Predictions about 2020... from 1994

  Рет қаралды 312,433

J.J. McCullough

J.J. McCullough

3 жыл бұрын

I found a 25-year-old book claiming it could predict the future. How accurate was it?
Check out The World in 2020 by Hamish McRae:
www.amazon.ca/World-2020-Hami...
SUBSCRIBE: kzfaq.info?...
FOLLOW ME:
🇨🇦Support me on Patreon! / jjmccullough
🤖Join my Discord! / discord
🇺🇸Follow me on Instagram! / jjmccullough
🇨🇦Read my latest Washington Post columns: www.washingtonpost.com/people...
🇨🇦Visit my Canada Website thecanadaguide.com
HASHTAGS:

Пікірлер: 2 100
@adrano_
@adrano_ 3 жыл бұрын
Can't wait for the next installment of this video in 2046... see you there everyone!
@stadtbekanntertunichtgut
@stadtbekanntertunichtgut 3 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if I will live that long becaue I love Bacon to much but I hope J.J. will keep making videos for a long time. Sorry for ruining your perfect 69(nice!)
@wah3271
@wah3271 3 жыл бұрын
I’ll make sure to like my own comment in 2046.
@DieReweEmskirchen
@DieReweEmskirchen 3 жыл бұрын
see you, greetings from bologna
@KevinWorthington
@KevinWorthington 3 жыл бұрын
President of Canada, eh? Breaking ties with the Commonwealth? Sort of a prediction of your own, JJ.
@mstech-gamingandmore1827
@mstech-gamingandmore1827 3 жыл бұрын
count me in
@CH-ek2bm
@CH-ek2bm 3 жыл бұрын
I watch The Onion for accurate predictions about the future
@williamkarbala5718
@williamkarbala5718 3 жыл бұрын
Lol in 2016 former governor Arnold Schwarzenegger endorsed former first lady Hillary Clinton to become president over Republican candidate Donald Trump. Who would have guessed Naked Gun 2000 would have been the most accurate vision of the future!
@yerdasellsavon9232
@yerdasellsavon9232 3 жыл бұрын
Based
@seneca983
@seneca983 3 жыл бұрын
Do you mean this video? kzfaq.info/get/bejne/n7FzZZSoqcfWcqM.html
@RamLaska
@RamLaska 3 жыл бұрын
r/nottheonion
@jackevans975
@jackevans975 3 жыл бұрын
C H watches The Onion for accurate predictions about the future
@brandonking1737
@brandonking1737 3 жыл бұрын
I predict that by 2035, most people will be 14-15 years older than they are today
@noneimportant5951
@noneimportant5951 3 жыл бұрын
Damn that’s interesting can’t wait 14-15 years to find out
@fullmetalalchemist9126
@fullmetalalchemist9126 3 жыл бұрын
@El Globo 😁
@BloggerMusicMan
@BloggerMusicMan 3 жыл бұрын
Amazing! XD
@johnmvd9111
@johnmvd9111 3 жыл бұрын
Ballsy move
@blackvaiii3011
@blackvaiii3011 3 жыл бұрын
can't wait to see if it's true !!!!
@darreljones8645
@darreljones8645 3 жыл бұрын
"Even if I'm President of Canada." Um, JJ, don't you mean "Prime Minister of Canada"? Or are you making another prediction about the future?
@caffeinatedlinux
@caffeinatedlinux 3 жыл бұрын
Either the Queen is immortal or a chunk of the Commonwealth is gonna strong republican movements when Charles becomes king.
@sabbs_
@sabbs_ 3 жыл бұрын
The Americans are getting to him 😔 🤚
@hobbabobba7912
@hobbabobba7912 3 жыл бұрын
@@caffeinatedlinux It is possible although that is yet to be seen. The Crown hasn't done him any favours though.
@The98597thMark
@The98597thMark 3 жыл бұрын
He said it with such a smirk, he knows exactly what he's saying 😛 And he's probably not wrong: 2046 is a long way away.
@kgd9725
@kgd9725 3 жыл бұрын
@@caffeinatedlinux I highly doubt Charles would be able to keep his own UK throne for a long time . He is despised by the public and would very much try to interfere in government .
@grmancool
@grmancool 3 жыл бұрын
"...let's hear some of your calm, moderate predictions" JJ TO HAVE HAIR LONG ENOUGH TO TOUCH HIS ANKLES
@BradyPostma
@BradyPostma 3 жыл бұрын
His hair was shoulder-length in 2005, in 2010, in 2015, and today. There's no trend of longer hair predicting this outcome.
@stproducciones9140
@stproducciones9140 3 жыл бұрын
He has white hair now :0
@Mnogojazyk
@Mnogojazyk 3 жыл бұрын
Then J. J. changes professions and becomes the Moscovite Metropole!
@eddiewillers1
@eddiewillers1 3 жыл бұрын
JJ continues to mindlessly bounce up and down while speaking.
@JJMcCullough
@JJMcCullough 3 жыл бұрын
@@eddiewillers1 I’m using my mind when I do it!!
@_underscore_8303
@_underscore_8303 3 жыл бұрын
by the year 2046 I predict JJ will have so much memorabilia that behind him that they will unite into one sentient being which will provide colorful interjections during videos
@BradyPostma
@BradyPostma 3 жыл бұрын
I predict that he'll get a second house just for his memorabilia.
@jeanpoutine9824
@jeanpoutine9824 3 жыл бұрын
(Dominion Voting Systems + George Soros's Tides + Federal Infrastructure Minister's financed NGO's) +(215 Spadina Ave,, Toronto) = Digital electoral fraud + coup d'état on sitting US President
@BradyPostma
@BradyPostma 3 жыл бұрын
@@jeanpoutine9824 There was a recount of Dominion voting machines that confirmed that the paper ballots matched the digital records. The other factors you mentioned have no apparent connection to vote counts. Therefore, the factors you mention collectively changed the vote counts by zero votes. Also, your comment is off-topic.
@jeanpoutine9824
@jeanpoutine9824 3 жыл бұрын
@@BradyPostma You're asleep, just food.
@BradyPostma
@BradyPostma 3 жыл бұрын
@@jeanpoutine9824 You offer no proof. If you were right, you'd have at least some proof. If I'm asleep, why are you talking to me? Who talks to sleeping people?
@paperbagman9445
@paperbagman9445 3 жыл бұрын
I’ll be voting J.J. as president of Americanada in 2046
@historyhub9211
@historyhub9211 3 жыл бұрын
We all should and will.
@andknuckles101
@andknuckles101 3 жыл бұрын
eliminate quebec
@LEO_M1
@LEO_M1 2 жыл бұрын
@@andknuckles101 Just grant them independence and let them do their own thing.
@bloodlust_9890
@bloodlust_9890 2 жыл бұрын
Quebec and Texas will be independant
@MrFuzziiWuzzii
@MrFuzziiWuzzii 2 жыл бұрын
I won’t be voting for someone who talks like that, too Canadian and goofy
@Tredenix
@Tredenix 3 жыл бұрын
"A _vision_ of 2020" It's such a shame that this pun can never really be used again.
@NIDELLANEUM
@NIDELLANEUM 3 жыл бұрын
"I can't remember what I did X years ago, I don't have 2020 vision"
@abdullahelnaas4473
@abdullahelnaas4473 2 жыл бұрын
Have you heard the one that goes "Hindsight is 20/20 and 2020 is a b****?"
@fritzderblitz
@fritzderblitz 3 жыл бұрын
I predict that by 2046 computers will be twice as powerful, 10,000 times larger, and so expensive that only the five richest kings in Europe will own them.
@jakubpociecha8819
@jakubpociecha8819 3 жыл бұрын
"Only the five richest kings in Europe" That is,if there will be five or more kings in Europe
@SylviusTheMad
@SylviusTheMad 3 жыл бұрын
@Ilyass Abbad "Eventually there will be only five Kings left in the world: Hearts, Diamonds, Spades, Clubs, and the King of England." - King Fahd of Saudi Arabia.
@Hurrikan7638
@Hurrikan7638 3 жыл бұрын
@@SylviusTheMad it won't be the king of England, but still queen Elizabeth II
@adamnelson4428
@adamnelson4428 3 жыл бұрын
Wait about computer dating?
@jimmym3352
@jimmym3352 3 жыл бұрын
I predict Queen Elizabeth will still be around.
@MikeApollo1
@MikeApollo1 3 жыл бұрын
I think everyone forgot around the end of 2019 when we were joking around about how they was going to be a plague in 2020,Just like 1720,1820 and 1920.
@spanishpizzagirl4126
@spanishpizzagirl4126 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I remember telling that to my friend, and told her that nothing will happen.
