How Economics Explained Gets African History Wrong

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • Further Research Recommendations below.
    Check out the original video by Economics Explained here: • MIT Study Reveals Why ...
    "Why Is Africa Poor" by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson: economics.mit.edu/sites/defau...
    Book Recommendations:
    Austen, Ralph A. Trans-Saharan Africa in World History. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2010.
    Conrad, David C. Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay. Chelsea House Publishers, 2010.
    Ehret, Christopher. Civilizations of Africa: A history to 1800. Charlottesville: The University of Virginia Press, 2018.
    (This one is super long and a bit academic, but covers an extremely broad timeframe and area, and goes much further back than most history books on Africa.)
    Fauvelle , Francois-Xavier. The Golden Rhinoceros: Histories of the African Middle Ages. S.l.: Princeton University Press, 2021. (This book covers a lot of topics in African history over a pretty wide area, but isn't overwhelmingly long)
    Gomez, Michael A. African Dominion: A New History of Empire in Early and Medieval West Africa. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2019. (Very good book on Medieval Sahelian history)
    Parker, John, and David Adjaye. Great Kingdoms of Africa. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2023. (This book features articles written by different scholars on a variety of topics from across Africa, and like The Golden Rhinoceros it's not too long. Great place to get a taste of history from across the continent)
    Phillipson, David W. Foundations of an African Civilisation: Aksum and the Northern Horn, 1000 BC - AD 1300. Oxford: James Currey, 2012.
    Thornton, John K. A Cultural History of the Atlantic World, 1250-1820. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2012.
    Thornton, John. Africa and Africans in the making of the Atlantic World: 1400-1800. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2007. (Probably my favorite book an Atlantic Africa)
    The Cambridge History of Africa (Volumes 1-5 for Pre-Colonial History)
    African History-Focused Channel Recommendations:
    ‪@FromNothing‬
    ‪@hiddenhist‬
    ‪@Bamise‬
    ‪@hometeamhistory806‬
    ‪@Mrminibagel‬
    ‪@medievalafrica‬
    ‪@ronuspirit‬
    Video Recommendations from channels not specifically focused on African history:
    Mansa Musa and Islam in Africa: Crash Course World History #16:
    • Mansa Musa and Islam i...
    Int'l Commerce, Snorkeling Camels, and The Indian Ocean Trade: Crash Course World History #18:
    • Int'l Commerce, Snorke...
    Kongo: Central African Superpower - African Empires Ep. 5: • Kongo: Central African...
    What Wheelbarrows can teach us about World History: • What wheelbarrows can ...
    Brief History Of Africa Before Colonialism -- How did we get there?: • Brief History Of Afric...
    Medieval transport - the beginners' guide (this one isn't related to African history directly, but elaborates on some of the stuff I talked about regarding transportation in this video): • Medieval transport - t...
    My own videos on West African History:
    The Kingdom of Benin (Edo Empire) | West Africa's Longest Lasting State: • The Kingdom of Benin (...
    The Ghana Empire (Wagadu) - Africa's Land of Gold: • The Ghana Empire (Waga...
    Apparently my citations are too long to include in this description, so I'll put them in a pinned comment.
    Patreon: / somasacademy
    Twitter: / somas_academy
    BlueSky: bsky.app/profile/somasacademy...
    ArtStation: www.artstation.com/kalahsoma
    00:00 Intro
    00:55 Claim: The Sahara Isolated Sub-Saharan Africa
    01:25 Trans-Saharan Contact
    03:45 Nile Valley and Red Sea Trade
    04:10 The Horn and Arabia
    04:41 The Swahili Coast and Indian Ocean Trade
    05:26 Actual Possible Barriers in Africa
    06:11 Claim: Africans Never Developed Farming
    07:00 Independent Crop Domestication in Africa
    07:58 Introduced Crops in Africa
    08:07 Animal Agriculture in Africa
    08:52 Spread of Farming in Africa
    09:32 Hunter-Gatherer Populations
    10:54 MIT Study
    12:25 Claims About The Wheel
    13:50 Wheel Use in Sub-Saharan Africa
    14:14 Saharan Wheels
    14:51 Non-Wheeled Transport
    16:25 Reasons for the Decline of Wheeled Transport
    18:54 Conclusion + Source Recommendations

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @SomasAcademy
    @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +510

    UPDATE: Economics Explained replied! See their comment here: czcams.com/video/fndh89MP2iQ/video.html&lc=UgxZYqkFQQSXvlPnC5l4AaABAg&ab_channel=Soma%27sAcademy
    Citations:
    [1] McDougall, E. Ann. Review of Research in Saharan History, by James L. A. Webb Jr. The Journal of African History 39, no. 3 (1998): 467-80. www.jstor.org/stable/183363
    [2] Fenn, Thomas R. “Contacts Between West Africa and Roman North Africa: Archaeometallurgical Results from Kissi, Northeastern Burkina Faso.” Crossroads / Carrefour Sahel. Cultural and Technological Developments in First Millennium BC / AD West Africa. Développements Culturels Et Téchnologiques Pendant Le Premier Millénaire BC / AD Dans l'Afrique De l'Ouest, 2009.
    [3] Cooper, Julien. (2012). Reconsidering the Location of Yam. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 48. www.researchgate.net/publication/334208155_Reconsidering_the_Location_of_Yam
    [4] Singleton, Brent D. “African Bibliophiles: Books and Libraries in Medieval Timbuktu.” Libraries & Culture 39, no. 1 (2004): 1-12. www.jstor.org/stable/25549150.
    [5] Samuel, Isaac. “The Colonial Myth of ‘sub-Saharan Africa’ in Medieval Islamic Geography: The View from Egypt and Bornu.” The colonial myth of “Sub-Saharan Africa” in medieval Islamic geography: the view from Egypt and Bornu., February 11, 2024. www.africanhistoryextra.com/p/the-colonial-myth-of-sub-saharan?publication_id=448231&post_id=141551376&isFreemail=true&r=2rxwd9&L.
    [6] Levi, Janice R. “Beyond the Saharan Cloak: Uncovering Jewish Identity from Southern Morocco and throughout the Sahara.” Ufahamu: A Journal of African Studies 39, no. 2 (2016). doi.org/10.5070/f7392031104.
    [7] Cartwright, Mark. "Swahili Coast." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified April 01, 2019. www.worldhistory.org/Swahili_Coast/.
    [8] Haour, A., Moffett, A. Global Connections and Connected Communities in the African Past: Stories from Cowrie Shells. Afr Archaeol Rev 40, 545-553 (2023). doi.org/10.1007/s10437-023-09546-5
    [9] Glémin, Sylvain, and Thomas Bataillon. “A Comparative View of the Evolution of Grasses under Domestication.” New Phytologist 183, no. 2 (June 9, 2009): 273-90. doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.2009.02884.x. ;
    Tadele, E., Hibistu, T. Empirical review on the use dynamics and economics of teff in Ethiopia. Agric & Food Secur 10, 40 (2021). doi.org/10.1186/s40066-021-00329-2
    [10] Scarcelli, Nora, Philippe Cubry, Roland Akakpo, Anne-Céline Thuillet, Jude Obidiegwu, Mohamed N. Baco, Emmanuel Otoo, et al. “Yam Genomics Supports West Africa as a Major Cradle of Crop Domestication.” Science Advances 5, no. 5 (May 3, 2019). doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aaw1947. ; D’Andrea, A. Catherine, Amanda L. Logan, and Derek J. Watson. “Oil Palm and Prehistoric Subsistence in Tropical West Africa.” Journal of African Archaeology 4, no. 2 (2006): 195-222. www.jstor.org/stable/43135404.
    [11] Fuller, Dorian & Denham, Tim & Arroyo-Kalin, Manuel & Lucas, Leilani & Stevens, Chris & Qin, Ling & Allaby, Robin & Purugganan, Michael. (2014). Convergent evolution and parallelism in plant domestication revealed by an expanding archaeological record. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 111. 10.1073/pnas.1308937110.; News Staff. “Earliest Evidence of Domesticated Sorghum Discovered.” Sci.News: Breaking Science News, September 28, 2017. www.sci.news/archaeology/earliest-evidence-domesticated-sorghum-05271.html. ; Dunham, Will. Genome study reveals prehistoric Ethiopian origins of Coffee | Reuters. www.reuters.com/science/genome-study-reveals-prehistoric-ethiopian-origins-coffee-2024-04-16/.
    [12] Havinden, M. A. “The History of Crop Cultivation in West Africa: A Bibliographical Guide.” The Economic History Review 23, no. 3 (1970): 532-55. doi.org/10.2307/2594622. (Note: This is an older source, and its content is outdated; it discusses a debate between several hypotheses on the origins of African agriculture which has since been settled)
    [13] Soukopova, Jitka. “Prehistoric Colonization of the Central Sahara: Hunters versus Herders and the Evidence from the Rock Art.” Expression, 2020. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0002995.
    [14] Crombé, P., Aluwé, K., Boudin, M. et al. New evidence on the earliest domesticated animals and possible small-scale husbandry in Atlantic NW Europe. Sci Rep 10, 20083 (2020). doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-77002-4
    [15] Kimura, Birgitta, Fiona B. Marshall, Shanyuan Chen, Sónia Rosenbom, Patricia D. Moehlman, Noreen Tuross, Richard C. Sabin, et al. “Ancient DNA from Nubian and Somali Wild Ass Provides Insights into Donkey Ancestry and Domestication.” Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 278, no. 1702 (July 28, 2010): 50-57. doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.0708.
    [16] Sadr, Karim. “Livestock First Reached Southern Africa in Two Separate Events.” PloS one vol. 10,8 e0134215. 21 Aug. 2015, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0134215 ; Marshall, Fiona & Hildebrand, Elisabeth. (2002). Cattle Before Crops: The Beginnings of Food Production in Africa. Journal of World Prehistory. 16. 99-143. 10.1023/A:1019954903395.
    [17] Law, Robin. (1980). Wheeled transport in pre-colonial West Africa. Africa, 50(03), 249-262. doi:10.2307/1159117
    [18] Chandler, Graham. “Why Reinvent the Wheel?” AramcoWorld, 2017. www.aramcoworld.com/Articles/July-2017/Why-Reinvent-the-Wheel.
    [19] Samuel, Isaac. “Roads and Wheeled Transport in African History.” African History Extra, December 24, 2023. www.africanhistoryextra.com/p/roads-and-wheel-transport-in-africa? - Citation 10
    [20] Samuel, Isaac. “Roads and Wheeled Transport in African History.” African History Extra, December 24, 2023. www.africanhistoryextra.com/p/roads-and-wheel-transport-in-africa?. - Citation 17
    [21] Samuel, Isaac. “Textile Trade and Industry in the Kingdom of Kongo: 1483-1914.” African History Extra, July 16, 2023. www.africanhistoryextra.com/p/textile-trade-and-industry-in-the.

