Asmongold TV - 10% dead in weeks.. Sudan is COLLAPSING | Asmongold TV
Episode Date: December 10, 202510% dead in weeks.. Sudan is COLLAPSINGAsmongold podcast for all of his stream highlights, competitions, reactions & more. --------- -------------- Keywords: twitch streamer, gaming content creat...or, streaming highlights, gaming drama Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The complete and other collapse of Sudan.
10% dead in weeks.
It's a bit of a cliche to say,
why doesn't the mainstream media care about this country or that war?
But if there is any truly ignored war on earth,
it's the one going on in Sudan right now.
Since 2023.
I think that honestly, the media just turns a blind eye
to all kinds of African conflicts and African tragedies.
I mean, I can see why.
It's because it's not relevant necessarily to Americans,
but it is crazy how much it gets overlooked.
It really is.
Sudan has been suffering from complete state breakdown
and owing to its massive population of over 50 million people
making the current crisis, not just the making of another fake.
So if it's 10% of people?
Oh my God.
But the largest humanitarian crisis on earth.
In 2025, it was the country with the highest,
number of people facing famine of internal refugees and the most mass death.
Oh my.
Beating out not to use another cliche, these wars you might be a little more familiar with.
So it beat out Ukraine and Gaza.
Wow.
To fully understand the crisis, you need to understand how Sudan got to this point.
But first, let me just try to share how awful Sudan civil war is in,
under six minutes.
Okay, all right.
The chain of events started
when longtime dictator Omar al-Bashir
was ousted after months
of popular protests,
triggered by economic collapse.
Weighing into pressure,
the armies called into the capital
to defend him instead turned on him
in April of 2019.
They...
Damn.
So it's like a civil war?
Forced him out,
giving the military power
for a few months
to go through a transitional phase.
Uh-huh.
Two military sects held power together, the Sudanese armed forces and the rapid support forces.
A paramilitary and business empire which grew out of the Arab supremacist Janjaweed militia.
Okay.
Which, by the way, translates in English to Devils on horseback.
Damn.
The SAF was headed by Abdul al-Bahann while the RSF was led by General Hamdam Degalo, better known as Hamedi.
Also known to al-Bashir as My Protector.
My Protector.
This career has been made through helping the Sudanese government crush rebels,
controlling Sudan's gold exports, and sucking up to the president.
Wow.
Rank one Glazer.
After the transitional government, the two men which ran these militaries,
big surprise, vied for control of the country.
No way.
This never happens.
...country against each other, rapidly degenerating Sudan in...
into a civil war which broke out in April 2020.
The main disparity was over the creation of a joint army.
Alberhan wanted it done by two years,
while Hometti wanted it done by 10.
Yeah.
Naturally, they started shooting at each other
to solve this debate.
Naturally.
Yeah, it makes sense.
Now the SAF controls the East, Nile River, and Coastline
posturing itself as the true government.
Oh, right.
The RSF controls the West, including a region
known as Darfur, launching a campaign for either...
I feel like, bro, I feel like these guys are cooked, right?
I mean, they don't have any access to the water.
I mean, really, I mean, they've got to be cooked.
Maybe not.
It seems that way.
Total control of the country or to separate as its own state.
No, okay.
The details aren't really hashed out yet.
I didn't know this.
The subsequent fighting has torn the social...
Look at that.
Yeah, this is like the PubG Desert Man.
The fabric of Sudan apart.
Look at least half a million have died with 15 million displaced, overwhelming refugee camps,
and 25 million suffering from hunger as farms and food stockpiles are deliberately burned.
Why would they burn the food?
In a country made up of 40% children, 90%.
So all the kids, what the, this is sick.
Most of them are out of school.
This is total collapse.
So 90% of the kids are out.
Out of school.
Oh my God.
Sudan has seen many civil wars in its history, but none reaching into its major cities.
Wow.
This time around, Sudan's capital and cultural center, the tri-city area of Khartoum, has seen clashes and airstrikes, so much so that Al-Burhan has had to flee to Port Sudan.
