The Lonely And Painful Presidency Of Franklin D Rooosevelt

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • Host David Reynolds focuses on Roosevelt's private life and how the onerous secrecy surrounding his troubled marriage influenced his presidency.
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Комментарии • 442

  • @---wu3qj
    @---wu3qj 2 года назад +112

    If the grass looks greener on the other side, water your own lawn!

  • @margaritaescoto3500
    @margaritaescoto3500 2 года назад +44

    So very informative and thoughtful. Eleanor´s greatest sadness was her lonely, loveless childhood. She could not give what she did not have. An amazing couple, nonethless.

    • @jb-vb8un
      @jb-vb8un Год назад

      ya must have an acoustic problem .... the video uses facts & evidence as proof of her deviant, powermad racism

    • @applesandgrapesfordinner4626
      @applesandgrapesfordinner4626 2 месяца назад

      ​@@jb-vb8unShe was far from racist. She supported civil rights activists and was publicly opposed to the Japanese internment camps.

  • @honestlyyours1069
    @honestlyyours1069 2 года назад +64

    What a great documentary! I really enjoyed watching it. My parents remembered FDR very well, as they were teenagers and in their twenties during Roosevelt's terms as President. They and I believed that FDR was one of America's greatest president. I myself believe that he was a greater president than Abraham Lincoln. FDR had to overcome almost impossible odds to become President and he led the nation through some of its darkest days during the Great Depression and the horrors of World War Two. I know that from my parents' stories those were truly terrible times and I am truly grateful that I was born long after the Second World War ended. This documentary just confirmed my admiration for the greatness of FDR as President.

    • @gemoftheocean
      @gemoftheocean 2 года назад

      FDR ignored all the communists in his administration. I despise him.

    • @catherinekelly532
      @catherinekelly532 2 года назад

      MadAbe was a heinous War Criminal!! Dictator not a president ~~

    • @MWhaleK
      @MWhaleK 2 года назад +6

      Well put! FDR was truly one of Americas greatest presidents and possibly the greatest.

    • @hallsjuju2400
      @hallsjuju2400 2 года назад +4

      I agree. For him to live with polio and be so encouraging to the nation.

    • @LJ-ht4zs
      @LJ-ht4zs 2 года назад

      I too feel that he was one of or even the greatest President

  • @The.Original.Potatocakes
    @The.Original.Potatocakes Год назад +12

    Wow I really want to learn more about Eleanor Roosevelt. She seemed like a remarkable First Lady. She even wrote in the news paper for the American people.

  • @jayonnaj18
    @jayonnaj18 2 года назад +15

    I don't blame Mrs. Roosevelt for abstaining from alcohol! My late father started drinking socially when I was a young girl, but Mother NEVER touched it! He became an alcoholic and began to treat us all so very brutally when he drank and was horribly evil to Mother especially! Not ALL people who drink booze turn into alcoholics, I know, but many are addicted and destroy their own lives and the lives of their families!

    • @LJ-ht4zs
      @LJ-ht4zs 2 года назад +1

      Mrs Roosevelt should follow her inclinations but not to allow her husband to have a drink or two is ridiculous. Too bad he did not have Lady Churchill for a wife. She was extraordinarily helpful to her husband and due to the stresses he had, she put up with an awful lot from him - (he was by all accounts and alcoholic - or seemed bipolar) but she stood by him and supported him saying he was a great man and got England thru WWII. Roosevelt had to put up with Churchill's moods and alcoholism and his desire to exert control over countries after the war - which Roosevelt did not want. Had stuff to contend with - in both Stalin and Churchill were so difficult to negotiate with.

  • @mikenixon2401
    @mikenixon2401 2 года назад +23

    Very good piece. I appreciated information not given in other accounts.

  • @ryanreedgibson
    @ryanreedgibson 2 года назад +10

    David Reynolds, you are a great host! As good as Attenborough! Timeline, these two docs are masterpieces! Absolute masterpieces!

  • @inkyguy
    @inkyguy 2 года назад +125

    This misses a critical explanation for Eleanor’s “tea totaling.” Alcoholism was endemic in her family. Eleanor’s father Elliot (President Theodore Roosevelt’s brother), whom she deeply loved her entire life, died from alcoholism when she was a girl. Her own brother, Hall Roosevelt, became an alcoholic and would die from complications of alcohol abuse. She wasn’t merely prudishly abstentious, though undoubtedly some people inevitably perceived her as that. She’d seen alcohol destroy and kill people she loved, and drinking terrified her.

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 2 года назад +12

      Teetotaling is the word. Nothing to do with tea--when the anti-alcohol forces were at a meeting discussing what level of alcohol use would be acceptable (in the days of the Demon Rum) one man meant to say "Total!" but stammered a little and it came out "tee-total." While it was made fun of at first, later the "drys' liked having a new specific work referring to 100% abstinence, no exceptions. Many people felt as Eleanor did, that alcohol destroys lives and kills, from their own personal experience.

    • @Zenmyster
      @Zenmyster 2 года назад

      As I understand it, Eliot took up drink to attempt to alleviate epilepsy. Of Eleanor would have been, likely, surrounded by women stuck on the demon rum.

