How Johnny Harris Rewrites History
Aug 10, 2023
How Johnny Harris Rewrites History
Wanna watch without ads and see exclusive content? Go to https://nebula.tv/thepresentpast As a historian watching the latest Johnny Harris video I was disturbed. Johnny has a laudable goal of wanting to show the origins of European colonialism. But he cuts so many corners, that history is sacrificed on the altar of storytelling. In doing so he presents warped version of what actually happened. The video in question: • The Origins of European Imperialism 00:00 - 00:30 - Johnny Harris Lies To You 00:30 - 01:18 - Johnny’s Vid 01:18 - 04:32 - Europe as a dark dark place 04:32 - 05:10 - Portugal’s Expansion 05:10 - 10:28 - Columbus Didn’t Invent Colonialism 10:28 - 11:37 - A Note on Depicting Native peoples 11:37 - 13:07 - A Compliment For Johnny Harris 13:07 - 15:59 - The Limits of Storytelling 15:59 - 16:24 - Acknowledgements Sources: Mohamed Adhikari - Europe’s First Settler Colonial Incursion into Africa: The Genocide of Aboriginal Canary Islanders David Haddock \u0026 Lynne Kiesling - The Black Death and Property Rights Jeffrey Barton Russel - Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians Government Finance and Imposition of Serfdom after the Black Death Margaret E. Peters Carla Phillips and William D. Phillips - The Worlds of Colombus https://dhayton.haverford.edu/blog/20 … Youtube: Why People think the world is flat: • Why People Think the World is Flat I’m a Journalist Who Hates The News • I’m a Journalist Who Hates The News Johnny Harris: A Story of YouTube Propaganda • Johnny Harris: A Story of YouTube Pro… (I used Tom Nichols analysis of JH critique of the media) Should I Sue Johnny Harris? • Should I Sue Johnny Harris? Imperial’s channel: / imperialyt-1 Faultine’s channel: / faultlinevideos Hi there, my name is Jochem Boodt. I make the show The Present Past, where I show how the present has been influenced by the past. History, but connected to the present and fun! Every episode I show how history has influenced and made a thing, an idea or event in our present time. I make different content. You can find me on: TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thepresentpast Instagram https://www.instagram.com/the_present … Twitter : https://twitter.com/@ThePresent_Past Logo by: https://www.instagram.com/multicolor _… If you have an idea for an episode please fill in this form:https://www.dropbox.com/request/nMMMS …
Content
0 -> This week I saw this new video by Johnny
Harris, and in it, he's lying to you.
4.72 -> The video looks amazing.
6.12 -> It has map roll porn and it's also wrong.
9 -> He simplifies events, screws up
the timeline, and he's rewriting history.
13.56 -> As a historian, it's painful to watch.
15.68 -> Since leaving Vox, Johnny
Harris has become a YouTube god.
18.72 -> Just putting his name
in a title guarantees views.
22.16 -> What?
22.68 -> But with these views also came criticism.
25.2 -> He's been accused of putting out
propaganda, not citing sources,
28.88 -> and today of simplifying history
so much it's harmful.
34.2 -> So what's this video actually about?
36.16 -> Johnny Harris discusses a subject
that has been the base
38.88 -> for countless of books
and academic discussion.
41.68 -> How did some countries from a relatively
unimportant region in the world
45.2 -> just rise up and dominate everyone else?
48.6 -> It's a big question.
50.16 -> A 500 year project of moving people
53.24 -> and weapons and germs
and language and violence.
56.6 -> And the outcome still influences
our world today.
59.76 -> So it's extra important to get the facts
right.
62.52 -> Don't get me wrong.
63.48 -> I love Johnny Harris.
64.64 -> He has inspired millions, including me.
67.32 -> He's pretty much the reason map
animation exists on YouTube
70.2 -> and he promotes therapy.
71.6 -> I'm a giant fan of therapy.
73.72 -> I like that.
74.36 -> But he pushes storytelling far
beyond the limits.
77.76 -> Let me explain.
78.84 -> Johnny sets the stage for his video.
80.88 -> Europe was.
81.84 -> But the fact is, there wasn't an abundance
of anything in Europe.
86.16 -> Instead, Europeans were just farmers,
barely scraping
89.4 -> by constantly in debt
to a few rich landlords.
