How This Central African City Became the World’s Most Expensive

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2022
  • Sign up for the Nebula/CuriosityStream bundle deal to get both streaming sites for just $14.79 a year: CuriosityStream.com/Wendover
    Watch Jet Lag: The Game at / jetlagthegame
    Buy a Wendover Productions t-shirt: standard.tv/collections/wendo...
    Subscribe to Half as Interesting (The other channel from Wendover Productions): / halfasinteresting
    CZcams: / wendoverproductions
    Instagram: / sam.from.wendover
    Twitter: / wendoverpro
    Sponsorship Enquiries: wendover@standard.tv
    Other emails: sam@wendover.productions
    Reddit: / wendoverproductions
    Writing by Sam Denby and Tristan Purdy
    Editing by Alexander Williard
    Animation led by Josh Sherrington
    Sound by Graham Haerther
    Thumbnail by Simon Buckmaster
    References
    [1] www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...
    [2] library.fes.de/libalt/journal...
    [3] www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/resr...
    [4] digitalassets.lib.berkeley.ed...
    [5] data.worldbank.org/indicator/...
    [6] www.aljazeera.com/news/2008/9...
    [7] www.afrol.com/articles/22889
    [8] bradtangolaupdate.wordpress.c...
    [9] www.cnn.com/2010/SPORT/footba...
    [10] www.bbc.com/news/world-africa...
    [11] www.bbc.com/news/world-africa...
    [12] www.reuters.com/article/us-an...
    [13] web.archive.org/web/201702161...

Komentáře • 4,1K

  • @QueenetBowie
    @QueenetBowie Před rokem +9851

    Botswana is one of the most stable African nations despite having large diamond mines. It would be cool to see a video on them and why they were able to create a functioning government and keep it going compared to neighboring African nations

    • @christopherwalker5017
      @christopherwalker5017 Před rokem +321

      Hate to break it to you but Botswana isnt as stable as you like to say

    • @teknikairaoulolgandessabek4102
      @teknikairaoulolgandessabek4102 Před rokem +952

      @@christopherwalker5017 Please let us know what is not stable in Botswana. I live next door in South Africa and I rarely hear about political troubles happening there.

    • @MosesMatsepane
      @MosesMatsepane Před rokem +1273

      @@christopherwalker5017 relative to other countries it is. High Democracy index, third lowest corruption index in Africa, and relatively low crime rates. Yes they still have health and electricity access issues to deal with, but they are headed in the right direction.

    • @Inflator82
      @Inflator82 Před rokem +121

      That's because opposite to what is broadcasted people and nations are not equal. Some are smarter and better than other.

    • @darkbrightnorth
      @darkbrightnorth Před rokem +293

      @@christopherwalker5017 overall no, compared to its neighbours and most developing nations it is very promising, both in its politics and economics on top of stability

  • @gouvyfam
    @gouvyfam Před rokem +4769

    As an Angolan I appreciate this video. The damage done by corrupt politicians is still a very big concern as most of the people still lack the bare necessities. Good work, you got me subscribed

    • @christopherwalker5017
      @christopherwalker5017 Před rokem

      How is Angola , I hear that China basically owns Angola

    • @iwanttocomplain
      @iwanttocomplain Před rokem

      We just hit a £100billion railway track. Alongside an existing one. To shorten the journey by 30 minutes. Lots of buildings bulldozed and communities all fucked up. Nobody voted for it.

    • @jorgecoelho4051
      @jorgecoelho4051 Před rokem +43

      Pedi legendas para melhor espalhar a palavra, vamos ver se eles o fazem...
      ...força Angola!

    • @tomi2205
      @tomi2205 Před rokem +10

      Aren't the elections this week?

    • @kohga1374
      @kohga1374 Před rokem +14

      @@jorgecoelho4051 Não falo português, mas meu inglês é bom. Eu adoraria ajudar se houver alguma maneira que eu puder.

  • @Fuzzlekinz
    @Fuzzlekinz Před rokem +176

    I lived in Angola for about three years as a kid, being a child of an oil company employee. It's really interesting watching this video as an adult nearly twenty years later. I did actually visit again in the early 2010s, and it was crazy to see how much development had happened in the city as far as infrastructure was concerned. It really was surprising how much it had changed in a short time, but you could still see the massive wealth inequality. So many people live in poverty, and you can't hide it with a beautiful skyline.

    • @Rio-by1eh
      @Rio-by1eh Před měsícem

      ✅✅✨✨✨✨

    • @geo77790
      @geo77790 Před 3 dny

      the people of that country whos oil it is are the one's living in poverty, while the seed of the serpent steal, kill, destroy, and plunder their natural resources live great, i tell u they are indeed through innoncent blood and corruption are enjoying their heaven on earth now and with all of their wealth they have accumilated over the years they will not take it with them as u have never seen a uhaul being pulled behind a limosene hurst, after they leave this world they will lift up thine eyes to judgement! unless they repent and turn from their wicked ways,

  • @Millerman0583
    @Millerman0583 Před rokem +118

    I was the maintenance lead for that 747 that flew to Angola for several years till they stopped flying in 2018.
    There were 3 times when the flight got to Iah we found a bullet hole on the aircraft. All 3 times the bullet hit the flaps. Local hpd got involved but nothing happened due to it got shot in another country.

  • @ExBlaz3
    @ExBlaz3 Před rokem +3359

    I don't think people realize how impressive it is to see the sheer amount of original old footage used in this video. Well done digging them up, WP!

    • @stevensmith2078
      @stevensmith2078 Před rokem +37

      Except…its footage from the 1960s and 1970s. It’s in black and white but it really isn’t old. The fact that it was accessed is impressive though.

    • @corbin8930
      @corbin8930 Před rokem +31

      He uses a service that provides copyright free content or its owned/licensed by the service company. I can’t remember the name but he mentions it in one of his other videos

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před rokem +43

      Yeah, Wendover is always skillful with stock footage but this is the first time that I've been seriously impressed by the quality of the footage. This is documentary-level quality.

    • @punkdigerati
      @punkdigerati Před rokem +34

      @@corbin8930 Storyblocks, but it's unlikely they had the historical footage, it's mostly stock footage.

    • @philosophy_bot4171
      @philosophy_bot4171 Před rokem +4

      Beep, bop... I'm the Philosophy Bot. Here, have a quote:
      "For a man to conquer himself is the first and noblest of all victories"
      ~ Plato

  • @carlosdelosrios4268
    @carlosdelosrios4268 Před rokem +2039

    I was an expat petroleum engineer working for Chevron in the late 90's in Angola. It was obvious back then that the dos Santos family had a corrupt strangle hold on the massive Angolan natural wealth. Every person of influence in every Angolan company remarkably had the last name dos Santos. It always struct me as tragic that a country with such incredible natural wealth, and at the time a population of only around 11 million, was subject to such extreme poverty and a life expectancy in the mid 40s. I hope Angola, like much of the developing world can overcome the crippling disease of corruption.

    • @sulaak
      @sulaak Před rokem +110

      You think the Dos Santos were able to concentrate all the power without the help of the US government?

    • @sushmag4297
      @sushmag4297 Před rokem

      Why can't people who come into alot of wealth and power and use it to lift up their fellow country men? More well off citizens = stronger country and more prosperity and wealth in the future. Why is it ALWAYS that the people in power use that power to take advantage and exploit and steal? It it just a human thing or is it that you have to be a fucked up person to seek power?

    • @MagicMike_101
      @MagicMike_101 Před rokem +49

      “Every country has the government it deserves.”
      ― Joseph de Maistre

    • @MagicMike_101
      @MagicMike_101 Před rokem

      Like many African countries, the only thing they will grow is from a population of 11 million to more than 200 million.

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Před rokem +142

      @@sulaak remember the US started off by fighting them. not everything can be blamed on the US my friend.

