Historical Blunders: The Mistakes That Changed the World

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
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Komentáře • 742

  • @Sideprojects
    @Sideprojects  Před 27 dny +31

    Thanks to Keeps for sponsoring this video! Head to keeps.com/SIMON to get a special offer. Individual results may vary

    • @ianbracken7973
      @ianbracken7973 Před 27 dny +3

      Nobody would know who you were if Keeps cured baldness. Not even you!!

    • @thomasjones4570
      @thomasjones4570 Před 27 dny +6

      A blunder requires real time carelessness. Not carelessness long after the fact. Thus, Russia selling Alaska was not a blunder. It actually made perfect sense not only at the time, but also the near future. In fact, even after the mini-gold rush, Alaska still would have been un-defendable by Russia and America was...itching to take it. The risk for Russia was still too great as it not only meant an issue with a future war with Britain, it also meant holding land that could cause a conflict with America as well.

    • @gohliangsong
      @gohliangsong Před 27 dny +3

      Simon should apply Keeps to his scalp, not his chin. ❤

    • @dmitryisakov8769
      @dmitryisakov8769 Před 27 dny +2

      Crimean War finished in 1856 not 1865. Why would you make such blunder?
      There is indeed a connection to Crimean War. USA was Russian ally during that war, which was one of the reasons why Russia was the only ally of Lincoln during USA civil war. Alliance, that would be shuttered by Lincoln's assassination in 1865 by the Brits (they tried to assassinate Alexander 2 as well in 1866). Sale of Alaska on unfavourable terms (it was already well known that Alska had wast deposits of gold) was the last attempt to save the alliance. It failed.

    • @SupertzarMetal
      @SupertzarMetal Před 24 dny +2

      Looking to follow Simon's hair growth.

  • @carolynmills513
    @carolynmills513 Před 27 dny +258

    My father was wounded with a bayonet to his leg in WWII, 1945. He was scheduled to have it amputated on 3 occasions. The doctor each time said they had this "wonder drug-penicillin" and would wait til the next day. Story short, it saved his leg.

    • @carolynmills513
      @carolynmills513 Před 27 dny +23

      Meant 1945...

    • @MichaelScheele
      @MichaelScheele Před 27 dny +11

      I assume you meant 1945.

    • @sanitarium017
      @sanitarium017 Před 27 dny +14

      ​@carolynmills513 you can edit comments

    • @ravenblood1954
      @ravenblood1954 Před 27 dny +13

      @@carolynmills513yeah you could confused my mightily there. At first I was like “How OLD are you if your dad was around in 1845” xD. Then I saw you were talking about WW2 and got even more confused xD

    • @carolynmills513
      @carolynmills513 Před 27 dny +2

      @@ravenblood1954 fat fingers!!! Lol

  • @sydhenderson6753
    @sydhenderson6753 Před 27 dny +353

    To defend Alexander II, having Britain annex Alaska would not have helped Russia that much, but selling it to the US was a way to keep it out of British hands and make the US friendlier.

    • @z0ro_62
      @z0ro_62 Před 27 dny

      Which is true. Most people don't know that during the Russian Civil war America attacked the communist

    • @dpelpal
      @dpelpal Před 27 dny +34

      Russia's army was a joke then, and it is a joke now. Let's get real here, people 🙄

    • @lewisdoherty7621
      @lewisdoherty7621 Před 27 dny

      I have been telling people that. The Russians would have lost it, but sold it to a country which had just been through a civil war and could block Britain.

    • @yewtoob2007
      @yewtoob2007 Před 26 dny +19

      During the Crimean War, an Anglo-French force attacked Petropavlovsk, the major port of Kamchatka, twice. Another war with Britain could have easily seen Alaska taken by the sea by a similar enterprise.

    • @brianthomas2434
      @brianthomas2434 Před 26 dny +35

      For much the same reason, Napoleon had sold Louisiana to the US in 1803. He knew that, during the almost constant state of war between France and the UK, British troops from Canada would easily outnumber any force France could muster on the North American continent.

  • @rogergallagher5511
    @rogergallagher5511 Před 26 dny +87

    Mao officially stepped down in 1976. That's a new euphemism for death I haven't heard of before.

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle Před 26 dny

      Leftist lexical manipulations disable truth.

    • @easalsoeas4565
      @easalsoeas4565 Před 23 dny +1

      This fool is a propaganda mouthpiece and I would only expect to hear such foolish things spoken as facts

    • @danubiosalas4231
      @danubiosalas4231 Před 23 dny +4

      What can you expect? He also said Alaska was purchased for 17 million dollars, everyone knows it was 7.2 millions.

    • @United-Nations-Space-Command.
      @United-Nations-Space-Command. Před 20 dny +5

      Only in death does duty end

    • @gazpachopolice7211
      @gazpachopolice7211 Před 20 dny +7

      That may seem funny until you consider that Kim Il Sung didn't step down despite going to hell in 1994 and is still president.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Před 25 dny +36

    During the Crimean war, British warships based in what is now Victoria, British Columbia actually attacked Russian settlements In Alaska. This is perhaps one reason why Russia saw Alaska as undefendable.

  • @ThomasWeaver1992
    @ThomasWeaver1992 Před 27 dny +102

    Russia was likely going to lose Alaska if they did keep it. British Canada could have easily invaded it. The USA was an ally of Russia at that time, so selling Alaska to an ally was a smart move in the short term.