When fighting couldn't be done between these groups, the armies switched to civilians, indiscriminately bombings.
swarming hospitals, schools
Holy shit.
Markets and residential areas.
Much of the fighting, though, is centered around Darfur.
Super surprises haven't been covered much in Western countries.
It's because people just don't give a fuck what happens in Africa.
Like, it has no effect on anybody, really.
That's the reason why nobody talks about it.
I mean, like, I understand that's like a very raw and, like,
fucking direct way to say it,
but I don't think I'm wrong.
A notoriously arid land which has traditionally been
Sudan's poorest region.
There, the RSF has won victory after victory,
receiving aid through a corridor
it captured to East Libya.
Sudan has had a troubled history
of race relations. Oh, what a surprise.
Many elites have declared Sudan
in officially Arab Islamic country,
sparking decades of unrest and conflict
between them and the darker-skinned mainly...
I wonder if, like, people will ever get over this shit.
Like, will we ever be in a world where, like,
why are you so brown?
Where's my gun?
Can somebody get my gun?
I need to use it right now.
Like, really?
I wonder if it's ever going to stop.
Christian people of the South,
culminating in South Sudan's secession in 2011.
Wow.
More recently, though, has been the government.
governments and RSFs fight against the non-Arab inhabitants of Darfur, a place literally meaning home of the foer.
This is an ethnically mixed region of four, Masalit, and Zagawa peoples, along with many.
Okay.
A nomadic Arab tribes, many of which move.
Damn, what the fuck?
Bro, look at that.
That's like out of a video game.
I didn't know they actually did this.
I thought this was like, oh my God.
Look at it.
Yeah.
I feel like this is like a mount that I have to buy in a store.
It's like a $25 amount.
The merchant mount.
The tension in the region over land rates,
along with approval from the Bashir regime,
culminated in a genocide of the Native Africans by Janjaweed forces in the 2000s.
So this genocide is precipitated by a previous civil war that was precipitated by a previous genocide?
Holy fuck.
A scenario that since the most.
recent breakout of war has started again.
Capturing Al
And they're just
Oh my, this is
Wow.
Capturing Al Fasher, which was a regional hub for the
displaced people of Darfur would mark
a huge victory for the RSF.
For 18 months. Can you imagine, bro? Like, I don't know if this is like a problem
with the map, but you imagine if you lived in here, bro, that would be
I'd be stressed out if I lived in here.
Like that would be like, God damn, like, I got to watch out.
Teen months, they siege to the city, cutting food and medical supplies, building a wall of dirt around the city, and shooting anybody who tried to escape.
Wait, that's the wall.
So, it's a dirt wall.
On October 27th, 2025, they finally captured it, starting what would become the bloodiest few weeks of the year.
So they finally, so they got over.
over the wall. The mostly Arab soldiers went through the city, systematically torturing and
killing all inhabitants over the age of 10. Wow. This is a group whose members call for the
extermination of all black skins from Darfur. Wow. Four, shouting that women will soon have
Arab babies and who've posted these atrocities all over social media. Oh my God.
We want those in Port Sudan to jump into the sea so the fish will eat them.
The northern state is something else.
You will all, you all will head there only for the women.
You will head there only for the women to cleanse their lineage.
Huh.
Usually we call it rape here, but okay, I guess over there it's different.
Right.
That's what I was thinking.
It is an attempted ethnic cleansing of.
of Darfur. Tens of thousands died with its capture, a fact only known because of the piles of
bodies seen from satellite imagery. In a city of this size, that means at least a tenth
were killed within weeks of his capture. God damn. That's insane. Speed of mass death and the only way
they could even know this was happening because they had satellite imaging of piles of bodies.
Holy fuck, man.
...seen in the modern world since the Rwandan genocide.
Now, it is in all honesty, more likely than not, Sudan will collapse.
At least it will collapse in its current form.
With the West either formally seceding like South Sudan
or creating a shadow government that basically acts as its own country
without going through the increasingly useless motions
of trying to become a UN member state.
