心情最複雜的一天…戰爭把人變成惡魔!縱享奢華的總統竟逃來台北天龍國|越南胡志明EP3【海派罐Tour】
Hello everyone, good morning I’m Haipai Canned Food Today’s episode might be a little heavy Because we are going to the War Remnants Museum It records the period of the Vietnam War and the war behaviors of the US military towards the North Vietnamese people So this 21-year-long Vietnam War what exactly did it leave behind for them? We’ll take a look together in a bit If you also like travel and history please help me like, subscribe, and share Thank you The ticket here is $1.52 USD per person And this logo on it is a peace dove I hope the records inside can make people reflect on the act of war Outside the museum there are many things left behind by the US military like weapons and equipment Placing them here, besides documenting the war, I feel also has a bit of a “showing off” meaning Like, “you, the world’s number one superpower, couldn’t beat us,” that kind of feeling I’m not a military enthusiast, so I don’t know much But if you like military weapons this should be a good experience This video today might have many scenes that can’t be shown to you directly Because YouTube will directly demonetize it (yellow flag) Or even give it a red flag (strike) So if everyone wants to see the uncensored footage besides flying over here yourself to see this War Remnants Museum I will also put all the uncensored footage in my channel membership area So you’re welcome to join my “Can Army” This is when Ho Chi Minh and Mao Zedong met The two met in 1959 It’s a “Communist International” feeling This is on July 22, 1966 when the Chinese people were in Tiananmen Square holding an anti-war demonstration But they were mainly protesting They called on the international community to stop the Vietnam War Here are various anti-war protests by Americans back then Because the Vietnam War was the world’s first war broadcast live on the news So many Americans were deeply shocked and realized that war is such a cruel thing So the public became very anti-war It’s like, “we send our kids to the other side of the world to fight a war and they keep d- so many casualties” So the US Congress became less and less supportive of the Vietnam War This is one of the reasons why the US military was forced to withdraw and forced to “Vietnamize” the war As for why the Vietnam War happened it’s because both the Soviet Union and the US wanted to extend their influence into Vietnam This created North Vietnam and South Vietnam But at first, they didn’t want to fight One reason they didn’t want to fight was because the Korean War was also breaking out The Soviet Union and the US were kind of fighting on two fronts
74
00:0Example: 2:33,353 –> 00:02:34,888
So they wanted Vietnam to reunify peacefully So it was decided to give them 3 years and use a national vote to decide whether North Vietnam would reunify the South or the South would reunify the North But because Ho Chi Minh’s approval rating was too high plus North Vietnam had more people South Vietnam felt we had no chance of winning this kind of vote So the two sides started fighting The US, of course, wanted to protect its influence in Asia so the US military joined the war Actually, North Vietnam also had support from China and the Soviet Union in terms of weapons and tactics So the Vietnam War started just like that (Fought for 20 years)
And it lasted from 1954 to 1975 [Chemical Weapons] This area shows how the US military used toxic substances and pictures of them wearing gas masks (Gas masks) These two photos show the US military spraying toxic chemicals The most famous chemical the US sprayed was Agent Orange, also called defoliant Because North Vietnamese soldiers would hide in the jungle There’s a dark humor meme that says “Please find the North Vietnamese soldier in the picture below” and it’s just four pictures of jungles What was tricky for the US military was they didn’t know where the enemy was hiding So they sprayed large amounts of Agent Orange the defoliant to make the leaves wither and fall This chemical substance also causes great harm to the human body This area documents the various chemical substances used by the US military, including Agent Orange Agent Orange was later rated as one of the most toxic chemical substances after WWII It says an average of 85 grams could k-ll about 8 million people And the photos here are of deformed children born after the chemical contamination from Agent Orange The concept is similar to Japan after the atomic bomb the children born afterward were deformed It’s quite similar This kind of chemical substance is extremely harmful to pregnant women and the human body Their genes might not be able to completely metabolize this toxin for several generations During the Vietnam War besides the US military many of America’s allies participated in the war Like the Philippines, South Korea, and Japan all participated in some way This Korean man was a Korean soldier who participated in the war He was also affected by Agent Orange So he came forward to explain how harmful Agent Orange is (Various landmines) (Hand grenades) This room has some paintings about anti-war and peace And there are also some paintings about how the Viet Cong took care of children Overall, it’s a relatively warm and peaceful atmosphere And this space also feels like the coolest space in the entire venue