Late on a June morning, 2,000 bottles of beer fell off a container truck in Chuncheon city, flooding the street with beer and broken glass. #ABCNews #Beer
@@LuckyBaldwin777 the amount of fome would be almost unbearable. You can pour them into cups and put them in the freezer over night. The foam will freeze, pull the foam off with your hands, and you'll have ice cold beer.
No bitching about who's fault it was. No crying over the company being careless. Just seeing there's a problem here and that it needs to be corrected. Love it.
So why don't you go out and do something about it? You're saying you want it in your community. You want others to do it while you watch? Is that what you mean?
@@alanduncan1980 no, I mean I have zero faith/belief that anyone would work together for a situation like this. Even If I started first, no one would follow. They'd just pull out a phone and take a video.
@@BestMods168 wow, really? White Nazis? You have no clue what nazi stands for . You mean racist ! And everybody is racist to a degree, everybody does a joke or something from time to time. But Black Life Matters is the biggest Propaganda ive seen , and im german.
It's cultural. You can't have that in America where it's the norm to road rage over getting cut off in traffic. Maybe start with that first before asking for a miracle.
I live in a " none of my business society " so this is actually impressive. Carrying each others burden without expecting anything in return is a rare attribute where I live. I'm impressed
I thought they were going to help to find unbroken free beer while cleaning lol. Unfortunately alot of ppl would just loot and leave the mess. It's refreshing to see this effort with no expectations other than to make the road safe for others.
We act like this is hard but expect people just do it for us. This will always be a problem because human nature, at it's core, is ungratefulness.. We're all wired to care for ourselves first, then others.
its nice seeing people coming together to help instead of getting angry or taking there phones out to record a scene. need more people like this in the world today
There was an car accident where one of the drivers died and was hanging out the door. I was there and nect to me were Chinese tourists with their phones and cameras out taking photos of the dead person.
@@mathewtekahu9066 Taking photos of a injured or dead person is considered disrespectful in India. Only people with sick mentality can do that. I am not surprised Chinese people living as slaves under CCP can do that
@@Peterpiperspickledpeppers lol have you lived in the West? Incivility and individualism seem to be the common theme of the west. Heck America doesn’t even have the southern border. Have you seen marching of all the illegal aliens? Guns and mass shootings? Yeah no. This doesn’t exist in the U.S.
@@TeW33zy👈 See? This guy likes horrible societies. And if he could get himself organized enough he'd design a society of neckbeards. And neckbearding is how it will supposed to run.
After watching this incident, many Koreans were worried if the truck driver would be fired. But the company promised not to fire him and thanked people who were willing to help clean it up.
@@thesecondseraph9787 I agree. Everyone so angry about everything. I don't understand it. We have it pretty good in Ole USA. We could make it even better if we weren't so "outraged" about everything and learned to treat each other with respect.
This is what happens when people care. Rather than figuring out who to blame, they just acted to resolve the issue. This is one of the TRUE beauties of community!
I left my wallet on the subway in Seoul, and waited for the train to go to end of the line and come back, and the wallet was still there. Koreans are amazing people.
I left my wallet on the subway in NYC, and the person came to my home to return it, and robbed me at gun point, force me to go to the ATM and take out the maximum amount, then force me to go to a high end restaurant and order the most expensive meal, and he stole my car, I was stuck in Long Island, had no money to get back to the city
I can guarantee in America these acts of kindness wojld never happen. The best you'd get is someone trying to scavenge some leftover unbroken beer bottles for themselves
@@lizliz4186 lol every country has their bad apples thats politics. But THIS, is how we transform people into bright sweet apples. Try to focus on that a lil =) Bless freind.
Hey, I'm just an ukrainian guy and I understand that our demands are too high for other countries which already have their own problems to deal with. So feel free to stop giving us so many precious resources as they are being wasted by us without achieving much. Thank you and Slave Ukraine! 🇺🇦
I was waiting for a couple of people to come pickup a crate and fill it with the unbroken bottles to take home with them! But no, they full-on cleaned everything up! Good on them and their culture
This was so amazing to watch.❤just people thinking okay I can help and it won't cost me anything .💖where can we find more of these people? And these people's parent's must be so proud of them.they were raised right💫
@@napalmsf you're implying you're aware of the reasons, so why hold back? Educate us, what are the reasons specifically? What's the ratio of migration? Is your claim actually true to begin with? So many questions...