How can a country get so bad to the country?
point where nobody has the power to stop what will likely go down as one of the worst mass
killings of this decade. Modern Sudanese history has been a cycle of military rulers, people
getting tired of them and their despotism, overthrowing them in popular riots only to end up
with another military ruler. Yep. That's about pretty much everywhere, actually. Yeah, there's
many such cases.
The cycle. Yep.
This has happened
the three cycles making up 52
of the almost 70 years
of independent history.
These chunks were the rules of
Ibrahim Abud, Jafar Namiuri
and Omar al-Bashir
respectively, each with a couple
guys after them in the transition
phase to the next military government.
Sudan's current crisis
So it's one war lord to the next.
Where who gets to
Lead the fourth.
The first two dictators basically had the same trajectories.
They both came to power through a coup,
led a government based on military over-civilian rule,
centralizing that rule around their personality,
and brutally put down rebellions and protests.
Old reliable.
General Ibrahim Abud was part of the Islamist coalition,
while Colonel Jafar Namiri led the leftist one.
man
instead of tribal governments
to both of these guys
progress was going to come through the Islamization
of Sudan
as a result of course
the defining political problem for most
of Sudanese history was what to do
with the South
Christianity was a pre-colonial religion
of the people who lived here
and the mountainous and jungly land of the region
prevented large-scale Arab or Islamic
migrations
the primary solution to northerner
elites thought of was to integrate it into a larger Islamic Sudan. Oh, okay. The first constitution of
the country already so divide when it was written for an explicitly Arab Muslim nation. Wow.
Both then tried to Islamize the South and both faced organized military backlashes in two different
civil wars. Damn. What's ironic is that part of the reason Abu was ousted was because of fatigue the
war brought and part of the reason
Namiri came to power was because he
negotiated the end of that first war.
Good. Namiri then went
back on that and did with the Islam.
This is why nobody talks about it. Who will you support
the commies or the Muslims? That's
true. Yeah, this is like a
leftist, like, you know,
you have to shoot your
wife or your daughter.
Right? I mean, it's like, what do you do?
Oh my God, right? Like, it's impossible.
Like, what do you? Yeah, like, oh,
God.
This coalition couldn't do
Create an officially Islamic Sudan
And he did it overnight
Enforcing Sharia with one presidential decree
Again
Wow
Organized resistance from the South
So for the first five or so decades
Of independent Sudanese history
The defining motivating force
Of the military governments
Was to keep the South in the country
Through mostly violent means
Killings and Burning Villages
What the fuck?
And they're trying to push their religion on them?
Oh wow, big surprise. That didn't work.
The waves of war would kill and expel millions.
Yeah.
Mass killings which would be history defining for most other countries were just a part of the...
Oh, the enslavement.
End of the 2000s.
Oh, they still do this.
A long history of these wars.
Uh-huh.
What didn't help the peace was the discovery of oil in the south.
Uh-oh. Here comes America.
which would represent a great help to the cotton dependent nation.
The national refinery to process it would be built near Khartoum,
rather than in the south where it was originally planned for.
Oh, so they build it in an area where they have control over it.
Yeah, it makes sense.
To export in Port Sudan.
Yeah.
So to get it here, a pipeline would have to be built across the country,
keeping the self dependent on the north for economic growth,
of which it saw almost not.
I drink your milkshake. I've seen this before. Yeah.
No oil was exported until the 2000s.
Oh, how about that?
Also planned was the Jong-Glai Canal project to transfer water from the marshy south upstream to the north.
The government promised foreign investors Sudan would have a green revolution with this project.
A green revolution.
Having more arable land than the rest of the Arab world combined.
Southerners protested for the rights to their own oil revenue.
and water resources.
So the government promised development projects for the south.
Oh, they said it was going to happen.
None of which were kept.
Oh, it didn't happen.
So they said it was going to happen, didn't happen.
That makes sense.
In fact, the entire canal project was scrapped when the conflict intensified.
Oh, okay.
So, yeah.
This second bout of fighting would begin the longest civil war in African history, ending in the breakup of the country.
Eight, was that 28 years?