    • @gideonmele1556
      @gideonmele1556 Před 27 dny +17

      Not so much an ally but they didn’t have any qualms back then. A much better choice than dealing with their rival, Britain

    • @onewaynestreet
      @onewaynestreet Před 27 dny +27

      ​@@gideonmele1556 Russia was our ally in 1867 and had been an ally of the Union states throughout the Civil War. If it weren't for Russia and their threats against London to remain neutral, Britain may have sided with the Confederacy. They were poised to do so.

    • @tripsaplenty1227
      @tripsaplenty1227 Před 26 dny +1

      russia could have got more money if they didn't accept the first low ball offer.

    • @volbound1700
      @volbound1700 Před 25 dny +10

      US benefited by the fact that no one liked the British. We got the Louisiana Purchase and Alaska that way.

    • @danidavis7912
      @danidavis7912 Před 24 dny +1

      Just my opinion, but yes, the Brits would have destroyed Russia then, if they chose to do so. As a US soldier who trained with our NATO friends in western Europe in the 1980s, I can say with full conviction that the Limeys and the Frogs were both forces to be reckoned with. I have nothing but respect for those guys. Simply put, their special forces were second to none.

  • @et76039
    @et76039 Před 27 dny +49

    Two points. The sale price was $7.2 million. A co-worker was from Seward's family; it's generally pronounced soo-ard or soo-ward.
    The Russian Empire was overextended by its New World colonies; there was no good transportation route, by any combination, between those colonies and the main imperial population centers. As later demonstrated by the Russo-Japanese War, defending that territory from a hostile power would have been untenable. The colonies functioned to exploit local resources, with few permanent settlers relocating from elsewhere in the empire to live there. The modern analogy might be mining asteroids.

    • @tomaskinoshta7589
      @tomaskinoshta7589 Před 25 dny

      FYI: Alaska is a parasitic state. Every year the US government sends more money to Alaska than Alaska sends back to the USA.

    • @VanAuld
      @VanAuld Před 24 dny

      $7.2 million is correct.

  • @dennisenright9347
    @dennisenright9347 Před 25 dny +8

    Ironically, long before the gold and oil were discovered, one of the first natural resources exploited in "Seward's Icebox" was ice. To be harvested and sent to cool the drinks in the saloons of San Francisco.

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 Před 27 dny +194

    I lived in Russia for a few years back in the early 2000s. MULTIPLE times Russians asked me why America never returned Alaska after the lease expired.
    There was no lease, it was an outright sale. At the time it was called "Seward's Folly" because Alaska was thought to be empty of anything useful. Yeah, Russia regrets it. OTOH, what a nightmare international politics would have been (and would be again) if Russia had territory in North America 😳

    • @user-ge8yn4ql4i
      @user-ge8yn4ql4i Před 27 dny +16

      How did they react to learning that it was a sale?

    • @argiberico
      @argiberico Před 27 dny +54

      @@user-ge8yn4ql4i invading Georgia, Armenia, and Ukraine.

    • @dmitryisakov8769
      @dmitryisakov8769 Před 27 dny +22

      I agree. It was a sale. What actually happened to the money is debatable, but it doesn't remove the fact of sale.
      Now, I also want to contribute a personal anecdote. I have lived abroad for a very long time and met a lot of Americans. But so far, none of them knew who Cassius Clay is. The story of Alaska sale is incomprehensible without him. But somehow, he is practically erased from history books. Are you aware of the guy? Muhammed Ali's name before converion to islam was Cassius Clay, but it was given to him in honor of that original Clay (just for your information)😉
      Let me know if this information is of interest

    • @philipliethen519
      @philipliethen519 Před 27 dny +11

      @@dmitryisakov8769 How is the story of the sale of Alaska incomprehensible without what involvement of Cassius Clay? Thank you.

    • @dmitryisakov8769
      @dmitryisakov8769 Před 27 dny +29

      ​@@philipliethen519 I will try not to go down too far down the history ;)
      During the election campaign in 1860, Lincoln was relatively dismissive or even hostile towards Russia. When civil war broke down in 1861 it could have become a breaking point for him, because immediately Britain and France offered support to South (inclusive initiative in recognizing South as legitimate political entity in international affairs). However, Cassius Clay was USA ambassador in Sankt-Petersburg. It was under his initiative that direct communication (letter exchange) between Lincoln and Alexander was established. Letters are quite fascinating in themselves. Particularly important the letter from Alexander describing the proposal from Britain and France on recognizing South. Alexander told Lincoln that not only he rejected the proposal, but he also declared that if Britain and France intervene, Russia would declare war on them. Russian fleet in New York and San-Francisco at critical moment of the war in 1863 was part of the same effort from Cassius Clay (British historians in early 20th century re-wrote/ridiculed that event), including the emperors order to Russian admiral, that in the event of British or France attack he submit his fleet under command of Lincoln.
      Emancipation of serfs in Russia took place in 1861. While there were multiple abolitionists around Lincoln, he was refusing to make abolition of slavery as focus in the Civil War. It was Cassius Clay, that personally delivered the copy of Russian Emancipation Manifesto to Lincoln in 1862, and kind of shamed Lincoln into pivoting and declaring abolition of slavery in 1863. Collaboration between Lincoln and Russia continued throughout the war. Cassius Clay particularly pushed for a telegraph line project that would connect USA to Europe through Alaska and whole Russian territory. That project was championed by Wester Union. And it is in the reports from this project one can find that everyone (both Russians and Americans) knew well by 1865 that Alaska had deposits of gold. However, after the end of civil war and more importantly the assassination of Lincoln everything went downhill. Note that within the year of Lincoln assassination the first attempt on Alexander’s life took place. It took them 4 attempts to kill him. By them I mean British puppet masters - too much data points towards them.
      However, even after Lincoln assassination Clay tried to maintain the alliance and he was pushing to telegraph project. But in 1866 trans-Atlantic telegraph line was complete making the east route less attractive. Clay tried to save this project, he also tried to preserve the alliance with Russia. It was him who proposed the idea of Alaska sale and he was working on that project. But his plan was to make it a vehicle to preserve alliance. But Seward was in pro-British camp. On Russian side it is important to understand that Alaska was not formally Russian. It was actually part of Russian-American company - a private corporation that was actually causing a lot of trouble for the emperor. So he actually wanted to break it. And from his perspective he was killing 2 birds with one stone. But he underestimated the influence of corruption. Including the fact that his ambassador Stoeckl was compromised by the company. By the time of sale, Clay was removed from his position and was marginalized. And the whole Alaska deal was repackaged. So now we know it a Sewards folly.
      This is just a gist of it. I think enough for the CZcams post 😉)