@aotoda486
@aotoda486 3 жыл бұрын
I did _not_ know that was a thing
@thatssofetch3481
@thatssofetch3481 3 жыл бұрын
How many pandemics have there been outside of years with ‘20’.
@hydrolito
@hydrolito 3 жыл бұрын
Spanish flu was 1918 to 1920 although did not completely go away as some people die from flu every year.
@asunflower7993
@asunflower7993 3 жыл бұрын
Well it's an evitable every 100 years there's always a plague I don't like it we could've stop the spread faster but it's just one of those nature things
@keshersygo
@keshersygo 3 жыл бұрын
I think in the next 20 or so years, we're going to see a steady increase in conditions like depression and anxiety all throughout the western world. We'll reach a state where going to a therapist and taking medication will be considered as normal as going to the dentist, in comparison to a time like the 1950s where people really looked at you funny for that sort of thing. As such, we'll see many new mental health facilities being opened up to cater to this need and increasing integration of mental health care and technology, such as telemedicine. Mental health care in various forms, more or less formal, will increasingly become a huge and very profitable industry. Currently, there's a common belief that things like depression are a result of some moral failing, or the result of spending too much time on the computer, etc, but as time goes by, the older generation (who often find these kinds of mental health struggles hard to relate with) dies and more and more people are treated with these conditions, the prevailing attitude will just be that depression and anxiety are simply facts of life that everyone has to deal with.
@gmodrules123456789
@gmodrules123456789 3 жыл бұрын
That's fucking horrible. Sounds like society in general has gone to shit.
@MrAlen6e
@MrAlen6e 3 жыл бұрын
@@gmodrules123456789 I idk governments have neglected mental health for far too long, I know even England has a minister for loneliness so it's definitely a possibility unless authorities take the mental health crisis serious
@DaraGaming42
@DaraGaming42 2 жыл бұрын
and thats not happenig now ??
@keshersygo
@keshersygo 2 жыл бұрын
@@DaraGaming42 It is, I am extrapolating that the trend will continue
@Kitschune24
@Kitschune24 2 жыл бұрын
Sounds nice, honestly. Maybe it'll be cheaper to get a therapist, maybe there won't be as much of a negative stigma around getting help for your problems, and maybe therapy and medication will be more advanced by then. Instead of just bottling it up and pretending it isn't a thing we could have better quality of life on a larger scale. Or... maybe that won't happen. Who knows?
@avaevathornton9851
@avaevathornton9851 3 жыл бұрын
Some of my predictions for 2046: Energy: A majority of global electricity production will be from renewable sources, though fossil fuels and nuclear will still provide significant fractions, and there will be several countries where internal combustion engine vehicles are straight up illegal. The biggest sources of renewable energy will be very cheap wind and solar, probably followed by hydro (which will have seen little or no cost reduction compared to now). Geothermal and marine energy also have the potential to deliver huge amounts of power sustainably, but I'm not sure 25 years is enough time to scale them up. It's plausible thermodynamically viable fusion will exist, but it'll be a very small part of the global energy economy if it does. There will still be a large market for oil, but it'll be shrinking and today's energy exporting countries will have suffered severe financial strains, in some cases consigning their populations to decades of stagnating or declining living standards. Demographics: The number of children born per year worldwide has been more or less constant since the 1980s, so by 2046, global population growth will have slowed to a crawl. The average age of the global population will have increased a lot and many of today's middle income countries (almost certainly including China) will have shrinking populations. Geopolitics: I hope I'm wrong about this part, but I expect China will become a semi-pariah state with a stagnant economy and an ossifying autocratic political system. If you tried to explain the levels of optimism many people, including myself, had towards China in the early 2010s to most teenagers in 2046, they would look at you askance. The United States will remain the world's most powerful country, though never with the kind of influence it had at the start of the century. India and Africa will be much more important on the global stage than they are now. The EU will not have changed too drastically, since Ukraine is the only large country that still has much chance of joining; the UK will also have a constituency for rejoining but by this time it will mostly be aging eccentrics and both major parties will be explicitly committed to staying out. Other: Some crewed missions may have reached the moon or Mars, but the current space colonization fad will have been quietly abandoned once policymakers remember these worlds are unimaginably remote and inhospitable wastelands and no, I don't think I'm being too harsh there. In some developed countries, Vegans and Vegetarians will be over 10% of the population, possibly over 20%. Most countries, including many African and Middle Eastern countries, will be noticeably less religious than they were in 2020. COVID will still exist in isolated pockets and cause sporadic outbreaks, but wont materially affect most people's lives. Life in most of today's Least Developed Countries will have improved significantly. Late 2010s/early 2020s nostalgia will be near its peak.
@Emanuele246gi
@Emanuele246gi Жыл бұрын
I would say something about the colonization thing, by 2025 NASA plans to come back to the moon, so if it won't be Mars, it certainly will be our satellite to be colonized
@w1ckedn0nsense34
@w1ckedn0nsense34 Жыл бұрын
Your predictions are strange to me because sometimes they seem too fast and sometimes they seem too slow. 15 years is both astronomically long and incredibly short at the same time. Predictions like 20% of people being vegan seem so unlikely to me because in 15 years, it's mostly going to be my generation "in charge" in their 40s as it were, and most of them are uninterested in making that change and so are the younger people I see. Same with the climate predictions, we're still expanding so much I just can't imagine that we would finally start building the infrastructure we would need to get to that point within the next few years. However I also have to thank you, because the predictions did allow me to imagine a world where we decided to DO something. It did help it seem more possible and I have some hope for the future now.
@Emanuele246gi
@Emanuele246gi Жыл бұрын
@@w1ckedn0nsense34 Many predictions for climate change are both depressing and full of hope: the renewable thing is a big one because it's true that is growing exponentially, never before being sustainable made so much economically sense as it is now
@josephlehman1242
@josephlehman1242 Жыл бұрын
Nuclear is renewable
@avaevathornton9851
@avaevathornton9851 Жыл бұрын
@@josephlehman1242 Not unless we're ignoring the meaning of the term and just using "renewable" as a general term for being environmentally unproblematic. New actinide reserves aren't being generated in the Earth at all, much less regenerated on human time scales, in fact without human intervention they would still be very slowly decaying into lead. Personally though, I'm becoming increasingly inclined to say "renewable" just isn't a very helpful classification; much clearer probably to just divide primary energy sources into combustion and non-combustion.
@AntonWongVideo
@AntonWongVideo 3 жыл бұрын
The great thing about writing a book predicting the future is that you can sell it two times: once at publish date and once after prediction date! It's GENIUS!!!
@NotShowingOff
@NotShowingOff 3 жыл бұрын
A lot of books these days are available online for free. Therefore, once again technology has usurped that expectation.
@twoscarabsintheswarm9055
@twoscarabsintheswarm9055 3 жыл бұрын
@@NotShowingOff bruh, you could just sell it online for money
@roofogato
@roofogato 3 жыл бұрын
ok im too stupid to understand this-
@firepuppies4086
@firepuppies4086 3 жыл бұрын
@@roofogato prediction book: I think this will happen. Post that timeframes predicted: What did I tell you? Nobody is smart but me!
@mohamedfaizan9844
@mohamedfaizan9844 3 жыл бұрын
I predict that all the oil rich Middle Eastern countries will collapse in the next 2 decades. Two reasons - one, they are too reliant on one resource that will eventually lose its value in a world increasingly moving towards clean fuel. And two, 80% of their population is comprised and run by expats from South Asia who are not given any rights of equal residency or citizenship - once the economy dries up, they will have no stake or reason to stay, while the local unskilled population is incapable of running a country on their own. I’m willing to bet my last penny on this prediction.
@SalutExpla
@SalutExpla 3 жыл бұрын
Hey we'll all be back here in 2046. See you then!
@mohamedfaizan9844
@mohamedfaizan9844 3 жыл бұрын
@@SalutExpla it’s a deal :-)
@SalutExpla
@SalutExpla 3 жыл бұрын
@@mohamedfaizan9844 heck yes!
@mohamedfaizan9844
@mohamedfaizan9844 3 жыл бұрын
@@HamishDuh2nd that may be true - but James, a country is not only a sum of its resources. The people matter. Imagine if 80% of your economic engine is only working for hire, and have no stake in the country’s future. The way they treat their migrant population is nothing less than modern day slavery - it will bite these countries back when they actually need them
@wills1644
@wills1644 3 жыл бұрын
@@mohamedfaizan9844 why I’m not looking forward to Qatar 2022... pure corruption and all the stadiums have been built with modern day slave labor
@toontrooper4103
@toontrooper4103 3 жыл бұрын
His personal feelings may have slipped in a bit at the end. Just a lil bit.
@candacen7779
@candacen7779 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it dabbled a bit into Ayn Rand-ian territory there.
