The biggest issue I have with Utopia, is how accurately it represents working in the public service. I feel like it triggers my internal trauma every episode.
@@yumsy37 Bit more than that actually. His character is perceived to have common sense, only for you to realise he is just like the rest of them except he is the least worst.
I've often said that Utopia is not a comedy/satire; its a public service training film! Many of the situations and events reflected in these episodes are direct reflections of my lived experience in the NSW PS. I just want to know who told working dog about them?!?! 🙂 Triggers my PTSD!
@@gromit368 I still think that Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister is better at telling you why things are they way they are while Utopia is more about highlighting the most absurd moments.
Genius and Utopia should never be used in the same sentence. I have all the seasons on DVD, including the earlier version, Hollowmen (?) and what I could bare of Rose-haven. Then I have the complete series of Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister from the late 1970s / early 1980s. To, the Australian writers .......... I get what you have tried to do.......... but, the comedy / satire misses the mark by a bloody country mile.
This could only come from the capital of AfDanistan, Melbourne. Yes, they really are a bunch of clowns. Intelligence will never penetrate that far flung sh1thole.
@@andrewsmith8729 As Rob Sitch said in an interview 8 years ago, "We don 't write comedy, we make observations." The comedy arises because of the real absurdity that exists within government. You don't need a farce like "Yes, Minister" to highlight it, you just need to put it on show.
and scary... the defence spending they are discussing is the same as what we are now on the hook for with these US nuclear subs... this episode aired in 2017.
Amazing how our government ended up signing a $386 billion deal. Perhaps they watched this satire and thought $400 billion is out limit. Lets not go over it :)
The Dish is my favourite Aussie movie. The Castle is fantastic too and one of the most quotable movies (and I lived in Coolaroo myself for 14 years). Russell Coight is classic. And I reckon Frontline is by far the best Aussie comedy series ever made. Everything they touch turns to gold.
you mean practically nonexistent and goes further into some sort of sick gov welfares program like a hospital without patient and doctors that somehow spend 7 figures each year
AUKUS submarines deal says hi! This show is virtually a doco. So close to the bone, every damn episode and every damn character. I don't know how Working Dog does it time after time, show after show. Genius level.
@@FUnzzies1 They weren't paying for the sub you imbecile. They were paying for a direct, cooperative alliance with a local power that was independent from the USA and the ability to make more sub from the line. The f*cking deal was to basically create the whole damn industry near Perth. Nothing remotely close to the shakedown the US sold about sub they'll probably never gives.
Reminds me of a company who spent millions over 5 years on a rostering tool. It was never going to work as not all attachments were initially purchased but the HR mandarins pressured for success. Every minor positive was praised and any realistic feedback was labelled as 'not being onboard'. In the end it was replaced by an excel spreadsheet developed by a payroll staff member in her spare time!
There are few programs on television that are able to make me laugh out loud! But Utopia does it every time. The implications of the searing insight into government decision-making are, at times, both hilarious and terrifying.
Grew up with Frontline, loved The Hollowmen and adore Utopia, I could not be more excited for season 3. I have to ask though, is there anywhere we can listen to the Utopia credits music on its own? It's such a great tune.
@@FUnzzies1its much easier for the average Aussie (with Chinese bot assistance) to just laugh at this and think 'life immitates fiction' then to understand the nuance of these statements said in the TV show and the submarine deal in real life.
Utopia is, I believe, the perfect comedy. It makes you roar with laughter, it makes you cringe alongside its characters, and it straddles the line between parody and reality flawlessly.
Such a brilliantly written and acted scene, top work from all involved. I look forward to scrolling down and reading the highly educated and very well informed comments regarding our current strategic situation and recently announced naval procurement program from people who believe that our national defense policy should basically consist of being super nice to everyone all the time and that's about it, or that we should be singlehandedly producing every bit of equipment required by all branches of our ADF locally here in Australia. Somehow. While spending significantly less on defense than we are. Somehow.