  • @Docwilson91
    @Docwilson91 Před 27 dny +49

    For those who didn’t do the math, Alaskan oil reserves are worth $275.2 billion according the data Simon provided.

    • @ChicagoFaucet.etc.
      @ChicagoFaucet.etc. Před 27 dny +7

      Great. That almost pays for Ukraine. 🙄

    • @autobootpiloot
      @autobootpiloot Před 26 dny +16

      @@ChicagoFaucet.etc.thankfully the more stable world economy pays for the aid to Ukraine more than ten times over. And the arms manufacturers flourish because of it. And it gives the us more international power that will pay for it. And that power will make the us sell even more arms to allies.
      Not helping Ukraine will be the end of the us being a superpower. Every single man outside of the us knows that. Sadly more and more people inside the us don’t have a clue of anything outside its borders. The ones that do support Ukraine.

    • @andrewharper3165
      @andrewharper3165 Před 26 dny +1

      ​@@autobootpilootaptly surmised Sir.

    • @Docwilson91
      @Docwilson91 Před 26 dny +3

      @@autobootpiloot the US supplying Ukraine allow the US to get rid of older stock and allows us to make new munitions. So it’s a win at least for arms manufacturers

    • @autobootpiloot
      @autobootpiloot Před 25 dny +2

      @@Docwilson91 even better, a lot of weapons given would have to be recycled in the US and is now given to Ukraine. They actually save money by giving it away, but on paper they write down the replacement as the amount of military aid given. That’s not fair and very misleading in my opinion.
      That isn’t the case with all weapons given obviously. Everything combined does cost a lot of money, but it’s worth it I think.

  • @dereksollows9783
    @dereksollows9783 Před 26 dny +18

    That story about Dr Flemings' sufferings at the hand of big-medicine keeps repeating endlessly.

  • @Mike-kc5ew
    @Mike-kc5ew Před 27 dny +40

    The selling of Alaska was a calculated decision of Russia at the time. Don't forget, history does not occur in a vacuum. Russia had just been to war with the UK, and the UK claimed a large portion of the Pacific Northwest in British Columbia, and the Yukon, which bordered Alaska. It wasn't too hard to predict that if Russia would be in another war with the UK, they may lose the Alaska territory and receive no financial compensation. So Russia determined how much they assumed the land to be worth (boy were they off), and sold it to anyone but Britain. The U.S. just happened to be in the right place at the right time for the sale to work out for their favor.

    • @gideonmele1556
      @gideonmele1556 Před 27 dny +9

      And the Great Game was far more important than what was seen as a vast, sparely populated snowfield that had some good sealing. Offloading that flank to a neutral third party for a nice chunk of change seemed like a good play until the gold and oil discoveries which to be fair, Russia wasn’t in a position to capitalize on even if the kept it.

    • @Sarindanvelor
      @Sarindanvelor Před 27 dny +7

      i mean tbf they were worried about the brits taking it so they sold it to people who had a pretty solid recent track record of beating the brits

    • @justonecornetto80
      @justonecornetto80 Před 26 dny +3

      @@Sarindanvelor Solid track record? Are you forgetting the War of 1812 when the British threw the US out of Canada then marched into Washington and had a party in the White House before burning it down? By the end of the war, the US was practically bankrupt because of the British naval blockade.
      Track record indeed.

    • @johnc2438
      @johnc2438 Před 21 dnem

      @@justonecornetto80 But then there was that little coda in New Orleans, before word of the treaty signing had reached the battling belligerents in the Gulf of Mexico. The Duke of Wellington's son-in-law met his end at the hand of Old HIckory.

    • @danfsteeple
      @danfsteeple Před 20 dny

      And it hurt the Native Alaskans

  • @joluoto
    @joluoto Před 26 dny +15

    Russia actually needed cash at the time, and just like the Americans called it Steward's Folly, St. Petersburg considered Alaska completely worthless. The money they got from the sale went right into much needed infrastructure projects.

