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The 12 New Countries That Might Exist Soon
Real Life Lore ^ | 29/4/24

Posted on 05/06/2024 4:42:32 AM PDT by Eleutheria5

Transcript

Search in video 0:00 as history continues evolving with Time

0:01 new and old countries come in and out of

0:03 existence pretty much all the time

0:05 dozens of new UN recognized countries

0:07 have come into existence in only the

0:08 past 30 plus years since the Cold War

0:10 Began coming to a close back in 1990 and

0:12 as a result the world map has officially

0:14 changed dozens of times in many of our

0:16 lifetimes East Germany faded out of

0:18 existence in 1990 when it was legally

0:20 absorbed by West Germany between 1990

0:22 and 1991 the collapse of the Soviet

0:25 Union led to the birth of 15 newly

0:27 recognized independent states and

0:29 arguably 16th in the form of chia which

0:32 is a really interesting case study in

.....

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: History; Reference; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: ambazonia; angrytrolls; azawad; basquecountry; bougainville; catalonia; colonialism; countries; crapholes; greenland; kurdistan; nascentstates; nations; newcaledonia; quebec; scotland; scotlandyet; southyemen; thirdworld; westernnewguinea
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To: Eleutheria5

No..United States of China?


21 posted on 05/06/2024 5:48:55 AM PDT by Leep (Leftardism strikes 1 in 5.)
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To: Leep

That’ll be what they’ll call themselves after annexing Taiwan and Hong Kong, and killing all the troublemakers in Tibet and Jingjang (i.e., everyone).


22 posted on 05/06/2024 5:50:41 AM PDT by Eleutheria5 (Every Goliath has his David. Child in need of a CGM system. https://gofund.me/6452dbf1. )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]