92.88 -> Life in Europe was scarce and miserable.
95.24 -> That really pissed off
people in the comments.
97.16 -> He then goes on to talk about empires
that, according to Johnny,
100.36 -> were doing just fine in this time.
Meanwhile,
102.6 -> there was a bunch of other empires
around the world that were thriving.
106 -> All of these empires were trading with one
another, making all of them even richer.
110.56 -> They all had better everything than Europe
did and miserable Europeans.
115.6 -> Eventually wanted in on all the trade.
117.8 -> So what goes wrong here?
119.88 -> Well, let's start with the whole wretched
place and landlord thing.
123.64 -> Jonny voices this general idea
about Europe in the Middle Ages.
127.16 -> Everything was shit
and everyone went to bed without dinner.
130.68 -> That sounds bad, right?
132.72 -> Well,
the time period he discusses saw a lot new
135.88 -> technological innovations
that made agriculture way better.
140.16 -> With all this innovation,
141.36 -> there was a lot more food
and the population of Europe grew a lot.
145.16 -> Between the year thousand and 1340,
the population of Europe grew
149.32 -> from about 38 million people
to 73 and a half.
153.72 -> And then the Black Death
killed 30% of Europeans.
157.52 -> But this Black Death actually made things
a lot better for the survivors.
162.04 -> It meant the end of serfdom
in Western Europe.
164.68 -> That landlord thingy
Johnny Harris is talking about.
167.16 -> Why? Well, labor was really scarce
and that meant that workers
170.84 -> had a much better bargaining position
against their landlords.
174.04 -> Of course, this didn't happen everywhere
at the same time,
177.6 -> but even so, generally seen, the situation
of the farms in European states
181.96 -> definitely wasn't worse than those
in the Empires Johnny Harris mentions.
185.72 -> So then Johnny says there were no shiny
things in Europe.
188.4 -> There wasn't an abundance
of anything in Europe.
191.76 -> But trade with the empires he mentions
really existed for a long time.
195.4 -> Since Roman times,
there was the Silk Road, you know, this
198.56 -> network of roads, shipping lanes and towns
that connected Asia with Europe.
202.68 -> Just sometimes
the trade broke down for a bit.
205.56 -> This is what happens when the Ottomans
conquer Constantinople in 1453.
209.8 -> They come in and introduce higher taxes.
213.04 -> So Portugal and Spain, they didn't
really search a route over land.
216.72 -> They wanted to cut out
the middlemen entirely.
219.24 -> So the exploration of Spain and Portugal
actually had a long, long history.
223.52 -> Also, when he describes
Europe in this time, he completely ignores
227.04 -> one of the most pivotal moments
in this time period, the Renaissance.
231.32 -> This is a period
232.44 -> after the Crusades where knowledge from
the Middle East was brought back.
236.52 -> Scholars in the Italian states
saw Roman and Greek texts in new light.
240.88 -> This led to flourishing culture
improvement in architecture and art.
244.88 -> I mean, the map that Johnny shows
with the world.
248 -> Yeah,
that was rediscovered in the Renaissance.
250.56 -> Okay, so Europe wasn't this awful place.
253.28 -> There were shiny things,
but Europe was geopolitically isolated.
258.88 -> And yes,
they did want in on the trade in the East.
263.6 -> So Johnny then goes on to explain why
265.52 -> Spain wanted in on all the trade
because of Portuguese action.
269.64 -> Portugal's work around was literally
to go around the continent of Africa,
274.68 -> and suddenly the Portuguese
are dressing in luxurious fabrics.
278.4 -> Okay, so now Spain sees Portugal
hitting the jackpot
281.24 -> and they're kind of jelly
they want in on this, too.
283.72 -> They need to establish their own
trade route to Asia.
286.92 -> Okay, so the Portuguese,
they were flaunting their goods.
290.28 -> Spain wanted in on the trade.
292.32 -> Let's look at a timeline here.
293.96 -> So Columbus leaves in 1492.
296.96 -> What is the first time the Portuguese
actually managed to reach India?
301.72 -> Right.
303.16 -> So, no, the Portuguese were not successful
305.88 -> in reaching India by sea
until Columbus was well away.
309.92 -> Well,
311.36 -> were on to Columbus.
312.96 -> This is what Jonny Harris says.