right now So if you feel hot while walking around you’re welcome to come here to get comfortable and cool down [The Crimes of War] This space now documents the crimes of war Inside, it shows various photos of how the US military tortured and killed North Vietnamese people They look quite brutal The photos displayed here are also one of the most horrific crimes committed by the US military during the Vietnam War The My Lai Massacre At the time, the US military believed many Viet Cong were hiding in the villages that soldiers and civilians were mixed So they decided to launch an attack on the village of My Lai My Lai was a village on the front lines at the time A unit of US soldiers led by William Calley charged directly into the village Facing the non-resistant and unarmed villagers they directly used automatic rifles and hand grenades to attack Although some American soldiers at the time were unwilling to obey orders William Calley snatched their guns and attacked Many infants and children were murdered that day Many women were also sexually assaulted and then shot Some were even herded into bomb shelters and killed with hand grenades Finally, a US helicopter passed by The pilot, Hugh Thompson forcibly threatened Calley with his own weapons to stop the massacre of civilians Only then did the slaughter at My Lai come to an end According to statistics 504 villagers were killed that day Afterward, William Calley was convicted by a military court After 3 years of house arrest, he was released In 2009 William Calley finally stated to the media that for what happened at My Lai he felt extremely remorseful and sorry This “Napalm Girl” photo is also a famous scene from the Vietnam War It shocked many people into feeling the cruelty of war This photo also won the Pulitzer Prize for news photography in 1972 However, this napalm bomb was dropped by a South Vietnamese pilot who mistook them for the enemy Besides this girl her two brothers and relatives were also burned [Punishments and Prisons] This is a simulation of their prisons at the time They would lock people in a space like this surrounded by walls Of course, this door didn’t exist This is a door for us to enter They would lock people in here and make them suffer from “sunbathing” Baking people to death As you all know from the past few days Vietnam’s sun is very strong and very hot There would be soldiers guarding here They would lock people inside and let people bake in the sun in here Just like this Extremely painful (Not sure what torture device, but it looks painful) (People being imprisoned) Back then, US soldiers would be up here guarding all their prisoners Some would be political prisoners some would be civilians Like the one we just saw They would be locked in here There are bats up here They look like real bats I don’t know if these bats are to replicate the situation back then But having so many bats here does seem a bit creepy And this cage looks like it’s for caging some kind of beast But it’s actually for caging people This guillotine was imported from France The last person to use this guillotine was probably Louis XVI, right? Although these tortures are very cruel I think if today it was a South Vietnamese prisoner of war or a US soldier who fell into North Vietnamese hands their fate would probably be just as miserable… I’ve actually always been someone who likes watching war movies But war movies they usually minimize the parts with women and children Or even just imply it with camera angles It’s more about presenting the conflict between men After visiting the War Remnants Museum today I actually discovered that during war there are so many women and children who suffer all kinds of harm Much of it is too horrible to look at Even I can’t bear such torment Why did they have to suffer this? And I especially think war another terrible thing about it is you might be a normal person but once you’re on the battlefield in such an extreme environment everyone becomes crazy Like the My Lai Massacre many soldiers might have been unwilling at first but because their superior gave the order they eventually went crazy too They started shooting too and even actively hunted down those unarmed, innocent people Many people, before stepping onto the battlefield might have been a good gentleman But once they stepped onto the battlefield they became a maniac who could kill without batting an eye It’s terrifying Okay, now that we’re done with the War Remnants Museum it’s almost noon We’ve decided to go eat some Bánh Mì (French bread) (Walk 20 mins) [Lunch – Bánh Mì Huynh Hoa] This Vietnamese Bánh Mì spot was also recommended by my friend 5410 The texture is full and the fillings are very generous Unless you are two or more guys otherwise, just ordering the smallest size and cutting it in half is enough This morning we saw the heavier history of the Vietnam War This afternoon, let’s see the world of South Vietnam (Walk 10 mins) [Independence Palace] This building in front is the Independence Palace Also called the Reunification Palace Right It’s both “Reunification” and “Independence” Anyway, it’s the presidential palace of South Vietnam It was originally built by the French during the colonial period The No… Ro… No… Norodom Palace Later on due to war it was damaged So during the South Vietnam period they found an architect to rebuild it It actually contains many Chinese character elements in its design Called “Ji” (Good Fortune), “Kou” (Mouth), “Zhong” (Middle), “San” (Three), “Wang” (King), “Zhu” (Main), “Xing” (Prosperity) “Kou” (Mouth) represents education and freedom of speech “Zhong” (Middle) represents loyalty “San” (Three) means the people need three qualities: humanity, wisdom, and courage “Wang” (King) symbolizes the people as king “Xing” (Prosperity) represents the nation’s prosperity And the entire palace also presents the character “Ji” representing good fortune Next to the presidential palace you can see two tanks These two tanks are the two tanks that crashed into the Independence Palace on April 30, 1975 They are Chinese-made and Soviet-made, respectively