Transcript
0:00·as history continues evolving with Time
0:01·new and old countries come in and out of
0:03·existence pretty much all the time
0:05·dozens of new UN recognized countries
0:07·have come into existence in only the
0:08·past 30 plus years since the Cold War
0:10·Began coming to a close back in 1990 and
0:12·as a result the world map has officially
0:14·changed dozens of times in many of our
0:16·lifetimes East Germany faded out of
0:18·existence in 1990 when it was legally
0:20·absorbed by West Germany between 1990
0:22·and 1991 the collapse of the Soviet
0:25·Union led to the birth of 15 newly
0:27·recognized independent states and
0:29·arguably 16th in the form of chia which
0:32·is a really interesting case study in
0:33·how countries can be born and die Chia
0:36·an ethnically and religiously distinct
0:38·territory of Russia unilaterally
0:39·declared its independence from the
0:41·Soviet Union and Russia in 1991 and
0:43·remained a deao independent state for
0:45·nearly a decade until it was forcefully
0:47·res subjugated by the Russian armed
0:49·forces in 2000 during that whole time
0:51·though the only other country that ever
0:53·formerly recognized chesa's Independence
0:54·was Taliban ruled Afghanistan Chia
0:57·fought two massive and brutal Wars of
0:59·Independence against the Russians in the
1:00·1990s the first from 1994 to '96 that
1:03·killed more than 100,000 people and
1:06·resulted in their deao independence and
1:08·the second war from 1999 to 2000 when
1:10·the Russians finally overran Cheta and
1:12·reincorporated it back into the Russian
1:14·State many high ranking chuchin
1:16·government officials then fled the
1:17·country and formed a chuchin government
1:19·in Exile in London that has continued
1:21·existing to this day while in October of
1:23·20122 in the midst of the Russian
1:25·invasion of Ukraine the Ukrainian
1:27·government voted a formally recognize
1:29·chesa status is being temporarily
1:31·occupied by Russia and recognize the cin
1:34·government in Exile as the territory's
1:35·sole legitimate government essentially
1:37·extending Ukraine's legal recognition of
1:39·chchchchia as an independent state now
1:42·the process of yugoslavia's collapse
1:44·after 1991 similarly led to the creation
1:47·of six or seven new independent
1:48·countries depending on your point of
1:50·view Slovenia Croatia bosnan and
1:51·Herzegovina North Macedonia and the
1:53·formerly United Serbia and Montenegro
1:55·all emerged by the early 2000s while
1:57·Montenegro further declared its own
1:59·independent from Serbia in 2006 and then
2:02·Kosovo unilaterally declared their
2:04·independence from Serbia 2 in 2008 which
2:07·remains legally disputed by Serbia and
2:09·therefore remains controversial in 1993
2:11·Czechoslovakia split into two new
2:13·countries czechia and Slovakia the same
2:16·year Eritrea managed to finally declare
2:18·their own independence from Ethiopia
2:19·after another decades long Independence
2:21·struggle in 1994 Pala a small Pacific
2:24·Island state achieved its sovereignty
2:26·and effective independence from the
2:27·United States in 2002 East Timmer became
2:30·the first new independent country to
2:32·emerge in the 21st century after a long
2:35·independent struggle against Indonesia
2:37·and then in 2011 South Sudan finally
2:39·achieved its own independence from the
2:41·rest of Sudan after another decades long
2:43·Independence struggle that resulted in
2:44·it becoming the world's youngest widely
2:46·recognized independent state and member
2:48·of the United Nations at least for now
2:51·dozens of new countries became
2:52·independent across the 199s but since
2:54·the 21st century began we've only seen
2:56·the four mostly widely recognized
2:58·examples of East Montenegro Kosovo and
3:01·South Sudan happened so far and no more
3:04·widely recognized examples have taken
3:05·place in the past 13 years now since
3:08·2011 and that BS an interesting question
3:11·what are the most likely new countries
3:13·that have the possibility to emerge on
3:14·the world stage next there are many many
3:18·possibilities out there that I'll cover
3:19·in this video and many others that I
3:21·won't I'm not going to cover any states
3:23·here that already exist in a deao sense
3:25·but lack widescale International
3:26·recognition such as Koso claimed by
3:28·Serbia the sahur Arab Democratic
3:30·Republic claimed by Morocco the Turkish
3:32·Republic of Northern Cypress claimed by
3:33·Cyprus abazia and South oia claimed by
3:36·Georgia transnistria claimed by mova
3:38·Somali land claimed by Somalia or the
3:40·Republic of China on Taiwan claimed by
3:41·the People's Republic of China on the
3:43·mainland I'm only going to cover
3:45·potential new independent states that
3:47·don't yet exist in either a legal desure
3:49·sense nor in a deao sense and so to
3:52·start this list off it seems most likely
3:54·right now that the next newest country
3:56·that will emerge soon and that will
3:58·probably also be widely recognized as
·Bougainville
4:00·the 194th member of the United Nations
4:03·will be banville in the Western Pacific
4:05·banville is geographically the
4:07·westernmost en largest island in the
4:08·Solomon Islands archipelago but while
4:10·the rest of the Solomon Islands are an
4:11·independent nation banville has long
4:14·been politically a part of Papua New
4:15·Guin instead the history dates back to
4:17·the very end of the 19th century in 1899
4:20·when the colonial German Empire laid
4:22·claim to banville and annexed it into
4:23·their nearby colony of German New Guinea
4:26·then during World War I the Australians
4:28·invaded and occupied the German colony
4:29·in ug Guinea including banville and
4:32·after the war's conclusion in 1920 all
4:34·of modern day Papu and ug Guinea became
4:35·an Australian mandate through the League
4:37·of Nations which led to a long era of
4:39·more than 60 years of nearly continuous
4:42·Australian administration of the
4:43·territory that was only briefly
4:45·interrupted by the Japanese invasion of
4:47·World War II after the war PPA New
4:49·Guinea evolved into a un mandate under
4:51·Australian Administration and then in
4:53·the 1960s Australian geologists
4:56·discovered that banville had massive
4:58·deposits of copper on the Island so the
5:01·Australian authorities did what every
5:02·other colonial government at the time
5:03·was doing and set up a huge copper mine
5:06·on the island in 1972 that at the time
5:08·was the largest open pit mine operating
5:11·anywhere in the world the copper mine
5:13·quickly became hugely important to the
5:14·economy of Papa New Guinea it alone
5:16·produced more than 45% of Papua New
5:19·Guinea's entire National export revenue
5:21·and the government received 20% of the
5:22·mine's total profits of which the
5:25·indigenous people of banville themselves
5:27·only received a 0.5% to 1 25% share of
5:30·the total profit thousands of outside
5:33·workers from the Papa New Guinea
5:34·Mainland and from Australia came to work
5:36·at the banville mine across the 1970s
5:38·and as more of them came and most of the
5:40·prophets left the island the indigenous
5:41·people in bugville began growing
5:43·increasingly resentful there are massive
5:46·cultural and linguistic differences
5:47·between the Papua guine Mainland and
5:49·banville Papua New guine itself is
5:51·usually classified as being the most
5:52·linguistically diverse country in the
5:54·entire world with no less than 893
5:57·separate languages that are known to be
5:59·spoken in the country country it's also
6:00·extremely rural with only about 133% of
6:03·the population today living in cities
6:05·across some of the most challenging
6:06·mountainous and rainforest terrain on
6:08·the planet Papa New Guinea is still such
6:10·an isolated and remote part of the world
6:12·that there isn't even an accepted
6:13·consensus on what the country's actual
6:15·population is still today the government
6:18·officially reports their population
6:19·today to be about 9.4 million but there
6:22·are credible studies conducted as
6:24·recently as December of 2022 then
6:26·estimate the true population of the
6:28·country is actually closer to 7
6:30·million people nearly double what the
6:31·government actually reports compared to
6:34·the Papa New Guinea Mainland banville is
6:37·much smaller and less populated with
6:38·only around 300,000 residents today
6:41·whose culture and ethnicity is more
6:42·closely related to the melanesians of
6:44·the neighboring Solomon Islands then to
6:46·the Papua New Guinea Mainland and so
6:48·perhaps understandably conflict began to
6:50·Bubble Up to the surface between
6:52·banville and Papua New Guinea after the
6:53·opening of the massive open pit copper
6:55·mine in the early 1970s Australia
6:58·granted Papa new guinia Independence in
7:00·September of 1975 that included banville
7:03·but just a few days before the
7:05·Independence was granted banville
7:06·unilaterally declared itself as the
7:08·independent republic of the north
7:09·Solomons instead but after it failed to
7:12·gain any International recognition
7:14·banville agreed on a settlement several
7:15·months later in August of 1976 to become
7:18·absorbed into Papa New Guinea with a
7:19·degree of political autonomy but
7:21·tensions between banville and the Papa
7:23·New Guinea government over the continued
7:24·operation of the mine on the island
7:26·continued growing until they exploded in
7:28·outright Rebellion in 1988 when a
7:31·separatist faction on the island called
7:32·the banville Revolutionary Army rose up
7:34·to fight for banville independence this
7:37·resulted in a truly devastating decade
7:40·war for independence that lasted until
7:42·1998 and which has been described by
7:44·leaders as the largest military conflict
7:46·to have been fought in the region of
7:47·Oceania since the second world war as
7:50·the Papa New Guinea government cracked
7:51·down on banville hard in order to
7:53·maintain their access to the Island's
7:55·crucial copper mine Papu Nini enforced a
7:58·total Maritime blockade of the Island
8:00·and deployed thousands of their soldiers
8:01·to the island to enforce Papua New
8:03·guin's Authority estimates vary greatly
8:06·as to how many people were killed in the
8:08·decade long War but it's usually
8:10·estimated that between 15,000 and 20,000
8:12·people in banville died during the
8:14·conflict while at least 300 Papu guini
8:17·soldiers were killed and thousands more
8:19·were wounded that means that in the
8:21·decade long war for independence between
8:23·1988 to 1998 roughly 10% of banville
8:27·entire pre-war population died while
8:29·tens of thousands more were placed into
8:31·internally displaced person camps the
8:33·two Waring sides agreed on a ceasefire
8:35·in 1997 and Papo Nini forces began
8:38·withdrawing from the island the
8:39·following year in 1998 while Australian
