What They Don't Teach You About Black Soldiers

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @crunchking9931
    @crunchking9931 Год назад +1002

    Black soldiers did fight in ww1 just not under an American flag like white troops. Instead they were given to the French as supplementary infantry and were the first of the Allie’s to cross into German territory. They were called the 369th infantry regiment better known as the Harlem hell fighters.

    • @zeroturn7091
      @zeroturn7091 Год назад +29

      That’s interesting, I just found out that my great grandfather served during WWI. I’ll have to read up more to see if he saw combat, thanks.

    • @KOMET2006
      @KOMET2006 Год назад +55

      You're speaking of the 93rd Infantry Division, which General Pershing (the commander of the American Expeditionary Force in France) "loaned" to the French Army for the duration of the War. The 93rd distinguished itself in combat on the Western Front, earning high praise (as well as medals for valor, like the Croix de Guerre) from the French.

    • @mujahudin
      @mujahudin Год назад +86

      No way I could see myself fighting for this Country now, so especially not during those times. Not for a country that considers me inferior just because of the color of my skin.

    • @Dagothownsneravar
      @Dagothownsneravar Год назад +38

      Fr that name is tough af. The Harlem hell fighters

    • @williamwinston9671
      @williamwinston9671 Год назад +24

      The 92nd and 93rd divisions saw combat in WW1 as well in the battle of the Argonne. The 369th known as the harlem hellfighters fought under the French flag. My great uncle was in the 92nd and survived the war.

  • @Exostars77-A
    @Exostars77-A Год назад +312

    The more I learn of the way this country has treated African Americans, the more disgusted I feel. Feelings that any rational, reasonable, fair person ought to share.
    I salute African Americans for the way they have shouldered the many outrageous burdens yet remained loyal to the country. Giving their lives for a country which did not consider them full human beings. Astonishing.

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад +2

      How many Black Americans do you think died in WW2?

    • @StromLxrd6
      @StromLxrd6 Год назад +35

      Our ancestors were definitely built different than today's generation, a lot stronger physically and mentally.

    • @adui_yako
      @adui_yako Год назад +22

      @@jumantewashington8715 RELEVANCE?!

    • @JUDALATION
      @JUDALATION Год назад

      Only a FOOL remains loyal to a country hellbent at the destruction of their people...AA are clowns for staying in the USA when blacks in Kenya, Barbados, Netherlands, Australia, are better off...

    • @troyelam8978
      @troyelam8978 Год назад +47

      It’s even worse than you’ve heard. This is why any black person claiming they should not receive some form of reparations truly doesn’t understand how far this country has set them back, even before they were born!

  • @KhemistryIBMOR
    @KhemistryIBMOR Год назад +395

    As a U.S. Army retiree, I thank you for this American history lesson, which is sorely needed.

    • @reginaldselby5074
      @reginaldselby5074 Год назад +3

      I agree with you.

    • @reginaldjones6024
      @reginaldjones6024 Год назад +6

      We aren't black or African American. We are American Aboriginal ( Indians)

    • @KhemistryIBMOR
      @KhemistryIBMOR Год назад +21

      @@reginaldjones6024
      Whatever moniker we/you choose, the message of the history lesson remains the same.

    • @realdeal8303
      @realdeal8303 Год назад +2

      ​@@KhemistryIBMORwould you fight for your own sovereign rights if need be ?

    • @CollinMac96
      @CollinMac96 Год назад +14

      @@reginaldjones6024I’m a black american all that other nonsense you’re spewing does nothing

  • @puravida5683
    @puravida5683 Год назад +527

    I am bi-racial German/Afro-American. My German mother often told me stories of when black soldiers first entered her hometown in Munich during WWII. As opposed to the white soldiers. Black soldiers were kind, treated the Germans with respect, and offered children and women food and chocolate. Even though, white soldiers mistreated black soldiers, worse than the German soldiers they captured. My German grandfather was in the German Army, captured by Americans, and sent to a prison camp in Texas. He told me he was shocked that the black soldiers in Texas, were still treated as slaves, by white soldiers.

    • @StromLxrd6
      @StromLxrd6 Год назад +57

      a damn shame

    • @Imissyoulou
      @Imissyoulou Год назад +19

      Black, with a capital B

    • @d2dar459
      @d2dar459 Год назад +7

      ​@@Imissyoulou
      Discretionary, but u can do that if u want.

    • @thegoddessdiana9185
      @thegoddessdiana9185 Год назад +23

      @@d2dar459 No, the grammatical rules were changed three years ago in August-September, 2020. The changes were made because the word, "Black", when referring to people both describes an ethnicity and a culture. Look it up. The only ones who capitalize "white" in the same context are said or tend to be ws and wn.

    • @d2dar459
      @d2dar459 Год назад +6

      @@thegoddessdiana9185
      Really? Who was the authority that oversaw this change? Genuine question.

  • @markopolozoomanitty6574
    @markopolozoomanitty6574 Год назад +157

    Now you know why Muhammad Ali stayed home.. You fight for those who love you. Not for those who hate you..

    • @f430ferrari5
      @f430ferrari5 Год назад +10

      Japanese Americans turned that hate into love.
      442/100 👍. Most highly decorated unit in WW2. Purple Heart Battalion. Constant suicide missions. Saved the Texas Lost Battalion.
      Families locked up in camps back home.

    • @GhostCell47
      @GhostCell47 Год назад +4

      Truer words were never said.

    • @Matice21
      @Matice21 Год назад +16

      Ali said” why should I fight for my oppressor? If anything I’ll join your enemy to help fight you “

    • @ceolagordon1132
      @ceolagordon1132 Год назад +7

      ​@@Matice21yes my dear one, it's a dang.gone shame that these hateful people were so devious and highly unprofessional unworthy of being in charge or command over even one fighting soldier. These were boys and young men away from home and possibly could lose their lives at any moment and yet being treated as a unwanted house guest! A damn shame!!😮😢❤️

    • @casper12365
      @casper12365 Год назад +11

      During the draft...my mother sent my brother (18 years old at the time) to Canada. My mom said no, no, I don't think so. Not MY son.

  • @bruno8126
    @bruno8126 Год назад +41

    My grandfather was a white soldier during WWII, and he had friends who were black, there was a lot of bulling withing white soldiers and other white solders in the barracks, my grandfather said how black soldiers acted more Collected, respectful and professional towards each other.

  • @curtisthomas2670
    @curtisthomas2670 Год назад +58

    One of the Tuskegee airmen volunteered to fight for Ethiopia in its war against Italy and eventually was in command of its small air force. He then went on to pioneer civil aviation in Ethiopia heading up what became one of the safest airlines in the world Ethiopian Airlines

    • @rjhoover5543
      @rjhoover5543 Год назад +4

      That would make a great movie!

  • @anactualalpaca7016
    @anactualalpaca7016 Год назад +108

    There's a story I heard from ww1 where a regiment of black us troops was sent to aid the French, and they were legitimately amazed at how the French treated them like actual people and didn't subject them to racial semantics like they experienced in the US.

    • @barryrobinson1041
      @barryrobinson1041 Год назад +12

      The 369th Infantry Regiment "Harlem Hellfighters" fought with distinction with the French during WW1

    • @TheLAGopher
      @TheLAGopher Год назад +8

      Black US troops were also amazed by the treatement they received from French civilians who welcomed them without racial segregation.
      In WW2 this occured again for Black US troops in England and Australia, which led to racial clashes with white US soldiers who didn't
      want Black US soldiers dating white women they could meet as local clubs that didn't segregate as US run servicemen's clubs did.
      I was said that part of the concern for General Pershing during WW1 was that if Black troops were treated the same as white ones, they
      would date French women which would set off the white troops. Black soldiers were mostly relegated to working the docks until
      French demands for US troops cause Pershing to transfer Black units to French commnd.

    • @Max-wd3wz
      @Max-wd3wz Год назад +2

      they where the hell fighters from harlem ny

    • @williesweetjr8713
      @williesweetjr8713 Год назад +3

      My Great Uncle told me of the same experience in France during WWI. Treatment he didn't receive in his Murfreesboro, TN home.

    • @dcornelious8080
      @dcornelious8080 Год назад +2

      Stories upon Stories of this all swept under the white rug

  • @girldaddividendinvestor
    @girldaddividendinvestor Год назад +277

    I never thought my grandfather was, "lying," about his treatment during WWII and Korea, but hearing the MULTIPLE sources confirm Nazis were treated better than Black soldiers after capture is SO Amerikkka. Thank you for this.

    • @raakmore4443
      @raakmore4443 Год назад

      WW3 is coming do you think it has anything to do with the rise of biracial and black population on census reports? Everyone knows the Nazi is the secret rulling class.

    • @zeroturn7091
      @zeroturn7091 Год назад +14

      The U.S. has a large Dutch background, you have to remember that the country wanted no part of WWII (outside of sanctions) until Pearl Harbor. The protonazis.

    • @dirkdillary4925
      @dirkdillary4925 Год назад

      The Nazi's were in America way before the wars! Look into the American Bund! Looking into how many Germans illegally immigrated to North America in the late 1800s (1860s and later)! Ask yourself why did they come and what was happening to the Negros in America during that time!

    • @TheLAGopher
      @TheLAGopher Год назад +19

      The war between the western alliance and Nazi Germany was the closest WWII hot to being a “Gentleman’s War” the US Army was segregated and captured Germans were seen as fellow white men under the influence of
      an evil regime. They were not hated as a people. A large chunk of the white American population is of Herman descent. They did face much discrimination in the First World War period but by WWII they had Anglolized to such a degree that they were left alone
      in while public wrath turned against Japanese Americans.

    • @jamesblunt1915
      @jamesblunt1915 Год назад +5

      ​@@TheLAGopherWhat wrath did Japanese Americans endure. I don't remember any JA being lynched or houses, and towns being burned down 🤔

  • @pencilpauli9442
    @pencilpauli9442 Год назад +49

    Paused @1:09
    That Black Americans were treated so badly after the sacrifices in WW1 reminds me of the experience of a Black soldier in Europe in 1944-5.
    He wrote of how the Black soldiers were treated in France as liberators and heroes, with no discrimination by the the French people. He had hoped that things would be different in the US post war. But on return, despite having served their country, they were treated the same old discrimination.
    Apologies for not having a source. It was shown on a British TV documentary commemoration the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Europe.
    Now I fear that the rise of the right will undo the rights that have been achieved in the latter part of the 20th century.
    And what happens in the USA tends to be smuggled into the UK too
    It's a constant and totally unnecessary fight for minority rights that never seems to bloody end.

    • @Imissyoulou
      @Imissyoulou Год назад

      Unfortuantly, there seemed to be a group of Blacks leaning toward the right, but that is their right.

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад

      No need to fear. The nation was built on racism and ws. We are truly living behind enemy lines. However our enemies will be our footstool.

    • @melaninfuture
      @melaninfuture Год назад +2

      Your fear is misguided. Look at the current state of Black americans collectively, what has either party done to repair the damage caused by this anti-black country?

    • @pencilpauli9442
      @pencilpauli9442 Год назад

      @@melaninfuture
      Not sure you grasp what I mean by right wing.
      The Republican party have moved further right. The Dems are generally better on social issues but are still conservative on the whole.
      The latter are also neoliberal economically and so have done sweet Fanny Adams to address the structural causes of racism.
      If you think that they are the same as the vile and hostile Republicans however, you must have been walking around turning a blind eye.

    • @IsaiahColeman-y7d
      @IsaiahColeman-y7d Год назад

      If I had been a soldier doing that time I would have made my way back there to live it sound like a good place for black men doing that time, come back home and white people ready to kill a black soldier if he was know to have killed a lot of white people in the war, some did get killed for it.

  • @KhemistryIBMOR
    @KhemistryIBMOR Год назад +9

    Excellent work!

  • @anthonybryant1969
    @anthonybryant1969 Год назад +69

    I see why Ali didn't want to be apart of the military.

    • @gregscott1672
      @gregscott1672 6 дней назад

      The way that Ali was treated was uncalled for. As a veteran myself, I can truly say that the military is not for everyone. Ali was a great human being and the greatest heavyweight boxer of them all. Much of his prime was wrongfully taken from him for refusing to serve in the military by the WBA and WBC boxing commissions in 1967 and he was denied a license to box until 1970. Racism is a cancer that should not have any place on this planet!

  • @MrTwenty20video
    @MrTwenty20video Год назад +39

    This video is well needed and appreciated. Thank you. 11:46 is a fact that everyone in the world should be told about. This is history and a current event in America.

  • @michaelodonnell824
    @michaelodonnell824 Год назад +97

    Jim Crown in the Military was strictly enforced. Even when serving overseas, US Military Police approached Restaurants, Cafes and Bars DEMANDING that they Segregate - ie NOT serve Black US Service people. Some UK pubs complied, but most did not...

    • @garawa1987
      @garawa1987 Год назад +25

      Even in Australia during that time when black Americans soldiers were stationed in Australia there were not allowed to mix with the general public

    • @coreylevine8095
      @coreylevine8095 Год назад

      After the War Black G.I was treated as bad the Military try to keep Black Soilders from dating local women in Germany,Italy,Japan and Korea by telling the people there that they had monkey tail and had STD and all that

    • @PumaFau
      @PumaFau Год назад

      I read once that a UK bar was told to segregate black soldiers. So the bar banned all the white troops and only let the black troops drink.

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад +3

      Which culminated into the Battle of Bamber Bridge.

    • @curtisthomas2670
      @curtisthomas2670 Год назад +28

      All the pub owners in the English town of Bamber Bridge responded to the segregation demands by putting up signs saying they would only serve black US troops and NOT white US troops 😅

  • @TheLilhoop23
    @TheLilhoop23 Год назад +46

    You know the USA was racist when African American troops during WW1 had to fight with the French troops..the French actually gave African American troops war medals for their service. #Harlem Hellfighters

    • @MalevolentBite
      @MalevolentBite Год назад

      France is still racist as hell. Both are racist. Don't draw that line. France always used blacks for their dirty work they are just more open about it than America.

    • @0lionheart
      @0lionheart Год назад +3

      2/3's of the Free French Army was African, but you rarely hear about that. The British and US fought to keep African troops out of the victory parades because it was a "white man's war" kind of deal. Fucking sucks man, ain't right.

    • @ivicahudika3379
      @ivicahudika3379 Год назад +2

      The Allies wanted to use the American units as replacements for the French and British armies, they did not want to use them as a separate fighting force. General Pershing fought really hard to keep the American Forces as a separate fighting force. There were several compromises he made. One was to have the American “black” 369 inf join the French 15th Div which was made up of French black Senegalese troops. Other American “white” regiments i believe there were four of them joined British units. The rest of the American Army stayed together. Pershing did a great job and was a platoon commander in an all black unit in his early days and had high respect for African American soldiers.
      Everyone received medals from France, because they fought in France and medals from the American Army.
      The reason black soldiers went to a French unit was more political and nothing to do with racism.

    • @raheemjenkins6110
      @raheemjenkins6110 Год назад +2

      @@ivicahudika3379lol. Keep telling yourself that.

    • @ivicahudika3379
      @ivicahudika3379 Год назад

      @@raheemjenkins6110 it’s true, do some research

  • @swannoir7949
    @swannoir7949 Год назад +34

    Before Tuskegee, many Black pilots were being trained in a small town called Robbins, Illinois, until 1937 when a storm destroyed the hangar, where it was briefly relocated to somewhere in the Southside of Chicago, until they found their permanent home at Tuskegee. Robbins is home to basketball player Dwayne Wade, and the actress from Star Trek (original series) Nichelle Nichols, and Keke Palmer.

    • @denno3124
      @denno3124 Год назад

      How do you know about Robbins, Illinois? You sound like you're from there.

    • @alpaphoenix3252
      @alpaphoenix3252 17 дней назад

      @@denno3124I’m from the Chicago area and he’s telling facts.

  • @Hero4Hire4
    @Hero4Hire4 Год назад +156

    The more things have changed; the more they have remained the same. 😢

    • @briggstondade4986
      @briggstondade4986 Год назад

      Black people being treated as a renewable resource?
      Yea I said it.

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад

      Blacks still whining.

    • @kerrydoe9810
      @kerrydoe9810 Год назад +8

      What goes around, comes around... so I guess ain't shit changed

    • @RUTHLESSambition5
      @RUTHLESSambition5 Год назад +14

      I would have fled and join the opposition. Would have gotten a way better deal. if I'm able to fight in the next big war I'm joining the ops. I wont give my life for these wyte crazies

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад +1

      @@RUTHLESSambition5 You would have swapped a job working in a canteen or driving an officer around for being a slave in a Nazi concentration camp.

  • @chriswilliams7504
    @chriswilliams7504 Год назад +19

    Needs to be a movie for the Tankers

    • @18YoungFLY
      @18YoungFLY Год назад +2

      I was thinking the same

    • @KhemistryIBMOR
      @KhemistryIBMOR Год назад +1

      Agreed!

    • @benjaminfrazier5419
      @benjaminfrazier5419 Год назад +4

      Former USMC M-60A1 tanker here. I agree!!! I nominate Spike Lee to produce a movie about the 761st…..
      🦅🌎⚓️✊🏾❤️🇺🇸

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад +4

      Needs to be more books that can detail our experiences in the Services. I don't care to see a heavily edited and then inaccurate movie on our experiences. The best format is books so that way the author has the freedom to expound and expand on the events.

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      @@benjaminfrazier5419Spike gets facts wrong too. I nominate somebody more insightful, maybe Tyler. He’ll tell it with the passion that it needs. His drama is always in-depth with it.

  • @18breaths66
    @18breaths66 Год назад +34

    We need to go back to separate medical facilities. They low key killing us.

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад +10

      It's not low key anymore it's open. Seek black Dr.s if you can.

    • @rdkirk3834
      @rdkirk3834 15 дней назад

      Our fathers sought integration because it makes us harder to target. Separate doesn't help you unless you control the system. That's the difference between a gated community and a ghetto.

  • @paulhunter6742
    @paulhunter6742 Год назад +13

    Thank you for posting this Documentary on Black Soliders in US Military. My father served during Korea War although he lucky not enter combat zone. After he passed away in 2017 i found Military scrapbook. He never talked about his Service during that Warm

  • @jessejohnson6799
    @jessejohnson6799 Год назад +68

    Seeing all of this makes my blood boil how the black soldiers who fought and died for a country who they truly believed in

    • @jamesnevitt3400
      @jamesnevitt3400 Год назад +3

      Not really wanting acceptance can be a problem . Especially amongst people that don't mean you any good that goes for any sisuation.

    • @y.v.n.gvidsstuff1057
      @y.v.n.gvidsstuff1057 Год назад +18

      ​@@jamesnevitt3400What are you even talking about it was wrong they even had to fight to do that. But your trying to say they're wrong for wanting to be treated equally in there own country ?

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      @@y.v.n.gvidsstuff1057he’s either a racist or a “sambo”.

  • @DrSkull1939
    @DrSkull1939 Год назад +9

    Thank you for posting all this information. We don't see this everyday as some would want you not to know real history. They want to control what you need to know. Once again, Thank you. I subscribed for more future content

  • @ronaldgreen8423
    @ronaldgreen8423 Год назад +91

    My grandfather was a cook on an island campaign and his unit was in heavy combat. At first they treated him bad and looked down on him. But once the white soldiers started to get took out. A sergeant went to him and told him he was sorry for everything and that he was needed to fight the Japanese. They gave him a rifle and ammo and the rest is history. He earned got a purple heart to go along with his bronze star.🤔🇺🇸

    • @karithema9ician657
      @karithema9ician657 Год назад +28

      A ♟ in their little games 🤷🏾‍♂️. Respect to him though he had massive balls to do what he did. I never want to deminish these brothers accomplishments. But I can’t turn a blind eye to injustice and it still only compounds the EVIL.

    • @d2dar459
      @d2dar459 Год назад +27

      Once they had no choice, they saw him as the man and soldier with skills equal to white soldiers he was.
      Ur grandfather deserves a thousand salutes 💯💯 but I can't pretend it's not disgusting that the sergeant refused to see that until he needed a favour.

    • @marshdell
      @marshdell Год назад +14

      Nothing quite like mass casualties to tear down that illusion of "supremacy" anything.
      Me? I'd ask Sarge if the guys wanted rice or grits for chow.

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад +1

      @@marshdellHELL YEAH!

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад +1

      Which campaign? Which outfit?

  • @carveslipknot56powerman7
    @carveslipknot56powerman7 Год назад +9

    I have a great grandfather who fought in the second world war and he managed to become a officer. I didn't know him too much because he wasn't in my life does he passed away earlier in my mom's life. But now that I've been listening to this thing it's kind of crazy that he must have experienced some of these and it must have changed him. What I can recall from my great-grandmother's life with him. Things must have changed drastically after the war... Plus given with this knowledge I can probably tell why

  • @phatgringo2.0
    @phatgringo2.0 Год назад +6

    Great video and timely release!

  • @yusufrashada2863
    @yusufrashada2863 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @duanelynch3730
    @duanelynch3730 Год назад +91

    My father had bitter memories of how he and other black soldiers were treated in Hawaii before being shipped off to fight in the battle of Okinawa in 1945. Black soldiers were not allowed leave in Honolulu because the white soldiers, sailors and marines would attack them. He spoke of how black soldiers would become seriously seasick as they we’re segregated in the bottom levels of the troop ships sailing to Okinawa.
    Yet he and his fellow black soldiers fought bravely against the Japanese. You don’t see this on the movies! 🤔🦾😤😡

    • @19Pyrus70
      @19Pyrus70 Год назад +17

      They've even stopped talking about the cook who managed to shoot down a zero during the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    • @defoegrinda
      @defoegrinda Год назад +8

      I salute and thank your father for his service and sacrifice, there’s a special place in Heaven for your fatter and all these black men that had to endure this treatment, they were very strong minded men, my respect to all of them

    • @mjanny6330
      @mjanny6330 Год назад

      It was the opposite lol.

    • @Nghilifa
      @Nghilifa Год назад +1

      @@19Pyrus70 That's not correct, I mean, they're naming a new aircraft carrier after him the USS Doris Miller CVN-81.

    • @19Pyrus70
      @19Pyrus70 Год назад +1

      @@Nghilifa
      If that's true, I believe I'll stand at least partially corrected!😅

  • @willcrute7477
    @willcrute7477 Год назад +25

    This country has never won a war until they let the black men fight yet they were still discriminated against

  • @JackPetraitis
    @JackPetraitis Год назад +2

    Lol W.B. DuBois does sound like WB tha boys. Some of these captions are whacked out but this whole video is golden. Thanks for creating it!

  • @jmar1973
    @jmar1973 Год назад +57

    My uncle served on a Huey helicopter crew in Vietnam. He ended up being in that situation because of his high test scores.
    I can't help but think that he was considered for that at all because of the sacrifices and hard work of the Black men who served in WW11.
    Awesome video,you really did your research. 👏🏿 👏🏿 👏🏿 Much appreciated, looking forward to seeing more from you!💯

    • @dat3rdsideboy386
      @dat3rdsideboy386 Год назад +9

      They had most black people fly because it was bigger risk and they didn’t care if they died my great grandfather was a Tuskegee airman he told me a lot about wwii

    • @y.v.n.gvidsstuff1057
      @y.v.n.gvidsstuff1057 Год назад +3

      ​​@@dat3rdsideboy386yep and we still kicked some butt in that line of duty to. 👊🏾🇺🇸

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      Was he a door gunner because they had the highest casualty rate!?

  • @romecottrell6444
    @romecottrell6444 Год назад +33

    I'm glad that I have seen this video, it's a shame how African American soldiers was so mistreated after fighting in every war that the United States of America 🇺🇸 has ever fought 😢 in . More should be done to repay African -Americans soldiers today for the work they put in to protect this nation 🇺🇲 .

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад

      400,000 White Americans died in WW2.
      708 Black Americans were killed in combat in WW2.
      7000 Black Americans were killed by Black Americans in 2021.

    • @deloreswillis9224
      @deloreswillis9224 Год назад +2

      I totally concur

  • @reginaldselby5074
    @reginaldselby5074 Год назад +9

    I just recently brought a book called Patton's Panthers, great eye opening read. It should be a must read for anyone studying military history.

  • @rhondanash-taylor9203
    @rhondanash-taylor9203 18 дней назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤THANK YOU FOR KEEPING HISTORY ALIVE 🙏🏾 👏🏾

  • @Cal3000
    @Cal3000 Год назад +4

    Great video. I've been watching a lot of WW2 videos lately and was always wondering how black people were treated then. It give me a lot of anxiety learning everything that they had to do through to want to gain respect.

  • @cripplehawk
    @cripplehawk Год назад +2

    A small trivia
    The first picture at 0:00
    are men from the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion. The reason they looked upset because they were captured by the Germans during the Battle of the Bulge and are being photographed by the German cameramen for the "Die Deutche Wochenchau" (German Weekly) (These men were in the front line area in Belgium). They fought but ran out of ammo

  • @senrab99
    @senrab99 Год назад +30

    My father was a WW2 Pacific vet. He stated to me that in garrison the social norms were in place, but melted away when the bullets flew. Black troops were mostly regulated to support actions, but the Japanese did not respect those boundaries. I salute the civilian and military heroes of our communities of that time. Heroes = The common person.

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      Army or Montford Point Marine?

    • @senrab99
      @senrab99 Год назад

      Primary job was Army radio operator, the Marines were not taking many negroes at the time. They joined the fight on hopes for a brighter future. They endured for better opportunities, and they were right. The old lies of laziness, incompetence, and cowardness could not be kept. WW1 and WW2 firmly planted the seeds for the Civil Rights movement because there were too many positive factors to ignore.

  • @t.r.stephens7547
    @t.r.stephens7547 Год назад +26

    My grandfather fought in WW2 and saw it is an opportunity to personally leave the south and Jim Crow not only that his younger brother was able to receive a job working in the defense industry in Chicago. After the war my grandfather did not go back south he stayed in NYC and used the training he received in the navy as a long shore man and heavy equipment operator to earn a very good living for the time he was also able to use VA gi bill to purchase his home and raise a family.
    Yes it was rough times for black servicemen but it was rough both in the military but especially as a sharecropper in the south.
    So in short this war pulled us out of poverty in a way but by no means granted us complete equality. It also laid the ground work for militancy that was used to achieve civil rights 2 decades after the war.
    So my point is that even wars can benefit if you can look at it in a constructive manner.
    25 years in the military helped me to realize this myself and gave me a great appreciation of what times were like.

    • @Neake22
      @Neake22 Год назад

      My friend. Wars instigated and caused by white men will NEVER benefit us AS A WHOLE in America.

    • @pencilpauli9442
      @pencilpauli9442 Год назад +8

      The question your anecdote begs is, why tf does it take a war to raise up some people who were lucky enough to obtain some economic security.
      I have no figures but I highly doubt your family's experience was the norm.
      You also ignore the fact that the opportunity cost of spending so much on the military is the potential spending on social programmes that could lift entire demographics out of poverty.

    • @t.r.stephens7547
      @t.r.stephens7547 Год назад +4

      Read a history book of your choice from that era if you want to know or even better find a black veteran from that generation and really talk to them.
      Yes you are right it is a shame that it took a war to start a process of change however wars have been a catalyst for change throughout human history for better and worse and any major war will effect every culture on the planet in one form or another.
      Progress is slow and comes in many unexpected and sometimes in undesirable ways but change is always constant.

    • @t.r.stephens7547
      @t.r.stephens7547 Год назад +3

      @@pencilpauli9442 besides this is my family’s story I understand that not everyone was able to benefit at the time but that’s how the world works ,and that I learned from grandpa I personally care for those who are members of my family and can only truthfully speak on my family’s American experience.

    • @pencilpauli9442
      @pencilpauli9442 Год назад +9

      @@t.r.stephens7547
      No shade intended for you or your grandfather of whom you are rightly proud.
      He did what he thought was best for his family and rightly so.
      Likewise yourself.
      It's the system that I am criticising.
      The military has been used post war to pursue a colonial agenda that has persecuted and oppressed non-White peoples overseas.
      It's not something that is widely discussed

  • @STLKRACKER
    @STLKRACKER Год назад +7

    It takes a very special person to fight for a country that treated them as subhuman.

    • @rayali9854
      @rayali9854 29 дней назад

      Yes very special even in 2024

  • @wanderfull5829
    @wanderfull5829 Год назад +18

    There are good reasons for Black Americans to serve in the military. But there are better reasons not to serve. I would never encourage my kid to serve, not for America.

    • @WeAllWeGot333
      @WeAllWeGot333 Год назад +1

      Not smart going to college is the worst thing someone can do rn the military gave me disability free money forever and experience you can’t get in the civilian world

    • @serious1756
      @serious1756 Год назад +1

      No, only for wakanda. Right

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      @@WeAllWeGot333true, brotherhood is one.

  • @dwaynejeffers1632
    @dwaynejeffers1632 Год назад +8

    As a veteran of the US Army I appreciate the service of my fellow veterans no matter what the branch of military they served with.

  • @timstewart9026
    @timstewart9026 Год назад +2

    Thanks for an excellent black history lesson. I had the honor of meeting a few of the veteran red tails when they spoke at Compton College when I worked in the 1980s. in fact my jr. high school (also in Compton) was named after General Benjamin O Davis jr.

  • @patricefrancq2277
    @patricefrancq2277 Год назад +5

    merci pour votre service

  • @desertdetroiter428
    @desertdetroiter428 Год назад +39

    Sometimes I HATE that I served this country.

    • @The.Original.Potatocakes
      @The.Original.Potatocakes Год назад +4

      You could be in a 3rd world country. 🤷‍♂️

    • @desertdetroiter428
      @desertdetroiter428 Год назад +45

      @@The.Original.Potatocakes how could I be in a 3td world country? Based on what? I’m not the descendant of immigrants (like you), and my family on both sides have been on this soil for 350 years. So no, I couldn’t be in a 3rd world country. You could perhaps.

    • @dei-wan-grey3888
      @dei-wan-grey3888 Год назад +1

      @@The.Original.PotatocakesA Sick UNGODLY People these Demonic Bigots are Disgusting to hear this type of Degenerate Filth was Happening truly Of Satanic Origin

    • @paulhunter6742
      @paulhunter6742 Год назад +20

      Please do not disregard your Service to this Country. Even if your fellow soldiers and officers didn't acknowledge that Service. You're still just a much hero as anyone else. God Bless you.

    • @RasheedGazzi-u5l
      @RasheedGazzi-u5l Год назад

      ​@@desertdetroiter428Tell him one more time! They kill me with that crap. Ask them why their ancestors left Europe. To get out of their s#ithole countries is why.

  • @2Tall03XX
    @2Tall03XX Год назад +22

    I had the privilege of knowing one of the first black Marines who fought in WW2. The stories and knowledge he had. May he RIP!

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      Which one? I’m interested in them and I’d like to look him up!

    • @2Tall03XX
      @2Tall03XX Год назад +2

      @@roderickstockdale1678 his name was PFC Leon Dixon. He passed away in July 2021.

  • @johnheigis83
    @johnheigis83 Год назад +1

    Very well done.
    Thanks.

  • @nyyt854tufc
    @nyyt854tufc Год назад +9

    First thing is black people have never been considered American 🙁

  • @MaterialGworlKodi
    @MaterialGworlKodi 6 месяцев назад

    Such an amazing video! Thank you my brother 🙏

  • @confusedson
    @confusedson Год назад +9

    Good documentary, with some chilling thoughts about it's time. One thing that perhaps deserves a mention would be how rape convictions were virtually NEVER brought against white American soldiers, despite THOUSANDS of accusations, whereas black American soldiers accused of rape faced very severe penalties (not to mention lynchings from their own side and such).

    • @IsaiahColeman-y7d
      @IsaiahColeman-y7d Год назад

      That has kept me from dating any woman except women of color, the power is still there anytime a white woman wants to use it, I heard a story where these three black soldiers were accused of raping a white woman doing the second world war, she pointed out two of the men, but they killed all three of them, one wrote his mother and told her he had nothing to do with raping that woman, but they were going to kill him the next day.

  • @feet9100
    @feet9100 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your great insight

  • @duanerice-mason2115
    @duanerice-mason2115 Год назад +36

    MY FATHER AND GRAND UNCLES SERVED IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR HOWEVER THEY ALL ADMITTED THAT IF THEY COULD HAVE LEGALLY AVOIDED MILITARY SERVICE THEY WOULD HAVE I HAVE NEVER EXPERIENCED JIM CROW THEY DID😢

    • @karithema9ician657
      @karithema9ician657 Год назад

      Nuff said 🤷🏾‍♂️ 🇺🇸= 🗑

    • @zeroturn7091
      @zeroturn7091 Год назад +1

      My grandfather was drafted due to having a February birthday, and all five of his remaining brothers signed up to join him. Their father served in WWI. What’s even more peculiar is that my paternal grandfather was a Marine during WWII.

    • @TheLAGopher
      @TheLAGopher Год назад +5

      It didn’t help that all black units were often poorly led by white officers who showed open disdain
      at the idea of black men as good soldiers.
      While certain all black units with black officers or enlightened white
      ones did perform competently
      those led by bigoted whites
      especially those from the south,
      performed poorly and that was used to tarnish the reputation
      of all black troops.
      Also black troops during the world wars were vastly under awarded
      compared to their counterparts
      in both earlier wars like the Civil War Spanish American War
      and Indian Wars or later wars such
      Korea or Vietnam.
      Some suspect that it was a deliberate policy to under award
      black troops to keep the support of southern whites for the world wars.

    • @susandalton7889
      @susandalton7889 Год назад +3

      It's all a darn shame. My dad was a World War Two veteran, originally from Brooklyn, New York. He kept a diary concerning his service in the European theater of operations. Even he, as a young soldier, mentioned in his writings how poorly black troops were treated by the Army.

  • @karenchandler2921
    @karenchandler2921 Год назад +28

    I had never heard of the Black Panthers but of course I have had of the Red Tails. Thank you so much for this history lesson. This means the world to me.

    • @reginaldselby5074
      @reginaldselby5074 Год назад +6

      Check out a book called Patton's Panthers. It's eye opening.

    • @odgreen5655
      @odgreen5655 Год назад

      You can buy their uniform patch online!

  • @muttley678
    @muttley678 Год назад +6

    my bahamian pops bless him served in ww2! much respect for him and All blk veterans like my self 80's !!!

  • @redsns1957
    @redsns1957 Год назад +4

    My father served in the Pacific during the war...he told his four sons...that the US military was no place for a Black man... especially during Vietnam it seemed that the government was playing catch up with Black soldiers sending everybody except those with money...he made sure those of my brothers that were eligible for the draft was in college

  • @Neake22
    @Neake22 Год назад +44

    Us helping these people fight THEIR WARS needs to stop.

    • @Ms.Byrd68
      @Ms.Byrd68 Год назад +5

      We don't serve for THEM... we serve for US!

    • @Neake22
      @Neake22 Год назад +11

      @@Ms.Byrd68 but what are you "serving"? And who's conflicts are you "serving" to end? I have yet to see a conflict America was involved in to benefit us.

    • @Ms.Byrd68
      @Ms.Byrd68 Год назад +9

      @@Neake22 My people, my family and whatever conflict that would threaten them! These men's service lead to finally & truly DESEGREGATING the Military, ending the discrimination in advancements, promotions and Military opportunities afforded to my family. They served for THEIR PEOPLE, THEIR FAMILY. I served for mine... YOUR WELCOME!

    • @s-madegames
      @s-madegames Год назад

      @@Ms.Byrd68 Yet Racism is nowhere near an end in the US

    • @Neake22
      @Neake22 Год назад

      @@Ms.Byrd68 You're missing the point. I'm not trying to discredit you or your family being inlisted. But we have been helping these people since the revolutionary war. That's no different than the black people from the civil rights era getting beat up and bashed in the head at restaurants just so they could eat with white people. You just had 2 brothers get discriminated against at Dennys. IT'S THEIR MILITARY, THEIR WARS!

  • @antoineferbos3586
    @antoineferbos3586 Год назад +17

    Great history video. In these times we need to remind the younger generation of our struggles in the past as well as in the future. GOD bless us all !!

    • @AJ-bb1tc
      @AJ-bb1tc Год назад

      No one cares about you people except you people 😂

    • @Fck_the_atf
      @Fck_the_atf Год назад +1

      We need to teach people about history but leave the victim blaming and race hustling out of it. I know you didn’t say it but it is a slap in the face to all the men in this video who died for equality just for their descendants to use their skin color to play the victim.

    • @jl.478
      @jl.478 Год назад

      @@Fck_the_atfblacks have been playing victim since the 60’s. It has only gotten worse in the 2020’s as they become more entitled.

    • @BobPantsSpongeSquare97
      @BobPantsSpongeSquare97 Год назад +1

      ​@@Fck_the_atfwhy are you so offended by the history of racism? It's less about "victim blaming" and more about you being uncomfortable when people talk about historical injustices

  • @b1slee267
    @b1slee267 3 дня назад +1

    Peace to all the brothas and sistas who gave their lives to a country that didn’t care much bout their well being, disrespected in the field and just wanted bodies out there just to come back home and be treated the same way.

  • @2REAL4MOST
    @2REAL4MOST Год назад +6

    Reparations Right Now for FBA-B1

  • @jimmiephantomtv6645
    @jimmiephantomtv6645 Год назад +1

    Outstanding information 👏 ww1 Black troops... 💯 Respect most be Heard awesome stuff here

  • @edwarddanso5289
    @edwarddanso5289 Год назад +4

    The black earth belongs to blackmen.The long suffering is going to be long and joy for ever.

  • @Jarod-te2bi
    @Jarod-te2bi Год назад +2

    The 93rd & 92nd divisions deserve a video.

  • @msgtvarela
    @msgtvarela Год назад +16

    This. This is the kind of stuff that’s never talked about in history classes in the public school system. You gotta enroll in college level courses just to learn this

    • @MMOfreakOUT1
      @MMOfreakOUT1 Год назад +1

      Please, let's not turn history lessons about World War 2 into how Black People were treated...
      What I believe we have to include more is what atrocities the allies did to Germany and even the FRENCH. Allied troops - including Black Americans - participated in sexual violence. It was, ofc, much worse on the Eastern Front where the numbers hit millions of women.
      The treatment of Black Americans is quite irrelevant to World War 2.

    • @jl.478
      @jl.478 Год назад

      @@MMOfreakOUT1atrocities? To the French? The Germans deserved everything they got.

    • @NoahPanton
      @NoahPanton Год назад +3

      @@MMOfreakOUT1I hope you look back on your comment in shame.

    • @MMOfreakOUT1
      @MMOfreakOUT1 Год назад +1

      @@NoahPanton I don't. People gotta stop treating Black People like innocent children. I've studied World War 2 throughout my life. Fact of the matter is that the only interesting part of Black People in WW2 was that the Americans and English got into fights over the Jim Crow laws that Americans had included in their military. But truth is that they didn't have much of a role back then. During the occupation of France, Nazis pretty much only picked up jews.
      Why should I learn about Black People in World War 2 when their role was so insignifact? There were Black SA members and there was Black American soldiers who r4ped Women. We gonna include them as well? Or is that gonna be left out? The only people who would think of Black People in relation to World War 2 would be Americans because of Jim Crow.

    • @NoahPanton
      @NoahPanton Год назад +2

      @@MMOfreakOUT1 you sound bitter! All that you’ve commented, has been done by your own people’s ancestors. Also I’d like to hear your evidence on those claims? All talk until we see your source🤮

  • @Jalenlane93
    @Jalenlane93 Год назад +5

    This country never deserved our honor, blood and sacrifice. I understand why black people serve because of the benefits but they need to remember this history.

  • @daffyd5867
    @daffyd5867 Год назад +5

    My father was a British army vet of ww2 and korea...he was always amazed at how poorly white American troops treated black troops....

    • @cashewnuttel9054
      @cashewnuttel9054 Год назад

      I'm amazed why these African Americans never considered rebelling and joining the enemy.
      A lot in the US could have acted as spies and saboteurs.

  • @darrenhunt9049
    @darrenhunt9049 Год назад +2

    As a former Australian Army member I salute all you Seppos regardless. Definitely miss you Jarhead bastards.

  • @nick6779
    @nick6779 Год назад +4

    When refitted with new airplanes to replace the P40 Warhawk fighter plane the 99th(332nd) Squadrons were flying they were given the P51 Mustang fighter plane at Ramitelli, Italy and not the "P37 Thunder Jet", a plane mentioned here that I have never heard of

    • @leodouskyron5671
      @leodouskyron5671 Год назад +3

      Got the picture right but the name wrong. They started with the P-40 Warhawk (OLD but reliable FOR GROUND SUPPORT), P-38 Airacobras and the P-51 Thunderbolt and eventually were upgraded to the P-51 Mustang (supply I believe was the reason).

    • @HaloFTW55
      @HaloFTW55 Год назад

      @@leodouskyron5671 The P-47 Thunderbolt?

  • @DisHappah
    @DisHappah Год назад

    Well, no matter what they went through and how much they might hate the country or their superiors for what they went through, they have my gratitude and respect. Thank you, brave soldiers, for stopping Nazi tyranny.

  • @darrelllovett4722
    @darrelllovett4722 Год назад +4

    My Grandfather served in the Red Ball Express

  • @daltonmcpherson935
    @daltonmcpherson935 Год назад

    Fantastic presentation

  • @acecreations1
    @acecreations1 Год назад +4

    I totally appreciate that your video highlighted the plights of Black soldiers… I wish that more time or efforts were put forth in your grammatical errors which is a a reflection of your dedication to prove we are capable of presenting facts.

  • @iYobuko
    @iYobuko Год назад

    Great Video, blessed to have seen this in my recommended. You deserve more views and recognition. Well done +1 sub

  • @michaelstagar4254
    @michaelstagar4254 Год назад +7

    Can you do some videos on the wars since? Vietnam would be the most interesting.

    • @Mocha69A
      @Mocha69A Год назад +1

      Every single war is most interesting

  • @cgee2224
    @cgee2224 Год назад +5

    33:15 There was no such aircraft called P-37 thunderjets. They were Republic P-47 Thunderbolts and North American P-51 Mustangs

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад

      You mean the messofshits

    • @mjanny6330
      @mjanny6330 Год назад

      There's heaps of lies in this lol.

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад

      @@mjanny6330 sounds about white to me.....
      Grow up ya salty saltine mayonated MZUNGU!!

    • @terejosh13
      @terejosh13 Год назад +1

      ​@mjanny6330 and your sources ohh you have none other than your WS rhetoric that is very poorly executed and educated

  • @datzitteezy
    @datzitteezy Год назад +4

    My great uncle served during world war 2. He said they wouldn't issue him a rifle. His job was to sneak up and place sticky bombs on german tanks and sneak away without being detected.

    • @IsaiahColeman-y7d
      @IsaiahColeman-y7d Год назад +2

      That was messed up and stupid why didn't the white soldier do that job sense they didn't want to give the man a gun

  • @briandozier9113
    @briandozier9113 Год назад +6

    Got in an argument with my first sergeant (Mexican dude) about Mohammed Ali “dodging the draft” during Vietnam. My thing is it takes balls to ask a people who you oppress rape murder kidnap experiment on and forbid drinking from the same water fountain to “ hey come fight for democracy for us over seas we need your help. My uncle was a tanker in Vietnam and was killed and my grandmothers family remained in poverty and segregation for the rest of the era minus her brother👏🏾 such a grateful country, why I left the army. No more serving this place. Not while being black they took enough from us

    • @odgreen5655
      @odgreen5655 Год назад

      There are men that I would call draft dodgers. Muhammad Ali is not one. He did more for this country refusing to comply with the draft than he ever could have done going to Vietnam.

  • @jayxtacee5695
    @jayxtacee5695 Год назад +4

    You forgot to talk about The Battle of Bamber Bridge during World War 2 when racist white American soldiers & officers were jealous and hated how Black American soldiers were welcomed in an English town and were allowed entry into bars and English white women were throwing themselves at them, this led to conflict

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Год назад +1

      That was an outrageous event and downright embarrassment to white GI's. The Brits said the Black soldiers were civilized and good to get along with while the whites were uncouth.

  • @royhenry-do9hq
    @royhenry-do9hq Год назад +3

    Sadly a lot of black infantry men in ww2 were given “shit jobs”. They were the ones who who had to do the mine sweeping, which is scary as hell. One wrong step and that’s it. I do believe that times have changed since then but it doesn’t excuse the past behavior and treatments. It wasent until 2003 that the Navajo code talkers were officially acknowledged as war heroes. That’s a darn shame

  • @jasonstevens2679
    @jasonstevens2679 Год назад +4

    They said Black service men weren't smart enough, brave enough and strong enough they were underestimated at each turn I now turn to White service men who among you is smart enough brave enough and strong enough to take a stand against discrimination in all forms JS

  • @catherineharris4746
    @catherineharris4746 Год назад

    The most truthful channel I've ever watched about the mistreatment of our black soldiers, and it really pisses me off!😡 To fight and die for a country that hates you, yet this country gives billions of our dollars to other racist countries that hate our people, instead of taking care of our own brave men that faught for this country!😞

  • @jeffreyyounger5772
    @jeffreyyounger5772 Год назад +2

    It goes to show, how far we come in the military 😉🪖 black men and women warrior s, during world war 2

  • @williammitchell3574
    @williammitchell3574 Год назад +3

    Hollywood needs to make a movie about the 761 tank group.
    #THE REAL BLACK PANTHERS!!!

  • @maureencora1
    @maureencora1 Год назад +7

    Do a Story About Montford Point Marines Combat in the Pacific, Semper-Fi.

    • @benjaminfrazier5419
      @benjaminfrazier5419 Год назад

      🦅🌎⚓️👍🏾❤️✊🏾🇺🇸

    • @odgreen5655
      @odgreen5655 Год назад +2

      I met one years ago that said he had been trained by Hashmark Johnson. It was such an honor!

    • @maureencora1
      @maureencora1 Год назад

      @@odgreen5655 Touche' (smile)

  • @johnheigis83
    @johnheigis83 Год назад

    Yes!
    Sing it, loud and extremely proud!
    Very well done!

  • @tommywilliams4073
    @tommywilliams4073 Год назад +5

    I whole heartedly thank and commend you all for this essay on the brave Black men and women who severed,and are currently enlisted,in the armed forces of this nation. Their outstanding heroism is a blatant example of their determination to give their all in spite of the racism of this country. However, I'd like to make a correction,if I may,as to the type of aircraft the 332nd Fighter Group was mentioned as flying in the video in mid 1944. It was stated that the group was issued the " P-34 Thunderjet". This was untrue as the F-84 Thunderjet wasn't invented until right before the Korean War in the 1950s,and as indicated by its name the Thunderjet was a jet fighter aircraft. The United States had developed no jet planes that flew in combat during World War 2. The plane the commenter probably was thinking of was the amazing P-51 Mustang,a sleek,piston powered workhorse of a fighter,that the 332nd used to sweep the skies before them.

    • @IsaiahColeman-y7d
      @IsaiahColeman-y7d Год назад +1

      You are right there were no jets used in world war two from the USA.

  • @roderickstockdale1678
    @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

    15:30, Croix De Guerre, brother(Kwa-da-gare)!

  • @CopperJedi
    @CopperJedi Год назад +3

    It's deeper than that. But I'm glad people are putting in the work. Soon, we'll realize that we've been duped out our own land. This is why many black communities lack black business owners. Instead, there are always foreign entities that set up shop because of Americas trade agreements. Many black cities were destroyed during both wars, similar to the Indians (black Americans) camps being destroyed while men were off to battle

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад +1

      Look up Seneca Village

    • @rdkirk3834
      @rdkirk3834 15 дней назад

      Most of those immigrants (from Africa, the Mid-East, India, and most Asians) weren't even allowed to immigrate into the US until 1965 because US immigration laws blocked non-Europeans. It was we black Americans who fought against racist immigration practices and got the Immigration and Nationality Act passed in 1965 (within a year after the Civil Rights Act). _We_ were responsible for those immigrants even being allowed here.
      But then, as they came into the US, they were prohibited from setting up shops in the white areas ("Not in my back yard") and encouraged to open business in the black areas. Banks extended loans to them that were denied to black businessmen in those same areas. The new immigrants were "weaponized" against the very black Americans who were instrumental in allowing them into the US.

  • @isoalien7664
    @isoalien7664 Год назад

    God bless ALL of our men in arms.

  • @linzierogers5024
    @linzierogers5024 Год назад +7

    Americas garment will always have an indelible stain on it.

  • @JustPlainAwful
    @JustPlainAwful Год назад

    Driving 400 miles at night with no headlights..🤝❤
    God bless these men and their families

  • @theannouncer5538
    @theannouncer5538 Год назад +6

    You know something is wrong when nazis are criticizing how your country is treating you😭

  • @play030
    @play030 18 дней назад

    My family has served since WW2, and so did i. I am proud of my service.

  • @BlackMarvel25
    @BlackMarvel25 Год назад +3

    Nazis were treated better than black americans. Its really sad. They thought if they participated and helped during ww1 and ww2 that the rest of the country would see them a little bit better... but they didnt. Henry johnson is a good example of what happened to us after the wars.

  • @makaronytony1788
    @makaronytony1788 Год назад +2

    My grandfather still living 102 ww2 veteran Sargent

  • @erichall465
    @erichall465 Год назад +11

    This country is mad evil.🤔

  • @gobot4455
    @gobot4455 Год назад +2

    Why wouldn't black people hate fighting in wars for a country where they were (are) treated like second class citizens?

  • @HobbsBhipp
    @HobbsBhipp Год назад +5

    A well researched video; the subtitles had a few misspelled words though. Also, how about the Pacific theatre?

  • @hsdentertainment
    @hsdentertainment Год назад

    Great video

  • @RasheedGazzi-u5l
    @RasheedGazzi-u5l Год назад +4

    Both grandfathers were infantry. One in Italy, one in France all the way to Germany.

    • @roderickstockdale1678
      @roderickstockdale1678 Год назад

      Which outfit was the Fortress one with?

    • @RasheedGazzi-u5l
      @RasheedGazzi-u5l Год назад

      @@roderickstockdale1678 I don't know what company he was in I just know it was "colored" one.

  • @Jabalakhdar-s1y
    @Jabalakhdar-s1y Год назад +2

    After all of this ....they came back home to have to go in the back door of the restaurant.
    My dad was in WW2

  • @mrcocoloco7200
    @mrcocoloco7200 Год назад +3

    Jesus! That's insane and freaking depressing!

  • @reddysg
    @reddysg Год назад +2

    Like i always say. Im an American but ill fight the enemy from my doorstep while supporting the troops 🖤🫡

    • @UltraInstinct-yn1ft
      @UltraInstinct-yn1ft Год назад +1

      So U support war 🤣🤦🏾‍♂️
      We so slo smh War iz ritualistic sacrifice. Y tha rich elite don't fyte?? Think it thru

    • @reddysg
      @reddysg Год назад +1

      @UltraInstinct-yn1ft I support defense. Protecting My Family. If the enemy attacks, I support the people CHOOSING to risk their lives to protect me and Americans. I will protect my family, home, and freedom personally. I don't believe in war.

    • @UltraInstinct-yn1ft
      @UltraInstinct-yn1ft Год назад

      @reddysg can't have it both wayz. If U support tha troops, that meenz U support war lol iss literally their only objective. I can find more information about soldiers stealin & raypin than actually helpin... but ur free 2c thingz howevr U like