Yeah, hang on a sec. Think the bloke down the road's got some of that. He'll just pull it out from his coight. Just as soon as he pulls his head away from the idiot box.
How about just being a sovereign nation with an independent foreign policy and stop doing everything the United Snakes "asks". Far beyond "allies" and "friends", and more into lapdog and vassal territory.
Los Europeos hemos puesto el listón muy alto en esto de ser tontos. Y vosotros lo habéis superado. Esta es la triste realidad del club de vasallos de Londres y Washington.
@@carlosduran7800 Si vas a entablar amistad con un acosador, también podrías elegir a los acosadores más grandes de la habitación como tus amigos. ;) También hay beneficios económicos en esto, o al menos ese es el plan. Salud Edit: lol... google translate dijo "acosador"... quise decir "tipo duro", me entiendes. :)
This clip is the most profound form of philosophical education which could be given to senior high school students. The transcript of this clip is suitable for a classroom analysis of language and communication.
the whole point is that if a war comes like currently seems present you have the military to defend yourself or others rather than being caught with your pants down trying to quickly build things because you weren't ready
I wonder if there really are people in authority in the public service who question government policy. I never saw one in the 20 years I was there. In fact, you dont see them in most organisations. The people who get to positions of authority are there because they DONT question. I think Rob would have copped a forced redundancy payout after week 1 of the first series....
There have been moments in my professional life where I have had to turn around to make sure the Utopia production crew wasn't standing behind me filming.
The most frightening aspect of this open source look at our defence is that there is a chance that our enemies could use these secrets anytime before the new subs come and run riot. And we have Albo as the warrior in chief, thanks for service ScoMo. Without you the bald and shiny may have made it, but alas, I'll bet, you are even now plotting your return to help your mate, in his tears.
Military hardware only gets you so far, training and command structure goes a long way too, that's why it would make sense to invest in hardware that lasts 30 to 50 years now to be prepared for tensions in the next 10 to 40 years. And I would totally expect from modern militaries to plan or at least play through scenarios where partners turn against each other. It's not as if the USA is not pushing everybody to ditch China as it sees it could threaten their dominance, and although a scenario where AUS would have to confront the USA is even more unlikely, it does bear keeping in mind that D. Trump was willing to shake alliances in a major way with severe consequences for "the World Order" so in diplomacy too nothing lasts forever. But this is neither here nor there, I am just now discovering the show and I subscribe wholeheartedly.
Who the hell are your enemies? You're literally far away from everyone and have trade relations with all your neighbors. Are all Westerners this dumb to just be fearmongered into submission and following the U.S. party line?
@@lxndrlbr The us is notoriously ruthless to its "friends" when it perceives disloyalty or sees them drifting away from their sphere of interest (or even just exercising the most basic national-self interest instead of prioritizing america's) I mean look at what they did to Gough Whitlam
Lol mate our enemies don't need to do anything. They just sell us stuff while we collapse our country and they keep buying out infrastructure and mineral rights.
i missed the part where he left out that china would never attempt to bully us with their military. I mean taiwan is doing just fine! China doesnt do anything dangerous to them like fire missiles, fly planes or practice wargames about invading them.
@@phillipgilmore8379 ...? what references do you have to come that conclusion ? literally all of the worlds arms procurement and development goes against what you just said
@@braydoxastora5584 Really?! In Ukraine they have been using kamikaze drones to great success against soft human targets. Unmanned fighter jets can out turn and kill ANY manned fighter by pulling 15g. Its simple maths. Military equipment ALWAYS is virtually out of date by the time it hits the market. And, surely, you can see its common sense. Humans on the front will always be the weakest link.
Except no. Trade routes are merely an element of regional politics and military tensions. Good to be reductive in comedy, but pretending this is the reality is stupid at best.