314.52 -> They listen to a pitch
from this Italian sailor,
317.52 -> and this sailor wants them
to fund his new startup called
320.48 -> What If We Sailed West
to Get to Asia instead of east?
324.12 -> Super promising name, remember?
326.28 -> Okay, I actually kind of like that joke.
328.88 -> And he is right.
329.68 -> The world did look like this.
331.4 -> There were maps around from people
that thought Asia was really close by.
335.44 -> Take this map from Toscanelli.
337.32 -> It shows Japan within reach.
339.88 -> Columbus used this and other calculations
to say Japan is only 2500 sea
345.08 -> miles away,
whereas in reality it's more like 10,000.
348.96 -> Columbus
was actually cherry picking proof.
351.16 -> And even though these maps existed,
the general consensus still was that
355.08 -> people didn't think you could reach Asia
by sailing west.
358.56 -> It was just too far away.
360.24 -> And they were totally right.
361.92 -> So Spain was like, Yes, great idea.
364.16 -> High risk, high return. Do it. Columbus.
367.16 -> Columbus put his findings before Spanish
369.12 -> experts of the court twice,
and he was rejected twice.
372.96 -> Only the intervention of the Spanish king
374.84 -> made it possible for Columbus
to get his boats.
377.72 -> Probably because he felt low risk,
potential high reward.
381.72 -> I mean, this Columbus dude is so sure
he's right against all odds.
386.6 -> He has a lot of confidence.
388.36 -> Okay, now we move on to one of the most
contested points for me in this video.
392.64 -> And for that, I'm going
to put on my Johnny Harris debunk hat.
396.72 -> It's a moment
he says Columbus changed the world.
399.36 -> This big epiphany.
400.96 -> And this is where the biggest light bulb
402.84 -> moment of the century goes off
in this guy's head.
406.72 -> Change of plans, boys, says Columbus.
409.64 -> We're going to claim this land Columbus
realization was instead of trading,
414.52 -> they could actually just
claim land for themselves.
417.84 -> And this changed everything.
419.64 -> After all,
no one was making any resistance.
423.76 -> This moment is the foundation upon
which all European imperialism grows.
429.48 -> So, Johnny, he admits in the comments
that he totally dramatized this event.
434.48 -> I don't know why,
435.36 -> because the truth is actually way more
interesting than his dramatized version.
439.4 -> As many people have said in the comments:
his contract
442.28 -> actually said he should claim land
he encountered
445.32 -> and that he would become
some sort of governor of these lands.
449 -> But even if we got Johnny some slack
for story purposes, he is still wrong.
454.64 -> Let me tell you why.
455.84 -> Okay.
456.04 -> So before Columbus went sailing,
457.68 -> there were basically two kinds
of colonial expansion that existed.
461.12 -> The first was the Portuguese way.
463.28 -> You could plug into existing trade routes
by showing up,
466.68 -> occupying
some land build forts and trading posts.
470.76 -> This is what the Portuguese were doing
in Africa.
473.04 -> Take the fort of Elmina that they built.
475.52 -> They did this because there was
a lot of resistance from locals and B.
479.68 -> every one died in the interior of Africa.
482.84 -> Seriously.
483.64 -> Still in the 1800s, up to half of
the colonies could die in certain places.
488.32 -> It's a fun field trip.
489.88 -> The second kind of colonialism is not that
well known.
493.2 -> Since the early 1400, Spain had a colonial
project going in the Canary Islands.
497.92 -> This has been called Europe's
first genocide.
501.44 -> Over the course of a century due
to Spanish
504.08 -> wars and enslavement
the population of the Canary Islands
507.36 -> dropped from estimates of 50 to 80000
to just a thousand Canary Islanders.
512.68 -> The Spaniards faced a lot of resistance,
but eventually
515.84 -> they made the islands into a plantation
economy.
519.48 -> Does that sound familiar?
521.36 -> This is a thing
522.24 -> historians have called a template
for Spanish conquests in the new world.
527 -> So this kind of colonialism
already existed
530.04 -> when Columbus went to the Indies,
and he really didn't care
533.76 -> if the people were subjugating to Columbus
or you had to conquer them by force.
538.68 -> So what did Columbus realize
when he was on his first trip?