8:42·peacekeepers came in to take their place
8:44·a formal peace agreement was settled
8:46·between banville and the papini
8:47·government in 2001 that solidified
8:49·banville status as a fully autonomous
8:52·part of the country and which also
8:53·granted banville the right to hold a
8:55·non-binding referendum on outright
8:57·Independence within 20 years in the
8:59·future that promised referendum was
9:01·eventually held in banville at the end
9:02·of 2019 which saw an absolutely
9:05·overwhelming vote of
9:07·98.3% of Voters on the island choosing
9:10·independence with a huge
9:12·87.4% voter turnout showing that the
9:15·will of the banville people clearly
9:17·desired Independence and though the
9:19·referendum was technically non-binding
9:21·on the part of the Papa New Guinea
9:22·government the overwhelming results of
9:24·it for Independence and all of the
9:26·previous history have made it extremely
9:28·difficult for the government just to
9:30·Simply ignore it and so in July of 2021
9:33·banville and the Papo New Guinea
9:34·government came to an agreement that
9:36·banville will be granted its formal
9:38·independence from the country no earlier
9:40·than 2025 and no later than 2027 pending
9:44·legal ratification by the Papa New
9:46·Guinea Parliament and although to date
9:48·when this video was made that
9:49·ratification hasn't been given yet it
9:51·seems fairly certain still that banville
9:53·will become the world's next largely
9:55·recognized independent country sometime
9:57·by 2027 and will likely replace South
10:00·Sudan as the world's youngest
10:01·independent country by then but what
10:04·about other less likely candidates for
10:06·new countries to emerge relatively
·New Caledonia
10:07·nearby to banville is also new calonia
10:10·which is probably at least in my opinion
10:12·the next most likely place to eventually
10:14·become a newly independent country New
10:16·Caledonia currently Still Remains as a
10:17·legal overseas territory of France
10:19·despite the fact that the island is in
10:21·the Pacific and is located about 177,000
10:23·kmers away from Metropolitan France over
10:25·on the other side of the world in Europe
10:27·the French annexed new calonia back in
10:29·1853 and ever since then successive
10:31·waves of European Polynesian and other
10:33·settlers have come to the island that
10:35·have made the indigenous ethnic konok
10:36·people on the island of minority where
10:38·today they only represent about 41% of
10:41·new caledonia's total population of
10:42·about 270,000 people with Europeans
10:45·representing another 24% of the
10:47·population and various Polynesians and
10:49·other groups representing most of the
10:50·rest for decades under French colonial
10:52·rule in the 19th and early 20th
10:54·centuries the indigenous kanak were
10:55·largely marginalized excluded from the
10:57·Island's economy and eventually confined
10:59·into a system of reservations like
11:00·indigenous Americans were in the Western
11:02·Hemisphere by the 1970s a modern
11:04·Independence and sovereignty movement
11:06·began growing in popularity among the
11:08·indigenous kanok people on the island
11:09·who were frustrated with their lower
11:11·socioeconomic status relative to the
11:13·European settlers of the island and so
11:15·the movement steadily adopted more
11:16·violent methods to advance their cause
11:19·the biggest violent incident occurred in
11:20·1988 when a group of 30 heavily armed
11:23·kanok Independence Fighters attacked a
11:25·French military outpost on the island
11:27·killing four French soldiers and taking
11:28·another 36 people including some
11:30·civilians as hostages the group demanded
11:33·that the hostages would be released in
11:34·exchange for serious talks with the
11:36·French government on the independence of
11:38·New Caledonia France refused to
11:40·negotiate and deployed a crack hostage
11:42·recovery team made up of dozens of
11:43·French Commandos paratroopers and G
11:46·counterterror specialist to raid them
11:48·instead in the ensuing raid the French
11:50·killed 19 of the kic hostage takers and
11:53·successfully freed all of the hostages
11:55·while two of the French soldiers in the
11:56·assault team were also killed resulting
11:58·in the total deaths of 25 people during
12:01·the bloody incident in the aftermath the
12:03·French government and the kanuk
12:05·independence movement agreed on a
12:06·10-year truce to secure stability on the
12:08·island and after the decade had passed
12:10·in 1998 without any other major
12:12·incidents the French government and the
12:14·major Pro and anti-independence parties
12:16·on the island all signed the newa Accord
12:19·which established a 20-year transitional
12:20·period until 2018 in which certain
12:22·powers would be transferred to the local
12:24·government and which also guaranteed
12:26·that after those 20 years beginning in
12:28·2018 new calonia would be allowed to
12:30·host three separate Independence
12:32·referendums that would determine the
12:34·Island's future political status and so
12:37·the first of these Independence
12:38·referendums in New Caledonia was hosted
12:39·in 2018 which was soundly rejected with
12:43·56.7% of Voters choosing to remain with
12:45·France and only 43.3% of Voters choosing
12:48·independence with a total voter turnout
12:50·on the island of
12:52·81% then the second Independence
12:54·referendum was hosted a couple years
12:55·later in 2020 That Grew much more narrow
12:58·this time with only 53.3% of Voters
13:01·choosing to remain with France and 46.7%
13:04·of Voters choosing to become independent
13:06·with an even higher voter turnout this
13:08·time of
13:09·85.7% the momentum appeared to be rising
13:12·for the pro- independent side and with
13:14·the final referendum on Independence
13:16·scheduled for December 2021 all eyes
13:18·were fixated on what would happen next
13:22·but in between the second and third
13:23·referendums the covid-19 pandemic hit
13:26·the island and ravaged it which resulted
13:28·in more than three 300 deaths that
13:30·disproportionately affected the
13:31·indigenous Kana community that was more
13:33·pro-independence it quickly became clear
13:36·that the next referendum would take
13:37·place during a period of customary
13:38·mourning within the Kana Community for
13:40·their lost ones but the government's
13:42·Health restrictions had made campaigning
13:43·for the final referendum largely
13:45·impossible so the pro-independence
13:47·parties on the island became worried
13:49·that this would all contribute to a
13:50·lower voter turnout than in either of
13:52·the previous referendums and so they
13:54·began asking the French government to
13:56·reschedule the final referendum until
13:58·after the pandemic get settled down more
14:00·but the French government refused to
14:01·reschedule the referendum and went ahead
14:03·with it as originally planned in
14:04·December of 2021 which led to all of the
14:07·pro-independence parties on the island
14:09·announcing that they would boycott the
14:10·vote and protest as a result the remain
14:13·with France Choice secured an
14:15·overwhelming
14:16·96.5% of the 2021 vote while only 3.5%
14:20·of Voters chose Independence and with a
14:24·very low voter turnout this time of only
14:26·43.9% of the island since all the
14:29·pro-independence parties had boycotted
14:31·it but none of that stopped France's
14:33·president Emanuel macron from visiting
14:35·New Caledonia himself afterwards where
14:37·he proudly proclaimed that the 2021 vote
14:40·had confirmed the will of caledonians to
14:42·stay French while he further emphasized
14:44·the new calonia had a vital role to play
14:47·in France's geopolitical strategy for
14:49·the Indo Pacific region new calonia
14:51·places Sovereign French territory
14:53·relatively nearby to the South China Sea
14:56·Taiwan and China while new calonia much
14:58·like Bo enville is also rich in specific
15:01·natural resources new calonia is
15:03·specifically HED to between 10% and 25%
15:06·of all the world's proven reserves of
15:08·nickel a metal that is becoming
15:10·increasingly important as a major
15:11·component of batteries and electric
15:13·vehicles France's control over new
15:15·calonia makes it the fourth largest
15:17·producer of nickel in the entire world
15:19·remaining only behind the likes of
15:21·Russia the Philippines and Indonesia
15:23·after the controversial 2021 referendum
15:25·France has publicly left open the
15:27·possibility that another referendum on
15:29·Independence could be hosted in New
15:30·Caledonia again within the time span of
15:32·one or two more Generations from now or
15:35·in other words maybe in 20 to 40 years
15:37·from now but the pro-independence
15:39·parties in New Caledonia have all
15:41·adamantly rejected this timeline and
15:43·they're currently in the process of
15:44·attempting to challenge the 2021
15:46·referendum results to the international
15:47·court of justice in the ha but it's
15:49·unclear if the court will actually even
15:51·agree to hear their case or not as it
15:53·stands now new caledonia's near-term
15:56·future looks like it will continue
15:57·remaining as a part of France but in the
16:00·more distant future another referendum
16:02·could potentially always happen that
16:03·could lead to the Island's Independence
16:05·eventually remaining within the
16:07·indopacific region we'll refocus a bit
·Western New Guinea
16:09·on the area of Western New Guinea the
16:11·Western half of the island of New Guinea
16:12·that is politically controlled by
16:14·Indonesia like the other half of the
16:15·island that's independent under Papua
16:17·New Guinea Western New Guinea is one of
16:19·the most remote isolated and undeveloped
16:21·corners of the world remaining in the
16:22·21st century home to only about 5.6
16:25·million people today in an area that's
16:26·larger than Japan it's also one of the
16:28·most sparsely populated regions of the
16:30·world as well the area is so remote and
16:32·its mountainous jungle interior so
16:35·difficult to access that it's estimated
16:36·there are still at least 40 uncontacted
16:38·tribes remaining there who maintain no
16:40·contact with the outside world and
16:42·continue living a prehistoric hunter
16:44·gatherer lifestyle more than 400
16:46·languages are believed to be spoken in
16:48·Western New Guinea while the largest
16:49·settlement in the territory jaap Pera is
16:52·more than 3700 km or 2300 M away from
16:55·Indonesia's Capital Jakarta about as far
16:58·away as London is from Armenia as a
17:00·result the culture and ethnicity in
17:01·Western ug Guinea is extremely different
17:03·and isolated from the rest of Indonesia
17:06·and there's been an ongoing separatist
17:07·movement in the region for decades
17:09·pretty much ever since Indonesia took
17:11·the area over when Indonesia declared
