Who Owns Antarctica? (Bizarre Borders Part 3)

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Antarctica, home to the south pole(s), penguins, and about 5000 people during the summers, but less than 1000 during the ever dark winter. No one lives on the continent permanently, so, who owns Antarctica? Most stuff outside national borders, the sea floor, the moon, really all of space, is the common heritage of mankind. It belongs to none of us and all of us, held in trust for future generations. Which is nice, if perhaps a bit presumptive to say that the entire universe is ours, and maybe someone will have something to say about that eventually, story for another time, but still. Well done humanity. Except, it's never that simple. Because the paperwork on Antarctica sort of says common heritage of mankind, but it doesn't go all in. Here's why. Explorers started landing in Antarctica in about the 1800's, planting flags and making claims. But these claims were a bit hollow because on the civilization tech tree, Antarctica wasn't colonizable. Nonetheless, like Monopoly, the optimal colonial strategy is claim everything you land on. In the early 1900's, the UK toyed with claiming all of Antarctica before scaling back her ambitions to just the coastal parts she had explored to the south pole. France also claimed coastal explorations to the pole, followed by Norway followed by the Nazis. Mid-century, Argentina and Chile claimed slices overlapping with the UK, who they figured was rather too busy at the time to care, but later she and her now independent colonies totally did. This left Antarctica a mess of competing claims, at a bad time to have large territorial disputes. Complicating things, the United States and the Soviet Union gave themselves the right to make a claim on Antarctica, not now, but maybe later. Given this, quite remarkably in 1959 the US and USSR and ten other countries, Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Chile, France, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, and the UK made a treaty to ease the tensions, saying that on Antarctica, there would be no military, no mining, and no nuclear exploding. The Antarctican paperwork is the first Cold War disarmament treaty, and set aside the continent for science and nature. By the way, because it's a nature preserve, there's a rule about garbage. Leave nothing behind. Nothing. Travel to Antarctica in the summer and you'll fly back with your poo in the winter. So this looks pretty great. What's the problem with the line about common heritage? Well, no one actually gave up their claims on Antarctica because the only way to get everyone to sign was to include this clause, which sidesteps the issue, basically saying countries will act as though Antarctica is the common heritage of mankind and as though they have no claims, but they aren't legally for realsies giving up anything, which is why maps of Antarctica often include the current state of claim wedges. This blank spot, by the way, is nobody's, leaving it the largest territory unclaimed on Earth by any nation. So far, anyway. Now unlike the colonial days, countries have the tech to build permanently staffed bases on Antarctica, and it just so happens that countries build their bases in their own claims, leaving no clear answer to this question. According to the treaty, Antarctica belongs to everyone, but the treaty itself has an intentional hole. So Antarctica exists in this quantum state where the claims are real and unreal. Some countries build within their "borders" and some countries without claims, like China, build their bases on the continent wherever because it belongs to everyone, right guys? These claims don't really matter, until they do in the 2040's when the mining ban comes up for review. Oh, and there's possibly a lot of oil in Antarctica, not to mention 70% of the Earth's fresh water, which could be the more valuable resource in the future. The US and the Soviet... er, Russia might just yet dust off those one free claim because I say so tickets. But for now, Antarctica is as the treaty intended. A continental nature preserve and scientific research haven. Squarespace is the easiest way to create a beautiful website, blog, or online store for you and your ideas. I'm very happy to have them as a sponsor because I personally use Squarespace to run cgpgrey.com and also hellointernet.com, the podcast I do with Brady. If you are looking to have your own website for just about anything, I personally recommend Squarespace. And if you click on the link or use the offer code "Grey", you get 10% off at checkout. So if you have ever considered starting your own website, click on the link, go to Squarespace, give them a try. It helps Squarespace, and it helps this channel. Squarespace. Build it beautiful.
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Channel: CGP Grey
Views: 4,003,349
Rating: 4.9513545 out of 5
Keywords: cgpgrey, education, hello internet
Id: DbKNlFcg02c
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 4min 1sec (241 seconds)
Published: Thu Dec 31 2015
Reddit Comments

You had an entire flag referendum just so you could put that in the video, didn't you?

👍︎︎ 643 👤︎︎ u/madesense 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

I just realized Nazi Girl has blue eyes...

👍︎︎ 269 👤︎︎ u/tribesman 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

Ok, so who is starting the crowdfunding to claim that chunk in the name of Hello Internet?

👍︎︎ 321 👤︎︎ u/_welcomehome_ 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies
  1. Get a flag.
  2. Plant that flag into unclaimed land. 3.Find oil under that land. 4.Live in The Shard
👍︎︎ 108 👤︎︎ u/KnightOfGreystonia 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

Antartica supposedly has the highest average IQ in the world!

👍︎︎ 64 👤︎︎ u/westridge53 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

Why doesn't Norway's claim extend to the pole?

👍︎︎ 60 👤︎︎ u/mrperson221 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

Claiming a significant portion of Antarctica would a most righteous use of the Nail & Gear. Can't wait for /u/JeffDujon to suggest recording from the Hello Internet Antarctic Region.

👍︎︎ 119 👤︎︎ u/ConstableBlimeyChips 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

Anyone else notice that he said hellointernet.com rather than hellointernet.fm?

👍︎︎ 117 👤︎︎ u/parallelepiped12 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies

Love how when Grey says "and no nuclear exploding" at 1:56 the USA and the USSR glare at each other

👍︎︎ 158 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Dec 31 2015 🗫︎ replies
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