325
00:1Next: 38,531 –> 00:11:39,732
Because the entire Independence Palace has no air conditioning the whole venue is very, very hot I can’t calm down enough to introduce it properly So from now on everything will be switched to post-production voiceover The 1st floor here is the banquet hall for state dinners On March 1, 1975 South Vietnamese President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu received a US congressional delegation here for the last time This oval table is the cabinet office This auditorium is used for meetings, receptions, and ceremonies It feels like many press conferences or awards might also be held here But even today Vietnam sometimes still holds important meetings here This is the favorite painting of South Vietnam’s first president, Ngô Đình Diệm This is the kitchen Equipped at the time with modern facilities comparable to a five-star hotel All equipment is made of Japanese stainless steel This is the president’s jeep South Vietnam’s last president, Dương Văn Minh rode this jeep to Saigon Radio to make the surrender broadcast By the way Dương Văn Minh took over the mess from the previous president Two days after taking office he announced an unconditional surrender The president’s Mercedes-Benz was once one of Nguyễn Văn Thiệu’s cars Produced in West Germany in the 1960s To commemorate the 20th anniversary of the liberation of the South this car was exhibited at the Independence Palace for the first time Next, we’ve come to the basement which is also the Independence Palace’s bomb shelter The entire shelter has many rooms connected by small concrete corridors The walls are covered with 5mm thick steel plates and equipped with a ventilation system But I feel I don’t feel any air conditioning It includes the command center radio station telephone switchboard decoding and transmission equipment Further down is a 2.5-meter-deep safety bunker that can withstand a 2000kg bomb attack The president could enter here directly from the stairs in his second-floor office This place feels perfect for filming a spy movie Something like this This is their telegraph room In the past, to communicate you had to send telegrams one by one Very inconvenient But now we have eSIM No need to swap cards No need to queue at a service center Just scan a QR Code and you can instantly get online abroad No longer need to be like them slowly typing telegrams, okay? We use the fastest eSIM We’ve been in Ho Chi Minh City these few days There’s signal at the concert venue There’s signal at the remote Cu Chi Tunnels Not to mention eSignal (e-xin-tong) supports so many countries Besides the US, Japan, Korea, and Thailand that Taiwanese love to visit it even has Cambodia, Turkey, and the UAE Basically, it has all seven continents covered Now we just have to wait for penguins to learn to use phones eSignal also has 24-hour customer service as diligent as the telegraph operators back then Ready to solve your problems at any time And now click the link in my description box to buy an eSIM immediately and you can get a 5% discount [Back to the main video] This room here is the president’s bedroom in the underground bunker If the area above was bombed or something
414
00:1Example: 4:53,726 –> 00:14:55,060
he could hide down here and sleep There are two phones next to him And next to that is a map of Vietnam Finally, this area is the president’s underground bunker command center Also covered with various maps of Vietnam I don’t know why this gives me Titanic vibes [President in your area] In the middle of the second floor there is a very large very extravagant carpet carved with many dragons It really feels like a Vietnamese emperor This room is the president’s office This room, compared to other spaces is less extravagant I heard that of the 3 phones here one of them is a direct line to the White House The painting behind him compared to paintings elsewhere is also more modest So are all those fancy-looking things just for showing off to foreigners? This mural is a bit extravagant So exaggerated This really feels like a seat for an emperor, right? Even the chairs next to it look luxurious and extraordinary To make others feel… To make others feel the President of South Vietnam is a badass very noble And then his own office well, no one sees it so he just sits there Possible And it’s in a remote place a remote corner So out here, it has to be very magnificent Possible It’s about “face” Or it’s a diversion To make communist spies think this is his office And then he puts his office in a very remote place So if he encounters a communist spy