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Corey: Oh, sick!

Grant: Hey, welcome to True Life

Tank: Alright, let's roll camera - and... "Action"

Jillian: Yeah, when you did the whole, like... that was good.

Grant : Can I cut?

Grant : Back to him...

Grant : reset, reset!

>Action lights

Corey : *grunts*

Cautious Clay : That was dope, that was great

Bipolar Sunshine : Nice

>Another one

Jillian : It's a wrap!

Cautious Clay : Awesome!

Bipolar Sunshine : Cool!

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Dr. Joe Dispenza UNLOCK the FULL Potential of Your MIND! The Law Of Attraction & Quantum Physics - Duration: 1:04:55.

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Melania Trump will to visit UK next week include meeting Queen Elizabeth II - Duration: 3:21.

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SCHUMER FAIL: Staggering Amount of Americans Want a New SCOTUS Pick ASAP! - Duration: 3:34.

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Playing the Victim | Historical Revisionism and Japan - Duration: 23:53.

If I asked you to name as many movies and video games as you can where Nazis are the

bad guys, you could probably come up with at least a dozen before you even had to take

a breath.

But if I were to ask you to do the same for Japan, you'd probably struggle.

Aside from the greatest movie ever made and maybe one of the Call of Duties, they really

aren't portrayed as evil in our popular media.

There actually is one Call of Duty, but if you're not a die hard fan I bet you can't

even name it.

This is despite the fact that they killed just as many people as the Nazis during World

War 2.

Why is that?

As with most stories about World War 2, we need to go back several decades to get the

full picture.

We're going to start the clock in 1868 with the Meiji Restoration, when the Emperor of

Japan became the supreme leader of the government.

Before that, it flip-flopped between the Shogun and the Emperor – who am I kidding, we've

all seen bill wurtz's video, and if you haven't you should, because I'm going

to reference it several times.

In 1890 the Meiji Constitution was adopted, which set up a western-style government, with

a parliament, a prime minister, and a monarch – very similar to what Great Britain has

today.

For several decades prior to this, Japan was a closed-off, isolated country.

But now they wanted to burst onto the world stage, quite literally with a bang.

China had always been the dominant power in Asia and since Japan borrowed so much of their

language and culture from China, they kind of felt like a little brother.

China is to Japan what Great Britain was to the United States.

And like a younger brother, when they matured a bit, they decided to test their strength

against the elder, which resulted in the First Sino-Japanese war in 1894.

To sum it up into a single sentence, this war was over who would control Korea and Japan

won.

They had beaten their older brother in their first real fight.

However, Japan also captured the Liaodong Peninsula, just north of Korea.

It previously belonged to China, who was leasing Port Arthur to Russia.

Now that the Japanese controlled it, they offered to extend the lease with Russia if

Russia recognized Korea as belonging to Japan.

Russia refused, wanting to exert its own influence on Korea.

So in 1904, the Russo-Japanese War started when Japan surprise attacked the Russian navy

in Port Arthur.

This is apparently a recurring strategy for Japan.

Long story short, Japan won, which was a pretty big deal.

This was the first time an Asian power had defeated a European power since the Mongols.

Ten years later, World War 1 began and I'm not entirely sure it should be called a World

War since it was almost entirely fought in Europe.

German-held territories in the Pacific, of which there were many, all fell to the Allied

forces in the first six months or so.

The rest of the war would go on for another four years.

Japan was one of those Allied forces, having captured several islands and ports from the

Germans.

So when it came time to negotiate the Treaty of Versailles, they got to sit at the table

with everyone else.

Can you ever find him?

There he is.

Yeah, Japan didn't take too kindly to being relegated to the end of the table and basically

forgotten, because, you know – Japan is all about the respect.

They had just beaten China, and Russia, and now Germany.

They felt like they should be treated with the same respect as all of the other world

powers.

And much like a younger brother with a chip on their shoulder, when they felt disrespected

by their allies, they stomped off to their room and plotted their revenge.

Japan's role in World War 1 was fairly minimal.

There was some action in the first few months, but then they mostly played a support role.

Their manufacturing and military industries took off during the war, because they were

one of the only allied nations not digging trenches in their backyard.

So the economy was booming and the population soared.

But then the war ended and people stopped buying Japanese goods… and then the Great

Depression hit, and people stopped buying Japanese goods even harder?

Japan had convinced itself that it was the target of a global conspiracy to crash its

economy.

Things were going great during the war and now that the world was at peace, things were

making a turn for the worst – which is the opposite of what you'd expect.

So nationalism began to take hold, much like it did in European countries at the time.

Why is the economy bad?

Because of terrible trade deals, a global conspiracy against us, and a lack of the respect

that we deserve.

This should sound familiar, but draw whatever parallels you like.

Japanese schools began pushing conformity, obedience, and ultra patriotism.

Many school teachers were former soldiers and ran their classrooms like boot camp.

There were even a few teachers who killed themselves out of shame for messing up words

to patriotic songs.

Again, draw whatever parallels you like.

But perhaps worst of all, was the indoctrination of the idea of Japanese racial superiority.

The Nazis recognized the Japanese as the Asian master race – which is why they entered

into an alliance with them.

The Japanese still saw the Chinese as somewhat of an older brother, but Koreans… were the

red-headed stepchild.

Now Japan had a new problem.