    • @AskiatheGreat64
      @AskiatheGreat64 Před měsícem

      This video reminds me when From Nothing made a response video to AlternativeHistory Hub a couple of years ago.

    • @AskiatheGreat64
      @AskiatheGreat64 Před měsícem +27

      From Nothing also made a similar response video to Alternative History Hub.

    • @Somebodyherefornow
      @Somebodyherefornow Před měsícem +3

      hmm are your sources not per claim? i'd reccomend doing tjat if you can

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +59

      ​@@Somebodyherefornow In the video I feature numbers in the top right corner to show which sources correspond to which claims. Some number include multiple sources in instances where I make multiple claims drawing from different sources in quick succession. I included only one citation of each source with the on-screen citation coming at the end of the part where I primarily drew from that source, rather than citing the same source repeatedly for each claim I drew from that source, because this is a CZcams video rather than a scholarly essay, and the formatting makes those types of citations more difficult to incorporate than in-text citations.

    • @Somebodyherefornow
      @Somebodyherefornow Před měsícem +12

      @@SomasAcademyi may be blind😂, sorry
      white on white text with black border...

  • @oussamoor
    @oussamoor Před měsícem +2845

    Common issue with any study or research about Africa is considering Africa as one entity

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +360

      Very true! Acemoglu and Robinson cite a few examples of African countries in their paper, and their analysis may very well be valid for these examples, but I think it's a huge mistake to regard any of them as representative of the whole continent. To make broad, overarching statements about a body made up of many individual countries, you must at the very least demonstrate that your claims hold true to a large portion of those countries (and ideally demonstrate it for ALL of them), including those that are physically seperated to ensure any trends you're establishing are actually continent-spanning rather than specific to a smaller region.

    • @DawnKing
      @DawnKing Před měsícem +18

      EXACTLY!

    • @ADM.II.
      @ADM.II. Před měsícem +5

      Correct!!!

    • @thequarterhalf
      @thequarterhalf Před měsícem +63

      @@SomasAcademy agreed.... we are home to more than a 1000 languages.... and most of them are still undocumented.....
      I do wish more poeple travelled to Africa to avoid the stereotypes.

    • @badfoody
      @badfoody Před měsícem +64

      it's a typical Americo Euro POV
      it's a blanket sense, I'm a Filipino and I was called not Asian because my name is Spanish

  • @fra604
    @fra604 Před měsícem +1383

    Sadly that youtube channel tends to make absurd mistakes. As a European, I noticed the same tendency when they speak about the EU. Full of bias, simplifications and plain mistakes

    • @Petey-se1lo
      @Petey-se1lo Před měsícem +153

      Good to know the misinformation is equal opportunity 😅😅

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Před měsícem +190

      As a European I've noticed that too. Seems to fail to understand that the EU is a trade union and not a second United States... Notified a lot of falsifies and simplifications. Many assumptions made that would only make sense if you view all of Europe (and not just the EU) as a single entity, which is daft. You can hate the EU, that's fine, but don't go around treating it like it's something it's not.

    • @falsevacuum4667
      @falsevacuum4667 Před měsícem +86

      @@Stettafire The EU is not just a trade union. Something like Asean or Mercosur would be more described like that. The EU is a political and economic union (and rapidly military union) with the structure of a confederation and a degree of supranational sovereignty. It is halfway to being a country, but yes it is far from the level of the US (though I will say it is more integrated than the first US constitution, the Articles of Confederation).

    • @hirocheeto7795
      @hirocheeto7795 Před měsícem +51

      @@falsevacuum4667 It's not really hard to be more binding than the Articles of Confederation, considering it said something like "united in common friendship" or the like. A parking ticket is more binding.

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro Před měsícem +2

      It's not economic union too. For last few years many policies are to be same which comes under political union​@@Stettafire

  • @LoudWaffle
    @LoudWaffle Před 15 dny +65

    "What is your source."
    >"Here is the one single source I used."
    "Okay I read it and it contradicts most of the things you said."
    >"🗿"

  • @X60Gamers
    @X60Gamers Před měsícem +1277

    as a person of african descent, thank you for dispelling all the myths even a five year old from senegal can debunk.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +144

      Thank you lol, these ideas are surprisingly and unfortunately common in the west. I hope this video helps to change that, so that we can move on from stuff everyone should know to the more interesting stories of African history that I've covered in my videos on Benin and Wagadu, and hope to cover many more of in the future.

    • @kevinxu3892
      @kevinxu3892 Před měsícem +50

      It’s a shame your voices are being overridden by nonsense when it’s told through a confident Anglo accent

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 Před měsícem +6

      @@kevinxu3892 Aussie accent :)

    • @TheControlBlue
      @TheControlBlue Před 28 dny

      Senegal is one of the most arrogant and yet poor and disfunctioning country of the coast. The country will fall in the next decade if it keeps going at current pace.
      They even have a scientist who believes Egyptians were related to Black Africans 😆

    • @tamiausten873
      @tamiausten873 Před 27 dny +8

      ​@@SomasAcademy thank you. I'm a history enthusiast: currently teach History in Nigeria and planning to start on my YT channel. I was surprised to hear that people thought the Sahara desert cut everything off: truly they are erasing the Trans Saharan Trade.

  • @topkwark
    @topkwark Před měsícem +611

    As the child of an African history professor, I can't really begin to express how much I appreciate that someone is taking the time to do this work. So, thank you!

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +58

      Oh my goodness, thank you so much, this really means a lot. I always try my best, and look forward to making more detailed African history videos in the future. I'm glad you enjoyed the video, and shoutout to your African history professor parent!

  • @youdontknowjoejo
    @youdontknowjoejo Před měsícem +641

    I’m glad your channel exists. As a Nigerian American I remember trying to find videos about African history back in the early 2010s and finding nothing but misinformation and Eurocentric propaganda about Africa. The west has a huge problem when it comes to understanding Africa and it shows. I remember having to correct a high school geography teacher, that Egypt isn’t the most populous country in Africa.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +113

      Thank you so much! I had similar issues back when I was first getting into African history; so much of the stuff you can find about African history on the internet, even today, is complete nonsense, whether Eurocentric propaganda, conspiracy theories, or simply myths repeated by people with no desire or ability to verify them. I am so glad to have found some of the channels and videos I recommend in the description, because they gave me the foundations to get really interested in African history, and eventually study West African history as a graduate student, which introduced me to a ton of academic sources that are unfortunately very inaccessible for most people! I want to make some of this information more accessible to people by covering it in future videos. I hope that in the near future African history will be at least as familiar in the US as Asian history, and that massive misconceptions like "Africans never developed agriculture" or "Africans were cut off from the rest of the old world until the 16th century" are as inconceivable as saying similar things about Asia (though this is probably gonna require some school curriculum changes, not just people on CZcams trying our best to share this information with people who never learned it in school lol).

    • @Nzambi237
      @Nzambi237 Před měsícem +11

      @@SomasAcademy THANK YOU

    • @mudra5114
      @mudra5114 Před měsícem

      ​@@SomasAcademyEurocentric propaganda is a myth.

    • @CantusTropus
      @CantusTropus Před 19 dny

      Western views on African history) tend to just be propaganda of one form or another (Wakanda Utopia from the Left, Stone Age Savages from the racists). Few people care about what it was actually like.

  • @georgekostaras
    @georgekostaras Před měsícem +723

    It's unfortunate that so many big channels are just clickbait machines

    • @Ironication
      @Ironication Před měsícem +70

      That's how they got big and stay that way: clickbaity thumbnails, neatly packaged and mass produced content. The audiovisual equivalent of a happy meal.

    • @gabrielladias420
      @gabrielladias420 Před měsícem +65

      It's not clickbait, it's imperial core propaganda. It's providing a bunch of nonsense arguments to avoid engaging with the history of european imperialism and extractivism

    • @marchantofcabbage3517
      @marchantofcabbage3517 Před měsícem +28

      Most of them are biased. Just look at how all the big channels cover the Genocide in Gaza

    • @Vhlathanosh
      @Vhlathanosh Před měsícem +7

      @@marchantofcabbage3517 oof! That they never want to get into. Mention the Balfour declaration and they pretend it's not a thing.

    • @VeteranVandal
      @VeteranVandal Před 29 dny +9

      ​@@gabrielladias420not only European even. American too. Don't wait for EE to ever criticize anything in capitalism. The guy is a straight up propagandist that poses as centrist.

  • @DinoCism
    @DinoCism Před měsícem +1335

    The wheel thing comes from Murray Rothbard. It’s a staple of racist and libertarian discourse on Africa. Modern economics (neoclassical) is a straight up religion.

    • @jonathanviera1589
      @jonathanviera1589 Před měsícem +151

      Basically it comes down to two things necessity and environment, for example why didn’t Europeans adopt camels when they proved to be more effective than the wheel because they could carry a lot, easier to produce and were cheaper to maintain, you also don’t need a road for camels it was just the superior option.
      It’s the same reason why the wheel didn’t see much use in Africa it was the environment, camels don’t do well in European environment and many Africans preferred camels because they were honestly the better choice.
      Also the wheel was a secondary method of transportation and trade in Europe the first has always been by boat both river and coastal. It was faster and you could carry more it just made more sense.
      And a lot of African states did that they used rivers for the same reason. Also many Sub Saharan Africans did use the wheel, both Ethiopia and Somalia did.
      And others didn’t because they had no real need for it and that’s not a reflection of their technological development it’s a example of their environment.