17:13·its independence from the Netherlands in
17:15·August of 1945 it initially didn't
17:17·include the Western half in New Guinea
17:19·which still remained under Dutch
17:20·Colonial control the Dutch wanted to
17:22·retain their own control over Western ug
17:24·Guinea and effectively turn it into a
17:25·self-governing territory of theirs but
17:28·Indonesia seriousely contested this
17:30·asserting that it was the legal
17:32·successor to all of the territory of the
17:33·former Dutch East Indies which included
17:36·all of Western New Guinea 2o a decade
17:38·and a half later in 1961 the Dutch
17:40·prepared to Grant Western ug Guinea
17:42·their separate Independence which led to
17:44·the first raising of the Region's
17:45·morning star flag in its history a
17:48·symbol that has ever since become deeply
17:49·attached to the west Papa Independence
17:51·Movement but Indonesia's Fierce
17:53·opposition to this development led to
17:55·them and the Netherlands coming together
17:57·to negotiate the New York agreement in
17:59·1962 which made it so that instead of
18:01·becoming outright independent Western
18:03·New Guinea's Authority would be
18:04·temporarily transferred from the Dutch
18:06·to the United Nations and then later
18:08·transferred again to the Indonesian
18:09·government who had then handled the
18:11·preparation for a self-determination
18:13·referendum in the territory to take
18:14·place that would determine its ultimate
18:16·future in the years that Then followed
18:18·Indonesian government forces reportedly
18:20·began arresting and exiling
18:21·pro-independence political activists and
18:23·leaders in the territory and when they
18:25·finally allowed a referendum on the
18:26·territory status to take place in 196 9
18:29·rather than opening it up to everybody
18:31·in the territory with one vote per
18:33·person the Indonesians only granted a
18:35·total of
18:36·1,22 local Representatives that they had
18:38·handpicked to take part in the
18:40·referendum the right to actually vote on
18:42·it who naturally all voted unanimously
18:45·to merge Western ug Guinea with
18:46·Indonesia the Indonesian authorities
18:48·have argued ever since that that system
18:50·of Representative voting was necessary
18:52·because of the territory's
18:53·geographically difficult terrain
18:55·remoteness and the lack of development
18:57·in the region but nonetheless class a
18:59·militant pro-independence movement was
19:01·born in Western New Guinea that is since
19:03·evolved into the modern free Papa
19:04·movement which continues to violently
19:06·fight against the Indonesian State for
19:08·the independence of Western New Guinea
19:10·and since 2021 the movement has been
19:12·considered as a terrorist organization
19:14·by the Indonesian government while even
19:16·flying the movement's morning star flag
19:18·is legally considered by the Indonesian
19:20·government to be treason that can carry
19:22·up to a 7 to 20e prison sentence and
19:24·since the Indonesian government is very
19:26·strict about allowing foreign journalist
19:28·permission to enter the territory the
19:30·information on what exactly the
19:32·situation looks like in the territory
19:33·from an independence perspective is very
19:35·difficult to par so who really
19:38·ultimately knows Western ug Guinea could
19:40·eventually become an independent country
19:42·and free itself from Indonesian rule
19:43·like East Timber did before it in 2002
19:46·or it might also not but either way
19:49·another island territory that's probably
19:50·a lot more certain to eventually become
19:52·an independent country one day is going
·Greenland
19:54·to be Greenland Greenland is currently
19:57·governed as an autonomous territory
19:58·belong into the Kingdom of Denmark as it
20:00·has for centuries ever since 1814 when
20:02·Denmark acquired the territory from
20:04·Norway since that time Denmark fully
20:06·Incorporated Greenland into the Danish
20:08·state in 1953 when it granted all of
20:10·Greenland's residents Danish citizenship
20:12·while in 1979 Denmark granted Greenland
20:15·a referendum on home rule that was
20:17·approved while a further referendum on
20:19·increasing the Island's self-government
20:21·even more was granted in 2008 that was
20:23·also approved by 75% of Voters that
20:26·transferred most of the Danish
20:27·government's authorities and respons
20:28·responsibilities in Greenland to the
20:30·local greenlandic government leaving
20:31·pretty much only Greenland's foreign and
20:33·defense policies monetary policy and
20:35·citizenship policy still in the hands of
20:37·Denmark despite its huge Geographic size
20:39·though Greenland's population is very
20:41·small today and only about 57,000 people
20:44·only about the same as a medium-sized
20:46·town and about 90% of the small
20:48·population on the island are ethnically
20:50·Inuit While most of the remaining 10%
20:52·are composed of Danes and other European
20:54·ethnicities under the terms of the 2008
20:56·self-government referendum that was
20:57·overwhelmingly approved in Greenland the
21:00·island was also granted the right by
21:01·Denmark to hold an independence
21:03·referendum whenever they wanted to to
21:05·determine the Island's ultimate
21:06·political status in future despite This
21:09·legal ability to call a referendum
21:11·though there has long been a lot of
21:12·hesitation within Greenland to actually
21:14·move forward with fullscale Independence
21:16·rather than maintaining the status quo
21:18·as an autonomous part of Denmark Denmark
21:21·currently maintains a generous annual
21:23·subsidy to the island of $500 million a
21:25·year which accounts for 20% of
21:27·Greenland's entire small economy and
21:30·provides for more than half of the local
21:31·greenlandic government's budget moreover
21:33·through Denmark greenlandic residents
21:35·are also all citizens of the European
21:37·Union as well if Greenland decided to go
21:39·their own separate way from Denmark they
21:42·would almost certainly lose the Danish
21:43·subsidies and lose their EU citizenship
21:46·as well which would almost certainly
21:47·negatively affect the greenlandic
21:49·economy nonetheless support for
21:51·Independence in Greenland appears to
21:53·remain fairly High a 2019 poll conducted
21:55·by the University of Copenhagen in
21:57·Greenland found that a w being
21:59·67.7% of adults in Greenland desired the
22:02·island to become a fully independent
22:03·state at some point in the future with
22:05·32.4% of greenlandic adults further
22:07·insisting that secession will still
22:09·benefit their economy and improve their
22:11·living conditions in April of 2023 the
22:14·movement for full greenlandic
22:15·Independence appeared to advance
22:17·significantly when the greenlandic
22:19·parliament unveiled its first ever draft
22:21·Constitution the Greenland could one day
22:23·rely upon if it ever comes to
22:24·negotiating its independence from
22:26·Denmark in the event that Greenland
22:28·hosts arest referendum on Independence
22:29·that passes this draft Constitution will
22:31·become the framework for a final
22:33·Constitution that will transform
22:35·Greenland into an independent republic
22:37·and though no discussions on a timeline
22:39·for an independence referendum have been
22:40·put forward yet the next parliamentary
22:42·election in Greenland is currently
22:44·scheduled for next year in 2025 and its
22:47·results could indicate whether or not
22:48·the independence movement on the island
22:50·will move further forward it therefore
22:52·wouldn't be terribly surprising if
22:54·Greenland one day soon does actually
22:56·host a legal referendum on Independence
22:58·that passes and makes itself one of the
23:00·world's newest independent countries in
23:02·the process while other prospective
23:04·independent country candidates may find
23:05·it difficult to secure the right to a
23:07·legal referendum of their own one other
·󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland
23:10·such prospective candidate is Scotland
23:12·where the idea of an independent
23:13·Scottish nation has been around for a
23:15·very long time Scotland indeed was an
23:18·independent Kingdom for many centuries
23:20·across the middle ages and fought many
23:22·wars against England to maintain that
23:24·Independence Scotland was first joined
23:26·with England in a personal Union in 160
23:28·3 when the King of Scotland at the time
23:30·James I 6 also became the king of
23:32·England at the same time as John the a
23:35·century later Scotland and England were
23:37·formly unified politically into a single
23:39·Kingdom through the acts of Union in
23:40·1707 that established the modern United
23:43·Kingdom as we still know it today though
23:45·Scotland continued to maintain its own
23:47·separate Regional identity and culture
23:49·all throughout the centuries the modern
23:51·movement for Scottish independence from
23:52·the UK began to gain momentum in the
23:54·late 20th century and by 1999 the UK
23:57·government allowed for the establish
23:58·ment of a devolved Scottish Parliament
24:00·that came under the governing authority
24:01·of the pro-independence Scottish
24:03·national party or SNP by 2007 and then
24:06·by 2011 the SNP had won the outright
24:09·majority of seats in the Scottish
24:10·Parliament which the British government
24:12·agreed to legally grant them three years
24:14·later in 2014 in the Scotland wide
24:17·referendum that took place that year
24:18·voters were asked Point Blank should
24:20·Scotland be an independent country the
24:23·previous months and years worth of
24:24·intense campaigning from both the remain
24:26·and leave sides of the question led to a
24:29·significant
24:30·84.6% voter turnout in Scotland that saw
24:33·more than 3.6 million Scots going to the
24:36·polls and in the end after the votes had
24:38·been counted and tallied the choice to
24:40·remain with the UK was clear with 55.3%
24:43·of Voters choosing to remain with the UK
24:46·and rejecting Independence up against
24:48·44.7% of Voters who had answered the
24:50·question with a yes and were in favor of
24:53·Independence but then just 2 years later
24:56·in 2016 the UK hosted a another
24:58·referendum that this time the entire
25:00·country participated in on whether or
25:02·not the country should remain or
25:04·withdraw from the European Union
25:06·referred to as the brexit referendum it
25:08·saw a total Nationwide voter turnout of
25:11·72.2% in which a slight majority of
25:14·Voters 51.9% of them selected that the
25:17·UK should withdraw from the European
25:19·Union while 48.1% of Voters chose to
25:22·remain in the EU the vote sent into
25:24·motion the process of the UK formally
25:26·withdrawing from the European Union
25:28·which was completed 4 years later in
25:30·2020 but during the 2016 brexit vote not
25:33·all parts of the UK voted equally
25:36·England and Wales both largely voted to
25:38·leave the EU while London Northern
25:40·Ireland and Scotland all voted more
25:41·largely to remain within Scotland voters
25:44·were significantly more in favor of
25:46·remaining with the EU than elsewhere in
25:48·the country with 62% of Scottish voters
25:51·in the referendum choosing to remain in
25:52·the EU compared with only 38% who voted
25:55·to leave one of the primary reasons that
25:58·many Scottish voters had chosen to
26:00·remain within the UK back in the
26:01·previous 2014 referendum was at the time
26:04·the perceived headache that would happen
26:06·with Scotland leaving the UK and
26:08·therefore leaving the EU as well which
26:10·would have left Scotland outside of the
26:12·EU and forced them to reapply to join
26:14·back in which would have ended up taking
26:15·an unknown amount of time to get
26:17·themselves re-accepted but then after
26:19·2016 it became clear that the UK was
26:22·leaving the EU anyway and dragging
26:24·Scotland along with it which quickly led
26:26·to frequent demands from the Scottish
26:28·National Party On hosting a second
26:30·referendum on Scottish independence
26:32·since the material circumstances of the
26:34·UK's position in the European Union had
26:36·fundamentally changed Scotland's first
26:39·Minister Nicholas sturgeon requested
26:41·another Independence referendum from UK
26:43·prime minister Boris Johnson in 2019
26:46·which was denied on the basis that the
26:47·2014 referendum was supposedly a once in
26:50·a generation event then in January of
26:53·2021 sturgeon again claimed that a
26:55·second Independence referendum would be
26:57·held if the pro-independence parties won
26:59·a majority of seats in that Year's
27:01·Scottish parliamentary election which
27:03·indeed ended up happening and so then in
27:05·June of 2022 sturgeon proposed that a
27:08·second Independence referendum would be
27:09·held a year later in October of 2023
27:12·provided that the legality and
27:14·constitutionality of the referendum was
27:16·guaranteed so she again requested
27:18·another referendum from the prime
27:20·minister at the time Boris Johnson which
27:22·was once again refused then in November
27:25·of 2022 the UK Supreme Court ruled that
27:27·the Scottish Parliament doesn't have the
27:29·legal Authority or the power to
27:30·unilaterally call for another
27:32·Independence referendum and so
27:33·sturgeon's current stance is that the
27:35·next upcoming UK general election in
27:37·January of 2025 will serve as a deao
27:40·referendum on Scotland's Independence
27:42·anyway the legal route to Scotland
27:44·holding another referendum on
27:45·Independence anytime soon is now in
27:47·seriously grave doubt while opinion
27:49·pulling on the matter in Scotland has
27:51·shown a recent Trend further towards
27:53·favoring Independence after the Supreme
27:55·Court's final judgment in November of
27:57·2022 the first five polls conducted
28:00·showed that a slight majority of Scots
28:02·were in favor of Independence ranging
28:04·from between 51% and 56% in favor while
28:07·a separate Nationwide poll showed that
28:09·for the very first time a majority of
28:11·all UK residents 55% of them Express
28:15·support for the Scottish government
28:16·being granted the right to hold a second
28:18·referendum on Independence so again who
28:21·really knows how this will all shape up
28:22·in the future legally the path to
28:24·Scotland's Independence currently seems
28:26·pretty closed at this point but if
28:28·opinion polling continues to suggest
28:29·that a majority of Scots are in favor of
28:31·Independence the British government may
28:33·eventually not be able to ignore the
28:35·demands of a second referendum forever
28:38·but it can also always turn into a
28:39·similar situation that's been going on
·Catalonia
28:41·in Spain for decades now with their own
28:43·major separatist movements in Catalonia
28:44·and the bass country the Catalin are a
28:46·romance ethnic group who traditionally
28:48·straddle the Eastern Mediterranean shore
28:50·of the Iberian Peninsula the Catalin
28:52·Trace their history in the region back
28:54·centuries while their language Catalan
28:56·is a romance language but one that is
28:57·distinct different from the neighboring
28:59·Spanish or French in the modern day
29:01·region of Catalonia and Northeastern
29:02·Spain roughly 37.6% of the population
29:05·today are native speakers of Catalan
29:07·over Spanish which has about 3 million
29:09·people there however the modern
29:11·independence movement in Catalonia can
29:13·be traced back to the late 19th and
29:14·early 20th centuries when a sense of
29:16·separate Catalan nationalism began
29:18·taking root they consider their identity
29:20·as being distinctly separate from that
29:22·of Spain in 1931 after the proclamation
29:24·of the second Spanish Republic Catalonia
29:26·was granted wide sweeping at autonomy
29:28·and home rule within Spain with its own
29:30·local Parliament and even its own
29:32·separate elected president but then
29:34·after the Spanish Civil War of 1936 to
29:36·1939 ended with a victory for the
29:38·Nationalist side and the establishment
29:39·of an authoritarian dictatorship under
29:41·General Francisco Franco Catalonia's
29:43·previous and brief era of autonomy was
29:45·completely crushed and reversed the
29:47·Catalan language was completely banned
29:49·and repressed as the francoist regime
29:51·attempted to enforce a unified Spanish
29:53·culture and language across the entire
29:55·country Franco as Spain continue to
29:57·exist until Franco himself died decades
30:00·later in 1975 which finally allowed
30:03·Catalan culture and political parties to
30:05·begin reemerging and advocating for the
30:06·restoration of their autonomy once again
30:09·with the restoration of democracy in
30:11·Spain in 1977 Catalonia received a new
30:14·statute of autonomy from the Spanish
30:16·government in 1979 and then decades
30:18·later in 2006 when a socialist
30:21·government was in power in Madrid that
30:22·was more sympathetic to Cataline rights
30:25·a referendum in Catalonia was allowed to
30:26·be held that would span the Region's
30:28·political and cultural autonomy even
30:30·further with a brand new statute that
30:32·was approved of by voters and then by
30:34·both the Catalan and Spanish governments
30:36·but then just 4 years later after that
30:39·in 2010 the Spanish constitutional Court
30:42·ruled on the new autonomy law and
30:43·effectively gutted it rewriting 14 of
30:46·the laws articles and dictating the
30:48·interpretation for 27 additional
30:50·articles this was the event that
30:51·triggered huge protests all across
30:54·Catalonia that included a March in
30:55·Barcelona of more than a million people
30:58·strong and as time went on from there
31:00·the angry calls within Catalonia
31:02·gradually shifted from increased
31:03·autonomy to outright independence by
31:06·2012 a poll released by the center for
31:08·opinion studies run by the Catalan
31:10·government showed that support for
31:11·Catalonia's Independence within the
31:13·territory had risen to an unprecedented
31:15·level of
31:16·57% and then the UK agreeed to Grant
31:19·Scotland the legal right to host their
31:21·own independence referendum added
31:23·further fuel to the fire parties across
31:25·the political Spectrum in Catalonia
31:27·formed a Coalition calling for the
31:29·Region's Independence the Catalan
31:31·government demanded a formal
31:32·Independence referendum be granted to
31:34·them which the Spanish government simply
31:36·refused to allow nonetheless in spite of
31:39·the Spanish government's refusal to
31:40·allow a legal referendum to take place
31:42·the Catalan political authorities
31:44·organized an illegal referendum anyway
31:46·in 2017 that generated an incredible
31:50·amount of controversy and drama before
31:52·the referendum was even held on the 1st
31:53·of October of that year the Spanish
31:55·government and constitutional Court
31:57·declared the ref referendum to be
31:58·unconstitutional and illegal a few weeks
32:00·beforehand while the Spanish police
32:02·began a widescale Crackdown of the
32:04·referendum in polling stations all
32:06·across Catalonia leaning up to the vote
32:08·and after it which included physical
32:10·assaults on voters and seized ballots
32:12·anti-independence parties in Catalonia
32:14·declared a boycott of the vote and so
32:16·when the referendum was finally held on
32:18·the 1st of October 2017 voter turnout
32:21·came in very low at only 43% of
32:23·registered voters still 92% of those
32:27·voters repres representing more than 2
32:29·million people or about 38% of all of
32:32·Catalonia's registered voters still
32:34·chose yes on the referendum to secede
32:36·from Spain and form an independent
32:38·Catalonia within weeks the Catalin
32:40·government issued its formal declaration
32:42·of independence from Spain which
32:44·prompted the Spanish government to
32:45·respond with the nuclear option the
32:48·Spanish Senate voted to seize control of
32:50·Catalin government institutions while
32:52·Spain's prime minister used his
32:53·executive powers to dismiss Catalonia's
32:55·president Carlos Pont and his entire ire
32:58·cabinet while fresh elections in
32:59·Catalonia were called up to happen 2
33:01·months later the Spanish police raided
33:03·the offices of Catalonia's government
33:05·leaders and arrested many on
33:06·unprecedented charges of rebellion while
33:08·the former catalonian president fled
33:10·into exile for Belgium most of the
33:12·leaders were later pardoned in 2021 but
33:15·Catalonia's 2017 attempt to secede from
33:17·the country was resoundingly crushed by
33:20·the Spanish authorities nonetheless
33:22·support within Catalonia for at least a
33:24·legally recognized Independence
33:26·referendum continues to appear very high
33:28·an April 2023 poll suggested that 77% of
33:32·respondents in Catalonia at least
33:34·supported being granted the right to
33:36·hold a legally recognized referendum
33:38·well only about 43% of the respondents
33:40·in the same poll said that they still
33:42·favored an independent status for
33:44·Catalonia one of the biggest reasons
33:46·that the Spanish authorities are so
33:48·opposed to the idea of Catalan
33:49·Independence is that if they happen to
33:52·Grant it it might end up opening up a
33:54·Pandora's box of potential possibilities
33:56·and open up the CH for more of Spain's
33:59·ethnic and linguistic minorities to
34:00·demand their own independences next
·Basque Country
34:03·besides the catalans the bks have been
34:05·the most historically independent-minded
34:06·group of people in Spain and they would
34:08·be the most likely ones to demand their
34:10·own independence next the concept of the
34:12·Bas country extends across the borders
34:14·of Spain and France along the western