@@S3NTRY trade routes that are currently and wouldn’t be at risk at least from the Chinese end because they do live on that? We already see how the Chinese attack trade with Australia: by cancelling their order and buying from someone else. A press conference, some phone calls to cancel their import orders and make new ones, and that policy was set. Ain’t got anything to do with “freedom of navigation” and defending trade routes from the evil Chinaman. If it were, it’ll be Southeast Asia who would be crying foul. Except, they’re the ones who don’t complain, they’re the ones who continue to reap the benefits of trade with China, and they’re the ones who condemned AUKUS involvement. All despite their actual maritime border disputes with China. You say this is too reductive, but really, it is how the Australian govt presented this situation today and how they justify their response that is making it seems overcomplicated. When having to be held accountable over their decisions, they just claim it’s too complicated to keep the voters off their backs.
Maybe this is the most stupid idea but the General has a point in being reluctant to publicly name the threat to Australia's national interests. By arming rapidly, rival nations risk scaring the other, so even if it was unintended, the other rival nation might interpret the first nation arming as a direct threat to itself, and arm itself more vigorously. Eventually this security dilemma becomes a security spiral.
People aren't dumb. Even if you don't explicitly state it and put on a friendly face. People can pick up on actions and social cues that will give away their true intentions. Same applies to nations.
The point is though, the more obvious and apparent you make it that you feel threatened. The more the other party will themselves feel threatened and arm themselves@@robincray116
Allow me to engage in this hilariously alarmist discussion for a quick second. Suppose we told America to go and get stuffed from a strategic/military procurement perspective. What happens next? Take your time, think it through, then get back to me.
@@S3NTRY the average sky news viewers holds a high school degree or less. Works a low skill job and thinks the world rigged against them. Although they just started their job, they think they can do a better job than their manager. They often work hard and never get promoted, and they don't know why. It's because these people are unteachable. They refuse to be open minded and think they are so smart. So, why bother.
@@De_cool_dude According to Australia's department of foreign affairs and trade, the UK was responsible for 50% of Australia's two way goods trading, whereas Asia was only 15% in 1939. So, no.
The problem with this is what if China does not want to trade peacefully? Then the ability to protect trade routes to everywhere else becomes really important, and it takes a long time to build a navy.
what do you mean not trade peacefully Australia's role is simply to EXPORT to China and import good from China, what the fkkkk are you even talking about?
You have invaded every nation on earth. In most cases twice. China has invaded literally no one. No that one border skirmish with Vietnam doesn't count. Who exactly doesn't want to trade peacefully?
@@zachb1706 because it isn't. China wants a peaceful solution. You do not. You wish to invade them. They build up their defences. That's not getting into the fact that they have every right to invade. You invented Taiwan to steal tens of trillions worth of gold. Give it back along with the island itself and take your traitors to the usa, then you can talk.
A new season of Utopia is coming Wednesday 7 June 8pm to ABC TV + iview! 🏢
This is very exciting news!!
🎉🎉
You blokes couldn't have asked for better marketing, could you? :D
Genuine question, did Germany do trade with Russia, or France, or the UK, or the USA before the world wars?
@@liamrmorgans921 Yeah...
The biggest issue I have with Utopia, is how accurately it represents working in the public service. I feel like it triggers my internal trauma every episode.
The only issue is that the Rob Stitch character has common sense. It would be more like the real world if no one had common sense.
Completely agree.
@@yumsy37 Bit more than that actually. His character is perceived to have common sense, only for you to realise he is just like the rest of them except he is the least worst.
I've often said that Utopia is not a comedy/satire; its a public service training film! Many of the situations and events reflected in these episodes are direct reflections of my lived experience in the NSW PS. I just want to know who told working dog about them?!?! 🙂 Triggers my PTSD!
@@gromit368 I still think that Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister is better at telling you why things are they way they are while Utopia is more about highlighting the most absurd moments.
This series might be really famous in Australia.. But this genius needs to be known in whole world....really underrated
Genius and Utopia should never be used in the same sentence.
I have all the seasons on DVD, including the earlier version, Hollowmen (?) and what I could bare of Rose-haven.