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 2 года назад +1

      @@Zenmyster Oh dear. I wonder if alcohol really helped Eliot at all. (The ketogenic diet was originally developed to help epilepsy--there was and is evidence it is helpful in some cases). Maybe alcohol helped Eliot blot out some of it, anyway.

    • @davidtrindle6473
      @davidtrindle6473 2 года назад +4

      Yes, and alcoholism was endemic in our country and the world and still is. Thus the brave but failed attempt at Prohibition (not just US, but Russia and other european countries).

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад +9

      Two of her mother's brothers were also horrible alcoholics. In fact, she visited the family house one day in October 1934 only to discover one of her uncles dead from alcoholism. Alcohol and its effects haunted Eleanor her entire life.

  • @josephpiskac2781
    @josephpiskac2781 2 года назад +27

    I read in the 1960s THIS I REMEMBER Eleanor's book account of her life with FDR. I didn't know she lived until 1962. I was born in 1953 and I am thankful that I have lived at this time in history.

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад +1

      Her autobiography is still to date one of the best personal accounts I've ever read.
      Yes, she was just 78 when she died after being medically misdiagnosed and enduring grueling treatments killed her before her time. Her uncle Theodore's daughters were 96 and 86 when they died, and her aunt's daughter lived to 84.

    • @josephpiskac2781
      @josephpiskac2781 2 года назад +1

      @@travelseatsyellowlab This destructive medical treatment of the elderly is common. Elderly care is just or even more horrific.

    • @retroguy9494
      @retroguy9494 2 года назад

      @@travelseatsyellowlab How was she misdiagnosed? And what grueling treatments killed her? I thought she died from a drug-resistant form of tuberculosis which the doctors WERE treating her for however, in the convention of the day it took many weeks for a bone marrow test (which she had) to PROVE TB. The only thing I know that made her very sick were the blood transfusions they gave her to combat the severe anemia and the prednisone (which was a treatment for TB then) which caused internal bleeding.

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад

      @@retroguy9494 Of course the blood transfusions were problematic. Each time she had them, her body became increasingly resistant because there were fewer sites to accept needles because of the sensitivity to her skin. The transfusions were for treatment of aplastic anemia. As a result of the transfusions, she was developing severe headaches. Tuberculosis wasn't diagnosed until days before she died, so no, she wasn't treated for that and she ended up having a stroke after the more frequent transfusions were growing less effective. She didn't get to begin tuberculosis treatment because she became unconscious and died just days after diagnosis. For as wealthy and famous as she was, she didn't get a fair shake at living a truly long life.

    • @pauleohl
      @pauleohl Год назад

      @@retroguy9494 Prednisone can be deadly.

  • @petermacander2061
    @petermacander2061 2 года назад +8

    The medical care of 1945 FDR received was NOT "botched". The effects of chronic tobacco abuse and alcohol on atherosclerosis and hypertension, and effective treatment and medical standards for antihypertensive medical therapy of hypertension were not yet available.

  • @Bob-Whiting
    @Bob-Whiting 2 года назад +33

    This has got to be one of THE Very Best documentaries by Timeline ever.

  • @brainstormingsharing1309
    @brainstormingsharing1309 2 года назад +15

    Absolutely well done and definitely keep it up ❗👍👏👍👏👍

  • @johnwright291
    @johnwright291 2 года назад +6

    David Reynolds is the best narrator for history there is period.

    • @frereM
      @frereM 2 года назад

      Very good no doubt. Peter Coyote (think Ken Burns documentaries) is right up there, too.

  • @JohnsonSaUceZach
    @JohnsonSaUceZach 2 года назад +7

    Been waiting for some David Reynolds commentary.

  • @nbc902
    @nbc902 2 года назад +52

    ....my uncle, Wilmer Deckard, was FDR's right hand man SS agent. He traveled with him around the world to all the historic meetings. Wilmer began his career as a Pennsylvania State Police officer at Hershey, Pa. training center. He rose through the ranks to become the chief of the midwest division in Cleveland, Ohio. .......lots of stories....

    • @thomasweatherford5125
      @thomasweatherford5125 2 года назад +14

      I would’ve loved to be a fly on the wall some evenings when your uncle was telling stories.

    • @mattkaustickomments
      @mattkaustickomments 2 года назад +7

      Please record your remembrance of your Uncle’s stories. Would be fascinating and I think though 2nd hand, valuable to historians and FDR scholars.

    • @nbc902
      @nbc902 2 года назад +9

      @@mattkaustickomments The stories will be in the book I'm writing.

    • @toniaphillips2511
      @toniaphillips2511 2 года назад +1

      My great grandfather was also his ‘right hand man’ for 2 years. His name was John Webb. I would love to find more information on his service.

    • @toniaphillips2511
      @toniaphillips2511 2 года назад

      My great grandfather was also Chief of Police in Staunton Va. my grandfather was born out of wedlock and his fathers identity was kept a secret until ai discovered who he was in 2016 using Ancestry and had a DNA test. If you could please contact me i would appreciate it.