34:16·edge of their border where about 3
34:17·million Basque people live today the
34:19·vast majority of whom all live on the
34:21·Spanish side the indigenous language
34:23·that is spoken by The Basque people is
34:25·highly unique in the context of Europe
34:27·at Large The Basque language is the sole
34:29·surviving paleo European language on the
34:31·continent that remains indigenously
34:33·spoken today and it predates the arrival
34:35·of any of the Indo European languages
34:37·that came during the Bronze Age as a
34:40·result The Basque language is classified
34:42·as a very rare language isolate
34:44·remaining linguistically unrelated to
34:46·any other known language still spoken on
34:48·the planet roughly 28.4% of the people
34:51·in the Bas country speak The Basque
34:53·language natively today which is about
34:56·750,000 people 700,000 of whom live in
34:59·Spain in a concentrated Arc across the
35:01·Spanish Northeast Coast with the
35:02·Atlantic near the border with France and
35:05·just like with the Catalin language The
35:07·Basque language was also banned and
35:09·harshly repressed within Spain during
35:10·the francoist era and influenced by
35:12·National Liberation events that were
35:14·going on elsewhere at the time of the
35:15·early 1960s in the context of
35:17·decolonization a militant Basque
35:19·separatist organization known as ETA
35:21·formed in 1959 with the explicit goal of
35:24·using violence to secure the
35:26·independence of a Bas State this was the
35:29·beginning of the Basque conflict a half
35:31·a century of violence between ETA and
35:33·the Spanish state that would last all
35:35·the way up until
35:36·2011 during that time more than a
35:38·thousand people several hundred of whom
35:40·were civilians were killed as a result
35:43·of the violence that included bombings
35:44·and assassinations while more than
35:46·22,000 others were injured and what has
35:49·sometimes been described as the longest
35:51·Modern War fought in Western Europe a
35:53·war that continued for decades longer
35:55·even after Franco died and the the Bas
35:58·country was granted widescale autonomy
36:00·along with Catalonia in 1979 Eda was
36:03·classified as a terrorist organization
36:04·by Spain France the UK US and the
36:07·European Union but then after Decades of
36:09·violence Eda finally announced an end to
36:12·their armed struggle against the Spanish
36:13·state only in 2011 and they eventually
36:16·fully disbanded themselves altogether
36:18·just in 2018 The Mask region of Spain is
36:21·these days generally considered to have
36:22·the highest degree of autonomy of any
36:24·non-state actor in the European Union
36:27·were there even allowed to collect and
36:28·keep their own taxes and while an
36:30·independence referendum has never been
36:31·hosted in the Bas country by Spain
36:33·before the support for holding one among
36:35·the Bas appears to remain fairly strong
36:38·polling in the Spanish Basque country
36:40·has shown a steady increase in the
36:41·desire for Basque Independence that's
36:43·generally followed along with the same
36:45·Modern Trend that's been seen in
36:46·Catalonia a 2010 poll from the
36:48·University of the Bas country found that
36:50·only 30% of Bas supported independence
36:53·at the time compared to 55% who were
36:56·against it but then another poll they
36:57·conducted 4 years later in 2014 showed
37:00·that support had shifted towards 34% who
37:02·were in favor of Independence up against
37:05·52% who are opposed to it while polling
37:07·since 2020 has shown significantly more
37:10·support for Independence than before the
37:12·first nazio meta National barometer poll
37:15·which seeks to regularly measure the
37:17·feelings on Independence in the Bas
37:18·country took place in 2020 and it found
37:21·that 42.5% of respondents were in favor
37:24·of Independence up against 31.5% who
37:27·were opposed to it then the second nazio
37:29·matoa poll in March of 2021 showed 39.5%
37:33·in favor of Independence up against
37:35·29.5% opposed to it and then the most
37:38·recent third nazio Metro poll conducted
37:40·in November of 2021 showed that 40.5% of
37:44·respondents were in favor of
37:45·Independence compared with just 29.2%
37:48·who were opposed to it so who knows
37:51·maybe like Catalonia if the desire for
37:53·Independence within the bass country
37:54·continues growing and eventually gets
37:56·too large for the Spanish government to
37:57·Simply ignore a referendum may
38:00·eventually be granted and if Catalonia
38:02·ever manages its independence first it's
38:04·probably a certainty that the basks
38:06·won't be far behind them next I think
38:08·that at least at this rate the odds of
38:10·Scotland Catalonia or The Basque Country
·Quebec
38:12·one day becoming independent are greater
38:14·than the biggest historical separatist
38:15·movement over in the Western Hemisphere
38:17·ever succeeding Quebec Quebec has always
38:20·been a unique province in Canada being
38:22·the only one with a predominantly
38:23·french-speaking majority in culture KC's
38:25·population today is roughly 9 million
38:27·people and the province's sole official
38:29·language is French and specifically not
38:32·English as of the most recent 2021
38:34·Canadian census French is the native
38:36·language of more than 78% of Quebec's
38:38·population while roughly 94% of the
38:41·province's population speaks French
38:42·fluently compared to only 8% of the
38:45·population who lists English as their
38:46·native language and only 52% of the
38:49·population who consider themselves even
38:50·fluent in English which is AB on the
38:52·same level of English proficiency as
38:54·Greece Quebec has therefore always been
38:56·an isolated bubble of the French
38:58·language in the America surrounded on
38:59·all of its sides by English speakers
39:02·which has always contributed to a
39:03·certain feeling of separateness and
39:05·nationalism within Quebec that has never
39:07·really gone away the peak of Quebec
39:09·nationalism happened in the 1980s and
39:11·1990s though when the province hosted
39:13·two referendums on their independence
39:15·from Canada the first one came in 1980
39:18·which saw a significant 85.6% voter
39:21·turnout that saw the remain with Canada
39:23·side win handedly with a total of 59.6%
39:26·of the vote compared to the leave side
39:29·that only managed to secure 40.4% of the
39:32·vote but then 15 years later came
39:34·Quebec's second and much more
39:36·controversial and closer Independence
39:38·referendum in
39:39·1995 this time the second Independence
39:42·referendum became a massive spectacle in
39:44·Quebec that saw the active participation
39:46·and input of virtually everybody in the
39:48·province the second referendum secured
39:50·what has remained the largest voter
39:52·turnout in all of Quebec's entire
39:54·history with a whopping
39:56·93.5% % of registered voters in the
39:58·province taking part in the decision and
40:00·the final vote was razor thin the remain
40:03·with Canada side just narrowly won in
40:06·1995 with just
40:08·50.6% of the total vote compared with
40:11·49.4% of Voters who chose to leave and
40:14·make Quebec an independent country the
40:16·difference between the remain and leave
40:18·sides was merely
40:20·54,2 188 votes out of a total population
40:23·of registered voters in Quebec at the
40:25·time of 5, 87 ,000 meaning that just 1%
40:30·of the population carried the entire
40:32·political future of Quebec at the time
40:34·but ever since the narrow failure of the
40:36·Quebec nationalist to secure the
40:38·province's independence in 1995 the
40:40·support for further separatism in Quebec
40:42·appears to have gradually dwindled away
40:44·but has still never completely gone away
40:46·altogether a recent poll from leir a
40:49·French language newspaper in Montreal
40:51·was conducted in 2023 that found that
40:53·current support for Quebec separatism
40:55·stands at just 38% of the Vin's
40:57·population a far cry from the more than
41:00·49% who voted for Independence back in
41:03·1995 but the data from that poll
41:05·suggests something even more alarming to
41:07·the pro-independence side in Quebec most
41:10·of the support for Quebec separatism
41:11·remaining comes from older people 55
41:14·years and over while support for Quebec
41:16·separatism among the younger Generations
41:17·in the province is significantly lower
41:20·this likely means that as the years
41:22·continue passing on support for kbec
41:24·separatism while still kind of
41:25·substantial today will continue
41:27·dwindling away simply due to the
41:29·attrition of the older cohort that more
41:31·strongly supports Independence dying off
41:33·and the younger Generations replacing
41:35·them who more strongly oppose
41:37·Independence and from here on just about
41:40·every other possible Independence
41:41·Movement remaining in the world it could
41:43·happen gets pretty speculative if it
41:45·hasn't been enough already for example
41:48·it's possible that an independent
·Kurdistan
41:50·Kurdish State could one day coales in
41:52·the center of the Middle East the Kurds
41:54·are their own ethnic group who number
41:56·somewhere between 30 and 45 million
41:58·people in the area and span across the
42:00·modern borders of turkey Syria Iraq and
42:02·Iran the governments of which have
42:04·always been opposed to the emergence of
42:05·an independent Kurdish State for the
42:07·simple reason that if the Kurds ever
42:09·emerged independent in one of them they
42:11·would likely work together to take over
42:13·the territory of all the others as well
42:15·the Kurdish inhabited lands also include
42:17·the headwaters of the Tigris and
42:19·Euphrates rivers and Rich oil fields in
42:21·the lands they inhabit in Iraq which
42:23·together would almost certainly mean
42:25·that any unified independent Kurdish
42:27·state would become a major geopolitical
42:29·power that everyone else in the region
42:31·would then have to reckon with as a
42:33·result the Kurds are generally
42:35·considered to be among the largest
42:36·stateless people in the modern 21st
42:38·century world the Iraqi Kurds have
42:41·however accomplished their own political
42:43·autonomy within Iraq ever since 1992
42:46·after the US began enforcing a no-fly
42:48·zone over their territory that allowed
42:49·them to achieve the leverage they needed
42:51·against the Iraqi central government in
42:52·Baghdad to secure it which established
42:55·the autonomous Kurdistan Regional
42:56·government krg in Northern Iraq much
42:59·later on in 2017 the krg decided to host
43:02·a unilateral referendum on their
43:04·independence from Iraq that much like
43:06·the unilateral Catalonia Independence
43:08·referendum was deemed illegal by the
43:10·Iraqi central government in Baghdad
43:12·nonetheless the krg went ahead with the