Did you try to shut me down?
Somebody says it's Jewish space lasers.
is oh wow
I don't know what else it could be
not them again
yeah
convinced America to fund its campaign
against these socialist agitators
while their funds came from
communist Ethiopia
oh so America
but after decades of fighting
the SPLM started
explicitly calling for separation
from the north
oh wow another one was the start
of the third military cycle
another one
Miri was ousted in
1985
an ineffective administration
couldn't keep power
only to be cooed by the
National Islamic Front
in charge
Al-Turabi and Al-Bashir
Holy shit
The new NIF government
would do just as the others had done
continue fighting the South
and crushing their political opponents
but just 10 years after they took charge
the NIF split
Is that Gandhi? No it's not like
Gandhi
it's a little bit different
Not into ideological sex, but over who should be in charge.
Of course.
Before that, Al-Trabi's most significant addition to history was being chums with bin Laden and getting...
Oh, right.
That's great.
Sudan put on America's state sponsors of terrorism list.
Uh-oh.
All-American aid to the country.
Good, by the way.
We shouldn't be giving them any fucking money.
Why are we sending money over to Africa?
Fuck that.
story short as the economy waned under sanctions al-Bashir and the national congress party would take charge
marking a slowdown of the war with the south they're paying for this year for one reason
al-turabi was the one more concerned with pushing in islamic sudan south secondly the war was
no longer affordable too many human and fiscal resources were going towards it while sanctions
were weighing heavy on the government thirdly this new oil provided a huge
huge incentive to end the war
to get it going. And last,
Al-Bashir focused his military
administration on another
region, Darfur.
During the second civil war
with the South, fighting spread to the
West as Al-Bashir viewed Darfur
with the same contempt that many
viewed the South with.
See, throughout the 1980s,
a flow of nomadic Arabs came
into the region to escape a decade
long war between Libya and
Czech. There's a
war. Of course. How could we forget the bonus war? And then there's the other war in Africa
that caused the second war from the other country that was also having a civil war because their
military leader was taken over by a coup because the people from that coup came from another
fucking civil war in another country. Oh my fucking God.
Which, by the way, in its final act concluded with the great Toyota War.
Libya's dictator Muammar Gaddafi had planned
This guy did have aura
I'm gonna be honest, he did
He was a real one
I don't know why we killed him
You know what he said
He said that if you kill me
Europe will be overrun
By Africans and Muslims
That's what he said
Huh
How about that?
On expanding his kingdom down into Chad
And eventually the entire Sahara
Greenland.
To help with this, he set up training camps around his enemies.
So he just wanted to take, honestly, we should have let him do it.
I mean, he did torture people.
But who doesn't, right?
Darfur's unpoliced Wild West was a great staging post for his fight against the Chadian Hesn Habre.
But a mix of refugees, weapons, and a constant stream of racial supremacy doesn't usually end up great for the local.
population. Though the two groups had coexisted for decades before, even commonly
marrying into each other's families, that didn't last when the drought came. Then
tensions boiled over... When the well runs dry, the people begin to eat each other. A tale as
old as time. This is always how it goes. Between native farmers and the nomadic herders
over what little water supplies remained. What followed was complete breakdown, to the point
where the police had to beg for fuel so they could do their routine patrols.
And it was around this time when devils on horseback started to float around
in relation to these new Chadian professional fighters.
So when Gaddafi failed to take Chad,
many nomadic Arabs stayed in Darfur.
Years of Arab oppression went by before they revolted
under the Sudan Liberation Movement and the Justice and Equality Movement.
Fearing the region would end up like South Sudan,
The justice and equality movement.
I wonder what that was.
And Al-Bashir empowered the Jeannjoid to do as they pleased.
Burn villages and kill locals en masse.
Wait, so he just let them go and do whatever the...
Okay.
Wow.
Because many in the forces aren't paid, they've been incentivized to loot as much as they can.
So they don't give them money because they're just going to steal it.
Bro, look at those stairs.
This is a PubG map.
What is this?