    • @clownpendotfart
      @clownpendotfart Před měsícem +51

      I don't believe EE got it from Rothbard, and I don't believe Rothbard came up with it. And neoclassical economists typically don't care for Rothbard, who would be considered "heterodox" for thinking econ should consist of verbal logic rather than math & empirics.

    • @clownpendotfart
      @clownpendotfart Před měsícem +32

      @@jonathanviera1589 The video clearly explained that the wheel declined in Europe once the Roman empire was no longer around to maintain roads. This points to a political/institutional explanation: the questions of why there aren't wheeled transports and why there aren't roads go together.

    • @jonathanviera1589
      @jonathanviera1589 Před měsícem +51

      @@clownpendotfart and even with wheels Europe still primarily used boats by river and boats because it was the better option. Africans did have roads and probably could have used the wheel more but why waste time and energy when boats and pack animals are readily available, easier and fit the environment better.

    • @PlatinumAltaria
      @PlatinumAltaria Před měsícem +33

      It's very normal to talk about the "hand of the market", and definitely not a mystical pile of shite.

  • @khornedmaple
    @khornedmaple Před měsícem +164

    If feel like the central issue here is the notion that Africa is uniquely poor, which means it's poverty must be rooted in something inherent to the African continent.
    One must only compare the development of the Chinese GDP per capita with, say, the Kenyan one to realize that African poverty is not all that exceptional.
    And this is China we're talking about. Try arguing that their geographical conditions consigned them to poverty and people will rightfully call you an idiot.

    • @teslashark
      @teslashark Před měsícem +12

      China has provinces that do worse than Kenya despite better natural resources, or do better than Zambia despite receiving less aid than Zambia in the 1960s. Both are big patches of land with local economies in conflict of interests.

    • @teslashark
      @teslashark Před měsícem

      China has provinces that do worse than Kenya despite better natural resources, or do better than Zambia despite receiving less aid than Zambia in the 1960s. Both are big patches of land with local economies in conflict of interests.

    • @hatinmyselfiscool2879
      @hatinmyselfiscool2879 Před měsícem +31

      ​@@OlivierVerdys so when china invests in foreign countries that is colonialism but when france orchestrates coups and policy changes in their former colonies that is fine or what exactly is this stupid comment. China if anything is employing imperialism in a very "light" way. They expect to gain things from their investments, they don't own the factories or the infrastructure they build for the countries.

    • @OlivierVerdys
      @OlivierVerdys Před měsícem

      Russia and its friend China not fomenting coups in Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali. No. Just caring for Africa because they are so well-known for not being racist at all, and having such welcoming enbrace of Africans and African culture in Moscow and Beijing. So many African faces there. Yes, you are totally right. Please let more Chinese colonize Africa. Please let more Africans work in mines run by Chinese companies. Oh yes. please do.

    • @GrassyHills202
      @GrassyHills202 Před 29 dny +15

      @@hatinmyselfiscool2879 now take what I say with a grain of salt but i'm pretty sure that most of the infrastructure build by china in other countries is atleast Leased to them for like 30 years or something , if not owned by them directly.

  • @heyyourebeautiful3867
    @heyyourebeautiful3867 Před měsícem +205

    Thank you. A lot of CZcamsrs give their thoughts on topics they are unqualified to speak about. I'm a civil engineer. One CZcamsr claimed the bridge collapse in Baltimore was from failing infrastructure when the truth is that bridge wasn't designed to withstand a cargo boat hitting it's support column.

    • @napakapa1046
      @napakapa1046 Před měsícem +21

      That's baffling, you see the boat strike the bridge and it immediately collapses, the number one hypothesis for the bridge collapse is right there, haha. I'd love to see what a bridge "designed" to withstand that level of strike would look like.

    • @Jc-yu2ot
      @Jc-yu2ot Před měsícem +7

      But the reality is that our infrastructure is crumbling. These things aren’t mutually exclusive.

    • @MoneyGist
      @MoneyGist Před 10 dny

      @@Jc-yu2ot He didn't say they were mutually exclusive. Just pointed out that their correlation doesn't imply one caused the other.

    • @Jc-yu2ot
      @Jc-yu2ot Před 10 dny

      @@MoneyGist that’s stupid lmao

  • @sasentaiko
    @sasentaiko Před měsícem +243

    Finally the algorithm sending me sense instead of nonsense. Subscribed.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +11

      Thank you!

    • @tacidian7573
      @tacidian7573 Před 27 dny +2

      The sad thing is, my CZcams Subscriptions feed constantly ignores channels like this, despite being subscribed to them.

  • @Z0MB13R0T
    @Z0MB13R0T Před měsícem +304

    the agriculture point is so funny to me because my dad’s side of the family is full of farmers and i’ve never heard anything about it being super hard to farm there

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +87

      Yeah, it's true that some parts of Africa have pretty poor soil quality which can cause difficulties with industrial scale planting (especially monocropping), but it's neither true across the entire continent nor a serious enough situation to prevent farming on the scale most people were doing it for most of history!

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +59

      @@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV The reason Africa isn't known for those things is because people don't bother to research it, because it certainly had them lmao, see the book recommendations in the description and my previous videos on West African history. I really wish people would stop assuming that because they don't know anything about African history, that means there was nothing there, it gets really frustrating as an Africanist.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +33

      ​@@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV It was certainly pretty sprawling, yeah. I wouldn't call it "based on agriculture" because that would be a strange characterization, but obviously it produced enough food to sustain large cities like Gao, Timbuktu, Djenne, etc. and populations that did not farm to support themselves like ironworkers, nobles, griots, weavers, merchants, scholars, etc. Large urban populations also existed throughout all other parts of Africa.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +47

      @@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV ...It was also impossible to replicate in Europe for most of history, the Roman Empire was pretty historically unique. Anyway, you've shifted the goalpost from "it was impossible to build large cities with specialization in Africa" - an unambiguously factually incorrect statement since Africa had many large cities and plenty of specialization - to "it was impossible to build empires on the same scale as the largest contiguous Empire in European history in Africa." I don't think you're arguing in good faith after that kind of fallacy, so I won't be engaging with you any further.

    • @khalidcabrero6204
      @khalidcabrero6204 Před měsícem +24

      @@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Never happened? There are dozens of very sizeable cities and towns on the Swahili coast. But there was no agriculture there - these towns sit on mostly parched and confined coastal islands, and don't have the space or water to feed themselves. Feeding these large city populations depended entirely on steady consistent trade with Bantu agrarian grain & meat producers on the interior highlands of the mainland. There was enough inland agriculture & trade in East Africa to maintain quite high city populations on the Swahili coast. It is very comparable to the situation of many Mediterranean cities, notably in Greece, Italy and the Levant, who were also constrained in confined coastal locations, and also similarly depended on far-flung food supplies trade to maintain their urban populations.

  • @FernandoMendoza-dw8nz
    @FernandoMendoza-dw8nz Před měsícem +451

    Economics explained only ever uses basic economics to describe the complexity of nations. Nothing of value is gained by watching the channel unless you've never learned basic economics.

    • @vyvianalcott1681
      @vyvianalcott1681 Před měsícem +45

      I don't think he even has a degree in Economics.

    • @connormcgee4711
      @connormcgee4711 Před měsícem +57

      ​@@vyvianalcott1681I have seen him allude to his experience in college courses, and demonstrates familiarity with how college-level courses are taught. It is likely he has a Bachelor's, but technically it is possible he has further education or dropped out. Sorry, that's all I know

    • @vyvianalcott1681
      @vyvianalcott1681 Před měsícem +37

      @@connormcgee4711 I looked it up, he does have a degree which is kind of even more embarrassing. I wonder what his GPA was lol

    • @luisfilipe2023
      @luisfilipe2023 Před měsícem +18

      Not really he obviously can’t go too deep since most people aren’t econ grads but his analysis is often supported by advanced economic theory at least it was when I watched it

    • @vyvianalcott1681
      @vyvianalcott1681 Před měsícem +61

      @@luisfilipe2023 No, if you're actually a qualified educator you should be able to explain advanced concepts or at least allude to them so we know where you're getting your information from. He doesn't do that because he's a hack, like most economists.

  • @MisterCynic18
    @MisterCynic18 Před měsícem +223

    Tragic this video will not reach nearly as many people as the EE one

    • @youtubeuserremainsanonymou9022
      @youtubeuserremainsanonymou9022 Před měsícem +20

      Maybe Soma can collab with Unlearning Economics to get a bigger audience. Unlearning Economics often criticizes EE

    • @anotheridiotontheinternet6136
      @anotheridiotontheinternet6136 Před měsícem

      ​@@youtubeuserremainsanonymou9022 would be nice to see them do an economic history video. Especially bc UE has ranted before about the lack of historical specificity and has more generally shown some interest in history

    • @Gulitize
      @Gulitize Před měsícem +8

      I mean that is a problem with many EE videos, or edutainment more generally.

    • @pritapp788
      @pritapp788 Před 13 dny +1

      Because EE is entertainment and most audiences prefer that to facts.

  • @HidalgodeAndalucia
    @HidalgodeAndalucia Před měsícem +654

    Soma DESTROYS Economics Explained with FACTS and LOGIC.