  • @davidreddie6912
    @davidreddie6912 Před rokem +120

    This is a very good, brief account of the recent history and development of Angola. I was employed there, by an oil company, based in Luanda, from 1987 to 2000. The tribal influences, Ovimbundu vs Kimbundu, etc, the development of relations between the colonial government and specific groups of nationals, the possibility of migration of communism to the uranium rich Namibia, etc, also had an influence. From my own experience and recollections, the direct flight from Houston was a faster and lesser cost alternative to flying via Paris, Lisbon or Brussels. With most oil company employees and offshore staff being on a 28 day rotational basis, there was a gradual preference for Angolan personnel to replace expatriates, for Luanda office employees to become resident and for facilities to be made available for wives and children. By my recollection, Luanda originally had services; water supply, electricity and sewage disposal, for about 300,000 people. The various phases of the war led to an influx of over 2 million, many living in very basic, breeze block and corrugated iron shacks, surrounding the white walled, red tiled roofs of the colonial city. Water supply for the office and apartment I lived in was brought in by a tanker truck. Power cuts occurred often, at peak usage periods. Some apartment blocks no longer had functioning sewage disposal. Renovation and expansion of the Luanda city services was considered to be a less preferable alternative to building a new city, nearby. The subsequent new construction of large areas of US style housing, villas and apartment blocks, and suitable schooling for International children is not a surprise to me. Even in the 1990's, monthly rental charges for expatriate family housing, built before independance, could be tens of thousands of dollars. The Production Sharing Agreements between foreign oil companies and the Angolan national company, Sonangol, allowed accommodation costs, etc, to be recovered from the funds generated by the oil produced. When I left in 2000, the total oil rate of about 750,000 bopd was from offshore blocks adjacent to the coast. Subsequent, higher cost development of deeper water blocks, further offshore, is the origin of the increased oil production, to 1.5 million and more. In the late 1990's there were about one hundred aid organisations providing support to the Angolan people, many with representatives in Luanda. One may have hoped that the removal of Savimbi and the subsequent peace agreement would have led to improvement in the quality of life for the average Angolan. Life expectancy has increased from the 40's to about 61 and infant mortality has improved from about 137/1000 live births to 55. Agriculture is being redeveloped and other industries established. The apparently despicable activities of some of the Dos Santos associates surely does require detailed investigation and appropriate action taken, by the current Angolan authorities.

  • @KurosakiNaturo
    @KurosakiNaturo Před rokem +29

    I'm angolan and live in Luanda, and I'm lucky enough to currently be within the middle-class bracket that can live comfortably, but the stark contrast between poor and rich here is absolutely and glaringly enormous.

    • @incognito4809
      @incognito4809 Před rokem +1

      I apologies if i sound offensive but why do most Angolans have no African names

    • @KurosakiNaturo
      @KurosakiNaturo Před rokem +5

      @@incognito4809 Culture. My family has mixing with Portuguese and portuguese-descendants at the level of my grandparents and great-grandparents, on both sides I believe.

    • @mjivory410
      @mjivory410 Před 10 měsíci

      @incognito48_9: Look up the colonisl Portuguese term ""assimilado"" (?sp?) The Colonial Portuguese meaning of the **term** highly __enlightenimg__ (!!pun. Maybe? Imcluded!!😚😄😚😄

    • @chechnya
      @chechnya Před 10 dny

      ​@@incognito4809 That's like Philippinos, they look Asian but have Mexican names, really trippy.

  • @EMarinoTrumpet
    @EMarinoTrumpet Před rokem +683

    An old man where I grew up in Venezuela was one of the Cuban soldiers that had been sent to Angola. I also met a girl that went to the Luanda International School. Interesting video and how you are telling me some of the stories these people had told me.

    • @kv4648
      @kv4648 Před rokem +4

      What did the girl say?

    • @pettahify
      @pettahify Před rokem +41

      Cuba really made a big contribution (especially considering Cuba's small size) for the freedom for some countries in the southern parts of Africa.
      Some one should make a video about it 👌

    • @EMarinoTrumpet
      @EMarinoTrumpet Před rokem +20

      @@kv4648 She told me it was nice in the neighborhoods for the people that worked for the oil company (her parents worked for the oil company). Anything else wasn't in a good shape and there were buildings with bullet holes still from the civil war.

    • @EMarinoTrumpet
      @EMarinoTrumpet Před rokem +8

      @@pettahify Yes it is quite interesting. This man did tell me they tried to also kidnap South African soldiers and hold them for ransom in exchange for Mandela. Not sure how much of it was made up though. He was pretty serious though.

    • @rogink
      @rogink Před rokem +37

      @@pettahify Yes Cuba made a great contribution to keeping civil wars going.

  • @mhkpt
    @mhkpt Před rokem +1045

    I worked in Portugal in 2010-12 and knew many people in the alcohol business, they all talked about how Angolans, along with some Brazilians, were making up pretty much the entire luxury alcohol market. I personally saw an Angolan couple spend over €30,000 in wine and spirits while I was at a wine shop there. Angolan political elites drank Petrus and Louis XIII while Angola continued to have some of the world’s highest child mortality rates.
    The corruption of the José Eduardo dos Santos regime was outrageous. And I think they also had deals with Deloitte, in return for lucrative consulting contracts with Sonangol and Sonagás, Deloitte would also audit the Angolan elections, partially explaining the Dos Santos incredible margins of victory despite his naked corruption.

    • @NicholasLittlejohn
      @NicholasLittlejohn Před rokem +28

      Evil

    • @mnbandeiracarvalho
      @mnbandeiracarvalho Před rokem +76

      I worked as a manager for a large retailer in Angola. We sold 700.000USD in a single day of wine and spirits for a wedding in 2017.

    • @auguaauaguga6517
      @auguaauaguga6517 Před rokem +3

      @@mnbandeiracarvalho lol 🤣

    • @ivangalik7848
      @ivangalik7848 Před rokem

      criminals or when scum gets to undeserved money

    • @Yweile
      @Yweile Před rokem +4

      i can say the same for the feds.. make one about the feds cause what the feds and government got line up gor you yu guys here will burn your pockets nd mental..

  • @findtherapists
    @findtherapists Před rokem +56

    While I was a merchant navy cadet I "visited" Angola, we were pumping gas so far off shore we couldn't see land. In the end it was destined for China but our ship was chartered by Total, pumping BP owned gas from a Chevron platform. I had a similar experience when acting as a floating oil store off the coast of Nigeria before that. The oil industry just wants to take from Africa with the bare minimum investment back to the countries there

    • @flawyerlawyertv7454
      @flawyerlawyertv7454 Před rokem +1

      Exactly.

    • @onomeonota23
      @onomeonota23 Před rokem +15

      As a Nigerian, I don’t blame the oil companies but the Nigerian leaders and people.

    • @thinktankcritic5267
      @thinktankcritic5267 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Exactly! It’s not the multinationals duty or responsibility to give back to the people … it’s their government!

    • @adAbsentia618
      @adAbsentia618 Před 27 dny

      That's a fair point, but there's no reason a fellow African family has to benefit; including unimaginable wealth from it. Something similar happened a few hundred years ago, the US had a Civil War about it

  • @blackjackjoe7
    @blackjackjoe7 Před 6 měsíci +10

    When I was 14/15 years old, I lived in Luanda with my parents in 1966-67. My father was a diesel engineer working for Gulf Oil as part of the first crew to begin drilling off of Cabinda on a huge flotation rig. Angola was a beautiful country and I thoroughly enjoyed my time there. Many stories to tell about that time. It is sad what happened in the 1970s and 80s with civil war, then again the corruption of the 2010s that derailed a chance for the population to improve on their condition. I hope they can get things straightened out.

  • @david4396
    @david4396 Před rokem +636

    I lived in Luanda for 4 years and this is pretty accurate, except the prices which you could get around. Also about LIS (Luanda International School) most capitals in Africa and the world have private IB schools so this isn't really very rare.

    • @joe_lubinda
      @joe_lubinda Před rokem +41

      exactly I'm from their neighbouring Zambia and we have "American International School of Lusaka" , International School of lusaka " etc all in the capital.

    • @nonamenoname2618
      @nonamenoname2618 Před rokem +21

      Please share what is inaccurate about the prices, I am genuinely curious. BTW, I am from Bulgaria and the best-ranked high school in the country is the private American College in Sofia. So, the Angola matrix spreads well out of Africa

    • @noneofyourbizness
      @noneofyourbizness Před rokem +27

      i think the point is that LIS is the ONLY school in the region offering anything more than a very basic level of education. That would not be true of other cities/regions in the world that have IB schools operating in them.