  • @sparky7915
    @sparky7915 Před 27 dny +14

    While men were searching for gold they had to eat too. Apparently there were Chinese in Alaska preparing food for the men. According to my bathroom reader some men woke up a Chinese guy looking for food. In a hurry he gathered all kinds of leftovers and put it all together. The men loved it and asked him what it was. The Chinese said it was Chop Suey or junk food.

    • @captainspaulding5963
      @captainspaulding5963 Před 26 dny +5

      Chop suey is widely believed to have been developed in the U.S. by Chinese Americans, but the anthropologist E. N. Anderson, traces the dish to tsap seui (杂碎, "miscellaneous leftovers"), common in Taishan (Toisan), a county in Guangdong province, the home of many early Chinese immigrants to the United States

  • @petertrevorah7689
    @petertrevorah7689 Před 26 dny +11

    I’m so glad you mentioned Howard Florey and his team. So often I have read simplistic histories of penicillin that give all the credit to Fleming. As you have said, the truth is much more nuanced but it was Florey and his team that actually put the drug to work saving lives.

    • @robertthomson1587
      @robertthomson1587 Před 22 dny

      Indeed. The Australian prime minister Sir Robert Menzies said, "In terms of world well-being, Florey was the most important man ever born in Australia".

  • @lajoyalobos2009
    @lajoyalobos2009 Před 27 dny +31

    Aren't sparrows mostly insectivores? Whoever thought that was a good idea had no clue what they were doing. If anything, one would think having MORE sparrows would be a good thing.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 26 dny +8

    0:40 - Mid roll ads
    2:10 - Chapter 1 - The killing of sparrows in china & the great famine
    5:10 - Chapter 2 - Discovery of penicilin
    8:50 - Chapter 3 - Constantinople's unlocked gate
    12:55 - Chapter 4 - Russia sells alaska

  • @GLASSB182
    @GLASSB182 Před 27 dny +14

    I absolutely love the name of this video lol. Like Arthur C. Clarke once said, "A hundred mistakes would not matter, when a single success could change the destiny of the world." But in these cases, it did matter lmao.

    • @aceundead4750
      @aceundead4750 Před 26 dny +3

      Lol or you could view this video as "a hundred successes wont matter when a single mistake can change the destiny of the world."

  • @beerasaurus
    @beerasaurus Před 27 dny +37

    Mao was the most powerful fool ever

    • @jonthinks6238
      @jonthinks6238 Před 27 dny

      He sets the deplorable record for killing the most people. Yes and china is still communist.

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle Před 26 dny +4

      Biden: "Hold my beer."

    • @DubhghlasMacDubhghlas
      @DubhghlasMacDubhghlas Před 25 dny +21

      @@grizzlygrizzle I don't like Biden but to think he is worse than Mao shows how uneducated you are.

    • @112313
      @112313 Před 24 dny

      ​@@DubhghlasMacDubhghlasgive joe some time...and he will kill millions through nothing but gaffe.

    • @DavidMcdonald-df8tb
      @DavidMcdonald-df8tb Před 19 dny +1

      The more I hear about that guy Mao the more I think he was a real jerk.

  • @brianmarple9029
    @brianmarple9029 Před 25 dny +3

    Watching this while on the Alaskan north slope working in the oilfield made it all the better.

  • @SenorGato237
    @SenorGato237 Před 24 dny +4

    "Why did Constantinople get the works? An unlocked gate," just doesn't have the same ring to it.

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B Před 21 dnem

      "Why did Constantinople get the works?" ...... "that's nobody's business but the Turks!" has a better "ring to it."

  • @johnvaleanbaily246
    @johnvaleanbaily246 Před 27 dny +23

    Yeah... about the Alaska purchase. You do realize that the Klondike gold rush happened in Canada, not Alaska. In fact the Klondike is region of the Yukon territory (as it was then), in north-western Canada... Always good to get your facts right.

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 Před 27 dny +4

      I think Simon has a video on the Klondike and Alaska gold rushes. The Americans who went to the Klondike went through Alaska. The Nome gold rush was kind of a sequel and a lot easier to get to since it isn't hundreds of miles inland.

    • @pmgn8444
      @pmgn8444 Před 27 dny

      Very true. Fact Boi and some of his writers aren't really concerned about accuracy.
      US merchants in Seattle and in Skagway, Alaska Territory, made a fortune equipping people heading into Canada's Klondike.

    • @baronvonjo1929
      @baronvonjo1929 Před 27 dny

      ​@@pmgn8444I'm sure they care. But with how many topics they cover and how many videos I don't particularly expect everything to be right but its still annoying.

    • @et76039
      @et76039 Před 27 dny +4

      Wikipedia points to the Klondike Gold Rush as a factor in populating Alaska. Although the Klondike is indeed in Canada, access was through Alaska, so Simon doesn't lose points on that. Both trails that were used to get to the Klondike originated in Alaska. It took the AlCan Highway to get a major road to tie the Yukon to the rest of Canada, several decades later.

  • @padawanmage71
    @padawanmage71 Před 27 dny +6

    “Hey, that’s a cool looking horse!”
    King Priam of Troy

  • @treydezellem27
    @treydezellem27 Před 27 dny +9

    Selling Alaska was not a blunder, it was a necessity to survive as a state. It was completely worthless to the Russians therefore just because it’s been discovered for its resources now doesn’t mean it was a blunder.

