• 2 months ago

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Transcript
00:00I am proud to be a citizen. I am proud to be a citizen. I am proud to be a citizen.
00:16Welcome to a new episode of The Thief's Throw.
00:24When Donald Trump announced his candidacy for the presidency of the United States of America in 2015, the world received this news with a smile.
00:32It was expected that his candidacy was a media campaign, something that he could use to get the public's attention.
00:37Something that he could use to get the spotlight.
00:39But it wasn't the first time he was nominated.
00:41When he tried to run for the presidency of Bush in 1988, he failed.
00:45He announced his candidacy in 2000, and he withdrew.
00:47In 2012, he announced his candidacy again, and he withdrew.
00:49So, he is a man who goes in and out again.
00:51Every time he nominates himself, then he leaves.
00:53But this time, the situation was different.
00:55Trump didn't withdraw. He stayed where he was.
00:57And as time went by, his power and popularity began to grow.
00:59Until he won the elections.
01:01And he became almost the most powerful country in the world, economically and militarily.
01:05The health of the world was shocked.
01:07How come?
01:09The man we used to make fun of,
01:11he did this to us and won.
01:13The comedian we used to mock,
01:15we made fun of him for years.
01:17He became one of the most powerful men in the world.
01:19The man we used to make fun of,
01:21he made fun of us in the end.
01:23Trump's victory, which he carried out in one way or another,
01:25depended on the attack of the refugees,
01:27and the promise of returning to the golden age of the United States.
01:29With the slogan,
01:31America Great Again.
01:33It was a warning bell.
01:35If he is extreme, he can be strong.
01:37And if he is on the right,
01:39Hitler is on the left.
01:41How do we understand the rise of the right?
01:43We must understand the rise of the king of the right.
01:45The great Nazi leader.
01:47The man who had a role in killing
01:49almost 60 million people
01:51in World War II.
01:53This artist.
01:55The painter of emotions and feelings.
01:57Of course, you won't believe me when I tell you
01:59that almost the most powerful man in the world
02:01wanted to be a painter.
02:03This is not me.
02:05This is Phil Aniel.
02:07He is a vegetarian.
02:09Hitler is a plant.
02:11We are normal people.
02:13But Hitler is a plant.
02:15Did you make fun of him?
02:17Hitler destroyed almost 11 countries.
02:19Some of them were partially occupied,
02:21and some of them were fully occupied.
02:23We are not talking about the countries of our forefathers.
02:25We are talking about Russia, Belgium, Denmark, France.
02:27Wake up.
02:29His army attacked Russia in the east,
02:31and occupied some areas in Africa.
02:33This vegetarian man's actions
02:35had a great impact on us as Arabs.
02:37What is this?
02:39For example, the eradication of racism
02:41in Europe was used as an excuse
02:43to declare the state of Israel in 1948.
02:45The war that started it was a reason
02:47for Britain's removal as a great power,
02:49and the declaration of the United States
02:51as a new great empire.
02:53This man changed the course of history.
02:55Let me tell you the story of the Saudis.
02:57I will replace the cucumber with an apple.
02:59Hitler was born in 1989 in Nimsah.
03:01Hitler was from Nimsah.
03:03He was not originally German.
03:05He wanted to become an artist.
03:07He applied to the Academy of Arts
03:09in Vienna in 1907.
03:11Unfortunately, the application was rejected twice.
03:13I don't know what was the problem.
03:15God forbid.
03:17Imagine what history would have done
03:19if Hitler had applied to the Academy of Arts
03:21and become an artist.
03:23Despite his failure to pass the exam,
03:25after his mother's death,
03:27he became an artist.
03:29He did what he could.
03:31There were many things he could have done
03:33in Vienna at that time.
03:35He contributed to the formation of ideas.
03:37If you know, Vienna was one of the
03:39capital cities of thought in Europe at that time.
03:41It is enough for me to tell you that
03:43in a period of time,
03:45Vienna had Hitler, Trotsky, Stalin, Freud,
03:47and Joseph Tito.
03:49He was part of the parallel axis of the Swiss bridge
03:51and the German Saudi hospital.
03:53Anyway,
03:55Hitler was one of the greatest people
03:57who changed the course of history.
03:59He was one of the greatest people
04:01who formed the events of the 20th century.
04:03Anyway,
04:05Hitler was influenced by many ideas
04:07that were present in Vienna at that time.
04:09One of them was Karl Luger's idea
04:11of the Heavenly Equalizer.
04:13The Heavenly Equalizer includes many people
04:15including us.
04:17Anyway, in 1914,
04:19Hitler volunteered in the German army
04:21like any young man who wants to serve his country.
04:23Despite this, he refused to join the army.
04:25According to his leadership,
04:27he had no leadership skills.
04:29Anyway,
04:31in 1918,
04:33a revolution took place in Germany
04:35that forced the German emperor
04:37to leave his throne and flee to the Netherlands.
04:39The war ended
04:41with the sudden surrender of Germany.
04:43Hitler felt betrayed.
04:45What was happening to him?
04:47He thought that they had surrendered.
04:49Of course, they didn't surrender.
04:51They kept hitting each other
04:53and no one died.
04:55The war didn't end.
04:57With the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919,
04:59Germany was forced to pay
05:01huge compensations to the Allies.
05:03It was a heavy punishment.
05:05What we fought for was to be tolerated.
05:07Surrendering meant a lot.
05:09The feeling of surrender and bitterness
05:11was felt. Germany had the right
05:13to be sad.
05:15We are not talking about a small country
05:17that suffered a lot in the war.
05:19It wasn't the strongest economy in Europe at the time.
05:21It was a great industrial power.
05:23Its national ratio was almost zero.
05:25It had its strength and weakness.
05:27It was humiliated by surrendering.
05:29Anyway, after the revolution
05:31and the end of the world war,
05:33political parties started to spread.
05:35They used parties to discuss
05:37and spread their ideas.
05:39Naturally, after revolutions,
05:41a political opening happens.
05:43Naturally, some authorities
05:45started to try to penetrate
05:47and spread their ideas.
05:49They wanted to know
05:51how they were going to die.
05:53Hitler, who was still in the army,
05:55was one of those informants.
05:57In 1919, Hitler went to a bar
05:59to spy on one of the right-wing parties.
06:01The Nazi Workers' Party.
06:03Hitler listened to their speeches
06:05and discussed them.
06:07He was amazed by their words
06:09about treason to the German army
06:11and the role of the Jews in the defeat.
06:13He joined them on the same day
06:15and Hitler was impressed.
06:17He was a great speaker
06:19and he knew how to stir up
06:21people's emotions.
06:23People liked him a lot.
06:25What a coincidence!
06:27He became one of the stars
06:29that later became
06:31the German National Workers' Party
06:33or the Nazi Party.
06:35The party had simple goals.
06:37We will stop paying the compensations
06:39for the first world war.
06:41We will take the land that was taken by us.
06:43The party was against communism,
06:45against capitalism, against Judaism
06:47and against the whole world.
06:49The party thought that the whole world
06:51was a neighborhood.
06:53The neighborhood had a big one
06:55and that big one was me.
06:57The party started its propaganda.
06:59A special newspaper was published
07:01to spread its ideas.
07:03The newspaper was about the Aryan race
07:05as the descendants of the legendary
07:07Atlantis people, the mermaid's descendants
07:09who were destined to rule the world
07:11as a force of its own.
07:13People started dreaming
07:15about the comeback.
07:17The party noticed
07:19some officers
07:21who were against the decision
07:23to convert to Islam
07:25and to reduce the size of the army.
07:27So Hitler offered
07:29the officer who was in charge
07:31to take this weapon
07:33and arm the party's men.
07:35The party had a program
07:37and a strong propaganda
07:39because they had armed militias
07:41to protect and control their enemies.
07:43The only thing left
07:45was to take over the power.
07:47In 1921,
07:49Hitler was elected as the leader
07:51of the Nazi party.
07:53In 1923, the golden opportunity
07:55to take over the power appeared.
07:57Germany couldn't find money
07:59to pay off its debts,
08:01so the government decided to print money
08:03and the money increased
08:05without any increase in production
08:07so Hitler started bombing Germany
08:09and the famous German hyperinflation.
08:11People walked around
08:13and found no money.
08:15One egg could cost millions
08:17if not billions of marks.
08:19The people couldn't eat
08:21so the government refused to pay off the debts.
08:23What did France do?
08:25They didn't pay off the debts
08:27and occupied the industrial zone.
08:29I say, it's a great insult.
08:31Hitler felt that he was in charge
08:33to take over the power
08:35but he didn't know
08:37that the world was coming
08:39and he was in charge.
08:41Why? Because it was
08:43the Toto family's election.
08:45Hitler didn't take over the power
08:47even though he had a solid plan.
08:49Toto, Toto, Hitler took over the power.
08:51He failed miserably.
08:53He was arrested
08:55and sentenced to 9 months in prison.
08:57He was a serious man
08:59who explained his intentions to Hitler.
09:01At that time,
09:03Toto wrote a great book
09:05about a mixture
09:07of his personal history
09:09and the Nazi party's manifesto.
09:11His experience in prison
09:13and the failed coup.
09:15His experience in prison
09:17made him rethink
09:19the best way to reach justice.
09:21He was convinced,
09:23like the Twitter family,
09:25that he would win the elections.
09:27In 1924, when Hitler was still in prison,
09:29the Nazi party won
09:31by only 3%.
09:33Even though the country was still at war
09:35and its economy was in a bad state.
09:37But the German people
09:39refused his proposal.
09:41The government overcame the protests
09:43and the strikes.
09:45Of course, they made a new currency
09:47to solve the problem of smoking.
09:49All of this made Hitler's words
09:51a choice for the German people.
09:53But Hitler, like any ambitious dictator,
09:55was resistant.
09:57He couldn't give up
09:59until 1928.
10:01Of course, the numbers were bigger
10:03than in 1924.
10:05All the indicators said
10:07that the party was stronger.
10:09This time, Hitler was with them
10:11when they were in prison.
10:13But unfortunately,
10:15the party lost again.
10:17This time, it won by only 2.5%.
10:19The German people
10:21refused the Nazi proposal again.
10:23Is this the end of the Nazi dream?
10:25Will Hitler give up?
10:27No, not yet.
10:29In 1929,
10:31fate played its game
10:33and sent Hitler
10:35an unexpected gift,
10:37the US dollar.
10:39In the world of economy and money,
10:41when the US is in crisis,
10:43the world is in trouble.
10:45In 2008, the unemployment rate in Germany
10:47increased to 6 million people.
10:49Now, the country was ready
10:51for the radical proposal,
10:53like the Nazi one.
10:55It was a hard time
10:57for radical solutions,
10:59like the right-wing
11:01or the left-wing.
11:03Now, people are starving,
11:05banks are collapsing,
11:07unemployment is rising,
11:09the country needs a leader.
11:11No one was more popular
11:13than Hitler,
11:15who said that Germany
11:17needed to stop paying
11:19its allies.
11:21The party took advantage
11:23of the German leader.
11:25For example, the party started
11:27to provide social assistance
11:29to the unemployed.
11:31The organization of the party
11:33and its presence everywhere
11:35in Germany helped
11:37the Nazi party
11:39become the most popular party
11:41in Germany.
11:43In 1932, the Nazi party
11:45led by Hitler
11:47became the largest party in Germany
11:49and got 37% of the votes.
11:51Can you imagine what happened?
11:53From 3% to 2.5%
11:55to 37%
11:57which is 17 times more
11:59than what we were talking about.
12:01Not only that,
12:03Hitler succeeded in
12:05winning the presidential elections
12:07against the first world war hero,
12:09John Hindenburg,
12:11and lost.
12:13But in 1933,
12:15luck was on Hitler's side again.
12:17The German president appointed
12:19a new head of state.
12:21He knew that the Nazi party
12:23was against the Nazis,
12:25so he decided to use his experience
12:27to bring Hitler to power
12:29and start a series of events
12:31that changed the course
12:33of the history of the world.
12:35Although Hitler's rise
12:37was motivated and exciting,
12:39it was a little scary.
12:41How did the German people
12:43welcome Hitler and his party
12:45twice in the elections
12:47was a big game.
12:49But here we see a very educated
12:51and well-educated people,
12:53with a great sense of achievement
12:55and history,
12:57who chose an inclusive and racist party
12:59in free and clean elections.
13:01And this is not just any people,
13:03this is the German people
13:05whose nationality
13:07almost reaches 0%,
13:09and who had the strongest economy
13:11in Europe.
13:13But what can we say?
13:15Isn't it better not to be a dictator?
13:17Isn't it better not to create
13:19repressive regimes that oppress people?
13:21He could have been a great artist,
13:23like Salvador Dali,
13:25but we don't like children,
13:27so they grow up like this.
13:29Do they have to be G.R.E.?
13:31No, they don't,
13:33but you have to watch the previous episodes
13:35and wait for the next week
13:37to see the new episodes.
13:39If you are on YouTube,
13:41subscribe to the channel
13:43and activate the notifications.
13:45See you next time!

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