Oh my God
Leaving behind
Empty Apartments
Offices and shops
Leaving refugees to swell
In makeshift 10 cities in the suburbs
The Darfurian
Genocide saw the deaths of at least
500,000 people throughout
The Second Civil War
Holy shit
Which Hemeti played a key
And personal
Genocide Air
And one which also made
Al Bashir the first head of state
Ever to be indicted by the
International Criminal Court
What happened to him?
role in masterminding it.
What happened to him?
As the military shifted its focus here, it left the South to negotiate their way out of the
whole mess.
Al-Bashir was open to it, and in 2005, they signed the comprehensive peace agreement,
outlining the post-war divisions of wealth and power, as well as giving the South the
option to secede by 2011.
I got a bad feeling about this one.
The NCP viewed the South as a distinct people, rather than a vote.
vacuum to be filled. Another, the American government pressured the country into it by promising
to lift their sanctions if they gave the Christians freedom, which did not end up happening
after news of the Darfur genocide broke. I'm going to be honest. I think that as America,
we just need to stop fucking, like, I think that this is, like, you're never going to fix this.
If they're going to fix it, they're going to fix it. But we are never going to go into Africa
and micromanage them into democracy.
We're not going to turn Sudan into Italy.
We're not going to turn it into Mississippi.
It's not going to turn into Washington.
Just let them do what they're going to do.
That's it.
Let them do it.
Like, I don't want to pay for it.
We can maybe trade with them, maybe.
But, like, yeah, it's not going to turn into Japan.
They nuked the shit out of them?
Why would we nuke them?
What the fuck would that do?
like they're not coming over here
like they barely have running fucking water
just let them deal with their own shit
in 2011 with a nearly
99th
I mean if we want to get the oil yeah we go get the oil sure
but like I mean couldn't we just have Saudi Arabia do that
they're like right next to it can we just give them money have them do it
30% margin they voted to become independent
however in one agreement during the war
the South would be defined as this line,
the three original provinces,
but in this new CPA,
they would allow South Cortefan,
Blue Nile, and Abyei to join as well,
creating a disputed border that lasts to this day.
Wow.
Kind of.
Sudan doesn't really have any borders right now.
It didn't help that they agreed to split oil revenues 50.
Remember what I always used to say,
how Africa was a PVP server?
I don't know how the fuck.
It never,
Like, this shit has never gone away.
It's been like this for a long time.
50, but around three quarters of oil reserves were found in the south.
So before and after independence, the two halves again fought over the border,
especially over the oil rich province of Abbey.
Leading to more deaths, displacements, and a harsh version of Sharia being implemented.
Strict dress code, morality police, death for apostasy,
Ban on mixed gender gatherings.
Wow.
That's all testament.
A version shaped by Al-Bashir.
Okay.
He said there would be no more question of diversity now that the South is gone.
That's how you can't.
How to solve the diversity problem.
Just get rid of them.
Okay.
Wow.
A pretty bad foreshadowing as to how he viewed how he wanted his.
country to run, while the South pretty much devolved into ethnic slaughter as soon as it got
independence.
The decade between the end of the war and the South's independence was the only time Sudan
really had an economic boom.
So everything was going great and then immediately turns into a shit hole again.
Right.
Used oil revenues to invest into education, healthcare, and infrastructure.
Look at this graph of Sudanese foreign exchange earnings.
The biggest thing here,
was oil with gold barely making the same dent.
95% of foreign exchange and 60% of government revenue was tied to oil.
That's a lot.
Al-Mashir had also built a patient network based on this oil revenue.
Again, see the crash.
Wow.
Subsidies to basic goods were given to the Sudanese middle class.
Bribes and development projects were given to business and local elites.
And funding to private security forces were all dependent on.
these fields. He also siphoned billions to overseas bank accounts for himself.
Ah, who could have guessed?
Thus, after the loss of this chunk in 2011, he was screwed. From its peak of $10 billion
in 2010, foreign exchange earnings fell to around $300 million in 2016.
Yeah.
3% of what they were. Al-Bashir then tried to ramp up pipeline causes.
to Port Sudan, which the South Sudanese president responded with murder suicide.