541.76 -> Well,
his initial idea when he was selling out
544.72 -> was to plug into existing trade networks,
just like the Portuguese did.
549 -> Remember, his pitch had been
he would find the rich Asian cities
552.8 -> the spices,
the cloth, the house with gold roofs.
556.44 -> And what did he find of all these things?
559.32 -> Nothing.
560.96 -> So Columbus actually got nervous.
563.96 -> He had to tell his bosses
something about this trip.
566.68 -> How was he going to make this
successful enterprise
569.84 -> from the initial idea of Portuguese
trading posts?
572.56 -> He switches to the Spanish style
of colonialism
575.04 -> that they had developed on
the Canary Islands, where they use locals
578.52 -> or import other people
to start the plantation economy.
581.96 -> So this is the big epiphany,
according to Johnny Harris,
584.92 -> but it's not something
Columbus came up with.
586.72 -> It followed from a
need to make something of this voyage,
590.16 -> followed from experience of Iberian powers
593.52 -> that were already colonizing
parts of the world for over a century.
596.88 -> Imperial ism wasn't developed there
and then with Columbus,
600.48 -> and it was also not developed
in encounters with the New World.
603.44 -> That's because history is almost
never decided by big men or women
607.4 -> and their ideas.
608.76 -> The truth is always more nuanced, and
there's always more history to a story.
612.72 -> Columbus
also definitely never said the following.
615.68 -> Forget trade with the East, said Columbus.
618.48 -> There's a bunch of land that we can go
take over in the West.
621.84 -> Because he died believing
he'd found islands east of Asia.
625.92 -> So in his mind, he was in the east.
628.52 -> Okay, so
629.28 -> after this, Jonny says that Spain
and Portugal quickly conquer the empires.
633.72 -> This is how it all started.
636 -> Under this new paradigm.
637.12 -> Both empires expanded very quickly,
forcing the Spanish and Portuguese
641.16 -> languages across the ocean.
642.84 -> And I do want to highlight something here.
645.52 -> Jonny doesn't really delve into this,
and maybe he will do it later.
649.32 -> I want to tell you something about how
the Spanish actually became so successful.
652.92 -> One important reason
653.92 -> that the Spaniards were able to conquer
the empire was they found so quickly.
657.48 -> It's that they befriended local factions
that were angry
661.24 -> at the most powerful factions around.
663.2 -> The Spanish were really trying
to exploit domestic divisions.
667.04 -> If you explain this story
668.36 -> in a way that the Spaniards
didn't really have any help at all,
671.48 -> it makes them seem like
672.48 -> these powerful European warriors
that were destined to take over.
676.68 -> It directly feeds into later
678.2 -> ideas of the racial superiority
of Europeans over all other peoples.
681.96 -> And if you do this,
682.76 -> you also make these people
look like one blob of uncivilized tribes.
686.76 -> But these people had allegiances,
politics and agency.
690.48 -> They chose to support the Spanish,
something that didn't
693.92 -> really work out for them.
694.8 -> In the end, but they chose so themselves.
698.72 -> Okay, so my rant is almost over.
701.56 -> I am going to tell you why
this was so bad in a bit.
704.84 -> But first, I want to compliment Johnny
on the start of the series.
708.4 -> I saw quite a lot of people
in the comments complaining about him
711.4 -> as a kind of a social justice warrior
about how conquest
715.56 -> and subjugation of people
was normal in all of history.
719 -> This is true.
719.88 -> But I still think we have to talk more
about European
722.76 -> colonialism
and the legacy of it for two reasons.
726.08 -> First, the scope and then the ideology.
728.96 -> European powers dominated
almost the entire globe.
732.24 -> They raped, pillage
and extracted resources.
734.76 -> If China had taken over the world,
it would have been equally as bad.
738.24 -> But they just didn't.
And second is the ideology, that
741.84 -> with the conquests was spread around
the world.
744.52 -> People are moral persons.
745.92 -> And to kill or enslave another human
being, you must dehumanize her.
750.2 -> So from the start of the colonial project,
European
752.88 -> scholars made a very big effort
to justify this behavior.
756.36 -> Europeans, they knew murder was bad.
758.84 -> They knew you had to have a just war.
760.92 -> They knew slavery was bad.
It was forbidden in Europe.
763.64 -> But when it's a whole different
kind of person.