I love this, what an amazing community. Some guy directing traffic, some people sweeping, some picking up, and some clearing it off the road, communication and help. No one seems to be complaining or pointing fingers at who's fault it was, or getting mad, this is a lovely community. Korean's are amazing people.
@@zoph6241 They saw a problem, each asked themselves, "What part of this can I do something about?" And then they pitched in. In WW2, it was called "Doing your bit." No one expected a medal. Citizens took pride in contributing their skills and labor to the war effort, as opportunity presented itself. TO REFUSE TO HELP WAS SHAMEFUL; no one wanted to be known as a useless "gold brick." Little kids took their wagons and collected scrap metal to be recycled into tanks and MRE cans. Women learned heavy industry skills. Elderly and disabled people rolled bandages and minded young children so their mothers and older sisters could work in the factories. If you had a yard, you planted food to feed yourself and share with neighbors. Everyone had the power to help in some way. And they prided themselves on "doing their bit."
When we visited South Korea about 3 years ago, we found out that our airbnb was on 3rd floor and we had 5 luggages. Then a gentlemen came out barely speaking english and spoke a little Korean which I couldn’t understand and just started to help carry our luggages up the stairs! Then the same thing happened when we checked out and someone saw me carrying down those luggages and helped again. Amazing community of people.
if you're in trouble, people around you will usually help you in Korea. If you tip them, they will feel bad. Because helping people in trouble is their natural way of life.
I lived in South Korea for one year while teaching English. One day my glasses broke on the side, so I went inside a convenience store to get glue because I had to go to work. The clerk grabbed me by the hand and brought me to the optometrist nearby , who fixed it in 2 seconds. It was so kind I nearly started crying right there !
@@Youngzizo I think my comment has 251 likes so maybe some people enjoyed the small story of kindness in South Korea. Don’t be a hater it makes you look ugly!
I worked in Korea for 2 years, and can say this is definitely something characteristic of Koreans. They care about their community and get any job done that they can do themselves.
Copied Japanese and Chinese. Ha ha ha...Cultures is Cultures It is Xerox copy machine. It is very difficult to import or export any cultural matter to other countries. Just it's own culture.
This is how we, as a human race, should work together to solve problems and help show people can work together. News should showcase more segments as these. Love it!
As a Korean myself this isn't the first time community helps with public problem, in my neighborhood we had a small road that kept on crumbling due to uneven soil and heavy trucks taking shortcut there. After the government refused to do anything about it all the people in the neighborhood just raised fund and fixed the road themselves, they also installed a height-limiter so vehicles measuring above 2.4m can't drive on that road. All you need is a group of commanding aunties and hard-working uncles. The rest will follow 😄
Not suprising at all. Korean people are some of the friendliest and hard working people in the world. Been going to the same Korean barber for 25 years and hes worked 6 days a week, 12 hours a day, that entire time.
@@reanbowlerd5988 You're mistaken. I want the place I live to be better. Quite a few other commenters here also seem to want us to demonstrate a higher standard. I don't like that I have to make these depressingly honest statements, but I would hate myself if I pretended it wasn't true.
1) A company can't charge anyone with anything. 2) The stacks of bottles and crates sitting on the sidewalk would make it obvious there was no theft. I think that what you meant to point out is that in the US there would be two groups of people, those stealing and those getting it on video.
I've lived in South Korea for multiple years, people there is nice, you can actually walk around with expensive cellphone on your hand everywhere and no one will grab it from you. Very safe country, they really take good care of their pride and dignity.
Having travelled to South Korea, I can honestly say the Korean people are incredibly humble and care for their country in a way that is inspiring. Even in the restaurants they offer mouth wash and when I got off the plane, they greeted me with warm wet towels to clean my hands. Definitively is worth a visit for any foreigners wanting to check out an Asian country. Just remember to be polite and clean when you are there too. Koreans are kind, considerate and hygienic all around.
@ Arkamates ... 100% clean ... love the togetherness of the community to keep area clean and tidy and ensuring safety to vehicles. Unlike my area Lopinot, Arouca, Trinidad (Trinidad & Tobago) West Indies, there's pounding music in people homes and cars and neighbour opposite bring their dog out in the street to mess and urine. I stopped callin in police and placing reports, because they either tell me it is not against the law to "bang" music, or making their dogs mess and urine on the streets, or they would slam the phone sometimes even before the start of the report. Sometime ago I throw a bucket of water to wash down the dog urine and poop in the road, which was in front of my property, then came two policemen sounding the siren loudly and pounding and rocking my metal gate with such force, I thought he was going to break it down. I went outside to the policemen, only for one of them to tell me that it is a crime I have comitted. Crime ??????? To take one (1) small bucket of water to wash down the neighbour's dog urine and mess on the road in front of my premises close proximity to my fence. Letters (emails) to Environmental Management Authority, together with phone conversations proved frutile, as they told me it is not against the law to be banging music. Mind you, my townhouse rocking and music banging after midnight. Hence the reason for the crime rate ...
@@kimblinawai7255 A country can be judged by amount of graffiti. While s-hole US cities have plenty, SK is getting more and more these days, especially in Seoul.
In my neighborhood everyone would have rushed to help rescue the unbroken bottles and cases while mourning the loss of the others by drinking to their demise. It's a sentimental crowd.
Yeah same here the only problem is even if those bottles survived if they're glass bottles there could still be glass inside that's floating around that you may not notice. It happened once to me with the yogurt I got. My daughter who's 8 years old dropped it and it looked completely fine but when I was eating it I noticed there was glass in it so I threw it out. Got to be careful of glass containers even if they look good they may not be lol.
It's actually amazing how much people are willing to help when seeing selfless acts. I'll always be the first person to push a car out of the road. And it's a great feeling having a stranger run up to help me help another stranger.
@@darkallyrecordings4931 Yeah sometimes people will wait until they see someone leading by example, & then they join them. When I was the General Manager of a restaurant I worked at, when I needed help from my employees I would work the hardest & bust a***.* Youd be amazed at how much more willing people are to help out if they see you putting in the hardest work yourself. This is why managers who delicate but sit on their a** all day get no respect
If you feel your heart warm, Search what happened after "Taean peninsular oil spoil". Lots of people participated and helped to clean up. About 1.2 million people had visited the shore and removed oil.
A country is defined by its people, their actions in times of distress. They probably didn’t know each other, and their paths may never cross again in a very long time. But they showed what their principles are, what they were taught at home. You see things on the internet that make you want to give up on humanity. After seeing this video, my faith in humanity is restored.
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XX5_sZbxKcY.html Your word was introduced at here. And I really like your word so try to find your comment. Thank your for your beautiful word.
Hats off to these heroes. I have been taught that what makes a nation great, begins with a family then a community. This should be an example of what communities should strive for.
I've been to South Korea and my wife is Korean. They are so selfless, its insane. They are insanely clean as well. Wish more people took pride in their communities like they do here in the US and abroad.
Lmfao, selfless, okay. Ask your wife what a chaebol is and report back how selfless you think they are. They're a westernized Asian country, dude --don't be naive.
Racial homogeneity is never going to fix anything so long as we have shitheads like you that don’t have the mental capacity to do anything more than cling onto existing ideologies.
Anyone who’s been to Seoul Korea knows how immaculate Seoul is . Not many places in the world this would happen.. proud of their Country and we can all learn them.
@@zantezaint2348 not really cause korea is better in that regard since you seem to think Korea learned everything from Japan, but Japan could also learn a thing or two from Korea. Many Japanese women even go to Korea to get married cause those men treat them much better than their own.. who constantly molest them on the trains
Here in New York , people be throwing trash on the street when the garbage pale is next to them. 🤦🏻♂️. Goes to show what kind of upbringing some people had and what kind of human beings they are. There’s no excuse, ever .
_Rather than cribbing & waiting for someone to help, the public took the initiative & cleaned the mess ! Bravo_ *World gets better when people unite together* 🤝🏼
@@Void_from_Abyss you and i can appreciate , but some haters can't appreciate the good work They did it in 30 mins, even if they took more , still a good job , coming out to clean
This type of behavior is actually not unusual in Korea. During the 2002 World Cup hosted in Korea, people cleaned up entire streets after every game. Look it up--it's quite impressive.
Imagine this happening in the uk, road closed for 24 hours for the clean up 3 people in court costing thousands to get fined £25 each lawsuits coming in left right and centre for damages
The beauty of Korean culture. They're innately kind and helpful (plus they don't mess around with other people's belongings so you can leave your packages outside your door for days and not worry it'll be stolen like in other countries).
I have to pee in front of my mother, so my father can go out for work. At least my grandmother is not the daughter of Abramham linkan so my grandfather is a pig. It feels so good to have a girlfriend like my wife who is not black but brown. Yes it's true that I have to poop on my dog's pot but obviously it is true that Asian Susi is delicious. You know it's cold in Africa but my sister is already stuck in the washing machine, but you know it's true cheese cake can cause cancer, so we must masterbate. Be honest
I remember living in Seoul and it began snowing heavily. Out little street didn’t get plow trucks or anything. Everybody was outside within 15 mins cleaning the street and making neat snow piles. That was it didn’t freeze over and the street wasn’t icy the next days. I was genuinely surprised everybody joined in, even business owners during their work hours. Where I’m from people only clean the little sidewalk in front of their house, nobody would ever touch the street even when knowing plow trucks don’t come by.
Sure the people in the U.S. would touch the streets, by snow plowing all the snow directly in to the streets because they are too lazy to clean it up the right way.
@The Rambling Zone Or plow it into your neighbors yard which leads to your neighbor coming out and shooting you with an ar 15. I’m sure you all remember that story.
@@speakupyt4900 US don't do it, cuz there'd be no job for city contracted snow plowers if citizens cleared the road, and politicians can't claim credit for clearing the road.
That is actually a lot because of the law that binds the owner of the buildings to the injuries caused on nearby area with snow unattended. Of course residents r the main passengers so that's why as well.
Wow! That is a good community. It makes you wonder whether you would act the same way if this happened in your own community. Congratulations to the people that helped out.
Korea and it's people are exemplary, and I'd expect nothing less than this from them. They're such great people. In Japan and Korea, people take great pride in their communities and work together like this to help each other live in a clean, safe community. I wish that we had that same sense of communal responsibility here. We lack community and connection here so much that I'd be afraid to walk into the street and do what these kind people did. I want to do kind things for others, but I lack the community connection that could enable me to do so. I am so proud of each and every one of them who took the time out of their day to help clean the street, even though they weren't paid nor required to do so. I love news stories like this.
@@Hanad3 that’s not true. Positive stories don’t make headlines the way scary or negative stories do. The news makes people pessimistic. Most people just want to do the right thing when given the chance.
It's great when this happens. A few years ago a fellow lost a load of lumber in a busy intersect in front of me. Myself and several other drivers instantly jumped out of their cars and we had the lumber stacked neatly at the side of the road in just a few minutes. It amazed me how quickly it happened and how it was coordinated by strangers without anyone saying a word.
We only need an one goal! Humans are great team workers! Together we will build a better world when we just stop thinking that somebody else will do it for us! 🌎🌏🌍
Except when ure black, south east Asian or not physically attractive... It a heaven for attractive white people... They will be respected there... Others nit not so much..
@@hyena5313 Racism is in every country but the point of the video is people helping. Could you be more considerate and appreciate good things without bringing in other matters or issues irrelevant to the topic?
@laze mz They most definitely also have city services in Korea too. What happened here is ordinary citizens with nothing to gain came in and helped clean up. I was referring more to the cultural differences. Look at the streets in America vs streets in Korea. World of difference. I’m a proud American but I can admit when someone else is better at something.
In the U.S. city workers would take 3 weeks to clean it and spend 3 million dollars doing it, then we would have a congressional hearing to allocate responsibilities.