  • @mayorjoshua
    @mayorjoshua Před měsícem +310

    I am an Afro-American, and I was already sighing when I heard the first point about the supposed isolation of sub-Saharan Africa. I recently talked about this assumption in my art class that was implicit in one of our readings about how world peace could be reached through artistic sharing and preservation. The author only focused on the Silk Road linking Europe, North African and West Asia, and East Asia; so as the only person of black African descent in my class, I felt the need to question the place of sub-Saharan Africa and (indigenous) America in his view of world peace. I mentioned the Trans-Saharan trades and the Indian Ocean trades to show how sub-Saharan Africa was well-connected to the rest of the Old World art history. My ancestors came from the western Sahelian, Sudanian, and Guinean regions of sub-Saharan Africa and many aspects of Afro-American culture have roots in the products of the Trans-Saharan trade such as music (see banjo/folk lute and indigenous African fiddling traditions) and spirituality (Islam was not an uncommon faith amongst the enslaved and even impacted the magico-religious practices of the non-Muslim majority; it also provided a means of literacy for enslaved Africans in the Americas who could write in Arabic or Ajami). And to talk about agriculture, the indigenous knowledge of the sub-Saharan Africans with crops was a driving factor in the trafficking of certain groups to the American colonies!! Indigo and rice production in South Carolina and Georgia (where I have family from), for example, motivated the importation of Africans from the region where they were already engage in such business!! As an descendant of enslaved Africans in the United States, the idea that agriculture was not popular in Africa is very insulting to my history. Thank you so much for making this video and setting the record straight!!

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +36

      I'm glad you enjoyed, thank you for your comment!

    • @flyingsquirrell6953
      @flyingsquirrell6953 Před měsícem +36

      I mean… wasn’t like one of the main reasons why the Empire of Mali was so strong was due to its exportation of salt? Like history proves the idea of sub-Saharan Africa being like another planet to be wrong.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +37

      @@flyingsquirrell6953 It had a central position in the Salt-Gold trade, where salt from the Sahara was transported south to the Sahel, Sudan, and beyond in West Africa, and gold was transported north to the Sahara and Eurasia. So yes, Mali grew wealthy off of imports and exports across wide ranging trade networks.

    • @theotheagendashill818
      @theotheagendashill818 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@flyingsquirrell6953 Even Ice age caveman in Europe have been snown to have had long-distance trade so this doesn't mean anything in regards to civilization

    • @joeeeyyyyyy
      @joeeeyyyyyy Před měsícem +1

      I am curious on this first point, how does crossing the Sahara desert stack up to other long distance travel?
      Would the supposed ease of crossing these routes be any more dangerous than travelling around say modern day UK or other parts of Europe?
      Was it any more deadly or of similar danger from the elements?
      I only wonder as the saraha was such a common 'deadly inescapable Environment' trope in nature documentaries and other media.
      thank you

  • @jihunpark3564
    @jihunpark3564 Před měsícem +161

    Who else here got into economics, trade and politics through history

    • @DawnKing
      @DawnKing Před měsícem +6

      Me!

    • @Helania12
      @Helania12 Před měsícem +32

      It’s hard to get Into these subjects without history. If you try you get bogus economics videos like this one that this video criticizes. Sadly people often fall for these kinds of videos because it simply shows what the majority already believes and doesn’t disprove any misconceptions.

    • @Petey-se1lo
      @Petey-se1lo Před měsícem +17

      I've never understood how people dislike history. Sure it may not be the most lucrative straight out, but you learn so much about life in general and it helps even understand the modern day

    • @Helania12
      @Helania12 Před měsícem +16

      @@Petey-se1lo It’s because it’s often taught very badly in schools. It’s sometimes the teachers fault but often it’s also hard filter out what is important in class since it’s impossible to go through world history with the amount of hours the subject gets making the subject very difficult to teach effectively in a class setting.

    • @fabionelmiguel
      @fabionelmiguel Před měsícem +7

      I even went to Business school, but I only start understanding it properly after get deep into history.

  • @sapientisessevolo4364
    @sapientisessevolo4364 Před měsícem +487

    I've made this joke before, and I'll make it again,
    Merchants: We need infrastructure for trade!
    Camels aggresively: We *are* the infrastructure!

    • @kylezo
      @kylezo Před měsícem +1

      i don't thnk i get the joke, that's more of just a historical tidbit

    • @Tony-mw-533
      @Tony-mw-533 Před 28 dny +5

      It's funny because it's true😂😂

    • @eddydogleg
      @eddydogleg Před 28 dny +4

      Sumpter animals can move goods but ships fossil fuel, wind or human powered are going move goods at much less cost. Look at the cost of modern goods transportation. A container ship can move a shipping container for $0.92 per statute mile, a train $2.75 per statue mile, and a truck about $8.00 per statue mile. The Sahara Desert was and is an impediment to trade where as trade on the Mediterranean Sea meant the province of Africa were considered the breadbaskets of the Roman Republic.

  • @timothytumusiime2903
    @timothytumusiime2903 Před měsícem +268

    I was confused about the fertile lands part of that video
    My native Uganda has A LOT of fertile soil being basically surrounded by lakes and rivers year round except in the northeastern third
    It's even reflected in our rapid population rise from 5 million at independence 60 years ago to 50 million now in spite of the the numerous civil instabilities and wars
    Why we're poor is more due to all our leaders not knowing what the fuck they're doing. We don't work with the leaders we vote to advance the country. We vote the ones least likely to fuck up our lives (the ones with the guns so they don't do a stupid and military coup) and try to work around them (in a business, law and justice things)
    With varying results

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +103

      Yeah, African poverty is a complex issue that varies from country to country, but in general I would say colonial and post-colonial political factors are exponentially more significant than pre-colonial or geographical factors.

    • @Bob-bs9ok
      @Bob-bs9ok Před měsícem +51

      That would require western economists to acknowledge the role their precious capitalism plays which is far too much when you can just be racist.

    • @-nyte2063
      @-nyte2063 Před měsícem +11

      ⁠@@Bob-bs9okwouldn’t it require them to acknowledge corruption and rather than it being a direct failure of capitalism?

    • @Bob-bs9ok
      @Bob-bs9ok Před měsícem +27

      @@-nyte2063 the corruption is just a symptom of the root issue. Capitalism requires the expansion of markets and exploitation for ever increasing profits, to do so they must take resources from the imperial periphery. Supporting corrupt politicians serves that purpose.

    • @-nyte2063
      @-nyte2063 Před měsícem +14

      @@Bob-bs9ok but all else being equal corruption would still lead to these same issues regardless of the economic model used to drive a society.That capitalism is a factor in these individuals motivations is not as important as the fact that they would enrich themselves by any means, countries with communist ideology namely the ussr and the ccp both have had issues with corruption. All I’m saying is that corruption seems to be the root problem here which exacerbates most other problems encountered m.

  • @GTAVictor9128
    @GTAVictor9128 Před měsícem +158

    In the Western imagination, Africa is stereotyped as a continent plagued by corrupt dictators, with the supposition being that Africans are perhaps too "primitive" to appreciate the virtues of Western-style democracy. But the truth is that ever since the end of colonialism, Africans have been actively prevented from establishing democracies. The legacy of strongman rule in Africa is largely a Western invention, not an indigenous proclivity. Western powers have thwarted countless attempts at real independence, which casts a rather ironic light on the West's historical image as a beacon of democracy and popular sovereignty.
    If you ever try to suggest that poor countries are poor because they have been disadvantaged by an imbalanced global economy, someone is almost certain to respond by pointing the finger at corruption instead. ...For anyone that isn't aware of the history of colonialism, unequal treaties, structural adjustment and trade rules, this seems as good an explanation as any.
    ...It is important that we expand our conception of corruption to include illicit outflows, anonymous companies, secrecy jurisdictions... ...And yet the mainstream definition of corruption does not encompass them... ...Instead, the corruption narrative diverts our attention away from these exogenous problems and places the burden of blame on developing countries themselves.
    ~ From "The Divide: A Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions"

    • @boxcutter0
      @boxcutter0 Před měsícem

      Whiny Neo-Marxism that try’s to blame all problems on Europeans, yet never acknowledging the positive contributions either.

    • @Gloomdrake
      @Gloomdrake Před měsícem +30

      Western colonial powers had the audacity to strip Africa of its art and resources, and then turned around and said that Africa lacked art and culture

    • @aAS-wi9ks
      @aAS-wi9ks Před měsícem

      The strongman rule is not a western inventions but an african thing. Although Africans are able to establish democratic regimes which last, it has generally failed because Africans are very tribalistic and rarely vote for people who aren't from their tribes. And the ruling ethnicity is a minority, it has no interest in democracy since the majority wouldn't vote for them, even they have great ideas.

    • @TheLocalStandard
      @TheLocalStandard Před měsícem +7

      I have really found a gem of a Channel here, so many intelligent and well articulated people here. This comment just add to it. Indeed we are really getting there.

    • @schoo9256
      @schoo9256 Před měsícem +3

      I have a question. I was taught that the wave of decolonisation in Africa following WW2, had the effect of creating sudden power vacuums which were then exploited by bad actors. The argument was that the West, having restricted access to any form of training and policy education, should have stayed for 20-30 years, reintroduced political education to these countries, fostered a new generation of policymakers who were local to the areas, set them up for success, and removed more slowly.
      Then when African countries did ask for economic advice from the West, the advice was to grow cash crops, and we all know how that turned out.
      Where would this fit (if at all) within the paragraph you quoted?
      I agree corruption is a poor excuse for poverty. I think poverty fosters corruption and acceptance of/resignation around corruption, not the other way around. We think of corruption as something that doesn't happen here, but we have an unbroken tradition of viewing the law as legitimate. We are just better at making things legal, which means the corruption is restricted to those familiar with the law, or those who can make the law. But the inner tendency is the same.
      I was saying to some Indonesian friends the other day, we have just as much corruption here in the West, we just hide it better under layers of respectability.

  • @WhichDoctor1
    @WhichDoctor1 Před měsícem +72

    Ive seen soo many EE debunked videos from so many different CZcamsrs with specialties in different areas that now I wouldn’t believe EE if they told me the sky was blue without getting independent and securely sited verification

    • @Giovansbilly
      @Giovansbilly Před měsícem +1

      They're like 1984 indeed lol

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před 29 dny +6

      It's not much of a debunked video, like when EE says the Sahara is like an ocean and Soma says it's more like a sea. EE is just making a point about how it makes trade harder which it does especially with Europe, doesn't mean there aren't examples of African trade with other areas, especially with the Middle East through the Horn of Africa. Still a good history video, and EE makes a good economics video.