766.2 -> Not human at all.
767.88 -> Not so civilized.
769.56 -> Well, then maybe you can enslave them.
773.28 -> So people have now complained
774.72 -> that we're giving too much attention
to the European side of things.
778.08 -> Well, I think after centuries of washing
our hands clean of this past, maybe it's
782.4 -> time to own up to this and actually
really dove into this history.
785.92 -> So for this,
I applaud Johnny Harris. Still.
788.44 -> Why does he make this fictionalized,
791 -> simplified account of history
and why is it such a bad thing?
794.44 -> I think Johnny generally wants people
to get interested in these stories. And
799.68 -> you, yes you, the
800.16 -> audience, you like to watch things
that are dramatized and flashy.
804 -> So he finds a way to make it
as attractive as possible.
807.12 -> But I think he goes too far
with the whole storytelling bit.
810.52 -> It's a bit ironic
that the criticism Johnny has for
813.24 -> the news
could also be leveled at his work.
816.6 -> The news is too flashy,
not nuanced enough,
819.92 -> and it makes you feel informed
for this piece.
823.2 -> Cutting the context
gives you a worse reading of history.
827.52 -> The education niche of YouTube.
829 -> It's not like a peer review paper.
830.92 -> It's also not as fictional as Hollywood
true stories.
833.76 -> I think on YouTube, viewers have an
expectation that information is accurate,
838.52 -> and many don't have the background tools
or time to check if it's really the case.
843.08 -> And so posing a simplified narrative is
maybe the only information people
846.76 -> are going to get from a certain subject.
848.56 -> So why should he care?
850.32 -> Is this all nitpicking and jealousy
from a micro creator?
853.88 -> Well, let me tell you a story about
something that I know Johnny cares about.
857.8 -> It's the origin story of the myth
that people
860.64 -> thought the world was flat in medieval
times.
862.68 -> That's actually a total legend,
and I have no idea why
865.24 -> I was taught that in elementary
school. How did that happen?
868.56 -> I actually genuinely care.
870.04 -> Like, how did that happen?
870.96 -> This myth is mostly the blame
of the novelist Washington Irving.
874.36 -> He wrote a fictional account of Columbus's
travels.
877.24 -> Irving
really went to school on the storytelling.
880 -> He puts down Columbus as a great visionary
883.08 -> man that has to fight against Catholic
clergy at the Spanish courts.
886.6 -> The book is ridiculously popular.
888.84 -> 175 editions were printed in the 1800s.
892.24 -> But Irving presented this story
as a struggle of scientific
895.56 -> method
against medieval religious backwardness.
898.76 -> And this epic struggle
has such an impact on his contemporaries,
902.04 -> it soon morphs into a belief
these clerics thought the world was flat.
905.92 -> Eventually, his historical fiction
907.8 -> becomes an historic fact
that persists to this day.
911.4 -> If some of these folks were around
when Columbus set sail,
914.4 -> they must have been founding members
of the Flat Earth Society.
917.64 -> They would not have believed
that the world was round.
921.36 -> Let's be clear.
922.2 -> Johnny is not as bad as Irving.
923.96 -> But a story like that makes sure
that myths about history are born.
928.12 -> This idea that Irving put forward soon
930.72 -> became the idea
that medieval people were all stupid.
933.96 -> And when history is used to present myths
that explain
936.36 -> the modern world, we should be very wary.
939.92 -> Okay, one last thing before we go.
941.92 -> Johnny, if you ever see this, please,
please, please start citing sources.
946.88 -> It gives more accountability.
948.8 -> It's going to be a starting point
for people
950.76 -> to read more about certain subjects.
952.56 -> It can help academics
that write books to do more research
955.92 -> that can eventually be an inspiration
for your videos.
959.52 -> Okay, Randolph.
961.92 -> I made this video
by using different sources.
964.16 -> They are in description.
965.76 -> YouTubers Imperial and Faultline
gave feedback on the script.
969.12 -> All mistakes are, of course, still mine.
970.92 -> Don't forget to check out their channel.
972.4 -> I definitely didn't touch on everything
that was wrong with the video,
975.64 -> so let me know in the comments
what I missed
977.88 -> and be sure to check out my content which
I tried to make as truthful as possible.
983.4 -> See ya.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAeoJVXrZo4