an argument on twitter. Bukele controls all branches of government and is essentially a dictator, but this is what the country needed in order to heal.

    • @tubaboytom
      @tubaboytom Před 8 měsíci

      I'm going to judge him because he shows the signs of an up and coming tyrannical dictator. History has shown, time and time again, that this is how you do it. He might be working for you right now, but what happens when you thank him and retire him? How long before he starts calling you a gang member and suspending your rights to justice just to be thrown in prison.
      Safety is important, but you've sacrificed your liberties for security. It's only a matter of time before he takes both from you and your family.
      Just read up on other Latinoamerican countries and their run with dictators.
      I wish the best for you and your community. Don't take this information as an insult.

  • @ngc_0044
    @ngc_0044 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This was so well done. Thank you for this!!

  • @nicholasfarmen1296
    @nicholasfarmen1296 Před měsícem +2

    My homies from El Salvador recently went back for a visit, and they said life there is so good they want to move back now

  • @pathutchison7688
    @pathutchison7688 Před 8 měsíci +1689

    I’m From the USA, and I respect this man more than any American politician. He had the guts to actually stop the gangs, who are basically terror organizations. He cracked down on the extortion that was crippling the economy. I have high hopes for our friends in El Salvador.

    • @Snarf_Le_Wombat
      @Snarf_Le_Wombat Před 8 měsíci

      Americans that vote Democrat need to ask themselves why they support violent criminals destroying America

    • @flok462
      @flok462 Před 8 měsíci

      He also demolished the foundation for a longterm successfull future. Without checks and balances their is no protection from corruption anymore. Even if he is a saint and uncorruptable, he will die someday and his successor wont be. By the way, what happens when he looses popular support? Do you really think he will step down or chance his mind? Looking at his past actions I dont think so.

    • @noah6351
      @noah6351 Před 8 měsíci +27

      did you watch the video

    • @pathutchison7688
      @pathutchison7688 Před 8 měsíci +84

      @@noah6351 yes

    • @peterpeter8217
      @peterpeter8217 Před 8 měsíci

      The biggest terror organizations are governments......corrupt policies by corrupt politicians like in the US are killing far more people than gangs do...

  • @gekalfat
    @gekalfat Před 9 měsíci +1327

    "Even if it is a mistake it is theirs to make"...very well said...and this applies to every country in the world

    • @lorenzooliveira1157
      @lorenzooliveira1157 Před 8 měsíci +14

      National issues need to be dealt by their national governments, be it a mistake in hindsight or not.
      I hope that such draconian measures become as effective as it seems, and that the nation heals and becomes a democratic country once things are fixed.

    • @bovinityleak2066
      @bovinityleak2066 Před 8 měsíci +6

      I thought it was some billionaires choice to make.

    • @FineWine-v4.0
      @FineWine-v4.0 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ​@@lorenzooliveira1157I see history is not your forte

    • @lorenzooliveira1157
      @lorenzooliveira1157 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@FineWine-v4.0 it’s a naive hope, but the best I can have rn :/

    • @lTha208l
      @lTha208l Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@FineWine-v4.0kinda reminds of Argentina when they elected Juan Perón. He was very popular by the working class in the beginning of his presidency and then he eventually became dictator and was overthrown. Hopefully this doesn’t happen in El Salvador

  • @aviatorliam
    @aviatorliam Před 5 měsíci +1

    Wendover I love your channel and all the information I learn from it. Thought something I noticed is your attention to detail when it comes to animations. For example, at 3:20, in the subscriptions tab you see his channel, Jet Lag: The Game, and Half as Interesting.

  • @clintjones961
    @clintjones961 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Fantastic video! I thought it presented the issues in a very balanced way. My takeaway is that Bukele definitely accomplished what needed to be done, but he may well have gone about it in a way that could open the door for some serious problems in the future.

  • @brunotcs
    @brunotcs Před 7 měsíci +954

    The "developed countries" will never understand that this is the only way to save 3rd world countries. Hats off to Mr Bukele, I wish Brasil had someone with the same courage.

    • @aferjov
      @aferjov Před 6 měsíci +51

      It might be the only way but the thing is that this way also works in 20% of the cases at best (when the guy amassing such power is nice enough to step down eventually and not pass on his powers to his cronies, kids or party successors), and the remaining 80% are the cases where the situation spirals out of control and results in another civil war or outright demotion of the 3rd world country to the 4rd world status 😅

    • @brunotcs
      @brunotcs Před 6 měsíci +65

      @@aferjov then we will have to wait and see... it's a risk that I think it's worth taking

    • @oussamaalaoui9121
      @oussamaalaoui9121 Před 5 měsíci +8

      Exactly like Singapour and Indonesia

    • @absolutelycitron1580
      @absolutelycitron1580 Před 5 měsíci

      So bolsonario wasn't that courageous man?

    • @brunotcs
      @brunotcs Před 5 měsíci +22

      @@absolutelycitron1580 nope... great ideas but lack of know-how to make them work politically, with a strong opposition sponsored by the drug cartel

  • @epicnessinacan
    @epicnessinacan Před rokem +396

    This is something a lot of people in the west don't (or don't want to understand). These major gangs are so violent and so powerful that you cannot treat them like normal criminals. You can't even begin to better the country while they run rampant, so you have you deal with them in such a way that they cannot act. Which Bukele did.

    • @bayersbluebayoubioweapon8477
      @bayersbluebayoubioweapon8477 Před rokem +9

      Except you don’t know history. About Barrio 18:
      “In the late 90s, beginning in El Salvador, the governments began passing more stringent laws that criminalized mere “association” with gangs. These so-called “mano dura,” or “iron fist,” policies only encouraged the gangs’ growth by concentrating many members in prison, pushing them to reorganize and regroup. In Central America, the space created for extortion rackets and kidnapping gangs by weak police forces and a relatively open criminal landscape was filled in part by the Barrio 18 and the MS13 in the 2000s.”

    • @chinii_eej
      @chinii_eej Před 11 měsíci +45

      ⁠​⁠@@bayersbluebayoubioweapon8477 “by weak police forces and a relatively open criminal landscape” Bukele massively funded the military and police force, and enacted an extremely loose law that let them put full use of that funding. The dynamic shifts, bukele holds all the power now. Mano dura policies failed because by the time it was enacted the gangs held more power.

    • @LoveOfLam
      @LoveOfLam Před 11 měsíci +10

      You can’t treat them with humanity

    • @monkeeseemonkeedoo3745
      @monkeeseemonkeedoo3745 Před 11 měsíci +21

      Yeap, they get to think about this from an abstract, removed and privileged position, then call it 'cold, objective and rational'. It's insulting, and lacking self awareness.

    • @Wasserkaktus
      @Wasserkaktus Před 11 měsíci +5

      El Salvador is part of the West you doofus.

  • @delwynjshelleyjr5434
    @delwynjshelleyjr5434 Před 2 měsíci +3

    He’s a true hero! Thank you for making the video showing how even one person can change the world for the better. ❤❤❤

  • @user-zo3ju5gk3h
    @user-zo3ju5gk3h Před 5 měsíci +8

    The only president who has the balls to stand up to criminals to protect his people.He deserves a novel peace award.

    • @ofusowre7620
      @ofusowre7620 Před 9 dny

      Nobel, but yes. Even as a Norwegian who is used to Democracy working well I fully agree with the president. It s no other logical options when people are being terrorized.

  • @UltraReb1rth
    @UltraReb1rth Před 9 měsíci +478

    as an el salvadorean, my mom would always tell me horror stories of how people could get robbed just for carrying money on the streets and anything of value, it was brutal and there was plenty of gang violence, it was like the cartels were a ruthless shadow government. after the crackdown, everything is peaceful and alot better

    • @lorenzooliveira1157
      @lorenzooliveira1157 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Hope your family no longer has to suffer from such brutality anymore, 🇧🇷 ❤ 🇸🇻

    • @billbauer9795
      @billbauer9795 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Would you say that the vast majority of those who got arrested during those mass arrests were criminals?

    • @lorenzooliveira1157
      @lorenzooliveira1157 Před 8 měsíci +15

      @@billbauer9795 in a country with such a chronic cartel issue, it seems difficult to say

    • @krstffrbrg01
      @krstffrbrg01 Před 8 měsíci +32

      @@billbauer9795To actually solve a problem of that magnitude, even cultural, you have to hit hard, tragically there will be innocent people in the crossroads but what is the other option, leaving criminals to live freely for the worth of keeping some regular civilians unharmed or stopping it all with some harmed civilians? This is why theres so much wrong in the world because we think as the first option, we must calculate and act because you will as a true politician who changes culture, hit someone on accident.

    • @billbauer9795
      @billbauer9795 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@krstffrbrg01 I agree. I was just trying to find out an estimate of the fraction who got detained who might be innocent - is it 10%, 1% or 0.1%?

  • @juanfc1431
    @juanfc1431 Před rokem +2315

    As a salvadoran, I'm glad you talked about this, and personally I think those criminals deserve no more liberty; my uncle was murdered by them. Nayib isn't the best president and I don't even consider him as a good one. But I have to admit that Bukele solved this decades long problem in a very realistic way. The situation with crime was horrible, we were even more dangerous than countries at war, like Syria. And this was the only way to solve it, with "Mano Dura", because you can't talk with them, you can't convince them, and I dont think yhe majority of them could even be redeemable Those gangs were born in the streets of Los Angeles and when they got deported, they found a place here in a very hurt country to keep jodiendo. I'm not sure what will happen with El Salvador in the future if Bukele gets re elected, but i'm happy to see my people feeling secure, recovering thier bussinesses, taking a huge breath of so many years of blood and violence, and I hope things will get better in time.
    Thank you Sam, you make such a great content.

    • @antoniobautista6718
      @antoniobautista6718 Před rokem +33

      As a guy from the Philippines, crime has lessened recently but it's still bad especially from corrupt officials. Do the majority of your people from El Salvador support Bukele and his efforts? Or is it more split? I understand the need for due process but for countries like ours sometimes any action is better than trying to be morally right.

    • @antoniousai1989
      @antoniousai1989 Před rokem

      ELECTION, LUL. You're talking about a guy that put soldiers in a Parliamentary assembly to intimate the parliamentarians into passing a bill. Good luck with him leaving his seat if he will be voted out.

    • @Connor_Herman
      @Connor_Herman Před rokem +137

      @@antoniobautista6718 In the video he showed polling numbers with 90-92% of Salvadorans in support.

    • @lucasglowacki4683
      @lucasglowacki4683 Před rokem

      You can’t compare places like ElSalvador to larger mixed countries like the US. There’s 5 million people there, and they’re all the same race, religion and culture. It’s like a gigantic family that will have a general opinion and movement. It’s nice to criticize from the outside but they’re obviously happy with Daddy Bukele and sometimes the baddies need a spanking! Everyone with a 13 or 18 on them to jail! The dummy tattoo loving gangsters did it to themselves🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @antoniobautista6718
      @antoniobautista6718 Před rokem +11

      ​@@Connor_Herman True, but I'd like to hear a more nuanced and/or authentic response from a Salvadoran.

  • @potatoxchippusu
    @potatoxchippusu Před 3 měsíci +4

    Im delighted that El Salvador is safe place. Hoping and praying it will continue in years to come and even if other to succeed the position of leading the country and community.

  • @mattdelarives2537
    @mattdelarives2537 Před 3 měsíci +36

    The fact that the UN, human rights groups, and mainstream media hate him, tells you everything you need to know about these organizations and their agenda.

    • @alvodin6197
      @alvodin6197 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Yes, it means they are concerned that the idea that you can just remove corruption by removing and killing corrupt people, often just leads to other corrupt people taking their place, which makes sense, if understand the conditions that causes corruption and crimes in the first place. But of course, you don't.

    • @dolorousjohn5499
      @dolorousjohn5499 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@alvodin6197 So you think the media is on your side? and is reporting truth?

    • @Ziaonfilmandtv
      @Ziaonfilmandtv Před 11 dny +1

      @@dolorousjohn5499no, but anyone who has studied history knows that this is how it turns out most of the time. People are praying Bukele is the exception not the rule.

  • @mrnigl1
    @mrnigl1 Před 11 měsíci +2106

    I’m at minute 20 and still on his side. They already tried everything to stop the gangs but nothing worked. Sometimes you have to use drastic measures to combat an otherwise unsolvable problem. As long as he doesn’t start to abuse his power for personal gain this guy is a hero.

    • @XxXgabbO95XxX
      @XxXgabbO95XxX Před 11 měsíci +122

      "As long as he doesn’t start to abuse his power for personal gain this guy is a hero."
      Aaaaaaaaaand what would guarantee for something like that to never become reality... I woooooonder...... mhhhhh.....

    • @mrnigl1
      @mrnigl1 Před 11 měsíci +195

      @@XxXgabbO95XxX a system that didn’t work to solve all their other problems. I’m not saying get rid of democracy everywhere. I’m saying it seems to have been the right decision for them.

    • @gentleshark972
      @gentleshark972 Před 11 měsíci

      We´ll have to see long term.
      Right now he´s buying time, that giant mrison is practically an enormous holding cell, growing hatred and pulling innocents into gangs or making them radical againts the gouvernement.
      Also, in the time these prisoners are locked up, he needs to make sure conditions become good enough so people in poverty can get decent living conditions, instead of having to turn to crime. Additionally those incarsurated will need to be given opertunities as not to return to crime once leaving the prisons, something the prison doesnt seem build to do.
      Lastly, of course, he´ll need to find a way to balance all of that, with keeping the nations budget under controle. It has to come from somewhere and loans arent limitless.
      So we´ll see. Maybe Bukele makes a miracle happen, reforms salvador, makes it a good place to live, keeps crime out of its streets, keeps international crime from invading this vacuum and keeps the nation from running out of money. But if all of that doesnt work out, then the situation will likely deteriorate again.
      Plus of course, Bukele still is essentially the dicdator, so who knows what trajectory he´ll take in the future. Lots of progressive leaders that "do what must" show themselves as powerhungry tyrants that keep the peace with censure, populism and violence down the line.

    • @derpidius6306
      @derpidius6306 Před 11 měsíci +59

      ​@Rizal To be honest? Even if he suddenly became a Vladimir Putin, its still a significant upgrade to what they had going on before, this dictatorship no matter which direction it steers has already improved the lives of people there

    • @whatsursource
      @whatsursource Před 11 měsíci +11

      ​@@mrnigl1 "Absolute power corrupts absolutely"

  • @georgeargueta6256
    @georgeargueta6256 Před 11 měsíci +711

    As a Salvadoran-American born in the early 80s, all I've ever known of El Salvador are the horrors of the Civil War that my parents lived through and the constant gang violence that succeeded it. I remember going to the country back in '88 and lights going out at my aunts house because the war was till raging and the guerillas had bombed the city's electricity. All that to say that throughout my lifetime, the country has always been a country of violence. However, now that Bukele has taken office and has begun to modernize the country and make it safe for it's citizens, I've begun to hear good things of El Salvador from my family, which is wonderful! My dad has been singing Bukele's praises since he first took office. He actually drained the swamp. Therefore, if the majority of the people want to reelect him, and he continues to actually care for the people, then I say go for it. How the hell could our corrupt American politicians even have the gall to denounce a president who is so loved by the people and who has actually cared for his country.

    • @sebastianeggleton5417
      @sebastianeggleton5417 Před 11 měsíci +59

      because he's an example of how much better things can be when someone genuinely cares for the wellbeing of the people instead of just pretending they care, so it shows how much american politicians could be doing but arent doing and they dont want to be seen in such a way.

    • @kroffe
      @kroffe Před 11 měsíci

      Cause US can’t control him

    • @XxXgabbO95XxX
      @XxXgabbO95XxX Před 11 měsíci +7

      Wouldn't you agree that what El Salvador has done is replacing gang violence with state violence? since they can imprison everyone without a real mandate... Or you just think that the benefits outweight the negatives? ?
      I think what el salvador accomplished is really awsome, but given that the cost for this success was to give an excessive amout of power to the police, couldn't it be said that what El Salvador really did was to just trade gang violence with state violence? Or is the feel to know that you can safely walk down the streets totally worth trading for a state that is respectful of it0s own constitution? I would like to know your opinion on that.

    • @georgeargueta6256
      @georgeargueta6256 Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@XxXgabbO95XxX I think this analysis of state funded violence is a bit flawed in that there is no violence to the regular citizenry. The only "violence" was to put in jail gangsters who were literally oppressing the vast majority of Salvadorans who were just trying to make a living. Bukele has improved education, health care, and overall safety. The country was a nightmare and mess prior to him, now it is moving in a better direction. Just like in the US, if you follow the law, then you have no fear of the police. (and no, cops aren't hunting minorities). Bukele wants to provide a good future to Salvadorans, something that the FMLN, who in my dad's generation fought the government to instill economic equality actually stole millions of dollars from its own populace. From what I know, the Salvadoran constitution does not allow for consecutive terms, but I think Bukele found a loop hole in that if he steps down for six months he is lawfully allowed to run again. Besides, what do people usually have to choose against? A leader who rusn the country to the ground and steals as much money as possible for one term, or a leader who betters the country and wants to continue to do so for one more term. I doubt he'll run again after the second term. Even in the US, FDR ran and won four consecutive terms, which also was illegal. But it was the Great Depression and WWII, thus, he got a pass. I don't know what the best answer is, but if the people who actually live there like him and vote for him, then they should be allowed to have the leader they want.

    • @kroffe
      @kroffe Před 11 měsíci

      If the leader is morally corrupt it doesn’t matter whether it’s gang or state police, the people will suffer. In most cases, however, gang leaders are mostly corrupt while those who work in states vary in differing degrees. At least in a state system, there are rules and laws which sets punishments, has a justice system, and has a form of elected governance set by the people. Gangs usually are groups that aren’t elected by the people nor do they provide benefits to the society as a whole in general. Usually it’s quite the opposite because they degrade it.

  •  Před 2 měsíci +7

    "If it is a mistake, it is their mistake to make"
    What a perfect line.
    Brazilian here, and all my love and hopes to El Salvador. ❤🇧🇷
    You are your own masters - do what you have to do, and tell the international community to shove it.

  • @usmanlone2643
    @usmanlone2643 Před měsícem +1

    Possibly the most unbiased video that I've seen on this topic. You've gained a subscriber today.

  • @mikiqex
    @mikiqex Před rokem +323

    This kinda reminds me of an Ancient Rome.
    In times of extreme emergency, the Senate of Roman Empire had the authority to appoint a dictator. The dictator was granted extraordinary powers and could make decisions without the usual checks and balances of the republican system. However, it's important to note that the appointment of a dictator was considered a temporary measure and was meant to be a limited-term office.
    One of the most famous examples of a dictator in ancient Rome was Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus. According to historical accounts, in 458 BC, Rome faced a severe crisis due to military threats from neighboring tribes. Cincinnatus was appointed as dictator to address the crisis. He successfully organized and led the Roman army to victory, and after just 16 days, he resigned from the dictatorship and returned to his previous life as a farmer.

    • @TrainerAQ
      @TrainerAQ Před rokem +38

      Ah, this is interesting. Cause most of Democracy is modelled after how the Romans used to govern, but nobody ever talks about the ability to appoint temporary dictators during times of crisis. It would certainly solve a lot of issues associated with trying to get 200 plus people to agree on how to tackle a certain debatable topic.
      Just appoint a temporary dictator. He makes the decision and we follow it no questions asked PERIOD. You may like it, you may hate it, but that's the decision we decided and that's how we are going to take on the crisis. Once the crisis is over, back to the normal flow.

    • @mariushusejacobsen3221
      @mariushusejacobsen3221 Před rokem +34

      The problem, of course, is that many prospective dictators would be trying to extend their terms, for example by making sure the problem is not actually solved, extending a war, etc.

    • @GAndreC
      @GAndreC Před rokem +4

      But you see friend societies grow and the man that you speak of was not chosen by the people but a handpicked appointment by the Roman Senate to address a problem everyone knew they were incapable of handling and with the added caveat that they intended to wash their hands clean of all decisions and lay all the blame on everything that went wrong upon him even though in the limited amount of time he took the position he was not privy to all the ways in which the Senate had failed at addressing the state’s problems.

    • @GAndreC
      @GAndreC Před rokem

      The problem about being a small nation is that oftentimes the problem can’t be solved in a week even if the legislative actually works for one week out of the year since how external players are is a huge input in the nation’s decision making process.
      Only if the big regional players are experiencing a plague, internal conflict or economic collapse can the decisions made a small country that faces no obstructionism can truly come to fruition as there are less resources being used to support ungovernability in their small nation in these instances.

    • @Mimi.1001
      @Mimi.1001 Před rokem

      @@TrainerAQ You could say "temporary dictators" still exist in some capacity today, albeit pretty much exclusively in (semi-)parliamentary systems where otherwise largely representative presidents appoint the head of government. Of course things are much more regulated nowadays, but if the president demands the parliament to follow suit, they might as well. One example I can think of is Italy actually, with prime minister Mario Draghi. The previous government broke down during the height of Covid (Italian governments tend to generally be quite unstable btw. due to many different political parties) and the president called for a National unity government under economist and former president of the European Central Bank Draghi. Apart from handling Covid he was also brought in to fix economic problems, last year though some major parties withdrew their support and a reelection was called.
      The current Slovakian government is actually entirely picked by the president, too, as the ruling coalition broke down just a few days ago and multiple ministers resigned without replacement. If they secure the confidence of the parliament, the cabinet might rule relatively unopposed, at least until the next election, especially since they have the backing of the president. Additionally, it's the former prime minister who asked fher to assemble a "cabinet of experts".

  • @Licho935
    @Licho935 Před 11 měsíci +336

    My parents left El Salvador 30+ years ago and they’ve said, among other things, that the gang violence was a big reason why they left. It’s only recently that they’ve begun making plans to return indefinitely once they’ve made enough to retire and I’m positive that it’s because of Bukele’s changes. Sure, to the world at large his tactics may seem cruel, but theres no denying that they have improved the living situation for many

    • @87mrreynolds
      @87mrreynolds Před 11 měsíci +37

      They call it cruel but they have no idea how this group operates I wish the world copy’s his policy’s.

    • @sgnibble1
      @sgnibble1 Před 11 měsíci +3

      I don’t get why people keep complaining about not showing those in la mara human rights. They lost those the moment they violated others humans rights

    • @winterinvicta
      @winterinvicta Před 11 měsíci

      Sometimes to fix a problem you need a dictator.

  • @ArcLove
    @ArcLove Před 4 měsíci +6

    I believe in the right of people to self-determination, so if the people of El Salvador want Bukele as a leader no outside superpower has the right to interfere. Really great documentary.

  • @vitatang904
    @vitatang904 Před 7 měsíci +22

    Countries should stay on their own lane. Let the people of each countries pick their ruler and their laws 👍🏽✊🏽🙏🏽. Prosperity to El Salvator

  • @gunner3921
    @gunner3921 Před 11 měsíci +687

    I had the privilege to visit El Salvador over spring break. This was an awesome experience as I had family telling me that not long ago, the streets would be empty after 7, or that nobody wanted to leave home before 8am in the city. Funnily enough, tourism is increasing to El Salvador, and it’s a BEAUTIFUL country, so it should be as much of a tourist destination as Belize!

    • @johnmguzman7491
      @johnmguzman7491 Před 11 měsíci +12

      I visited El Salvador solo in 2016 for 2 weeks. Memories of men holding guns in front of nearly every shop (to protect these shops), tasty street food, lovely beaches and good people. Yes, there was crime but I was never personally affected.

    • @jonpierson559
      @jonpierson559 Před 10 měsíci +37

      @@johnmguzman7491 nobody ever is until they are

    • @supremefatness4085
      @supremefatness4085 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I am currently visiting my family from my dads side I grew up in the suburbs with my dad making it successful out of El Salvador into America it’s eye opening to see El Salvador I respect my father way more after seeing how he grew up

    • @supremefatness4085
      @supremefatness4085 Před 10 měsíci +2

      And I never knew El Salvador was this dangerous

    • @johnmguzman7491
      @johnmguzman7491 Před 9 měsíci

      @jonpierson559 hi Jon. 🙂Have you visited this county too?

  • @U.Odyssey
    @U.Odyssey Před 11 měsíci +272

    Beautifully said at the end of the video. It's their country, they chose him out of necessity. The people have spoken and enough is enough. Let them have their peace.

    • @naggar127
      @naggar127 Před 11 měsíci

      no man you dont get it the american mongrels on twitter dont like their beloved gangsters being treated the way they treat civilains therefore it is wrong

    • @VictorSilva-qf2tu
      @VictorSilva-qf2tu Před 11 měsíci +22

      @@YuukiZ2023 If only gang members were humans...

    • @Miami1991
      @Miami1991 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@YuukiZ2023 weak . Your il encourages chaos in the name of " human rights " NGO SHILLS

    • @triflomastera4882
      @triflomastera4882 Před 11 měsíci

      @@YuukiZ2023 Human rights to murder people, of course.

    • @dbo0729
      @dbo0729 Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@YuukiZ2023 you don't care about human rights. you didn't care about the people who had to live there before the clean up.

  • @Flor4721
    @Flor4721 Před 5 měsíci +7

    I have been to El Sal a few times for work and the before and after of this man’s rise to power are incredible. El Sal is a beautiful country with a rich and vibrant heritage. I am happy for the citizen. I wish we could vote this man as president of the world !!

  • @barry9221
    @barry9221 Před 6 měsíci +5

    I went to El Salvador in September of 2023. People are super happy right now with Bukele. I’d love for him to remain in power so my family and I can continue to go to El Salvador. It truly a beautiful country that has been gripped with violence for too long.

  • @sethchenko
    @sethchenko Před 11 měsíci +232

    the funny thing is that Singapore did this 50-60 years ago and look where the country is now. the removal of gangs and triads was one of the earliest steps in the country's developmental progress. the various external unions which are against this guy cleaning up his country need to look at other examples where something similar has worked, not by using their vastly different historical, societal and cultural backgrounds and incorrectly deeming his method to be unjustified.

    • @Distress.
      @Distress. Před 11 měsíci

      Here in the first world we're so far removed from our actual history that we cannot fathom the states these countries are in. Spoiled

    • @princeigorash
      @princeigorash Před 11 měsíci +12

      You are spot on with Singapore.I mentioned this as a replay to a user comment that was criticizer for Bukele taking absolute power.Let him take the power, and bring order - there are only 2 ways - people will praise him or overthrow him.

    • @sirllamaiii9708
      @sirllamaiii9708 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@princeigorash Honestly a benevolent dictatorship is the best form of government but there's no way to ensure that the next dictator will be as good. If he isn't the entire nation suffers. Look at Rome for example. But some sort of system to allow the election of a dictator given a crisis would be great, again like how they had in Rome with the Senatus consultum ultimum

    • @HappyGick
      @HappyGick Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@sirllamaiii9708 Who said that the next guy had to be a dictator?

    • @sirllamaiii9708
      @sirllamaiii9708 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@HappyGick Unless at the end of the current dictators term he implements extreme reforms, the next one would use the same loopholes and laws to make himself a dictator as well

  • @vinigomez598
    @vinigomez598 Před 11 měsíci +239

    I visit El Salvador every month, and I can say the country is unrecognizable, before people couldnt even enter neighborhoods after 8PM since the gang members would not allow it or would even kill anybody who dare to do so, public buildings were mostly rottened down, business would close doors due to extorsions, people were afraid and nobody trusted anybody. Now you can check your phone on the streets, walk at night, wear jewelry, small business are popping everywhere, that was unthinkable a year ago, even people that never liked Bukele in the begining are changing their minds toward him. All Central American countries take him as a role model, he is not extremely popular in his country, he is extremely popular in the whole region.

    • @legin3753
      @legin3753 Před 9 měsíci

      western cry babies don't understand this

    • @shhwinner6663
      @shhwinner6663 Před 9 měsíci +7

      I'm from the UK and I support his policies

    • @HyperVectra
      @HyperVectra Před 8 měsíci

      *he is not _JUST_ extremely popular in his country, he is extremely popular in the whole region

  • @alexissalguero9249
    @alexissalguero9249 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Back in 2017 I left my country El Salvador by the grace of God the u.s been helping me a lot and I never thought my country can change the way it is in less 10 years God bless you Bukele and keep going forward 👍🏻

  • @Eduardo28624
    @Eduardo28624 Před měsícem +110

    La avaricia y el miedo son los peores enemigos del éxito, ya que tienden a empujarte a tomar decisiones que nunca te ayudarán a obtener libertad financiera; también puedes evitar que te derriben. Saca el miedo que llevas dentro y comienza a obtener ganancias desde hoy a través de inversiones.

    • @jamespaulo5806
      @jamespaulo5806 Před měsícem

      La inversión se paga más rápido que el trabajo duro. Cada hombre rico que ves hoy invierte, no es sólo su arduo trabajo lo que los convierte en quienes son hoy. Así que no permita que la opinión de otra persona le impida invertir en criptomonedas si lo desea incluso en el comercio de opciones binarias. Comienza a construir tu futuro y el de tus generaciones hoy.

    • @JessicaFlores-583
      @JessicaFlores-583 Před měsícem

      Todo lo que necesitas hacer es mantener una actitud positiva, relajarte y dar ese paso audaz para lograr el éxito. Ésa es la diferencia básica entre los ricos y los pobres hoy.
      Ganar es una elección COMO el éxito es un estado de ánimo

    • @lieskaortega5828
      @lieskaortega5828 Před měsícem

      Las acciones en línea de 2024 son difíciles e increíbles. La gente ignora la rentabilidad de las criptomonedas.
      y eso por sí solo había sido el principal problema que limitaba su inversión.
      Prefiero invertir mi dinero en criptomonedas, por lo lucrativa y versátil que se ha vuelto y sigue avanzando, en lugar de invertir en acciones.

    • @Andres78668
      @Andres78668 Před měsícem

      Siempre he querido operar con criptomonedas desde hace algún tiempo, pero la volatilidad del precio me ha resultado muy confusa. He visto muchos vídeos de CZcams sobre cómo operar y obtener beneficios, pero no lo entiendo del todo. Todavía necesito orientación.
      Alguna recomendación?