@MrAlen6e
@MrAlen6e 3 жыл бұрын
@@alexsheppard153 yeah I love JJs commentary but there's parts where you can tell
@user-hq3lh4qo1l
@user-hq3lh4qo1l 3 жыл бұрын
are y'all butthurt here or what ? This thread seems kinda whiny, idk...
@greywolf7577
@greywolf7577 3 жыл бұрын
@@user-hq3lh4qo1l Um, you seem to be whining about the fact that not everyone agrees with the guy in the video.
@user-hq3lh4qo1l
@user-hq3lh4qo1l 3 жыл бұрын
@@greywolf7577 u misunderstood my astonishment of how can someone actually get that low
@alsyrriad
@alsyrriad 3 жыл бұрын
Eh. I think when it comes to the water shortage prediction, McRae might’ve been wrong if he was talking about North America, but in other places in the world, the threat of a water shortage is very real, as he predicted. South Africa’s water shortage and irrigation issues and the dam dispute between Egypt and Ethiopia, which came close to starting a war last summer, are prime examples of this. I think the reality is that the water shortage issues aren’t as widespread as McRae might’ve thought, but I definitely wouldn’t say they aren’t a concern right now in the world, or, at the very least, that they aren’t going to escalate sometime in the near future.
@candacen7779
@candacen7779 3 жыл бұрын
Agreed. And throughout North America, there are pockets where fresh water sources are indeed a major concern. Most of them are occupied by cities and towns that the mainstream media doesn't pay attention to, but the problem is there and growing.
@enricobortolazzo2651
@enricobortolazzo2651 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I feel like JJ's dismissal of this is a little short-sighted
@MrAlen6e
@MrAlen6e 3 жыл бұрын
@@enricobortolazzo2651 well it is a very western perspective so I understand for not really giving a proper oversight of other regions
@Ushio01
@Ushio01 2 жыл бұрын
Fresh water is very much a concern in the USA it's just the majority of people are ignoring it and will continue to do so till the effects of no fresh water affect them.
@bulldogger1467
@bulldogger1467 2 жыл бұрын
The West US already has severe water shortage issues
@Waldzkrieger
@Waldzkrieger 3 жыл бұрын
Kind of impressive that he predicted *Parasite* would win best picture, wow
@riversidepark4107
@riversidepark4107 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah but is it as accurate as Time-Traveler Noah’s prediction about Canada in 2030?!
@JJMcCullough
@JJMcCullough 3 жыл бұрын
TTN admitted he made it all up smh
@BradyPostma
@BradyPostma 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, what a plot twist!
@twoscarabsintheswarm9055
@twoscarabsintheswarm9055 3 жыл бұрын
Bruh TTN lied?
@MaggotDiggo1
@MaggotDiggo1 3 жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough Who'd a thunk it?
@ukraineballaviation1483
@ukraineballaviation1483 3 жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough it was actually pretty obvious that he lied
@snakearekat2634
@snakearekat2634 3 жыл бұрын
Although he was pretty neutral in his predictions, he seemed pretty biased when he talked about American politics lol
@jayjaybee
@jayjaybee 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the last quote really spoke volumes about where he stood. As does JJ's productive vs. whiners remark tbh.
@LeavingGoose046
@LeavingGoose046 2 жыл бұрын
I mean it sounds like what's going on truth be told, whether or not you like the framing of it. There is the increasing socialist movements in the young, the rise of intersectionality and general woke culture, all things that can and have been framed as the culture war between the whiney and self reliant, even if you'd argue unfairly so.
@AB-yw9bd
@AB-yw9bd 2 жыл бұрын
I agree, it almost felt like you knew who he was talking about without saying conservative and liberal. While that prediction was most likely targeted at conservatives being productive and liberals not, you can really apply that theory in either direction. Conservatives and liberals "whine" on about the same level just about different stuff. Liberal progress and conservative financial progress are different but are progress nonetheless. So saying one side will whine while one side wants progress goes both ways.
@a2rhombus2
@a2rhombus2 2 жыл бұрын
@@AB-yw9bd He said the whiny side are the people that feel "disadvantaged." Pretty sure there's not much other ways to interpret that other than taking a shot at minority groups.
@periodicart444
@periodicart444 2 жыл бұрын
@@jayjaybee JJ also opens his video by complaining about marx of all things and how his view of the future is wrong, when in reality most of what he said came true. It kind of bums me
@adanactnomew7085
@adanactnomew7085 3 жыл бұрын
I love how in the quote sections, the font/typeface chosen is very typical of the mid 80s to 90s commercials. A very nice touch.
@louisll.nicholls5347
@louisll.nicholls5347 3 жыл бұрын
Nothing to do with the video, but how many items of clothing does J.J. own? It seems he wears an outfit one video, and then a different outfit the next, with neither being worn again in videos...
@JJMcCullough
@JJMcCullough 3 жыл бұрын
I’m glad you noticed that.
@cutecommie
@cutecommie 3 жыл бұрын
@Consensual Buttrape Owning different clothing isn't a skill. Putting outfits together is.
@tescomealdeals4613
@tescomealdeals4613 3 жыл бұрын
I love this channel because it feels like you are actually there, sitting around the campfire with him, rather than just listening to a story or taking a lecture.
@TheMainGuyYT
@TheMainGuyYT 3 жыл бұрын
Evidence suggests that Waluigi will be added into smash bros by the year 2030
@TheGhostOf2020
@TheGhostOf2020 3 жыл бұрын
Based. #ImWithWah
@BitchChill
@BitchChill 3 жыл бұрын
Not happening
@TomA-pw7rv
@TomA-pw7rv 3 жыл бұрын
@@BitchChill there is hope
@af1shyscheme453
@af1shyscheme453 3 жыл бұрын
What do you mean this guys writing wasn't in some way motivated by his political beliefs when he literally said one side of politics would be reliable and establish strong, rich capitalism and the other side would be whiney.
@GarrettMerkin
@GarrettMerkin 2 жыл бұрын
One thing I don't like about this channel. J.J. seems to only be concerned if the political beliefs aren't aligned with his. If they are than they are fairly balanced. If not? Then something something whiny. Love this channel but that's a big hypocritical turnoff.
@nelsongibson114
@nelsongibson114 2 жыл бұрын
My exact thoughts. "Whether you're on the left or right, you could agree..." Um, no? That was a very obviously right wing sentiment made by the author.
@uni4rm
@uni4rm 2 жыл бұрын
@@GarrettMerkin All he did was read what the author said. He clearly wasn't interested in arguing with people who are going to take offense and whine about being called whiney.
@ryanwortman9405
@ryanwortman9405 2 жыл бұрын
@@nelsongibson114 Disagree, he said a theme of whiney vs. productive. You could absolutely see mainstream conservatism as whiny people who refuse to change and mainstream progressivism as productive and improving society. I'm sure most progressives see Ben Shapiro as whiney.
@acasualcactus5878
@acasualcactus5878 3 жыл бұрын
The Siiiiiiiiiiiiimpsoooons! Can’t predict the future.
@bandaid007jl
@bandaid007jl 3 жыл бұрын
lol I see what you did there
@Rose-inspirations
@Rose-inspirations 3 жыл бұрын
Don't say that 🤔 hmm I'm still waiting for one of the episodes to come true 🤣🤣
@marcello7781
@marcello7781 3 жыл бұрын
The Simpsons throw an arrow and people draw a target around it.
@Sorcerers_Apprentice
@Sorcerers_Apprentice 3 жыл бұрын
It mocks our present follies so well, we end up thinking it predicted them at a later date. We simply failed to learn from the mistakes of the past and ended up repeating them.
@jeanpoutine9824
@jeanpoutine9824 3 жыл бұрын
The entire world sees the crimes being committed by corrupt Canadian governments, but most Quebecers still refuse to see what's going on and and why evil prevails in Quebec, because the occult is not something hidden, it is what you refuse to see, here:. www.bitchute.com/video/U4uCpQjHUk5N/ Le monde entier voit les crimes commis par des gouvernements corrompus du Québec, mais la plupart des Québécois refusent toujours de voir ce qui se passe et pourquoi le mal prévaut au Québec, parce que l'occulte n'est pas quelque chose de caché, c'est ce que vous refusez de voir.. ici: www.bitchute.com/video/U4uCpQjHUk5N/
@tcmtv001
@tcmtv001 3 жыл бұрын
I always love hearing how predictions play out several years later
@tylerhackner9731
@tylerhackner9731 3 жыл бұрын
Same it’s very interesting
@heinrichbier4759
@heinrichbier4759 3 жыл бұрын
If you noticed though none of the climate “alarmists” predictions ever come true.
@pixel6698
@pixel6698 3 жыл бұрын
@@heinrichbier4759 That's because many of the predictions were made to give a sense of urgency, if only we had listened back then and already started making changes. The earlier we fix our long term problems the better.
@andrewjones2132
@andrewjones2132 3 жыл бұрын
@@heinrichbier4759 Many "alarmists" were making predications about climate change back in the 80s, and we are now seeing the consequences. McRae is quoted as saying the effects of climate change would be ignored for a generation - he was right about that.
@heinrichbier4759
@heinrichbier4759 3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewjones2132 yeap I was an alarmist myself once. I received a degree in Biology with honours and marine and freshwater biology from a “prestigious” Canadian University that is rife with group think constantly pushing doomsday scenarios. In the 70’s the “consensus” was we were entering a “little ice age”. There was few really cold winters that also coincided with the oil embargo and group think about “peak oil”. Or how about the Maldives should have been completely under water 20 years ago and then 10 years ago. Climate change is of course a real thing. Climate is by definition equates to change. Believing we can “control” climate by trying to manipulate only factor, CO2 (and not the largest factor), is like believing vaccines can save us all from a virus... Climate is so complex it’s beyond arrogant to think we can somehow control it to the point where it will remain static indefinitely. Just more invisible boogie men to create fear and panic which keeps us all distracted and divided as the CCP and the Globalists destroy democracy...
@actanonverba3041
@actanonverba3041 3 жыл бұрын
the “tug of war” prediction seems pretty biased in how he portrays one group against another.
@KarlSnarks
@KarlSnarks 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah he's trying to portray working class struggle as just a bunch of whiney people who don't want to take responsibility.
@koodscood3027
@koodscood3027 3 жыл бұрын
@@KarlSnarks I think that categorization could just as easily be applied to certain elements of the right as of the left. Those who blame everything on immigrants, for example.
@KarlSnarks
@KarlSnarks 3 жыл бұрын
@@koodscood3027 Good point, but I wasn't necessarily talking about left/right. The problem with it is how the writer frames it, the people who criticize the state or big business for systemic issues that disadvantages them (low minimum wages, bad working conditions, expensive healthcare etc.) are considered complainers even though the issues are very real. I do think there genuinely are people (both on the left and the right) that just complain because they don't want to take responsibility for their lives, but most people who're struggling in life do so because of bad circumstances (often created by the failings of the system). However, the author (as it seems to me, because of the framing) basically says "If you don't succeed in life it's because you didn't pull yourself up by the bootstraps and complained" I could be misinterpreting it, but I don't think so. Btw, I do believe that even if you're disadvantaged because of matters outside of your influence, you should still do everything in your power to improve your life, both individually (improving yourself, building financial security if possible etc.) and collectively (organizing protests, taking part in mutual aid, unionizing etc.)
@MentalGains
@MentalGains 3 жыл бұрын
@@KarlSnarks are most people struggling because of a "bad circumstance" not under their control? I would say no.
@camerondailey2627
@camerondailey2627 3 жыл бұрын
@@MentalGainsthis is a bit of a long message but I think we can have a fair discussion about this, I'm not trying to fight you, this is my perspective on the issue. I would say many people absolutely are disadvantaged in ways that make it inherently more difficult for them to work their way into the middle class. Corporations take advantage of people, underpay them, and fire them for unionizing. Systemic inequality is very much a real issue, climbing out of poverty is extremely difficult as one gets caught in a cycle of working their asses off to pay the bills and then have no money left to put into a savings account for the future, especially those without any support system and those who have people dependant on them, whether that be children or elderly parents. The Healthcare system is flawed to a ridiculous level, to the point that even people who have saved up money their entire lives and who would have been able to retire comfortably wind up paying out their entire life savings because of a health concern. Medications that cost $10 to produce cost $1,000 dollars a month because private corporations own the patents to those medications and overcharge for them because they are necessary for someone with a chronic illness to remain a living, human person. College prices are so high that the return on a college degree, especially if you have to take out student loans to pay it, are very often not even worth getting the degree. I think we can both agree that those who are born into families with the financial ability to pay for their degrees are significantly more likely to be able to start saving their money at an earlier age, this is a straightforward and easy to agree upon example of systemic inequality. This is especially exacerbated by the fact that many people are born into disadvantaged families and, even if what you are saying is true, the child did not have the ability to choose when and to whom they were born. With our grade school education system so inherently based on class which is influenced by geography, this puts children born into a poor family at a disadvantage at a very young age. They don't get to choose how they are raised, and without good programs in place to help raise them to be good citizens, it's understandable that many of them do not become so. I could go on. There are things people can do to improve their lives, yes, but with a system that makes that increasingly difficult as time goes on, at what point does the disadvantage you are born into make it nearly impossible to fully climb out of poverty? Especially if you have more than one, or even all, of the issues I've listed here.
@finished
@finished 3 жыл бұрын
just want to clarify because there may have been a bit of misinformation about one third into the video about 'alternative energy' the facts are that solar is THE cheapest form of energy and there are no safety concerns with the use of solar energy, wind is cheaper than coal but cannot be sustained without government funding as solar can be at this point, there are safety concerns with wind but they area less than the safety problems we know are associated with fossil fuels. that is all
@tricksor6589
@tricksor6589 3 жыл бұрын
JJ clearly hasn't looked at the Middle East and Ethiopia and Egypt for water wars
@scienceface8884
@scienceface8884 3 жыл бұрын
India and China are also starting to point fingers and guns at one another, the main cause seemingly being water
@mckaystarr789
@mckaystarr789 2 жыл бұрын
Those are not primarily due to climate change though. At least in India and China, that conflict has been ongoing for basically centuries.
@LeavingGoose046
@LeavingGoose046 2 жыл бұрын
@@mckaystarr789 If you heard JJ speak it wasn't about climate change but rather population growth and ever growing need for water. While climate change most certainly does effect modern water wars, some didn't need a changing climate as a catalyst. I know several US states are going through lengthy legal battles as well, and another good place of conflict for water is in central Asia in the soviet mess countries.
@Malkintosh
@Malkintosh 3 жыл бұрын
As far as future predictions go, I'd say McRae did pretty well.
@candacen7779
@candacen7779 3 жыл бұрын
@@alexsheppard153 Glad I wasn't the only one who picked up on that.
@jimmym3352
@jimmym3352 3 жыл бұрын
He is perhaps too optimistic about America. Our political divisions seem to be getting worse. And despite what he says, common sense isn't prevailing, and the unproductive members of society (both on the left and right) seem to be getting louder and angrier. I see no resolution to this.
@abunchofiguanaswithinterne2186
@abunchofiguanaswithinterne2186 3 жыл бұрын
@@jimmym3352 Be the change you want to see. Encourage unity and instill common sense. The foundation of our country starts at the individual after all.
@tigervalley62
@tigervalley62 3 жыл бұрын
Better than most predictors I've come across.
@SnailSlugSlut
@SnailSlugSlut 2 жыл бұрын
Aren’t all predictions about the future?
@thelongslowgoodbye
@thelongslowgoodbye 3 жыл бұрын
My prediction for 2046 is that there would have involved some sort of military conflict with China. I don't know if I'd go as far to say all out war but there will be some escalated aggression. I do think that some diseases such as HIV/AIDS and some minor forms of cancer will have cures. I think that life between now and 2046 won't look terribly different and won't look like some Sci-Fi movie (the movie GATTACA comes to mind for some unknown reason). However, I do think most people will have to put more effort into searching for meaning in their lives as technological advances will mean that we would possibly have more free time on our hands as machines do more of the menial & repetitive work than the jobs of the past. I do see some professions just disappearing altogether and being replaced by machines such as accounting. Retail stores will mostly be replaced by showrooms and people would just order their desired items online. Supermarkets will follow the Amazon/Wholefoods model of having very few human employees and mostly rely on technology for purchases/transactions to take place with customers rather than queuing up at a checkout. I do think interest in cars will drop as more people will use public transport in urban areas and cars will just be for hobbyists and people who live in remote areas.
@Wiki9339
@Wiki9339 3 жыл бұрын
For cars, its more likely that there will be a lot more autonomous cars, eventually leading to an autonomous taxi service. Since there would be no driver, it would be a cheap service so most people will opt to not buy a car. Tesla plans on making it mainstream by 5 years, but imo its going to take 10 years
@teddyjones3093
@teddyjones3093 3 жыл бұрын
Cool prediction. I agree with you.
@jipster7028
@jipster7028 3 жыл бұрын
I think this prediction could very well come true
@EnigmaticLucas
@EnigmaticLucas 3 жыл бұрын
I agree with all of your predictions except the China one (because MAD is a thing)
@xxfortnitegamrxx2182
@xxfortnitegamrxx2182 2 жыл бұрын
A vaccine cure for cervical cancer which is mostly effective was announced
@katherinelong5692
@katherinelong5692 3 жыл бұрын
I predict that in the future, people around the world will be eating and drinking at around 12-1pm on most days, roughly during the time and occasion we currently call lunch...
