How did the Great Depression affect the rest of the world? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • When we talk about the Great Depression it's mostly in reference to the United States or the Weimar Republic. But what about the rest of the Great Powers? To find out how it affect them watch this short and simple animated history documentary.
    A special thanks to my Patreon Supporters below:
    Jens Koch-Nommensen
    Øystein Alsaker
    Carl Österbrand
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    Jane Sumpter
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    Steven Gibson
    Phillip Gathright
    Jack Nelson
    Barry
    Erik Hare
    Tony Belmonte
    Adrian Marine
    John Orr
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Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @ChessedGamon
    @ChessedGamon Před rokem +11344

    "The British government had cleverly prepared for it -- it's impossible to enter a depression if you never left one."
    God bless this channel.

    • @joaoostroski4778
      @joaoostroski4778 Před rokem +607

      damn, so that's what the argentinians have been doing all along; i knew they were up to something!

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +188

      It's a bit dramatic. UK was paying off its war debts at incredible rates pre-depression. Pre-WW1 the British economy was on fire. Not sure what he was going for there

    • @ZPheenix
      @ZPheenix Před rokem +55

      @@silverhost9782 no pre-ww1 the British economy was booming

    • @silverhost9782
      @silverhost9782 Před rokem +93

      @@ZPheenix I'm well aware, that's why I said it was doing well. But even after WW1 the economy really wasn't as bad as this video and comments make out. It was paying off war debts and expanding social programs whilst maintaining military spending. It was weaker than pre-war, but not that bad. Shame the video ignored that in the name of making a topical joke

    • @balpreetsingh6834
      @balpreetsingh6834 Před rokem +48

      @@silverhost9782 yup, England's pre war economy was strong as it had all the Asian and African loot

  • @ghostofgrozny47
    @ghostofgrozny47 Před rokem +10303

    The great depression made people realize the necessity of James Bisonette

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Před rokem +230

      Damn right - if we only listened.

    • @pabcu2507
      @pabcu2507 Před rokem +432

      @@beanseason6515 cool, now you want a cookie?

    • @questionablefred6010
      @questionablefred6010 Před rokem +15

      Of course

    • @charliespurr7325
      @charliespurr7325 Před rokem +333

      @@beanseason6515 you're just salty you didn't think of a clever James Bisonette comment in time

    • @keephappy114
      @keephappy114 Před rokem +188

      @@beanseason6515 "maybe if I comment this people will start to like me"-🤓

  • @theuwutsar
    @theuwutsar Před rokem +4657

    The main effect the Great Depression had on Japan was the collapse of Rice imports, which would influence Japan's decision to invade Manchuria as a means to prevent a major famine from occurring in Japan

    • @roystonlodge
      @roystonlodge Před rokem +742

      Wrong. It was all because Kelly Moneymaker was jealous of James Bissonette.

    • @tree427
      @tree427 Před rokem +74

      @@roystonlodge bro i never pay attention to the outro how did I know that those names were in it

    • @kennethnwebb
      @kennethnwebb Před rokem +90

      @@tree427 subliminal messaging

    • @tankle
      @tankle Před rokem +7

      And then the USSR defeated Japan

    • @willblack8575
      @willblack8575 Před rokem

      @Ivan Araújo who gives a shit about china? we talking anime here.

  • @cassianoneto1553
    @cassianoneto1553 Před rokem +3300

    In Brazil, the depression almost single handedly ended 40 years of Oligarchic rule under the Old Republic. The country was ruled by an elite of coffee barons since 1889 that were too powerful for any other group in the country to oppose. Then came the depression and the export economy of coffee collapsed, allowing the opposition to launch an armed insurrection that overthrew the Old Republic in 1930 and began the Vargas Era, that saw the beginning of widespread industrialization, rights for the lower classes and the concept of “class pacification” that Brazil still practices to this day.

    • @WILLIAN_1424
      @WILLIAN_1424 Před rokem +247

      Don't forget the good 'n old populism with a flavor of authoritarianism.

    • @ZetoBlackproject
      @ZetoBlackproject Před rokem +341

      I love it that Star Wars copied Brazil...
      Old Republic
      Empire
      New Republic
      It all fits.

    • @justahobbiest
      @justahobbiest Před rokem +239

      @@ZetoBlackproject The fact that the New Republic quickly left it's idealistic roots and became as corrupt and oppressive as the Empire ever was is well replicated in the Star Wars novels (Legends) as well

    • @mathy4605
      @mathy4605 Před rokem +144

      @@ZetoBlackproject Brazil had an autocratic rule between Republics, yes, but the term “Empire” might be misleading, since the actual Empire preceded the Old Republic, and was a time of Economic Prosperity and relative Liberalization (at least as far as freeing slaves, investing in infrastructure and education, etc.).

    • @vitoremanuel4374
      @vitoremanuel4374 Před rokem +2

      @@WILLIAN_1424 The only bad part was the populism

  • @lucianoosorio5942
    @lucianoosorio5942 Před rokem +1733

    "A bad economy, and weak governments meant that the people are a little too unhappy."

    • @guard6069
      @guard6069 Před rokem +92

      Socialist revolutionary ideas intensifies*

    • @paulcojocaru6982
      @paulcojocaru6982 Před rokem +145

      so when an angry man with a silly mustache came along and said that he could fix everything the people loved it

    • @tremedar
      @tremedar Před rokem +48

      "And when a man with a silly mustache/hat said he could fix everything, the people loved him"

    • @CA999
      @CA999 Před rokem +1

      Which people?

    • @lucianoosorio5942
      @lucianoosorio5942 Před rokem +7

      @@CA999 regular/average people

  • @michaelball93
    @michaelball93 Před rokem +1420

    We really need videos like this. Even in the UK, the Great Depression always seems to be taught from a US/German perspective.

    • @ronanwaring3408
      @ronanwaring3408 Před rokem +52

      Yea but it sort of explains it as the uk and france were growing ever more reliant on the billions of reperations it got from germany which was growing evermore reliant to pay us by borrowing from the usa

    • @Nomenooooo
      @Nomenooooo Před rokem +7

      Really? I got taught how it hit UK and the Weimar Republic (Germany) and then the USA a bit later on.

    • @ronanwaring3408
      @ronanwaring3408 Před rokem

      @@Nomenooooo No as the video says we were already hit by a recession a decade before hand but it was the collapse of the US economy that triggerd the Actual great depression as it was relying on loan repayments from britain and france to justify the credit it was giving to germany which it was relying on to pay us so basically the USA was using the war time loans of GB and FRA as collatoral against the loans it was giving to GER which as you can probably figure is a stupid idea I don't know what there teaching you all now but education has really done down the loo in the 13 years since they taught me all this

    • @ronanwaring3408
      @ronanwaring3408 Před rokem +24

      @@Nomenooooo The shorter answer is what the US banks were doing before the 2008 crisis is exactly what they were doing in the roaring 20's and caused the exact same problem a massive recession but back then they couldn't normally just print more money in the same way they do now because it was tied to the value of a countries gold reserve hence why some like the uk and italy left "The gold standard" and was able it debase the currency and print more of it

    • @gordonrams_into4539
      @gordonrams_into4539 Před rokem +2

      I was taught from the Canadian perspective (it's not hard to know why)

  • @TK_Brainslug
    @TK_Brainslug Před rokem +1023

    "The Japanese economy was much more prepared for foreign adventures." That cracked me up so hard

    • @maccy4829
      @maccy4829 Před rokem +45

      The well timed pause made it 😂

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před rokem +38

      "We do a ritter trorring" ~ Tojo

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull Před rokem +13

      @@seronymus LMAO 😂 🤣 😅

    • @thedwightguy
      @thedwightguy Před rokem +1

      Not that the Brits, USA, Spanish, and all the other european wanna be powers didn't give them the IDEA.

    • @dimamatat5548
      @dimamatat5548 Před 2 měsíci +1

      "The Great Depression is bad, and Japan's economy is now crappy, but the military is just fine, so it invades Manchuria" - bill wurtz

  • @panqueque445
    @panqueque445 Před rokem +310

    "It's impossible to enter a depression if you never left one"
    Genius

    • @loginavoidence12
      @loginavoidence12 Před rokem +5

      kind of like what were doing now: if it continually gets worse and worse for decades then technically not a recession

    • @The_whales
      @The_whales Před rokem +4

      “You don’t have to worry about your oven burning if it’s never on”

    • @DavidFarrer-sk5tc
      @DavidFarrer-sk5tc Před 9 měsíci +1

      British thinking always puts us one step ahead! 😄👍🇬🇧

  • @maxkennedy8075
    @maxkennedy8075 Před rokem +560

    The depression and its instability had a huge effect on boosting the power of Japanese ultranationalists, who used it as justification for autarky and the required conquering of the Pacific if Japan was to survive

    • @Spido68_the_spectator
      @Spido68_the_spectator Před rokem +21

      Well, add to that a passive coup in 1941 and there you have your military dictatorship.... what does this remind me of ?

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před rokem +6

      @@Spido68_the_spectator Not to mention is that it is not 1 a one time coup but many time to. Especially with the Navy and Army doing the seperate coup to see one who is better. Honestly i felt who the heck want the chair of Prime Minister at that time.

    • @kingleech16
      @kingleech16 Před rokem +7

      @@thanhhoangnguyen4754 The sheer number of junior to middle-ranking officers in the Japanese military who seemed convinced "I know what the Emperor REALLY wants!" and that it was hunky-dory to kill a bunch of folks to "work towards the emperor" is astounding. Particularly since it was a culture that is often characterized as being based on obedience above all else.

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před rokem

      @@kingleech16 Especially the Army doing something bold. The Navy bolder. The scores of them making coup and killing officials or officers of difference branch. Then they just confessed and recorded to show the public then the court doing their trial. They doing it for the Emperor so they are hero. The uneducated public people of course believe so they have the public backing.
      They murder a bunch of official and then court just sentence them to a time out ?????

    • @ChomoBidensMules
      @ChomoBidensMules Před rokem +3

      Make Sakhalin Karafuto again

  • @arishokqunari1290
    @arishokqunari1290 Před rokem +405

    Wait, there were US Americans emigrating to the Soviet Union? That's a story I'd love to know more about

    • @MsPaintMr
      @MsPaintMr Před rokem +216

      It's fascinating but also tragic, nearly all of the idealistic Americans died in the purges. A cold lesson for western tankies today.

    • @AndrewAMartin
      @AndrewAMartin Před rokem +43

      @@MsPaintMr IIRC, there was a TV movie about it, maybe starring Richard Thomas (famous for his role as John Boy Walton), maybe not, I don't see anything likely in his IMDB filmography. I do vaguely remember seeing a movie about idealistic Americans going to the USSR for a better life due to the Depression and it not ending well for them...

    • @mvalthegamer2450
      @mvalthegamer2450 Před rokem +118

      Well, yeah. The Soviet Union did work for two main periods. Between 1928 -1940, the Soviet economy boomed, as the soviet social programs combined with the five-year plans meant the USSR could promise migrants a comparatively good standard of living as compared to everywhere else. However, the 1930s hostile diplomacy by literally all of Europe combined with the effects of the Soviet famine of 1930-33 lead to a sense of paranoia in Russia, culminating in the purges and WW2. After WW2, Russia saw a second economic boom which lasted until Oil interests began to corrupt the party in the 1970s.

    • @arishokqunari1290
      @arishokqunari1290 Před rokem +6

      @@mvalthegamer2450 thank you for the short insight!

    • @kieranhyde8195
      @kieranhyde8195 Před rokem +76

      @@mvalthegamer2450 it wasn't so much that oil interests began to corrupt the party in the 70's, just that oil prices stopped propping up the economy. Throughout the 50's, 60's, 70's economists, mathematicians urged to modernise and adapt the soviet system, but the government was too cautious, implementing reforms at the bare minimum or half doing them, pausing at the first sign of any growing pain. They were smart people hampered by an unlistening
      government (a great deal of what we know about Linear Optimisation comes from soviet mathematicians). Famously, the government opted to destroy its own computer research industry by cancelling their own computer development and relying on cloned American technology (something similar to how the UK allowed its own fledgling computer industry to flounder and is now beaten by countries that had been third world). Meanwhile, steadily increasing oil prices filled in the gaps in the economy that the economists had been attempting to have filled, and when those prices collapsed they were exposed to the world.

  • @mcalkis5771
    @mcalkis5771 Před rokem +512

    Good thing James Bisonette was able to build his immense fortune around the depression.

    • @starflowers1751
      @starflowers1751 Před rokem +47

      Wouldn't that be Kelly Moneymaker?

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Před rokem +1

      Boring

    • @Andres-tv9yi
      @Andres-tv9yi Před rokem +1

      @@starflowers1751 Kelly a qt.

    • @TheOneWhoMightBe
      @TheOneWhoMightBe Před rokem +4

      @@starflowers1751 James is eternal, but Kelly is a time-traveller. She used her knowledge of the past to amass her vast fortune.

    • @blackjacktrial
      @blackjacktrial Před rokem +2

      @@TheOneWhoMightBe but isn't time just a boogly-woogly timey wimey thing?

  • @quinasreveure6533
    @quinasreveure6533 Před rokem +407

    One thing i find weird is that, even though we've seen this in school, i never really learned the effects of the Great Depression from my country's perspective (México)
    Even by being our neighbour, the little i can recall we saw about was that the post-revolutionary war economic recovery was so big that we were relatively untouched by the Great Depression, something that i don't know how to feel about it

    • @cardenassolisrodrigo2601
      @cardenassolisrodrigo2601 Před rokem +111

      Because it happened to us the exact same that happened to Britain, "You can never get in a depression, if you never had left one" Because our economy went downhill with the Revolution in the 1910's and never recovered in the 1920's, that's why it doesn't affected us alot, Mexico didn't recovered from the economic collapse that the Revolution brought until the 1940's when the "Mexican Economic Miracle" started just as WWII started too.

    • @quinasreveure6533
      @quinasreveure6533 Před rokem +15

      @@cardenassolisrodrigo2601 Well that's technicaly true
      But what keeps me up it's that, i really do feel like the context that was taught is that "Before the revolution, everything was miserable; after it, life kept going"
      It gives me the vibes that the post-ww2 economic miracle was just a continuation of the 20s boom in the country, with the difference being that it became more noticeable later on
      Maybe that's the reason the PRI legitimized it's political control over the country for so many years: a prolonged economic boom

    • @Potatotenkopf
      @Potatotenkopf Před rokem

      Wasn't México still healing from the revolution?

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Před rokem +1

      @@quinasreveure6533 okay?

    • @Potatotenkopf
      @Potatotenkopf Před rokem

      @@cardenassolisrodrigo2601 isn't the "mexican economic miracle", just México giving workers and selling stuff to the US and Europe more?

  • @itzadam9359
    @itzadam9359 Před rokem +934

    Video idea as a loyal Patreon supporter: Why was Finland 🇫🇮 given autonomy in the Russian Empire?

    • @guard6069
      @guard6069 Před rokem +69

      Why was belarus given autonomy in the USSR

    • @doctortcool9586
      @doctortcool9586 Před rokem +166

      Why was the USSR given autonomy in the USSR?

    • @georgehh2574
      @georgehh2574 Před rokem +57

      Have you suggested the idea on Patreon itself? More likely to see it there.

    • @anttibjorklund1869
      @anttibjorklund1869 Před rokem

      "Suomalaisalueen hallintamenettely määräytyi lähinnä neljästä Venäjään vaikuttaneesta reaalipoliittisesta tekijästä: Venäjän keskusjohdon heikkous, Euroopassa käynnissä olleista Napoleonin sodista Venäjään kohdistunut sodanuhka, myös Ruotsin kautta, ja Ruotsin vastaisen raja-alueen rauhoittaminen muutenkin sekä toisaalta luoteisen Suomen muuta Itä-Eurooppaa vähäisempi suurstrateginen merkitys, Pietarin suojausta lukuun ottamatta." - Wikipedia.
      Basically to pacify the area and to make use of the governmental structure already in place during Swedish rule.

    • @wederMaxim
      @wederMaxim Před rokem +66

      1. The tsars of that time loved liberal experiments. For example, they tried to create the Kingdom of Poland, but some ignorance of culture and the fact that before that the Poles themselves were a great nation did not allow it.
      2. Protection of St. Petersburg. They were literally people whose goal was to protect St. Petersburg. Weapons were brought to Finland from all over the empire, it seems they were even bought in Japan. If I were the emperor, I would want the people who defend my capital to have an incentive to do so.

  • @harrisonlee9585
    @harrisonlee9585 Před rokem +25

    The Mussolini SI SI SI facade is my favourite running gag/background character.

  • @tomm9963
    @tomm9963 Před rokem +336

    It's a shame you don't do the 10 plus minute videos anymore. Hard to fit in so much information about so many different countries in three and a half minutes

    • @alexanderkarvos6728
      @alexanderkarvos6728 Před rokem +31

      Blame YT

    • @waNErBOY
      @waNErBOY Před rokem +62

      he made a video explaining why, in short advertisers prefer shorter videos than longer, therefore as this is his income he needs to make shorter vids and more money

    • @tomm9963
      @tomm9963 Před rokem +3

      @@waNErBOY Yeah, I know that

    • @commenterjosh2428
      @commenterjosh2428 Před rokem +35

      @@waNErBOY he should split 10+ minutes into 3-minute segments: Part I, Part II, Part III, and so on.

    • @visassess8607
      @visassess8607 Před rokem +16

      @@waNErBOY Just because advertisers prefer shorter videos doesn't mean they aren't on longer videos and he has supplemental income through other sources like Patreon.
      It's just a bad argument.

  • @binaway
    @binaway Před rokem +25

    My mothers uncle (at 17yo) left England for Australia at the beginning of the depression. His travel expenses paid for by the non government Big Brother Movement (BBM). He had been told the depression had not hit Australia and there was plenty of jobs to be found. In fact Australia had gone from for a strong economy to a basket case in a matter of weeks. When his boat arrived at Sydney harbor there were hundreds of people with signs saying "go home poms don't steel our jobs". He wondered what had he come to done. The BBM had found him a job delivering mail on horse back in an outback rural area. He previously had never ridden a horse in his life and had to learn on the job. The last man in was given the worst mail round which meant he had to get up before 4am and didn't get back until after 9 pm. Food was provided, as part of the job with his pay docked, but breakfast commenced at 6.30am and dinner was available until 7.30pm. There was no shops in the sparsely populated region. He had to complain to his boss that he was starving. He ended up with one meal a day of cold leftovers. It was better than nothing but not much better.

  • @TheLegoMaster261
    @TheLegoMaster261 Před rokem +97

    I wish you also covered how the depression affected countries in South America because I’ve been curious about how it impacted them.

    • @lorrainemapper7000
      @lorrainemapper7000 Před rokem +11

      I dont really know much about what it did to south america but i think it caused a Coup in brazil and it caused argentina’s economy to stagnate and even get in a recession

    • @javieraravena5345
      @javieraravena5345 Před rokem +14

      Actually Chile was the most affected country in the world, and it caused a crisis called the second anarchy, with like 6 coups between 1931 and 1932

    • @ShinigamiInuyasha777
      @ShinigamiInuyasha777 Před rokem +5

      Argentina actually went to it's first military coup (wich left to a second internal coup) wich lead to a first attempt to hiper liberalize economy and Shady deals to open british markets. But during the second half of the 30s it was attempted to industrialized the country.

    • @SusanOnTVShows
      @SusanOnTVShows Před rokem +4

      This video was only about the great powers.

    • @carlireland5049
      @carlireland5049 Před rokem +3

      The one funny part given how much of a basket case that country later became is that Venezuela was actually doing pretty well because it had just discovered the Maracaibo oil.

  • @velocitor3792
    @velocitor3792 Před rokem +203

    Would love to hear your channel explain how/why Kruzchev was overthrown/ pushed out of power, and how Breznev was the one who replaced him.

    • @ACoolKidsProduction
      @ACoolKidsProduction Před rokem +17

      I'd also be interested in learning how Putin got the seat from Yeltzin. Seems like there was some blackmail and dealmaking involved there.

    • @calmbbaer
      @calmbbaer Před rokem +32

      @@ACoolKidsProduction - The feeling I got was that Putin was the person Yeltsin trusted most not to imprison him. Also, I believe Putin picked Medvedev as his (temporary) successor because he was perhaps the only person who (1) Putin could trust to do what he wanted, and (2) was shorter than Putin, so Putin would still look in change when they stood side by side.

    • @risannd
      @risannd Před rokem +1

      Cuban Missile Crisis

    • @user-vz2fj4wq7d
      @user-vz2fj4wq7d Před rokem +1

      @@calmbbaer I'd stick with the second reason, seems like exactly the kind of thing he could have in mind

    • @kaliyuga1476
      @kaliyuga1476 Před rokem

      Kruschev ruined the USSR

  • @marsgal42
    @marsgal42 Před rokem +112

    The historical Dow Jones numbers are interesting. The index peaked in 1929, bottomed out in 1932, and didn't equal its pre-Depression peak until 1954.

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered Před rokem +28

      The difference is 29 was a bubble and 54 was a good growth standard. The first real middle class was sustaining it through consumerism.

    • @marsgal42
      @marsgal42 Před rokem +8

      @@writerconsidered They didn’t call it the Roaring Twenties for nothing...

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před rokem +2

      And 1987 was a bigger crash than 1929.

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered Před rokem +1

      @@lawrencedoliveiro9104 Define the metric?

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před rokem +1

      @@writerconsidered The aforesaid index.

  • @TheHylianBatman
    @TheHylianBatman Před rokem +147

    I had always heard that the Second World War was the end of the Depression.
    Interesting that it took until the mid-50's to get back "up to speed".

    • @speedzero7478
      @speedzero7478 Před rokem +13

      Wasn't there a deep recession after world war II, in USA and Japan? I remember in Japan reading that the economy was in shambles until the Korean War happened and orders for Japanese goods started to pick up. Similarly in USA, after the war all the soldiers and equipment were demobilized, and there was a lot of labor strikes too about working conditions and wages being too low.

    • @diddlypoop4722
      @diddlypoop4722 Před rokem +44

      @@speedzero7478 no after WW2 the USAs economy was skyrocketing. Japans economy was bad because the war had cost them their empire and all their major industrial centers had been leveled

    • @ZetaArcticana4006
      @ZetaArcticana4006 Před rokem +34

      @@speedzero7478 Things like the Marshall Plan wouldn’t have happened if the US was still in a recession. The US could afford the help European economies at the time because its economy was doing so well at the time.

    • @TheHylianBatman
      @TheHylianBatman Před rokem +2

      @@speedzero7478 I don't know, but it would certainly make sense.
      In school here in the USA, though, it's taught that WWII went straight into the 50's.

    • @a12shotman
      @a12shotman Před rokem +16

      @@TheHylianBatman "In school here in the USA, though, it's taught that WWII went straight into the 50's." what are you talking about

  • @Daglizzh
    @Daglizzh Před rokem +106

    Love your vids bro you actually need a award for the most simple yet amazing art

  • @PhilWood82
    @PhilWood82 Před rokem +13

    2:02 The easter egg of the spinning newspaper. Just reading one paragraph will have you in stitches. 😂

  • @JustDevon1
    @JustDevon1 Před rokem +59

    In New Zealand the Great Depression is known as the “Sugarbag Years” due to the fact that most working men wore sugar bags as clothing because stitching, sugar bags together was cheaper than buying clothes

    • @ltipst2962
      @ltipst2962 Před rokem +7

      I've heard that before cof other places I did not expect that of new Zealand but frankly I have not heard of any of NZs history below...20 years ago. Strange. I will surely look this up

    • @louisliu5638
      @louisliu5638 Před rokem +1

      @@ltipst2962 isn't that jute or hemp??? today it's trailer park chic clothing!!

    • @toastnjam7384
      @toastnjam7384 Před rokem +4

      In the US flour companies begin making flour sacks with colorful patterns and offered DIY instructions for sewing ideas right on the package.

  • @truesavagejack
    @truesavagejack Před rokem +16

    "The British government had cleverly prepared for it -- it's impossible to enter a depression if you never left one."
    The greatest :D
    Well done sir!

  • @samueltrusik3251
    @samueltrusik3251 Před rokem +203

    A shame Czechoslovakia was not mentioned. They did really well for such a young nation.

    • @vincedibona4687
      @vincedibona4687 Před rokem +60

      He focused on the great powers. Sorry, but CZ wasn’t one.

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Před rokem +14

      @@vincedibona4687 nah last time I checked Czechoslovakia was one of the two great powers

    • @user-lv8dn8gw9z
      @user-lv8dn8gw9z Před rokem +37

      ​@@irenaveksler1935 Czechoslovakia didn't even get a war declaration when it got annexed by funny mustache man
      Even Poland got that lol (fuck all happened with it but it was there)

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Před rokem +15

      @@user-lv8dn8gw9z if it wasn’t obvious it was a joke also it got annexed immediately unlike Poland which took 20 days

    • @JN-wr9he
      @JN-wr9he Před rokem

      @@irenaveksler1935 they did a dirty job in ww2

  • @johnlienhart2717
    @johnlienhart2717 Před rokem +62

    I'd like to reiterate my love for you writing out the newspapers.
    "If they wanted London they could've just stayed there" is the stand out here.

    • @derrickthewhite1
      @derrickthewhite1 Před rokem

      ugg, I can't read the one around france because its too blurry.

    • @nicolasduhaut7331
      @nicolasduhaut7331 Před rokem +2

      Newspaper really are the best things on this channel. The unemployement going from 6 to 8 because of Fancy-é-René got me laughing

    • @johnlienhart2717
      @johnlienhart2717 Před rokem +5

      @@derrickthewhite1
      Devastation for the French economy as both Pierre and René have been made unemployed. This of course means France will see a sharp rise in its unemployment rate with the total number of jobless bums going up from 6 to 8.
      Pierre, a former construction worker, was told that economic conditions made his position at the firm untenable. 'The fourty smoke-breaks a day probably didn't help to be fair', wheezed Pierre whose wife is now looking for someone with better economic prospects.
      René had hoped that his job as a waiter would be saved thanks to the ` above his name which he thought made him sound fancy. Alas, no. People don't have the money to spend on endless pastries and butter-cooked goods.
      The government has said it will do everything it can to relieve the pressures on the economy. So long as it isn't difficult and doesn't interrupt Prime Minister Laval's brunch.
      *MORE ON PAGE DUEX*

    • @derrickthewhite1
      @derrickthewhite1 Před rokem +4

      @@johnlienhart2717 thanks! That's hilarious!

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před rokem +1

      Gandhi was officially labelled a “terrorist” for remarks like that ...

  • @captain_hammer
    @captain_hammer Před rokem +10

    1:11 I see that the UK government has used the same strategy for the current economic crisis... simply never recover from the one in 2008

  • @LeetleToady7
    @LeetleToady7 Před rokem +12

    1:16
    Genius, why didn’t we (the Americans) try that?

  • @jpgoss9986
    @jpgoss9986 Před rokem +16

    0:50 That number shocked me, how have I never heard about this, But while 100,000 may have applied for the job, only 10,000 were hired by the soviet trade agency, at least according to Tim Tzouiladis's book The Forsaken: An American Tragedy in Stalin's Russia. Still, though that is shocking to me.

    • @wederMaxim
      @wederMaxim Před rokem

      O, thank you. I will definitely read it.

  • @doubledown0411
    @doubledown0411 Před rokem +92

    All of these nations made it through the depression made thanks to the economic prowess of James Bisonette.

  • @markstott6689
    @markstott6689 Před rokem +3

    "So Japan was better prepared for ...... foreign adventures"
    That's a cracking line/delivery for what ensued.

  • @canubeetquad
    @canubeetquad Před rokem +2

    I think I have watched 100% of your videos now and just desperately wait for a new release.
    I would like to kindly request another series of 10 minute videos on a subject. Those were fantastic.

  • @ajzebadua
    @ajzebadua Před rokem +4

    I really enjoy these videos, I do miss the longer 10 minute history videos though I can imagine it's much more effort to make them.

  • @kargalith7026
    @kargalith7026 Před rokem +9

    "Foreign adventures..." Don't know why I love that so much but I do.

  • @InviniteStudios
    @InviniteStudios Před rokem +130

    This channel is so fair, and always so well done 👍🏻 🌎

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive Před rokem

      "so fair" yeah blatantly lying about one hundred thousand Americans moving to the USSR

  • @Nikkidafox
    @Nikkidafox Před rokem +131

    "The Great Depression sucked for a lot of people"
    "I hope you enjoyed this episode and a special thanks to my patrons, James Bisonette..."

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Před rokem +1

      Lmao

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Před 4 měsíci

      20th century moment when America catches flu and the rest of the world does too.

  • @XXXTENTAClON227
    @XXXTENTAClON227 Před rokem +23

    London actually crashed prior to New York, so for Britain it was just extra depression on top

    • @subzero.cuber47
      @subzero.cuber47 Před rokem

      Thanks for that new info

    • @ltipst2962
      @ltipst2962 Před rokem

      I've a theory that we got out of the depression in both the late 60s and then again in the late 90s mid 2000s. Other than that I am theorizing with high levels of confidence its been bad throughout. Maybe not for London but for the UK aye. Facts I tell ye. Facts.

  • @rando28-3
    @rando28-3 Před rokem +9

    3:03 “I have an idea.” 🤣

  • @Brytons_Thoughts
    @Brytons_Thoughts Před rokem +2

    i already knew the answer to this question a long time ago
    but i'm glad you've made a video on this for those who want to dig through a heap of info

  • @nasis18
    @nasis18 Před rokem

    Another great example of something I had never really thought about, but I'm glad to have learned about it. Great video.

  • @mikoajsochanski1349
    @mikoajsochanski1349 Před rokem +6

    You are a genius of comedy about history ☺️ Love your channel!

  • @Cartasio69
    @Cartasio69 Před rokem +110

    So basically:
    The Great Depression: Exists
    The Soviet Union: We don't do that here.

    • @royale7620
      @royale7620 Před rokem +40

      Because they were already depressed.

    • @rafaelglopezroman1110
      @rafaelglopezroman1110 Před rokem

      Yeah their economy was practically destroyed thanks to a certain civil war, famine and sanctions meaning the only way was up.

    • @wederMaxim
      @wederMaxim Před rokem +3

      Теперь делают😢. В этот раз мы будем с вами в одной лодке.

    • @youdontneedtoknowwhoiam9612
      @youdontneedtoknowwhoiam9612 Před rokem +35

      @@royale7620 Nah men it's just that economy works out surprisingly good when you don't leave it to your imaginary friend "The Hand of the Market". " Is this hidden hand in the room with us now?"

    • @WILLIAN_1424
      @WILLIAN_1424 Před rokem +24

      Can't have an economic depression if your economy is already destroyed after a civil war :)

  • @ca984
    @ca984 Před měsícem

    After a year I noticed the news paper actually has no gibberish on them but proper news, this channel never ceases to amaze

  • @Davian_Thule
    @Davian_Thule Před rokem

    This was the best video you've uploaded in the last month

  • @stefanl3299
    @stefanl3299 Před rokem +9

    1:47
    "That's the future's problem" LOL

  • @AlcoholicBoredom
    @AlcoholicBoredom Před rokem +40

    Fun Fact: Stalin banned the book The Grapes of Wrath, because it showed that during the Great Depression even the poorest of Americans owned their own trucks.

    • @JN-wr9he
      @JN-wr9he Před rokem +3

      Were any mainstream soviet books printed in the west? I guess not, because westerners have such a narrow, skewed, incomplete idea of life in USSR

    • @AlcoholicBoredom
      @AlcoholicBoredom Před rokem +13

      @@JN-wr9he Not what I said. The book was personally and directly banned by Stalin for the specific reason I said above.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Před rokem

      He can’t have been perceptive enough to have discovered that _a priori_ , though. I’m assuming it was brought to his attention after a few thousand copies had already circulated.

    • @finnguy1549
      @finnguy1549 Před rokem +4

      Source?

    • @skillbopster
      @skillbopster Před rokem +1

      @@JN-wr9he LOL your utopia failed.

  • @googoo-gjoob
    @googoo-gjoob Před rokem +2

    this dude can take a serious topic & spice it up with just the right amount of humor.

  • @joesomebody3365
    @joesomebody3365 Před rokem

    Great video as always, always love the concise but funny format.

  • @marcobisi7768
    @marcobisi7768 Před rokem +12

    Italy's recovering quickly from the depression is the perfect example of the saying "Even a broken clock is right twice a day".

    • @marcjohnston4271
      @marcjohnston4271 Před rokem +2

      Also the origin of the quote, "At least the trains ran on time."

  • @klayersgaming191
    @klayersgaming191 Před rokem +3

    I love this channel so much

  • @bananenmusli2769
    @bananenmusli2769 Před rokem +7

    0:17 I love how it says "douchebag" on the wall

  • @knightofhistory
    @knightofhistory Před rokem +2

    I love these videos. I've been a massive fan for years! So much so that I actually made my own channel (it focuses on History as well) thank you for the inspiration!

  • @mYcRiSpDiScK
    @mYcRiSpDiScK Před rokem +2

    Fantastic book which describes this topic in more detail is Carroll Quigley's Tragedy and Hope. Long read, but so informative.

  • @felixmcgrath8511
    @felixmcgrath8511 Před rokem +24

    What about the rest of the world? Would love a part two!

  • @happyelephant5384
    @happyelephant5384 Před rokem +1

    "Decade will end better"
    You are genius, love you

  • @CurvedGD
    @CurvedGD Před rokem +2

    I like watching history matters so much, I have chosen to use this video as a product in my media coursework

  • @uytteb
    @uytteb Před rokem +32

    Great video. You should also do one to explain the difference between supporters that get a spoken mention at the end of each video (like James Bisonette) and the ones that get a written mention. After so many years, I still don't get it.

    • @irenaveksler1935
      @irenaveksler1935 Před rokem +1

      They were the first patrons

    • @J-1410
      @J-1410 Před rokem +8

      Patreon support levels, spoken pay more, but there are limited spots.

    • @uytteb
      @uytteb Před rokem

      @@J-1410 That would make sense indeed.

    • @J-1410
      @J-1410 Před rokem +2

      @@uytteb I mean it is on his patreon page

  • @Aquamayne100
    @Aquamayne100 Před rokem +7

    History matters asking all the right questions and making history interesting. Keep up the great work!

  • @HyperVegitoDBZ
    @HyperVegitoDBZ Před rokem

    The humour on this channel is maginficent!

  • @andrewroberts7428
    @andrewroberts7428 Před rokem

    this is such an incredibly fascinating, though brief, video

  • @maximus13161
    @maximus13161 Před rokem +6

    If anyone is interested in the topic, japan alongside Germany was one of the first countries to recover from the great depression due to the policies of Takahashi Korekiyo, a former PM and head of the Bank of japan and minister of finance who was quite ahead of his time in terms of economic policy, being called the Japanese Keynes. Sadly he was assassinated by the radicals in the military after he cut government spending (to lower inflation) along with others in what is called the 2-26 (Feb 26) incident, which while failing, caused weakened civilian administration and increased control by the military over government decision making and control over the country as a whole.

  • @justtheilluminativ282
    @justtheilluminativ282 Před rokem +38

    Good video idea: How did America’s adversaries (Iran, Cuba, North Korea, Iraq etc.) react to 9/11?

    • @Justin-pe9cl
      @Justin-pe9cl Před rokem +4

      THIS! I want to see this.

    • @georgehh2574
      @georgehh2574 Před rokem +4

      Iraq wasn't exactly an adversary at the time. Think about the timeline of events.

    • @tremedar
      @tremedar Před rokem +13

      @@georgehh2574 Iran not Iraq, and quite frankly *both* were antagonistic toward the US.

    • @IAmTheOnlyLucas
      @IAmTheOnlyLucas Před rokem +8

      I remember reading somewhere that Saddam said something to the effect of “ha! Sucks to suck ‘Merican devils” which the Neocons did not like one bit.

    • @bakrahabibi5471
      @bakrahabibi5471 Před rokem

      I doubt anyone gave it alot of thought. Terrorists attacks had started to become common all around the world. USA getting hit with one didn't add to the world's grievances. It did however give the USA a casus belli on the middle east, which it exploited to the fullest extent. That mightve been worrisome for its adversaries, as the proxy war in the middle east would now be accelerated. But it would also allow states like Russia to get more influence and even establish a puppet in the middle east, like the USA did with Israel.

  • @tommo258
    @tommo258 Před rokem

    Fantastic video as always.

  • @rumbleinthejungle3358

    Thanks for the upload

  • @sprucewillis9000
    @sprucewillis9000 Před rokem +92

    Can't be affected by the great depression if you're already depressed
    :(

    • @VValkyr
      @VValkyr Před rokem +11

      You have depression, I have ✨ 𝓽𝓱𝓮 𝓰𝓻𝓮𝓪𝓽 𝓭𝓮𝓹𝓻𝓮𝓼𝓼𝓲𝓸𝓷 ✨

    • @CptFoupoudav
      @CptFoupoudav Před rokem +2

      Stop being depressed !

    • @altaccaltacc7652
      @altaccaltacc7652 Před rokem +2

      No. it's not an emotion, it's an economic crisis.

    • @kingofcards9516
      @kingofcards9516 Před rokem +3

      *Soviet moment*

  • @affablesage9582
    @affablesage9582 Před rokem +10

    I've heard people mention that the US went off the gold standard and wondered why for a long time. This explanation makes a lot of sense. It also explains why you could feed a whole family on $3 back then whereas now that'd barely buy one person a shitty snack from a vending machine.

  • @bascianowatches9531
    @bascianowatches9531 Před rokem

    Great content as always

  • @DereC519
    @DereC519 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I like this video because in history class we often don't go over the great depression outside of those two big countries

  • @MartimCorreia10
    @MartimCorreia10 Před rokem +6

    0:11 i wish the balkans still were like that, they were so clean and organized, nowadays its a big mess

  • @emperornapoleon6204
    @emperornapoleon6204 Před rokem +24

    “Foreign adventures,” what a riot!
    Unlike currencies after the 1930s, this channel is a gold standard.

  • @paulshelton5309
    @paulshelton5309 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for making this. I was taught in school that the Great Depression was worldwide, but never what it looked like anywhere but the US and Germany. I tried making my own lesson on it two years ago and struggled quite hard to find anything, not to bring up the conflicting narratives found when researching Japan during this time.

  • @jspihlman
    @jspihlman Před rokem

    The way that you animated the Palazzo Braschi was hilarious! Thanks for the laugh.

  • @Sinistar123
    @Sinistar123 Před rokem +3

    "The British refused to comment because they coudln't understand our reporters accent and so shooed him off with a broom and told him to 'go back to Denmark'". The newspapers on this channel are golden.

  • @lightningfletch5598
    @lightningfletch5598 Před rokem +58

    That joke about Britain never leaving a depression made me laugh out loud.

  • @modernxenophon1582
    @modernxenophon1582 Před rokem +2

    About 1:01, we still have Soviet-made silverware from something like the 1920's or 30's in our familiy, and it's really good even after almost a century of use.

  • @samdumaquis2033
    @samdumaquis2033 Před rokem

    Your vids are awesome

  • @Antonio.b16
    @Antonio.b16 Před rokem +3

    When you said “foreign adventures” I died 😂

  • @trumpetmom8924
    @trumpetmom8924 Před rokem +10

    Thanks for covering something never taught in American schools. But, alas! The newspaper was blurry and hard to read. 😔

    • @decker.2425
      @decker.2425 Před rokem

      Wow, really? American schools don't go in depth about how other countries dealt with the depression? Wowzers!

  • @bonalisa8827
    @bonalisa8827 Před rokem +1

    SPLENDID AS ALWAYS.

  • @cmoser22
    @cmoser22 Před rokem

    Great topic and vudeo as always! Not a perspective you get often.

  • @jaywilliams9294
    @jaywilliams9294 Před rokem +5

    Now i want to know what happened to that 100,000 Americans that moved to the USSR

  • @Dalynx09
    @Dalynx09 Před rokem +6

    "I have the Great Depression"
    "I got the Big Depresso"
    -The Internet, probably

  • @brodericki4281
    @brodericki4281 Před rokem +1

    Genuinely fascinating ❤

  • @nik65stgt60
    @nik65stgt60 Před rokem

    Fascinating content!

  • @princecharon
    @princecharon Před rokem +6

    2:31 the black building with 'SI SI SI...' and Benny the Moose's face on it really existed at the time. It was the Fascist Party Headquarters.

  • @leonardorivelorivelo9253
    @leonardorivelorivelo9253 Před rokem +35

    Economic depressions should be studied more because you know, *2008* and the fear of future depressions
    By studying our mistakes we might end up never suffering another

    • @kostam.1113
      @kostam.1113 Před rokem +18

      Economic depressions are inevitable in capitalist boom and bust cycles

    • @xxxBradTxxx
      @xxxBradTxxx Před rokem

      @@kostam.1113 With central bank boom and bust cycles. Also with the government having the power to shutdown businesses because some obese and old people were dying from the flu.

    • @stefans.466
      @stefans.466 Před rokem +4

      In a capitalistic economy there must always be a depression and subsequent growth out of the depression.

    • @stefans.466
      @stefans.466 Před rokem

      @@kostam.1113 Exactly

    • @TheTrex9000
      @TheTrex9000 Před rokem +1

      @Kosta M. ok tankie

  • @lordmoff1231
    @lordmoff1231 Před rokem +1

    2:02 it took half a second to make my day!

  • @assmunkey69
    @assmunkey69 Před rokem

    What the this is perfect for my semester project!!

  • @winstonchurchill586
    @winstonchurchill586 Před rokem +5

    1:54 hitler really caught a tan since I last saw him

  • @thedwightguy
    @thedwightguy Před rokem +4

    Fortunately all my relatives in Canada were on subsistence farms in rural areas. Mom would walk three miles into town to sell five eggs, and buy her candy. you didn't grow what you couldn't use yourself, trade, or sell for cash. at least they ate.

  • @MyWrecker
    @MyWrecker Před rokem

    Keep on making these videos

  • @Hand-in-Shot_Productions

    I haven't asked this question, but I found the answer quite interesting! France was mildly affected, the UK was too poor to be poorer (until they made the wise decision to prepare for war), Italy and Japan prepared to fight wars of imperial expansion, and (most ironically of all) the USSR was protected from the Great Depression by... sanctions.
    By the way, nice euphemisms at 1:13 and 2:56! I also found the "Spoon-a-Tron 2000" at 1:01 and the "headline" at 2:02 (you know how mild the effect is when a construction worker and a waiter losing their jobs is headline news!) to be quite entertaining! Thanks for the video!

  • @armandoguerra7658
    @armandoguerra7658 Před rokem +4

    Insane that you didn’t mention that it erupted in a civil war in Spain

    • @madgavin7568
      @madgavin7568 Před rokem +1

      Spain wasn't a great power anymore...

  • @Carpediem357
    @Carpediem357 Před rokem +3

    Can you do more of these Great Depression what they looked like in other countries. Be cool for you to cover them and not just the major powers

  • @Noidonteatbabiesstopasking

    I love how you have just one video specifically for ‘the entire world except the US’

  • @sum-random-inkling7093

    Watching a short recap to get ready for the next season.

  • @emilybrockschmidt1597
    @emilybrockschmidt1597 Před rokem +3

    This video really needs to be longer than just 4 minutes.

  • @djdragon1850
    @djdragon1850 Před rokem +4

    Well this is a great help as am learning about this in school! :D
    *Also I love this channel as am learning about America and well I keen interest in the history of the USSR*
    this channel is just a fav for a history geek like me :3

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for another excellent video! As some other(s) have mentioned, I would be interested to see a video on how a bunch of other countries around the world weathered the Depression too! Thanks again!
    God be with you out there, everybody! ✝️ :)

  • @ahmetkarl1229
    @ahmetkarl1229 Před rokem

    Are you making the videos yourself or do you have a big/medium/small group of animators and editors helping you? Solid video btw.