    • @david4396
      @david4396 Před rokem +2

      @@noneofyourbizness there’s a few but not many

    • @david4396
      @david4396 Před rokem +4

      @@nonamenoname2618 “unofficial currency exchange”

  • @grahamleiper1538
    @grahamleiper1538 Před rokem +595

    Regards Houston Express. That 747 replaced an MD11 that wasn't the most reliable.
    Nobody got in taxis. You have drivers. Oil companies would often have minibuses. Taxis were/are not deemed safe.
    Also flights were generally workers, managers and technical experts rather than executives.
    "Executives" get their own plane. They're not going to stand for two hours in a queue at Immigration.
    Now people are generally flying on scheduled airlines - from the US that's usually via Frankfurt.
    Things a lot better now than 20 years ago for most, but way too much money has left the country.
    Hopefully the elections tomorrow stay generally peaceful. First one since Dos Santos died.

    • @sganzerlag
      @sganzerlag Před rokem +12

      Thanks for the insight!! Do you remember by any chance the nationality or ethnicity of the 747 and/or of the MD11 pilots? Best regards from Brasilia, Brazil.

    • @docouchi7929
      @docouchi7929 Před rokem +2

      Mentira, não acredito que um país conquistado pelos ibérico esteja corrompido kkkk … the more you know, the less you want to know …

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
    • @Alia-bo9vw
      @Alia-bo9vw Před rokem

      hi graham... recently i seen a online game and its name " sparc" very easy to use

    • @preheatedkarma7954
      @preheatedkarma7954 Před rokem +1

      I used to see the Houston express every week a few years ago.

  • @Sonnenstrahl_0
    @Sonnenstrahl_0 Před 11 měsíci +4

    An excellent documentary, I loved the complete summary of the Angolan last 60 years and the analysis you did.

  • @kidomingos3496
    @kidomingos3496 Před rokem +5

    You did a very good insight in shorter time about Angola history, well done 👏🏾

  • @C0n7ax
    @C0n7ax Před rokem +490

    Angola is mentioned prominently in: "The Looting Machine". Another example of a country whose leaders' financial success depends solely on resource extraction by multi-nationals rather than the taxation of it's citizens. This circumstance leads to the needs of the general population being completely irrelevant as their prosperity, or lack thereof, has no impact on the capacity of the corrupt to enrich themselves.

    • @noneofyourbizness
      @noneofyourbizness Před rokem

      very much like the tory governments of the UK.
      only the (mild) threat of losing power at next election keeps tory govts from deserting the needs of the 95% entirely. i kid you not.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před rokem +18

      What more do you except from a country operating on central planning which the needs of the population are an afterthought?

    • @franzjoseph1837
      @franzjoseph1837 Před rokem +56

      @@shauncameron8390 no, they dropped Marxist practices almost immediately after independence cause western money is sweeter from centuries of imperialism. What we are seeing in Angola is capitalism in all its neoliberal glory.

    • @jameshowlett2694
      @jameshowlett2694 Před rokem +29

      @@shauncameron8390 sounds like the only research you did on Angola was a glance at their flag

    • @you2449
      @you2449 Před rokem

      Angola aint' got nuthin on Ukraine. A nation so unspeakably corrupt, it's being used as the catalyst to conquer the planet, and the human race.

  • @fredyates9863
    @fredyates9863 Před rokem +396

    When I saw the title of Last Week Tonight I just thought, man Sam already did this, are they just ripping off Wendover? Then you got featured and I felt better about it. Congrats!

    • @joost00555
      @joost00555 Před rokem +70

      If it is any consolidation, Last Week Tonight will get the word out to way more people, so it was a topic worth being repeated.

    • @Rentta
      @Rentta Před rokem

      Which title ?

    • @akshathhmukkera6332
      @akshathhmukkera6332 Před rokem +7

      @@Rentta the carbon offset video

    • @RobertMacLeanDeveloper
      @RobertMacLeanDeveloper Před rokem +1

      Wait until this video on last week tonight... It is so good

    • @Pyrus425
      @Pyrus425 Před rokem +3

      Of the talk show hacks, Oliver can be both the best, and the worst.

  • @waterdispensersdiy2511
    @waterdispensersdiy2511 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this video!even from a small country like Singapore found it interesting and lot of things to learn from, 💯💯💯 well done! More video please

    • @krio1267
      @krio1267 Před 11 měsíci

      love singapore from malaysia

  • @i.am.navkaur
    @i.am.navkaur Před 9 měsíci +17

    I just spent 10 days in Angola. 4 nights in Luanda, took Macon bus to Kuito, took an express train to Luena, took a school-type bus to Lalumba, and finally travelled to Malundo-Sikongo border in Zambia on a private cargo vehicle - the most uncomfortable 18 hours! I was deeply saddened to experience the lack of infrastructure, the inability to communicate (although I’m fluent in Spanish), the extremely dilapidated housing, standing dirty water in giant potholes (which causes frequent malaria), and the mistreatment of children, especially boys. People were mostly kind and some were helpful also.

    • @jenniferjuliana10
      @jenniferjuliana10 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Just because you speak Spanish, that doesn't mean they can understand you. They speak Portuguese, not Spanish. Even myself, Angolan descend (Dad is Angolan), speaks Portuguese from Portugal and Angolan people still have difficulties to understand me and visa versa.

    • @relocatetoItaly
      @relocatetoItaly Před měsícem +2

      Angola speaks Portuguese not Spanish you sure you went to Angola?

    • @Gigi-xr3qs
      @Gigi-xr3qs Před 16 dny

      @@relocatetoItaly LMAO! navkaur is a total moron!

    • @reaux3921
      @reaux3921 Před 9 dny

      Yeah girls are not mistreated *sarcasm* 🙄

    • @reaux3921
      @reaux3921 Před 9 dny

      Girls just got married as kids and r worded and beaten by theirs husbands but all is good

  • @andyjwagner
    @andyjwagner Před rokem +372

    “Why Nations Fail” by Acemoglu and Robinson shows how this was the norm around the world throughout history, until a very small number of nations started to escape in the 17th and 18th Centuries.

    • @IntrusiveThot420
      @IntrusiveThot420 Před rokem +32

      Seconding "Why Nations Fail"; it's one of my all-time favorite books.

    • @Ptaku93
      @Ptaku93 Před rokem +9

      Probably caused by psychological changes as depicted in "The Weirdest People in the World", which I highly recommend

    • @davidcovington901
      @davidcovington901 Před rokem +11

      @@pulse3554 LOL? Huh.

    • @IntrusiveThot420
      @IntrusiveThot420 Před rokem +33

      @@pulse3554 i was gonna say, half the book is about colonialism leaving behind bad institutions 😂

    • @foobar9220
      @foobar9220 Před rokem +16

      Definitely a good recommendation. And the reason why I do not really share the optimism that ends the video. As long as simple exploitation can make an elite incredibly rich pretty easily, this will be done by that elite. It is a very long struggle for nations to transform from extractive to inclusive

  • @Hinfinitus1
    @Hinfinitus1 Před rokem +673

    As an Angolan , it’s sad to see that my country had everything to prosper but unfortunately the greed for money and power made the people more selfish and abandoned the others who have nothing , imagine where those people would be today if everything was fine, recently we had elections and the MPLA is being accused of altering the results (which everybody knows it’s true) and there’s practically nothing the honest people can do to help our country, one day I hope everything to turn out to be fine .

    • @bethhillier1294
      @bethhillier1294 Před rokem

      In Canada the corrupt federal politicians of the Liberal government are the same. Their greed overlooks homeless, unemployed Canadians. The disabled, seniors & low income family with children are homeless & starving. The current Canadian government doesn't care about that. Canada is a third world country with corrupt Elections under the current NDP-Liberal coalition governments. Simply corruption for the elite who are currently preforming GENOCIDE of the people of our country.

    • @12325814
      @12325814 Před rokem

      It is YOUR PEOPLE WHO MADE THE DECAY.
      DEAL WITH IT.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před rokem

      @@Meatdevil
      But Angola is yet another case of yesterday's liberators becoming tomorrow's oppressors.

    • @beebeetee2926
      @beebeetee2926 Před rokem +4

      Thanx for sharing!

    • @12325814
      @12325814 Před rokem

      @Prkau telek You mean the same Europe that got terrorized by Mongols, committing never-before-seen genocide or the Turks (Osmans), who have killed, kidnapped, raped and enslaved basically THE WHOLE South - and East Europe until 1683, when they got proper beating at Vienna? 😄😄 Learn some history first, shallow and purpose-built wokeism doesn't work when confronted with facts 😄😄😄

  • @royschmidt675
    @royschmidt675 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for for the excellent informative history of this country. Your narration was a bit to fast but thorough if one could keep up !
    Peace & Love ❤️🙏

  • @-Honi-
    @-Honi- Před rokem +5

    On May 1st 2017, Sonair decided to open the Houston Express service, previously exclusive to oil companies operating in Angola, to the general public, to reduce the impact of weak demand brought about by the low oil price and the flight became semi-open, with 80 seats per flight, among the 189 available, dedicated to public passengers, to be precise.

  • @bconni2
    @bconni2 Před rokem +140

    i lived in Portugal years ago in my youth in which i worked construction with many Angolan immigrants, and i can tell you these guys were some of the best people i ever met in my life. invited me in their homes for dinner and drinks, always happy and grateful for the opportunity they had to make a better life for themselves and their families

  • @stevensmith2078
    @stevensmith2078 Před rokem +345

    On my first trip to Angola in the mid 2000s, managers from the company I visited mentioned that an apartment for six people could cost $100,000. I thought that was expensive to buy when prices in Eastern Europe were so much cheaper. I then found out that the price was MONTHLY RENT. Given the paucity of hotel rooms at the time, which went for $500 a night, it made sense. Wow!

    • @MaxThomas79
      @MaxThomas79 Před rokem +14

      @@Alia-bo9vw what are you even taking about?

    • @Sleepyhead101
      @Sleepyhead101 Před rokem +72

      $100,000 monthly rent?
      Hong Kong: finally a worthy opponent, our battle will be legendary!

    • @nazbmn242
      @nazbmn242 Před rokem +3

      How much did you get paid considering these mad prices?

    • @redwolfexr
      @redwolfexr Před rokem +20

      @@nazbmn242 The way it works is your expat "package" includes things like lodging. The extreme prices were partially how the multinationals were paying the landowners off. You never "see" the bill.
      It also usually includes a car service too. Nobody hires American's unless they have to on the international market -- our taxing of foreign income and reporting requirements for foreign banks makes it too big of a PITA to hire us.

    • @Yweile
      @Yweile Před rokem +1

      i can say the same for the feds.. make one about the feds cause what the feds and government got line up gor you yu guys here will burn your pockets nd mental..

  • @ygorsardinha5521
    @ygorsardinha5521 Před 10 dny

    That was remarkably spot on,great work on this piece

  • @realcoy2115
    @realcoy2115 Před rokem +12

    Awesome explanation and very well edited! I yelled "WHAT?!" so many times in regards to the choices they made to collect their wealth.

  • @mlisb0n
    @mlisb0n Před rokem +326

    I believe that many won’t get how precise and unbiased this video is. Well done

    • @josekiabalaantonio602
      @josekiabalaantonio602 Před rokem +3

      Of course...

    • @Yweile
      @Yweile Před rokem +3

      i can say the same for the feds.. make one about the feds cause what the feds and government got line up gor you yu guys here will burn your pockets nd mental..

    • @MarcoAntonio-xd1ej
      @MarcoAntonio-xd1ej Před rokem +9

      Ehh... Can't cope with the unbiased part, don't think that such thing exists

    • @Ms9ja4lyfe
      @Ms9ja4lyfe Před rokem

      @@josekiabalaantonio602 qq

    • @BlueBookMen1000
      @BlueBookMen1000 Před 6 měsíci +1

      The video doesn't mention the atrocities of UNITA, which was back by Apartheid South Africa, which kept the war going and completely destroyed the country and planted land mines every where as a result displaced millions of people. The war could have ended in 1998, after the fighting had stopped. There was an election, everyone was campaigning peacefully, but because neither candidate got 50% of the vote, there was supposed to be a run off election. Power Hungry Savimbi didn't like run off elections and was afraid he was going to lose, so he abandoned his election bid, and instead decided to continue his war campaign, killing millions' more villagers in the country side until he died in a shoot out with Government forces in 2002. Then after all those atrocities committed by UNITA, they expected the Angolan people to elect them to run the country. Very strange. There is a reason why UNITA keeps loosing elections. People remember what they did.

  • @EstebanCastle
    @EstebanCastle Před rokem +31

    I like how he hooks in the old wendover fans with some airplane facts at the start of the video, before diving into a country report that taught me more than a semester in college.

  • @demosthenesflorival6555
    @demosthenesflorival6555 Před rokem +2

    Great content! Thank you.

  • @JamesofQPR
    @JamesofQPR Před rokem +1

    So interesting and educational Thank you!

  • @kildareire
    @kildareire Před rokem +49

    Well done on the shout out from John Oliver's (HBO) 'Last Week Tonight.' That was the first time i've ever seen legacy media quote a CZcamsr, where the piece wasn't actually about the CZcamsr (ie Pewdiepie). Well done team!

    • @Mazortan
      @Mazortan Před rokem +8

      Stop revering late night funny men

    • @edwardtan1354
      @edwardtan1354 Před rokem

      @@Mazortan but that late night funny man is Zazu 2.0

  • @richteffekt
    @richteffekt Před rokem +48

    Very good stuff, once more. Thank you. As for the image chops and jumps: when working with interlaced images with differing framrates: convert interlaced- to progressive footage in the framrate it was recorded in, do it in a separate project (make sure field order and fps are as in the original or at least visually make sense when importing).
    Then, import into your project; making sure the original frame rate remains assigned, so conversion happens in your final compilation sequence. Only the occasional single frame stop or drop will remain, being hardly if at all visible.

  • @keren5272
    @keren5272 Před rokem +5

    This video is so information. I'm Angolan living in South Africa so I don't know enough about our history. Most of the history I know is South African because I went to school here so it's nice to learn about my own countries history.

  • @J.C...
    @J.C... Před rokem +1

    Whoa. My dad worked in Luanda, he worked in Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria, too. All doing oil/gas industry stuff. All between 2002 and 2014

  • @401ak5
    @401ak5 Před rokem +56

    I truly think this channel is my favorite now, over and above the history, gaming, music, and intellectual focused channels I could typically be found watching... it's just that damn good! Sam is just out here, killing it, every episode..... This is a Sam channel, right?
    Keep up the good work, sir! You, and what you do, is very much appreciated!!!!

  • @richard1701able
    @richard1701able Před rokem +112

    Congratulations on getting on Last Week Tonight. I hope you've got new subscribers because of it.

    • @MalcadorTheSigilite
      @MalcadorTheSigilite Před rokem +1

      What's the context of the Last week tonight video?

    • @bbd121
      @bbd121 Před rokem +1

      Wait, which episode is that? What was the topic?

    • @jord839
      @jord839 Před rokem +7

      @@MalcadorTheSigilite It's part of the video he had about Carbon Offshoots being meaningless, specifically how a forest "set aside for Carbon offshoots" was actually owned by a preserve for decades and the company was lying out their ass.

    • @richard1701able
      @richard1701able Před rokem +2

      @@bbd121 the lastest one about Carbon Offsets.

    • @mefisto05s.20
      @mefisto05s.20 Před rokem

      That's not an achievement lol. Lwt guys are sellouts, bitches doing bidding of highest bidder.

  • @shotimemillionaire
    @shotimemillionaire Před rokem

    Great coverage of Angola!

  • @darkketchup8883
    @darkketchup8883 Před rokem +3

    i wish and pray.. angola will grow and recover in peace.. and all
    its people will benefit from its earth blessing of natural resources..
    love from
    the philippines

  • @rafaelpani100
    @rafaelpani100 Před rokem +205

    Is there any way you could make a similar video about sao paulo? The sheer amount of inequality that is present in that city is unprecedented. You could go from luxury and opulence above most European capitals to poverty and violence comparable to war zones in the blink of an eye. I think it would make a very interesting video, either about rio de janeiro or sao paulo.

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Před rokem +30

      Its not unprecedented, though. Amazingly, even São Paulo and its impressive inequality is nothing compared to many metropolis in other third world countries

    • @ArlindoBuriti
      @ArlindoBuriti Před rokem

      yes, brazil is just rio de janeiro or são paulo... dont do about fortaleza... dont do about salvador, dont do about gramado... do about a fucking dump like this two cities.
      what there is to say? you dont have high pay jobs for everyone because we have high taxes and anti-bussiness policies created by fucking socialists, there... it makes me mad that people like you even exist and there only so much you can do about a city.
      inequality, that is not the goverment job to fix it, in brazil the goverment needs to get the fuck out of the way,open the markets, lower taxes, turn all this fucking state bussiness into private ones and fucking fire or fuck everysingle high pay public servent and give that money to public servents that do the job at the base of all things, the real elite of this country.
      dont do about rio de janeiro or são paulo, do about minas gerais or something more interesting not this places.

    • @santiagorf77
      @santiagorf77 Před rokem +34

      @@FOLIPE Brazil is the most unequal country in the most unequal continent, Latin America. You can find world class universities, Ferraris, and the largest shantytown in the world in just one city, Sao Paulo

    • @john_smith_john
      @john_smith_john Před rokem +7

      the only video sao paulo deserves is a video of its demolition

    • @jvictormacedo6624
      @jvictormacedo6624 Před rokem +15

      @@santiagorf77 Brazil isn't the most unequal country in the world nor Latin America. Brazil isn't the land of opportunity as the US, neither has the same quality of life as the countries in the west of Europe, but it is much better than Africa, Asia, and even most countries of eastern Europe. If you really want to see inequality look at Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and China.

  • @DanielPizarro184
    @DanielPizarro184 Před rokem +69

    Im so happy you spoke about Angola, the wealth that the 0.5% hold is way too high, I can prove this video is also very much right as I am Angolan myself. keep up the good work :)

    • @cinnamonstar808
      @cinnamonstar808 Před rokem

      White Supremacy takes no Ls
      The reason why they do not like ​👌🏽💅🏾​​💄Ms Dos Santos is simple 1 reason. SHE MADE Portugal Angola's 🇦🇴 newest colony.
      if Angolans pull out their money out of Portugal banks ..the economy fill fail overnight
      THE SAME FAITH is for France w/ African countries supporting the. The same way for London with Nigerians hold up their economy
      ==================== at the end of the day " CORRUPTION MONEY do not stay in African banks ========================
      they have no moral grounds when they accept a thief items. he has no words for allthe European banks or the Americans from Texas going to live off Angola's future. They too are taking food from the poor Angola.
      White supremacy takes no Ls. = its ok for them to steal and plunder. its ok for them to be number #1 but is angry at ALL others for improving their country.
      CHINA made their country great..from dirt poverty and they are pissed off
      AFRICA is the future = and they are upset about it.

    • @MagicMike_101
      @MagicMike_101 Před rokem

      2022. No one needs to be in a place to know a place.

    • @DanielPizarro184
      @DanielPizarro184 Před rokem +4

      @@MagicMike_101 you’d be surprised

    • @MagicMike_101
      @MagicMike_101 Před rokem

      @@DanielPizarro184 I'd not. Did you see anything change? Just words on the internet, not a reality of people's lives getting better.

    • @manueldesousa5054
      @manueldesousa5054 Před rokem +4

      Desejo-te a ti e a todo o povo Angolano muita sorte!
      Um dia toda essa gente cruel que vos explora pagará pelos seus crimes.

  • @jandombambara
    @jandombambara Před rokem +4

    You should do 1 on Zambia aswel. Honest brutal truth right there!!

  • @simwyck
    @simwyck Před rokem

    Thank you. Very nice overview of the recent history of this beautiful African country. I hope the future will favour all its inhabitants.

  • @CivBase
    @CivBase Před rokem +136

    That last line was a little weird. "If the people can accurately predict which candidate will stick to their word - which candidate will find a path to turn natural wealth into human wealth - then all is not lost for Angola. It still has a chance at breaking the resource curse." The line implies that one - and only one - of those candidates will absolutely do just that. For all we know, both will. Or more likely, neither will.
    This feels like the perfect opportunity to point to CGP Grey's wonderful "Rules for Rulers" video where he elegantly describes the forces that make corruption inevitable. Corruption is simply a tool for acquiring the keys to power, something a ruler needs no matter how honorable their intentions. If Angola's government is going to reform to better serve its people, that will almost certainly be because external players who benefit from it doing so have become more important keys to power. A well-intentioned leader is important, but destined to fail unless those keys to power change to help align his goals with his power base. The fact that this election is happening at all is a good sign, though.

    • @AshrakAhmed
      @AshrakAhmed Před rokem +10

      I would like to remind you tha Bangladesh seems to have election every 4 years but in last 3 terms the same party has won uncontested while rest of opposition boycott election.
      Another resource based (lot of natural gas) "democracy" which never seem get out of "get rich quick" skims.

    • @CivBase
      @CivBase Před rokem +6

      @@AshrakAhmed Yeah, an election is a good sign but definitely not a guarantee that the people's wellbeing has become important for the keys to power.

    • @lululegende1407
      @lululegende1407 Před rokem +4

      @@CivBase hello my jake brethren

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Před rokem

      @@AshrakAhmed why not take the hungarian path and create an all encompassing anti-establishment coalition intended to take power away from the ruling party?

    • @edwardtan1354
      @edwardtan1354 Před rokem +3

      @@jonathanodude6660 because likewise it will still devolve to who holds the keys in power

  • @Learn_Something_New
    @Learn_Something_New Před rokem +389

    Congratulations on getting featured on LWT with John Oliver's Carbon Offset episode!
    It's sad that the world celebrates the growing net worth of the richest in a poor nation. Celebrating the first billionaire is not what the world should aspire to. Instead, we should look at the opportunities for the poorest to escape poverty as good metric for improvement.

    • @ypey1
      @ypey1 Před rokem +12

      Also dont focus on the poorest, it will drag you down. Its the middle class that defines a nation!

    • @maarten1115
      @maarten1115 Před rokem +41

      @@ypey1 Unless you don't have a middle class.

    • @mefisto05s.20
      @mefisto05s.20 Před rokem

      Lol, you watch lwt? And on top of that you think getting featured on it is an achievement? Guys are lwt are terrorist supporting hypocrites, they aren't intrested in truth but rather whoever pays most

    • @mefisto05s.20
      @mefisto05s.20 Před rokem +6

      There is nothing wrong btw in celebrating rich in poor countries, what matters is how they got rich. Blanket hating rich mentality shows how tarded someone is.

    • @popopop984
      @popopop984 Před rokem +29

      @@mefisto05s.20 Nice straw man, no one hates all rich people, people just immediately question large income or wealth gaps, before watching the horror show of what lot’s of rich people do to be rich in the first place. It’s a process, not a knee-jerk reaction.

  • @yukilabrador7219
    @yukilabrador7219 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I was in Luanda in 1996-97, when I worked for the UN in Angola (mission Unavem-3). Quite a lot has changed. 😂

  • @andrewmeece2064
    @andrewmeece2064 Před rokem

    This is so interesting well done video.

  • @AngDevigne
    @AngDevigne Před rokem +58

    Congratulations on having your video featured on John Oliver!!!
    This one was amazing as always. Happy to see you educating the world and keeping us incredibly entertained while you do it.

  • @guilhermetavares4705
    @guilhermetavares4705 Před rokem +203

    As a Brazilian, I am glad to see a video like this. Brazil and Angola share not only the language, but also problems such as social inequality and corruption. Unfortunately, the situation for Angolans seems much worse.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před rokem

      Angola has one-party Marxist rule. Brazil doesn't.

    • @bobweiram6321
      @bobweiram6321 Před rokem

      Brazil's corruption has been around much longer with no end in sight.

    • @bobweiram6321
      @bobweiram6321 Před rokem +1

      @@cabidela Bull. The elite in Brazil are far worse! They live behind heavily fortified compounds and horde all the money to themselves. They use the police and military to keep its citizens from rebelling. It's what America is becoming.

    • @jestinmathew4503
      @jestinmathew4503 Před rokem +2

      Good luck to you guys

    • @CoolKid-qk7tl
      @CoolKid-qk7tl Před rokem +13

      And the same source: Portugal

  • @voiceluckan
    @voiceluckan Před rokem +2

    My house was directly under the approach path of one of the airport’s (4 de Fevereiro) runways , and every week I saw that very same plane overfly , turns out that was the story behind it.

  • @princefuzzy8144
    @princefuzzy8144 Před rokem

    You got a new subscriber!

  • @capossito
    @capossito Před rokem +52

    As an Angolan and long time subscriber thank you. You are on point, your research was well made. Yes unfortunately corruption is the evil of any society and it has been deeply integrated in ours and will take some time to turn the tide.

    • @ozeppeo
      @ozeppeo Před rokem +2

      Are there any chances to turn the tide? What do you think?

    • @EduardoMusasa
      @EduardoMusasa Před rokem

      Que pensa do governo Lourenço?

    • @maaz322
      @maaz322 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ozeppeo Not with a democracy. When you see a recurring problem, one of the variables is the issue. Why is the Arabian Peninsula more successful? Probably because they're all authoritarian regimes. Democracy in Africa is all about balancing economic growth and growing your personal wealth before your term ends. An absolutist, on the other hand, is more concerned about his people, otherwise he cannot assure his hold on the nation in the long-term. One of the first things Sheikh Zayed did with oil money was boost education among Bedouins. Educating children is a long-term investment that bears fruition perhaps not even in the Emir's reign, but this heirs who will witness a native, educated middle class, perhaps. Why would a president in Africa do that? Democracy is just the perfect rigging game for western corporations. You lobby for the candidate who benefits your corporate interests the most and the uneducated population is nonethewiser towards the propaganda, heck, illiteracy is actually a perk for the president's campaign.
      Every sovereign European country once had their authoritarian leader that laid the foundation for their country, why is that development stage deprived for the developing world? Being the 21st century makes no difference if they're still weaving baskets and do not read or write.

  • @billmix
    @billmix Před rokem +9

    I used to take that very flight every 28 days. I didn't stay in Luanda though. I took another flight to Cabinda and stayed at a camp called Molongo (sp). Kind of miss those days as I made absolutely killer money and only worked 6 months a year.

    • @kennarajora6532
      @kennarajora6532 Před rokem

      how do I get that job?

    • @billmix
      @billmix Před rokem +3

      @@kennarajora6532 Work in Oil & Gas is the only way. I was over there training the locals how to laser scan (aka LiDAR) in 2014 to 2016. It was a very cool gig. It did suck being gone for a whole month at a time but the equal amount at home made it worth it. It isnt as nice over there any more. The work has dryied up for the most part and everyone I knew over there have moved on. The Houston Express flight is no more and there are other US airlines that fly over there. Only reason the HE flight existed in the first place was due to the government. They would not allow any US airlines to land there when flying direct from the US. Only way to get a direct flight was to take the HE flight. Only way to get a seat was to work in O&G. I was a huge money grab since the gov was the ones that contracted the flight and thus received the revenue. The people of Angola are super nice and I had nothing but nice memories from my time over there.

    • @qwerty1994ize
      @qwerty1994ize Před rokem

      I’m trying to get into trading the physical Oil & Gas commodity

  • @anonviewerciv
    @anonviewerciv Před rokem +3

    Short answer: oil. (7:30)
    3:22 War for independence. [muffled "Death to the MPLA!" in the distance] (5:35)
    11:00 Not much trickle-down, but a lot of transfers. (16:10)
    20:10 Yeah, that one.

  • @biznessman4597
    @biznessman4597 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I was raised in Luanda, I lived in Talatona like 10 minutes from the HTCA hotel by car. People always acted impressed when I said I lived in talatona, I never knew why till I got older

  • @ykirank
    @ykirank Před rokem +3

    Amazing video. Today I learnt so much about this African country in 22min. Thank you for all the effort that your team put in. 👏

  • @gihont
    @gihont Před rokem +51

    Also, do not forget to mention the fact that 99.8% of the expats living there use the "Black Market" rate which usually is valued 3x higher than the official one. For perspective, 1 USD is equal to 426 AOA, With the black market rate, 1 USD could be valued over 1,000 AOA. This is great for the "rich" expats living there but terrible for the locals who get paid in their official rate prices. Even buying bread sometimes, is a luxury some cannot afford; despite being one of the cheapest things in the country. Therefore, the economic system in Angola is shambolic; it supports visitors but doesn't support the permanent inhabitants.

    • @guilhermesartorato93
      @guilhermesartorato93 Před rokem +1

      So if Wendover used the official exchange rate those stuff costs about 1/3 the mentioned price for foreigners actually. Which is still not cheap.
      I've seen that in my own country in the 80's and 90's during hyperinflation: "parallel" exchange rates over 5x, 6x, 8x the official one.

    • @hpatdh077
      @hpatdh077 Před rokem +2

      This sounds almost exactly like Argentina where the official rate is 1 dollar $163, but unofficial is $340 and rising each day, also with hyperinflation.

    • @guilhermesartorato93
      @guilhermesartorato93 Před rokem

      @@hpatdh077 Ha! I knew it! Does Argentinian press inform this unofficial-but-more-than-official exchange rate on the news too?

    • @hpatdh077
      @hpatdh077 Před rokem

      @@guilhermesartorato93 Only in some media because the authoritarian Kirchner regime could send you to jail.

    • @hockeygrrlmuse
      @hockeygrrlmuse Před měsícem

      That's something that struck me on the rewatch too - they talk about the Westerners living in the elite areas but not even much discussion about other elite Angolans aside from the Dos Santos siblings.

  • @j2248
    @j2248 Před rokem +14

    I read an article that proposed that the reason Norway succeeded where others failed (in being a relatively poor country that discovered oil) was that even though Norway was poor when it discovered its oil reserves, its political institutions were strong and were not destroyed by corruption after the discovery of oil. Sadly, it seems that many african countries that discovered oil reserves did not already have strong political institutions in place to deal with the wealth that oil brings and protect themselves from potential corruption.

    • @EduardoMusasa
      @EduardoMusasa Před rokem +2

      One has to take into account colonialism. Impossible to compare Norway and the African countries

    • @j2248
      @j2248 Před rokem +1

      @@EduardoMusasa fair enough but there are oil rich nations in the middle east which were colonised but are now very wealthy

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před rokem

      @@EduardoMusasa
      Not really. Singapore was colonized. The Gulf was colonized. There are 10 countries that never got colonized, but only 3 of them are prosperous. The other 7 are just middling at best.

    • @chendaforest
      @chendaforest Před 11 měsíci +2

      Australia is another example of a resource rich and successful country. But it was colonised and settled by Britons who brought the Protestant work ethic and Westminster system of government. Success was ensured.

    • @tommyshanks4198
      @tommyshanks4198 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@EduardoMusasanot sure you can blame colonialism for this over Cold War politics. Most of my family thought the country was headed towards becoming an independent multiparty multiracial democracy in '72, '73. Then cold war politics fueled a war that made the previous wars look like a sunday picnic.
      You had the bizarre situation of the White House ok'ing American oil giants to exploit the oil there, with the royalty $$$ they paid to Luanda being used to pay Cuba for their troops, who in turn were fighting UNITA, also paid by $$$ from the White House. Bidding wars between the global powers made every 2bit warlord there into a player. That more than anything is what made corruption endemic.
      I sometime troll old South African or Cuban vets, asking them what were they fighting for anyways? Just sad when I think about all those meaningless deaths

  • @Donovaan
    @Donovaan Před rokem +2

    Good video! But Angola is definitely not tiny (13:35). It's almost three times as large as California.

  • @NommyNommyNomNom
    @NommyNommyNomNom Před rokem +8

    Another fascinating video about something I wouldn't have ever discovered on my own. Thank you for your continuing efforts

  • @ee214verilogtutorial2
    @ee214verilogtutorial2 Před rokem +9

    3:44 Panhard EBR, that’s one of the best tanks for its class
    6:02 Ratel APC, not sure how good it is in actual combat
    6:39 Soviet MTLB, maybe?

  • @borja1000
    @borja1000 Před rokem +2

    Great vid! And you only scratched the surface of the proportion of this unfornate story of rich country, with a people who endured so much but run by an unbeliavebly cruel cleptocracy. I've met angolans who said things were better there as a colony.
    The level of greed of the Dos Santos and what it led them to do to their people in just uncompreehensible.

  • @jaypatwardhan4740
    @jaypatwardhan4740 Před 8 měsíci +6

    If one visits Angola, it does not look like an African country with Africans. The number of EU-immigrants I saw there was unbelievable. Goes to say, if there are any resources, the EU-immigrant will be the first one to show up.

  • @Mooseshagger1
    @Mooseshagger1 Před rokem +21

    Loved the experience of working there. Angolans are wonderful people too. So friendly.

  • @pedrocoentro2009
    @pedrocoentro2009 Před rokem +5

    My family came to Portugal in the 1975 airlift. I hope the new leadership isn´t just a change of people on top. Thank you for sharing.