In order to feed their expanding population, they would need more land and I wish this

was a joke… but they actually called it manifest destiny and invaded China in 1931.

Except it wasn't actually China, it was Manchuria, which was kinda sorta part of China…

kinda…

Maybe I can help?

Please.

You're right, Most carefully worded historical resources will call the Japanese offensive

between 1931 and 1932 the "Invasion of Manchuria" not the "Invasion of China" because "China"

was not one unified political entity at the time.

With the collapse of the Qing dynasty in 1912 the country had split into numerous states

ruled by warlords called cliques, who fought both with and against each other in shifting

alliances.

The Republican Kuomintang under Chiang Kai Shek and the Socialist Chinese Communist Party

united to fight the warlords but soon started fighting each other beginning the Chinese

Civil War.

The Fengtian clique ruled most of the area we call Manchuria and it was this state the

Japanese invaded in 1931 because of the vast economic and military ties they had in the

region.

The "Invasion of China" is a name reserved for the offensive in 1937 because it was the

first time Japan had invaded territory actually controlled by the Republic of China politically.

However both invasions were done under fabricated incidents of Chinese aggression such as the

Mukden incident and the Marco Polo bridge incident respectfully, betraying Japanese

obvious military interest in crushing Chinese rule in the area.

If you'd like to learn more, check out my history of China series over at the Suibhne

channel when you're done here As he said, in 1937, the Marco Polo Bridge

Incident occurred, which was the beginning of the Second Sino-Japanese War.

And depending on who you ask, the beginning of World War 2.

There are obviously dozens, if not hundreds, of battles to talk about here – but battle

history isn't really my thing, so let's just focus on two.

The Battle of Shanghai started in August 1937.

While Japan still viewed China as an elder civilization and held them in somewhat high

regard, they expected Shanghai to fall quickly.

China was broken and fighting amongst itself – Japan was clearly superior, at least in

their minds.

But it didn't, the Chinese held out for three months until November 1937 when they

retreated to Nanking.

The Japanese pursued them for all 200 miles absolutely obliterating anyone or anything

along the way.

The city of Suzhou, which is on the road between Shanghai and Nanking, went from 350,000 people

to just 500.

Single cities in China suffered as many casualties as entire countries in Europe.

If you remember Bill Wurtz's video, here's where he talks about the Japanese advance.

And Japan invaded more and more and more and more of China and was planning to invade the

entire East.

Did you catch it?

I bet you didn't, because you probably had annotations turned off.

Here it is again, with them turned on.

And Japan invaded more and more and more and more of China.

And they did some rapes.

What a wonderfully lighthearted way to put that.

And as an annotation, which means it wasn't much more than an afterthought.

So let's talk about Nanking, which was the capital of China at the time.

Chiang Kai-shek pulled the government and air force out of the city and ordered the

skeleton crew of troops to hold Nanking at all cost.

It was pretty clear to the soldiers that he had left them for dead.

But being the capital of China, it was still a fairly important political prize for Japan,

so the Emperor appointed his uncle, Prince Asaka, to lead the charge.

This becomes incredibly important later.

The siege and battle for Nanking lasted four days in the beginning of December 1937 – remember,

Shanghai lasted 3 months.

The Chinese soldiers in the city either ran, surrendered, or tore off their military uniforms

and looted stores, homes, and sometimes random people on the street in order to steal their

clothes and hide among the civilian population.

The Japanese who entered the city had a completely different mindset.

They felt humiliated after Shanghai and were looking for revenge.

At the same time, they were absolutely disgusted by the soldiers who were surrendering.

One of the main tenets of the Japanese warrior code, or Bushido, is death before dishonor.

There is nothing more shameful than surrendering.

Among Western military powers, there was 1 surrender for every 3 dead.

Among the Japanese, there was one surrender for every 120 dead, they just didn't do

it.

This was compounded by the fact that the Chinese outnumbered the Japanese 7 to 2.

Journals from Japanese soldiers at the time wondered why are they surrendering?

Even unarmed they could overpower us.

The Chinese were cowards in the eyes of the Japanese and the only explanation they could

come up with was that they were subhuman.

Once they took the city, things only got worse.

Prince Asaka, or one of his subordinates, issued a "kill all captives" order.

The stated reason was to preserve food.

Where have we heard that one before?

All 90,000 Chinese soldiers, now prisoners of war, were killed.

Every military aged male in the city was killed.

In fact, almost everybody in the city was killed.

If I asked you to list one hundred ways to kill a person, you still wouldn't come close

to what the Japanese did.

Prisoners were used for bayonet and machine gun practice.

Officers ordered new recruits to kill unarmed prisoners in order to break them in and desensitize

them to war.

Those are just the nice ways, I hope you're not eating right now, because it's about

to get a whole lot worse.

Chinese were lined up in rows and beheaded.

They even made contests out of it, where officers would compete to see who could behead 100

Chinese the fastest.

These contests were reported in Japanese newspapers in the same way you'd read about a baseball

game.

After they were beheaded, the row behind them would push them into the mass grave that they

dug themselves… and then they were beheaded and pushed in by the row behind them.

And that's if you were lucky.

There are cases of the Chinese being forced to bury their own countrymen up to the neck

alive, and then being buried up to the neck alive themselves.

Bodies were used to fill in trenches so that tanks could drive across.

People were forced to drink kerosene and then shot so they exploded.

People were forced to walk out on the ice.

Babies were impaled on bayonets or thrown into boiling pots of water.

Yes, that is a real picture, you wouldn't have believed me otherwise – it's blurred

for obvious reasons though.

Basically every way you could possibly think of to kill a person and then some.

At least 200,000 people were killed, which was half of the population of Nanking at the

time.

This is why the event is known as the Nanking Massacre.

But it's also known, perhaps more appropriately, as the Rape of Nanking.

Do you have any notion of what happens when a city is sacked?

The Japanese raped every woman they could find.

I hope you have a strong stomach, because between 20,000 to 80,000 women were raped.

Why does that number have such a large range?

Because after women were raped by anywhere from 15 to 20 soldiers each, they were killed

and then their bodies were left in the street with bayonets stuck in them.

Again, blurred for obvious reasons, I'm not making this up.

Why were they killed?

Well, rape was explicitly forbidden in the Japanese military, but dead women tell no

tales.

Asian cultures value female chastity and purity, so many surviving women never spoke about

it or just killed themselves out of shame.

To this day, no woman will admit that their child may have been born to a Japanese soldier

and infanticide was rampant during the occupation.

And if you think that's the worst of it, you're still wrong.

At gun point, Chinese fathers were forced on their own daughters, sons on their mothers,

basically every combination that you've all looked up on pornhub.

I'm so done trying to understand millennials.

There were rape contests as well, but honestly, even I have my limits, so we're done talking

about this.

You might be thinking: How have I never heard about this, this must have been carried out

in secret or something.

No, this was front page news at the time.

There were a number of foreigners in the city, including reporters, businessmen, and ambassadors

– it was the capital of China after all.

These foreigners established the Nanking Safety Zone, a two and a half square mile area reserved

for civilians that was supposed to be safe from the Japanese military.

Many former Chinese soldiers hid in the zone and were subsequently captured, so the military

justified regularly raiding the zone.

It eventually sheltered 250,000 refugees and was maintained by two dozen foreign nationals

led by John Rabe.

The official Nazi Party representative in Nanking.

Nazi Germany was allied with Japan, so he had every reason to portray Japan in a positive

light.

But he didn't.

His letters and journals from the time tell the gruesome story of how thousands of women

were raped and thousands more were murdered.

Last night up to 1,000 women and girls are said to have been raped...

You hear nothing but rape.

If husbands or brothers intervene, they're shot.

What you hear and see on all sides is the brutality and bestiality of the Japanese soldiers.

(Dec 17, 1937) He would walk the streets and night and stop

rapes in progress – like a Nazi Batman… but his only superpower was his swastika armband.

The idea of a "good guy Nazi" is just so weird that you couldn't make it up if

you tried.

Upon his return to Germany, the Gestapo ordered him to never speak of Nanking again.

He is celebrated as the Oskar Schindler of Nanking and there are multiple memorials to

him in the city today.

This lasted for six weeks.

Reporters were barred entry to the city the entire time, and it didn't take long for

foreign governments to figure out why.

Then the stories started coming out.

There are very few media depictions of this incident, but this one, called Flowers of

War, came out in 2011 and starred Christian Bale.

They definitely put some coin into this one so it's worth giving a watch.

Had I not read about this event prior to seeing the movie, I would have thought it was an

exaggeration.

They even go through the effort to recreate several of the iconic photographs of the massacre,

including this one, which we saw earlier.

To Wurtz's credit, he does mention the Rape of Nanking in his "history of the entire

world."

Japan is finally conquering the East and they're so excited they rape Nanking way too hard.

They should probably just deny it.

We'll get to the denial later, but this event, combined with the "accidental"

sinking of the USS Panay in Nanking during the evacuation turned US opinion against Japan.

But the final straw was when Japan invaded Indochina in 1940.

The United States decided to cease all shipments of oil and other goods to Japan as well as

ban them from using the Panama Canal.

Japan's response to this was…

But then Japan spits on them in Hawaii and challenges them to war.

And they say yes.

An event he leaves out of his history of the entire world, despite how important it is

– and despite the fact that it wasn't just Pearl Harbor.

They attacked dozens of islands in the Pacific all on the same day in order to secure their

own sources of oil.

I made a video about this.

Pearl Harbor was where the US Pacific Fleet was based, so it's the one that got the

most press.

The attack was designed to stall US response long enough for Japan to fortify its other

positions.

Which worked actually… for a little while.

I'm not going to get into the specific battles of the war, but I do want to talk about the

prisoners of war.

As I said before, the Japanese rarely, if ever, surrendered – but for western militaries,

surrender is a perfectly acceptable option.

At the beginning of this video, if you were able to name any movies about Japan in World

War 2, one of them was probably the 1957 movie Bridge on the River Kwai, starring Obi-wan

Kenobi, and maybe you knew about the 2014 movie Unbroken.

Both of these movies are about the hells on Earth that were Japanese POW camps.

Of American POWs in Nazi Germany, one out of every 25 prisoners died in a camp.

Of American POWs in Japanese camps?

One in three.

They surrendered, in the eyes of the Japanese, they were dishonorable cowards and they are

enemies of Japan.

You will be treated accordingly.

The infamous Bataan Death March in 1942 was the forced relocation of 60,000 to 80,000

American and Filipino POWs over 70 miles.

It's often referred as the POW Trail of Tears, which is an apt comparison because

just as many people died.

In an act of perpetual defiance, the march is repeated annually at White Sands Missile

Range in New Mexico.

So let's end the war.

Bonus Round, United States versus Japan, fight.

Finish him.

I don't want to get into whether or not it was right to use the bombs.

But I will say that destroying cities wasn't all that new.

We'd been firebombing cities for a while at that point, this was Tokyo – again, I

made a video about this.

So if I were to tell you that this was done by a single bomb, you'd probably think I

was lying.

And rightly so, because that one's actually Tokyo, the first one was Hiroshima.

The point is that you couldn't tell the difference.

So when we told Japan "we are in possession of the most destructive explosive ever devised

by man" their response was: "Yeah, sure you are buddy."

Because we had been levelling cities for some time.

So we dropped a second one and forced an unconditional surrender without having to invade mainland

Japan.

The United States installed a new government, inspired by the United States government.

Whoa wait.

And they did some rapes?

Rapes did occur in occupied Japan.

But to use the same "whoops, and they did some rapes" tone to suggest that it was

anywhere near the same scale as Nanking is just intellectually dishonest.

It was measured in the hundreds, not the tens of thousands.

This, along with playing up the horrors of the atomic bomb, helps paint a sympathetic

picture of Japan as a victim of the war rather than an aggressor.

Along with a few other subtle narrative changes.

Like that the war was to free Asia from western imperialism, not world domination.

And Pearl Harbor was just a reaction to being backed into a corner, not an aggressive land

grab.

Those really are the versions of history being taught in Japan today.

And that's only recently, for decades after the war, Japanese schools didn't even teach

that Japan and the US were at war – or who won.

But there's something else I want to say about that segment.

The United States installed a new government, inspired by the United States government.

No we didn't.

Firstly, it's much more inspired by the constitutional monarchy that Great Britain

has, but secondly, there's very little new about it – all of the positions are the

same.

The Emperor is still the Emperor, the parliament still exists, even the Prime Minister – the

current-day Prime Minister is the 63rd Prime Minister.

We've only had 45 presidents.

The position goes all the way back to the Meiji Restoration.

And while all of the positions remained the same, so did many of the faces.

The 56th Prime Minister of Japan was previously being held as a Class A war criminal.

To put that into perspective, there is nothing higher than Class A – if Hitler were captured

alive, he would have been a Class A war criminal.

This is why Nazis are always the bad guys in our World War 2 media and not Japan.

Nazis don't exist anymore… or at least they're not in charge anymore.

There is a clear disconnect between Nazi Germany and present-day Germany.

But if you make Imperial Japan the bad guys, you are by extension making current-day Japan

the bad guys.

Everything about the government, and most people in it, were the same.

Many Class B and C war criminals, including the lower level officers and soldiers, were

tried by the Nanking War Crimes Tribunal.

Many of the foreign nationals who administered the Nanking Safety Zone testified against

them.

The two lieutenants who participated in that 100 beheadings contest were tried there and

their defense was… and I wish I was joking here…

"It was only like, 70 people."

Weirdly that didn't work and they were found guilty and executed.

One of the lower level generals was also tried, but blamed the massacre on Koreans…

Which also didn't work and he was executed.

But most of the Class A war criminals were tried in Tokyo by the International Military

Tribunal for the Far East.

Or IMTFE for short.

While the IMTFE found that the Nanking massacre was "secretly ordered or willfully committed"

– they weren't allowed to prosecute the top commander, who, if you remember, was Prince

Asaka.

The entire Imperial family was given immunity from prosecution by Douglas MacArthur.

This infuriated the Chinese, but at least they could go after the other high-level officials…

Until 1949, when Mao seized control of mainland China and the Bamboo Curtain fell on Asia…

is that racist?

It feels racist.

Then the Korean War happened and the West needed a non-communist ally in Asia, so the

IMTFE just… sort of stopped.

This was when the future Prime Minister was let off the hook and was allowed to continue

being a politician.

As long as he was pro-American.

While present-day Germany paid war reparations, Japan never really had to, and since the chief

culprits of the Rape of Nanking never stood trial, Sino-Japanese relations were sour for

decades.

Eventually the government of both Communist China and the Republic of China "forgave"

Japan in order to open up trade relations, which infuriated Chinese citizens.

Japan has never formally apologized for any of its war crimes.

The United States helped with that cover-up narrative.

How do you convince millions of citizens that the people they just fought a few years ago

are now our friends?

Mostly by repeatedly apologizing for and playing up the horrors the atomic bombs.

Because you know, two wrongs make a right.

They cancel each other out.

If you look at history, we have bombed the masculinity out of an entire continent.

We dropped two atomic bombs on f***ing Japan and they've been drawing Hello Kitty and

s*** ever since.

As funny as that is, he's also not wrong.

Hello Kitty, Keroppi, more recently Gudetama were all created by Sanrio to play into the

victimization and pacification of Japan.

They are all designed to look vulnerable.

All of these characters are so cute and defenseless and you just wanna hug them and protect them,

oh m- It's also known as Kawaii culture and really grew during the 70s and 80s but

continues today.

Until the cold war ended and the stories came out.

Japanese soldiers who no longer feared prosecution talked openly about what they did.

Books were published, like Iris Chang's The Rape of Nanking, movies were made like

Flowers of War and Unbroken.

And still Japan, officially anyway, denies their part in the tragedy.

