Why did Brazil Fail to Become a Superpower?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • Closed Captions and PT-BR subtitles by Tenison Jr.
    Brazil SHOULD have been a superpower, it basically has the same situation as the USA. Large farm, huge population, tucked away from the rest of the world. Why did Brazil never flourish into the great power it could have been? And where is Brazil going in the future? Besides the 2022 World Cup finals ;)
    If you haven't subscribed already, do so here: / h0ser
    #brazil #countryball #polandball
    Countryball, Polandball, History of Brazil, Portugal, portuguese empire and CARALHO. South America . vs the Future. Alternate History, Alternate Future of the world, of Asia, of Europe, of Africa, of America of the World, American Americans. Russia v.s. The Future

Komentáře • 7K

  • @h0ser
    @h0ser  Před 2 lety +6996

    I came to Brazil

    • @StateoftheWorld
      @StateoftheWorld Před 2 lety +378

      smh stole my comment how could you, unsubbed and disliked

    • @ImaRando2000
      @ImaRando2000 Před 2 lety +46

      What happened to your Nigeria video the other day

    • @garrettallen7427
      @garrettallen7427 Před 2 lety +123

      I don’t like the implications of that…

    • @hardcoded
      @hardcoded Před 2 lety +27

      Gasp! What you're in for?

    • @g.town-troy4035
      @g.town-troy4035 Před 2 lety +56

      Bro did you say Covid Aids 😂😂😂😂

  • @user-sd6lg8lf5c
    @user-sd6lg8lf5c Před 2 lety +10163

    I’m Russian and Brazil is like tropical Russia. A ton of potential but the same problems.

    • @itsblitz4437
      @itsblitz4437 Před 2 lety +564

      And Russia was a superpower.

    • @unm0vedm0ver
      @unm0vedm0ver Před 2 lety +383

      RIP Nikolai II and Dom Pedro II

    • @yggbeats5759
      @yggbeats5759 Před 2 lety +196

      @@itsblitz4437 i mean russia was only superpower due its location in europe and big military tho but yea

    • @constantinethecataphract5949
      @constantinethecataphract5949 Před 2 lety +40

      @@itsblitz4437 still is kinda

    • @visigoth3696
      @visigoth3696 Před 2 lety +68

      @@constantinethecataphract5949 not at all

  • @LeanderAuditore
    @LeanderAuditore Před 2 lety +5981

    I live in the Brazilian Amazon, and i want to add a few things:
    1. The Amazon region of Brazil is not that hostile as shown in the video, maybe it was, like 70-80 years ago, but nowadays is perfectly civilized region, the reason why there are few brazilians living here in comparison with the rest of the country is because was (and nowadays still is) a unatractive region, is very hot, it rains a lot, and have a lower economic developed that the rest of the country (which means, less jobs, lower wages).
    2. One of the main reasons why Brazil failed to become a superpower is because it failed to catch up with the capitalistic and industrialized economies in the 19th century, as mentioned in the video Brazil was the last country in the west to abolish slavery, The Brazilian government executed an poor land distribution throught the "Lei das terras 1850", and there was little to no incentive to transform the brazilian economy from agricultural to industrialized (There was a Brazilian Aristocrat to tried to do that, his name was Baron of Maua).
    If you check the Brazilian GDP per capita in early 19th century and compare it to the one of the late 19th century, you will notice that there was very very little growth, in the same period countries like America, UK or even Argentina experienced an gigant growth.
    (Sorry for the gramatical mistakes).

    • @jamixflixs6329
      @jamixflixs6329 Před 2 lety +76

      How hot does it get?

    • @Caio.R.S
      @Caio.R.S Před 2 lety +453

      @@jamixflixs6329 it's practically over 30 degrees Celsius year round, with highs of nearly 40 degrees. And the Amazon region is not even the hottest in Brazil

    •  Před 2 lety +183

      Cara eu nao aguento mais eu nao sei se eu to errado ou acordei em um universo alternativo mas pq q TODO MUNDO fica se referindo aos EUA como américa?

    • @adambezzate8735
      @adambezzate8735 Před 2 lety +162

      @ pq é o nome do pais

    • @chozer1
      @chozer1 Před 2 lety +27

      Maybe when the government stops burning down the forest it will be more attractive

  • @pedrofiates3394
    @pedrofiates3394 Před rokem +383

    It's very common to put the blame of Brazil's (and a lot of latam's) lack of development on colonization, and it is a large part of it, but studying Brazil's history it also becomes very clear that utter incompetence is a constant.(the choice of rodoviary transport is a good example).

    • @SamuelAngelo0758
      @SamuelAngelo0758 Před rokem +30

      Mas o Nordeste tem isso até hoje! É um fato intrínseco ao Brasil, eu vejo com meus próprios olhos, corrupção, assaltos, morei nas duas cidades mais violentas do Brasil, moro na periferia e no interior a economia não é descentralizada! Sempre as cidades são controladas por famílias ricas e abastadas, é difícil você crescer com os maiores impostos do mundo, lutar contra a corrupção, criminalidade, concentração de riquezas, economia engessada... A única saída é a descentralização da economia, o que dificilmente ocorrerá.

    • @vpillajr
      @vpillajr Před 11 měsíci +10

      This isn’t incompetence. It’s a political choice

    • @carlhansson
      @carlhansson Před 11 měsíci +9

      I agree. I'm almost thinking that the consistency of poor political decisions being made, even with the advantage of learning from other countries, indicates widespread corruption.

    • @SemNome-hz3bz
      @SemNome-hz3bz Před 11 měsíci +14

      Construir rodovias no lugar de trilhos de trem foi uma escolha política, os Estados Unidos precisam vender seus carros não é mesmo kkkkjj,

    • @danix4883
      @danix4883 Před 11 měsíci

      @@pedrohenrique-lv1oynot really, at one point we have to stop blaming others and take responsibility, our government is corrupt & incompetent, it’s time we acknowledge it

  • @papagaiorusso
    @papagaiorusso Před rokem +208

    Tá tranquilo, é só questão de tempo pro Brasil se tornar uma potência, daqui uns 500 anos a gente consegue kkkkkk 🇧🇷🇧🇷

    • @sidneyentr5640
      @sidneyentr5640 Před rokem

      Brasil poderia rapidamente virar uma potência se as pessoas soubessem votar , elegeram um bandido socialista preso por corrupção .

    • @raibrazil8305
      @raibrazil8305 Před rokem +9

      Kkkk no próximo aeroporto é mais fácil

    • @evsgo95
      @evsgo95 Před rokem +1

      Outros 500 anos?

    • @NetBooter
      @NetBooter Před rokem +7

      ​@@evsgo95os primeiros 500 anos foi a fundacao, lá em 1500 foi o fim da escravidão por cor de pele, e nos próximos 500 vai ser o fim da escravidão pelo imposto

    • @josdesouza
      @josdesouza Před rokem +11

      Nem tanto assim. O povo chinês passou mais de um século de perrengues padecendo de múltiplas agressões imperialistas, entretanto, conseguiu dar sua volta por cima revolucionariamente. Se esperarmos que a providência divina se apiede do Brasil e Jesus baixe novamente à terra para nos salvar, então seu prazo de 500 anos seria até pouco.

  • @TheLibertador
    @TheLibertador Před 2 lety +7447

    Don't worry Brazilian brothers, here in México we face the same problems! Some day we will ged rid and solve our issues together. 💚 🇲🇽🤝🇧🇷💚

    • @VampRavenna_
      @VampRavenna_ Před 2 lety +331

      Thanks from Brazil 🇧🇷💛🇲🇽

    • @lancelotkillz
      @lancelotkillz Před 2 lety +171

      Hola amigos. Hi from the US but I'm Mexican

    • @VampRavenna_
      @VampRavenna_ Před 2 lety +96

      @@lancelotkillz hola!!!🇧🇷💛🇲🇽

    • @sviitor
      @sviitor Před 2 lety +103

      I honestly don't think that day will ever come

    • @pragafds9278
      @pragafds9278 Před 2 lety +163

      é isso aí caralho, vamo usar o poder do chapolin colorado pra virar as duas maiores nações do mundo

  • @AbokaseeRed
    @AbokaseeRed Před 2 lety +627

    Brazil: I CAN DOMESTICALLY PROCESS MY RESOURCES WHENEVER I WANT. As long as its tomorrow.

    • @seink9163
      @seink9163 Před 2 lety +11

      It will never be done because we rely on raw material to get foreign coin. If we process our resources, foreign people won't buy it and will cause a collapse in our economy... Or at least that's the excuse I heard.

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 Před 2 lety +4

      also brazil defunding local industry fsr: brbrbrbrbrbrbrbrbrrrrrrr

    • @gbdornls
      @gbdornls Před 2 lety +6

      @@seink9163 That's Bull because if they want to process it themselves, and we sell the already processed material, they will have to buy from someone else, or not process it themselves at all.

    • @Feliprins
      @Feliprins Před 2 lety +4

      @@gbdornls Brazil is heavily reliant on imports for manufactured goods, even the agriculture which we flaunt so much about imports fertilizers, vaccines for cattle and seeds from outside labs... not even to talk about the machinery which is almost completely imported, every industry is so reliant on it that we are stuck trying to export as much as possible to make up for the rapid withdraw of dollars everytime some investor wants to build anything in Brazil... Also one of the reasons why foreign investors are kings who always get all their wishes fulfilled is because they can inject dollars into the economy, breathing much needed fresh air into it (But remember that no business injects money without the intent of withdrawing more in the long term, increasing even more the need for dollars to keep said investors with the hopes on being able to redirect their investments outside of the country) In fact even our inflation is based on the dollar heavily, the Plano Real which was put into practice to get rid of hyper inflation was basically allowing imports to set the value for products and force brazilian businessmen to keep their prices competitive, which means that when the dollar goes up so does everything in the economy. It begins with the need for manufactured goods and traps us into an endless loop of taking short-term growth through international capital which leads to most of the profits going outside the country while a said elite keeps the scraps of those big corporations... The lack of a trustworthy government also hampers any possibility of focusing the capital necessary to grow a manufacturing industry for heavy machinery, it becomes too costly due to corruption, not enough qualified labour and the lack of technological investment into making it a compeitive industry which brazilian businessmen would choose over the international alternatives.
      Anyways, it all started with the British forcefully feeding us all their industrial products and ends with us getting screwed over by short term policies to band-aid macroeconomic issues due to political instability and an elite stands to profit out of this status quo... Short of a miracle like the politicians deciding to change their centuries long behavior or the international market collapsing and forcing us to industrialize, hope is bleak.

