Such eloquent speech from all of them, especially the Egyptian boy. They don't refrain from giving their honest opinions and thoughts out of fear for controversy, like you would see it today. It is all done in good spirit with manners and is very admirable to me.
@@soloist9495 No, if you gathered high schoolers from all around the world, I don't think they would be able to have conversations like this. At least not as open and respective.
@@soloist9495 Well it’s certainly not visible. Nowadays there is so much arrogance, rudeness, hostility, ignorance and everyone has an agenda, they are not interested in truth. I love polite, respectful debate without any of that.
After hearing the Egyptian guy ,it occured to me that, this is the exact way I want my speech to develop . How is he presenting his words with those facial movements is so fascinating.
1954? yeah it was a golden era for Myanmar . After 1962 when Nay Win did military coup, Myanmar become so poor and education system was seriously destroyed. All those bad conditions start to happen becoz of Nay Win and now in 2022 Min Aung Hlaing did coup again and UN still takes no serious action against this 2022 coup,allowing dictators to do what they wanna do and kill innocent ppl
To think a country that was still full of poverty and still dealing with the horrors of the invasion in 1942 by the Japanese was seen as its golden age is terrifying and pray that there is a change in how my people are led
That's funny. As a European (of Arab stock and living in Vietnam) I tend to see this trait (even) more in Americans than in Europeans. And a lot of East Asian countries seem to be the most open to curiosity of all.
@@ixlnxs Europeans will never consider you European, you are arab and always will be to them. However, if you were born in America, you are American first and foremost and will be treated as such. This is the reason America is far superior to Europe.
@@culture04dc Not true at all. I've lived in the USA and was always considered a fellow American or a European if people saw me (blond, blue-eyed white guy) and an Arab if they didn't see me but knew my name (exotic Dutch first name, Arabic middle and surname). Just like in Europe. Only Asians ask me what I am and take my word for it. The rest of the world is always "but your name..." or "but you look so..."
@@culture04dc A lot of Americans assumed I was American if they met me in real life and spoke with me. Only if we "met" via email, without my voice but with my name, I was a foreigner. ;) And in Europe too, they classify me as European by looks and Arab by name. Here in Vietnam they trust my own judgment, and my passport.
@@ixlnxs I see now. Thank you for the timestamp! And I agree, her response was so vague and she only pointed at the south when it was everywhere in the U.S. Obviously its was stronger in the south, but it was everywhere during those times.
Speak even faster Teacher Lady - faster & faster with big words - so that these fine, non native English speaking youngsters have to listen to your fast talking mouth
I am so glad to see Myanmar (Burma) guy!!! He is amazing!!
He's cute
@@MentalHealthTreatment Is there any source of information about David from Burma?
@@burmahome3899 His name is David Tin, that's all I know
@@MentalHealthTreatment www.htwyfaa.org/virtual/101/Documents/pdf/List%20of%20Delegates.pdf Are you looking for who they were?
Such eloquent speech from all of them, especially the Egyptian boy. They don't refrain from giving their honest opinions and thoughts out of fear for controversy, like you would see it today. It is all done in good spirit with manners and is very admirable to me.
Ppl still speak eloquently today
Nothings changed but colour tv and the advent of the internet
@@soloist9495 No, if you gathered high schoolers from all around the world, I don't think they would be able to have conversations like this. At least not as open and respective.
@@liii3622 I was thinking the same thing.
@@trulyblessed5254 These students were the best of the best, not the average from that time.
@@soloist9495 Well it’s certainly not visible. Nowadays there is so much arrogance, rudeness, hostility, ignorance and everyone has an agenda, they are not interested in truth. I love polite, respectful debate without any of that.
It would be interesting to see something like this with kids today.
kids do these as part of clubs in schools. Have always done it.
They would be too busy staring at their phones.😅
Burmese guy looks like a charming movie star
After hearing the Egyptian guy ,it occured to me that, this is the exact way I want my speech to develop . How is he presenting his words with those facial movements is so fascinating.