    • @jonahdavis1147
      @jonahdavis1147 Před měsícem

      Alcanzar cualquier objetivo en el comercio requiere conocimientos de dominio específicos y habilidades técnicas. Pero luego, después de eso, todo es gestión de la mentalidad. Sin embargo, la mayoría de la gente ignora eso. Automáticamente piensan que tienen resuelta la última parte de todo, y es un error.

  • @helenyanes4350
    @helenyanes4350 Před 11 měsíci +670

    I’m Salvadoran-American, born and raised in the US, and since early childhood, I’ve heard horrible stories from my family members who lived in there. One of them was about how gang members would take over buses filled with people, lock the doors so they couldn’t escape, and then lighting it up in fire, murdering the people inside. I’ve had some family members that I unfortunately never got the chance to meet because they were killed by gang members. Because of the lack of safety, education, and economic opportunity, my family moved. But I’m really glad that there’s finally a president who stepped up and actually did his job. A lot of my family members are coming back to ES either to visit or stay there permanently, and they say how they feel so much safer and happier. I really hope this continues, it has always been my dream that El Salvador becomes prosperous and safe, and I really do think that dream will happen.

    • @edwingarcia2256
      @edwingarcia2256 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Good comment, just one thing i notice. You are american not just by being born in the US but because your family is from El Salvador which is in the American continent as well.

    • @Mudnuri
      @Mudnuri Před 10 měsíci +10

      ​@@edwingarcia2256Quit lying. You have no clue what you're talking about. If you are born in American soil, you are an American.

    • @Mudnuri
      @Mudnuri Před 10 měsíci +21

      ​@@edwingarcia2256and quit with that nonsense about America being more than the USA. You know good and well there is no other country referred to as America than the USA.

    • @Julius-Ver
      @Julius-Ver Před 10 měsíci +23

      @@Mudnuriyou are absolutely right, theres no other country referred to as america… however, there is this pretty big landmass, often referred to as a continent, hope youve heard of it, that people do also call america.

    • @edwingarcia2256
      @edwingarcia2256 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Mudnuri???

  • @danielportillo5232
    @danielportillo5232 Před 11 měsíci +1364

    It's impossible to overstate how spot on this video was about the situation here in El Salvador. Very objective, as unbiased as it could have been, extremely well researched and put together.

    • @joerice4390
      @joerice4390 Před 11 měsíci

      True.. Most of these documentaries on CZcams AR hit pieces to try and convert you to an ideology

    • @mrsanchez3036
      @mrsanchez3036 Před 11 měsíci

      I find that world bank loan very suspicious. The elite choose when countries prosper or suffer. Im glad for the ppl but there is something bigger at play here.

    • @jokuvaan5175
      @jokuvaan5175 Před 11 měsíci +13

      Yea presenting arguments and points of view from multiple angles.

    • @hispanichipstervlogs8971
      @hispanichipstervlogs8971 Před 11 měsíci

      I feel the same way im showing this to my parents.

  • @tomparatube6506
    @tomparatube6506 Před měsícem

    "... condemned by all in the business of condemning...": hahaha, so well put 👍👍👍

  • @prdeacon974
    @prdeacon974 Před 3 měsíci +10

    Don’t ever be kind to bad people. If you do, eventually you will have to be cruel to good people.

    • @alvodin6197
      @alvodin6197 Před 2 měsíci

      Either or, we could actually understand that people aren't just "good or bad", but grow up in a society and environments that they didn't choosr, and that very much affected their brain development and how they become as adults. Which is very known in developmental psychology and even neuroscience and brain developmental sciences. The idea that there are bad people that we must destroy is what allows for things like GENOCIDE, massacres and mass expulsions.

    • @lamontkhoza2856
      @lamontkhoza2856 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@alvodin6197agreed

  • @smks8er
    @smks8er Před rokem +422

    As a Salvadoran myself, I really appreciate how neutral, balanced and objective this video was. Thank you! All viewpoints both negative and positive were considered. While there was definitely more detail that you could have gone into for certain points, I understand that for this type of video there is only so much time that can be spent on any one point or topic. Congrats on a great introductory expose on the current state of Salvadoran politics.

    • @Rays_Bad_Decisions
      @Rays_Bad_Decisions Před rokem +7

      American politicians do that sometime where they won't show up to emergency legislation it's the worst!!

    • @Eric_X
      @Eric_X Před rokem +4

      @@Rays_Bad_Decisions it's because there are no or little benevolent leaders or legislators, to them, it's mostly money I mind.

    • @ydid687
      @ydid687 Před 11 měsíci +10

      its not neutral and unbalanced, i've watched wendy for a long time and he's proficient in logistics not politics, he sounds like a mediocre reddit commentator here
      you can hear the passive aggressive condescending tone, he doesn't even realize that he's doing it inadvertently
      "dictator" and hundred other judgements and explanations are just being blurted out about what systems are why they are and what they should be isn't even thought about properly here

    • @miss_adventure
      @miss_adventure Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@ydid687 this is a really interesting take, I appreciate it

    • @frillhaus
      @frillhaus Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@ydid687 I agree with this, he does little to justify why Bukele may be using this 'dictator' approach. It paints a picture of extremism when the most important question (at least for me) is what the reasoning behind these decisions are. That goes unanswered and dismissed as dictatorship through his inadvertent remarks. Still a very interesting video

  • @alexanderduron5078
    @alexanderduron5078 Před rokem +975

    As a Honduran, I'd say most Hondurans are kind of wishing El Salvador would take over Honduras under Bukele's rule, and maybe even bring back the Central American Republic

    • @PrimusStorm
      @PrimusStorm Před rokem +86

      I’m a Salvadorian too and I think this is highly unlikely. El Salvador just isn’t Russia. It’s nice though to think or even imagine of the Republic of Central America. So many videos with comments about how our neighboring countries or even in South America, how they want Bukele over there to be president.

    • @BuckingHorse-Bull
      @BuckingHorse-Bull Před rokem +31

      Hey, don't be saying that even in comments. Big Brother wouldn't like that.

    • @waynethegreat23
      @waynethegreat23 Před rokem +56

      Honduras could vote to be ruled by him if they wanted to lol

    • @jaimepuig2258
      @jaimepuig2258 Před rokem +9

      You could form a new federation by referendum

    • @dgillies5420
      @dgillies5420 Před 11 měsíci +33

      Honduras AND Nicaragua (especially) need reforms of this magnitude ... But Bukele's way is not sustainable. These countries need to run themselves more like Costa Rica ...

  • @christopherfoley4332
    @christopherfoley4332 Před měsícem +1

    This is such a unbelievably thought provoking video, so well done... if i had to guess which side of the fence it wanted someone to land on i couldn't because its obviously an extremely complicated issue and as an outsider i wouldn't want to give an opinion. Fantastic work, and good luck to everyone invested... 90 percent approval rating says a lot though.

  • @register1430
    @register1430 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Down the middle doc. Well done. I knew of the 2 prongs in his rise. Crime and Crypto. This doc put a lot more to the man than I knew before.

  • @mauvillegasgarcia9871
    @mauvillegasgarcia9871 Před 8 měsíci +209

    I'm from Argentina, most of the people here agrees that Bukele government is controversial but clearly effective. When things works well nobody can deny that the ends justify the means.

    • @emilishungry
      @emilishungry Před 7 měsíci +1

      I don't know anything. What are the controversial things about his Govt?

    • @-.-.__..
      @-.-.__.. Před 7 měsíci +15

      @@emilishungrythey call him authoritarian

    • @rorypaul153
      @rorypaul153 Před 7 měsíci

      Did the ends justify the means when Hitler consolidated power and allowed the German economy to recover, feeding millions of starving people?

    • @rorypaul153
      @rorypaul153 Před 7 měsíci +12

      @@emilishungryhe created a police state where the president has all the power.

    • @father0f4ll
      @father0f4ll Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@emilishungryhe's pretty authoritarian and against abortion

  • @fatherman9789
    @fatherman9789 Před 9 měsíci +1625

    I love your closing sentence of it being THEIR mistake to make. They're a country with full autonomy and they should be allowed to make decisions for themselves. I'm happy to see how far El Salvador has come, but I'm hoping it doesn't spill into a dictator regime, but I'm somewhat confident it won't

    • @ttry1152
      @ttry1152 Před 9 měsíci +32

      The only way it won't is if bukele himself steps down and shows the errors

    • @murderouspillowgaming9001
      @murderouspillowgaming9001 Před 9 měsíci

      The problem is usually if a country is truly making a mistake by giving all of their power to the government. They can’t undo that mistake in the modern era. The government and its forces will simply be too powerful for the people to take their lives back.
      It would be a mistake that could never be undone. That’s how dictators work. Dictators are usually only able to be overthrown by foreign intervention in the modern era.

    • @scotterboi9
      @scotterboi9 Před 9 měsíci +78

      A dictatorship isn't necessarily bad.

    • @machete5438
      @machete5438 Před 9 měsíci

      What democracy has given to Latin America?? A pile of thugs, looters, gangsters, killers, narcos, thieves, criminals, fraudsters etc. Democracy has failed totally, and it is a failed system.

    • @PuJolsLol
      @PuJolsLol Před 9 měsíci +6

      interference by other countries will happen soon, and they’ll be considered a misfortune.

  • @kkBunk
    @kkBunk Před 5 měsíci +1

    I loved this video it was descriptive educated me on something i was looking into and very formal.

  • @danielsanchez9891
    @danielsanchez9891 Před 22 dny +2

    I feel like there’s two problems and neither are necessarily with Bukele himself.
    1. Who comes after Bukele? He is a rare example of someone who has used his power well. When he either dies or steps down, there will be a large power vacuum. That tends to beget a lot of conflict.
    2. People will look at his example and assume that (fill in the blank populist politician) would be able to accomplish something similar with power. This is a risky gamble and probably won’t turn out all that well for any countries that try it.

    • @0106johnny
      @0106johnny Před 16 dny

      Bukele is extremely corrupt, he used his power mostly for personal gain.