    • @guru47pi
      @guru47pi Před 23 dny

      Exactly. Think of it this way: Russia already has 5-6 Alaskas that they can actually defend; they're called Siberia. Siberia is loaded with gold, oil, titanium, diamonds, etc. It's just extremely poor bc all the money goes to the czar, the Party, or oligarchs, depending on the century.
      Put another way, this is like saying France should never have sold Louisiana to the US. They had only gotten back from Spain a few years before the sale, and had no ability to defend it. Selling both to the US were basically the countries getting paid to acknowledge the reality that they couldn't develop or defend the regions

  • @tango_uniform
    @tango_uniform Před 27 dny +3

    My dad taught me about Chinese sparrows 60 years ago. Very interesting.

  • @mikesturyan9
    @mikesturyan9 Před 27 dny +5

    Pretty sure it was the cannons knocking down the walls that let the Ottomans in.

  • @WaywardVet
    @WaywardVet Před 27 dny +37

    The Louisiana Purchase. Not only did France give away land they hadn't conqured, it pretty much set the stage for "It's ours on paper".

    • @nyuuchan3563
      @nyuuchan3563 Před 26 dny +3

      This is true. The fact that no other country disputed the purchase tho…

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle Před 26 dny +3

      The expansion of a primitive, tribal theocratic ideology beginning around 632 AD.

    • @WaywardVet
      @WaywardVet Před 25 dny +4

      @@nyuuchan3563 And i will admit, i am a US Cavalry veterean. There were disputes. We still laugh about Custer. Tecumseh we revere. (I should clarify. Nations protested. My branch of the army behaved poorly)

    • @SnowLeopard-lt1vf
      @SnowLeopard-lt1vf Před 25 dny +1

      @@grizzlygrizzlesounds like your describing Christianity in the 11th-13th century more than 632.

    • @ADobbin1
      @ADobbin1 Před 23 dny +1

      It was french territory. The Spanish gave it away.

  • @kj55
    @kj55 Před 26 dny +8

    Can you imagine how different the cold war would have played out if Russia still had Alaska

    • @landtuna3469
      @landtuna3469 Před 22 dny

      ....or northern California?

    • @danfsteeple
      @danfsteeple Před 20 dny +1

      The White Army probably would have fled to Alaska

    • @acerimmer8338
      @acerimmer8338 Před 16 dny

      Yeah, it would've been even colder. Gets pretty chilly up in Alaska.

  • @martinfitzsimons5884
    @martinfitzsimons5884 Před 27 dny +8

    Its clear how well Keeps works. Simon’s beard is coming along nicely 😎👍

  • @StephenJohnson-jb7xe
    @StephenJohnson-jb7xe Před 27 dny +4

    If you are alarmed by how Simon pronounced Seeward you should hear how he pronounces quarter horse.

  • @patrickbo2045
    @patrickbo2045 Před 24 dny +3

    Elephants, you say?
    Check out the naked mole rat, that's a freak of nature that pretty much deserves its own video

  • @kidbluboo
    @kidbluboo Před 27 dny +8

    Holy crap Simon I've literally watched 5 new videos from you today spread across all your channels! Keep them coming!

    • @Hillbilly001
      @Hillbilly001 Před 27 dny

      He's a Lizard Overlord. Allegedly.

    • @stephd2607
      @stephd2607 Před 27 dny +1

      Only 5? Those are rookie numbers.

  • @djsonicc
    @djsonicc Před 26 dny +2

    "it isn't clear who left the gate unlocked..."
    Yeah I can't imagine too many people being eager to admit that kind of a blunder lol

  • @kimiyoshi1818
    @kimiyoshi1818 Před 25 dny +2

    This video reminds me of the book "100 Mistakes that Changed History" by Bill Fawcett. It's a good read, and makes me think that history is not just about winners, but cataclysmic blunders.

  • @yukonbikerguy
    @yukonbikerguy Před 27 dny +4

    Thanks for the video guys, always entertaining! The 1898 Klondike gold rush happened in Yukon Territory Canada. The people came through Skagway USA and over the White Pass into Canada to Dawson City Yukon. It wasn't part of Alaska and so that gold would not have belonged to Russia. The gold in Nome and the oil are real Alaskan treasures though, that would have been Russian.

  • @nanoglitch6693
    @nanoglitch6693 Před 25 dny +1

    YO!!! As an Alaskan, massive kudos on pronouncing Kenai correctly! Non-locals pretty much ubiquitously *always* get it wrong with a baffling consistency lol. 😂

  • @Makem12
    @Makem12 Před 15 dny +1

    So basically, #1 is don't go messing with an ecosystem until you have a very strong understanding of it and its relationships with plants and animals.

  • @wailingalen
    @wailingalen Před 27 dny +3

    Mao's "Great Leap into Famine and Death"

    • @tritium1998
      @tritium1998 Před 8 dny +1

      He gained more food and lives than ever after the Great Leap Forward instead of collapsing into civil war and assassination like other glorified regimes.

  • @mathiassommer1851
    @mathiassommer1851 Před 27 dny +1

    Man I really like that almost everyday when I go to bed there is a new video. Thank you!

  • @thomasjones4570
    @thomasjones4570 Před 27 dny +13

    A blunder requires real time carelessness. Not carelessness long after the fact. Thus, Russia selling Alaska was not a blunder. It actually made perfect sense not only at the time, but also the near future. In fact, even after the mini-gold rush, Alaska still would have been un-defendable by Russia and America was...itching to take it. The risk for Russia was still too great as it not only meant an issue with a future war with Britain, it also meant holding land that could cause a conflict with America as well.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Před 27 dny +2

      Thing is even for the time the sale of Alaska was extremely cheap. They very likely could’ve charged more for the territory and America still would’ve paid it.