Oh, wow.
To transport all oil through the pipe.
When that was resolved and it really dawned on Al-Bashir how little sources of foreign revenue he had left,
he institutionalized the Jean-Juweed, rebranding them as the RSF and allowing them to do whatever they could to make money.
So he just said, just rob everybody and give me their money?
What the fuck?
He basically privatized this militia group.
They exported soldiers to the Yemeni Civil War to make some money, got into construction, trading weapons, but most importantly, started gold production.
Especially after they captured the massive Jebel Amir gold mine in Darfur.
Big shocker, this didn't replace Sudan.
Dan's lost foreign exchange and as an import-reliate country, losing their reserves would result
in a what we can say.
Robbing a bunch of villages were the most expensive thing that they have is a Coke can.
Yeah, what a surprise.
It didn't necessarily get you any money.
I would have never guessed.
Now, country-ending crisis.
In 2018, his patronage network formally collapsed when he ended subsidies to bread and fuel,
nearly tripling the price of food for the average person
starting the protests which ousted him
taking us back to where we started
so this is what we're on. The loss of South Sudan broke al-Bashir's patronage system
and left a bloated military with nothing to do.
Attempting layoffs would threaten the regime
as many young military-trained men would suddenly be out of work.
To give you some perspective,
roughly 70% of the government spending went into the
The Army or private security groups in 2016, while 2% went to education.
2% went to schools.
Wow, but you got to, hey, how many AK-47s do we have?
And 1% went to health spending.
Of course.
Throughout this whole thing, the RSF, likely seeing the writing on the walls,
created their own streams of revenue to stay gold, fighting and smuggling.
Ah, good.
Oh, reliable.
Independent from the central government.
A far ways from Hamedi's humble beginnings as a camel trader, he now controls the region's mines and oil refinery.
You got to, I mean, like, if you started, like you were selling camels and now you control this, I mean, that's a come-up.
It is.
That's impressive.
This is a man of ambition.
Now, that ambition is killing a bunch of people.
Not so good, right?
But ambition.
cementing a literal business empire in the desert.
Yes.
Their most important connection is with the UAE,
which is the world's hub of gold refining and trading.
It's been reported that they've sold hundreds of millions of dollars worth of gold to the Emirates
through Hometti's family company, Al-Junaid.
So everybody there must be great and they must be rich, right?
Everybody got the money from that?
The Emirati government has funded the paramilitary with smuggles.
weapons and aid through the eastern Libyan corridor.
So giving them with AK-47s and...
Of course, they officially deny all of this,
but the Amarotti business interests in the country are too great.
It's one of the biggest gold-producing regions on Earth.
And by placing a bet on the RSF winning the war or seceding,
they can keep growing their position as the world's gold superpower.
Damn.
They also rely on Sudan for food imports,
as it was an al-Bashir program to sell some of Sudan's farmland to many Middle Eastern powers for their own food security,
seeing what a lack of it could lead to.
Yeah, I guess so.
Keeping Sudan's semi-functioning is just in the interest of the Emirates.
And according to some experts, if they withdrew tomorrow,
there's a good chance the war would end real quick.
So they don't want to end the war because then they would stop making money.
Man.
See, they do it too. It's not just us.
See? How about that?
Also involved in the war are Russia's Wagner group, also betting on the RSF to win.
Wait, aren't, isn't that like a fucking, like, blackwater?
Yeah, that's like some, like, fucking mercenary group.
Protect gold supplies under the Merrill Gold Company.
Yeah.
And on the other side, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iran, Ukraine, and the Russian government
who would all like to see.
One of the guys, I think his name was Pringolzin or something like that.
And after they tried to take over Russia and it didn't work, his helicopter mysteriously crashed.
Yeah.
I mean, honestly, like, you really like Pringles.
Yeah, I mean, I kind of got it, right?
I don't remember his name exactly.
Yeah, his plane?
Oh, his plane crash.
Wow, what is right?
I mean, honestly, like, yeah, now they're focusing on Sudan rather than Russia.