@denisenova7494
@denisenova7494 3 жыл бұрын
Many hot countries have siesta then and they'll eat later. Interval fasting might still be thing too.
@niccage6375
@niccage6375 3 жыл бұрын
I feel like we could have our first millennial president in 10 years.
@giffordscott2599
@giffordscott2599 3 жыл бұрын
We could've had it this year... pete buttigieg
@christiangomez9576
@christiangomez9576 3 жыл бұрын
I want a younger leader I don't want any old farts.
@65mcman
@65mcman 3 жыл бұрын
It could be in 4 years, if a republican is elected or if Biden decides not to run again
@Gallic_Gabagool
@Gallic_Gabagool 3 жыл бұрын
@Willy Nilly Lmao as if Boomers are doing a good job... Have you seen the state of this country?
@niccage6375
@niccage6375 3 жыл бұрын
@@65mcman it better not be josh hawley aka a traitor
@poke-champ4256
@poke-champ4256 3 жыл бұрын
The joy of a new JJ video now also includes to see how his hair has gotten longer :D
@JollyOldCanuck
@JollyOldCanuck 3 жыл бұрын
Gold bugs fail to recognize that there is inherent value in believing a currency is valuable even if it's just paper. If someone is willing to accept $1.50 for a cup of coffee or a candy bar then it has value based on people's willingness to accept it.
@arrgghh1555
@arrgghh1555 3 жыл бұрын
They also can't grasp the fact gold has no inherent value either.
@adamsfusion
@adamsfusion 3 жыл бұрын
@@arrgghh1555 I actually wish gold was no longer a prized jewelry material because it has so much better use in the sciences and engineering fields. It's expensive in those fields not only because it's inherently rare to some degree, but because it has such a high demand in being worn and adorned where it's not actually useful.
@Steadyaim101
@Steadyaim101 3 жыл бұрын
Not a gold bug, but for me an issue of abandoning the gold standard or just the principle that 'something tangible' must exist to back up the value of products is in financial trading. Things like investing on the dividends, credit swapping, cryptocurrencies are all completely, 100% reliant on the willingness to accept it has value. Its a circular abstraction of an abstraction (the 'value' behind them is based on confidence in the economic system, which is in turn based on continual investment). I think this is what Marx called insane money, since although financial value is being created when you do something credit swapping, its only on paper, there's often no utility value that comes out of it (like the development of some product or provision of a necessary service).
@babyinuyasha
@babyinuyasha 3 жыл бұрын
@@adamsfusion silver has more industrial uses than gold, that's one reason why it's cheaper. Silver is also more abundant than gold, but it's rare enough to hold value, albeit it fluctuates a ton. In the 1930s an ounce of silver was 25¢, in the late 70s it was $50. As of the writing of this comment, silver is just under $26 an ounce
@babyinuyasha
@babyinuyasha 3 жыл бұрын
I'm not a gold bug by any means but I support the idea of going back on the bimetallic system. $1 in 1898 had the buying power of $31 today, the dollar was backed by gold and the coins were worth thier face value in silver, hell the dollar was silver.
@fancywrong6405
@fancywrong6405 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine the look on J.J.'s face when he finally becomes emperor of West-Hemispheria
@dlugi4198
@dlugi4198 3 жыл бұрын
To be fair that dudes predictions seem to be a little bit affected by his conservative ideology too.
@alezar2035
@alezar2035 3 жыл бұрын
He is mostly affected not by his conservaturism which he is definitely in some part, but mainly by his historical stagnation It was pretty popular ik the 90s they thought the world had reached peak history and that the future will be like the 90s but with slowly better technology, which is totally wrong
@perforongo9078
@perforongo9078 3 жыл бұрын
How so?
@pascalausensi9592
@pascalausensi9592 3 жыл бұрын
It looks like he was mostly right, though.
@Audi1081
@Audi1081 3 жыл бұрын
@@alezar2035 lol that’s what I thought too...totally wrong
@Audi1081
@Audi1081 3 жыл бұрын
Agreed lol. I think that largely they sounded pretty tame but saying that one side of Americans will be self reliant/motivated and the other side will be “whiny and blaming/suing institutions such as insurance companies, corporations, etc”..... lmao, need I go on?! (I will.) Def conservative dog whistling and once again the people (conservatives) claiming to be the defenders and harbingers of personal liberty snd freedom defending these ENORMOUSLY POWERFUL entities that have some degree of control over all of us and then blaming the people (liberals) that speak out against it (which is utilizing one of our enshrined personal liberties, btw). So that’s how I think it’s skewed a little by the guys personal politics.
@thomasvincent8905
@thomasvincent8905 3 жыл бұрын
8:38 To be honest, Emmanuel Macron was in the incumbent party before leaving it and is a former banker, so his election is not that big of a shock. However, it's true that many people are today pushing for a sixth republic, like Jean-Luc Mélenchon, who finished fourth with 19% of the votes in 2017.
@jonasschich5979
@jonasschich5979 3 жыл бұрын
well, I'd say that the constitution doesn't need to change for the hole political system to change. In many parts of europe it appears as the big moderat partys in power since the war are declining and beeing replaced by more extrem and less stable partys (in France that is the fall of the konservativs and the socialists and the rise of the front national and macrons and melochons partys)
@pascalausensi9592
@pascalausensi9592 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine if the 2017 runoff election had been between Mélenchon and Le Pen.
@cutecommie
@cutecommie 3 жыл бұрын
@@pascalausensi9592 Based, finally putting those libs to the test whether they prefer socialism or barbarism.
@kaiserwilhelmii674
@kaiserwilhelmii674 3 жыл бұрын
Egypt is gonna experience a water crisis, with that Ethiopian Dam project.
@TheGhostOf2020
@TheGhostOf2020 3 жыл бұрын
True, but any of these disputes like between China and India in Tibet, stem from man-made disruption of natural waterways. I’m fairly certain the original predictions in the 90s stemmed from the belief that the future would have systematic shortages in fresh water supplies. Because it’s more a crisis over inter-state resource sharing/cooperation, rather than something that is caused by overpopulation or a drying global climate.
@eccentriastes6273
@eccentriastes6273 3 жыл бұрын
11:53 While I agree with you that most of the analysis in this book seems to be commendably unbiased, this statement strikes me as belonging more to the bad type of prediction. That is, the statement is both very ideologically loaded and hasn't been fulfilled. We're definitely seeing a lot political polarization, a "tug of war," but the even if you accept the premise that leftists are just whiners, the idea that the current American right-wing zeitgeist represents rugged individualism is absurd. When I think "personal responsibility," I don't think of defiantly refusing to take precautions against a pandemic and storming the capital building because you can't admit you lost an election. Of course that's not all conservatives, but it is unfortunately the most powerful and influential strain of them for the last four years.
@JJMcCullough
@JJMcCullough 3 жыл бұрын
You are projecting a partisan bias onto his analysis that he didn’t say. There are plenty of whiners on the right wing. In fact I think his analysis is important precisely because it talks about a cleavage in attitudes, rather than philosophies. If you watch Tucker Carlson all he does is whine about rich and powerful people screwing conservatives.
@eccentriastes6273
@eccentriastes6273 3 жыл бұрын
​@@JJMcCullough Thanks for the reply. I would think that if we're talking about a meaningful political battle at all, we must be talking about a partisan/tribal battle. Even if both the left and right have both responsible and irresponsible elements, at the end of the day the right-wingers tend to ally with right-wingers against left-wingers and vice versa. At least that's how it seems to work currently. (I will say that recently I've seen the hardcore Trumpists getting more and more pushback from within their own party. We'll see how that plays out in the longterm.) I suppose I could be misreading the quote and it's more about a conflict inside people's heads between different cultural tendencies rather than in the real world between people who act out those tendencies. In that case I could see it as more plausible.
@historyhub9211
@historyhub9211 3 жыл бұрын
I love it when someone makes a reasonable prediction and has facts to back it up. My best example is you, because you are so calm and informative.
@comradepolarbear6920
@comradepolarbear6920 3 жыл бұрын
10:34 that aged well
@Christopher_TG
@Christopher_TG 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I was about to say, that prediction was remarkably accurate.
@theMOCmaster
@theMOCmaster 3 жыл бұрын
president of canada, now with 50 additional provinces
@seneca983
@seneca983 3 жыл бұрын
I predict that in 2046 the EU will be somewhat larger with at least more of the former Yugoslav republics joining but likely it will be at most moderately more integrated than today. So basically I think the trend predicted by McRae will continue for the time being.