Saying it was all just Soviet and Chinese propaganda – which is kind of true by the

way, even some blaming the United States for it, which…

Saying that it was only 3000 people who were killed – even though there are single mass

graves with more bodies than that.

Or that it was Chinese looters or that all the women who were raped were actually paid

prostitutes or "comfort women" – which is the same reason Japanese-Korean relations

are still on the rocks.

The Japanese government thinks that apologizing for the sins of the past would be an insult

to veterans – those responsible have already been prosecuted, how many times must they

apologize?

Once would be nice, you know, for starters.

Having any sort of academic or political discussion on Japanese war crimes in Japan usually results

in career suicide.

And more often than not, death threats.

Whenever a Japanese politician makes the mistake of apologizing in a personal capacity, not

an official one.

They either retract it shortly afterwards or are voted out.

The current Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe made that mistake in 2006.

And now repeatedly claims that comfort women were not forced into sexual slavery but were

private entrepreneurs.

On a visit to the Yakusuni Shrine, which memorializes over a thousand convicted war criminals, fourteen

of which are Class A, he said: "The men convicted by the Allied tribunals

are not war criminals under the laws of Japan."

Japanese denial of their war crimes, and especially Nanking, is akin to denying that the Holocaust

happened.

The most successful historical revisions are those that only tell one side – but in recent

years, we've finally started to hear the other sides of this story and it's important

to listen.

The saying goes "those who do not learn from their history are doomed to repeat it."

You no longer have the luxury of saying you did not learn, because now, you know better.

I promised I'd make this video almost two years ago, and here it is… finally.

Big thanks to Suibhne for helping me with this video, make sure to check out his channel

and videos on China.

I'd also like to thank my legendary patrons Eric and Hamzah.

If you'd also like me to butcher the pronunciation of your name or at least have your name up

on screen, head over to patreon.com/knowingbetter.

In the mean time don't forget to… uh… no, nope, not saying that.

We're going generic on this one, click that subscribe button.

Also follow me on twitter and facebook and join us on the subreddit.

For more infomation >> Playing the Victim | Historical Revisionism and Japan - Duration: 23:53.

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HAPPENING NOW: Nunes Just Called on Trump to Expose the TRUTH on the FBI's FISA Abuse! - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> HAPPENING NOW: Nunes Just Called on Trump to Expose the TRUTH on the FBI's FISA Abuse! - Duration: 2:26.

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Eating Horse Meat Hot Pot (Thắng cố) & Getting Drunk in SAPA, VIETNAM 2018 | VIETNAMESE FOOD - Duration: 16:16.

Hey what's up guys, it's Cory here. I am in Sapa.

And this is in the northwest region of Vietnam, high in the mountains.

And in the evenings, it gets pretty chilly and so people like to eat really hot, warm foods.

So tonight we're going to have a really famous dish that's well-known from Sapa.

This restaurant here behind me is highly recommended by Vietnamese people when you come to Sapa.

So if you guys want to know where this is, definitely check the description box down below.

Let's go check it out!

We got a giant basket of greens here.

There's some cabbage, and I'm not sure what kind of leaf this is.

It looks like spinach.

This dish that they have here is a giant hot pot.

And it's filled with organs from a horse.

So there's like intestines, there's blood cubes, kidneys, all kinds of different things in there.

It smells really good because of the seasoning for the broth.

And the broth has cardamom, there's star anise, I can smell all kinds of stuff in here.

It's just a sensory overload on my nose, like pungent is the wrong word.

Because pungent sounds terrible, but it's very strong.

And I think part of that smell is the gaminess of the intestines.

And I'm very excited because I do love organs, you guys know me.

If you've seen my previous videos, I eat all kinds of stuff and so this is going to be really, really cool.

It gets very cold in the evenings, so this kind of a hearty hot pot stew definitely

helps warm you from the inside out.

And the thing to do while you're eating this specific dish here in Sapa is to drink

the traditional corn wine. So they gave us this

looks like a sake bottle. But uhmmm

Little sake cups.

This is corn wine. And this is what most of the people drink while eating this dish.

Alright, we've reached boiling point. Look at that, that's so awesome.

Ok so the green leaf that I thought was spinach is actually a star gooseberry leaf,

that's according to Wikipedia, thank you Wikipedia.

I've seen it everywhere, I just didn't know what it was.

But this is like one of the most common green leaf things you can find in southeast Asia.

It's used in so many different dishes.

And it's good, it reminds me of..... spinach. Sort of.

I am never one to turn down blood.

And so we got some of the blood cube here, this is horse blood.

And you guys know me, I love my sauces, my dipping sauces.

And this specific one here that they gave us reminds me of the

one I had in Thailand. It's extremely spicy.

Dip that blood cube in there.

This is really hot.

Mmmmm

Oh yeah.

Hmmm?

There's a bit more of a gaminess to this blood.

I think just because it's horse. It tastes a little bit different

from beef blood or pork blood.

But I can definitely tell that it's a little bit more gamey and

a little bit more kind of like an iron-y taste.

But not bad, I like that.

It's so hot!

Oh my god

Mmmmmm

Check out this piece of horse guys, you can see the skin

and the layer of fat amongst the meat there.

It's like a sandwich of the epidermis.

Mmmmm

First thing I notice right away, it's pretty tough to chew.

But, actually

this one is not bad. I was expecting more of a gamey taste.

I haven't had horse in a very long time.

I have had raw horse in Japan, so this is my first time having cooked horse meat.

Tofu

It's really noisy right now, a lot of people just showed up to the restaurant.

It's like a party of 20.

And there's like a party of 10 outside, and traffic.

There's really hard cartilage on this thing,

but we're going to go ahead and eat it cause cartilage is edible.

Lots of cartilage.

I think what's making all of this like pretty tasty is of course the broth.

It's just infusing everything with that really strong

smell and taste.

I'm shaking. hahahaha Trying to hold this.

Very rubbery, ohhhh yeah.

Yeah, that is very gamey. It tastes like the grass

smell from the farm, like that's how gamey it is.

So you can tell that this horse ate some pretty good stuff up here in the mountains.

There's amazing, lush vegetation up in this whole region, so....

I'm just absorbing Sapa through a horse.

Alright, I'm going to pour my girlfriend some of the rice wine (I meant to say corn wine) here.

Ooooooh

Here you go.

Got it?

Alright.

Gonna do a cheers. Cheers!

Mmmm

Ahhhhhhh Woooooo

Ooohoohoohoo

Oh my god!

--It's very strong. That is very strong!

That's stronger than sake, ooooh man.

The corn alcohol, it's like grain alcohol. You know?

This is like Sapa mountain moonshine, essentially.

I think that's exactly what this is, this is literally like moonshine.

Woooooooo

Do you know moonshine?

--You face is getting red.

Already? Am I already getting pink?

--Yeah

Really? hahaha I only had one sip!

Maybe it's because the steam is blowing right at my face.

Man, we got a whole thing of this. I'm going to get pretty trashed by the end of this video guys.

Let's get lit!

What else can we try in here?

Is that brain? Brain?

Brain. Ooooooohhhh!

Did you here how excited I was when I discovered that it was brain?

I haven't had brain in awhile. I can't remember the last time I had brain.

I've only had sheep's brain.

I don't recall having cow's brain.

And this my friends is horse brain.

Brainnnnnzzzzz yes!!

I'm probably going to do something really stupid.

So brain is soft and it's kind of like tofu, when it's really hot, it retains heat.

So, my dumbass, I'm probably going to stick the whole thing in my mouth

and burn it. But, horse brain.

Yep! Very hot!

Wooooooo

But, wow!

It's like it melts right in your mouth, Mmmmm

Sorry, I'm still recovering from how hot it is.

Ok, there we go. Nice, it went down.

Very creamy, very soft. Like you can probably drink that through a straw.

Easily, very easily. And it tastes like the broth.

Like I said before with the other things, so that really helps you

to be able to consume all of the things in this dish.

Let's go ahead and wash that brain down with some corn alcohol.

Wooooo

Ooohohhohhohhhhhh

oh my gooodddd

It's good. It's good. It's good, I promise you, it's good.

I normally don't drink strong liquor, I'm a beer kind of a guy. Or like a wine kind of a guy.

But liquor, like whiskey, tequila, vodka, I used to drink that stuff

in my teens and early 20's, but after like 22 I was like... no more.

Too much partying, way too much tequila and whiskey, yeah.

So pretty much I've avoided it for at least 16 or 17 years.

Cheers guys!

Ahhhhh

Wooooooo

It's good, I'm just going to drink this. I'm not going to eat anything.

Nah, just kidding. I will. I will eat, I'm hungry.

I can kind of already feel the toastiness, the fire rising from my belly.

And entering my blood stream. Mmmmm

Alright, some more horse meat right here. This is just meat only, with

a little bit of a layer of fat on there.

What's that? Is that liver?

We've got to have the liver!

Mmm, thank you.

If you guys are curious about horse meat itself,

it's very similar to beef. Like, not kidding.

It's very similar to beef. It's a little bit tougher.

Not as tender as beef, but just as good.

Full of flavor, really yummy. Like I would totally eat horse again.

And here's the horse liver, nice and steamy. You can see it's steaming hot.

I'm not really a fan of cooked liver, I love raw liver .

But cooked liver, mmmmm it's okay. But not a big fan.

Ok, just try it all.

Tastes like cooked liver. Actually, though, this is a little bit different.

With other liver that's cooked, like pan-fried and stuff,

when you're eating it, it kind of tastes dry.

This is actually super moist, like every bite is full of juice.

And it's all thanks to that broth.

I need to balance out some of that horse meat and organs with some greens.

And some tofu.

Mmmmm

Alright, we're going to go ahead and put in some of the rice noodle things here.

Look at that, like a pro.

You don't just dunk it in, you put it in the little ladle. you put it in the ladle.

With the soup.

And you let that cook up a little bit.

And my guess is they're going to unravel and become like really flat.

And wide noodles.

Yeah! There we go, that's what I was talking about.They did unravel.

Some of the ingredients in this broth are the exact same ingredients that are used in Pho.

So to have the noodles in here, it's like Pho horse meat.

So I'm going to just let you guys know, it's very hard to film when you're eating in front of

steamy things, uhmmm

the steam always gets right up on the lens. It fogs up.

And then you have to wait for it to cool down .

So that it, you know, clears up.

So actually behind the scenes, you guys probably don't see this, but I'm blowing softly

towards the steam so that it doesn't come towards the lens.

Oh, you're making a little mini bowl of Pho.

Wow! Thank you!