    • @ceejay1476
      @ceejay1476 Před 8 dny

      Watching videos with a political bias so as to attempt to confirm your own doesn't say anything about any info or misinfo that was relied, but only about your very own quality as a an impartial listener

  • @ElleDiablo
    @ElleDiablo Před měsícem +80

    As a South African always told (confidently) by Afrikaans descendants of Dutch settlers that 1) bantu people arrived at the same time/after the Dutch settled therefore we have equal claim, only the Khoi tribes were here and 2) we had no trade/technology/were taught to farm/were "civilised" by colonisers, despite archeological evidence to the contrary (despite the destruction of others), i REALLY appreciate this video.
    I'd love for you to do a video debunking far right South African talking points, but I'm definitely saving this one for future reference. Excellent work with reference.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +24

      Thank you! I probably won't be directly debunking any narratives like that, because I don't want my channel to be percieved as political, but if I ever cover South African history in the future I'll definitely discuss when the Bantu peoples arrived in the region and what their civilizations were like in Southern Africa.

    • @aidan-ator7844
      @aidan-ator7844 Před 10 dny +2

      I don't think that point is entirely groundless.

    • @pyr4625
      @pyr4625 Před 9 dny +1

      Yeah, it’s not like there’s no truth to it.
      The common Afrikaner claim that the Nguni/Tswana/etc were equal to monkeys is definitely bigoted, but you guys weren’t as advanced as Kongo or Ethiopia or West Africa, let alone the Dutch colonizers.

  • @hiddenhist
    @hiddenhist Před měsícem +174

    I tried to listen to Economics Explaind's interview with a "specialist" on Spotify. In the description of that podcast, Africa was referred to as a country. 🗿
    One day, I'm going to do a takedown of Jared Diamond. He seems to be a prominent source of these mindsets...

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +64

      I listened to the whole interview, and found Acemoglu - the guy they interviewed - so much more knowledgeable and respectable than the video would suggest. He was even very clearly trying to steer them away from the Diamond school of geographical determinism (even though his alternative leans into institutional determinism, with the same overgeneralizations and other issues of any form of determinism). They just... didn't listen to him.

    • @hiddenhist
      @hiddenhist Před měsícem +25

      ​@@SomasAcademyI can at least respect the latter mindset. It tends to come from Africans who are frustrated about the poor state of présent politics, but I find it often is projected onto the past in an anachronistic way. But yeah, I haven't a clue what Economics Explained was thinking with this video. Feels like he wanted to make something he knew he didn't have to research as an easy "give me". Lots of those big "general explained" channels seem to have a penchant for messing up on Africa. Still thinking to how a large creator was arguing in his comments that Africans lacked ships.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před měsícem +48

      It's almost kind of funny how people desperately want to explain recent history with deep geographical roots. Like trying to explain why Africa is poor in the immediate aftermath of European colonialism by talking about the Sahara is like trying to explain Western European poverty after the fall of the Western Roman Empire by talking about ice age glaciation patterns.

    • @Paul-bs5wl
      @Paul-bs5wl Před měsícem

      @@hedgehog3180 No. It really isn't. Africa's relative paucity of useful rivers and the Sahara desert being quite obviously more difficult to travel than most other areas of the world are not irrelevant to Africa's economic state, nor is the native fertility level of the soil before industrial fertilizers. Just because trade caravans could, and did, travel across the Sahara, doesn't mean that sub-saharan Africa wasn't significantly more isolated than it would have been if that whole area hadn't been so inhospitable. The fact remains that Africa was economically underdeveloped relative to Asia, Europe and arguably even some parts of the Americas before European contact. If we're not going to accept the old idea that it was a racial thing, then this does require an explanation, which is exactly what Jared Diamond wrote his book to do.
      As for Ice Age glaciation patterns, it would be pretty weird to explain events in about 480AD with reference to events that happened nearly 10,000 years earlier. Although, the fall of the Western empire does coincides roughly with the end of the Roman warm period, and this has indeed been cited as a contributing factor to Western Europe's problems in the immediate aftermath of Rome's fall, due to the drop in agricultural output occasionned by less ideal weather in areas north of the Alps.
      However the reason this comparison is not normally made is because this would raise the notion that, like Western Europe, Africa was benefitting from its imperial overseers and that the removal of the imperial power subsequently caused the degredation of the society. That is not a politically popular perspective to hold about Africa, but it is the pervailing one held about Western Europe.

    • @nacicomi
      @nacicomi Před měsícem

      ​@@hiddenhistI suspect that the reason why these "general explained" channels fail so hard when talking about africa is because they rely on popular "knowlage" and common sense rather then actual research.
      They don't educate, they make money by justifing existing beliefs with techno-babel.
      They don't have to be true, they just have to make sense to the undereducated

  • @MiloticFan
    @MiloticFan Před měsícem +16

    It feels good to know there are critical thinkers out there (such as yourself) who refuse to allow such deplorably incorrect “historical info” on Africa to fester into widely-accepted misinformation, that goes unquestioned by many & is mindlessly consumed, then readily regurgitated like it’s the truth. Thank you, from a Senegambian man… +1 subscriber my friend🤞🏿

  • @Orion2525
    @Orion2525 Před měsícem +67

    The other item of note is the relative nature of rich vs. poor. Many historians considered the Mali Empire rich in its day, supplying half the gold of old Europe, while the modern Republic of Mali is poor. But the modern Republic of Mali is far richer and more productive than its 14th century counterpart. Same could be said comparing modern vs ancient Greece in their respective times. The difference is in comparing these nations of their time to the rest of the world.

    • @hatinmyselfiscool2879
      @hatinmyselfiscool2879 Před měsícem +14

      I think the real issue we need to think about is the fact that the wealth these countries have never went away, it just isn't owned by itself anymore. Mali is still rich in everything, even currency. But that currency isn't in mali. It's somewhere in a french bank.

    • @dwarasamudra8889
      @dwarasamudra8889 Před 7 dny +1

      There is a slight difference. The King of Mali was very rich because he owned or at least had a very big stake in the gold mines and salt production and he also owned a lot of slaves. The say that the citizens of the Kingdom of Mali were the richest people in the world on a per capita basis or to say that Mali had the biggest economy in the world at that time would not be true

  • @luisfilipe2023
    @luisfilipe2023 Před měsícem +23

    I think these ideas are so ingrained in the public perception that EE just assumed they were true from the beginning. I myself have made the mistake of using these arguments to explain Africa

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +12

      Absolutely, these are unfortunately very widespread misconceptions - although I never thought that Africa lacked agriculture and never heard the wheel argument until much later, I also repeated the argument about the Sahara cutting off Sub-Saharan Africa several times back before I got into African history! It's very easy to pick up myths when so little about African history is widely discussed. That's why I thought it was important to make this video, and why I tried not to be insulting to EE for making these mistakes (even though as an educational channel I think their standards should be much higher) - I don't want anyone to feel bad for not knowing better when these ideas are so common, I just want to help make them less common!

  • @truuee9016
    @truuee9016 Před měsícem +22

    Great job. I literally responded to that video, and there were so many ridiculous claims, I commented that a video was needed to debunk them. So THANK YOU.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +5

      Lol, I'm glad I'm not the only one who saw how seriously wrong the video was

    • @truuee9016
      @truuee9016 Před měsícem +1

      @@SomasAcademy lol you definitely are not the only one. Thanks again, and keep up the great work.

  • @lo9251
    @lo9251 Před měsícem +92

    I clicked this video because I almost never find videos refuting the egregiously shallow, often harmful and often inaccurate or misleading content on Economics Explained. There was a time I didnt mind the channel and even found it insightful sometimes. But the quality of the content there is too shallow to be useful. Its more like "Pop Economics" -- it doesn't even try to do the topics it selects justice.
    Your explanations are what I expect from a channel claiming to do "economics explained" content. This is great stuff you've put together here and I love the way you explain it. I hope you and channels like yours fill this void. Folks like me are interested in the topic of economics as consumers and to get our info from EE would be tragic.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +14

      Thank you, but economics isn't the focus of my channel, history is more my area. If you want a solid economics channel, I would recommend Unlearning Economics!

    • @Seth9809
      @Seth9809 Před měsícem +8

      Money and Macro is constantly debunking Economics Explained

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +9

      @@Seth9809 I found that channel just the other day and have been watching a bunch of their videos lol

    • @lo9251
      @lo9251 Před 19 dny

      @@SomasAcademy Sorry for the late reply, hard to track comments on youtube. But to your point: economics and history aren't as separate as traditional educational would have us believe. Case in point: this video :) Look forward to more of your work!

  • @Pompeius_Strabo
    @Pompeius_Strabo Před měsícem +87

    The idea that Subsaharan Africa wasn’t in contact with Eurasia is ridiculous, we have accounts of interactions going back to classical times. Augustus even met with a delegation of Ethiopians on the island of Samos in 21 BCE.

    • @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV
      @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Před měsícem +6

      They didn't say there was no contact, they said isolated....
      Before the internal combustion engine anyone who didn't live within a few miles was a mysterious forigner.... :D
      Sub-Saharan Africa wasn't constantly swamped with Europe's issues the way Northern Africa was, that's all, a small point made in the EE video :)

    • @hatinmyselfiscool2879
      @hatinmyselfiscool2879 Před měsícem

      ​@@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTVit's one of many "technically true" argument you and ee make. Everything is trchnically true if you take away enough context. West africa and east Africa were not isolated. We just know less about the region because either artifacts were lost or the rest was destroyed in europes endless superiority complex and their inferiority jumping high when they found out what africans coukd achieve. One of the reasons great zimbabwe, benin and the ashante suffered from lack of cultural artifacts is that europeans stole or destroyed what ever they could get their hands on.

    • @chroma._.5986
      @chroma._.5986 Před 6 dny +1

      @@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTVbut they still weren’t isolated. what’s your point?

    • @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV
      @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Před 6 dny

      @@chroma._.5986 My point was that they were clearly relatively isolated compared to their northern neighbours... :)

  • @Fortigurn
    @Fortigurn Před měsícem +28

    Your channel is criminally under-subscribed.

  • @jacksonwinter5110
    @jacksonwinter5110 Před měsícem +7

    "They just filled the gaps from sloppy reading with their own preconceptions"
    Like all neoclassical economists.
    I was recently studying Zimbabwe land reform and its incredible to see economists talk through the evidence and then conclude something completely bizarre because it fits their preconceived understanding, even when it conflicts with the evidence.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +1

      Sounds like an interesting topic for study, can you suggest any sources if I want to follow suit?

    • @jacksonwinter5110
      @jacksonwinter5110 Před měsícem +1

      @@SomasAcademy I emailed you some sources!

  • @Chammezl9813
    @Chammezl9813 Před měsícem +10

    Good video. I'm glad this is being slowly tackled in the online space

  • @MrCB555
    @MrCB555 Před měsícem +16

    As a guy married to a Zimbabwean-Mozambican, I find the history of Africa to be fascinating. One thing I learned was that Chinese coins have even been found at Great Zimbabwe. Indian Ocean trade! 😮😂😊

  • @edwarda5584
    @edwarda5584 Před měsícem +36

    It's great to have voices like yours resisting ignorant attempts to erase history. I wonder if you could do a video on looted ancient artifacts sometime in the future? If Africa has no history why have they kept in museums what they didn't melt down or destroy entirely?

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +5

      Thank you for the topic suggestion, I'll consider covering that at some point!

    • @edwarda5584
      @edwarda5584 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@SomasAcademyDon't mention it!

  • @goatheartt
    @goatheartt Před 29 dny

    Thank you for your video! It is much needed. I wish more people see it. I was incensed watching the Economics Explained one, and you refuted every issue perfectly.

  • @leovalenzuela8368
    @leovalenzuela8368 Před měsícem +10

    This is good work, and I’m glad you made this video!

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you so much, I'm glad you appreciated it!

  • @wahuigi6843
    @wahuigi6843 Před měsícem +13

    Easily won a subscriber, this is the best researched video I've seen on Africa, thank you!

  • @sonyaa7680
    @sonyaa7680 Před 19 dny +6

    I completely agree with alot of your claims. It makes me sick how the western world still seems to paint africa as a monolith of primitivism so we can ignore the continents humanity when we exploit them further. Excellent sources, i’ve learned a lot especially from your agriculture and cultivation section but I think another key part of the problems facing agriculture cultivation in a lot of subsaharan agriculture is that the classical farming methods used for thousands of generations in the area functionally disappeared with the advent of colonialism, demonizing these methods in favor of monocultures, displacement of natives form their land and isolating them from information on such methods so they would no longer hold any power in the means of production, as well as opportunists deforesting previously lush areas(that worked along side agricultural customs for water preservation and work against erosion) for immediate profit. Again great video, libertarian belief in the west always seems to make poverty a moral failure so it’s only a matter of time before racism and infantilization comes into play with the most exploited continent in the world.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Před 9 dny +12

    Sorry did he just claim africa didn't develop agriculture, the continent has the highest rural population and highest subsistence farming of any continent. One of the reason it is considered poor is because farming for oneself does does not show up in GDP, as it isn't exchanging any money.

  • @mrwarr
    @mrwarr Před měsícem +1

    Thank you for making this video! I wanted to comment on the EE vid, but I felt like I’d be shouting into the void. You shouted louder and better than I.

  • @Pacemaker_fgc
    @Pacemaker_fgc Před měsícem +51

    Here from Veritas et Caritas, awesome video. I'm sad to admit I don't know as much about African history as I should, beyond how it connects to Middle Eastern and American history, but this has given me a lot of interesting threads to follow. Thank you.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +8

      Thank you for watching, I'm glad you enjoyed and I hope the resources I've suggested can help you learn more!

    • @dawnmcsweaney6521
      @dawnmcsweaney6521 Před měsícem

      Don't forget, most Black people are aware the word "History" originates from the term "His story." That's means his story, in reference to a bunch of White men lies!

  • @schrodingersmoose
    @schrodingersmoose Před měsícem +32

    Making mistakes is one thing, but misrepresenting your one source is what I think is revealing. As someone making videos, making mistakes is part of the process, but taking sources and engaging with them is so incredibly important. Also, great video as always! 💚

  • @Kruuppe
    @Kruuppe Před 27 dny

    this was a fantastic video, and I really appreciate the work you put into it. not just the video, but the recommendations, citations and everything else. instant sub and bell notification setup

  • @paulbo9033
    @paulbo9033 Před 27 dny

    This is the first real expertise YT has recom for me in a long time. I subscribed.

  • @normanmadarasz4979
    @normanmadarasz4979 Před měsícem +15

    That was simply outstanding. Thank you so much for the astonishing amount of research material you put into making this. Yet, I ask you: is it necessary to go through it all so quickly? I know we can all just press the rewind button, but there's no need to rush. I loved the way you deal with the scholarship. I'm curious as to whether you intentionally kept Henry Louis Gate's documentary Africa's Great Civilizations out of your references, and if so, why? Before your video, it was the material that had literally turned my globe upside down.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +7

      Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed! I am a naturally fast talker, I sometimes try to slow things down for my video but to me it feels agonizingly slow and artificial lol, apologies if it makes me hard to keep up with sometimes. That documentary wasn't in my references simply because I've never seen it lol, I'll check it out when I get the chance now that you've brought it to my attention.

  • @mathewomolo
    @mathewomolo Před měsícem +199

    the uncomfortable truth is that a big part of these 'mistakes' come from colonial racist propaganda.

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před 29 dny +3

      What mistakes?

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Před 19 dny +7

      @@TheSm1thers Watch the video.

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před 19 dny +5

      @@jasonhaven7170 I did and he didn't really make a mistake. The whole thing is based on not understanding what EE is saying or expanding upon it. For instance, to say the Sahara contributes to isolating Africa is not to say there's never been any trade whatsoever between Africa and other continents.
      Also even if he did make a mistake he's making "Geography determines destiny" points, not racial ones.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Před 19 dny +11

      @@TheSm1thers He literally made constant mistakes. Watch the video properly.

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před 19 dny +4

      @@jasonhaven7170 For the other one he just says "Ancient Africans would've found it very hard to develop agriculture given these factors" in reference to poor geographic conditions that meant much of Africa lagged behind other parts of the world in terms of productive agriculture. He doesn't say "Africans never developed any agriculture at all".

  • @Respectable_Username
    @Respectable_Username Před měsícem

    Absolutely fantastically well-done video! Both really interesting history and presented in a really clear way. Good stuff!

  • @mirianakoleva7870
    @mirianakoleva7870 Před 24 dny

    This video is wonderful and very educational. I'm glad you cleared up some misconceptions I've seen before. Greetings from Bulgaria

  • @Nohandleentered
    @Nohandleentered Před měsícem +20

    The channel called Premodernist has a really good video on the wheel nonsense and a more recent one about wheelbarrows

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +11

      Yes, I actually link those videos in the description!

    • @XingAoShen
      @XingAoShen Před měsícem +3

      @@SomasAcademyi love premodernist, we need more historians like him. Glad to subscribe to you now too!

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +1

      @@XingAoShen Thank you!

  • @Laitalafraise
    @Laitalafraise Před měsícem +3

    Thank you for your work, the time and research you put into it! This video was amazing and I wish it was longer!! I've just subscribed and cannot wait to see your other videos!

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +2

      Thank you so much, I really appreciate that!

  • @Alexander082388
    @Alexander082388 Před měsícem

    Great piece! Diligent and accurate research - and exceptionally explained. Thanks for your work!!!

  • @kabirkumar5815
    @kabirkumar5815 Před 17 dny

    This is one of the most well researched and cited videos I've ever seen on youtube. Subscribing.
    Thank you for making and sharing this.

  • @NOTHINGNEWYT
    @NOTHINGNEWYT Před měsícem +22

    ❤😍❤😍❤ Fantastic video, pleeeease do more videos like this where you cover broader topics with a wide scope, especially on African history. You're obviously very knowledgable about this subject, and I think there is a good reason why your most popular videos are about African empires. CZcams really needs more informative content on African history like this, you're right there are way too many misconceptions floating around on this subject. Plus I think the algorithm will reward you :)

  • @ravenstone366
    @ravenstone366 Před měsícem +6

    Nice to hear more from more historians from one's own Country or of Africa, but learned of this in backwoods school here in the States but that was in the 80s. Thanks for the recommendations of books need some new reads anyways. May you and yours stay well, and good blessings.

  • @pasteque6605
    @pasteque6605 Před 18 dny

    Thank you for this good video. I hope it will have a good visibility

  • @-beee-
    @-beee- Před 20 dny +1

    Wow, I learned a TON! I didn’t even see the original video, but I’m so grateful this one was recommended Thanks for breaking down why wheels are not appropriate for all conditions. It makes so much sense! Really excited to explore your other videos and learn more about this history.

  • @willval21
    @willval21 Před měsícem +72

    I remember studying African history in college, and I was shocked by how many things Americans do not learn about African history (eurocentric bias). I learned only a tiny bit about it before college, mainly with Egypt, Aksum, the Atlantic slave trade, and imperialism by Europeans. In college, I learned so much more, but I just scratched the surface. I wish history education in the U.S. about groups outside of the Americas and Europe were better covered.

    • @marshallcook2740
      @marshallcook2740 Před měsícem +8

      Why would a basic history class in the U.S. focus so much on people groups outside of the U.S. I wouldn't except a history class in Nigeria to focus on the Japanese or Brazilian peoples.

    • @someguy4512
      @someguy4512 Před měsícem +15

      ​@@marshallcook2740 because it's History you guys are just ignorant that's all.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +11

      A basic history course in the US will teach you about Ancient Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, the Roman Empire, Medieval and Early Modern Europe, European colonialism, a little bit about Ancient China and India, a bit about Japan, and a number of other non-American history subjects. The vast majority of history taught in US classes is not US-specific history. Considering also that Africans were one of the core founding demographics of the British colonies, West and West Central African history has a much greater place in the narrative of US history than the founding of Buddhism or the Mandate of Heaven, which you will learn about in a basic history course.