    • @thomasjones4570
      @thomasjones4570 Před 27 dny +6

      @@baneofbanes Still does not fit the criteria for a blunder as a things value is relative.
      At the time the land held little value for Russia as they could not defend it and the little they could gleam from the land did not add any value to Russia or its economy coupled with the fact that anything they wanted to do with it came with a higher cost of transport over such a vast distance.
      To this day the land itself has little value and that is why its population is under 1 million despite its size.

    • @gideonmele1556
      @gideonmele1556 Před 27 dny +6

      @@baneofbanesthe concern was the US rejecting the proposal and the Brits just taking it. So either get cash or lose it anyway. If they knew oil and gold were there, that would be even more incentive for Britain to strike at that mostly undefended vast tract of snow. Giving the Brits ports so close to the Russian Pacific would have been even worse

    • @PrezVeto
      @PrezVeto Před 15 hodinami

      That's just one conception of blunder.

    • @thomasjones4570
      @thomasjones4570 Před 10 hodinami +1

      @@PrezVeto No. Its the literal definition of the word blunder. Most people are total morons and use words without knowing what the fuck they actually mean.
      Like "I could care less" like total twats not realizing they are saying they care and that it is possible for them to care less about it.

  • @kevoseddo4064
    @kevoseddo4064 Před 25 dny +1

    Will you make a video about historic retail companies? For example, sears used to be huge and sell full home building kits. I wonder if there are even older companies that had a massive inventory

  • @Hanoverfist86
    @Hanoverfist86 Před 25 dny +1

    Quote “History is a pack of fables that is agreed upon.”Napoleon Bonaparte 🇫🇷

  • @amaccama3267
    @amaccama3267 Před 27 dny +6

    Congratulations on 1M

  • @Jakey4000
    @Jakey4000 Před 26 dny +1

    At least at my pharmacy we don't care if you're looking for any product for a reason, we just want to make sure you're getting the best option available, or advice if the only option is to get a prescription

  • @seanwiley558
    @seanwiley558 Před 27 dny +1

    Well, I guess I am now officially part of the Simon club. You mentioned your mega projects channel.... paused this video... searched, found, and subscribed. 😂

  • @jasondarland2383
    @jasondarland2383 Před 27 dny +8

    After starving through a few months of siege for an emperor who probably treats me like shit anyway, can bet your ass id sneak through that gate for a late night smoke and just forget to close it on the way back.

    • @Davy_Blaze
      @Davy_Blaze Před 26 dny +1

      Well if the attacking force new about your colaboration, sure. Otherwise by opening gates you would be killed as a regular enemy soldier.

  • @philiphumphrey1548
    @philiphumphrey1548 Před 26 dny +3

    I would say Boudicca's decision to fight a pitched battle with the Romans at Watling Street (ignoring all the hard learned lessons and experience of the previous 17 years) was a monumental blunder that had long term effects. But for that England might never have been Romanized and history could have been very different.

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Před 16 dny

      Reality is Britain was never really romanised, we were always an uncivilised barbarian frontier that cost more to keep than was gained, that's why the Romans withdrew (as well as all those troops required to keep Britain under control led to an uncomfortably large force that every hundred years or so would give the commander the idea of setting off to try and conquer rome themselves).

  • @DavidWRankinJr
    @DavidWRankinJr Před 27 dny +5

    The US was the enemy of my enemy for Russia. The British had local troops in Canada, and a history of fighting wars for territory. Alaska was at the very far end of a supply train for Russia at the very time when it couldn’t afford to maintain it. The British tried to take Crimea and almost fought the US for Oregon and Vancouver several times, why wouldn’t Alexander think Britain would use any excuse to take Alaska from him. The Yukon Gold Rush would have provided that excuse if nothing else.
    To use the old expression, Alexander cut his losses. Yes, Alaska was worth more than he got, but he was better off with it in US hands than British hands.

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Před 16 dny

      Yep I'm pretty sure he was hoping it would lead to a war between Britian and the US if he got lucky...

  • @2neetoon
    @2neetoon Před 27 dny +20

    Forking over Alaska is certainly a "blunder." I guess they miss those billions every year.

    • @abrvalg321
      @abrvalg321 Před 27 dny +4

      In his casual russophobia Simon never told you that the reason was purely political and not economic.

    • @Shinzon23
      @Shinzon23 Před 27 dny +15

      ​@@abrvalg321 russophobia? I sense a Russian troll

    • @cwj2733
      @cwj2733 Před 27 dny +9

      @@abrvalg321selling alaska was purely a goofy ass choice. the slavs there had been making GOOD ass money the decades they owned it. they sold it cus they were just scared of british and were poor because of crimea.
      there is no russian bias. they were driven into a financial hole because they wanted crimea, and that they have obliterated the otter population in alaska. so they goofily sold alaska. the end

    • @aq5426
      @aq5426 Před 27 dny +3

      They still consider Alaska to be Russian territory, and given half a chance they'll swipe it from us.

    • @aq5426
      @aq5426 Před 27 dny +7

      @@abrvalg321 Slava Ukraini, bot.