@Somajsibere
@Somajsibere 3 жыл бұрын
Personaly, I think it will be a lot more like the early US in 2046, mainly based on the fact that you start seeing Eurofederalists poping on social media, meaning the idea becomes more accepted. It would still be diffrent states, but thet would have a economic, and foreign policy union, as well as a common military.
@seneca983
@seneca983 3 жыл бұрын
@@Somajsibere To me, that seems quite uncertain (though still possible). You might see a lot of federalists but there's a lot of eurosceptics too on social media and a quarter of a century might prove too short a schedule for such a change.
@Somajsibere
@Somajsibere 3 жыл бұрын
@@seneca983 The way I see it is simple, for the most part even Euroskeptick parties abandoned their leave the EU stances(see Marine Le Pen who abandoned this stance in 2019, well not completly, she now wants the EU to remain as it is) meaning the entire populatio moved towards eurofederalism. Also not to mention the EU isn t there for the good feelings of cooperation anymore. It is a real solution to real problems that plague Europe. Also worth noting is that by early US I mean US before 1812, back when the nation was still a confederacy, and the states were more like countries. Surprisingly not too diffrent from EU now.
@seneca983
@seneca983 3 жыл бұрын
@@Somajsibere "for the most part even Euroskeptick parties abandoned their leave the EU stances" But they can still likely delay further integration. Things like common defense take time. The early US was much looser than today but it did have a common defense as it got one from the get-go.
@Somajsibere
@Somajsibere 3 жыл бұрын
@@seneca983 I mean you are right, but by 2046 it will probably a thing, that is why I say that by 2046 will be like early USA. I mean there is a common border agency, in the form of Frontex. Edit: Also a lot of Euroskeptics are euroskeptics because they are nationalists, and many of these people moved towards pan-european nationalism. Weirdly enough I think they support a united military.
@cypoopie
@cypoopie 3 жыл бұрын
What a nice birthday present! Thanks for all the videos, they have taught me a lot!
@historyhub9211
@historyhub9211 3 жыл бұрын
Happy Birthday.
@dominichunt5526
@dominichunt5526 3 жыл бұрын
bruh i somehow got here 30 seconds after the upload last time i was this early russia was an empire
@squamish4244
@squamish4244 3 жыл бұрын
bruh you use the Imperial Russian flag, you would know.
@thiviyansaravanamuthu4395
@thiviyansaravanamuthu4395 3 жыл бұрын
Don’t you mean Prussia
@ActuallyApollo
@ActuallyApollo 3 жыл бұрын
@@squamish4244 prussia and russia are different countries
@squamish4244
@squamish4244 3 жыл бұрын
@@ActuallyApollo No shit. I mixed up one eagle with another eagle. Sue me.
@sirsesamesalad
@sirsesamesalad 2 жыл бұрын
Actually the water part is true partly, Hoover dam is running out of water and most of the lakes in california are almost dry. If you live in California or Nevada this won’t effect you very much right now and if you don’t live in that area at all you’re good.
@Rokkoasas
@Rokkoasas 3 жыл бұрын
Would you make a second video about this book? I loved it, got so hooked that I couldn't believe it was that short!
@jerrell1169
@jerrell1169 3 жыл бұрын
Very funny that he predicted that France would have ANOTHER revolution. I’ve also seen that his prediction about China is echoed by plenty of people who think that China will sort of decentralized or even Balkanize once the nations core leadership loses its power to any extent. Also it seems like he thought that the culture war we have now would be waged more so by traditional conservatives against borderline Libertarians which is just sort of comedic to me.
@tylerhackner9731
@tylerhackner9731 3 жыл бұрын
I love hearing how predictions play out
@SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand
@SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand 3 жыл бұрын
hey buddy nice stolen comment :)
@aarfeld
@aarfeld 3 жыл бұрын
The reason why more people didn't work from home, even though the technology existed to do so, was because employers thought that their employees wouldn't get their work done and would cheat. They wanted to keep them under their watchful eyes in an office. Well, the pandemic changed all of that and it turns out that people have been very productive working from home, and employers like the potential saving that could accrue from renting smaller office space. I predict more work-at-home opportunities in future, and something of a crash in the office real estate market, to go along with the decline in the need for retail stores, which is already underway.
@jimmyz2684
@jimmyz2684 3 жыл бұрын
Hey JJ, I know your "Leader of every country" idea didn't turn out as interesting as you wanted it to, but maybe do a video series on the FIRST leader of every country? I think that might be pretty interesting.
@erraticonteuse
@erraticonteuse 3 жыл бұрын
Is it just me or was his prediction about the US: "there will be growing inequality due to poor economic planning on big business/the government's part, also people who blame big business/the government for their problems are whiny"?
@ivetterodriguez1994
@ivetterodriguez1994 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I didn't get that. Clearly, those people just want something done about our systemic economic inequality. But I guess you'd have to live here to really understand the sentiment.
@coddyriggin
@coddyriggin 2 жыл бұрын
Well jj and the writer are both conservatives that hate left wing populism. Jj’s statement that he was unbiased in his predictions is absurd and really really shows his bias. Ironic that he doesn’t catch himself.
@sinanbirol1053
@sinanbirol1053 3 жыл бұрын
wait you're telling me we don't live in late stage capitalism??
@gamermapper
@gamermapper 3 жыл бұрын
Biggest joke
@jake3736
@jake3736 3 жыл бұрын
According to Marxists everything is late stage capitalism
@RatBoyXXVI
@RatBoyXXVI 3 жыл бұрын
Americans do, at the very least
@SuperSMT
@SuperSMT 3 жыл бұрын
It's just capitalism. Nothing 'late stage' about it
@Optimistprime.
@Optimistprime. 3 жыл бұрын
I like these fun type of videos! Everything is so serious theses days. Great video!!
@felipeitoanuatti
@felipeitoanuatti 3 жыл бұрын
If JJ’s president of Canada, that means no more monarchy and no more Governor-General. Triple victory for JJ.
@lajya01
@lajya01 3 жыл бұрын
@@HamishDuh2nd By 2046, my prediction is Qc separatists will be dead and the province will become a bigger NB speaking some kind of Franglish. Either way, I don't care, I know I'll have moved out from there by then
@khkh
@khkh 3 жыл бұрын
He was suspiciously accurate, it would be interesting if you could do an interview with him
@Corwin256
@Corwin256 3 жыл бұрын
Ask him who wins all the horse races for the next few years.
@justinbowen2509
@justinbowen2509 3 жыл бұрын
Memes about the Simpson’s predicting are out! Memes about Hamish McRae using common sense to predict the future are in!
@JennyLeigh2001
@JennyLeigh2001 3 жыл бұрын
The thing that struck me most is when you said “The much newer tendency for people to refuse to take responsibility for the consequences of their own actions and instead blame the state, big business, etc” can apply to both left and right mentalities. And the really funny thing is they BOTH see the other side with that mind set, yet the people with those tendencies are on both sides... interesting.
@williancruz9657
@williancruz9657 2 жыл бұрын
Man, we're already in the water crisis. Crop failures have been happening all over the world, and back when I still lived in brazil we had a year of water rationing 6 years ago because the reservoirs were below 0% capacity and drawing from emergency reserves. I don't doubt many people all around the world have similar stories. You just happen not to notice because you live in a first world country.
@Rytheking2
@Rytheking2 3 жыл бұрын
I misread this as “from 1984” and I thought you went full Dave Rubin
@uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753
@uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753 3 жыл бұрын
Reading predictions from the past is SUCH a fun pastime Check out the People’s Almanac trilogy from 1975-81, shit had some absolute GOLD in it
@inwalters
@inwalters 3 жыл бұрын
What about "The Book of Predictions" by David Wallechinsky, Amy Wallace and Irving Wallace - some of the predictions in there were clearly the result of people dropping acid.
@juanpineda469
@juanpineda469 3 жыл бұрын
Or those French illustrations about life in the year 2000
@JustANervousWreck
@JustANervousWreck 3 жыл бұрын
@@juanpineda469 those are the best.
@uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753
@uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753 3 жыл бұрын
@@inwalters Irving Wallace was the author of The People’s Almanac IIRC, great works
@MarcoLopez-mz1xc
@MarcoLopez-mz1xc 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are so interesting 🤩
@10mmenjoyer
@10mmenjoyer 3 жыл бұрын
I’d love an interview with him today
@lux2094
@lux2094 3 жыл бұрын
these predictions are not entirely devoid of ideology. He only seems "moderate" because his ideas align nicely with neoliberal capitalism. the last prediction in the video was the best evidence for this.