  • @davidtrindle6473
    @davidtrindle6473 2 года назад +7

    More recent research has found that Roosevelt actually informed Truman About the bomb early on.But Truman was not involved in the management of the actual project

  • @НурикОмарев
    @НурикОмарев 2 года назад +4

    It is so obvious judging by the footage that Stalin felt extremely uncomfortable. And the whole atmosphere is tense. They can’t hide it.

  • @adammiller6747
    @adammiller6747 2 года назад +30

    God thank you🙏 I've been waiting for an FDR timline.

  • @alexhubner
    @alexhubner 2 года назад +5

    This is a very precious documentary. Thank you VERY much for such a wonderful work. Cheers from the sunny Brazil.

  • @10speedr
    @10speedr 2 года назад +29

    Churchill was right about the Soviets.

    • @GHGore
      @GHGore 2 года назад +4

      FDR surrendered Eastern Europe in exchange for the United Nations.
      What a deal... (WHOOOOMP WOOMP.)

    • @zacklp3844
      @zacklp3844 2 года назад

      @@GHGore Well there was an attempt

    • @AvgustGeorgi
      @AvgustGeorgi 2 года назад

      There wasn't a war Churchill didn't like. If he could find paradise on a map, he would certainly make a damaging reference to God in the House of Commons.

    • @AvgustGeorgi
      @AvgustGeorgi 2 года назад

      @@GHGore yeah he should have just nuked it, right?

  • @nairobidelacruzvargas6694
    @nairobidelacruzvargas6694 2 года назад +3

    Hombre:
    - Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945).
    - James Roosevelt I ( 1828-1900)
    - James Roosevelt (1760-1847)
    - Isaac Roosevelt (1726-1794)

  • @arielle4297
    @arielle4297 2 года назад +21

    Unfair..how Eleanor is portrayed..without evidence...she was an amazingly empathic woman, trying to save lives..and she saved many and grew past her own personal difficulties...

    • @retroguy9494
      @retroguy9494 2 года назад +3

      She was empathetic to OTHERS, that's true. But NOT to her own family. My mother was the exact same way.

  • @JJW77
    @JJW77 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for the well done documentary.

  • @wartornbeauty
    @wartornbeauty 2 года назад +3

    I’m obsessed with ‘The Big Three’. FDR is my favorite presi

  • @larsjoehnk8457
    @larsjoehnk8457 2 года назад +34

    He lifted and held a nation together in a wheelchair and worked himself to death in the interest of ending the worst war in history. Simply one of the greatest presidents of all time.

    • @AudreySmith-223
      @AudreySmith-223 2 года назад +13

      except the Japanese interment camps

    • @MarcPagan
      @MarcPagan 2 года назад +15

      The best thing FDR did for the USA, from an Economist's review?
      Die.
      As a member of the International Economics Honor Society since 1985, I've read countless studies and books on the Great Depression.
      The disconnect, and lies, of history books vs Economics studies is amazing, and of great concern.....youth and the public with no Econ background, are being misled.
      His policies turned a recession, into the Great Depression.
      Imparting unneeded misery upon millions.
      Plus, he was an authoritarian hack.
      He tried to pack the Supreme Court after his unconstitutional, immoral, and authoritarian polices got spanked.
      History books are written by Leftists
      ....every mainstream Economist has eviscerated him...justly.
      If your child's history book praises FDR...fire your school board.

    • @larsjoehnk8457
      @larsjoehnk8457 2 года назад +7

      @@AudreySmith-223 Agreed.

    • @jonglewongle3438
      @jonglewongle3438 2 года назад +4

      There is the NBC - ABC liar version of FDR. But what was he really ? A Zionist collaborator with Bolshevism.

    • @lockinload23
      @lockinload23 2 года назад +3

      @@jonglewongle3438 incel

  • @erikroelinkcitizen2302
    @erikroelinkcitizen2302 2 года назад +3

    Verry impressive episode thanks for the learning

  • @Roc-Righteous
    @Roc-Righteous 2 года назад +4

    Your videos are wonderful

  • @franciscojose6496
    @franciscojose6496 2 года назад +5

    Congratulation for your video no doubt great persons

  • @jamesbrien1944
    @jamesbrien1944 2 года назад +3

    A very enjoyable and informative study.

  • @dr.barrycohn5461
    @dr.barrycohn5461 2 года назад +2

    Well done.

  • @cmdrflake
    @cmdrflake 2 года назад +22

    Stalin really was the big winner in 1944-6. He had no intention of following Wilsonian values concerning Poland and other Eastern European countries. He got everything he wanted. Eastern Europe was to be enslaved for 60 years despite the rhetoric of the western Allies to the contrary.

    • @grantguy8933
      @grantguy8933 2 года назад +2

      His mismanagement had Russia lost tens of millions more people.

    • @thestreamoflife1124
      @thestreamoflife1124 2 года назад +2

      Indeed I was born behind the iron curtain... Rumania

    • @jamesporter5468
      @jamesporter5468 2 года назад

      @@grantguy8933 was it mismanagement or intentional?

    • @grantguy8933
      @grantguy8933 2 года назад

      @@jamesporter5468 probably mismanagement and he certainly cared less or not care at all.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад +2

      The Soviets had conquered those countries, and not sharing our values, Stalin treated them just as had czars for hundreds of years. The issue continues to this very day as Russia is in the process of invading and conquering Ukraine.

  • @stevenmillikin558
    @stevenmillikin558 Год назад +1

    Why was there no treatment of how he first was elected president? There was no discussion of how he first unsuccessfully struggled to implement his policies to improve the conditions of the great depression. There was nothing indicating that FDR tried to pack the U.S. Supreme Court or that he disgracefully interred Americans of Japanese descent. It's as if the only time that mattered in FDR's administration was the last 2 years of his administration, ignoring the previous decade of it!

    • @Al2023-wx3ck
      @Al2023-wx3ck 4 месяца назад

      Wrong again, they arrested suspected Japanese spies, not innocent people for no reason. Stop your Whyte guilt trips
      It’s embarrassing

  • @ryanreedgibson
    @ryanreedgibson 2 года назад +5

    Remarkable! I cannot fault his daughter as there was so much at stake. Absolutely incredible leader but like all of us, we must think about succession. The post-war world would have been so much different if FDR would have lived even a year longer. Elenor should have never estranged herself from her daughter. You don't do that to your children.

  • @lionandwolfboy8714
    @lionandwolfboy8714 2 года назад +9

    God Bless America🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @shizumaakiyama3129
    @shizumaakiyama3129 2 года назад +2

    Oh they even went to Springwood IN NY so cool i love that house

  • @etiennenobel5028
    @etiennenobel5028 2 года назад +2

    Great stuff

  • @maryjanewilliams6239
    @maryjanewilliams6239 2 года назад +4

    You skip Molotov's visit to the White House on the way to San Francisco for the founding of the United Nations. Astoundingly to Molotov, Harry Truman bawled him out, (as Harry and I, Missourians both, would call it.) Because the Soviet Union was not keeping its promises made at Yalta to let Poland and the other Eastern European countries have democratic elections. Where did Harry get the idea that had been promised at Yalta? From Churchill, of course. Churchill got to him immediately. Harry knew nothing about foreign affairs. Assumed Churchill was the Great Man whose interpretation must be right. So Harry invited Churchill to speak at Fulton, Missouri -- where he gave the "iron curtain" speech that brought on the Cold War. Also: it wasn't when Stalin heard the atom bombs were dropped on Japan that he started the Soviet effort to build an atom bomb. He had known about our Manhattan Project for years, via his spies. Even had our design for the bomb.

  • @deltaboy767
    @deltaboy767 2 года назад +10

    At 32:06 Is visibly clear that the war has taken its toll on FDR. One of the greatest presidents. .

  • @dennisrivera-cash165
    @dennisrivera-cash165 2 года назад +5

    Very cool they filmed in Hyde Park, NY. I grew up across the street from the FDR Springwood estate. Interesting to think how history can be your own backyard.

  • @jilltagmorris
    @jilltagmorris 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent program

  • @altheacraig2904
    @altheacraig2904 2 года назад +12

    I was born in 1937 in WA state, USA so I lived through World War Two. My only blood uncle was a Marine in the South Pacific at that time and did make it home when it was over. I have told people that my two favorite presidents are Franklin Delenow Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman for what they did during those awful years. The second atomic boom was all that stopped the Japanese.

    • @nunya2954
      @nunya2954 2 года назад

      Roosevelt and Truman were traitors to the Sovereignty of the United States of America in their quest for a New World Order. We still have elected officials that want that goal so they can destroy the United States of American. In doing this, they are all Satanist, because God had the United States FOUNDED on the Bible. So, to destroy what God brought forth, well, they will all pay upon meeting God.

  • @onemercilessming1342
    @onemercilessming1342 2 года назад +16

    He was a mama's boy. Go visit their home where he and Eleanor are buried. Eleanor was relegated to the children's nursery while Mama Roosevelt had an adjoining room to FDR's.

    • @oneshothunter9877
      @oneshothunter9877 2 года назад +1

      Lol 😂😂

    • @orangescoop13
      @orangescoop13 2 года назад +6

      A mama's boy and a great man.

    • @onemercilessming1342
      @onemercilessming1342 2 года назад +6

      @@orangescoop13 Not really. He was an adulterer and an egotist.

    • @dremac33
      @dremac33 2 года назад +5

      @@onemercilessming1342 hmmm sounds familiar from the previous shitshow president...

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад +3

      Their marriage was doomed from the start. Eleanor had almost no strong role models to build a successful marriage. Franklin allowed his mom to make the big decisions for himself and his family. By threatening to divorce Franklin when she found out he was cheating, his mom had no choice but to step in lest she face public embarrassment.

  • @paulakpacente
    @paulakpacente 4 месяца назад +1

    FDR should never have run for a 4th term.

  • @martinpoldma6393
    @martinpoldma6393 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @newnewhutchison991
    @newnewhutchison991 6 месяцев назад

    Excellent

  • @lindasmarch
    @lindasmarch 2 года назад +5

    Very pretty portrayal of a man that could have put an end to the depression with corrections shown to him that, because of politics and his “friends”, he refused to implement!

    • @hsavage2899
      @hsavage2899 2 года назад +2

      🙄

    • @squid.com8927
      @squid.com8927 Год назад +2

      Oh yeah I bet you could have ended the greatest economic crisis in history couldn’t you

    • @wojtek9675
      @wojtek9675 Год назад

      @@squid.com8927 well Harding and Coolidge fixed their depression and created a decade of great prosperity. so why did FDR think that doing the exact opposite thing would fix the issue?

    • @squid.com8927
      @squid.com8927 Год назад +3

      @@wojtek9675 they did nothing of the sort. The recession of 1920-21 was a result of demobilization and Harding and Coolidge did nothing to solve it. The prosperity of the 1920s was a result of progressive legislation implemented by T.R and Wilson meanwhile Harding and Coolidge hollowed out the middle class and set the stage for the Great Depression.

    • @wojtek9675
      @wojtek9675 Год назад

      @@squid.com8927 😂 Woodrow Wilson was a moron and was a terrible president. The fact you think he did anything good just shows you know nothing

  • @Last_Chance.
    @Last_Chance. 2 года назад +7

    These Bitcoin scammers are going all out in the comments. Smh.

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 2 года назад

      Report them, see what happens--click the three dogs, select unwanted commercial promotion or spam....

  • @menekseuebel6530
    @menekseuebel6530 2 года назад +2

    Interesting

  • @nelfitrinidad2443
    @nelfitrinidad2443 Год назад

    Yes I want to learn more

  • @shopsshire9282
    @shopsshire9282 2 года назад +5

    The cold war is never been over. What happened in 1945 is still feeling felt today in 2022 with Putin's delusions of reimagining the Soviet Union. It's amazing at 30 minutes and 15 seconds how he compares dealing with Vladimir Putin to dealing with Joseph Stalin.

    • @retroguy9494
      @retroguy9494 2 года назад

      I don't know how old you are, but it WAS in fact over for a while. Thanks to Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. And of course, Boris Yeltsin followed and things were still good. It was only after that former KGB agent and still commie wannabe got in there that things started going back to the old ways.

  • @ScarletHeather76
    @ScarletHeather76 2 года назад +18

    Eleanor never appreciated Franklin? When did he ever appreciate her?

    • @JohnsonSaUceZach
      @JohnsonSaUceZach 2 года назад +2

      I suppose it's a 2-way street.

    • @pangaeaproximap.p4408
      @pangaeaproximap.p4408 2 года назад +1

      Thank me later.

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 2 года назад +7

      They were very much in love at the beginnng. Eleanor never really forgave him for the first Lucy Mercer affair.

    • @ScarletHeather76
      @ScarletHeather76 2 года назад +3

      @@1234cheerful I agree with those observations. She was treated poorly by her mother as well. I think the betrayal after being in love was too much for her to bear.

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад +2

      If Eleanor didn't appreciate Franklin, it was solely because of his behavior. He never stood up to his mom, allowing her to domineer his wife and children, never putting Sara Delano in her place.
      Had Franklin not married Eleanor, who was the real politician in the family, groomed by her aunt Anna Cowles, his political ascension would've been a lot more difficult than it was. Eleanor was wealthier than her husband, higher on the New York social ladder than Franklin and I believe part of her appeal to him was the fact that the then president was her uncle.

  • @s.clignancourt1897
    @s.clignancourt1897 Год назад +1

    Excellent. But the title - what a bummer. Was this really necessary? Your film illustrates that this was NOT what defined him or should be most remembered about FDR. Indeed, he and those close to him went to great effort and pain to distract attention away from it, and instead onto the issues that mattered more.

  • @thamesplayz7406
    @thamesplayz7406 Год назад +4

    FDR is one of my inspirations, May he rest in peace also Eleanor Rosevelt. He’s one of the Presidents who’ve inspired me to want to run for President despite the benefits, to try to be a good leader, and try to make a better future for future generations after my time. God willing I can become a President of the United States One of the President African American with African decent. Amen. 🙏

  • @worganfreeman2694
    @worganfreeman2694 2 года назад

    Guy was a frontiersman who once came into some sort of contact with sasquatch. Interesting huh!

    • @kiwibob223
      @kiwibob223 2 года назад

      Different president I think.

  • @cindykaywebster4643
    @cindykaywebster4643 2 года назад +3

    We need another FDR and Eleanor!!!

  • @blautens
    @blautens 2 года назад

    This is excellent, but why does Timeline reupload this so that it appears new other than to get more views from people who subscribed and/or already viewed it?

  • @pappabunny
    @pappabunny 2 года назад +5

    Mussolini, the founder of the Fascist movement, called FDR the perfect Fascist due to his economic and social policies.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 2 года назад

      I guess that means FDR was a Fascist.

  • @charlesjackson7904
    @charlesjackson7904 2 года назад +1

    Micahs daddy was annihilated by the wheelchair president

  • @adammiller6747
    @adammiller6747 2 года назад +2

    Dan rocks 🙌🙏🥰

  • @thomasweatherford5125
    @thomasweatherford5125 2 года назад +2

    I had no idea FDR was so scandalous

  • @matthewmorrison9344
    @matthewmorrison9344 Год назад

    The greatest president this country has ever had

  • @xinniandong4042
    @xinniandong4042 Год назад

    很久以前在电视上面看的,剧情大概这样:小学徒拿一个瓜还是葫芦削皮练习剃头,师娘经常喊他干活,他就把刀子插在葫芦上走了,后来学成了在给客人剃头,师娘喊他干活,他就把刀子插在客人头上了。

  • @vonhumboldt1985
    @vonhumboldt1985 2 года назад

    29:50 Well that's on the spot for today ^^

  • @AndyGrouch
    @AndyGrouch 2 года назад +8

    Dark times lay ahead. We need another Roosevelt.

    • @verawright2157
      @verawright2157 2 года назад +1

      Excellent production. Very informative. I love the statue of fdr and Fala , his dog. This made history alive. Congrats to whomever put this together.

    • @Richard4point6
      @Richard4point6 2 года назад

      We have one, only he is demented as well as duplicitous.

  • @chatswithcath
    @chatswithcath 2 года назад +2

    👀👀👀👀 Did FDR really make his OWN daughter his messenger for his main mistress… whilst he was STILL married to Elenor??? 😒

  • @bnkundwa
    @bnkundwa 2 года назад

    I heard he was kidnapped in Morocco. I liked his name. What is the mission or goal? The battle of Roncesvalles. Certainly, the American Dream.

  • @kinfemichaelnigussiehassen6008
    @kinfemichaelnigussiehassen6008 2 года назад

    What was his reaction of Churchill on the death? Roosevelt ..we have learned about Stalin?

  • @callmethecommentcountess9329
    @callmethecommentcountess9329 Год назад

    Respond as well interesting

  • @rosaandrade7802
    @rosaandrade7802 2 года назад

    Excellent information. I would like to know you. You are very handsome men!!!

  • @albifape
    @albifape 5 месяцев назад

    Verdade amigo

  • @713davidh42
    @713davidh42 Год назад

    An excellent documentary and well-written narration. FDR set the standard for leadership that we Americans have expected from our presidents ever since.

    • @blankerism4189
      @blankerism4189 8 месяцев назад

      documentary is well done but FDR isn't a standard of leadership by any measure in American politics. neither is Wilson, both were bigots and racists. they were also bad when it came to civil liberties during their administration.

  • @tadihagazi8619
    @tadihagazi8619 2 года назад +1

    Roman 8:15🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟👑👑👑👑👑👌JESUS LORD LOVE JESUS BOY NAME BLESSED YOU BROTHER

  • @Russellw.-rm5zb
    @Russellw.-rm5zb 5 месяцев назад +1

    The damage Franklin Roosevelt did in the U. S., and around the the world, exists to this day!

  • @miillionsofcritters1729
    @miillionsofcritters1729 2 года назад +4

    So basically today they would be considered a Polyamourus couple and wouldnt have to be so secret about it

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад

      Most of the people who knew them then knew it was an open marriage. I don't think they were that secretive about it

  • @rebeccao8895
    @rebeccao8895 2 года назад +8

    So he had polio, heart problems and was in a romantic relationship outside his marriage with his cousin - did ALL that affect his brain and ability to lead?

    • @bobg1069
      @bobg1069 2 года назад +1

      well no, because he was hopeless anyway.

    • @JudeNance
      @JudeNance 2 года назад +1

      Not at all.

    • @willen2416
      @willen2416 2 года назад +4

      Lucy Mercer was not his cousin. She was Eleanor Roosevelt’s secretary when Roosevelt was a young congressman. That when the affair started? Eleanor found out when she uncovered some passionate love letters the two lovers had shared. Eleanor wanted a divorce but FDR’s domineering mother-in-law, Sarah, convinced her to stay because a scandalous divorce would have ruined his promising political career. She agreed to stay in the marriage, provided, he would end the affair. He broke his promise during World War II and started secretly seeing Lucy again. She was actually with FDR at Warm Springs when he suddenly died in April, 1945.

    • @Richard4point6
      @Richard4point6 2 года назад +1

      He led in the direction of socialism and the perpetuation of the Depression. He interned thousands of citizens while turning away Jewish refugees who were subsequently doomed to Hitler's gas ovens.

    • @davidepperson2376
      @davidepperson2376 2 года назад +2

      The electorate sure had right to know about his health, however. Even then the media covered for a Democrat. Fascinating.

  • @jackiebinns6205
    @jackiebinns6205 2 года назад +1

    All this is common knowledge about FDR

  • @Last_Chance.
    @Last_Chance. 2 года назад +5

    I bet she really inserted the catheters gently after he had the affair lol.

  • @sazger
    @sazger 2 года назад

    Are there any good films on FDR?

  • @tombasye1016
    @tombasye1016 2 года назад +4

    Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt was one of the Greatest President's in American History, He will always be '' REMEMBERED '' !!

  • @thetreyxturner
    @thetreyxturner Год назад

    The presenter is good, weirdly dramatic sometimes. But those impressions - just cut them out. FDR didn’t sound anything like that!

  • @johnrudy9404
    @johnrudy9404 Год назад +1

    Back in '98, went to Maine and stopped at Camp Abello(sp?). It was
    Sharply apparent that FDR was a rich guy, who could never appreciate the real plight of the poor, except as a figure head, spouting edicts and rearranging alphabet letters to fit his programs. Just the ice house alone was as large as my present home(21X21). Having servants and daily routine handled by others is not a good prep(imo), for ascending to CEO of the US. Yes, he had Polio and supposedly, Gullian Barre. But,
    Older people I've spoken to have said that many of the make work programs were window dressing.
    I believe them.

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 2 года назад +1

    I bought a DVD from a bargain bin several years ago. It was called Hyde Park on the Hudson and starred Bill Murray, who I enjoy, and was about FDR, a president I have always thought saved the country from revolution with his programs during the depression. I only got around to watching it a few months ago. FDR’s reputation had already been somewhat tarnished for me when I had read Eleanor and Franklin: The War Years. The book describes his total lack of attention to Missy Le Hand when she was dying. Eleanor visited her, provided for her, and tried to get FDR to visit or at least write a note, but he refused to reach out in any way according to the book. He didn’t want to be made uncomfortable. He demonstrated a lack of empathy and was selfish in protecting himself, rather than considering the feelings and situation of a woman who had dedicated 21 years of her life to him.
    But nothing prepared me for the movie. In it FDR is portrayed as an insensitive sexual predator, preying on women over whom he has some power, whether emotional or financial. It was shocking, but believable, especially after reading the book.
    Note: In fairness, I must refer readers to information on Missy Le Hand found on Wikipedia. In that entry it details many financial actions taken by FDR to insure Miss Le Hand’s care and comfort; however, once she left the White House to live with her sister she never saw him again. Some of the entry does speculate on their possible romantic/sexual relationship, causing me to think again; she was his secretary and lived wherever the Roosevelt were. She was dependent on him for her emotional and financial needs and experienced jealousy when her status changed. So I must hold to my first thoughts; however unwelcome they are to me.

    • @LJ-ht4zs
      @LJ-ht4zs 2 года назад +1

      He did take care of her financially after her illness however, if I remember one documentary, nothing was mentioned about a sexual relationship at all, but she became enraged that he had a warm relationship with the princess of Norway - again not sure it was sexual but fun, light and engaging. Maybe he could not take one more person who needed to own him and not understand his need for some space and engagement that was fun. I never heard or read that he was a sexual predator.

    • @LJ-ht4zs
      @LJ-ht4zs 2 года назад +1

      If someone is your secretary and goes into rages if you have friendly or warm relationships with another woman - maybe it was just to much for him to take. Maybe some women thought because he was very charming and witty that there was more to it - than it was. Both she and Eleanor, in their own ways, were tight women who did not afford ease to a man who needed it. While Eleanor's father died when she was young and was not appreciated by her own mother maybe she could not give that kind of emotional warmth. Since his mother was so controlling, maybe he could take that kind of emotional control by women - even if they had relationships with him (wife - long time secretary).

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 Год назад

      @@LJ-ht4zs watch Hyde Park on the Hudson. It portrays him as insensitive in many ways, both emotional and sexual. I always thought the financial support for Missy LeHand was handled by Eleanor, not him.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 Год назад

      @@LJ-ht4zs The Princess of Norway was above his touch and classy, but he was smitten. She accepted Roosevelt hospitality while house hunting and then set up her own household.

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 Год назад

      @@LJ-ht4zs I am amused by you euphemism about “affording ease to a man who needed it”. Franklin definitely sought out women who wanted to or had no choice in “providing ease”. I also admire your thought process and facility with vocabulary

  • @rebeccasabourin6193
    @rebeccasabourin6193 2 года назад +6

    My favorite quote of his is I can either run the country or control Anna I can't possibly do both.

    • @jawanauselton9197
      @jawanauselton9197 2 года назад +5

      That was the other Roosevelt, Teddy

    • @bobg1069
      @bobg1069 2 года назад

      he couldn't do either.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад +2

      @@bobg1069, Franklin Roosevelt literally saved American democracy and capitalism.

    • @ffmedicmtfd
      @ffmedicmtfd 2 года назад +4

      Rebecca wrong Roosevelt. Anna was teddy's daughter.

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад

      @@ffmedicmtfd Alice was Teddy's daughter whom Teddy made that comment about.

  • @stevenmetter8835
    @stevenmetter8835 2 года назад +4

    The facts speak of very different view of FDR , first he was pilgrims society member whom bow to the queen , secondly he know about Pearl Harbor , he knew very well America would be in war sooner than later. It was a surreptitious charade. Probably one of greatest sins and treason he continually had treasury buy gold bullion and stockpile it at a time of course when infusion of cash in the depression would helped millions of people persevere and build economic strength.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 2 года назад +1

      Yup, a former Asst Sec of the Navy lets his Pacific fleet get ruined so he could fight a war in the Pacific.

    • @frereM
      @frereM 2 года назад

      @@SandfordSmythe + /s I believe.

  • @thestreamoflife1124
    @thestreamoflife1124 2 года назад +2

    He was amazing

  • @gabrielacobian9137
    @gabrielacobian9137 2 года назад +6

    The conclusion was rather generous considering all the negatives regarding FDR's efforts to bring along Russia into the west, which efforts were sternly thwarted by such people as Eiesenhower and the rest of the cold war architects under the guidance of winston churchill.