Then I have the complete series of Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister from the late 1970s / early 1980s.
To, the Australian writers .......... I get what you have tried to do.......... but, the comedy / satire misses the mark by a bloody country mile.
It's worth noting that it's called "Dreamland" for international audiences and "Utopia" for the Australian market
This could only come from the capital of AfDanistan, Melbourne. Yes, they really are a bunch of clowns. Intelligence will never penetrate that far flung sh1thole.
@@andrewsmith8729 As Rob Sitch said in an interview 8 years ago, "We don 't write comedy, we make observations." The comedy arises because of the real absurdity that exists within government. You don't need a farce like "Yes, Minister" to highlight it, you just need to put it on show.
Agreed, once I discovered this show, got a VPN and asked my Aussie buddies for a pw so can watch it. It's just too damn good.
The problem with Utopia is it feels too accurate
Almost profetic. I can't watch anymore Simpsons, or Capusotto (argentinian), because what was intended to be a healthy eye-opener failed.
It's honestly hard to get through an episode after working in the public sector so long
@@JackBaker954 it gives me anxiety
I now cant unhear Future Funds after watching Utopia
I worked for the government for 35 years…every episode I watch, I just nod AND shake my head at the same time.
I grew up in the 90s watching repeats of Yes, Minister, and this show sometimes manages to reach that exalted level. This is a *great* scene.
The brilliance of British writing compared to this cheap crap? you really must be a moron.
Reach or exceed
@@jasmeenmalhotra2225 yes, indeed, your curry is made in a hurry
We're in agreement really, but I'd say they're pretty much on par, just a slight difference in style..
Yes, Minister shows the history is repeating itself
and this episode is about 3 years old - both brilliant and timeless :-)
and scary... the defence spending they are discussing is the same as what we are now on the hook for with these US nuclear subs... this episode aired in 2017.
It ages like a fine wine
Amazing how our government ended up signing a $386 billion deal. Perhaps they watched this satire and thought $400 billion is out limit. Lets not go over it :)
@@medved4030 probably where they got the idea from
3 years old?.. are you sure?.. then, "working dog" has someone spying for them.. ha ha ha.. deep inside the government..
Seriously, Rob Sitch is a national treasure.
holy crap didn't realise it was him until i saw this .... changed alot since frontline
Agreed, actor, writer, director, he does it all.
He is a legend for sure
and those 2 other guys, Santo and ?
@@kparker2430 Tony Martin
Utopia wasn’t a comedy, it was a documentary.
This joke never gets old
Nation building....Nation building.....etc etc....
Same as Idiocracy.
Been doing it since 1986 with the D-Generation. You can never go wrong with Working Dog. They never let you down.
"Champagne comedy!"
The Dish is my favourite Aussie movie. The Castle is fantastic too and one of the most quotable movies (and I lived in Coolaroo myself for 14 years). Russell Coight is classic. And I reckon Frontline is by far the best Aussie comedy series ever made. Everything they touch turns to gold.
The D-Generation was funny, Utopia is more like torture though.
Unfortunately I have seen "Any Questions for Ben?"
"Shall we use the nod system" so good!
Sooo good
In 2017 this was satire. In 2021 it became painful reality.
what reality
@@chenliu397 AUKUS Submarine deal
This joke never gets old
@@utkarsharyanbargain that deal
@@FUnzzies1 only became painful reality you unfortunately wake into.
This show is absolutely spot on - hilarious yet scary how accurate it is at the same time 😂
"I wouldn't want to raise tensions"
"Where?"
"In this room"
Gets me every time.
This was produced in 2017! How did they know it was close to $400billion? 🔮😆✨
This is legit how getting anywhere productive in the Australian Army felt for nearly 20 years… especially the last 10
you mean practically nonexistent and goes further into some sort of sick gov welfares program like a hospital without patient and doctors that somehow spend 7 figures each year
AUKUS submarines deal says hi!