1954?
yeah it was a golden era for Myanmar .
After 1962 when Nay Win did military coup, Myanmar become so poor and education system was seriously destroyed.
All those bad conditions start to happen becoz of Nay Win and now in 2022 Min Aung Hlaing did coup again and UN still takes no serious action against this 2022 coup,allowing dictators to do what they wanna do and kill innocent ppl
Absolutely! It was the golden times of Burma
To think a country that was still full of poverty and still dealing with the horrors of the invasion in 1942 by the Japanese was seen as its golden age is terrifying and pray that there is a change in how my people are led
Wow. The Egyptian guy is strikingly handsome.
The Burmese boy is such a gentleman. Very impressive.
The guy from Egypt is Great
What an incredible of knowledge exchange. Thanks for uploading this legend video.
Have you had dates here? Oh you’re from France. I couldn’t help it 😂
So many intellect thing
You can help a person even though you don't like the idea what he's doing
👍
That's very old fashioned but we do 😁
Egypt dude is really handsome
He is, like movie star looks
@@MentalHealthTreatment What is his name and where is he now?
I agree! 😍😍
he's ok
I am from Burma 🇲🇲 I love myanmar 🇲🇲😍😍💖💖💖❤️❤️❤️
Now millitary 🙄
@@jo-wv4lc we didn't support them 😎
I am glad you love your country
wow that teacher is amazing. "keep asking questions." This is the key to life. Know-it-all's (many Euros fall in this category) are very foolish.
That's funny. As a European (of Arab stock and living in Vietnam) I tend to see this trait (even) more in Americans than in Europeans. And a lot of East Asian countries seem to be the most open to curiosity of all.
@@ixlnxs Europeans will never consider you European, you are arab and always will be to them. However, if you were born in America, you are American first and foremost and will be treated as such. This is the reason America is far superior to Europe.
@@culture04dc Not true at all. I've lived in the USA and was always considered a fellow American or a European if people saw me (blond, blue-eyed white guy) and an Arab if they didn't see me but knew my name (exotic Dutch first name, Arabic middle and surname).
Just like in Europe. Only Asians ask me what I am and take my word for it. The rest of the world is always "but your name..." or "but you look so..."
@@ixlnxs nope. It's cause you are a foreigner. If you were born In USA you are a American. There is no debate about this lol
@@culture04dc A lot of Americans assumed I was American if they met me in real life and spoke with me. Only if we "met" via email, without my voice but with my name, I was a foreigner. ;)
And in Europe too, they classify me as European by looks and Arab by name. Here in Vietnam they trust my own judgment, and my passport.
The guy from Burma!!
Omggg that Egyptian guy is gorgeous.....
It's strange how she never asked them about the racism in the US that day. Weird.
The French guy brought it up at 16:16. Her reply didn't age well.
@@ixlnxs I see now. Thank you for the timestamp! And I agree, her response was so vague and she only pointed at the south when it was everywhere in the U.S. Obviously its was stronger in the south, but it was everywhere during those times.
In many other videos they talk about prejudice and racism in the US.
The French dude speaking the truth about the concept of happiness in their countries. at 19:20
Someone know the Burmese name of David Tin? Can't find his data without Burmese name
I think it's supposed to be "Thin".
I think the Danish girl has a good point.
The Spanish and Burmese fellas are hotties too! 😘😘
I don't think the French guy liked the Egyptian guy lol.
Is it only me wanting to know what these teenagers have become today?
They have become ash and bone
@@jsw78 lmao
Speak even faster Teacher Lady - faster & faster with big words - so that these fine, non native English speaking youngsters have to listen to your fast talking mouth
Blob
What?
In the 1950s people weren't trained to assume other people are automatically stupid!
They seem to be doing ok. They are students, after all. They are used to learning new things.