  • @demon.shisui494
    @demon.shisui494 Před 27 dny +1

    Damn Simon ngl been watching you since I was but a wee lad and it’s great to see you still doing interesting videos and showing more of your personality. Been loving you’re stuff since the good ole Top 10 channel videos. Found you originally for historical videos and stayed for the extra random facts🤣😂

    • @scottmeredith3359
      @scottmeredith3359 Před 26 dny +1

      The only videos of his I’ve seen (a LOT) all date back to 2020 at the oldest. He has videos much older than that??

  • @rwarren58
    @rwarren58 Před 21 dnem

    Thank you. As of this moment, no elephant should be safe.

  • @fatmanjones5359
    @fatmanjones5359 Před 27 dny +1

    Had to watch Cleetus,That Chapter then your video. Top 3 is pretty good but you hold 3 of my top 10 favorite videos to watch.

    • @RedBeardTheFirst
      @RedBeardTheFirst Před 27 dny

      When you say Cleetus do you mean the Resurrection of the Fiero?

  • @aguynamednathan
    @aguynamednathan Před 27 dny

    Getting here this early is one of the GREATEST accomplishments of my life!

  • @plaguedoct0r
    @plaguedoct0r Před 26 dny +1

    One time I was born, and I've been regretting it ever since.

  • @ferengiprofiteer9145
    @ferengiprofiteer9145 Před 27 dny +5

    Manhattan Island was purchased for 14 billion dollars in beads. (Adjusted for today's money)

  • @clintonpangburn3698
    @clintonpangburn3698 Před 27 dny

    It's the blunders rather than the success that keeps us coming back Simon!

  • @starkiller578
    @starkiller578 Před 27 dny +2

    HOW MANY CZcams CHANNELS DOES THIS MAN HOST?!??😭💀

  • @Gungnirs_revenge
    @Gungnirs_revenge Před 27 dny

    Love the fact keeps has literally made the link Simons name

  • @azureandnoir3274
    @azureandnoir3274 Před 26 dny +2

    leaving my high paying job to start a business with a jack ass who stole my ideas then tried to sue me is in my top 10 greatest mistakes that and messaging my ex

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle Před 26 dny +1

      Idea-stealing has become quite commonplace these days.

    • @azureandnoir3274
      @azureandnoir3274 Před 26 dny +1

      @@grizzlygrizzle its frustratingly annoying and sad when you try your hardest to think outside the box just to have it ripped away from you

  • @DenethorDurrandir
    @DenethorDurrandir Před 26 dny

    I feel sympathetic to Constantinopole, can't even count how many times my teammates in Rust left the doors open, leaving us vulnerable to a raid.

  • @Qolos
    @Qolos Před 27 dny +3

    Now we know why Constantinople got the works.

  • @obijoel4209
    @obijoel4209 Před 13 dny

    Hey Simon...would be nice to see a video on the positive side of this - where we learn about historical "mistakes" that actually lead to wonderful, life-saving inventions or medicines. The discovery of penicillin was good in this video but I'd like to know more.

  • @Laszlo34
    @Laszlo34 Před 26 dny

    I love the ad for Keeps as read by the poster child for...Losts ;P

  • @MattValtezzy95
    @MattValtezzy95 Před 27 dny

    I saw the Great Chinese Famine was the first thing you were bringing up and took a swig of my cocktail

  • @maxcichon2557
    @maxcichon2557 Před 25 dny +1

    "Casual Friday"? Stocking feet and open pantries?

  • @JordaneseTyphoon-jk6fr

    You did make one small error: Mao didn’t “step down” in 1976. He died

  • @peterdollins3610
    @peterdollins3610 Před 27 dny +2

    The crusade fro m Venice a rival of 'the City' inspired by Pope Innocent to Jerusalum stopped at Constatinoble & sacked the City in 1204? so weakening the Empire. This led to the weakness and to the end of Constantinoble. Those fleeing 'the City' took knowledge to Italy so sparking the Renaissance.

  • @scottjackson1420
    @scottjackson1420 Před 27 dny +4

    Biggest mistake? Dating the hot redhead for 2 1/2 years as an undergrad.
    My God, were there bad long-term repercussions from THAT!

    • @Jameson1776
      @Jameson1776 Před 27 dny

      Do tell?

    • @gideonmele1556
      @gideonmele1556 Před 27 dny +1

      Ayyyyyyyy
      We all have at least one

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle Před 26 dny

      Choosing a wife because she's good in bed is up there, too.

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Před 16 dny

      I'd love to hear the rest of this story but it doesn't sound like it was entirely without its compensations :-)!

  • @parallaxnick637
    @parallaxnick637 Před 21 dnem

    No love for Vortigern? Who invited the English into Britain to help fend off the Irish and Scots? And then got betrayed when they wouldn't stop coming? Imagine a world where he didn't make that mistake.

  • @grantadam7674
    @grantadam7674 Před 4 dny

    Cane toads in Australia, a massive blunder and what about the Aleutian islands. Was this part of the Alaska purchase.

  • @briansimon4363
    @briansimon4363 Před 23 dny

    Only in a story about Penicillin could there be a poster ‘curing gonorrhoea in 4 hours’ and a scientist called V. D. Allison. Is my mind twisted and dark?!🤣

  • @JoRoWi83
    @JoRoWi83 Před 14 dny

    The Alaska blunder… how much gold has been pulled from that land

  • @The_Butler_Did_It
    @The_Butler_Did_It Před 23 dny

    Can't help thinking the sponsor of this video might have made a tiny blunder:
    Use Keeps and you too could have a full head of hair, just like I haven't

  • @jameslong4511
    @jameslong4511 Před 18 dny

    It was Bob who left the gate unlocked. Mystery solved.