This show is virtually a doco. So close to the bone, every damn episode and every damn character. I don't know how Working Dog does it time after time, show after show. Genius level.
Exactly, we pay 30 million for the each Sub and another 30 billion for back door/ protection money
Well it is still an ABC show, my guess is they just change a few names from an ABC think tank or board meeting and bingo a new episode.
The subs that you are saving money on? The subs cheaper by magnitudes over the French subs you were supposed to buy?
@@FUnzzies1 They weren't paying for the sub you imbecile.
They were paying for a direct, cooperative alliance with a local power that was independent from the USA and the ability to make more sub from the line.
The f*cking deal was to basically create the whole damn industry near Perth. Nothing remotely close to the shakedown the US sold about sub they'll probably never gives.
Reminds me of a company who spent millions over 5 years on a rostering tool. It was never going to work as not all attachments were initially purchased but the HR mandarins pressured for success. Every minor positive was praised and any realistic feedback was labelled as 'not being onboard'. In the end it was replaced by an excel spreadsheet developed by a payroll staff member in her spare time!
Yes ,at last ,the inner working mind of Australian defense strategists
"I wouldn't want to raise tensions"
"Where"
"In this room"
LOL
There are few programs on television that are able to make me laugh out loud! But Utopia does it every time. The implications of the searing insight into government decision-making are, at times, both hilarious and terrifying.
Does How I Met your Mother also make you laugh out loud?
I love utopia, I just wish it wasn't so close to reality.
the general trend is that comedy has to increase its ridiculousness in order to keep its lead over reality lol
ITS COMPLETELY INNACURATE
No relationship to reality at all
Putins reality...
OMFG you actually did it. It's sad how well this sketch has aged word for word.
Why because it makes the guy saying that we shouldn't protect our borders look stupid when he can't protect peoples houses from kids 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@Ifyouarehurtnointentwasapplied what?
This comment aged like milk. China thanks you for letting them buy your government.
Love the dry comedy. Please keep making more episodes.
I'm glad we still have Mike Moore to explain this stuff to us
He’s on the Frontline, that’s for sure…
Grew up with Frontline, loved The Hollowmen and adore Utopia, I could not be more excited for season 3. I have to ask though, is there anywhere we can listen to the Utopia credits music on its own? It's such a great tune.
S01E07 has the credits tune by itself :)
I have watched this clip a million times and it gets me every time
This video is absolutely priceless. It needs to be watched by _everyone_ in the world.
When it was made, it was meant to be sarcasm and people laughed. And today, they put this into real action.
Major reason why onion news stopped being funny and started being horrifying. Reality started imitating sarcasm
This ignorance is terrifying.
@@FUnzzies1its much easier for the average Aussie (with Chinese bot assistance) to just laugh at this and think 'life immitates fiction' then to understand the nuance of these statements said in the TV show and the submarine deal in real life.
Been a while since I saw this. Truer today than years ago.
Mike Moore always asks the hard hitting questions...................
One of Australia's best investigative journalists.
You guys have to pump these episodes and series out.. easily one of the best shows ever made
Best show ever. A direct reflection of Government.
Oh man, if it wasn't so funny I'd cry! Been watching these guys since the very first episode of the Late Show, and have never really got over it :)
OMG Brilliant!!!
GOLD! Absolute comedy GOLD!! Subscribed!!
Utopia is, I believe, the perfect comedy. It makes you roar with laughter, it makes you cringe alongside its characters, and it straddles the line between parody and reality flawlessly.
How good is this. Subscribed!
Such a brilliantly written and acted scene, top work from all involved.
I look forward to scrolling down and reading the highly educated and very well informed comments regarding our current strategic situation and recently announced naval procurement program from people who believe that our national defense policy should basically consist of being super nice to everyone all the time and that's about it, or that we should be singlehandedly producing every bit of equipment required by all branches of our ADF locally here in Australia. Somehow. While spending significantly less on defense than we are. Somehow.
Yeah, hang on a sec. Think the bloke down the road's got some of that. He'll just pull it out from his coight. Just as soon as he pulls his head away from the idiot box.
How about just being a sovereign nation with an independent foreign policy and stop doing everything the United Snakes "asks". Far beyond "allies" and "friends", and more into lapdog and vassal territory.
Los Europeos hemos puesto el listón muy alto en esto de ser tontos. Y vosotros lo habéis superado. Esta es la triste realidad del club de vasallos de Londres y Washington.
Well said
@@carlosduran7800 Si vas a entablar amistad con un acosador, también podrías elegir a los acosadores más grandes de la habitación como tus amigos. ;)
También hay beneficios económicos en esto, o al menos ese es el plan. Salud
Edit: lol... google translate dijo "acosador"... quise decir "tipo duro", me entiendes. :)
Utopia is a great documentary series...
Yes!! As the sabre rattling reached fever pitch over these last weeks, I recalled this scene! Thanks for posting it.
This clip is the most profound form of philosophical education which could be given to senior high school students.
The transcript of this clip is suitable for a classroom analysis of language and communication.
Where can I get a copy of this documentary??
the whole point is that if a war comes like currently seems present you have the military to defend yourself or others rather than being caught with your pants down trying to quickly build things because you weren't ready
Protecting our trade with China - from China. I've had the same thought.
I'd love to add a LOL emoji - but I can't.
Just an awesome show. So miss The Late Show, best Saturday (any) night entertainment ever.
I wonder if there really are people in authority in the public service who question government policy. I never saw one in the 20 years I was there. In fact, you dont see them in most organisations. The people who get to positions of authority are there because they DONT question. I think Rob would have copped a forced redundancy payout after week 1 of the first series....
So excited for the new series. This is great television at its greatest!!
Excited ABOUT the new series. You can feel feelings FOR people, but not things.
2023 and this still looks legit as f*** 😂😂
I've just discovered Utopia on the high seas, mi hearties. It's ridiculous that it's not more globally available.
When art imitates life.
Tell me it's true they're doing a new season.
Art doesn't usually imitate life 4 years early
Classic! This was the true Australian "office"
Gee timing couldn't be better....
Not ironic at all
And bang on the money cos it Gunna run over budget cos inflation over 30nyrs
The problem is I can never find Utopia - always keep looking for it in the documentary section 🧐
I prefer Tony when he was The Hollow Men version - he would have written the white paper!
They did. They made an advertisement that pissed off everyone except for the target demographic for military recruitment
@@jamesperkins191 yeah, that's the episode I was referring to
Took the words out of my mouth!
Moving quickly from AUKUS to SCREWUS.
USUKA
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha , very funny, I like it..
@@oldmate99 🤣🤣🤣👍..
@@oldmate99 Wish I could give you more than a 👍
Yeah! Losing our political and economic autonomy as well as freedom of navigation and territory to China will show those damn Yanks!
How can I watch this in Canada
There have been moments in my professional life where I have had to turn around to make sure the Utopia production crew wasn't standing behind me filming.
This channel should have subscribers equal to the population of Australia!
Odd is understatement-as long as they nod😂
Classic act! Just Brilliant!
Life imitates art
I love it guys.. subscribed..
The US says "jump!" and Australia asks "how high?" - very sad.
Spot on
The most frightening aspect of this open source look at our defence is that there is a chance that our enemies could use these secrets anytime before the new subs come and run riot. And we have Albo as the warrior in chief, thanks for service ScoMo. Without you the bald and shiny may have made it, but alas, I'll bet, you are even now plotting your return to help your mate, in his tears.
Military hardware only gets you so far, training and command structure goes a long way too, that's why it would make sense to invest in hardware that lasts 30 to 50 years now to be prepared for tensions in the next 10 to 40 years.
And I would totally expect from modern militaries to plan or at least play through scenarios where partners turn against each other. It's not as if the USA is not pushing everybody to ditch China as it sees it could threaten their dominance, and although a scenario where AUS would have to confront the USA is even more unlikely, it does bear keeping in mind that D. Trump was willing to shake alliances in a major way with severe consequences for "the World Order" so in diplomacy too nothing lasts forever.
But this is neither here nor there, I am just now discovering the show and I subscribe wholeheartedly.
Who the hell are your enemies? You're literally far away from everyone and have trade relations with all your neighbors. Are all Westerners this dumb to just be fearmongered into submission and following the U.S. party line?
@@lxndrlbr The us is notoriously ruthless to its "friends" when it perceives disloyalty or sees them drifting away from their sphere of interest (or even just exercising the most basic national-self interest instead of prioritizing america's)
I mean look at what they did to Gough Whitlam
Lol mate our enemies don't need to do anything. They just sell us stuff while we collapse our country and they keep buying out infrastructure and mineral rights.
Merry Christmas to everyone within the Australian government an their families 💜
Kind regards Tomi 🌲
This is basically what Mr Keating said.
i missed the part where he left out that china would never attempt to bully us with their military. I mean taiwan is doing just fine! China doesnt do anything dangerous to them like fire missiles, fly planes or practice wargames about invading them.
the guy who said wars will only ever be fought with missiles and GPS? yeah no the dude is old and out of touch
@@braydoxastora5584 really?! Manned vehicles in warfare is finished. Humans are a liability on the battlefield.
@@phillipgilmore8379 ...? what references do you have to come that conclusion ? literally all of the worlds arms procurement and development goes against what you just said
@@braydoxastora5584 Really?! In Ukraine they have been using kamikaze drones to great success against soft human targets. Unmanned fighter jets can out turn and kill ANY manned fighter by pulling 15g. Its simple maths. Military equipment ALWAYS is virtually out of date by the time it hits the market. And, surely, you can see its common sense. Humans on the front will always be the weakest link.
If you want to see how Austalian politics works, watch Hollowmen. Also with the brilliant Rob Sitch.
The pig iron dispute occurred almost 55 years ago. How history is forgotten and is doom to repeat and how our freedoms fought for can be taken away.
Boycott against Japan in 1939 bears no relevance to Australia - China relationship today 😂
@@johnyossarian9059 Supply for militarism is relevant.
Reminds me of Milo Minderbinder in catch 22
I love the outro music
Considering the price Australia is going to spend on 3 Virginia-class SSNs and eventually in its 8 Aukus SSNs... 360 billion AUD...🤣😂
over 30 years
Isn't the "big invasion" meant to happen soon?@@braydoxastora5584
Oh yes baby!... awesome work.. "please explain"...
With Utopia , I'm never sure if I'm watching a satire or an actual documentary.
Still relevant and brilliant. New series coming soon?
People mistake this show for a comedy. It is actually a documentary.
You are so original
I'm sure the Yes minister & Yes prime minister series provided plenty of scenarios & tips for Utopia.
Only completely nailed it. And only what Paul Keating was saying recently in his usual inimitable manner (jeez I mis him).
Except no.
Trade routes are merely an element of regional politics and military tensions.
Good to be reductive in comedy, but pretending this is the reality is stupid at best.
@@S3NTRY trade routes that are currently and wouldn’t be at risk at least from the Chinese end because they do live on that? We already see how the Chinese attack trade with Australia: by cancelling their order and buying from someone else. A press conference, some phone calls to cancel their import orders and make new ones, and that policy was set. Ain’t got anything to do with “freedom of navigation” and defending trade routes from the evil Chinaman. If it were, it’ll be Southeast Asia who would be crying foul. Except, they’re the ones who don’t complain, they’re the ones who continue to reap the benefits of trade with China, and they’re the ones who condemned AUKUS involvement. All despite their actual maritime border disputes with China.
You say this is too reductive, but really, it is how the Australian govt presented this situation today and how they justify their response that is making it seems overcomplicated. When having to be held accountable over their decisions, they just claim it’s too complicated to keep the voters off their backs.