    • @Malikj661
      @Malikj661 Před 21 dnem

      @@marshallcook2740 But we learned about the holocaust over and over and over and over again

  • @ADM.II.
    @ADM.II. Před měsícem +3

    Nice vid really enjoyed how you dispelled misinformation. Subscribed.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem

      Thank you! Also, nice pfp, I love Assassin's Creed lol

  • @christopherh2243
    @christopherh2243 Před 27 dny +1

    Thank you for this video! Even though the mistakes in EEs video were quite egregious, you showed real professionalism in using it as an opportunity to educate us rather than just an excuse to vent. This is the first video I've seen from this channel, and it already made me subscribe!

  • @boubbhastories2727
    @boubbhastories2727 Před měsícem

    I remember starting the video, but it was so bad that i could go passed a few minutes. I'm glad you watch the whole and made this video. Great work!

  • @thelastpagan4999
    @thelastpagan4999 Před měsícem +3

    As an archeology major and someone who studied History and Anthropology extensively the EE video actually physically hurt

  • @medievalafrica
    @medievalafrica Před měsícem +41

    Great video, Soma. Really well made. And thanks for the shout-out. ✨️

  • @k.c1126
    @k.c1126 Před měsícem

    I subscribe to @AboutNothing and have seen videos from a couple of the others. But your presentation here is very informative and focuses attention on major misconceptions that are frequently transmitted without people realizing it.

  • @tsuki3752
    @tsuki3752 Před měsícem +2

    thank you for this video! africa had been one of my interests and i studied it in class this year (had to drop it tho bc of depression 🤪 doing better now tho) so this was right up my lane. plus the reading list and video/channels list is definitely something im checking out.

  • @nicholasdalby5178
    @nicholasdalby5178 Před měsícem +38

    Same with South India and Southeast Asia. Indonesia has experienced a number of powerhouse thallassocratic empires which were DOMINANT and it was the very terrain and difficulty of land transport than led them to defend against the Mongols and remain independent. Those empires were so wealthy due to MARITIME TRADE. Same with the Cholas and so on.17:12

    • @schoo9256
      @schoo9256 Před měsícem +1

      Does thallassocratic mean ruling the seas? Too lazy to google

    • @fadhil2831
      @fadhil2831 Před měsícem +4

      ​@@schoo9256yeah its maritime empire

    • @schoo9256
      @schoo9256 Před měsícem +1

      @@fadhil2831 thanks

  • @moah2012
    @moah2012 Před měsícem +7

    Ghanaian- American here. (I'm ashanti and great bringing up my tribe). Great vid overall. From my understanding, the wheel thing came from the fact that the Kongo Kingdom didnt use the wheel when the Portuguese arrived in the 15th century. You can find that in Acemougu's book "Why nations fail." But the issue with economics explained is when he extrapolated that because the Kongo Kingdom didnt have wheels in the 1400s, that meant all of Africa didnt have wheels, which is a silly extrapolation.

  • @bluguito
    @bluguito Před měsícem +1

    Hey Soma, just wanted to say how much I love your videos!!! I think they're so easy and clear to understand, and you use a lot of good arguments and facts mentioned too!
    I think the topic of this video is very interesting itself too, thank you so much for this video! :]

  • @pymgore
    @pymgore Před měsícem +2

    Would love a video about writing in Africa!! Thank you for making this - learning a lot

  • @paris_2518
    @paris_2518 Před měsícem +25

    I really appreciate you putting in the effort to pronounce Acemoğlu’s last name in Turkish ^^. It also really sucks that he doesn’t talk much about the neocolonialism and outsider western destabilization and meddling that we still have to deal with to this day and how colonialism really did a number on the infrastructure that has been built into these countries were primarily based on resource extraction and that doesn’t help much with diversifying their economies and the people developing more self determination for them selves 🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +8

      Yeah, I always try to pronounce things as accurately as I can, especially names! And I agree, the article and interview really don't touch on post-colonial factors, which I think are comparably important to colonial factors and more important than pre-colonial factors in explaining the economic situations of most African countries!

  • @_TiteLive_
    @_TiteLive_ Před měsícem +3

    I was taken aback (and really appreciate)how thorough your counter arguments were. So many gaps in his videos were covered. It does make me wonder: how accurate have any of his other videos really been? I’m quite alarmed as a past viewer of his, to be honest.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +1

      Thank you, I'm glad you appreciated! I have seen a few response videos since making this that suggest a lot of EE's work is pretty dubious including in their actual area of expertise; I'd recommend the channel Money and Macro for a few examples.

  • @egohicsum
    @egohicsum Před měsícem +2

    very informative video thank you ❤️

  • @cbin3741
    @cbin3741 Před 26 dny +1

    Thank you very much for this very informative clip. But what is even more interesting for me is more information about african history. I still remember the problems I had as a youth - before the internet ;-) - trying to find history books about Africa or Asia. Thankfully it's become so much easier to spread knowledge since then.
    I subscribed and am looking forward to watching other clips on your channel.

  • @mw7
    @mw7 Před měsícem +5

    Thank you for doing the work to correct the record. As "edutainment" and video essays have become more popular, we get more issues with dilettantes speaking outside their area of expertise, or just straight up spreading misinformation. This isn't the first time that particular CZcams channel has done this. And as you point out, misconceptions about African history abound. Again, thank you. I hope this video gets half as many views as EE's incorrect one.

    • @renato360a
      @renato360a Před měsícem

      I would hope EE is smart enough to see this and produce a new video correcting themselves on everything, actually reading the paper they cited. I mean, it's a free video idea and 75% of the work has been done already.

  • @MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu
    @MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu Před měsícem +37

    i bet this chick knows way more about Africa than Economics Explained ever could

    • @Cooom
      @Cooom Před měsícem +5

      I bet she knows there Democratic Republic of the Congo is at that!!

    • @MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu
      @MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu Před měsícem +10

      @@Cooom what

    • @chidubememma-ugwuoke9660
      @chidubememma-ugwuoke9660 Před měsícem +1

      @@MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu I think by "there" he/she meant "where"

    • @LoudWaffle
      @LoudWaffle Před 15 dny

      Considering she has two BAs and a Master's, and we're not even sure if EE finished his undergrad, yeah I would say so
      Even without taking into account that she specialised in history and African history, while his subject was Economics lol

    • @MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu
      @MikhailKalashnikov-re4qu Před 14 dny

      @@LoudWaffle i sure your right, idk how you know this she could of lied but you would belive anything she says GFC

  • @joshuatony.5353
    @joshuatony.5353 Před měsícem +1

    Hi Soma, i love you, your content and African history, just subbed

  • @alicia10387
    @alicia10387 Před měsícem

    Yo I’ve been waiting for someone to make a video on this!!

  • @azathothog
    @azathothog Před měsícem +7

    white understanding of africa is very different from how africans understand Africa period

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +10

      I would say "Western" or even just "non-African" understanding, because I've found these misconceptions common among many Asians and even African Americans. The public discussion of Africa outside of the continent is unfortunately incredibly limited, and colonial-era racism unfortunately fills in a lot of the gaps even for people of African descent.

    • @azathothog
      @azathothog Před měsícem +6

      @@SomasAcademy Yeah your western view of Africa really pisses me off have you heard of how Afrikaners are creating white successionist towns

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +3

      @@azathothog Yeah I have heard of that, pretty disgraceful.

    • @azathothog
      @azathothog Před měsícem +2

      @@SomasAcademy i find disgracefull to be an understatement its disgusting and vile and lets not forgot how arabs treat my people the amazigh

  • @Chaideu
    @Chaideu Před měsícem

    This is a really good video , I love this video , I learnt so much thank you for making this

  • @fabe61
    @fabe61 Před 18 dny

    Thank you! I find so much of their stuff to be overly simplistic and their commentary on economics in Africa is especially egregious

    • @fabe61
      @fabe61 Před 18 dny

      To go further though, the institutional economics approach of Robinson and Acemoglu is really not good enough for explaining poverty in Africa or uneven economic development generally. The pair don’t give proper attention to traditions like dependency theory that still have significant explanatory power 60-80 years on, given not loads has changed in terms of economic disarticulation, unequal exchange, and the use of ‘comparative advantage’.

  • @DrGlynnWix
    @DrGlynnWix Před 23 dny +3

    I tend to have a lot of quibbles with Economics Explained. It is a very good channel, but they also tend to espouse pretty traditional economic analysis with a lot of overlooking power dynamics that have created or reinforced current trends, much less basic history 😅. I haven't seen the video you were inspired by, but I appreciate this thorough review of pre-colonial African trade and economics. One thing we know is that all the places colonized were colonized BECAUSE they were wealthy in both raw materials but also in finished goods. People wanted the stuff from these places, meaning trade was plentiful in these places well before colonization.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před 23 dny +1

      Yeah, I assume it would be very hard to put out weekly videos on a subject as broad and complicated as economics without oversimplifying a lot and making lots of errors along the way. I'm sure that with the resources a channel that size has at its disposal they could improve the research standards somewhat (maybe hire a few people to fact-check), but I can't blame them for blunders; there's inevitably gonna be a tradeoff between making high quality videos and posting on a regular schedule.

  • @user-fk8hc6rq3v
    @user-fk8hc6rq3v Před měsícem +8

    This is a great review and response to the video!! :3
    Particularly, the claim about agriculture never developing in Africa is SO absurd that I'm positive Economics Explained did zero fact-checking and just relied entirely on their own racist biases.

    • @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV
      @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Před měsícem

      They didn't say farming didn't develop in Africa.
      They said large scale agriculture never produced a large city or empire in sub-Saharan Africa which is broadly true. :)

    • @user-fk8hc6rq3v
      @user-fk8hc6rq3v Před měsícem +5

      @@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV ...no? Just watched the EE video, and the first time they bring up agriculture is the clip used in this one. The second time, EE claims that agriculture only existed in select areas of Africa (very false) and that people had to "keep moving" (false as well; many pre-colonial sub-Saharan societies throughout West, South, Central, and East Africa lived sedentary lifestyles).
      Also, pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa had a number of empires and cities. This is literally mentioned in this video. There was Songhai, Ghana/Wagadou, the Sokoto Caliphate, Mali, Kanem-Bornu, Jolof, etc. for empires, and Kumbi Saleh, Timbuktu, Kong, Kilwa, Djenné-Djenno, Sokoto, Ibadan, and Ngazargamu (just to name a few) for cities.

    • @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV
      @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Před měsícem

      @@user-fk8hc6rq3v I'm familiar with African empires, but they rarely sprang from an agricultural surplus like they tended to in Europe and Asia.
      Farming happens everywhere, agriculture is an organized centralized affair.

    • @user-fk8hc6rq3v
      @user-fk8hc6rq3v Před měsícem +3

      @@EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV That's not really what you said in your first comment. I can't tell if you're defending the EE video or making your own points, because this video (and me) already invalidated THEIR points.
      Plenty of African polities (such as the Oyo, Mali, and Songhai empires, along with the Swahili city-states) produced agricultural surpluses that were frequently then traded.
      Also, definition of agriculture: "Agriculture is the science, art, or occupation of cultivating land, raising crops, and breeding livestock."
      Many societies throughout Africa practiced intensive agriculture; they just often had different methods when compared to farmers from Eurasia.

    • @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV
      @EveryoneWhoUsesThisTV Před měsícem

      @@user-fk8hc6rq3v EE video was about economics, it got plenty wrong in regard to history and agriculture, but I doubt they care much about anything but their main points about economics.
      I do endorse its main point that Sub-Saharan Africa couldn't sustain the kinds of empires and economies that Europe had, because of geography.
      To sustain the population of Rome, they imported vast amounts of food from all over the Mediterranean, that would be logistically impossible in Sub-Saharan Africa because of the geography.

  • @13adLucEnt
    @13adLucEnt Před 29 dny

    Thx for this vid. Great work 👏👏👏

  • @wambokodavid7109
    @wambokodavid7109 Před měsícem +1

    nice take...i saw his video a while back and couldnt beleive it

  • @michaelrae9599
    @michaelrae9599 Před měsícem +5

    Excellent insights. Most of my African history knowledge is either Sub-Saharan or North African. This fills in a lot of the middle.

  • @theculturedjinni
    @theculturedjinni Před měsícem +43

    This Economics explained video was just face-palm. Though, some of the points could be argued to be more about degrees rather than 1 or 0, it was still a video that oversimplified African greater development too much. Africa has been home to some great civilizations and kingdoms. And though I could nit-pick and argue some points of issues here and there I think you did a very good overview of the issues with this video.
    You do know I really wonder why the Ge'ez Axumite word for wagon ,Saragallaa, existed and was used, if wheels were unknown to sub-saharan Africa (hmm really makes you wonder does it not?)😏

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +8

      Thank you! I only addressed the arguments Economics Explained made that were predicated on clear historical misconceptions, so there's a lot in their video that I think is way more debatable, as you said, although I do feel they oversimplified throughout (partly as a consequence of drawing from Acemoglu and Robinson, who themselves overgeneralized from only a few examples, in my opinion, and partly as a consequence of simplifying Acemoglu and Robinson's arguments even more). There's a lot more that could be said about their full video, but my goal here was to focus on the arguments that were indisputably incorrect, while leaving more debatable points aside. That's why I also didn't tackle the question of "why is Africa still poor?" itself, because although I think I could provide a pretty strong answer to that question, it would be a matter of interpretation and argument rather than an explanation of historical fact.

    • @theculturedjinni
      @theculturedjinni Před měsícem +2

      @@SomasAcademy 👍

  • @angmid9210
    @angmid9210 Před měsícem

    Great video - thanks for making it

  • @lewisnduati1444
    @lewisnduati1444 Před 25 dny +2

    Well in Kenya, the community I come from, the Agikuyu, were basically farmers, domesticated cattle, sheeps and goats, had no king, was fairly democratic, was head by a chief who was assisted by a council of elders, who regularly changed as per the age set, had the iron age, basically everything that researchers don't mention

  • @Dkmo94
    @Dkmo94 Před měsícem +51

    The comment section of the EE channel always gets a strong far-right tinge whenever that dude talks about any African country. Stopped watching his videos because it was so bad

    • @altechelghanforever9906
      @altechelghanforever9906 Před měsícem +34

      Idk what is it with the internet and Africa. For some reason a lot of people online have a primal hatred towards anything related to Africa and it's quite worriying.

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro Před měsícem

      Now never go to a channel called history scope video on Africa economy. I remember comments straight up saying how some races are inferior and how Africa is always going to be poor because of it. It's full on racism

    • @spinecho609
      @spinecho609 Před 17 dny

      I left his discord server real quick, at the time it was overrun with right wing idiots up to straight up nazis.

    • @laisphinto6372
      @laisphinto6372 Před 16 dny

      Its maybe the Side effect of the shitshow in America because a Lot of the Arguments are coined in a very American way ON both Sites Like for example the whole nonsense with the black Community only maybe works with America and the Obsession with White and black and the whole generic discussions

    • @Sosski
      @Sosski Před 13 dny

      @@altechelghanforever9906because they are racist. Tale as old as time nothing to be confused about 💀

  • @eddiea8468
    @eddiea8468 Před měsícem +4

    I would love a video about the history of writing in Africa!

  • @zad8027
    @zad8027 Před 17 dny +1

    This video is amazing! Ive fallen prey to a few of these misconceptions myself in the past, and it is good to see them so thuroughly debunked. Hope this video makes the rounds and helps clear peoples misconceptions.

  • @hipmusicdrumminsingin
    @hipmusicdrumminsingin Před 20 dny

    Great vid! I didn't see EE's video, but from your criticisms it seems like Jared Diamond haunts EE's video like a ghost

  • @penguinpingu3807
    @penguinpingu3807 Před měsícem +12

    I don't get why people think the wheel is the mother invention of all human civilisation. Wheels are overrated as a key invention that creates "successful civilisation."
    The mass adoption of wheels are more of a sign of a stable era. Where roads are smooth enough that woodem wheels don't break easily.
    The incas and Aztecs were quite successful without the wheel. Clearly the wheel is not the key invention.

  • @admirekashiri9879
    @admirekashiri9879 Před měsícem +39

    Wow this was very interesting and informative. I love the level of detail you provided. I never knew Rhapta meant sewn.
    It’s sad misconceptions remain so strong even amongst researchers and big channels on this platform.

    • @kenilwort7350
      @kenilwort7350 Před měsícem +3

      It seems like the MIT researchers made a decent argument. Economics Explained did not. Academia is continuing to decolonize. CZcams? Not sure about their decolonization efforts or lack thereof.

  • @brettgoldsmith9971
    @brettgoldsmith9971 Před 13 dny +2

    I'm really loving the culture of youtube where we point out when supposedly educational content is incorrect. It really is forcing people to check their sources more becore publishing. Thank you for doing your part

  • @Diddancing
    @Diddancing Před 20 dny

    Job well done. I would certainly love to see more videos ..

  • @mcrumph
    @mcrumph Před měsícem +4

    One thing that wasn't mentioned in your video is natural harbors. Africa has approximately 30,500 km of coastline. That might sound like a lot, but Norway, with only its west & southern coasts on the ocean, has between 25,000 & 83,000 km of coastlines, all depending on how they are measured. I would say that this was one of the largest impediments to long distance trade. Add to that the fact that many of the rivers that flow from the interior portions of the continent are difficult to navigate, requiring difficult portages from headlands to the various seas & oceans. Good video & thanks for the book recommendations.

    • @SomasAcademy
      @SomasAcademy  Před měsícem +5

      A relative lack of coastline isn't necessarily an impediment to long distance trade - lots of natural harbors may encourage a society to focus more on maritime activity, but as mentioned in the video, parts of Africa still had strong maritime cultures, namely the East African coast. In West Africa, there are also quite a few lagoons along the coast where boat travel was common. However, current systems and rough waters discouraged Western Africans from developing a lot of maritime technology; those enclosed lagoons I mentioned were safe, but if you went too far out into the open ocean chances of capsizing were a lot higher, so Western Africans mostly hugged the coast. North of Senegambia, the prevailing currents also push south, making it difficult to sail northward; this largely prevented direct contact with Europe prior to the 15th century, when the Portuguese discovered that sailing directly west from the African coast would bring them to a circular current system allowing their ships to return to Europe. This is why when we're talking about trade between Sub-Saharan Africa and other parts of the Old World prior to the Early Modern Period, the focus is all on overland trade across the Sahara and maritime trade along the eastern coast; the western coast just couldn't get involved until the discovery of that current system.
      As for navigable rivers, that issue is somewhat overstated; toward the mouths of several major rivers in Africa, the flow becomes rapid and therefore unnavigable, but that leaves quite a bit of navigable river further inland, and there was most likely a fair amount of travel by boat within the African interior. I think the origin of this idea that African rivers are particularly unnavigable may come from early European sources, since when they arrived by sea to the western coast Europeans would have first been greeted by the rapids around the mouths of these rivers, preventing them from navigating further inland and seeing what the rivers were like elsewhere. We know for sure that trade goods made their way from the Eastern coast of Africa to the Western one, so the interior was definitely more navigable than some people assume.
      Thank you for watching and commenting!

    • @mcrumph
      @mcrumph Před 29 dny +2

      @@SomasAcademy Wow.Thanks for that reply. I admit that my knowledge of Sub-Saharan (or even Saharan) culture & history is very limited, but I am working on it. I tend to tackle things chronologically & for the last decade or so have been more focused on ancient history (both east & west) & the early development of civilizations. But, in my plodding way, I will get there. Just give me another decade or so & I might even break the BCE/CE curtain (though, I have no interest in Rome). Thanks, & I have subscribed. Keep up the great work.

    • @danielating1316
      @danielating1316 Před 29 dny

      ​@@SomasAcademyare you African? Because your accent isn't African

  • @Vinxi
    @Vinxi Před měsícem +5

    You're a Godsend. Bless you.

  • @localman9063
    @localman9063 Před 26 dny +1

    Instantly subscribed. I wish I found your channel sooner.

  • @guide3116
    @guide3116 Před měsícem

    This is an excellent video keep up the great work