@a2rhombus2
@a2rhombus2 2 жыл бұрын
JJ considers himself to be a moderate despite being a devout capitalist lol, he's a bit biased towards seeing this guy's views as common sense
@itisnotsosimple
@itisnotsosimple 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I agree. I haven't seen too many of this guys videos but the fact that he smuggly dismissed the concept of people making predictions based on ideology and acted like he was some galaxy brain who observed the world as it really is just made him look like an idiot to me. He doesn't even realize his own beliefs are ideologically fueled.
@AaronFevens
@AaronFevens 3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your channel because you clearly strive to prevent your political biases and philosophical beliefs from coloring your videos. While most other channels and media are becoming increasingly politically polarized, you manage to remain fair and balanced, for the most part.
@jarretpaul
@jarretpaul 3 жыл бұрын
I'd have to agree 100%.. I found his channel during the Canadian elections to get a better perspective but found I could really relate and look up to JJ in many ways. Such a great channel.
@camerondailey2627
@camerondailey2627 3 жыл бұрын
I think his political beliefs definitely bled through a little at the end there, what with calling the people using their right to freedom of speech to call out real and serious problems in our society "whiny". I find that to be a little disingenuous.
@superdan2010
@superdan2010 3 жыл бұрын
I’m in love with JJs hair ❤️
@valheffelfinger6521
@valheffelfinger6521 3 жыл бұрын
J.J - I gotta say I watched probably the first 20 hours of your content with eyebrow firmly raised due to your previous adventures in Punditry on the Sun News Network. However, I am continually impressed at the very reasonable narratives of politics and history on this channel. So much so that I share your primers on Canadian Governance and political history with friends and family that express interest. So basically I'm writing this to say that if you admire an author like McRae you should be proud of how well you've done the same on this channel. That being said I don't know how you and pundit you are the same person, but truly it doesn't matter. Your impact here is a benefit to anyone who follows you and I hope you're proud of what you are managing to accomplish. Please keep up the great work. It's desperately needed.
@valheffelfinger6521
@valheffelfinger6521 3 жыл бұрын
*20 hours is hyperbole but it was a while.
@fredricknoe3114
@fredricknoe3114 3 жыл бұрын
There's a game from 1988 that predicts the future called Cyberpunk 2020. It's what inspired Cyberpunk 2077.
@maloviv1232
@maloviv1232 3 жыл бұрын
There is also a Cyberpunk game from 1988 that is set in 2013
@fredricknoe3114
@fredricknoe3114 3 жыл бұрын
@@maloviv1232 oh yeah
@AntonWongVideo
@AntonWongVideo 3 жыл бұрын
last time a Canadian team won the Stanley cup was 1993...imagine if he made THAT prediction in 1994
@REDDAWNproject
@REDDAWNproject 3 жыл бұрын
By 2046 the oilers will still have a team full of potential
@E4439Qv5
@E4439Qv5 3 жыл бұрын
@@REDDAWNproject ...you're talking about Houston, right?
@REDDAWNproject
@REDDAWNproject 3 жыл бұрын
@@E4439Qv5 edmonton
@madhav766
@madhav766 3 жыл бұрын
Such a great video! Good job as usual J.J. Nothing sus here. 😁👏🏼
@RobedLogic
@RobedLogic 2 жыл бұрын
kinda got chills at the end there when he said "aggressive common sense" will take back over. please, god. please.
@Iknowthismeme
@Iknowthismeme Жыл бұрын
The part about 90s Italy being divided because of differences between northern Italy and southern Italy is a bit more complicated. During the 90s Italy went under a big chain of changes and it’s often marked as the beginning of a new historical period there. Maybe you could look up at what happened between 92’ and 94’, I think it could be interesting enough to be covered in a video or in a KZfaq short.
@RyszardPoster27
@RyszardPoster27 3 жыл бұрын
Literally in 2020 we saw the beginning of water conflicts over water dams in Africa and in Asia, so it's not a small problem. Also 9:26 did the Kaliningrad Oblast gain independence? xD
@RAMZIAARON
@RAMZIAARON 2 жыл бұрын
I havent used "cable tv" for 8 years now and I'm never going back. Never going back to paying huge amounts for companies to show me ads.
@rogerknights857
@rogerknights857 Жыл бұрын
I like the way you just plunge into your talk without a lot of “throat-clearing.”
@triteobservations4494
@triteobservations4494 3 жыл бұрын
There was a pretty great comic about the U.S./Canada water war that came out a few years ago, titled "We Stand on Guard" I'd definitely recommend it if you're into that sort of thing.
@Skp1452
@Skp1452 3 жыл бұрын
So you think capitalism will just never end. That sounds even more absurd.
@cutecommie
@cutecommie 3 жыл бұрын
"It is easier to imagine an end to the world than an end to capitalism"
@liamcastillo2902
@liamcastillo2902 3 жыл бұрын
Captilsm has endured more
@Skp1452
@Skp1452 3 жыл бұрын
There was a time when feudalism was predominant and had endured more than capitalism but over time capitalism came to become the more sustainable mode of production. Same thing will happen with socialism
@aronchai
@aronchai 2 жыл бұрын
It's also doubtful to me that the next economic paradigm will have been accurately predicted by people from the 19th century
@Skp1452
@Skp1452 2 жыл бұрын
@@aronchai evolution was discovered in the 19th century. Why not scientific socialism?
@rainmanjr2007
@rainmanjr2007 3 жыл бұрын
So often we get schooled about histories so this piece is really fresh and fun. Good idea, oh Lord.
@SeorgeGoros
@SeorgeGoros 3 жыл бұрын
This American here loves your work JJ. Great video.
@vonelle9122
@vonelle9122 3 жыл бұрын
A video about the Simpsons followed by a video about predictions. Did they do it again?
@siddoo6778
@siddoo6778 3 жыл бұрын
jj the world has been collapsing ever since bretton woods was phased out how could you say such a thing
@jonathanwebster7091
@jonathanwebster7091 3 жыл бұрын
This is fascinating, thanks! I can remember being 10 in 1994 and wondering what the future would entail
@NikeSimmons
@NikeSimmons 2 жыл бұрын
Accurately predicting stuff like this is crazy, it’s a fun experiment to revisit publications such as this
@wendel5868
@wendel5868 3 жыл бұрын
I got one: By 2050, all our issues would be worsened by the degradation of the environment in a global scale.
@captainwilts2244
@captainwilts2244 3 жыл бұрын
for real if I could make a moderate prediction I can see the 2020s playing out very similarly to the 1920s with a few exceptions. I can see due to the pandemic we'll see an economic boom once life gets back to normal as people will be far more willing to live life to the fullest bringing back booms to any hospitality, restaurants, bars, nightclubs and such type businesses which do survive the pandemic. Social change will still change to be more liberal as I can see especially things such as legalisation of weed and a change in the values of the police and prison systems being the key progress of this decade as gay marriage was to the 2010s. Additionally young peoples values such as classifying your pronouns and breaking down of gender barriers will be very normal as it's something we've come to accept as normal. Trump will try to come back in 2024 but lose to a more moderate candidate as most voters will still feel very strangely about his last year in office. The Dems on the other hand will likely try to transition to a more radical system as congress-women such as Omar and AOC become more influential in the shape of the party causing a trump 2016 like rift to form. China and the US will start off a new cold war but not an ideological one such as capitalism vs communism but it will be over more specific issues such as china's treatment of muslims and hong kong, but more secretly it could be because the US is scared of Chinese imperialism spreading more across the third world and China is bitter about US companies going to countries where they can find cheaper labour as China itself transitions more into a black mirror type country with middle class lifestyle but a dystopian government still at the helm In Europe, Scotland will leave the UK, Boris will be the 3rd tory PM in a row to resign on the job and Keir Starmer will be elected. Apart from that I see thing mostly staying the same for most European nations
@TheGhostOf2020
@TheGhostOf2020 3 жыл бұрын
On your predictions regarding the US political agenda’s for the democrats and the GOP, I think you overstate the fluidity of inter-party ideological shifts and their ability to take control. The Democratic Party is arguably only being held together right now by the Trump/Trumpism era. Outside of agreeing on what the top issues are in the country, the specifics on policy become Balkanized (just look at the dem primary season!).
@TheGhostOf2020
@TheGhostOf2020 3 жыл бұрын
Ergo, I think it would be more likely that an intermittent loose shuffling of political alliances where you see a chaotic split in the GOP between more far-right/populist (trump-loyal) and the more moderate, pragmatic, orthodox conservatives who cut ties with Trumpism. And the democrats will gradually begin to form two distinct camps of leftwing progressive idealists, and the more traditional/pragmatist old guard in the party. And from the moderates/pragmatists from both parties having increasingly closer cooperation and platforms. Post-Bernie Sanders, the progressive caucus will be hard pressed to maintain, let alone grow their support. Most of all we’re all going to be reminded that 99% of the time political currents are incredibly glacial.