Look at that!

Am I slurring already guys? I don't know. I feel like I'm talking funny. Like I'm saying weird stuff.

But this, this my friends, looks awesome!

And it, *sniffs* it smells sooooo good! Oh my god.

I just want to try the noodles by themselves.

Mmmm, flat rice noodles. That's good.

So my girlfriend and I are going to be brutally honest about this dish. It is gamey.

For me it's not a problem, but maybe for a lot of guys who might be coming to Sapa,

and you want to try this,

but you might be surprised is that it's actually really gamey.

So yeah, just a heads up. We like this dish,

but we don't like it enough to order it like all the time. You know, this is one of those things,

like when you come to Sapa, you gotta try it.

And that's what we're doing. And it's well worth it, but I don't think we'll probably order this

until the next time we're in Sapa, or next time we're in Sapa, who knows, maybe we'll just skip this.

We definitely wanted to eat this for you guys, on film.

And just try it out, you know, you gotta try it out.

Some more blood cubes, Mmmm hmmmm.

i like the blood. Yum yum!

Ooooh

Wooooooooo

Wow!

Cheers guys!

Pinky out.

It's so strong......

Ahhhhhh

Yeah, that's it. I can't eat anymore guys.

I'm stuffed. And I'm slightly drunk. hehehe

Yeahhhh~

Ok, I hope you guys enjoyed this video. I'm a little bit toasty and I'm very full.

It was good, it was good food, definitely worth trying.

I probably wouldn't have it again for a long time. That's just being honest with you guys.

But if you guys want to know anything and everything about this restaurant and the dish, it's going to be

in the description box down below. So check that out.

And so that's it for this video, I hope you guys enjoyed it.

Please Like, Subscribe, do all the social media followings and all that cool stuff.

I hope I'm not slurring. And I will see you guys in the next video, bye!!!

For more infomation >> Eating Horse Meat Hot Pot (Thắng cố) & Getting Drunk in SAPA, VIETNAM 2018 | VIETNAMESE FOOD - Duration: 16:16.

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How You Lose Money In Stock Market - Duration: 10:12.

Hello everyone and welcome back to the course.

And in this lesson we'll take a look on very important concept that will help you understand

logic behind making profit in stock market.

In case you are trying to make profit in stock market and have only booked loss then there

is problem with your understanding of making profit.

And with help of this lesson first I want to address that problem.

So lets start with the last line that you hear in every mutual funds advertisement.

"All Investments Are Subject To Market Risk, Read All Scheme Related Documents Carefully".

Which in simple words means when you are investing your money in stock market, you are subjecting

your investments to risk of loss.

But against this risk you can also make exceptional rewards.

While investing, majority usually expect, "If I analyze my stocks properly I would

make profit even if 50% of my stocks will perform as expected".

If we take that into consideration, this is risk reward curve with respect to which you

are trying to invest in stock market.

A perfect unidirectional linear curve with perfect 45 angle for risk of every single

penny.

Expecting this perfect line on risk reward curve is main reason for your loss.

There are 2 problems associated with investing method designed for this expectation which

guarantees you a recipe for loss.

First a perfect linear curve is only possible if you can control both risk and reward while

investing.

Which by no means is true, while investing you can neither control risk nor you can control

reward, both of them are controlled by market.

Next it assumes you'll succeed with your stocks at least 50% of the times.

Which again is not really true.

Every year 1000s of businesses are listed in stock market.

Out of which hardly 50% survive for next 5 years.

Hardly 10% to 20% survive for 10 years.

Out of these 10% to 20%, only few manage to grow in size with time and only 1 or 2 businesses

become industry leaders of tomorrow.

Let me be brutally honest here, a business that can generate more cash than it needs

to survive is a fundamentally strong business.

So if a business has generated what it needs to survive for next 100 years without growth

in size, it is still a fundamentally strong business.

Fundamental strength doesn't drive prices of stocks, improving fundamentals does.

And majority of businesses that manage to get listing on stock exchanges are usually

fundamentally strong enough while getting listed.

They usually start deteriorating after listing.

After every 10 years, almost 50% of fortune 100 companies in stock market change.

And rest stocks change to such a huge extent that it is hard to find businesses that were

listed 10 years ago on it.

Business failure rate in stock market is more than 50% in spite of strong as well as improving

fundamental strength.

To respect the risk reward diagram in front of you, stock market must be able to maintain

average win rate of 50%, which again is not true.

A slight change in failure rate more than 50% will instantly turn your risk reward diagram

into this.

Even failure rate of 51% will deflect risk reward curve in direction of risk.

You may see profits for very short term.

But Final result will always remain loss.

This means if you'll invest by keeping reward or profit in mind, the final result will be

loss.

And that is going to happen because you can not control risk, nor you have any control

over reward in stock market.

Probability wise we can say that stock market gives you 80% to 90% risk of losing money

against just 10 to 20% possibility of reward.

A market where risk is more than reward is better known as risk market.

Opposite of risk market is reward market, where reward is more than risk.

Example of such markets are banks, provident funds, government funds and money deposit

institutions.

Where your risk is relatively less as compared to your reward.

Profits in such markets can be represented by current diagram.

As you can see, in reward markets the amount of risk is either very less or as good as

non existent.

For example bank deposit gives you 2-3% profit, RD might offer 5 to 6%, FD 6.5 to 7%.

In case you are senior citizen 8% and finally provident or government funds offer 8 to 8.5%.

The maximum profit on any reward market in India is not more than 8.7% as per March of

2018.

Your range of profit in reward market ranges from 1% to maximum 8.5%, you only have to

make selection which kind of investment you want to make.

Depending on either you select saving account, fixed deposit, recurring deposit, provident

funds or government funds, you are as good as guaranteed to make reward.

All you have to do is maintain accounts till maturity.

Risk is less, so are your rewards.

The reason I am telling you this so that you can understand, in reward market you manage

reward more than risk and you have some level of control on both risk and reward.

This comes with limitation of limited profit.

Opposite is true in risk market, in risk market you have to manage risk more than reward and

you have as good as zero control on both risk as well as reward.

But it comes with one huge benefit, the potential of reward is not limited.

And therefore people who understand how to invest in their respective risk markets are

making extremely big profits.

Stock Markets, bonds market, commodity markets, currency markets, debt & securities markets,

mutual funds and real estate markets all of them are risk markets.

And they offer massive profits not because the people who invest in them are trying to

manage profits, the reason why people succeed in risk market because they manage risk or

in simple words losses.

The current diagram represents risk reward curve in risk market if risk is managed properly.

In short run you may not see growth but by making sure risk remains less reward potential

can be exponential.

In easy words this is what we call compounding growth in profits by minimizing losses.

In simple words, in risk market you have to manage risk to make profits.

Listen carefully, I said you have to manage risk not take risk, taking risk is recipe

for loss, managing risk is recipe for profit.

So the idea that stock analysis offers you provision for profit is one of your biggest

misconceptions about investing.

Stock analysis is not provision of profit, it is provision for low risk on your investment.

Motive of this lesson was to help you understand that in risk markets profits can be made by

managing risk, you can not manage profit in risk market, management of profit is only

possible in reward market.

Stock market is risk market and to make profits in it you are not supposed to manage profit,

you are supposed to manage risk associated with your investments.

So stock analysis is not provision for guaranteed profits it is just provision for low risk.

Moral of the story is, "As investor in risk market you do not invest to make profits,

you invest to keep your losses short.".

In other words, as investor in stock market you are not investing to make profits but

to keep your losses short.

With that said watch this lesson again if required.

Understanding of what we learned in this lesson is important for you to understand what exactly

we'll be doing as analysis.

So thanks for watching this lesson and see you in next lesson.

For more infomation >> How You Lose Money In Stock Market - Duration: 10:12.

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TOP 10 PHIM KINH DỊ HONG KONG GÂY ÁM ẢNH NHẤT MỌI THỜI ĐẠI - Duration: 3:14.

For more infomation >> TOP 10 PHIM KINH DỊ HONG KONG GÂY ÁM ẢNH NHẤT MỌI THỜI ĐẠI - Duration: 3:14.

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First Alert Weather - Duration: 2:33.

For more infomation >> First Alert Weather - Duration: 2:33.

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Simontive 6 Episode 31 - Duration: 2:17.

Title: Simontive 6 Episode 41 China's New Moves

Mr. Dinosaur: I am here. We must round up the prisoners right now. Follow me Simon and the military.

Title: Attic City

Simon: We are Team Dogland united to stop DTO since you have been aggressive lately.

Mr. Dinosaur: We have the military here to stop you. Surrender now!

Cat: Don't forgot about cat. Meow! This is important because I prefer canned cat food.

Penguin Jr.: We are ready to do something about this right now.

Marfnagle: We are DRO for Dogland Rebel Organization which combines DTO and me to form DRO stronger than ever with governmental support.

Yi: That is right. Some countries supporting us with some moral support can reclaim Dogland as part of China.

Yi's Twin: All Americans and Doglanders will be expelled once China takes over. I hereby claim Attic City and Appleland part of China.

Mr. Dinosaur: We have to reconquer the territory before Dogland is under Chinese control.

Simon: I got a notice that they will respect these Dogland territory and even give them Chinese citizenship. That is a lie.

Kimon: That can never happen. We must ask America to declare war and reconquer the territory. This means that Governor FBI should do this soon, but he is on vacation in America. I will tell him to do that when he comes back.

For more infomation >> Simontive 6 Episode 31 - Duration: 2:17.

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현대차, 신형 제네시스 1호차 전달 및 고객 인도 개시 - Duration: 4:47.

For more infomation >> 현대차, 신형 제네시스 1호차 전달 및 고객 인도 개시 - Duration: 4:47.

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How to use Handbrake v1.1.1 - Beginners Guide for Exporting Video - Duration: 28:51.

For more infomation >> How to use Handbrake v1.1.1 - Beginners Guide for Exporting Video - Duration: 28:51.

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BEING INDIAN | Patriotic short film | Hindi | Neha Sharma Productions - Duration: 6:00.

KESHAV FAGNA

For more infomation >> BEING INDIAN | Patriotic short film | Hindi | Neha Sharma Productions - Duration: 6:00.

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Como tener energía ilimitada en Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery V1.7.3 - Duration: 0:34.

For more infomation >> Como tener energía ilimitada en Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery V1.7.3 - Duration: 0:34.

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অ্যাপ ক্যাব চালকের হাতে হেনস্থার শিকার জনপ্রিয় টেলি অভিনেত্রী | Actress Elfina Mukherjee - Duration: 1:43.

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