3rd WORLD PEOPLE REACT: FACTS ABOUT GERMANS NEVER TAUGHT IN SCHOOL | GERMANY REACTION

3rd WORLD PEOPLE REACT: FACTS ABOUT GERMANS NEVER TAUGHT IN SCHOOL | GERMANY REACTION

3rd World People React

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@Ricardo-cp2lu
@Ricardo-cp2lu - 23.09.2024 19:44

Great video, thoughtful and informative.
German immigration to Brazil started in 1824 and stood relevant until the 1950s. My own grandparents came in 1920.
I've visited the city of Emmelhausen (in the Hünsruck district, in Rhineland-Pfalz state) very recently before coming back home, and they inaugurated there a monument to the German immigrants to Brazil. It's a lovely place and the people are very welcoming.

Another place here in Brazil worth mentioning is the state of Espírito Santo, where the largest concentration of Pomeranian-speaking communities live - even larger than in Pommern itself.

Now in many communities in Brazil and Germany people are celebrating the 200th anniversary of the beginning of the German immigration. The Deutsche Post made a special postage stamp celebrating it.

Finally , there's a wonderful movie by the German director Edgar Rietz, called "Die Andere Heimat", centered in the German immigration to Brazil in the XIX century. I watched it in Germany and it's a very beautiful story.

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@germanyhamburger5552
@germanyhamburger5552 - 23.09.2024 19:49

Germany is the strongest economy in Europe, the military is no longer in the foreground.

When germans set their minds on something, they pursue it no matter what to make the country great.
But at a certain point, politicians take a step back and it seems like they are not trying anymore.
Germany is currently experiencing a sleep phase in politics.

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@ralfbauerfeind8236
@ralfbauerfeind8236 - 23.09.2024 20:33

Well, Germans has not always brought good things into the countries they were immigrating. Like when colonizing the African continent, or when some people formed "Colonia Dignidad" in Chile from 1961 until 2007. I am sure there can be videos found about those topics.

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@palantir135
@palantir135 - 23.09.2024 21:10

Dutch mapmakers were famous too. The famous Blaeu atlas is well known.

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@palantir135
@palantir135 - 23.09.2024 21:13

Zeitung is pronounced as tsay-tung

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@peterjanssen2105
@peterjanssen2105 - 24.09.2024 00:49

very good video

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@BerndFunken
@BerndFunken - 24.09.2024 04:33

I wouldn't listen to Thomas Sowell. Most "Facts" in this video are pure and utter Nonsense.

So, the german language is way older than many other languages? How does a Economist know that? He is not even a fucking Historian.
At the time when the Italian people had built already Rome we Germans still did live in small villages full of small huts, hundreds of tribes and each tribe had its own language. There was no common German language, but many variants that were "incompatible" to each other (and we needed a lot of time before we had even the idea to invent a common German language that every German could understand). And we didn't invent the beer, the Egyptians were drinking beer over 1000 years before we even thought of making beer. And we learned how to make wine from the Italians (remember? These were the guys that knew how to build big cities, streets, aqueducts and all the other good stuff hundreds of years before we Germans learned that.... from them).

I'm really curious about the sources of the "knowledge" of Thomas Sowell. Did he have some "right wing" friends that told him these fairytales? What he says sounds a lot like all that "German supremacy" propaganda crap.

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@rosshart9514
@rosshart9514 - 01.10.2024 02:51

So Germany has to be second world?

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@haydensimpson650
@haydensimpson650 - 11.10.2024 00:15

Do you know there is a german village in Brazil that called Pomerode 🤔

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@bernicegerspacher8902
@bernicegerspacher8902 - 23.10.2024 16:17

Germans were the National Socialists (NaSO) not National Zionists(NaZi‘s)…

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@bernicegerspacher8902
@bernicegerspacher8902 - 23.10.2024 16:20

Auschwitz and other concentration camps were forced labour camps… not killing camps…
Google holodomor…

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@jorgschafer1698
@jorgschafer1698 - 12.11.2024 22:52

Ok... there is a little mistake in Video: Germany as a national country exists since 19th century. The time before the country was splitted in hundreds of little autonom principalities. They all have got their own money, dialects, identities. The language is since to our days splitted in dialects. That means: a guy from Munich (Bavaria/Alps) can't understand a guy from Hamburg (North sea).

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@publicminx
@publicminx - 23.12.2024 15:39

Germans invented many important things: cars, bikes, computer, jet engines, motorcircles, rockets, helicopters, a working 'modern' printing press (in difference to the Chinese which was already not fitting to that kind of language AND did not like the German version also created fitting modernized paper and ink (which is why the modern press back then was imported to china and not the other way around. and thats not the only thing), x-ray, mp3 and so on and so on , .. an interesting and important invention many dont know btw. is the 'buttonhole' (Knopfloch) in the 13th century. It changed the fashion forever (and actually after the invention one had in Europe (later also exported in most of the rest of the world - today basically the entire world) a boom of 'over using those new invention' with rows of button holes. Which is why one can recognize that a cloth with a button hole cannot be before that invention. And if one takes the Holy Roman Empire as such then you had basically anyway basically all Renaissances/most reforms/most relevant inventions in the world etc. all happening within this Empire or more or less directly influenced by it...

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@publicminx
@publicminx - 23.12.2024 15:44

about mining. another (less known) example: at medieval time when the Hanseatic League became slowly a thing the first ones often had a route to Gotland/Sweden (Gotlandfahrer was a German term thing). Now, Sweden knew already about mining (which is in general much older and goes back thousands of years more) but German brought 'professionals from other mines' to Sweden plus more modern technics. That was important because Sweden had a lot of copper mines and with this new combination of mining/trade infrastructure about 2/3 of all copper in Europe (and beyond) came back then from Sweden!

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