@gamermapper
@gamermapper 3 жыл бұрын
Hope the US would stop commit war crimes and sponsor tęrrorism
@maxibillionromani2885
@maxibillionromani2885 2 жыл бұрын
Well, you've been right on one so far.
@JL-hz5li
@JL-hz5li 3 жыл бұрын
Jeez this guy is really awesome in getting so many difficult things correct or almost correct.
@PheenKnowsBest
@PheenKnowsBest 3 жыл бұрын
Loving the use of Apple Garamond Typeface!
@jebacc4447
@jebacc4447 3 жыл бұрын
I think JJ will in fact become President of the North American Union between Canada, Mexico and the USA 😌
@brandonbonett6416
@brandonbonett6416 3 жыл бұрын
We can only hope...
@TheGhostOf2020
@TheGhostOf2020 3 жыл бұрын
What would the motivation be though for some kind of union like that, for any side that is, that is better than the present usmca/nafta arrangement?
@JaredJonesAZ
@JaredJonesAZ 3 жыл бұрын
But why stop at making NAFTA a country when we can make NATO a country
@callmedave1280
@callmedave1280 3 жыл бұрын
The funniest 1994 prediction my parents had about 2020 was that i would be a big success 😆
@BS-vx8dg
@BS-vx8dg 2 жыл бұрын
Great video. As you said to place predictions here, I started typing that "In 25 years, J.J. McCullough will be the leader of the U.S.-Canadian merger movement " but then you interrupted my typing with your "President of Canada" line, and now I have to think about it some more.
@maccanorton
@maccanorton 3 жыл бұрын
Enjoying J.J.'s expanded range of sounds effects.
@darrishawks6033
@darrishawks6033 3 жыл бұрын
Imagine thinking the prediction "China will become a loose federation" isn't an ideologically motivated one lol
@nonmagicmike723
@nonmagicmike723 3 жыл бұрын
It was just the conventional wisdom in the '90s that trade and increasing wealth in a country would lead to social and political liberalization. Unlike a society of isolated communities of peasants just scrapping by, the thinking went, one of literate, globally-connected, mostly middle-class people wouldn't tolerate being bossed around by a central dictatorship and would want to have some say in the politics. And so pretty much everyone expected China to liberalize and become more like Japan and South Korea as its economy took off. Not a crazy expectation if you think about it. But it just hasn't happened. The Chinese are a little special.
@2712animefreak
@2712animefreak 3 жыл бұрын
@@nonmagicmike723 I'm pretty sure that the federalization was the thing OP was aiming at. If the people of a country are easily connected to each other, the need for federalization vanishes. In fact, I predict that due to the presence of the internet, the countries will become more... not necessarily centralized, but less federalized, (maybe 'united' is the word I'm going for?) as people associate themselves more with those that share similar interests and values as themselves, rather than people that happen to be geographically close to them.
@nonmagicmike723
@nonmagicmike723 3 жыл бұрын
@@2712animefreak I guess so. But we can't really know unless the people truly have a say in their politics. Then, maybe they'll want to have more wiggle room in deciding their local policies, and maybe they'll want to give those long-persecuted ethnic minorities a greater deal of autonomy; in which case, China will become less centralized. Or maybe they just like central government deciding all for all and double down on the same. It's true that regionalism and regional nationalism in the US has lessened. But the role of state and local politics hasn't. That's because even though a conservative Texan will feel greater affinity towards a conservative Californian than towards a liberal fellow Texan, the idea that "Texas should remain red" is still very much on the back of his mind. So there's still a great deal of political consciousness when it comes to individual states and localities. Only difference today is instead of North vs. South, it's Democrats vs. Republicans wanting to defend their state political turfs.
@jokester3076
@jokester3076 3 жыл бұрын
@@nonmagicmike723 even as a kid, I was highly sceptical of the notion that economic liberalization and increased trade would somehow magically end the one party police state in China. China should’ve been pressured into ending its one party autocracy before we ever open the doors to unfiltered trade and the outsourcing of industry, now we can’t put that genie back in the bottle.
@The98597thMark
@The98597thMark 3 жыл бұрын
Eh, wasn't a stretch given what was going on in the world in the 90s. "Loose" is undefined; you could call the US a loose federation, which by any world standard it is. I think the main sticking point with such a prediction which he didn't really take into account, is that it's easy to centralise power (and governments love doing that) but it's harder to *de*centralise power without a lot of instability and risk. I guess the UK did it on some level, otherwise most federations are either getting closer or they're in the process of more or less collapsing.
@glegos2281
@glegos2281 3 жыл бұрын
i would argue that this pandemic has exposed the inherent problems with capitalism, and if we don't do something about it, its a lot more likely capitalism will be replaced violently rather than peacefully.
@JJMcCullough
@JJMcCullough 3 жыл бұрын
No it’s not.
@glegos2281
@glegos2281 3 жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough just because i'm ideological doesn't mean i'm irrational. i have empirical reasoning for why i believe what i believe.
@glegos2281
@glegos2281 3 жыл бұрын
@@JJMcCullough i still like your videos though, even if we do probably disagree on a lot of things politically.
@nateisawesome766
@nateisawesome766 3 жыл бұрын
@@glegos2281 Don't even bother. He's brainwashed. He will likely never come to terms with reality. What a shame 😐
@glegos2281
@glegos2281 3 жыл бұрын
@@nateisawesome766 you say brainwashed, i say misinformed and politically unaware. i can work with that. calling it brainwashing and immediately writing off all defenders of capitalism doesn't account for people's ability to learn, change, and evolve in their political opinions. i used to be a right leaning centrist, but through learning and changing over time my political opinions changed, and now i'm a leftist.
@TheTNTerminator
@TheTNTerminator 3 жыл бұрын
The pop up ad at the bottom of the video was literally a horoscope ad lol
@djvelocity
@djvelocity 3 жыл бұрын
2:35 - haha Banjo Kazooie reference. Awesome! We are so from the same era 😅🙌
@daisylazy5326
@daisylazy5326 3 жыл бұрын
The reason we didn’t work from home before is because they want to make sure we don’t get too comfortable at work
@paullangland6877
@paullangland6877 3 жыл бұрын
11:10 That's actually very true. Although we see larger states of California and New York see a growing homeless populations, there is a lot of regions in the country that could easily pass for 3rd world countries. This is because many regions had an industry they used to thrive on only to see those industries move away to another country and see the once huge factory or factories in town shut down one by one leaving the towns on the brink of becoming ghost towns. In 2008, when GM nearly went bankrupt, a lot of cities with GM plants nearly lost their whole population and small business like for example diners that were nearby the GM plants slowly went out of business too because there was a chain reaction.
@abdullatifzero
@abdullatifzero 3 жыл бұрын
I’m intrigued by the way he pronounces the word “about”.. it’s mesmerizing!
@perspectivelyspeakingpodcast
@perspectivelyspeakingpodcast 3 жыл бұрын
The first video I watched of yours was "how the Canadian government works (explainer)". Since then, I try to watch as many of your videos as possible. I like your keen sensibilities on delicate or complex subjects, your humility and your fun disposition as well. Another video I get to enjoy and they seem to be coming out a little more frequently. Thanks JJ (•‿•)
Explaining the 2020 U.S. Election - Four Theories of Victory
18:59
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 436 М.
Check out these wild predictions from 1978!
15:59
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 134 М.
Sigma girl and soap bubbles by Secret Vlog
00:37
Secret Vlog
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
100❤️
00:19
MY💝No War🤝
Рет қаралды 23 МЛН
Дарю Самокат Скейтеру !
00:42
Vlad Samokatchik
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
5 Ridiculous 2020 Predictions | Random Thursday
12:05
Joe Scott
Рет қаралды 369 М.
The Rise and Rule of Elon Musk
42:46
Johnny Harris
Рет қаралды 2 МЛН
What were the most important things of 2020?
13:54
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 169 М.
Singapore: The World's Only Successful Dictatorship?
18:25
PolyMatter
Рет қаралды 2,7 МЛН
Ranking the 100 Greatest AMERICANS ever
15:43
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 153 М.
How Britain Became a Poor Country
41:36
Tom Nicholas
Рет қаралды 1,6 МЛН
Listen to world leaders speak English!
20:19
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 2,4 МЛН
The Weird Years of The Simpsons (1989-1994)
14:20
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 286 М.
Inside JJ McCullough's Vancouver Apartment
10:08
Adam J Bell
Рет қаралды 139 М.
The Corrupt World Of Food Politics | Marion Nestle
1:26:10
Doctor Mike
Рет қаралды 247 М.
Sigma girl and soap bubbles by Secret Vlog
00:37
Secret Vlog
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН