5 Things You Didn't Know About Eisenhower

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024
  • Historian and author William Hitchcock chronicles the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower, whose time in the Oval Office is often overlooked yet filled with many crucial moments and big decisions such as foreign conflicts in Korea and Vietnam, the rising military-industrial complex, and the early days of the civil rights movement.
    For more about THE AGE OF EISENHOWER by William Hitchcock: bit.ly/2sureGE
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Комментарии • 394

  • @TerrenceBowden-i4k
    @TerrenceBowden-i4k 4 года назад +85

    He was very reluctant to use military force to resolve international conflict. My favorite President.

    • @douglasj.arcuri1370
      @douglasj.arcuri1370 2 года назад

      Absolutely.He knew the ravages of war unlike other Presidents.He also knew MICE.

    • @dvchel
      @dvchel 2 года назад +2

      A real President and General who cares for his/her soldiers.

    • @mikeoxlong3676
      @mikeoxlong3676 Год назад +2

      Ike saw the horrors of war firsthand. He knew how terrible war was and that it should always be an absolute last resort.

  • @cyanrazorCel
    @cyanrazorCel 4 года назад +177

    He knew how to stop war, and people today haven't listened enough.

    • @BryonLetterman
      @BryonLetterman 4 года назад +13

      It takes a soldier who has seen the horrors of war to understand that war should be avoided at all costs when war is not absolutely necessary. WW2 was the last war that was absolutely necessary for us to go full effort into.

    • @robertthomas5906
      @robertthomas5906 4 года назад +8

      @Brad Watson That's not true about Trump. We have proof it was Hillary's campaign that worked with Steele and the Ukraine, not Trump. The democrats are the criminals. Main stream media lies like crazy to us and they publish corrections where you'll never see them.

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 2 года назад

      @Brad Watson he would be called a RINO by rump. But it would be actually be a badge of honor.

    • @waynespaeth9061
      @waynespaeth9061 5 месяцев назад

      Eisenhower's "A Chance For Peace" speech given in April 1953 shows in stark terms the price we pay for an arms race. IMO it is one of the most important speeches given by any President in the history of the United States.

  • @dondwight88
    @dondwight88 5 лет назад +94

    Ike also refused to engage China over its shelling of Quemoy and Matsu in the Straits of Formosa in early 1955, saying " we're not going to start World War III over a pile of rocks in the straits." Or something close to that. Don Dwight

  • @moreofawave
    @moreofawave 2 года назад +15

    Respect, President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

  • @davidkuharich9269
    @davidkuharich9269 2 года назад +9

    One of the greatest presidents of the 20th century

  • @salvatorem1959
    @salvatorem1959 4 года назад +24

    That's a great general. One who looks to avoid war as much as possible.

  • @antonioraphaelrapadas2001
    @antonioraphaelrapadas2001 2 года назад +11

    *Another trivia about Pres. Eisenhower... when he was assigned in the Philippines in 1935 as Liason Officer to Gen. McArthur to Pres. Quezon, who was Lieutenant Colonel at that time, Eisenhower and Quezon, developed a friendly relationship of mutual respect, exchanging political views and even playing bridge together. Eisenhower became a military adviser. President Quezon grew to rely on Ike, setting up a private office for him next to his own in the Presidential Malacañang Palace. Later on, the two men were involved in saving lives by bringing in thousands of Jew refugees in 1939 from Germany and Austria with the aid of then-US high commissioner Paul McNutt. Eisenhower saw also how the Filipinos were denied on having independence from American Govt. I think this is why he was molded in these events by emphasizing freedom and civil rights on his political agenda when he was the President of the United States of America... try to watch Quezon's Game...*

  • @MaximusDecimus1313
    @MaximusDecimus1313 5 лет назад +126

    His farewell address was the, in my view the most PROLIFIC not only farewell address but one of the most important address to American citizens everywhere. I really admired him for that address it took a lot of guts to challenge the establishment yes unbelievably even as president that took a lot of guts and I’m sure he lost a lot of his high ranking military supporters after that but he was 100% on the money the military industrial complex has gone unchecked and has spiraled out of control so ,ugh so that the dod black budgets and all these things leaching off of all Americans a lot of times on crackpot ideas and our leaders have NO excuse he spelled it out for them and nobody took it as serious as it should have been.

    • @diemquynh9818
      @diemquynh9818 5 лет назад +1

      LtCmdrMaximus why no one listerned

    • @davidrendall7195
      @davidrendall7195 4 года назад +7

      Im not sure you know what PROLIFIC means?

    • @FandensOldemoder
      @FandensOldemoder 4 года назад +1

      @ David Rendall I am afraid that you are right. Prolific is something
      productive, creative, inventive, plentiful, ... the Military-Industrial Complex (MIC) part of Eisenhower's farewell speech was the opposite of prolific. Nobody listened - or they did and ignored it - or (even worse) they deliberately did the opposite of what he advised in order to get fat cat jobs in the MIC.

    • @davidrendall7195
      @davidrendall7195 4 года назад

      @@FandensOldemoder I disagree, JFK and Johnson channeled a huge chunk of the available funds, factory floors and R&D people away from from the MIC and into the civilian space program - a bit of divide and rule.
      Nixon took on and soundly thrashed the MIC in his first term. And of course Nixon was Eisenhowers VP when he made that speech. People were listening and did trim back the excesses of the Atomic powered 50s MIC.
      Then it dawned on them they had gifted the Russians a qualitative and quantitive advantage in the 70s and Reagan swooped into power on the back of trillions in military funding.
      Which won the Cold War.

    • @hqi1321
      @hqi1321 4 года назад +4

      The word you were looking for was PROPHETIC, not prolific

  • @jenme4796
    @jenme4796 2 года назад +10

    When I was a little girl, my dad would always talk about him, the general who became President, during his rule of the US, we were the most powerful country, power meaning the middle class was plenty, people were most happy, the world was peaceful

  • @brentsummers7377
    @brentsummers7377 4 года назад +17

    If you look at Wikipedia, Eisenhower's approval ratings as President were high and consistent throughout his time in office. The American people knew they had a good person in the top job.

    • @chuckbuckbobuck
      @chuckbuckbobuck 2 года назад +1

      He also knew how to laugh at himself. When Art Buchwald parody him his Chief of Staff was quite upset about it. Eusenhower told him to simmer down and not bring it up again. He was the epitome of a self-assured man unlike our current and oast rwo former Presidents who were quite thin-skinned. That alone makes him a great President!

  • @moboutmen
    @moboutmen 4 года назад +60

    I still like Ike.

  • @AgueroNain
    @AgueroNain 5 лет назад +31

    Excellent share and well done, great historical context about president Eisenhower.

  • @alpha-omega2362
    @alpha-omega2362 4 года назад +132

    another legacy: The Interstate Highway System....

    • @Vegan_scorpioo
      @Vegan_scorpioo 3 года назад +7

      yea and of course Alaska and Hawaii became states during his serving as a president!

    • @Edward_Waterfield
      @Edward_Waterfield 3 года назад

      The railroads beg to differ.

    • @alpha-omega2362
      @alpha-omega2362 3 года назад +1

      @@Edward_Waterfield and the horse and buggy beg to differ too

    • @Edward_Waterfield
      @Edward_Waterfield 3 года назад

      @@alpha-omega2362 The Highway doesn't pay for itself.

    • @andyc9902
      @andyc9902 3 года назад +2

      He literally made Usa

  • @MyHam-os4bq
    @MyHam-os4bq 3 года назад +30

    My son’s middle name is Aisen (pronounced Eisen) after this great fellow. He’ll be here in April and we can’t wait to tell him about the origins of his name someday.

    • @edgargarred4319
      @edgargarred4319 2 года назад +4

      tell him Tell him by what a great american hero and savior hes named after! Tell him of the greatest prosperity he brought to america while he was leading this country.

    • @Tomas-to9kz
      @Tomas-to9kz 2 года назад

      Sorry, but you named your son after a murderer.

    • @MyHam-os4bq
      @MyHam-os4bq 2 года назад

      @@Tomas-to9kz I was hoping nobody would notice 🤫😉

  • @djgrumpygeezer1194
    @djgrumpygeezer1194 2 года назад +6

    Ike ended the Korean War. Word is that he told the Chinese, “We agree to stop the war here and now, or the US goes all in, including atomic weapons.”
    Ike was also acknowledged as being one hell of a poker player.

  • @AMERICANDIPPER
    @AMERICANDIPPER 3 года назад +31

    It would be nice to have a President like him nowadays

    • @Quietly-David
      @Quietly-David Год назад

      Been wishing it for All my year's.

    • @shipmate3577
      @shipmate3577 Год назад +1

      no thankyou; he was a puppet for big business and the elite and suppressed Veteran rights following WWI and teargassed Veterans marching in D.C.; it was only due to the need of soldiers to fight in WWII that Veterans gained the GI BILL. He was also an adulterer, but monogomy isn't a requirement to be a good president/leader.

    • @georgeschaut2178
      @georgeschaut2178 5 месяцев назад

      Boy would it ever...

  • @margaretflood-elahwal5861
    @margaretflood-elahwal5861 4 года назад +8

    Wow mad respect for EISENHOWER!

  • @brucekuehn4031
    @brucekuehn4031 2 года назад +4

    In every life, one can say, “He should have done this. He should have done that,” but Ike is deserving of a standing in history that should continue to increase.
    One of my favorite pictures of Ike won a Pulitzer and was taken with JFK at Camp David while they walked together deep in conversation after Kennedy’s failed Bay of Pigs invasion. Such bipartisanship and respect we haven’t seen in the US in decades.
    He was shaped by his military experience. He was the perfect man to organize the huge military effort in WWII and lead Allied forces to victory. Never a glory-hound, quiet diplomacy and competence was how he rose up and how he worked throughout his long career. Even though he had a massive heart attack in his first year as President, he lived to be 78 and died in 1969. He was buried in his uniform and an Army coffin.

    • @davidhess6593
      @davidhess6593 6 месяцев назад

      Ike had his first heart attack in 1955 the *third* year of his Presidency.

    • @brucekuehn4031
      @brucekuehn4031 6 месяцев назад

      @@davidhess6593 My error - you are correct. First heart attack was 1955. He had a total of 7 before dying in 1969.
      Thinking of him again today on the 6th of June, 2024, the 80th anniversary of D-Day. The indispensable man in the Allied victory over the Nazis. It has been said that during WWII, he lived on cigarettes and coffee.

  • @andreasbyczkowski3435
    @andreasbyczkowski3435 4 года назад +17

    So much of Dwight Eisenhower’s integrity, character and capabilities are EXACTLY what we need now. Let’s just “spiritually erase” all the unfortunate bungling and worse that occurred since then(...pssst/if only we could).

    • @bruceanderson7762
      @bruceanderson7762 3 года назад

      Be a lot of work...but...why not?

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 2 года назад +1

      How far we've fallen. Night and day is a gross understatement.

  • @pinewood2899
    @pinewood2899 4 года назад +19

    I think it was IKE who said about the politicians in Washington “ if you want a friend get a dog”.

  • @craigslistrro709
    @craigslistrro709 5 лет назад +45

    All the great ones are dead... The rest refuse to die.

  • @joangillen1260
    @joangillen1260 4 года назад +4

    Excellent!!! Thank you!!!

  • @MFPhoto1
    @MFPhoto1 3 года назад +5

    Harry Truman just before Eisenhower's inauguration in 1952 (paraphrased): "Poor Ike. He's going to sit behind this desk, give orders, and expect people to carry them out."

    • @garymorris1856
      @garymorris1856 Год назад +2

      Truman was wrong. Eisenhower was a much better president than Harry, and it's not even close.

  • @borood1188
    @borood1188 3 года назад +12

    Greatest president ever, but he is very underrated.

  • @ghostofsilence2697
    @ghostofsilence2697 4 года назад +6

    "A good king does not look for war" ~ Odin

  • @mrpeel3239
    @mrpeel3239 4 года назад +3

    Terrific summary by one of Kenyon and Yale's great alums!

  • @robertphillips4914
    @robertphillips4914 2 года назад +4

    Very underrated President. I find it interesting that Ike And JFK had a good relationship. During the Cuban Missle Crisis JFK consulted with Ike.

  • @AnneOhn123
    @AnneOhn123 4 года назад +2

    Very well done... I've subscribed for many more videos, thank you!

  • @joenoda9094
    @joenoda9094 4 года назад +26

    For all his prejudices,
    Patton represented to a high degree the honor of the army and the
    basic generosity of the American people. He made this very plain in a reply
    to a question put to him by the army’s Theater Judge Advocate: “In all these
    talks (to the troops) I emphasized the necessity for the proper treatment of
    prisoners of war, both as to their lives and property. My usual statement was,
    “Kill all the Germans you can but do not put them up against a wall and kill
    them. Do your killing while they are still fighting. After a man has
    surrendered, he should be treated exactly in accordance with the Rules of Land
    Warfare, and just as you would hope to be treated if you were foolish enough to
    surrender. Americans do not kick people in the teeth after they are down.”
    He openly deplored Eisenhower’s anti-German
    policies: “What we are doing is to utterly destroy the only semi-modern state
    in Europe so that Russia can swallow the whole.”

    • @texmontana420
      @texmontana420 4 года назад +1

      Why do you think they killed Patton ?

    • @jesusislordsavior6343
      @jesusislordsavior6343 4 года назад

      Joe Noda
      What is the 'basic generosity of the American people'? Who discovered that? American people? 'Do not judge, lest ye be judged': that could pertain to positive judgments as well as negative ones.
      As it happened, by the grace of God, Russia did not swallow Europe whole. But beware China's underhanded effort today, to swallow the entire globe through a combination of commercial and political pressure.

    • @nadyarossi5102
      @nadyarossi5102 2 года назад +1

      Patton was a grandstander,
      not the great General that Ike was.

    • @shipmate3577
      @shipmate3577 Год назад +2

      Patton argued to use tanks and tear gas against WWI Veterans protesting Congress in D.C. for Veteran rights. How people forget.

  • @deb310red
    @deb310red 4 года назад +62

    Eisenhower was a great President. Thanks for sharing this video.

    • @buddymario3462
      @buddymario3462 4 года назад +7

      Dwight Eisenhower my favorite

    • @rogerhackler223
      @rogerhackler223 4 года назад +5

      @@buddymario3462 Theodore Roosevelt, and Dwight David Eisenhower rank equal to Sir Winston Churchill, which is absolutely true! I respect exactly what you said!

    • @schlechtestergtaspielerdek3851
      @schlechtestergtaspielerdek3851 4 года назад +1

      He is responsible for many gov crimes. He is an idiot!

    • @DH-ve5bl
      @DH-ve5bl 3 года назад +1

      @George Arnold. Don’t forget Franklin Roosevelt.

    • @corn.3892
      @corn.3892 3 года назад

      @@buddymario3462 he killed thousands of people for the united fruit company. he was very evil!

  • @alanstrong3295
    @alanstrong3295 4 года назад +17

    He helped put the brakes on Patton. If he had lived long enough, he would have been upset with Nixon and Watergate.

    • @adamsmith3413
      @adamsmith3413 4 года назад +1

      Alan Strong True but Ike also said that with Patton he was sure he could win in Europe but without GSP he was uncertain.

    • @jstasiak2262
      @jstasiak2262 4 года назад +4

      Alan Strong
      Eisenhower would have been extremely impressed with Nixon who accomplished a lot of important things that produced lasting good while in office: Started the EPA, Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and did more for the environment than any president previously or since; Started OSHA and gave it sufficient power to enforce workplace safety; desegregated the Southern public school system without race riots; ended Kennedy's and Johnson's Vietnam war folly; enforced women's rights in Title IX; enforced civil rights laws; forced the Federal Government to honor its treaties with Native Americans; overcame resistance of the State Department and Republican Establishment to open relations with China; SALT treaty with the USSR; Expanded funding for the National Institutes of Health for cancer research and National Endowment for the Arts. At the time the Watergate putsch occurred, he was close to an agreement with Ted Kennedy for a plan for National health insurance.
      Nixon accomplished more important things during his presidency than all his successors combined. Reagan included. Watergate seems quaint by today's standards.

    • @Melinda8162
      @Melinda8162 4 года назад

      @@jstasiak2262 Well....I wouldn't know what Eisenhower would have thought about Nixon ' then'...but, he sure didn't want him as VP the second time around!! But, was advised of course, to not drop him when running for a second term!

    • @jstasiak2262
      @jstasiak2262 4 года назад +1

      Ruby
      The Republican Establishment didn't like Nixon. They never did. They told Ike they wanted Nixon off the ticket and Ike couldn't easily ignore them. They even invented a fake scandal ("slush fund") to get rid of him. Although Nixon actually did a real good job as VP, Ike told him that he had to make his case to the public to keep his job. That's when Nixon made his famous "Checkers" speech ( named after his dog) which was a rousing success. After that, Nixon couldn't be booted off the ticket in 1956 and the Establishment had to shut up.

    • @Melinda8162
      @Melinda8162 4 года назад

      @@jstasiak2262 Well, you seem to know alot about Nixon and I presume you are a great admirer of him. Which, I must say I haven't met many people at all, who are! But, to each his own. I was alot younger when he was president, and at that age where there was alot going on in my life so politics was not a priority! Although, there was some ' interest ' when the whole Watergate thing was all over the news!
      I just have a hard time really understanding the guy!
      In later years I did take more interest in watching the interviews he did and the documentaries. Just seems strange, he isn't well thought of or even referenced to by other presidents. It was interesting to read your comments because in all honesty I didn't realize those things.

  • @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr
    @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr 2 года назад +3

    He was... a gentleman.

  • @ThePbird1
    @ThePbird1 4 года назад +18

    As to Vietnam, we had advisors there during his admin.

    • @chriscohlmeyer4735
      @chriscohlmeyer4735 4 года назад +6

      Paul Fogel and a neighbours son died there during that time. His mom used to give me milk and cookies when I rode my tricycle through their yard, then she stopped, then she came out and told me what had happened to her son and that she didn't feel up to making cookies anymore.

    • @Melinda8162
      @Melinda8162 4 года назад

      @@chriscohlmeyer4735 That's sad. Was that her only son?

    • @paddle_shift
      @paddle_shift 4 года назад +4

      Advisors are way different than active soldiers. Yes, they still are in harms way. Ike would never have supported what Johnson did during Ike’s Presidency. Why do I believe this? Because he could have and didn’t. Also, because he achieved the armistice in Korea for same reason.

    • @robertsullivan4773
      @robertsullivan4773 2 года назад +1

      I believe back then they were called observers not advisors there were there to gather first hand intelligence.

    • @08jag81
      @08jag81 2 года назад +1

      Though in '65 Eisenhower supported intervening in Vietnam and advocated using overwhelming force to win it as quickly as possible.

  • @vivianpowell1732
    @vivianpowell1732 4 года назад +3

    Eisenhower had leadership credentials over and above those associated with his military career. Before becoming President of the United States, he had served as president of Columbia University. I was fortunate to have seen President Eisenhower in April 1955. My mother and I attended his appearance at The Citadel in Charleston SC. As we were walking onto the campus, the presidential limousine passed us and Ike waved and flashed us his famous grin. I was 7 years old and still remember that afternoon so clearly.

  • @douglasj.arcuri1370
    @douglasj.arcuri1370 2 года назад +1

    I know one thing.He was a Great President underrated Every Year his stature rises.

  • @benavraham4397
    @benavraham4397 5 лет назад +2

    Excellent video!

  • @clubredken13
    @clubredken13 4 года назад +3

    One of my favorite WW2 movies is Ike: Countdown to D-Day.
    With Tom Selleck as Ike.
    It's tied with Saving Private Ryan for me. I highly recommend it.

  • @tiernanwearen8096
    @tiernanwearen8096 3 года назад +4

    The big country was one of his favourite movies and he had it shown 6 times in the white House

  • @douglasj.arcuri1370
    @douglasj.arcuri1370 2 года назад +2

    One of the Great Presidents.Totally underrated.But IKE has moved up in the rankings as a Great President.And deservingly so.

  • @tomkeating5178
    @tomkeating5178 4 года назад +20

    interesting a man of war knew about war and, made sure usa stayed out

  • @garymorris1856
    @garymorris1856 2 года назад +1

    I was born during the Truman administration, and Eisenhower is the best president in my lifetime, by a wide margin, and yes, I am including Truman.

  • @b1i2l336
    @b1i2l336 2 года назад +7

    Historians have finally come to recognize this great man as one of our five greatest Presidents.

  • @carloste3ichert120
    @carloste3ichert120 4 года назад +17

    Immense respect for Ike. He was responsible for the interstate highway system

    • @robertsullivan4773
      @robertsullivan4773 2 года назад +1

      And it wasn't just for the people he wanted it as a benign weapon system of high speed roads so our military could move quickly within our country if we we ever were invaded.

    • @opticscolossalandepicvideo4879
      @opticscolossalandepicvideo4879 Год назад

      He was a racist

    • @georgeschaut2178
      @georgeschaut2178 5 месяцев назад

      He was also partly responsible for the building of the St. Lawrence Seaway...yes, he was a Republican who understood gov't's role in providing infrastructure...George, Canada...

  • @chunglee6895
    @chunglee6895 4 года назад +4

    great visionary leader for American and the world.

  • @BigTexan59
    @BigTexan59 2 года назад +4

    Ike is an underrated president when people think of the great presidents.

    • @michaelverbakel7632
      @michaelverbakel7632 2 года назад

      I still think that Dwight Eisenhower's predecessor President Harry Truman was higher in stature with what he accomplished as President than what President Eisenhower did in the 1950's.

  • @thomasaquinas5262
    @thomasaquinas5262 4 года назад +2

    Ike was a solid and good man who always tried to do the right thing. In the event, he laid the groundwork, inadvertently, for the Vietnam war. The tragic chain of events leading to that tragedy included the French, the Brits, the indigenous resistance forces and America too...

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 2 года назад

      He laid the groundwork?? Nonsense. Eisenhower KNEW the costs of getting entrenched into that conflict, and KNEW what the French had gone through between 1946-54. Kennedy laid the groundwork by sending 15,000 military into the country.

  • @mikewilson7622
    @mikewilson7622 2 года назад +1

    The greatest president ever we sure need him today

  • @alanshadastrokeanddiedinho2897
    @alanshadastrokeanddiedinho2897 4 года назад +5

    Eisenhower said that appointing Warren was the worst decision he made as president, he did so because then Gov. Warren was challenging Eisenhower for the presidency.

    • @juanmonge7418
      @juanmonge7418 2 года назад

      Warren was the Governor of California. The price of Warren’s endorsement for the Presidency was a future appointment to the Supreme Court.
      Actually, near the end of his Presidency, Ike was asked if he had made any mistakes as President. He said : Two- they are both sitting on the Supreme Court.

  • @jonathanhansen3709
    @jonathanhansen3709 4 года назад +3

    I was a child when Eisenhower was President, but I remember feeling safe growing up in the this country. Unlike today, I knew a grown up was running it. I knew who was President even when I was 5 years old. Eisenhower was a lot smarter than he’s given credit for. The economy prospered. The Soviets were very cautious in their actions, because they knew they were dealing with a man who had been “General of the Armies” and run the invasion of Europe in WW2. Like any great General, he was a man who hated war, and loved peace.

  • @Vegan_scorpioo
    @Vegan_scorpioo 3 года назад +2

    I admire every and each president who avoid war as much as possible, sign of real human being also great leadership❤️

    • @tbone2135
      @tbone2135 3 года назад

      Ike got us into the Vietnam War, I hate Ike!

    • @tbone2135
      @tbone2135 3 года назад

      @@lonewalker_1155 No that Ike!

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 2 года назад

      @@tbone2135 No.

  • @benanderson4473
    @benanderson4473 4 года назад

    Excellent video

  • @johnhofstetter2714
    @johnhofstetter2714 4 года назад +4

    Lot's of great stuff. Now I know what "Make America Great Again"really means.

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 2 года назад

      . true. Sadly it's been misappropriated and hijacked by goofballs, recently.

  • @hughdonaldson
    @hughdonaldson 3 года назад +2

    The last President without any prior political experience who managed to do a good job

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 2 года назад +1

      But high rank in military service served him well. And the nation.

  • @jackiejones1341
    @jackiejones1341 Год назад

    The type of leader we need today. RIP 🙏.

  • @josellorca9275
    @josellorca9275 2 года назад

    He is the best US president up to now. He still been my favorite president.

  • @dallasyap3064
    @dallasyap3064 Год назад

    He was a great President indeed. Another excellent accomplishment of his was the construction of the complex Interstate Highway System that connects the entire mainland US.

  • @edwardanthony7283
    @edwardanthony7283 3 года назад +3

    Ike was the last of the Great Ones, with a how sad for US, & his ingenious Interstate Highway system still moves this country on a daily basis.

    • @BigTexan59
      @BigTexan59 2 года назад

      Give Ike credit for the interstate getting built, but he took inspiration from autobahn.

  • @Brace67
    @Brace67 4 года назад +1

    President Eisenhower remarked at one time that one of the worst decisions he made as president was appointing Earl Warren to the Supreme Court. Warren had been the Republican governor of CA but after his appointment as Chief Justice he became quite liberal in his positions on various issues, much to the chagrin of Eisenhower. Ike was not pleased. He spent a great deal of time on the golf links making many important decisions such as which driver to use. I recall that my dad didn’t think much of him and referred to him as “Old fuzz n**s”.

  • @kennedymcgovern5413
    @kennedymcgovern5413 18 дней назад

    You promised me 5 things i did not already know. You still owe me 5.

  • @robertmoir5695
    @robertmoir5695 3 года назад +2

    well I know Eisenhower was the right person for the time and he was a change for the better when he came to power

  • @saveyourbacon6164
    @saveyourbacon6164 2 года назад +2

    The 1950's.... arguably the high water mark of the American Dream. The rich paid their fair share of taxes, there were four surpluses and there might have been an overall surplus for the 1950's, had it not been for the recession starting in 1959. Ike seems to have known intuitively when to accept advice and when to go against his advisers. His reluctance to use force to resolve international conflicts evidences a realisation that it was inappropriate for the USA to seek to resolve every international issue in accordance with American interests.
    Ike would be absolutely appalled to see the behavior of the Republican Party of today, and the decline of the USA as a result.

  • @johnwesleyhuss2327
    @johnwesleyhuss2327 3 года назад +2

    My favriote president. Raised in kansas

  • @thaddeusroberts2393
    @thaddeusroberts2393 5 месяцев назад +1

    He was a great president, but I hate that he put "In God We Trust," on our currency. We were doing so well with the division of Church and State, now people believe that our founding fathers wanted this religious talk from our government (they didn't).

  • @robertblake9892
    @robertblake9892 6 месяцев назад

    His comments on the "military-industrial complex" were not a model of clarity and clear thinking, he noted that "we can no longer afford to improvise", we engaged in a lot of forward planning before WWII, aircraft, small arms, naval vessels. His defense policies left our defense posture dangerously unbalanced, the over-reliance on "massive retaliation" left us ill-prepared for the 1960s, "wars of liberation", and the adoption of the "up or out " promotions policies for the military resulted in our not having a professional military but a career one. Vietnam showed the folly of that system.

  • @jodeluna62
    @jodeluna62 4 года назад

    Good!

  • @pueblonakahmora8118
    @pueblonakahmora8118 4 года назад +8

    He didn't say we needed a military industrial complex. He warned of the military industrial complex

    • @lurking0death
      @lurking0death 4 года назад +3

      Yes, he most certainly DID say it was needed. But he also said it was potentially corrupt and potentially too influential. Get your accursed facts straight, moron.

    • @scorpiogirl4444
      @scorpiogirl4444 4 года назад

      lurking0death wow? What triggered you? It was a limitation of facts that the commentator was going on. No need for such anger and name calling when it was just as easy to either ignore the comment or to comment to let the person know they need to investigate and educate themselves With complete facts.

  • @americanpatriot4241
    @americanpatriot4241 4 года назад +2

    President Eisenhower was the right man for the right time.

    • @KAIROA
      @KAIROA 4 года назад +1

      So was General Patton....!!!

    • @KAIROA
      @KAIROA 4 года назад +1

      The shuffle of ranks was a scramble in which seniority was often ignored and valor came to be measured by bureaucratic standard of the rules of protocol. Thus Ike, who had been a major for sixteen years, had six promotions-one about every six months, rising from lieutenant colonel to full general in less than three years. He was given a fifth star on December 16 1944, ironically the day the Germans handed him his greatest setback by unleashing the counteroffensive in the Ardennes.
      Mark Clark graduated from West Point eight years after Patton and was still a lieutenant colonel in 1941, when Patton was a major general. Then, however, he pulled away and became a full general_ ahead of Patton.
      It was not the best way to raise what Patton called the fallen arches of his self -respect.
      Made a lieutenant general only on March 12, 1943, after two years as a major general, he wore his three stars for two more years in spite of his victories. And he was uncertain whether he would retain his temporary rank after the war, because he was still only a colonel in the Regular Army.
      In March 1945, he had been overtaken again, not only by Ike, but Bradley, Devers, Clark, and Spaatz, who were promoted to full generals. Neither Patton nor Hodges, nor Simpson nor, for that matter, Sandy Patch was included in the promotion list.
      Knowing how rank-conscious Patton was, and how he resented such rebuff, Eisenhower pleaded for him and for Hodges in Washington. But General Marshall vetoed their promotion on the ground that, as he put it, it would have been a slight to Bradley, and Devers who by then were commanding army groups. Patton grinned a little more grimly than usual when he was told he had been passed over, but bore the snub surprisingly well. Just then he was compensated by a sudden avalanche of other rewards.
      Luxembourg awarded him its coveted Croix de Guerre, France made him a Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor and the City of Metz had a huge medallion minted for him. And besides, he said, “I am having so much fun fighting that I don’t give a damn what my rank is.”
      But he did care, of course. When, four months after Ike’s promotion, and four weeks after the others had been given their four stars, he also was made a full general, he was less than elated. Sometimes I fell, Patton wrote on the eve of his last promotion, “that I may nearing the end of this life.” And more characteristically, in a less macabre mood, “I sometimes think that it is disadvantageous to do too well.”

    • @Justin.Martyr
      @Justin.Martyr 4 года назад

      *& DonaLd Trump IS the RIGHT PRESIDENT NOW!!!!!*

    • @Justin.Martyr
      @Justin.Martyr 4 года назад

      @@KAIROA *& just WUT was the GOOD Part about Patton???*

  • @mitchellcarter1654
    @mitchellcarter1654 3 года назад +1

    He also set up the first chief of staff office in the White House to control information flow to his office instead of activities being willy-nilly.

  • @LEARSIKCIGAM
    @LEARSIKCIGAM 4 года назад +7

    Career politicians are the problem

  • @McIntyreBible
    @McIntyreBible 2 года назад

    1:45, that's a fact I wasn't aware of!

  • @jefferyjohnson4920
    @jefferyjohnson4920 2 года назад

    Soldier, leader and statesman. I liked Ike. I consider him one of our best presidents. He saw what war is. He agonized about the decisions made during the war and the loss of life. 🙏🇺🇸🙏🇺🇸🙏🇺🇸🙏🇺🇸

  • @lordemed1
    @lordemed1 4 года назад +4

    Dwight David Eisenhower was a great man...humble, authentic, and wise. Man, could we use his presence now. Ike would have put Trump in his place...which would have been well below the General, and looking up.

    • @stevepanos2050
      @stevepanos2050 4 года назад

      So you would prefer a buffoon like Biden (who is owned by the Chinese)?

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 2 года назад

      Man, could we ever!

  • @garymorris1856
    @garymorris1856 3 года назад +1

    Interesting, but I already knew all of these things.

  • @mattzupon4155
    @mattzupon4155 3 года назад +3

    Ike was probably the most pragmatic POTUS

  • @mortishastyles1345
    @mortishastyles1345 4 года назад +1

    Because he was the President of the United States of America my spirit decided to be born into mortal life in '55.Because of him alone in God we trust on all our money is our strength against those who do not.

  • @willsjaime
    @willsjaime Месяц назад

    Earl Warren was probably his only mistake. His court dismantled a lot of things that Ike actually stood for.

  • @roberthudson1959
    @roberthudson1959 Год назад

    Citing the appointment of Earl Warren as one of Eisenhower's accomplishments ignores the reality that Eisenhower called that appointment his biggest mistake.

  • @georgeschaut2178
    @georgeschaut2178 5 месяцев назад

    Don't forget...he was also president of Columbia University from 1948 to '53...

  • @TBaroody1
    @TBaroody1 2 года назад +1

    Very underrated POTUS I LIKE IKE

  • @b747guy9
    @b747guy9 4 года назад +6

    In my personal view his greatest failure in office was not confronting Joe McCarthy

    • @stephenrichie4646
      @stephenrichie4646 4 года назад +3

      He worked hard behind the scenes to discredit McCarthy. It worked. He thought going after him publicly would only fuel the flames and give him the attention he craved.

  • @justinbrockshus8483
    @justinbrockshus8483 5 лет назад +4

    You're leaving out a few things in the things you bring up in this video. For example, Ike considered the Earl Warren nomination/appointment the worst decision he ever made as President, because he ended up being a liberal. Yes, he sent troops to Little Rock AR, but reluctantly and hesitatingly and only after Governor Faubus refused to do anything about it. President Truman was the first President to send troops (in non-combat roles) to Vietnam in what would become the Vietnam War. During the Eisenhower Administration, we were still there and even slowly and steadily increased our presence. Lastly, his famous Farewell Address was just before he left office, like 3 days, not after.

    • @Melinda8162
      @Melinda8162 4 года назад +1

      @Justin Brockshus:. Then why didn't Eisenhower pull everyone out of Vietnam while he was president if he thought we shouldn't be involved?
      I mean ' whoever' was there, which I thought were ' advisors '??

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 2 года назад +1

      @Buck Rothschild LBJ knew about this attempt, but he thought it was too horrible to make it public.

    • @epa2349
      @epa2349 2 года назад

      @@Melinda8162
      There's no pulling everyone out, after WW2, America had some form of military presence in most of the countries, most of those countries actually ask for it because it would mean they are under the protection of American army.
      Which is why monarchies of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, UAE all have tens of thousands of American troops on their land because they are basically under American protection.

    • @leonardbonitt3586
      @leonardbonitt3586 2 года назад

      I am under the impression that Eisenhower sent 700 advisers to Vietnam.

  • @TheKeithvidz
    @TheKeithvidz 4 года назад +1

    On his 'foreign policy' - tried to overthrow Syria (Barac destined to follow suite); overthrew democratic Guatemala and Iran, played a role in the eventual murder of African premier Patrice Lumumba over resources ushering decades of brutal rule in his nation.

  • @Raykibb1
    @Raykibb1 5 лет назад +1

    I wonder if Ike had helped France in 1954 with Vietnam, if that could have altered the entire Vietnam conflict in the 60s?

    • @michaelcampon9000
      @michaelcampon9000 5 лет назад +1

      Raykibb x

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 4 года назад +3

      In 1954, Ike tasked one of his Generals, Matthew Ridgway, on what it would take on the part of the US to supplant the French in Vietnam. Ridway - who prepared a document for posterity sake - said it would take anywhere from 500k to 1,000k men, and even then, he said, "that might not be enough." Ike asked, "and then what?" Ike knew. He knew what the French had gone through and the dedication and tenacity of the Vietcong.

    • @Raykibb1
      @Raykibb1 4 года назад +1

      James Anthony: Thanks, I am a huge fan of Ike’s. I loved his fiscal policies, and his farewell address was ominous, and sadly unheeded.

  • @GH-oi2jf
    @GH-oi2jf Год назад

    I disagree with the assessment of Eisenhower’s role in Vietnam. When the French decided to leave Vietnam, the United States took their place and helped to maintain a separate government in the south and prevent implementation of the 1954 accords. The only sensible policy was to assist in implementation of the accords, then go home, as subsequent events proved.
    In the 1960s, President Johnson was the person we blamed the most for the Vietnam War, but I have long believed that it started with Eisenhower and the Dulles brothers.

  • @marisarossi6692
    @marisarossi6692 4 года назад +2

    io, italiana, amo IKE per motivi familiari.

  • @salvadormarley
    @salvadormarley 4 года назад

    Why are there English subtitles on an English video?

  • @tek6423
    @tek6423 2 года назад +1

    I like Ike.

  • @margaretneanover6066
    @margaretneanover6066 5 лет назад +1

    He seemed under duress that the complex wasn't just a German invention, that the idea was some blended concept that not only had created , but was monsterous to some ethnics through probable hindsight. It's kinda like black friday, everyone finds idea and races to the cost of it. I think casualties along the way. It's so imperative to not agree that inner casualties are just one for a cause, because the cause seems to carry many meanings. The Earth is filled with offensive defense. Yet long ago it was rumored about a ethnic racing as a game, not a religion. The silent concerns about who's willing, who's drafted, who's forced into that chaos isn't just a question, it's had answers that are not popular to the cause. So, now the rumors about this life or another, should be communicated. The side calling bull sets a much different stage
    Both hands find it harder to pass without being caught.

  • @michaellangan4450
    @michaellangan4450 4 года назад

    With such a germen name as Eisenhower, you would think, during WW2, he was kept under scrutiny.

    • @magiccitymelkite6161
      @magiccitymelkite6161 3 года назад +1

      I highly doubt it. His family was in America for generations and came from Amish and Mennonites who were a religious minority who fled Germany and settled in Pennsylvania and later Kansas due to religious persecution hundreds of years ago likely before the unification of the modern German nation-state. His last name is even an Americanized spelling different from what it would be in Germany.

  • @m3rl707
    @m3rl707 2 года назад +1

    I still like Ike..
    Stuffed up majorly in Iran tho

  • @BryonLetterman
    @BryonLetterman 4 года назад +4

    It takes someone who understands the true cost of war and the horrors of war to keep American troops out of wars that we had no business fighting in. I was hoping that Trump would have been the guy to recognize that we should not be in Iraq and immediately withdraw troops and also find a way to bring a swift end to Afghanistan, but he hasn't done that. But at least he hasn't escalated things, meaning increase troop levels. We need another president with the same experience and mindset as Eisenhower.

  • @fatherofdragons4880
    @fatherofdragons4880 2 года назад

    No mention of Val valiant Thor then?

  • @makingknowsense8979
    @makingknowsense8979 3 года назад +2

    He was a cool dude. Everyone thought he was out on the golf course. Not even close he was a hands on president. Most important he was the last ethical Republican president. After Eisenhower presidents are more concerned with power than the country. Read the 1956 Republican Platform its hard to understand how they went so wrong.

    • @BigTexan59
      @BigTexan59 2 года назад

      When was the last ethical Democrat president? Maybe Carter, but Jimmy was too nice to deal with the world.

    • @Jeffreylogan74
      @Jeffreylogan74 2 года назад

      They are all corrupt establishment liars. They killed Kennedy because he wouldn’t fall in line and keep their lies secret. You probably need to go pre WW2 to find a genuinely honest president.

    • @Jeffreylogan74
      @Jeffreylogan74 2 года назад

      They are all corrupt establishment liars. They killed Kennedy because he wouldn’t fall in line and keep their lies secret. You probably need to go pre WW2 to find a genuinely honest president.

  • @sblack48
    @sblack48 Год назад

    During ww2 hitler was the least of his worries. He had to figure out how to get the leaders of england france and britain to get along. Talk about genius!

  • @buddymario3462
    @buddymario3462 4 года назад +2

    Dwight Eisenhower is my favorite president

  • @ronaldreagan5535
    @ronaldreagan5535 3 года назад +3

    Ike was also part Black (an ancestor of his was a slave), which may explain his push for civil rights while in office. He also had a mistress.

    • @veannwright3354
      @veannwright3354 3 года назад

      Ikes mother was the child of plantation slaves. The Democrats don't want people to knew how much Republicans have done for equity.

  • @gabrielacobian9137
    @gabrielacobian9137 3 года назад

    There are two things I would like to comment on, one is about the falacy or misconception that Russians were godless; Russians are the most profound spiritual people in the world. The second point is about my opinion regarding Eisenhower. He was not as aware of history as those who tried hard to influence him in his capacity as militaryman as well as a politician; consequently, he was often influenced as president.

    • @epa2349
      @epa2349 2 года назад

      Yeah Russians weren't godless, but communism is. The American fight was against communism not against ordinary Russians.

  • @lewie7820
    @lewie7820 2 года назад

    Marshall was his Ace in the hole. Ike had the idea. Marshall came up with the plan.......

  • @beckyann8389
    @beckyann8389 3 года назад +1

    I like Ike

  • @jimsanti2234
    @jimsanti2234 2 года назад

    He played football for army against Carlyle and Jim Thorpe