  • @Crioten
    @Crioten Před 27 dny

    The starfishes, really, really love you ;]

  • @drake6sermos665
    @drake6sermos665 Před 27 dny

    Sweet Drop, Simon

  • @Gator198l
    @Gator198l Před 25 dny

    "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men." Godzilla by Blue Oyster Cult.

  • @johnransom1146
    @johnransom1146 Před 27 dny +1

    Dawson city isn’t in Alaska. It’s in the Yukon Territory, Canada?

  • @KoRntech
    @KoRntech Před 16 dny

    13:20 that's Okay we defeated the Eastern Alliance in RobotJox for Alaska a long time ago.

  • @whyjnot420
    @whyjnot420 Před 23 dny

    2200 year old Roman Empire. 753 BC (traditional date of the founding of Rome) - 1453 CE (fall of Constantinople)

  • @HVACSoldier
    @HVACSoldier Před 22 dny

    “Penicillin cures gonorrhea in 4 hours.” That’s some ad.

  • @joaobaptista8377
    @joaobaptista8377 Před 4 dny

    funny that he replaced the words death with Stepping Down For Mao

  • @conradbo1
    @conradbo1 Před 24 dny

    The historical blunder you made Simon was to put keeps on your chin instead of your head. But still I must admit that your look works very well

  • @wf7754
    @wf7754 Před 26 dny

    Alaska’s purchase price was $7.2M, not $17.2M. About 2 cents an acre.

  • @valiant971
    @valiant971 Před 27 dny +2

    It isn't pronounced William "Seeward", it's "Suard".

  • @BLOXKAFELLARECORDS
    @BLOXKAFELLARECORDS Před 25 dny +1

    👏🏽 good show.

  • @kevbis4231
    @kevbis4231 Před 8 dny

    I lived in Dawson city Yukon Canada still looks the same as the gold rush!!

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Před 26 dny

    0:01 ...Oh, jeez!!
    Where to begin?
    *SO* many choices...
    🤣

  • @saiynoq6745
    @saiynoq6745 Před 27 dny

    5:11 my wife had a C section an they stuffed her with a gel that had sliver in it to help with healing on a number of levels an I can see why sliver was so important way back I’m sure they could see back then how it help

  • @karandavis5197
    @karandavis5197 Před 26 dny

    If you used Keeps on your beard, I can say it did a great job!

  • @javiermoretti1825
    @javiermoretti1825 Před 24 dny

    Blunder: It wasn't "Emperor Constantinople," he was Constantine XI Palaiologos.

  • @billness2635
    @billness2635 Před 24 dny

    Couple of corrections to the Alaska story. First one is the purchase price was $7.2 million dollars, not $17 million. Second point is the pronunciation of Seward. It’s not “Sea Ward” it’s “Soo Ward.”

    • @judyd1
      @judyd1 Před 21 dnem

      That accent is disconcerting...my closed captioning shows he actually said seven point two million.

  • @stephenforrest9301
    @stephenforrest9301 Před 26 dny

    9:28 "Emperor Constantinople" should be "Emperor Constantine". Funny that the last Western Roman Emperor was named Romulus and the last Byzantine emperor was named Constantine.

  • @Mooocheropordis
    @Mooocheropordis Před 13 dny

    Simons beard is getting to cossak proportions

  • @-Angelscor-
    @-Angelscor- Před 26 dny

    A little correction and humble info contribution,
    Mehmed II's army during the siege of Constantinople was approximately more than 100,000 men, not 60,000. The enormous giant cannons the turks had were forged by Hungarian engineer Orban who defected to the ottoman empire as a resentful Christian.

    • @tomriley5790
      @tomriley5790 Před 16 dny

      Resentful because the byzantines wouldn't pay what he wanted they didn't have the cash. He blew himself up with one of his guns during the siege.

  • @CV_CA
    @CV_CA Před 24 dny

    1:03 Try it on your own head. If I see hair I am convinced.

  • @Tagurrit
    @Tagurrit Před 27 dny +1

    Yeah, that’s what I want! Hair products recommended by somebody whose ball😂😂😂

  • @here_we_go_again2571
    @here_we_go_again2571 Před 25 dny

    As soon as British settlement in Canada reached British Columbia, Canada would have seized Alaska. The Tsar did well to
    sell it; the money enabled him to free the serfs and to begin building Russia's railway.

  • @tmnt3998
    @tmnt3998 Před 20 dny

    A deal that saved the mankind! For a time...

  • @SquallLeonhartlo
    @SquallLeonhartlo Před 21 dnem

    As for Alaska, Russia felt it was in a situation where it either had to sell Alaska or someone would take it by force. Defending it, establishing the infrastructure necessary to profit from it, and sending people there to work the land were all going to be too expensive and difficult for the Russians to be seen as worthwhile.
    The Russians and Americans had a survey of Alaska done before the sale, and it was known that there was a lot of mineral wealth there. The Russians just weren't going to be in a position to exploit it before someone took it from them.
    It's comparable to if America were to sell the moon to aliens, because the aliens might take it anyway and America couldn't really exploit it effectively.