As a kid I waited all week for 10PM on a Saturday……. Shitscared is a national treasure. That and Governor Front Bottom of course. And Barge Arse too!
Shall we use the nod system? 🤣
Best line: 'In this room!'
I thought this was a documentary about Australia's current AUKUS submarine deal. 😂
It is.
It was first aired years beforehand.
Still hits the bullseye.
Even the amount is correct. The 8 subs will cost 380 billion.
The price of the subs will double or triple before delivery.
That is down under gold my Ozmen
Maybe this is the most stupid idea but the General has a point in being reluctant to publicly name the threat to Australia's national interests.
By arming rapidly, rival nations risk scaring the other, so even if it was unintended, the other rival nation might interpret the first nation arming as a direct threat to itself, and arm itself more vigorously.
Eventually this security dilemma becomes a security spiral.
People aren't dumb. Even if you don't explicitly state it and put on a friendly face. People can pick up on actions and social cues that will give away their true intentions. Same applies to nations.
@@robincray116 Surprisingly enough, nations often have leadership who are completely stupid and set off security dilemma spirals by being too paranoid
The point is though, the more obvious and apparent you make it that you feel threatened. The more the other party will themselves feel threatened and arm themselves@@robincray116
What documentary is this?
Ironic but unfortunately is really happening and their people are not objecting☹
@@snarkywombat155 dumbest comment ever.
@@snarkywombat155 you made the dumbest comment ever.
The Hollowmen was the true successor of Yes Prime minister!
Funny cause it's true.
Brilliant!
It's funny 'cos it's true!
this is so brilliant lol
Australia's defense policy is to pray that America helps us
and their policy is ensuring we are fighting for them
Well I suppose if you use American spelling, you may well be right?
And in the future will be to pray they don't flip the remote control system on their/our submarines.
Pray, without d “r” is, PAY.
Allow me to engage in this hilariously alarmist discussion for a quick second.
Suppose we told America to go and get stuffed from a strategic/military procurement perspective.
What happens next? Take your time, think it through, then get back to me.
Very good
Why then is china building a base in Solomon Islands
Is that what sky told you?
They're not, and the only thing that would change that is if we started gearing up to go to war on America's behalf. Oh, wait...
@@freedumb_3.0Please tell us the arrangement. Enlighten us with your empty rhetoric.
@@S3NTRY the average sky news viewers holds a high school degree or less. Works a low skill job and thinks the world rigged against them. Although they just started their job, they think they can do a better job than their manager. They often work hard and never get promoted, and they don't know why. It's because these people are unteachable. They refuse to be open minded and think they are so smart. So, why bother.
Can't wait for the new series.
what was Australia's biggest trading partner before WW2?
Pretty sure it was the UK
@@m136dalieJapan, actually
@@De_cool_dude According to Australia's department of foreign affairs and trade, the UK was responsible for 50% of Australia's two way goods trading, whereas Asia was only 15% in 1939.
So, no.
Two thumbs up!
The problem with this is what if China does not want to trade peacefully? Then the ability to protect trade routes to everywhere else becomes really important, and it takes a long time to build a navy.
what do you mean not trade peacefully Australia's role is simply to EXPORT to China and import good from China, what the fkkkk are you even talking about?
You have invaded every nation on earth. In most cases twice. China has invaded literally no one. No that one border skirmish with Vietnam doesn't count.
Who exactly doesn't want to trade peacefully?
@@ЯрославЛ-ф1жyou’re saying that like China isn’t currently undergoing the largest military build up since WW2 in order to invade their neighbour
@@zachb1706 because it isn't. China wants a peaceful solution. You do not. You wish to invade them. They build up their defences.
That's not getting into the fact that they have every right to invade. You invented Taiwan to steal tens of trillions worth of gold. Give it back along with the island itself and take your traitors to the usa, then you can talk.
@@seawater1322 to trade wirh Japan, India, South East Asian countries .. dumfkkk