43:14·2017 Independence referendum anyway that
43:17·saw a pretty large 72.2% voter turnout
43:20·that resulted in a completely
43:22·overwhelming vote of
43:24·92.7% in favor of the krg's independent
43:27·dependence up against only 7.3% of
43:29·Voters who chose to remain with Iraq
43:32·however the Iraqi government refused to
43:33·recognize the results of the referendum
43:35·declared it illegal and then launched a
43:37·full-blown military offensive into the
43:39·kg's territory in retaliation the Iraqi
43:42·Army then overran roughly 20% of the
43:44·krg's administered territory and killed
43:46·hundreds of people in the process which
43:48·forced the krg into conceding and
43:51·cancelling the results of the referendum
43:53·at the same time the Syrian Kurds have
43:55·also achieved their own deao om through
43:57·Force since the Syrian Civil War began
43:59·next door but unlike the Iraqi herds
44:02·they have always stopped just short of
44:04·asserting their own independence from
44:06·Syria officially only claiming their own
44:08·autonomous status within Syria which the
44:11·Assad regime in Syria still doesn't even
44:13·recognize as legitimate if the Syrian
44:15·Kurds ever took things a step further
44:16·and declared their own independence like
44:18·the Iraqi Kurds attempted to do in 2017
44:21·or which Turkish kurd separatist
44:23·factions like the pkk have been
44:24·attempting to also do for decades then
44:27·then it would almost certainly trigger
44:28·at least an immediate Turkish Invasion
44:31·or intervention to stop them from doing
44:33·so since turkey would then fear that if
44:35·they succeeded they would use their own
44:37·independence to ferment unrest in the
44:39·Kurdish inhabited area of Southeastern
44:41·turkey and so since the Turkish Syrian
44:43·and Iraqi governments would and have
44:45·opposed any and all moves towards formal
44:48·Kurdish Independence it's a development
44:50·that's not exceptionally likely to
44:52·happen anytime soon and similar to the
44:55·Kurds there's also the potential no
44:57·matter how slim for an independent state
44:59·for the targ people in Northern Africa
45:01·to eventually emerge through Force as
45:03·well the tar eggs are a large nomadic
45:05·Berber ethnic group numbering around 4
45:07·million people whose territory spans
45:09·across the modern borders of Mali ner
45:11·Libya and Algeria since 1916 there have
45:14·been at least five major targ rebellions
45:16·in this area demanding the creation of
45:18·their own independent state and the most
45:20·successful of all of them was the most
45:22·recent one that happened in 2012 back
45:25·then tarag Rebels managed to overrun the
45:27·entirety of Northern Mali including
45:28·mali's most populated Northern cities
45:31·timbuk 2 and GA the tarag rebels then
45:33·seize the moment to unilaterally declare
·Azawad
45:35·the independence of a state that they
45:37·called azawad in April of 2012 a state
45:40·that they envisioned as becoming the
45:41·Homeland for the targ people that
45:43·Encompass roughly 60% of mali's
45:45·internationally recognized territory but
45:48·then shortly afterwards islamist
45:49·factions within azawad including
45:51·Al-Qaeda effectively co-opted the
45:53·movement for themselves and then decided
45:54·to expand their Ambitions by launching
45:57·Invasion into the rest of Mali to try
45:58·and take over the entire country which
46:01·then prompted a huge French military
46:03·intervention against them that rapidly
46:05·saw French forces recapture all of
46:07·mali's territory and Destroy azawad
46:09·about as soon as it appeared without any
46:11·other country ever offering aaad any
46:13·form of diplomatic recognition then in
46:16·February of 2013 with all of its
46:17·territory lost the targs formally
46:20·renounced their prior claim of
46:21·Independence for azawad and asked Molly
46:23·to begin reincorporating them back into
46:25·the country but in recent years the
46:27·azawad movement has witnessed a bit of a
46:29·comeback again Molly experienced
46:31·back-to-back cou d'as in 2020 and 2021
46:34·that brought a new anti-french military
46:36·hun into power in the country that
46:37·decided to expel all French troops from
46:39·the country by 2022 and they began
46:42·welcoming in Russian troops from the
46:43·Vagner group to assist them against
46:45·rebels in the country instead in the
46:47·ensuing chaos that followed the azawad
46:50·movement has regain significant momentum
46:52·and ground and currently as of 2024 it
46:55·controls a large swath of mol's North
46:57·once again if they're able to expand on
47:00·their success and take back control over
47:01·major towns in the area like timbuk 2
47:03·and GA again it could only be a matter
47:06·of time before azawad unilaterally
47:08·redeclared their own independence in
47:10·Northern Mali again and the question
47:12·this time will be if anybody intervenes
47:14·to stop them again or if anybody will
47:17·decide to just simply recognize them
47:18·this time meanwhile in Cameroon Down in
47:21·subsaharan Africa there are the
47:23·potential conditions emerging for yet
47:24·another possible new candidate country
47:26·toer in the near future as well this
47:29·time in the form of a potential new
47:30·country known as ambz Amazonia in
47:32·cameroon's extreme West the issue here
47:35·dates back to the Colonial period where
47:36·for decades between 1916 and 1961 modern
47:40·day Cameroon was divided between a
47:41·larger French colony in the East and a
47:43·smaller British colony in the west who
47:45·directly influen the pattern of
47:47·cameroon's two dominant languages today
47:50·French and English French has naturally
47:52·remained the dominant language spoken in
47:53·the bigger part of Cameroon that used to
47:55·be a French colony and 41% of the
47:57·country's total population currently
47:59·speaks French meanwhile English has
48:02·remained the dominant spoken language in
·Ambazonia
48:03·the smaller part of Cameroon that used
48:04·to be a British colony and so about 16%
48:07·of cameroon's overall population speaks
48:09·English this has led to a long-standing
48:11·issue within Cameroon ever since the
48:13·country's Independence that's known as
48:15·the anglophone problem where the
48:17·english- speaking minority in Far
48:18·Western Cameroon has often felt
48:20·disenfranchised and locked out by
48:22·certain policies and actions enacted by
48:24·the majority french-speaking cameroonian
48:26·government in 2016 widescale protest in
48:29·the smaller anglophone part of Cameroon
48:31·broke out that the mostly
48:32·french-speaking cameroonian government
48:34·decided to violently crack down on which
48:36·led the angones in Western Cameroon
48:38·deciding to launch a separatist
48:40·Insurgency which eventually led to a
48:42·group of angones to unilaterally declare
48:44·the independence of the western angone
48:46·region of Cameroon as the independent
48:48·state of ambazonia this led the
48:50·cameroonian government to openly declare
48:52·war on the ambazonian separatists and
48:55·the cameroonian Army was ordered in to
48:56·restore the government's Authority which
48:58·sparked the cameroonian Civil War or the
49:00·anglophone crisis in the country that
49:02·has continued on ever since thousands of
49:05·people have been killed by the conflict
49:06·since then and hundreds of thousands
49:08·more have been forcefully displaced and
49:11·as it currently stands the cameronian
49:13·government controls most of the large
49:14·cities and population centers in the
49:15·angone region while the ambazonian
49:18·separatists still control large swaths
49:20·of the area's rural Countryside if they
49:22·are eventually successful in their
49:23·Rebellion then the ambazonian
49:25·separatists will almost certainly
49:26·attempt to gain formal recognition of
49:28·their independence as Africa's newest
49:30·State like South Sudan and Eritrea
49:33·became before them through fours but
49:35·they still might not become the world's
·South Yemen
49:37·newest country that emerges through
49:38·Force of Arms in Yemen the long Civil
49:41·War in the country is reaching its
49:43·10-year anniversary of beginning with no
49:45·immediate end still in sight but as it
49:48·currently stands now as it has for many
49:50·years there were three major factions in
49:52·the war that could eventually negotiate
49:54·for peace the iran-backed houthi and the
49:56·Saudi backed Republic of Yemen are
49:58·decidedly not separatist entities they
50:01·both want full political control over
50:03·the entirety of Yemen's internationally
50:04·recognized territory and they both
50:07·officially claim to be all of Yemen's
50:09·rightful and legitimate government
50:10·meanwhile the third major faction in the
50:13·war the UAE backed Southern transitional
50:15·council is explicitly a secessionist
50:17·faction that seeks for the
50:19·reestablishment and Independence of the
50:20·former South Yemen again just like it
50:22·used to exist for decades in the 20th
50:24·century between 1967 and 1990 before it
50:28·was absorbed into the former North Yemen
50:30·that created the unified Yemen that
50:31·existed up until the Civil War began in
50:33·2014 if the southern transitional
50:36·council is successful in its desires and
50:37·negotiations whenever a formal peace
50:39·settlement is made in Yemen then it's
50:42·very possible we could end up seeing the
50:44·geopolitical return of South Yemen to
50:46·the World's Maps again and a return back
50:48·to the era of a politically divided
50:50·Yemen which is more of the historical
50:52·reversion to the mean in the area when
50:54·you consider that Yemen has been
50:55·politically divided between between a
50:56·north and a South for centuries and its
50:59·recent Union between 1990 and 2014 was a
51:02·pretty major aberration in this
51:04·otherwise long history of divided
51:07·rule countries might come and go on the
51:09·international stage all the time but
51:10·pretty much all countries have
51:11·governments that want to track their
51:13·citizens activities and restrict their
51:14·citizens access to certain websites apps
51:16·and entertainment options and that's
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51:20·into play for example I was recently
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51:30·European Union now because of a series
51:31·of EU internet regulations that were
51:33·rolled out back in 2018 to protect EU
51:36·citizens data known as the general data
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51:40·basically just ended up leading to a ton
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51:45·their access in Europe there were tons
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23 posted on 05/06/2024 6:52:00 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar
That was settled in 1861-1865, and by a SCOTUS ruling in 1869.

The left has show us that nothing has to be settled . . . ever. It is folly to consider borders permanent. Frankly, the Pledge of Allegiance is a Legal Fiction, "Indivisible" until it isn't.

That said, we are nowhere NEAR any individual state seceding from the USA formally. Heck, NOT A SINGLE ONE is willing to forego highway or education funds in exchange for sutting federal strings. When Louisiana or Alaska or New Hampshire makes it s drinking age 18 again, or makes seatbelt wearing suggested, or tells the NHTSA they can go to Hades and important stripped cars from India that don't have all the tracking and shut down gizmos (not to mention CAFE), then I might take notice.

Any U.S. based movement will be rural, passive non-cooperation, and widespread enough as to be more bother tha it is worth to control. Think the Bundys versus BLM a few years back, but MORE.
24 posted on 05/06/2024 6:56:56 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana
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To: Eleutheria5

and the beast will have twelve heads.


25 posted on 05/06/2024 8:04:08 AM PDT by teeman8r (Armageddon won't be pretty, but it's not like it's the end of the world or something )
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To: SunkenCiv

Who can read that without going insane?


26 posted on 05/06/2024 8:10:24 AM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear (Kafka was an optimist.)
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To: Eleutheria5

The Republic of Ruthenia with L’viv as its capital, as the rest of Ukraine gets absorbed into Russia.


27 posted on 05/06/2024 8:13:05 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

The Marx Brothers fought for Fredonia, and Margaret Dumont’s honor, which is more than she ever did.


28 posted on 05/06/2024 8:15:04 AM PDT by Eleutheria5 (Every Goliath has his David. Child in need of a CGM system. https://gofund.me/6452dbf1. )
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To: Eleutheria5

Moronica For Morons!


29 posted on 05/06/2024 8:17:02 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Eleutheria5

30 posted on 05/06/2024 8:18:17 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: who_would_fardels_bear

I used to read deposition transcripts all the time. Part of my job back then.


31 posted on 05/06/2024 8:21:25 AM PDT by Eleutheria5 (Every Goliath has his David. Child in need of a CGM system. https://gofund.me/6452dbf1. )
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To: dfwgator

“Moronica For Morons!”

Good idea. Kick Washington DC out of the union. They’re seceding whether they want to or not!


32 posted on 05/06/2024 8:22:56 AM PDT by Eleutheria5 (Every Goliath has his David. Child in need of a CGM system. https://gofund.me/6452dbf1. )
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To: who_would_fardels_bear

You must relish it, since you have no actual interest in the topic or the video.


33 posted on 05/06/2024 8:24:23 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: Eccl 10:2
45:40 🇲🇱 / Azawad

Make Azawad Great Again. Azawad was a self recognized country from 2012 to 2013.

34 posted on 05/06/2024 8:29:34 AM PDT by FreeReign
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To: SunkenCiv

I had an interest in the topic. It would have been nice if a summary were provided. If, for instance, the poster had enough interest in getting other people to watch the video. I watch too many videos as it is. A brief summary would have been helpful. These transcripts are not.


35 posted on 05/06/2024 9:20:01 AM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear (Kafka was an optimist.)
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