  • @doodoopoopoo2508
    @doodoopoopoo2508 Před rokem +3

    Angola has one of the coolest flags ngl, red and yellow are one of the best color combinations

  • @ruisantos9332
    @ruisantos9332 Před rokem +2

    I lived in Angola from 1 to 10 years of age. From 1966 to 1975. I still dream with that country. Good memories of my childhood..I loved that native people. VIVA ANGOLA.

  • @crabby7668
    @crabby7668 Před rokem +47

    It looks a lot nicer than when I was there in the 80s. It was a bit of a hole then, still with a slow war going on in the south. Little food available and infrastructure so poor that oil workers would not use the lift in their tower block a week before leave, in case it broke down and trapped them.
    Luanda looked like it had been a nice place once, but was full of Cubans and Russians as well as the American oil companies. There were some interesting events with the Russian "trawlers" hanging around just offshore an American oil base and retransmitting all of the American walky talky traffic back over loud speakers to wind them up.
    On another occasion luanda Airport was closed for the departure of the Portuguese prime minister, so our helicopter could not depart. So the crew of a Russian airforce executive jet came over and started chatting to the French pilot who showed them around. They reciprocated by showing us around the inside of their aircraft.. Not bad for still being in the middle of the cold War!!

  • @laurens740
    @laurens740 Před rokem +20

    One of my closer friends was adopted from Luanda, very interesting to get a glimpse into what their childhood might’ve been like

    • @Alia-bo9vw
      @Alia-bo9vw Před rokem

      hi m scherer... recently i seen an online game and the name is sparc ,we can earn reward even u lose

  • @aGr3atD4y
    @aGr3atD4y Před 5 měsíci

    great video!

  • @augustineshako1540
    @augustineshako1540 Před rokem +4

    I'm from Namibia and it seems like we've struck oil in the recent months, really worried that it's a bad thing

  • @ScottyPhilbin
    @ScottyPhilbin Před rokem +9

    I actually lived in luanda during highschool. This is extremely accurate good video!

  • @joe_lubinda
    @joe_lubinda Před rokem +7

    I have friends from Talatona, some live in UK. My jaw dropped when I found out one of them has a dad who owns a private jet, his name is c. kapose.

  • @claussenmusic
    @claussenmusic Před 7 měsíci

    Drinking game idea: take a shot every time Wendover or Real Life Lore pronounce a word like a person who has never heard that word said aloud

  • @accordblaze
    @accordblaze Před rokem

    1:30 imagine living in one of those houses. Like living in the Truman show lol.

  • @RobinClaassen
    @RobinClaassen Před rokem +21

    VIDEO IDEA: Since you're a big infrastructure guy, I'd love to see your take on the European Commission's July proposal that Finland and the Baltic countries switch their rail gauges from the 1,520 mm Russian Gauge to the 1,435 mm Standard Gauge: What the difficulties and benefits will be from the switch, and if and when it might happen.
    Apparently Ukraine also plans to do so, but they don't see to have a timeline to do so, even one dependent on when the war ends. I read that in Ukraine alone, it's estimated that the switch will cost at least 100 billion USD, mostly because. it will require the replacement of most of the the country's rolling stock. (The train cars/engines themselves are wider than allowed on most European lines, so just replacing the bogies would not be enough for them to be allowed to travel outside Ukraine.)
    Apparently the European Commission proposal was in large part motivated by the difficulties experienced by Ukraine when it tried to export its grain by rail while the port of Odessa was closed. I would assume that another motivation was making it harder for a future hypothetical invading Russia to supply its troops, and easier for the free world to supply their defending forces in the invaded country.

  • @xanpenguin754
    @xanpenguin754 Před rokem +74

    Wow this is an amazing video. I must say the sheer level of detail you poor
    into all your videos is just amazing. I’ve been watching you for years and I don’t think I’ve ever seen a video of yours that’s not been engaging and well researched.
    Anyway hope your day stays great. Have a good one mate.

  • @OMProductions81
    @OMProductions81 Před rokem

    Well done. Thank you.

  • @hevnervals
    @hevnervals Před 8 měsíci +1

    Video is wrong, the resource curse has nothing to do with corruption or cronyism. It's about allocating too much labour and capital in a small sector, which prohibits diversification. As for oil, it also includes currency overvaluation (Dutch disease) which makes other export industries less competitive on the global market.

  • @Matt-YT
    @Matt-YT Před rokem +41

    When I worked for an oil company with a large presence in Angola, graduates were earning 3x more than compared to their Houston counterparts and also got an apartment for $10k a month. Of course these positions were only open to sons and daughters of local politicians

    • @gihont
      @gihont Před rokem +2

      Recognize the name LIS?

    • @qwerty1994ize
      @qwerty1994ize Před rokem

      What did you do when you worked in the oil company?

    • @Matt-YT
      @Matt-YT Před rokem +1

      @@qwerty1994ize pipeline engineer

  • @raptexalicious866
    @raptexalicious866 Před rokem +8

    The Black Ops 2 campaign taught me all about Angolan history. Zavimbi will forever be remembered.

  • @HappyToursAfrica
    @HappyToursAfrica Před 3 měsíci +1

    Happy Tours Africa is following you from UGANDA. Enjoy Angola

  • @MrKamran4685
    @MrKamran4685 Před rokem

    Great stuff.

  • @eloiselovesdevi
    @eloiselovesdevi Před rokem +49

    Angola is such a rich country in natural resources, imagine if it were well administered rather than pocketed by few! I feel for Angola and many other countries like it where the wealth gets grabbed by those in power while the people suffer in poverty!😥

    • @rockwithyou2006
      @rockwithyou2006 Před rokem +5

      thats what happens in a dictatorship

    • @simonmanley6257
      @simonmanley6257 Před rokem +1

      are you going to pretend that you are not aware that outside powers and the oil companies pick these dictators and install them in these countries to do their bidding

    • @mosesmwima4769
      @mosesmwima4769 Před rokem

      Grabbed by agents of foreign powers

    • @broshake547
      @broshake547 Před rokem

      They wealth are stolen by American and Chinese Company not nercerally Angolan in power

    • @sakhu8945
      @sakhu8945 Před rokem +1

      Your people are the ones ultimately behind it though....

  • @aswmdude24
    @aswmdude24 Před rokem +23

    Not even 20 seconds in and he's mentioned a 747

    • @granjuas
      @granjuas Před rokem

      😆😆😆 I love the fact that all research starts with an airplane.

    • @cameron856
      @cameron856 Před rokem +4

      At least we will know when somethings wrong, no mention of an aircraft 🥲

    • @jefflewis4
      @jefflewis4 Před rokem

      He does good work, we can live with his plane fetish.

  • @loretagurakuqi6950
    @loretagurakuqi6950 Před rokem +55

    Awesome! your potential seems limitless. I'm fascinated with investing but being a single mother and juggling all these things are quite difficult. How best can I start and what sector to engage in?

    • @loretagurakuqi6950
      @loretagurakuqi6950 Před rokem

      @Bryan wow! do you think you can give me some advice on how to invest in a healthy way as you are doing? Please

    • @loretagurakuqi6950
      @loretagurakuqi6950 Před rokem

      @Bryan Thanks for sharing, just looked up
      on google and I'm super impressed with her credentials. I dropped a massage on her webpage and hope she replies soon.

    • @Benjaminmac
      @Benjaminmac Před rokem

      Investing in cryptomarket with the aid of a professional or experienced trader is a very good passive streams of income.

    • @patsnew8422
      @patsnew8422 Před rokem

      She is the best and has really made a good name for herself and i can Vouch for Ms Melisa Pamela Perez a certified ßroker with FINRA approved

    • @christopher8633
      @christopher8633 Před rokem

      A lot of investors have restrained from the market because of the volatile and sudden crash in the market. But I’ve learnt to understand that trading is quite different from just hodling. There are short sell for bearish and long sell for bullish

  • @rolandoacosta6982
    @rolandoacosta6982 Před rokem

    very interesting Thank you.

  • @gihont
    @gihont Před rokem +43

    Lived there for 5 years. The difference between the rich and the poor is impossible to describe. Beautiful country that is run by corrupt people. However, this is the case for most of Africa to be honest.

    • @Churros1616
      @Churros1616 Před rokem

      Most of Europe too to be honest.

    • @seanbryan1739
      @seanbryan1739 Před rokem

      @@Churros1616 what’s the average salary in Europe compare to an African? Over 10 times more. Don’t be stupid

    • @kap1526
      @kap1526 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@Churros1616not on same level. But europe is corrupt through and through

    • @r.mariano8118
      @r.mariano8118 Před 27 dny

      @@Churros1616not comparable.

  • @TheHylianBatman
    @TheHylianBatman Před rokem +94

    I'm shocked that Portugal was in political turmoil for multiple decades, and I've never heard of it. For anyone wanting to read more about it, it's the Carnation Revolution.
    Congratulations on the appearance on Last Week Tonight.
    A good video. An excellent job at highlighting consistent problems.

    • @eobardthawne324
      @eobardthawne324 Před rokem +6

      Why are you shocked that you’ve never heard about it? There’s plenty of things that happen that you’ve never heard about.

    • @TheHylianBatman
      @TheHylianBatman Před rokem +15

      @@eobardthawne324 Yes, but I like history a lot, and I feel like a revolution and military dictatorship in Portugal that lasted a good chunk of the 20th Century would've been something I encountered in my random readings by now.

    • @eobardthawne324
      @eobardthawne324 Před rokem +5

      @@TheHylianBatman Portugal isn't a country that hits the news very often so you probably wouldn't have came across it unless you were specifically looking at Portugal.

    • @TheHylianBatman
      @TheHylianBatman Před rokem +4

      @@eobardthawne324 Very true, very true.
      And regrettably, I've never deep-dived into Portugal.

    • @Miguell996
      @Miguell996 Před rokem +23

      Yup... Our king was killed in the early XX century, we then had a republic, were involved in the 1st World War and after that had a military coup in 1926. Salazar was invited to overview the finances in 1928, under the condition of having big veto powers and decisions regarding taxes and fiscal laws. In 1932 he was elected to the equivalent of a today's Prime Minister and in 1933 changed the constitution and became the dictator for almost 40 years. We stayed "neutral" during WW2 and managed to not come under fire in the wake of WW2 regarding our imperialistic stance, because Salazar alleged that our colonies should be viewed as an extention of our mainland Portuguese borders. From 1961 to 1974 we fought in the Colonial Wars and some of the Captains of those wars later founded the movement that would overthrow the dictatorship. Salazar died in 1970, two years after an accident where he fell from a chair. The brain injury got so bad that for those two years, he was led to believe by his closest people that he was still in charge and would still sign new laws and attend meetings (it's a wild story).
      April 25th of 1974, the MFA (Armed Forces Movement) overthrew the regime and for a year there were riots, terrorist attacks and general uneasiness between the supporters of the newer, socialist-styled regime, the ones who were in favor of the old dictatorship and even within the higher positions of the MFA. Things got messy up until November 25th 1975, when two factions of the MFA (the "radicals" , who wanted a more communist-oriented country and the "moderates", that well... Were more moderate in comparisson) clashed and the moderates managed to subdue the other movement. To mention that between 1974 and the new Constitution of 1976, the US was watching the situation very closely, and there were even plans of a possible intervention (via coup or invasion) should the communist faction of the MFA come to power.
      This is a veryyyy abreviated summary of the history of Portugal in the 20th century... It's too much happening for so little (historical) time.

  • @behzodhasanov6810
    @behzodhasanov6810 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I have been to Luanda, I have visited some of these places, streets in 2018. This country has huge potential, lots of young people available for work. They have wide access to ocean as a cheap transport and yet they can't properly export their domestic produce because of the underdeveloped roads infrastructure, ports. The country suffers from insane levels of corruption. The "quick gain" mentality of the people who make their way to the top crippled the country's economy. The economy has never been diversified. The capital city doesn't have clean water. Even the hotel "Diamante" where we stayed didn't have clean tap water, we were afraid to take shower also because, the water was obviously right from the tropical rivers, uncleaned, untreated, it smelled. When I spoke to residents they confirmed that some buildings had clean water while most didn't. That was in the capital.
    Look at Dubai, Abu Dhabi - the UAE. They don't have any sources to get underground water or whatsoever and yet, they invested their oil money to put enough desalination plants to provide the entire cities with crisp clean, top quality drinking water for homes and even the farms. In the middle of the desert they are able to grow high quality vegetables and even some fruits.
    The guy who invited us to Angola was another wealthy guy who was also corrupt. He wasn't shy to show us what he got through forged tenders and bidding. He had around 50 different businesses majority of which were non-functional, only few of them were operating the rest were there for show off. Many of these we believed were officially bankrupt and he was happy if the government interfered and took the businesses back ( as he had already earned his dirty money).
    The country where I come from doesn't have access to sea or ocean which makes it difficult for our hard working people to sell domestic produce overseas because, land transport is very expensive and it takes days, sometimes months to move goods across borders.
    Angola is a beautiful country where best quality pineapple, papaya, banana and other tropical goods grow and yet don't make it international markets because of the incompetent transport structure.
    African's main problem is the greed, the quick gain mentality.

  • @domexdevlogs8566
    @domexdevlogs8566 Před rokem

    Could you make a video like this about the Kingdom of Eswatini?

  • @ElvynBliss
    @ElvynBliss Před rokem +5

    thank you for you coverage on Luanda. The lesson that GDP doesn't corralate whatsovever with HDI oder Quality of life, EVERYONE should take to heart!

  • @dansouthlondon9873
    @dansouthlondon9873 Před rokem +3

    Spot on video.
    Only thing I'd like to point out is that José in Portuguese is pronounced with a 'j' more like in English rather than Spanish where it's a 'h'.

  • @dbraymore
    @dbraymore Před 10 měsíci

    I did this run as a Maintenance Representative for World Airways around the turn of the century and I believe your information may be incorrect. The passengers were oil workers from rough necks to execs. No confusion, SONAIR. We were chartered ACMI, they lease the Aircraft with Crew, Maintenance and Insurance payed by World Airways. At the time this cost would have been 4-5k/hr. X14 hrs that would be about 60k, their other significant expense is fuel. About another 70k USD. ATLAS whom you referenced is an ACMI operator as well. We we’re operating an MD11, a 747-400 gets much more expensive to operate.

  • @nazariatorres8698
    @nazariatorres8698 Před rokem +18

    É pena NÃO haver tradução em português,,,é um assunto interessante

    • @topicvideosguy
      @topicvideosguy Před 11 měsíci

      We lost so much with the removal of community captions. I hope one day they'll realize how stupid they were and add it back in.

  • @pedromatias9437
    @pedromatias9437 Před rokem +9

    I love this channel. The narrator's voice, speed of talking and the content are on point. Thank you

  • @jorgeaateixeira
    @jorgeaateixeira Před rokem +53

    In case you’re interested, in Portuguese, the “J” in “José” is pronounced exactly like the “J” in “João”. Great video, as usual!
    Edit: Sorry I wasn’t clear. I was referring to the way “João” was pronounced in the video. My comment was directed at Sam (not that I expect him to read it).

    • @simon762321
      @simon762321 Před rokem +17

      please use another example, that seems the same to me.

    • @Walk_on_Part_In_a_War
      @Walk_on_Part_In_a_War Před rokem +21

      Not exactly a helpful comment for non-Portugese speakers!

    • @johnstevens3564
      @johnstevens3564 Před rokem +17

      The "J" in Portuguese is pronounced pretty much like the "J" in French, as in "je m'appelle". It's not that different from the English "J" either. So in doubt, just pronounce it like you would in English.
      What is absolutely wrong is to pronounce it like the Spanish "J", almost with an "R" sound. You are just doing an effort to end up with an even worse, mistaken pronunciation.

    • @johnstevens3564
      @johnstevens3564 Před rokem +15

      @@Walk_on_Part_In_a_War Compare "José" at 6:10 and "João" at 14:54
      The first one sounds very Spanish and wrong, the second is not perfect but is much more accurate.

    • @tisjester
      @tisjester Před rokem

      @@johnstevens3564 that was helpful thank you!

  • @aaronmeyers4845
    @aaronmeyers4845 Před 11 měsíci

    Ok this is the best channel ever made . You are a CZcams god

  • @Fahrenheit4051
    @Fahrenheit4051 Před rokem +3

    Very interesting video. FYI, in Portuguese, "José" is pronounced "Zhu-zay"