Good call.
Yeah, y'all try.
That shit didn't work.
some sort of stability in what they view as a geostrategically important to region.
Despite all their atrocities, the RSF still wants to project themselves as a force of democracy and peace to gain governing legitimacy.
Democracy and peace.
We love that.
You don't really have to go through these motions anymore.
Sure.
In 2025, the RSF came together to declare a government of peace and unity, drafting a constitution for what their new country.
may look like.
And although there's not really another government on earth who buys this delusion, basically...
Nobody at this point.
Nobody believes it.
Nah, no, oh, you guys are done killing each other?
Right.
Until what?
Tomorrow?
Sanctioned by the whole Western world.
There's also not a government who really cares much to do anything about it.
So everybody has just said, nah, man.
Like, I'm out.
Like, that's it.
They don't even, they don't want to fix it.
They don't want to help them.
They don't want to trade with them.
They're like, no, guys.
Like, y'all can figure it out.
Honestly, I think that's the bad.
That's what they should do.
Meanwhile, sitting in the southern Nuba Mountains,
a remnant of a past war can be found in a new form.
Distracted by the civil war,
the SPLM has attacked and set up a little republic of New Sudan.
No.
Surprising about half a million people.
Of course.
They've started their own English language schools,
made their own court system outside of Islamic law.
no.
Started the fight for a Western-style secular democracy.
It's a reminder as to how far Sudan has gone in its current crisis.
Good luck, guys.
That the issue the government has spent almost its entire existence trying to stop
has just gone ahead because nobody has the capacity or care to squash these southern rebels.
Well, that's the funny thing about it, is that they can't, like, they don't even have the
logistics to even, they have the logistics to continue.
the war, but they don't have the logistics to end the war.
So this has just been going on, it seems like, forever.
Unfortunately, there's just not that much care to go around for what is almost certainly
Sudan's largest crisis in its existence.
I would say so, it seems that way to me.
For the increasingly nihilistic people living there, leaving behind no governing
structure for society, and unless you're the Amarotti sheikh, not much care from the
the outside world as well.
So the Emirates are just getting paid off this shit.
Damn.
So they're just getting all the gold.
They get in all the shiny rocks.
Meanwhile,
these people are just killing each other.
If you enjoyed this video and are a long time viewer,
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please do.
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I'll leave you guys a video.
Being like rocket fuel for this channel,
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Yeah.
And if you haven't checked out,
this video, do that as well.
It's a comparison of communist Cuba
and capitalist South Florida
and how they depend on each other for
their own survivals. I didn't know
about it being
mutualistic. I didn't know that at all.
And good video, sad truth. Yeah,
what a great video. This is amazing. I want to link it
to you guys. The guy's name is Hozier. This is
Hozer, I think, I don't know how to see his name.
But yeah, really, really great video.
Really amazing video. I didn't know
a lot of this stuff at all. I'll link
you guys video. Give him a sub. Give him a like.
right that was very very well put together i didn't even know that uh i i didn't know it was that
bad honestly like i guess like this is just it so to them for news on things that we don't hear
about yeah exactly well this is the other thing is that like a lot of western media
they don't really talk about this stuff i think it's because it doesn't really interest like
viewers like most people like on the internet and i think that in the international audience
you have a collective engagement,
but whenever you're talking about like a personal opinion,
that isn't the,
that isn't a problem.
That's definitely not a problem.
And yeah,
there's no doubt.
I'm playing moral story.
If it's not Israel involved,
it's minorities,
killing minorities,
no one cares.
Yeah,
I saw a family guy.
I think that we all know about that.
And Moispao video on Nina.
No,
I didn't see that,
but,
yeah, Hassan never speaks about this,
of course.
Well, I don't know.
I mean, like, this is,
the thing is that,
It's one of these issues where I feel like everybody's wrong and it's just a total fucking,
it's a total shit show.
And like this is, my opinion on this has always been like from an Americans perspective is that
that's crazy.
Wow.
And never go there.
Right?
Like you guys want to kill each other and cut each other up.
Go ahead.
Like I don't want to have anything to do with it.
I don't want to be there.
I don't want to trade with you really.
I don't want to have anything to do with you.
Right.
It's a cluster fuck.
Yeah.
Just a massive cluster fuck.
So yeah.
Nobody wins over there?
Yeah, you're not going to, like, you're not going to convince them to turn their country into Japan.
It's just not going to happen.
Like, if it's going to happen, it's going to be them doing it themselves.
You're not going to like, oh, well, well, what if we teach them to read?
Oh, great.
Well, then they'll learn how to kill each other even better.
You've got to change the fundamental.
That's what it is.
You have some of the videos have the facts?
I don't know.
I like knowing the extra stuff personally.
I do.
And, yeah, unless they have a Mr. Beast.
Oh, true. Yeah, Mr. Bees could go there and fix Sudan by building wells and giving them feastables. That's a great idea. And I see Casey Tron. Yeah, I talked about that for quite a while. Actually, I did. I talked about for a long time. So yeah, a new title of the Arab video. I'll watch it at some point. Yeah, I investigated the murder capital of America. Which one? Yeah, which one? There's a lot of them. Yeah, I'm not sure. And should we just conquer Africa? No. I don't want to, I don't want to micromanage a bunch of fucking Africans. Why the fuck do I want to go micromanage a bunch of Africans?
no
absolutely not
fuck no
I just want to leave them the fuck alone
just leave them the fuck alone
what are we doing to talk about this yes
it's not slavery
well like not micromanaged fully managed
take control
nah it's a pain in the ass man
it's a pain that you think that's easy to do
because you haven't tried to communicate
with people like this like trying to take over
a whole fucking country that's oh my god
absolutely not
like life started there
Yeah, and it can stay there.
Like, they can stay there.
They can deal with it.
Yeah, if Africans built America, why can't Africans build Africa?
Because Africans didn't build America.
Like, if somebody tells you to build something, it doesn't mean that you really built it yourself, right?
I mean, like, let's be honest, slaves built America.
Yeah, right.
Like, if slaves built America, then why are the places that they came from not built up?
It's very clearly because they didn't.
Like, it's important to acknowledge that they played a role and it was an unwilling role and it was a terrible thing.
but to say that they built America, that's a fucking ridiculous lie.
Absolutely ridiculous. Outrageous.
So, yeah, a bad place is built up.
Then why we stopped using them? Yeah, exactly.
And so they built America without getting paid?
Yeah, I mean, some of them, I mean, it helped.
I mean, it did help, but, like, I wouldn't say it's like that.
And I disagree.
I mean, again, like, you know, this isn't an opinion.
You just look at the countries that they came from and see, like, well, why is it that every single one of these places is awful?
Like, I mean, really, what are we talking about?
And, like, I understand you can say, oh, no, it's because of America.
It's because of this earth thing.
No, man, like, it was like that back then.
It's like that now.
It's been like that for hundreds of years.
At a certain point, you've got to stop blaming everybody else.
Like, maybe these people that are, like, fucking genociding each other constantly over and over and over and over.
Maybe it's because of their own behavior.
Maybe it's because they did it themselves.
So, yeah, everyone keeps pillaging them and redrawing the maps as well.
mean, they keep redrawing the maps for themselves. It's not, this entire fantasy that Africa would be a
paradise if it didn't have to, if there was, oh, wow, well, well, maybe it's, it's Europe's fault,
Africa is a shithole. Get the fuck out of here. Absolutely not. I'm sure we didn't help, but plenty of
these countries haven't had a direct influence from America in quite a while, and they're still doing this.
Like, it's not everybody else's fault that you're constantly killing each other. It's crazy. The only people that
believe that are people that hate white people, they hate America, they hate Western culture,
and they're trying to find ways to demonize it. It's not true. It never was true. And history
will prove that it probably never will be true. They've been doing this for thousands of years.
Thousands of years. This has been happening. I don't know what to say. This is 2025 to? Yeah,
exactly. Like, I don't know what, like, people are just out of their mind.