trying to assassinate him he can escape And maybe in here sits… a body double His double Stop making things up This room is the president’s bedroom There’s a beautiful carving above And the president’s bed comfy sofa and lots of cosmetics Oh~ and CHANEL I only recognize CHANEL The First Lady’s bathroom feels bigger than my house This is the First Lady’s dressing room This whole wall is her wardrobe This whole place is her runway Wow And she can look out at the central courtyard while slowly changing her clothes (I’m speechless) And this mirror must be where, after she changed she would pose here Hmm~ “Kawaii desu” Oh~ Going to sleep This is also a guest room Any one of its guest rooms is two to three times the size of my home There are various animal horns here A public service announcement: No buying no killing The President of South Vietnam set a very bad example There’s a Ravenclaw here This is their dining room Wow~ the plates are also noble and luxurious The more I look at these luxurious decorations the more ironic it feels that the entire government was completely defeated in the end This is where the First Lady received the wives of domestic and foreign politicians and ladies The decorative lights are specially designed in the shape of flowers adding a soft atmosphere This presidential palace was actually dual-use for living and working Like Taiwan’s current Presidential Office it’s only for work The president doesn’t live in the Presidential Office The president lives in the official residence So you can see that inside here there’s the president’s bedroom and also their entertainment facilities For example, mahjong a movie theater Because the president and first lady and their children all lived here A bit like the White House Their whole life is in here So they would have these entertainment facilities But I feel having these facilities is also very ironic Because during the Vietnam War America gave South Vietnam a lot of aid But actually, a lot of this aid was embezzled by the officials at the top And I heard some front-line South Vietnamese soldiers even went over a month without pay And here you are, happily eating hotpot and singing It feels a lot like when the Kuomintang (KMT) was about to be defeated in mainland China A bunch of high-level officials embezzled everything So your soldiers couldn’t fight And in the end, you were driven out This is the view of the courtyard from the 4th floor If South Vietnam hadn’t fallen this street in front would be their Ketagalan Boulevard This helicopter up front is the last US helicopter to evacuate Vietnam This one is a replica And on the ground, there are two circles That’s where they dropped bombs back then And South Vietnam’s second president, Nguyễn Văn Thiệu on the eve of the fall in 1975 resigned and fled to Taiwan He lived in Tianmu, Taipei for a while 9 days after he fled Saigon the South Vietnamese presidential palace was breached by the North Vietnamese They surrendered unconditionally We’ve finished touring the Independence Palace You can see I’m covered in sweat Especially in the B1 basement It was ridiculously hot But I saw soldiers there still able to wear masks I’m thoroughly impressed Truly soldiers I don’t know why they don’t turn on the AC in the entire building Vietnam is so hot The only reason I can think of is this is the former enemy’s presidential palace So they don’t want people to have too pleasant of a memory here After all, the architecture and decor are really luxurious So they just cut the AC Maybe it originally had AC vent arrangements They just forcibly turned them into fake decorations So it’s very hot inside, very hot And it makes you feel very irritable while walking around This might be a kind of psychological warfare on their part So today, this historical journey from the Vietnam War to reunification we can consider our tour complete If you liked my video please remember to help me like, subscribe, and share I’ve also enabled memberships now If you’re willing to support me you’re welcome to join my “Can Army” and travel and “stan” idols with me I’m Haipai Canned Food see you next time Bye-bye
參觀戰爭遺跡博物館
許多人看到那些殘忍的照片,都被嚇到摀嘴
再看看當年南越的總統府
是一種前線殘酷,後方歲月靜好的違和感
🌟訂閱海派罐頭🍣 ➤ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpDR8IETd6nkpmoWXYyr9bw
🥫加入會員 ➤ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpDR8IETd6nkpmoWXYyr9bw/join
🎮遊戲頻道 ➤ https://www.youtube.com/@jackleegame
🥫Instagram ➤ https://www.instagram.com/jacklee_gt
🥫Tiktok ➤ https://www.tiktok.com/@jacklee_gt
💰用綠界賞罐頭一口飯吃 ➤ https://p.ecpay.com.tw/AD08EE1
————————————————
✈️出國旅遊必備eSIM卡
🔗海派罐頭專屬購買連結 ➤ https://tinyurl.com/2xwbq87o
🧏♂️24H在線客服 ➤ https://esimconnect.com.tw/#/access/twentyfourcustomerservice
eSIM使用教學 ➤ https://youtu.be/7PtNFZgYTYc
————————————————
【Timecode】
00:00 開場
00:25 戰爭遺跡博物館
03:14 化學武器
05:33 戰爭的罪惡
07:27 刑罰與監獄
08:58 心得
10:08 午餐 Bánh Mì Huynh Hoa
10:39 統一宮
11:49 宴會廳、內閣、餐廳、總統坐駕
12:53 地下室
14:09 工商時間
15:19 總統區域
18:01 休閒娛樂
18:29 心得
19:27 4樓景色
20:03 結尾
————————————————
正宗泰國古法抓龍筋 ➤ https://youtu.be/Eepy6u7k_e8
大麻煩初體驗 ➤ https://youtu.be/eflCCtW0awk
上海迪士尼瘋狂排隊 ➤ https://youtu.be/sKwgHVltJfI
黃牛逼我出國看BABYMONSTER ➤ https://youtu.be/Kfly8beOhL4
追NMIXX衝大巨蛋 ➤ https://youtu.be/ux7Iy_YOwfM
泰國大皇宮 ➤ https://youtu.be/wAauTmutL0E
和前同事畢業旅行 ➤ https://youtu.be/bnrH63jkfhw
————————————————
Music from https://dova-s.jp/
#海派罐頭 #越南 #travel #越戰 #海派罐tour