    • @pedroivantaveraferreira3037
      @pedroivantaveraferreira3037 Před 2 lety +1

      If we process it here the local economy will grow and poor people will stop being slaves. It is what was happening in 2005-2013 Era, the children of slaves were beginning to go to college, utterly absurd in the viewpoint of the country owners. Slaves were starting not only to demand more rights in their labor contracts but also go to court when said contracts weren't respected. Brazil is sinking, shrinking 1.5% per year on internal production this disaster was manufactured

  • @NOVA10993
    @NOVA10993 Před 5 měsíci +37

    Brazil is a good country...always stay neutral.. Never bully his little neighbors...you will rise in future..stay positive.. Take love from INDIA
    🇮🇳 🤝🇧🇷

    • @diliscollective9743
      @diliscollective9743 Před měsícem +1

      never bully his little neighbors? ask paraguay about that

    • @nmolehaze
      @nmolehaze Před 29 dny +2

      "Never bully his little neighbors" a bit ironic coming from an Indian.

    • @rogue9946
      @rogue9946 Před 28 dny +4

      ​@@nmolehaze And who do we bully ?

  • @carlosguimaraes1196
    @carlosguimaraes1196 Před rokem +345

    I was born in Portugal, my mother is portuguese and my father, american from Kentucky. I was lived in Portugal until I was 15, then we moved to the USA, and at the age of 28 I decided to move to Brazil and today, with my 47 years old, I can say that Brazil is wonderful, much better than the USA and Europe in many aspects. At least for me! Many problems that we see around here also exist in Portugal, the European Union and the USA. I love Brazil.

    • @johno.7791
      @johno.7791 Před rokem +36

      Wow, Carlos. Embora você não seja brasileiro, somos povos irmãos. Amo Portugal também. Abraços!!!!!

    • @user-ys9zd4kf1t
      @user-ys9zd4kf1t Před rokem +5

      mito

    • @gustavohp3439
      @gustavohp3439 Před rokem +10

      Mano, se eu fosse vc eu vazaria pra portugual dnv kkkkk

    • @azazel8700
      @azazel8700 Před rokem +14

      Eu realmente não consigo entender o que daqui pode compensar por todos os problemas gigantescos que temos, a Europa parece mil vezes melhor de se viver

    • @gabrielazevedo1340
      @gabrielazevedo1340 Před rokem +24

      @@azazel8700 por causa dessa mentalidade é que não nos desenvolvemos como nacao

  • @juanpedronofal4829
    @juanpedronofal4829 Před 2 lety +3658

    I love my brothers and sisters from Brazil, we face tha same problems here in Argentina! Hope we'll see a brighter future for our nations!

    • @itsblitz4437
      @itsblitz4437 Před 2 lety +66

      Hopefully they may come together to overcome these issues.

    • @shzarmai
      @shzarmai Před 2 lety +112

      Yeah hopefully both Brazil and Argentina can become high-income developed countries in the future........

    • @gp1567
      @gp1567 Před 2 lety +67

      Argentina and Brazil are complementary in many aspects, one cannot exist without the other. So, Brazil will never be a superpower without Argentina and vice-versa.

    • @errocrin5488
      @errocrin5488 Před 2 lety +48

      @@gp1567 lol no, you said alot of bullshit pal

    • @ShivJ16
      @ShivJ16 Před 2 lety +35

      @@shzarmai Argentina is pretty rich and developed already tbh. It just has a mismanaged economy.

  • @brunotvrs
    @brunotvrs Před rokem +1559

    9:24 fun fact: Brazil was once called "United States of Brazil" and for 5 days it had a flag that was incredibly similar to the USA flag.

    • @dlib89
      @dlib89 Před rokem +176

      Until 1968, we were United States of Brasil. USB lol

    • @eggseed6543
      @eggseed6543 Před rokem +215

      That was our teen phase

    • @snk-js
      @snk-js Před rokem

      that was the phase of the BR where boomers dominated completely and used the military force to pressure minorities on the country and for those was against naz1 behavior

    • @GustavoLopes-vj5mp
      @GustavoLopes-vj5mp Před rokem +28

      @@eggseed6543 loooooooooooooooooooooool

    • @entokyado568
      @entokyado568 Před rokem +68

      Fun fact: TODAY mexico actually is clled "United Mexican States" becouse "united states" is not a name, it is a condition of the contry, and talking about the United States of America, we also can't call it America becouse America is the whole continent, so how we call it? 🤨

  • @tagama
    @tagama Před rokem +353

    O cara cita o possível colapso populacional e os brasileiros querem discutir qual cidade é grande qual é pequena. Tenho fé no futuro

    • @antoniomiguel5391
      @antoniomiguel5391 Před rokem +3

      recife

    • @CursedSwede
      @CursedSwede Před rokem

      Quando a população envelhecer demais, é só chamar os angolanos, bolivianos e moçambicanos. Se bem que pra isso o Brasil precisa oferecer algo melhor do que esses países citados. Se a gente continuar ladeira abaixo como nessa última década, estaremos f***dos.

    • @blackmetallkiller
      @blackmetallkiller Před rokem +30

      Tao discutindo no congresso pronome neutro kk

    • @laudemar-A.B.6386
      @laudemar-A.B.6386 Před rokem

      Um monte de bobagens e estupidez, o dono deste canal é canadense, Canadá é um país quase isolado e ofuscado pelos EUA 🤡😆

    • @igor-oh9eo
      @igor-oh9eo Před rokem +11

      ​@@laudemar-A.B.6386 mas olha a a qualidade de vida dos caras kkkkk

  • @pedroamaral5139
    @pedroamaral5139 Před 11 měsíci +29

    Listening to foreigns talking about Brazil from a geopolitical perspective is really cool, it makes it easy to see the strategic advantages that we have that we forgot because of the internal political noise. Awesome video!

  • @matheussouza3751
    @matheussouza3751 Před 2 lety +1240

    "Small settlements like Manaus"
    Manaus, with 2 million inhabitants and being the manufacturing capital of Brazil: am I a joke to you?

    • @francogiobbimontesanti3826
      @francogiobbimontesanti3826 Před 2 lety +106

      Manufacturing capital is exaggerating. São Paulo and Santa Catarina are by far the most industrialized states.

    • @lucashenriquemartansmachad8388
      @lucashenriquemartansmachad8388 Před 2 lety +232

      @@francogiobbimontesanti3826 a maior parte dos produtos eletronicos sao da zona franca de manaus kkkkkkkkkkkkkk

    • @miguelito4528
      @miguelito4528 Před 2 lety +178

      @@francogiobbimontesanti3826 olha o paulista achando q é o centro do universo ai kkkkk

    • @rogerseula4212
      @rogerseula4212 Před 2 lety +32

      Continua uma cidade perdida no meio do mato

    • @ytalotaniby3672
      @ytalotaniby3672 Před 2 lety +76

      @@rogerseula4212 Perdida com mais de 3 milhões de pessoas em sua zona metropolitana kkkkk

  • @rsouza01
    @rsouza01 Před rokem +14

    I'm Brazilian, and apart from the "small settlement Manaus" (honest mistake for a foreigner), everything else looks very accurate.

  • @Tripod9648
    @Tripod9648 Před 11 měsíci +19

    It’s interesting to think, “What if Brazil was a superpower?” But I would argue that superpowers today might still hinder the Brazilian government from achieving such a status. Take the US. It’s easy to point figures at the US, but if their was a rising superpower within the Americas, it’s possible the US might view this superpower as a threat, and might send the CIA to stage a coup.
    But in our reality, the US didn’t need to do such a thing, as mass inequality, corruption, and violence, all stop Brazil from obtaining a positive stance on the world stage.

    • @Squirtle-xm6bi
      @Squirtle-xm6bi Před 10 měsíci

      USA don't want another American super power. CIA will send "FREEDOM" and "DEMOCRACY" to this country.

    • @FrangkyMind
      @FrangkyMind Před 7 měsíci +11

      The CIA: "how do we destroy south american countries?"
      South American Countries: "i gotchu fam"

    • @dubstepXpower
      @dubstepXpower Před 5 měsíci

      Superpowers don't need other countries help or permission to succeed

    • @Tripod9648
      @Tripod9648 Před 4 měsíci

      @@dubstepXpower No they also don’t need permission to let other agencies mess with them either. The CIA has a lengthy history of conspiring with another countries politics and even inspiring or actively funding coups to elect a more submissive president to let America have better trades, routes, or just let American business have millions of workers overseas. Theirs a reason North Korea, Iran, China, Russia, all have ridiculous levels of security and paranoia. The US is a scary country that you would be wise to make your best friend.

  • @NoOne-fe3gc
    @NoOne-fe3gc Před 2 lety +956

    You forgot to mention the migration of qualified workers.
    All the reasons you cited, mostly violence, cause a huge migration of very qualified people. Which in turn drains the country from any possible chance of industry diversification.
    Also, migration is for the middle/upper classes as it is extremelly exprensive to migrate as a brazilian (in contrast of how easy it is to migrate from India for example)

    • @dafeels3085
      @dafeels3085 Před 2 lety +44

      I think it's still extremely hard for Indians to migrate too. You either need a degree in a high demand area (like nursing) so you could get job sponsored or already have a family member there.

    • @NoOne-fe3gc
      @NoOne-fe3gc Před 2 lety +23

      @@dafeels3085 Right, I didn't meant it was easy by any means, but from Brazil you are either a very qualified worker as you said, and even so it is quite hard to get a job from outside canada ( I guess that applies to indians too...) or your have to pay a HUGE amount to go to college in Canada... I guess Indians could do that too and I don't see their exchange rate being any better than brazil...
      Yeah I guess my point about it being easier for indians is wrong.... =)

    • @joshbentley2307
      @joshbentley2307 Před 2 lety +46

      @@dafeels3085 I suppose there’s also a bigger language barrier for Brazil, only 5% of the country can speak English.

    • @frenchempire9471
      @frenchempire9471 Před 2 lety +1

      @@joshbentley2307 but there continent is Hispanic, so they mostly speak Spanish and perhaps Portuguese due to that being their colonizer

    • @Tuysicom
      @Tuysicom Před 2 lety +52

      ​@@frenchempire9471 No, we don't speak Spanish. In fact only 0,2% of the population (460k people) speak Spanish.

  • @davidroman7469
    @davidroman7469 Před 2 lety +497

    Brazil is basically like playing a game of poker and starting with 4 aces and still manage to lose.

    • @lucadipaolo1997
      @lucadipaolo1997 Před 2 lety +105

      Yeah, kinda like playing vs a mafioso, you get 4 aces, but he gets 5 cause he's cheating, and if you complain you get shot.

    • @phosphenevision
      @phosphenevision Před 2 lety +68

      Absolutely not true, many problems Brazil still has today date back to how it was colonized. Portuguese colonization in Brazil was brutal, the immigrants that came and became Brazilians were taxed heavily and did not even own their own land. It was very different than colonization in the US, the British were "soft" compared to the portuguese. They wanted to create a new prosperous land and populate it. The portuguese wanted to funnel all the riches of Brazil straight to Portugal. Brazilians never really did manage to shape Brazil how they wanted, we gained independence, yet still had an emperor, eventually became a republic, but never divided the land, it has always been in the hands of the very few. Brazil is a long story of unenfranchised people, squashed rebellions, and coup d'etat after coup d'etat after coup d'etat. Brazil isn't fumbling a game, it's doing this by design.

    • @atanaZion
      @atanaZion Před 2 lety +4

      @@phosphenevision That's why the only 1st world countries in America are USA and Canadan
      England didn't come here to explore the lands

    • @phosphenevision
      @phosphenevision Před 2 lety +10

      @@atanaZion they definitely did I just think they were less experienced/focused. Portugal had already tested the colonization and slavery economic model in Madeira and west Africa, when they came to Brazil they already had decades of experience with it and a lot of economic success. They knew what they were after and how to get it. It also helps that places like Madeira had very similar weather to Brazil.

    • @ministryoftruth8499
      @ministryoftruth8499 Před 2 lety +19

      This video at times gives the impression that Brazil, had history played differently, would be a superpower comparable to the USA. I think that is definitely not the case. Sure Brazil could be more developed than it is, but it would never be the USA, or China, or a potential allied Germany-Russia. It simply lacks the geography to be a superpower of the highest order: (1) most of the country is tropical, not temperate climate; (2) the country is truly like Chile, but with all its many valuable resources stuck in its huge remote interior, which is cut off from the coast by an over-abundance of coastal highlands and a lack of navigable rivers. Argentina's geography is much better than that of Brazil despite its smaller size. In my opinion Argentina is more of a wasted country than Brazil when it comes purely to geographical advantages in South America. Also, not all of Brazil's history was negative like the video would lead viewers to believe. The video makes no mention that Brazil unlike the rest of South America was well on its way to become a developed country during the reign of Emperor Pedro II (late 19th century), being an independent kingdom rather than someone else's colony, and having infrastructure and institutions comparable to those of some European countries at the time. The way I see it, at this critical point in time the country was one reform away from being free to achieve its true potential: land reform - the power of the great landowners needed to be broken. Unfortunately, it was not to happen, because the large landowners deposed Pedro II through a military coup, sealing Brazil's fate as the eternal country of the future.

  • @le_dias
    @le_dias Před rokem +263

    O mano sabe mais do Brasil do que muitos brasileiros. E esses que pouco sabem insistem nos corruptos e na prática de pequenos delitos.

    • @xihai
      @xihai Před rokem +12

      Então kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk mais 4 anos sem progresso

    • @sprtillo
      @sprtillo Před rokem +11

      O cara não tem nenhuma vivência como brasileiro e vocês ainda insistem em babar ovo de americano falando do nosso país. Procurem estudar mais

    • @WesleyChuPasseios
      @WesleyChuPasseios Před rokem +17

      ​@@sprtillo opa cara vc já foi em um local chamado "rua"? eu sei é intrigante esse local, todos lá são extremamente inteligentes confia
      americano também é burro, mas eles sabem pelo menos quem foi o primeiro presidente deles.

    • @qcunnaceitanenhumnomevaissomsm
      @qcunnaceitanenhumnomevaissomsm Před rokem +1

      pse kkkkkkkkk

    • @chevy.preto.
      @chevy.preto. Před rokem

      Ele não está 100% certo não amigo,apenas tá certo na questão de criminalidade mesmo

  • @brisasuave3823
    @brisasuave3823 Před rokem +46

    Brasil pode não ser o melhor país pra se viver, mas também não é o pior. Sigo nesse pensamento pra não morrer de tristeza.

    • @samizex8840
      @samizex8840 Před rokem +9

      Pior que o Brasil melhorou pra caralho se a gente comparar com a decada de 80/90

    • @colossinsensei
      @colossinsensei Před rokem +2

      @@samizex8840 Comentário útil

    • @fluttzkrieg4392
      @fluttzkrieg4392 Před rokem +1

      @Samizex
      Infelizmente só tende a piorar com a situação que o mundo está agora.

    • @whatthefkc
      @whatthefkc Před 5 měsíci +1

      At least it is very beautiful.

    • @Rafael_Peixoto
      @Rafael_Peixoto Před měsícem +1

      Pelo menos n tem tantos desastres naturais, imagina se tivesse tsunami, terremoto, muitos furacões que nem nos estados unidos, nevascas... A chuva já derrete tudo, mas podia ser pior

  • @frinpi7473
    @frinpi7473 Před 2 lety +270

    as a brazillian i also have no idea why i still have no super powers

  • @grupogurps1813
    @grupogurps1813 Před 2 lety +1893

    A história da descoberta de minas de ouro no Brasil é quase cômica: durante 200 anos, não se descobriu uma mina. Nesse período, o governo de Portugal tinha decretado que qualquer mina de ouro descoberta no país pertenceria unicamente à Coroa Portuguesa. Em 1760, a Coroa decretou que apenas cobraria 20% do ouro descoberto (O Quinto). De repente, surgiram diversas minas de ouro no país. Milagre!!

    • @theslapchanel
      @theslapchanel Před 2 lety +84

      O ouro no Brasil foi descoberto no reinado de d. Pedro II em 1687, sendo a época áurea desta indústria na primeira metade do século xviii, com d João V. Em 1760 já reinava d José, mas as remessas de ouro não eram a mesma coisa

    • @blacktuira4858
      @blacktuira4858 Před 2 lety +30

      @@theslapchanel Dom Pedro II em 1687? o imperador so foi nascer 150 anos depois

    • @theslapchanel
      @theslapchanel Před 2 lety +136

      @@blacktuira4858 D. Pedro II rei de Portugal, não confundir com D. Pedro II do Brasil

    • @petersylvester23
      @petersylvester23 Před 2 lety +55

      @@blacktuira4858 Portugal teve 4 "Pedros", o quarto sendo o nosso Dom Pedro I.

    • @theye29
      @theye29 Před 2 lety +3

      Foi em minas gerais?

  • @cachorroninja5210
    @cachorroninja5210 Před rokem +30

    Brazil is the eternal country of the future
    Brasil é o eterno país do futuro

  • @mpauloperes
    @mpauloperes Před rokem +38

    Só eu achei bastante peculiar que um dos motivos do nosso atraso sejam as escarpas? Sério, nunca vi isso como um problema grave. O relevo é acidentado de um lado, fazemos a estrada pelo outro...

    • @luizfabiano4334
      @luizfabiano4334 Před rokem +7

      você é economista ou engenheiro?

    • @leandrodasilva2523
      @leandrodasilva2523 Před rokem +8

      Para exportar a comida produzida no oeste precisa levar até o porto as estradas nesses lugares e mais comum nos últimos anos, mas imagina se nós pudesse aproveitar essa região desde a colonização. Nós ia ter recebido mais imigrantes de classe baixa para cultivar nessas regiões do que oligarcas com escravos.

    • @jailsonsantos9955
      @jailsonsantos9955 Před rokem +3

      @@leandrodasilva2523 por 200-300 anos o Brasil só existia no litoral. Sobre o relevo, por exemplo, uma chuva essa semana e a principal via entre rio x sp ficou bloqueada pq caiu barreira (via Dutra), são coisas q a gente não se atenta muito mas fazem diferença.

    • @raphaelalexandre2855
      @raphaelalexandre2855 Před rokem

      Curitiba cresceu muito após construção estrada da graciosa e da ferrovia Curitiba-Paranaguá.

    • @heindinhooo
      @heindinhooo Před rokem +3

      Verdade seja dita, se você assistir a alguns vídeos de fora falando do BR verá que eles criticam bastante nosso relevo costeiro mesmo.
      Então a gente pode não enxergar esse problema de fato, pois nos acostumamos a isso, mas num contexto geral, bem capaz de gerar dificuldades ao desenvolvimento sim.

  • @jamesdeen2722
    @jamesdeen2722 Před 2 lety +736

    I’m Afro-Lebanese Brazilian on my dads side, so I decided to study in Brazil for ~6 months in college. I studied Brazilian and Latin American economics and perspective, as well as international economics and management. The video makes a great point in that the Brazilian economy became far, far too important on primary goods production and exports (i.e. materials, mining, agriculture, etc) and this has caused huge swings in the economy. When primary goods/commodities prices are up, the economy does very well and Brazil booms, like the period of 2000-2012 or so. But when the commodities boom reduces and prices go back down, the economy shrinks. They rode the wave for that decade, and stayed largely dependent on commodities exports, without diversifying exports and the economy as much as necessary to combat the inevitable reduction in commodities demand and thus prices.
    There’s also large disparity between the north and south. As mentioned in the video, slavery wasn’t abolished until 1888. The northern half of the country was its cradle. Where slaves produced and mined all of the exports. They needed to fill the southern half, so the govt offered Europeans free land to move to the south and bring their families and businesses to Brazil. Now you have a more developed, service focused southern Brazil vs the more commodities, agriculture based northern half. I studied in Florianópolis, a large and highly developed city in the southern state of Santa Catarina. I have the stereotypical Brazilian, Afro/Arab influenced light brown skin and curly hair. But when I researched the south and arrived there, most people don’t look like me. They just look white/European (especially German and Italian), because of the govt initiative I mentioned previously. Florianopolis is about +85% White/European. Very interesting history. I love Brazil so much and my time in Florianopolis was so incredible. Brazil has it problems, but I’d rather go back and live in floripa than to continue living in the US, where I was born. Brazilians are so warm and open and loving people (mostly). The mash up of cultures and peoples, you just can’t beat it. Sorry for such a long post, if anyone even reads this. I just love Brazil so much. Eu tô morrendo de saudade do Brasil 🇧🇷😓

    • @udontneedtoknowmyname
      @udontneedtoknowmyname Před 2 lety +42

      Ypu are always welcome here Bro.

    • @oarielg
      @oarielg Před 2 lety +37

      Fofo

    • @willhem5963
      @willhem5963 Před 2 lety +18

      @@diogoduarte2944 ele quis dizer que estudou a economia brasileira e latinoamericana, ou "Brazilian and Latin America Economics" em inglês

    • @ericreif3834
      @ericreif3834 Před 2 lety +13

      @@diogoduarte2944 brazilian economics cara, lê a frase inteira

    • @emmaoof3335
      @emmaoof3335 Před 2 lety +2

      @@diogoduarte2944 Brazilian *economics* the economy in Brazil

  • @gustavoabreu3097
    @gustavoabreu3097 Před 2 lety +224

    Brazilians:
    hippity hoppity this comment section is now our property.

    • @h0ser
      @h0ser  Před 2 lety +79

      There are over 200 million Brazilians, I see this as a win

    • @Ccrisx2
      @Ccrisx2 Před 2 lety +9

      O mais interesante q esse vídeo nem tem taaantos brs aqui

    • @nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti5375
      @nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti5375 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Ccrisx2 Na vdd tem, mas a maioria está escrevendo em inglês

    • @pragafds9278
      @pragafds9278 Před 2 lety +7

      just like portugal did with brazil

    • @flowerflour5257
      @flowerflour5257 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Ccrisx2 Ss, só que os br tão aprendendo inglês mais do que nunca

  • @canaldoandy4944
    @canaldoandy4944 Před rokem +72

    Em um video de 10 minutos em Ingles e feito por um americano, eu aprendi mais sobre o Brasil sobre sua história e geográfia do q meus 3 anos finais do ensino médio

  • @vaniavania7757
    @vaniavania7757 Před rokem +4

    I live in the most technologic state (there is not much of them, only 4 or 5 are pretty technologic) of Brasil, São paulo (It is on Southeast, pretty cool place). You said everything i learned in one pretty great school here and you explained exactly as i learned (except that i learned with more details... i mean it took years) congrats.

  • @PUAlum
    @PUAlum Před 2 lety +391

    I'm a Californian who spent a lot of time in Brazil in the 1970's. It's such a great country! This video gives a lot to think about. Corruption is a major barrier to progress----but corruption seems to be spreading! Still...returning two or three times over 30 years, Brazil's progress is obvious. And i still have saudades.

    • @LionelMessi-yp4sc
      @LionelMessi-yp4sc Před 2 lety +4

      How was Brazil in the 1970s?

    • @arolemaprarath6615
      @arolemaprarath6615 Před 2 lety +2

      Is California a part of Mexci? Like Baja California?

    • @PUAlum
      @PUAlum Před 2 lety +5

      @@arolemaprarath6615 it's complicated. It was once. Probably will be again some day. Especially if the US re-elects Trump.

    • @gabrielnascimento1021
      @gabrielnascimento1021 Před 2 lety +14

      I've met a guy in Florida who lived in California and visited Brazil when he was young, I remember when he told me about trucks problems that the chassis would bend if you pulled too much weight and people would park in front of a tree and slowly accelerate to make the chassis go back to its original form, he was such a nice guy and we talked for hours, I was a car dealer and we were trying to sell him a van but I just wanted to keep talking to him

    • @HeadhuntexGamer
      @HeadhuntexGamer Před 2 lety +3

      @@PUAlum I highly doubt it, it would be impossible to convince the other states and specially the US military to let it go. Also why would it even go back to Mexico? That would be the same as giving Louisiana to the French. At the best scenario it would become independent.

  • @jjj.jjjkkkkk
    @jjj.jjjkkkkk Před 2 lety +500

    Countries in Latin America like Brazil, Argentina and Mexico are countries with great pontential but corruption holds them back 🙁

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +6

      You can thank that to their lack of national identity which gives rise to enormous amounts of cultural populism, which _in turn_ is what breeds their corruption.

    • @jjj.jjjkkkkk
      @jjj.jjjkkkkk Před 2 lety +14

      @@mekingtiger9095 But national identity is not lacking in these countries

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +29

      @@jjj.jjjkkkkk I guess you can say that about Mexico and Argentina to at least some extent. Maybe Chile and Uruguay aswell. But as for the rest, including Brazil? Many of them were the result of geographical isolation and territorial disputes which got solved/unsolved by petty fighting between politicians without an ounce of actual nationalism being involved in there. Some are even so heterogeneous that its population has barely anything in common between themselves. The most screaming example of that being Brazil. It's so diverse and culturally clusterfucked that there is no room for a sense of union between its people. It only got culturally unified via an artificial process initiated by Vargas with intense populist propaganda. Even then, the work was left mostly incomplete, and since he died, brazilians have again had an identity crisis from the start. You can't have an unified people with a sense of cooperation and internal harmony in mind in these conditions, therefore no real sense of national fraternity and thus no one will be actively willing to step up and do _anything_ for their country. No one, and I repeat, _no one,_ will get up and fix the country's problems when they do not feel driven to fix it in the first place since for them their countries are mostly hollow figures with mostly "strangers" to them for the most part. There is absolutely nothing organic about their "national identities". They're aberrations of history which can only feel any sense of union and patriotism with a "Miraculous Great Leader" in charge. Their morale is so dependent on the myth of a strong charismatic political figure, in fact, that it's the _perfect_ recipe for corrupt politicians to control and manipulate them.
      Latin American countries are nothing more than incomplete nations, if even nations at all. So repeat with me: *There is no such thing as a brazilian nation!*

    • @il_brunao1604
      @il_brunao1604 Před 2 lety +9

      @@mekingtiger9095 As a brazillian you're so right that's the sad truth of having big cultural differences between the population

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +16

      @@il_brunao1604 This is why Brazil can _never_ be considered a legitimate nation. A people who depend on political leaders to forge their identity and bonds of kinship or just their entire life purposes for themselves and have their morale be so dependent on charismatic populist figures is unworthy of ever being called a true nation. If they can't find an organic bond that unite them as people towards a common goal, then they're better off separated from eachother, following their own distinctive paths in the journey of discovering their own national meanings and cultural identities. Either as separate countries or as wandering individuals. Even if it means getting hurt A LOT in the process...
      State Paternalism ingrained within a culture was _never_ good for anyone.

  • @pinebarks
    @pinebarks Před rokem +22

    i just wanted to say, this videos really well researched!! im brazilian myself, and was impressed with how specific you got. even though i didnt technically learn anything from this, it was nice to see all these points strung together coherently! and hahah, i loved the humor. the campeao do mundo part got me laughing out loud, it seems youve picked up our sense of humor.
    brazil campeao do mundo porraaaa vamo caralho top 1 homicidios caceteee

  • @michelferreira9695
    @michelferreira9695 Před rokem +3

    Brazil national dance is not samba, but moonwalk: we take one step forward and then we take ten steps back.

  • @samuelschonenberger
    @samuelschonenberger Před 2 lety +85

    Talks about violence and corruption
    Music in the background: party
    Is that Brazil in a nutshell?

    • @joaopadua7134
      @joaopadua7134 Před 2 lety +6

      VAMOS FLAMENGO

    • @lan8801
      @lan8801 Před 2 lety

      @@joaopadua7134 dale Mengão 👍

    • @Luis.A.Angeli
      @Luis.A.Angeli Před 2 lety +1

      Só não vão tacar fogo no estádio se perderem a próxima partida

    • @pragafds9278
      @pragafds9278 Před 2 lety

      @@joaopadua7134 UMA VEZ UMA VEZ UMA UMA VEZ FLAMENGO SEMPRE FLAMENGO

    • @mycheack1805
      @mycheack1805 Před 2 lety +1

      @@joaopadua7134 2×1

  • @petette4442
    @petette4442 Před 2 lety +1251

    México manda muitos beijos amigos brasileiros 🇲🇽🇧🇷💕

    • @nakelekantoo
      @nakelekantoo Před 2 lety +58

      Brasil manda beijos de volta amigos mexicanos 🇧🇷💞🇲🇽

    • @drexcortes
      @drexcortes Před 2 lety +2

      😄

    • @ninjapurpura1
      @ninjapurpura1 Před 2 lety

      Mando muitas pi*as para las chicas mexicanas.

    • @Lia-dx9hg
      @Lia-dx9hg Před rokem +4

      @@rafaeleduardo9855 tmnc kkkk

    • @sournois90
      @sournois90 Před rokem

      @@rafaeleduardo9855 engraçado

  • @jujuoof174
    @jujuoof174 Před 2 měsíci

    You’re getting me into country balls, thanks!

  • @lucasdanezine9168
    @lucasdanezine9168 Před rokem +36

    Impressionante o vídeo, sabe mais do Brasil que boa parte dos brasileiros.

    • @luccaskingo
      @luccaskingo Před 11 měsíci

      Um dos fatores do atraso do br é o cristianismo

  • @arthurpilau6927
    @arthurpilau6927 Před 2 lety +486

    About the 2013 protests: Brazil had the second highest GDP growth rate in the world from 2004 to 2012, unemployment rates were at around 5% and extreme poverty was being reduced drastically, but, since the damned year of 2013, everything has changed: we are facing either recession or stagnation (it depends how you look at it) and unemployment is around 15% to 20%. Although the protests had in fact mobilized the population against the corruption, it didn't change a thing (it actually made things worse). Now, not only we have the corruption problems you mentioned, but also we face a similar problem the US has: a country divided by two political parties where nobody is willing to discuss the real problems the country as a whole is facing, the only thing politicians are worried about is how to maintain themselves in the power. Finally, the future is dire: we have presidential elections next year and the two candidates most likely to win are Bolsonaro (the current right wing president, who is, at the bare minimum, politically incompetent) or Lula (the president from 2002 to 2010, whose political party and himself to be honest, are known for corruption scandals).
    So, where Brazil is going? Nowhere for short. We won't be industrializing in the near future, in fact, we are incentivizing our economy to become more and more rural. So Brazil isn't the country of the future no more.
    Sorry for extending myself, as a economist I am really passionate about the topic.
    Your video was great overall and it did cover most of the reasons why Brazil is where it is today. Good job!

    • @deborawa
      @deborawa Před 2 lety +6

      agreed

    • @liliuMAX
      @liliuMAX Před 2 lety +22

      The 2013 protests was a fckng color revolution since then we went downhill

    • @marechaltukhachevsky2909
      @marechaltukhachevsky2909 Před 2 lety +65

      Na verdade não é correto dizer que estamos divididos em dois partidos políticos, o PSDB não existe mais em cenário nacional (apesar de ainda forte no reduto paulista), a divisão é entre PT e o Bolsonaro como pessoa, o partido da vez é qualquer partido que o Bolsonaro escolher. Muito mais que os EUA nosso país é mais dividido em personalidades do que partidos.

    • @jalexsilva8162
      @jalexsilva8162 Před 2 lety +62

      A única saída pro Brasil é a do aeroporto

    • @marcosalexandre6613
      @marcosalexandre6613 Před 2 lety +14

      ​@@jalexsilva8162 é por causa desse tipo de pensamento que país continua a mesma bosta.

  • @catoflado4977
    @catoflado4977 Před 2 lety +632

    Thats right. As a Brazilian, I confirm, the forced Focus on agriculture and the lack of investment or the distribution of the wealth generated by it doomed Brazil forever.
    Until this day, the concentration of land is absurd, and there was never a land reform.
    If Brazil had a land reform at some point, the wealth generated by agriculture would foment small business and investiments in other areas. But ALL the attempts to do It resulted in the agricultural elite financing coups to maintain their Power.

    • @_Meres
      @_Meres Před 2 lety +10

      Which means we should get rid of the parasite government and their monopoly of force, so big land owners can't buy it to guarantee their inefficient dominance.
      Google doesn't buy any governments to keep themselves up there, so being a rich company is not the problem, it's being able to corrupt someone with the monopoly of force and 220 million modern slaves under that monopoly.

    • @emylily8266
      @emylily8266 Před 2 lety +56

      @@_Meres ah yes, cause the same big land owners that already have private militias stealing indigenous land are totally gonna break apart once theres no government... youre asking for feudalism if you actually spent 2 seconds thinking about it, no monopoly of force means armed land disputes and internal conflict. We already have part sof the country where the state basically doesn't exist, doesn't even go tax anyone living there, but i don't see ppl flocking to live in stateless favelas.

    • @blade8741
      @blade8741 Před 2 lety +68

      @@_Meres my man I live in a stateless favela as a friend pointed out. The state not being present only will increase the dispute of the armed militias and drug traffickers on the urban cities, aswell as the private armies that exist within the big farmlands from big producers. I study law and have been told of people here from Rio going to said big farm lands trying to "make the law work" only to end up assassinated.
      Truth is, we need a deeply change in our system, the problem is, those in power don't want change.

    • @ezed8748
      @ezed8748 Před 2 lety +13

      As a Argentinian... we have similar problems lmao... and other aswell
      And if im not wrong lots of countries in latam have similar problems

    • @aquele_cara_la2834
      @aquele_cara_la2834 Před 2 lety

      @@blade8741 você conhece o *B U N G A S* ?

  • @rosalurdes568
    @rosalurdes568 Před rokem +2

    I'm from Brazil
    And seeing all the love in the comments warms my heart.

  • @curiocurioso1740
    @curiocurioso1740 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Nice analises

  • @Gabriel87100
    @Gabriel87100 Před 2 lety +331

    Brazilians have a cultural "ignorance" of sorts that is very much historical. We never had much political stability ever since the Empire, which makes people "worship" political figures that would "make everything better". That's why Brazilians don't think about solving actual issues and instead battle each other in supporting figures that don't give a damn to people. It's always Populist President A vs Populist President B, both only wanting to get rich, influential and promising the world.
    And that's why it never "takes off", because people are inherently into personality cults.

    • @MrLoowiz
      @MrLoowiz Před 2 lety

      Weak constitution and a shitty culture, structural issues that really mess up a country.

    • @robchamp8556
      @robchamp8556 Před 2 lety +15

      spoke the truth bruv

    • @steampunkastronaut7081
      @steampunkastronaut7081 Před 2 lety +17

      This is the story of Argentina too

    • @MrLoowiz
      @MrLoowiz Před 2 lety +21

      @@steampunkastronaut7081 Argentina was almost a first world country. It reached a place where Brazil never was. Though its descent would make even the most daredevil snowboarder scared for their life.

    • @cobraverdi6730
      @cobraverdi6730 Před 2 lety +7

      Vdd, eleição desse ano ta uma putaria desde a ultima eleição, que foi uma putaria desde a anterior, e assim ate vargas, que era um puto, mas eu gosto de comer getúlio (o bolo de feijão) ent nao faz mal

  • @dimitrios8272
    @dimitrios8272 Před 2 lety +133

    As someone that had a childhood in brazil I loved it and people always were sooo nice to me. It was like paradise. But this all makes sense and its so unfortunate. This country does have a lot of potential.

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 Před 2 lety +23

      I think part of the problem is exactly that
      think of former gifted children that fail to exceed later in life
      when you are raised absolute convinced of your ''great potential'' by basically everyone around you, you get to settle, instead of building a ''go-get it'' attitude you get comfortable doing the bare minimal
      why try so hard, when you're so sure of your ''great potential''
      when you're so focused on a promise of a future is too easy to neglect the present, ultimately dooming any chance of that future potential from materialising
      and then the years catch up and you realise how little you've actually accomplished

    • @williamcorrea8023
      @williamcorrea8023 Před rokem +1

      @@matheussanthiago9685 damn...

    • @guilhermetavares7967
      @guilhermetavares7967 Před rokem +1

      De onde tu é ?

  • @nippycobra
    @nippycobra Před 5 měsíci +3

    Cause not every country is gonna end up being a superpower.

  • @Kavou
    @Kavou Před rokem +1

    Brazil has the most wholesome people ever, stay strong!

  • @otaccats
    @otaccats Před rokem +435

    As a native litoral Rio de Janeiro brazilian, i can confirm that the part where you said about violence on São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, is REALLY accurate, i loved the video, thank you.

    • @barbaramarianadeassuncaofr9210
      @barbaramarianadeassuncaofr9210 Před rokem +31

      E sabe o que é pior? Rio de Janeiro é muito famoso pela violência e etc, mas todos os sites que eu olho (dos atualizados aos mais antigos) falam que o estado mais violento do Brasil (ou um dos) é o RN, principalmente na capital - vulgo onde eu moro KKKKKKK não me afeta muito porque não saio muito de casa, só pra pegar ônibus, mas é chato ter medo de andar no próprio conjunto se for mais de 19:00

    • @lucastzp
      @lucastzp Před rokem

      Nada RJ nem é o estado mais violento, isso é pq aqui é a casa da Globo, tudo de ruim vira um novelåo na mídia e é espalhando pelo resto do país todo... Tem estados do nordeste bem mais violento que aqui, Maranhão por exemplo.

    • @CAnAbrAvA2011
      @CAnAbrAvA2011 Před rokem +17

      @@barbaramarianadeassuncaofr9210 nordeste se tornou generalmente mais perigoso que o rio, varios estados são tão perigosos como o rio até mais

    • @whirr11WasStolen
      @whirr11WasStolen Před rokem

      @@CAnAbrAvA2011 true

    • @sasino
      @sasino Před rokem +4

      People fighting against each other for money, instead of fighting together for common goals.
      I think that some US states and cities are at risk.

  • @yeetydab1672
    @yeetydab1672 Před 2 lety +379

    Brazil is essentially what I would imagine the United States to be had the confederates won. It was a country controlled by large and rich farmers, with an economy dependant on slavery. With most of the wealth concentrated on a small elite population, the people never had a strong reason to form a stable and solid government such as the US. Now days, the people have little control over the government, companies are mostly monopolized and we don't produce any meaningful technological goods

    • @cseijifja
      @cseijifja Před rokem +8

      Argentina is what the us would have been id the confederates had won, to be more precise, landowners, everywhere, minimal industrialiation, ect, ect.

    • @BaiacuGraphics
      @BaiacuGraphics Před rokem

      Falou pouco mas falou merda

    • @Matt-bk2rt
      @Matt-bk2rt Před rokem +3

      meh, I don't think so. I feel like argentina is more like it.

    • @BaiacuGraphics
      @BaiacuGraphics Před rokem +15

      @@Matt-bk2rt Argentina is much more economically screwed than Brazil, and besides, the riches it has are much smaller, I'm not saying that it doesn't have a lot of riches, but compared to Brazil it's small.

    • @daubeny7386
      @daubeny7386 Před rokem +9

      Its interesting that a large portion of Confederates fled to Brazil after the war, about 30.000 to 50.000 if i remember

  • @lucasplatiz3625
    @lucasplatiz3625 Před rokem +4

    Tu tens uma visão interessante sobre nosso país, gosto muito desse tipo de conteúdo e é bom ter um pouco dessa visão de como somos visto internacionalmente. Discordo de algumas coisas que você disse no começo, eu com certeza conheço mais a fundo essa ladaia toda, sempre morei aqui. Cara, eu gostei. Obrigado pelo vídeo 👌🏻😃

  • @rafaelsantana1949
    @rafaelsantana1949 Před rokem

    great video!!! very accurate

  • @glasseverywhere
    @glasseverywhere Před 2 lety +600

    I love you Brazil, from an American that wants to live there. Yes, I do think Brazil's future will be positive and the economy will boom for the best

    • @franknwogu4911
      @franknwogu4911 Před 2 lety +60

      yikes

    • @gtPacheko
      @gtPacheko Před 2 lety +2

      @@franknwogu4911 why?

    • @Ralzone
      @Ralzone Před 2 lety +37

      lol. thanks for the lies

    • @AndalusianLuis
      @AndalusianLuis Před 2 lety +87

      How much did you get paid to post this?

    • @Ralzone
      @Ralzone Před 2 lety +44

      @@AndalusianLuis i think that someone is point a gun at his head.

  • @meneither3834
    @meneither3834 Před 2 lety +82

    I just found a hidden gem, I'll be binging this channel for the next few hours.

  • @silverstar8868
    @silverstar8868 Před rokem +5

    Brazil is what lefties imagine the US being like

  • @Daniel-zj8zg
    @Daniel-zj8zg Před 2 lety +71

    1900: Brazil is the country of the future
    2050: Brazil still is the country of the future

    • @breakingzilian5371
      @breakingzilian5371 Před 2 lety +9

      2060 Sul Independente é o novo Brasil do futuro!

    • @renelacorte1852
      @renelacorte1852 Před 2 lety

      @@breakingzilian5371 Cara não duvido disso se o sul já estiver desenvolvido

    • @Soulbotagem-BR
      @Soulbotagem-BR Před 2 lety +1

      Better than being the "country of the past"... Brazil is a new and powerful car with a bad driver. USA, EU, Japan, India and China are winning cars, with good drivers, but old... Brazil, sooner or later, will take its place in the world...

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Soulbotagem-BR and fall again real quick with. Only few people whose can really made Brazil great. But in these time of is really hard to find it.

    • @atanaZion
      @atanaZion Před 2 lety +1

      @@breakingzilian5371 Eca,Eca, q nojo desses parasitas

  • @maradalilaferreira4060
    @maradalilaferreira4060 Před rokem +1373

    Ser brasileiro é incrível, mas morar no Brasil é terrível ;-;

    • @angelo1342
      @angelo1342 Před rokem +32

      Concordo plena mente ( . _ . )

    • @34.000
      @34.000 Před rokem +6

      oi

    • @samanthafox3124
      @samanthafox3124 Před rokem +50

      Eu tive que sair do Brasil há 15 anos e morar no estrangeiro. A saudade não dá trégua no meu coração, mas quando eu vou ao Brasil e vejo as dificuldades, injustiças, crimes, etc até fico grato por morar fora☹️

    • @pedrochagas9903
      @pedrochagas9903 Před rokem +4

      Falou tudo

    • @michaeljfferson
      @michaeljfferson Před rokem +3

      contraditório.

  • @ReDsupimpasLOL
    @ReDsupimpasLOL Před rokem

    amazing video

  • @Matheus-hj8ye
    @Matheus-hj8ye Před 6 měsíci

    Surprisingly accurate video about my country, for a foreigner.
    Good one

  • @kardoplays1025
    @kardoplays1025 Před rokem +11

    Thats the difference when you have a colony of exploration and another colony of settlements, one grow rapidly, the other one gets exploited. Our problems dates back to when Brazil was still under Portugal's crown

  • @Domingues2820
    @Domingues2820 Před rokem +23

    It's the first time I see a foreigner talking about these problems that Brazil has, most only talk about the good things, like Copacabana

    • @shakilhonil8447
      @shakilhonil8447 Před rokem

      Is it still good? Idk about that haha

    • @entokyado568
      @entokyado568 Před rokem +1

      Actually copacabana is a superestimate thing, Brazil has a lot more to offer them just a beach so, come to Brazil 😃

  • @ABC-vv4cm
    @ABC-vv4cm Před 5 měsíci +3

    Demographics. It’s always demographics.

  • @boto336
    @boto336 Před rokem +1

    Que vídeo legal muito explicativo vc está de parabéns

  • @acavella0855
    @acavella0855 Před rokem +169

    Actually, it's now just being discovered that there is in fact many city that are being made by the indigenous Brazilian people. But the reason why it is not as famous or have remains like Andes or Maya civilization is that most of the city are made from woods and not stone which makes it easier to be reclaimed by forest and decompose. And also makes it difficult to find it.

    • @RooseveltGuilherme
      @RooseveltGuilherme Před rokem +10

      Recently I read a study claiming there might be 10 million indigenous people in the Amazon region before 1500... which is absolutely ludicrous lmao

    • @sasino
      @sasino Před rokem +4

      @@RooseveltGuilherme I think it would be a good investment to build cities and factories for them in the Amazon so that they can start producing.

    • @zeroeu5510
      @zeroeu5510 Před rokem +11

      @@sasino??? Are you suggesting colonizing the remaining native population?

    • @pedronathan6025
      @pedronathan6025 Před rokem +6

      @@zeroeu5510 i guess he sorta is (maybe without realizing it)

    • @devilface97
      @devilface97 Před rokem +1

      Which makes sense, you build with what you have access too

  • @nathanseper8738
    @nathanseper8738 Před 2 lety +150

    The worst part was that Brazil had a chance to be a respected power under Emperor Dom Pedro II, possibly one of the greatest monarchs who ever lived. But he was overthrown by those corrupt aristocrats. In his last breath, Pedro said, "May God grant me these last wishes - peace and prosperity for Brazil." If only he knew what would follow him.

    • @ptlemon1101
      @ptlemon1101 Před 2 lety +4

      God passed on that it seems kekw

    • @joacoolcipher
      @joacoolcipher Před 2 lety +3

      brasil should have abolished slavery on the time of independence

    • @xdevell
      @xdevell Před 2 lety +17

      @@joacoolcipher Não é tão fácil assim, tem que ir gradativamente. Pega a abolição da escravidão nos EUA, eles acabaram num piscar de olhos, mas o que aconteceu depois? Guerra Civil. o Brasil aboliu a escravidão gradativamente, pra ter controle da situação.

    • @marechaltukhachevsky2909
      @marechaltukhachevsky2909 Před 2 lety +8

      Foi um tão grandioso monarca que foi expulso por meia dúzia de militares republicanos que não tinham apoio popular ou respaldo nacional nenhum, e saiu correndo logo pra Portugal, nossos antigos "senhores" ao invés de ficar e lutar por seu país.

    • @wanderingthewastes6159
      @wanderingthewastes6159 Před 2 lety +3

      xdevell na verdade, a campanha do Lincoln especificamente falou que ele não ia abolir a escravidão, mas o sul não acreditou e saiu da União. Foi só anos depois, bem no meio da guerra, que o Frederik Douglas conseguiu convencer ele a fazer a guerra ser sobre emancipação, em parte pra ganhar mais apoio da população.

  • @fernandohp5362
    @fernandohp5362 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Sou brasileiro e posso assegurar que 100% do video é verdadeiro, parabens pela didática.

  • @vitorsales6143
    @vitorsales6143 Před rokem +2

    November 15th 1889 here's when everything started to goes wrong 😞😞

  • @pietro871000
    @pietro871000 Před 2 lety +151

    Brazil could have become easily a 2nd United states... but it's a pity seeing the country not having the boom it deserves.

    • @splashnskillz37
      @splashnskillz37 Před 2 lety +10

      USA's don't come often

    • @lawbringer9857
      @lawbringer9857 Před 2 lety +41

      Pietro Cionfoli If Brazil was a British colony it would have been. But unlucky for you, you instead had the incompetent Portugues as the colonialist.

    • @splashnskillz37
      @splashnskillz37 Před 2 lety +14

      @@lawbringer9857 Rather not have systemic Racism like USA and South Africa had thx

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety +15

      @@lawbringer9857 Well not all of them is incompetence. There was one man one man whose spent his whole life giving Brazil all of his. He did make Brazil great even potentially rival the US. He was their ruler ,their people hope and their people hero. How unfortunately it was by their own Republican hand that drag him and Brazil down.

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety +2

      @@splashnskillz37 To be honest with you on this they reap what their sow years ago. They want a Republic for it people now they got it.

  • @skaibox5921
    @skaibox5921 Před 2 lety +303

    Man, I am Brazilian and I can say for sure that you are thoroughly correct. Corruption here is a massive problem, the main reason for most of all the others problems (lack of infrastructure, poor education, huge violence, etc). Recently, the “car wash” plan was basically “deleted” ( It is still working, but it bears little to zero political support, and the majority of politicians that were once in prison, are now free) by Supreme Justice Tribunal (STF), which means that all those corrupt politicians might be elected again. Such a wasted opportunity, I wish I could hope for Brazil becoming a true superpower, although, as a Brazilian, it seems extremely unlikely. Thanks for your video!

    • @joaogabrielalves8781
      @joaogabrielalves8781 Před 2 lety +4

      Entendo sua dor mermão

    • @yuukiyoshizawa7007
      @yuukiyoshizawa7007 Před 2 lety +37

      Literally because they vote for corrupt and unqualified politics to their government. Take Lula for example, people claims his government was the "best", but all of the modern day government that is full of corruption and inefficiency, increased a lot while he was on presidency and exploded on Dilma, causing the impeach and the party's downfall. Still, people want him back, which l find absolutely stupid. Guy was in prison, proved there was corruption on his government (which was no little) and now is running for presidency again, l won't be surprised if people would... or actually, will vote for him. Like l always say: Brazil deserves to be a third world country, because it's people want to. People having "politics as their pets" and refuses to see the truth. In a serious country with serious people, he would've stayed in prison. We are all doomed. Brazil will never become a super power.

    • @YagizBagdatli
      @YagizBagdatli Před 2 lety +5

      isnt corruption the problem of literally almost every country right now?

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 2 lety +20

      @@YagizBagdatli Yes. But we have become pros at it

    • @YagizBagdatli
      @YagizBagdatli Před 2 lety +1

      @@riograndedosulball248 LOL alright makes sense

  • @futincrivel
    @futincrivel Před rokem +6

    Brazil's big problem is very well pointed out in the video - Being dependent on agricultural products. Brazil needs industrialization, but today we are de-industrializing, and this happens because agricultural entrepreneurs have become very powerful oligarchs and have prevented any major industrializing government program. And Lava Jato (Cas Was Operation) helped to demolish the 5 big industries in Brazil, so it put us in a deeper and more disastrous situation.

  • @Killerkraft975
    @Killerkraft975 Před rokem +5

    Why countries are what they are today, a TLDR:
    European colonisers

  • @rushil3098
    @rushil3098 Před 2 lety +521

    Amo o Brasil da Índia 🇮🇳💓🇧🇷

    • @EnioGabriel_
      @EnioGabriel_ Před rokem +7

      Nem vou fala nada kkkkk

    • @pedrobutta
      @pedrobutta Před rokem

      CAUSE OF THIEVES, PEDOPHILES, CHILD TRAFIKKING, SOCIALISM AND CORRUPTION.

    • @szveszs
      @szveszs Před rokem +2

      @@EnioGabriel_ nem eu

    • @Gamerlude
      @Gamerlude Před rokem +1

      muito menos eu

    • @D0llyz
      @D0llyz Před rokem

      @@EnioGabriel_ pq?

  • @pedrovalenca_
    @pedrovalenca_ Před 2 lety +46

    love your work, bro. I truly appreciate your interest in my country and it's clear that you did a lot of research
    one thing I must point out, though. manaus has 2.5 million inhabitants in its metro area. it's not a small settlement by any metric

  • @johnboyc5
    @johnboyc5 Před rokem

    Been binge watching you videos all week. Love it. Keep it up :)

  • @fancat7535
    @fancat7535 Před rokem +11

    i love to see that you guys apreciate our culture and history

    • @thewhitegirlslayer1
      @thewhitegirlslayer1 Před rokem +1

      amigo todas as view são de brs praticamente
      se ilude não
      esses caras só ''conhecem'' as favelas do rio

    • @fancat7535
      @fancat7535 Před rokem

      @@thewhitegirlslayer1 não

  • @wp12mv
    @wp12mv Před 2 lety +66

    Brazil could be great if it gets it's act together.... Oh no Brazil is doomed

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +3

      Lack of a national identity to cooperate towards a common goal, that's why.

    • @HeadhuntexGamer
      @HeadhuntexGamer Před 2 lety +4

      @@mekingtiger9095 As a Brazilian I think this is one of the main reasons. But boohoo, it's a taboo to talk about it. Maybe putting a bunch of different people from different places and not giving them a proper identity didn't work out. Literally, ask any brazilian what brazil means to them and they'll say "soccer or carnaval". Who would have guessed it.

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +3

      @@HeadhuntexGamer The closest thing to a national identity Brazil has ever had was within the Vargas Era and no other moment (qell, there's the monarchy too, but that's debatable given how much of its legacy has been nullified). Even then it relied too much on glorifying him as a figure for the people to rally around instead of the population itself and its traits or qualities. And thus the beginning of Brazil's populist mentality has been defined. Honestly, by this point, the country should have been simply balkanized and fragmented into several smaller pieces, with the South having the most chances of succeding...

  • @preuen6825
    @preuen6825 Před 2 lety +187

    I regret that one day my country recovers from an undesirable policy, lack of creativity is the worst corruption
    I have faith that Brazil will be a power again.
    I love Brazil é fds.

    • @robertevbayekha6639
      @robertevbayekha6639 Před 2 lety +5

      As a American don’t lose hope

    • @TugaThings
      @TugaThings Před 2 lety +11

      7-1

    • @joacoolcipher
      @joacoolcipher Před 2 lety +26

      @@TugaThings 5 copas

    • @philmccracken564
      @philmccracken564 Před 2 lety +3

      @@joacoolcipher Bro can I ask why there's so many Brazilians in The UK all of a sudden? They're creating enclaves n sheit

    • @JeremiasCBMPR
      @JeremiasCBMPR Před 2 lety +8

      @@philmccracken564 Its because UK is very good to qualified workers, here.

  • @DegnaDings
    @DegnaDings Před 5 měsíci +1

    As someone who’s lineage is traced back to Brazil, it hurts to see my home country struggle like it does

  • @ashokathegreat4534
    @ashokathegreat4534 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Laziness, samba, beach laying, drinking, robbing,theft ….that doesnt help South America

  • @cristianepellegrino928
    @cristianepellegrino928 Před 2 lety +14

    You forgot to mention the immense immigration of industrial workers from Italy and Germany who came to the south and southeast of Brazil

  • @Samurai-fe3ck
    @Samurai-fe3ck Před rokem +148

    Love from Serbia 🇷🇸 to Brazil 🇧🇷

  • @daltonvargas15
    @daltonvargas15 Před rokem +1

    Only one word describes this big question: Corruption.
    10 minutes explanation it's just for properly monetizing this video.

  • @Duda286
    @Duda286 Před rokem +1

    "some small settlements like Manaus..." Dude.... 2 freaking million ppl

  • @stewartgames6697
    @stewartgames6697 Před 2 lety +84

    Another issue with tropical climates are that human brains are a bit like computers - if they get too hot, they run slower. Humans literally think and learn slightly faster in cooler climates, which is why up until air conditioning was invented most universities were located in the cooler Northern climates or up in mountain ranges. And there is a noted pattern of work efficiency increasing with altitude, the onset of winter, and with living at higher latitudes. You can't build a great economy if you get so hot in the afternoon that all you want to do is take a siesta. That is why siestas and all of their cultural equivalents were invented, and why humans - who evolved in hotter climates - naturally get a bit sleepy around midday. Sleep is a great way to cool down a hot brain. It's all about heat! Your brain is a bio-computer and works better if you keep it cold!

    • @nemo7542who
      @nemo7542who Před 11 měsíci +7

      I've always said that. I'm Brazilian and I'm absolutely air-conditioning dependent, and I 100% believe countries have a higher chance of being developed if they have a cold climate.

    • @agaraga168
      @agaraga168 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@nemo7542whoirmão é você?😮

    • @nemo7542who
      @nemo7542who Před 10 měsíci

      @@agaraga168 Olá irmão 🤓

    • @allisons6910
      @allisons6910 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Explain Egypt's early civ success & India's economic success then?

    • @DaviBananaOGrande
      @DaviBananaOGrande Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@allisons6910India is a poor and inequall country, didn't had many success eitheir.

  • @rojasseverianomiguelangel1452

    Es como dicen que México y Brasil serán potencias económicas en el futuro pero no superpotencias mundiales si aún seguimos siendo el patio trasero de estados unidos ☹️

    • @Murilokw
      @Murilokw Před 2 lety +24

      brasil es mejor que mexico

    • @carloscortes1577
      @carloscortes1577 Před 2 lety +9

      No viste el video bro. Ahí lo explican. Usa no tiene nada que ver.

    • @andreisouzabento7506
      @andreisouzabento7506 Před 2 lety +4

      The future who never come, i die and i will never see brazil growth, my father see it my older brother see it. And j started to seing the organic problems.

    • @Mind777s
      @Mind777s Před 2 lety

      @@andreisouzabento7506 same

    • @ummapperseparatista7552
      @ummapperseparatista7552 Před 2 lety +2

      F uc k y ou amer ica
      Brazil supremacy
      😎👉👉

  • @mecaraujo
    @mecaraujo Před rokem +1

    Sad but true...I'm Brazilian and right now we have the same problems of the recent past, but skyrocketed!!

  • @foxd1563
    @foxd1563 Před rokem +2

    I'm glad to see an american not asking if we live in the forest. Finaly someonw who knows Brazil

  • @animarthur5297
    @animarthur5297 Před 2 lety +134

    I'm Brazilian, and i can say that this video is very accurate. I'm surprised you managed to summarise so many deep and complex issues our country has in just 10 minutes.

    • @meganathan98
      @meganathan98 Před 2 lety +14

      Yeah, except its not. Manaus is not a small village, it has 2.2 million people, the portuguese are not a small ethnic group, they are over 35 million people in Brazil, and Dilma Rousseff's impeachment was not directly correlated to the carwash investigations but rather to accounting practices (pedaladas). Its also not correct that tropical places develop less by default, as you can see by the likes of Singapore, Hong Kong, most of Australia, etc, some of the richest places on Earth. There were a lot of problems with the video

    • @jefersonpereira5630
      @jefersonpereira5630 Před 2 lety +5

      São só informações tiradas do Wikipédia. Video bem superficial.

    • @Isabella-ot4mu
      @Isabella-ot4mu Před 2 lety +7

      @@jefersonpereira5630 sim meu deus, e bem preconceituoso

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Isabella-ot4mu Como assim "preconceituoso"? O cara só resumiu o país de forma em básica e superficial, só isso?

    • @berthoudosilva6768
      @berthoudosilva6768 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Isabella-ot4mu sim eo pior são os próprios brasileiros concordando e falando mal do Brasil pessoal com síndrome de vira lata

  • @eduuuEMC
    @eduuuEMC Před 2 lety +73

    To sum up, we failed because of corruption, poverty, violence and negligence. Some of the issues are Portuguese heritages, but that's still not an excuse since we're on our own for almost 200 years lol. Anyway, as a local, I can say that Brazilians are not that united, we do get together occasionally but only when the topic is sports or tv shows. When some groups come together to "fight for a better country", they're just putting their politicians on a pedestal thinking that the country will magically improve.
    In general, Brazilian people are really divided like the American society, and just like them, our nation is filled with ignorants.

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 2 lety +9

      I am going to say that we are more divided than them. Way more.
      We have no national identity whatsoever

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety +17

      @@riograndedosulball248 To be honest with you on this my Brazilian friend. What you guys really need is another Pedro 2. If that possible in this era.
      Also love your country and it history from Vietnam.

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety +5

      @williampg gois Like many Revolution those whose have no plan for an acutual plan to deal with the issues before the coup they have no future. Look at the 1st France Revolution . So what was their plans after they chopping head their monarchy. They are lucky that Napoleon step in.
      Pretty much go like you said overthrow monarch and make republic deal country problem later.

    • @kodama9430
      @kodama9430 Před 2 lety +1

      @williampg gois O povo não "fez" uma república, A maior parte da população da população do Brasil imperial não queriam uma república

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety +1

      @williampg gois your Republican history also surprises me especially in part where they disrespect your Emperor. They don't even came to your greatest leader funeral and demanding for not showing the Imperial flag for his funeral. I really pity your country. Because i would trade our country cowardly king for Pedro II. The greatest ruler the Brazilian people ever have
      Love from another jungle country in South East Asia Vietnam

  • @osmiumsoul9535
    @osmiumsoul9535 Před rokem +1

    I was trying to not wake my girlfriend up, but when you said covid-AIDS... I lost it

  • @daniellima4391
    @daniellima4391 Před rokem

    I completely lost it when he called Manaus a "small settlement" lmfao

  • @danilocazaroto7545
    @danilocazaroto7545 Před rokem +94

    Thank you for making a video about Brazil. 😁
    As a Brazilian it’s a shame we still a “Country from the future” but a sense a kind of hope in this term. I think, resolving the corruption will be a massive start to be a better Country. 🙏

    • @guilhermeeduardo933
      @guilhermeeduardo933 Před rokem +4

      It's a good point, but sadly we can't solve that in our generation. Corruption it's so solid here. Maybe our children or some intervention.

    • @luc8254
      @luc8254 Před rokem +10

      It will never happen, flee if you can while you can

    • @unkindled6410
      @unkindled6410 Před rokem +3

      we just took a MAJOR step down to combat corruption so...

    • @danieln.7625
      @danieln.7625 Před rokem +2

      @@luc8254 many african countries suffered from the same fate and managed to find a way out, mainly bc they didnt listen to foreigners that thought they knew the country more than the ppl who lived there

    • @danieln.7625
      @danieln.7625 Před rokem

      the harsh reality about corruption is that on 2nd world countries, its always a chain thats being held and pulled by a higher power, brazil's potential is being wasted because countries like the united states are trying to hold us back by purposely supporting the worst possible candidates for president and other important roles, our rich and vast country is being silently milked, the yanomami people ( who live over an enormous amount of uranium, very important material for countries like the US for example) are being taken bit by bit, to the United States to learn about things, I wonder why..., they clearly want our niobium and uranium, but their democratic governments are just too shy to ask

  • @conorkelly947
    @conorkelly947 Před 2 lety +9

    "Small settlements like Manaus" it's got 2+ million ppl my dude

  • @tacioob2337
    @tacioob2337 Před rokem +1

    This video is like when the bully grabs the nerds arm and put to his face saying "why are u hitting urself?"

  • @Somethingaweful
    @Somethingaweful Před rokem +1

    Brazil becoming a superpower. Man that sounds like a cool idea for a COD game!

  • @AlldeLucas
    @AlldeLucas Před rokem +99

    Imo (as a brazilian) the biggest trap Brazil can’t overcome is a collective victim mentality of being exploited. This lead a good chunk of the population into a “advantage taking (compensation)” mentality as well as a need to look up for a savior which leads to really poor political decisions.
    But that’s just my take based off my experience.

    • @NoThisIsntMyChannel
      @NoThisIsntMyChannel Před rokem +10

      Yeah, everyone blames Portugal, corruption, blah, blah, but take no action, play the victim, keep on doing the "jeitinho brasileiro" and blame colonisation as the reason why it is not developed

    • @diniscosta6702
      @diniscosta6702 Před rokem +19

      The victim mentality, always waiting for the "promising time yet to come" and waiting for a savior are all key features of the Portuguese culture as well. Perhaps the biggest difference between the US and Brazil is that the first was filled with action minded people (poor scots and irish, a bunch of germans, and jewish people, all wanting to prosper and do business), while in Brazil, the portuguese never wanted to work. Maximum prosperity with minimal work. Which connects with the advantage taking that you mentioned. Unfortunately the colonial cultural marks are still left in the fabric of the Brazilian society to this day. It all depends on the people's mindset now and how it develops.

    • @LoveMeNowSucker
      @LoveMeNowSucker Před rokem

      Lol pure bs

    • @MrJoshyguy
      @MrJoshyguy Před rokem +4

      ​@Dinis Costa Most people in the first 60-70 years of US history were ancestrally English, but most Americans neglect this due to historical bias

    • @jordan_roadhouse4798
      @jordan_roadhouse4798 Před rokem +1

      @@MrJoshyguy
      Yeah because they can redeem their victim privilege points if you're Irish, Scottish or whatever.

  • @miguelito4528
    @miguelito4528 Před 2 lety +32

    It's sort of a meme in Brazil that when you see someone being lazy you say: "Aí tá vendo, é por isso que o Brasil não vai pra frente"
    "Hey you see, that's why Brazil doesn't goes foward."

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +1

      Brazilians are too disorganized and uncoordinated as a nation to get their shit together. I bet that if it got split up between several smaller countries based on local or regional cultures with a national identity of their own to promote bonds of national and cultural unity between its citizens, they would certainly be better than how they are right now. Specially the southern most region which seems to have the strongest sense of such kind of unity and kinship still intact.
      Repeat with me: *There is no such thing as a Brazilian Nation.*

    • @miguelito4528
      @miguelito4528 Před 2 lety

      @@mekingtiger9095 I disagree

    • @deepakrathore5459
      @deepakrathore5459 Před 2 lety +1

      i mean what ever the other person said is correct you guys are very much disorganised jus like us in india but we are secular we grow together! in india we know that politicians do corruption in millions and even in billions sometimes but we still work hard to improve! i ll tell you one thing indians are the most hardworking people on this planet and if you guys can become like us then you would grow a lot!

    • @guyhosse3308
      @guyhosse3308 Před 2 lety

      @@mekingtiger9095 We don't see each other as different kinds of people. Demoralized nation? Yes. But still a nation.

    • @mekingtiger9095
      @mekingtiger9095 Před 2 lety +3

      @@guyhosse3308 Naaah, you should see the rivalry between Southern, Southeastern and Northeastern brazilians everytime separatism is mentioned. It's notthing like ethnic tensions in the Balkas, but it's funny as shit seeing them all roasting and accusing eachother of dragging them down and sucking all their respective tax money away.

  • @iSayDewawa
    @iSayDewawa Před 9 měsíci

    i like hosers transition from countryballs to national animals

  • @TricaGamer
    @TricaGamer Před rokem +1

    Imagine talking about something without understanding them fully

  • @zukixikuzzukixikuz2898
    @zukixikuzzukixikuz2898 Před 2 lety +198

    " Samba, futebol, cerveja e um pouquinho assim de falcatrua. Esse é o quadrilátero explosivo que forma básicamente a cultura de um país chamado Brasil. A pilantragem é um elemento tão encroado na vida do brasileiro que seria impossível exterminala sem extinguir a vivência de vida de ambos. "
    Hermes e Renato

    • @nada0101
      @nada0101 Před 2 lety +7

      Mano, só tem samba no Rio de Janeiro.

    • @diemenschen8339
      @diemenschen8339 Před 2 lety +9

      Se é que você pode chamar isso de "cultura".

    • @SamuelSAmuel-nd6fe
      @SamuelSAmuel-nd6fe Před 2 lety +18

      O Brasil não é só samba, cerveja e futebol. O Brasil é muito mais diverso e grande, muito maior que só isso. Não tem como resumir uma cultura tão grande em 4 simples palavras.
      Se for assim, podemos dizer então que EUA é basicamente orgulho, sanduíche, basquete e refrigerante? :)

    • @joaopadua7134
      @joaopadua7134 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nada0101 ele só citou

    • @nada0101
      @nada0101 Před 2 lety +1

      @@joaopadua7134 Ele só citou que isso é a cultura do Brasil, sendo que não é só isso.

  • @Pitohui_holztz
    @Pitohui_holztz Před rokem +188

    É a primeira vez que eu vejo alguém de fora do país acertar tanto nos nossos problemas. Normalmente n gostamos que alguém de fora fale mal de nós, mas você acertou tanto que eu agradeço por explicar e entender nossos problemas.
    It's the first time I've seen someone from outside the country hit our problems so hard. Normally we don't like someone from the outside talking bad about us, but you nailed it so much that I thank you for explaining and understanding our problems.

    • @moisesmaciel5123
      @moisesmaciel5123 Před rokem +14

      Verdade, tinha um vídeo do canal Wendover que falava da péssima geografia do Brasil, o vídeo teve que ser deletado porque vários brasileiros estavam reclamando nos comentários

    • @herbertnatanael
      @herbertnatanael Před rokem +7

      Parecem saber mais sobre o Brasil do que muitos brasileiros.

    • @Jonathanmestrejedi
      @Jonathanmestrejedi Před rokem +3

      @@moisesmaciel5123 Aquele vídeo era bem acurado na verdade. Parece que o brasileiro médio é que não sabe o quanto que a geografia brasileira é ruim.

    • @imahouser
      @imahouser Před rokem +3

      sim, toda vez que eu vejo um gringo falando do Brasil eu começo a me coçar de tanta informação flasa ou mal-dita

    • @lukkegolter
      @lukkegolter Před rokem +3

      O que acho super ridiculo é como o brasil acha que ainda ta bem, todo gringo comum sabe que nao, mas o brasil insiste em dizer que sim e que os gringos sao os maleficos ou burros por falarem mal "kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk"

  • @albashir7140
    @albashir7140 Před 5 měsíci

    That was brilliant ❤

  • @Jeemapologetics
    @Jeemapologetics Před 11 měsíci +1

    3:20 is actually wrong, the native Brazilians/Amazonians built enormous civilization, but once they were killed off en masse by disease, the jungle quickly overtook most of their buildings as nobody was around to groom the area. When the Europeans returned to these interior areas again after 150 years, they thought there had never been any civilization there, as they could not find it.

  • @Poft2
    @Poft2 Před rokem +52

    "Não permitiremos um Japão ao sul do Equador." - Henry Kissinger
    "We Will not allow a Japan in the south hemisphere." - Henry Kissinger

    • @sombraarthur
      @sombraarthur Před rokem

      E os otários ainda acham que o problema foi a colonização, ou a geografia, ou outros problemas que não são inerentemente geopolíticos e políticos...

    • @gustavofelicidade_
      @gustavofelicidade_ Před rokem

      edisciplinas.usp.br/pluginfile.php/6919820/mod_resource/content/1/Aula%2011_Rabe_Kissinger%20and%20LA_Introduction_2020.pdf

    • @lessthanpinochet
      @lessthanpinochet Před rokem +9

      Kissinger is Jewish.

    • @nandohenriques2975
      @nandohenriques2975 Před rokem +8

      @@lessthanpinochet Ok...? Does that change anything?

    • @user-pl1ge8to8w
      @user-pl1ge8to8w Před rokem

      @@nandohenriques2975 yeah surely a coincidence like how the israeli were behind the murder that set back the brazilian nuclear project