    • @lampegutt123
      @lampegutt123 2 года назад +2

      And how would it be an automatic negative to cooparate and work toghether with the soviets? Pointing nukes at eachother is that how it should always be?

    • @lampegutt123
      @lampegutt123 2 года назад

      And our western media keeps retelling the complete fantasy that USA and the UK did any real damage to the german war machine….

    • @tiggergolah
      @tiggergolah 2 года назад +2

      @@lampegutt123 So, D-Day had no impact? Please clarify.

    • @1234cheerful
      @1234cheerful 2 года назад +1

      @@lampegutt123 Fantasy? Do explain what you mean.

  • @emom358
    @emom358 2 года назад +4

    Too bad Eleanor and Franklin couldn't come to a proper compromise. His treatment of his wife, and vice president are shameful.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад +3

      That was the compromise. Eleanor was going to divorce Franklin until Franklin’s mother talked her out of it. He was to never see or have contact with Lucy, who been HER secretary, again. She was to live a largely separate personal life of her own. They would work together as a couple to accomplish the things they both believed in.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 2 года назад +1

      I had heard that at one time later in life, one of them attempted a reconciliation, but the other refused. Sorry, I forgot who. Probably Eleanor said no.

    • @travelseatsyellowlab
      @travelseatsyellowlab 2 года назад +2

      @@SandfordSmythe Eleanor had wanted to travel to the Pacific in 1943, in order to visit soldiers there to build morale. Franklin had spoken to Eleanor a short time before, and I believe he might have written her. When they had a meeting where Franklin awaited Eleanor's response to his suggestion, she simply didn't respond to his proposal during the conversation and said she intended to travel abroad for work. That was the final break between them. I believe it was then that he fully rekindled with Lucy.

    • @Richard4point6
      @Richard4point6 2 года назад +1

      His treatment of Japanese American citizens...Jewish refugees...the economy

  • @thestreamoflife1124
    @thestreamoflife1124 2 года назад +6

    Lars hit it on the head....yes a great president

  • @ericjoniec914
    @ericjoniec914 2 года назад

    This man, one of kind. A good president. ReEected for a 3rd term. Like many had a relations on the side. The best part his daughter would sneak his Broad without a knowledge of Deleonre. Got caught eventually, and the wife would not speak to own daughter for this even after his death for years.

  • @-LightSmit
    @-LightSmit 2 года назад +1

    It wasn't bad, though I feel like this is more a bed time story than what actually happened. Some people in the comment section mentioned great key points though I could be wrong in saying that.... It is mentioned over and over again in this documentary that "we know what they are thinking and planning" without evidence. I have great plans and thoughts myself as a father of 3 and for people or my kids to say I "think this" and "that" with no proof is rediculous. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Thanks - L

  • @lelandthomosoniii4743
    @lelandthomosoniii4743 2 года назад +1

    Great Man...
    Rich guy,,,who careD!

  • @Mr.Josh.
    @Mr.Josh. 2 года назад +17

    Well, looks like we have 2 wheelchair presidents from what I see now..

    • @theallseeingmaster
      @theallseeingmaster 2 года назад +6

      Thank God that FDR did not suffer advanced, rapidly progressing dementia, the kind of which Brandon, apparently, suffers.

    • @MarcPagan
      @MarcPagan 2 года назад +6

      Not fair.....FDR could pass a cognitive test.

    • @fidus868
      @fidus868 2 года назад +2

      Lol

    • @Last_Chance.
      @Last_Chance. 2 года назад

      @@janetslicer3637 Biden

    • @baronesselsavonfreytag-lor1134
      @baronesselsavonfreytag-lor1134 2 года назад +3

      Fans of the "stable genius" demented narcissist child rapist trying to slander normal presidents 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @christiannh0214
    @christiannh0214 2 года назад

    FDR died on 4/12/1945

  • @Sam-iv8jy
    @Sam-iv8jy 2 года назад

    I love the envie in this guy's voiice. Dose he not know he could never be the person FDR was. Heavens he makes us, me and my children, laugh.

  • @RWernsing
    @RWernsing Месяц назад

    359cal

  • @doreekaplan2589
    @doreekaplan2589 2 года назад +5

    He was the only president people wanted for sixteen years......that being so, it was no ones business what he dealt with personally including physically. Like anyone else, his personal self was his personal business

    • @davidepperson2376
      @davidepperson2376 2 года назад +1

      I’m sure you hold the same as true for former President Trump?

    • @PlayshotKalo
      @PlayshotKalo 2 года назад

      Did you feel the same about the time Trump had to hold onto Secret Service while descending a ramp and Biden when he tripped on stairs?

  • @normamimosa5991
    @normamimosa5991 2 года назад

    Re: Timeline Fundraiser for the children of Ukraine. What about the children of Donetsk and Luhansk? 0ver 14,000 Russian men, women and children killed by the Azov Militia and Ukrainian Army shelling, one of the main reasons for the invasion: to stop that shelling and slaughter

  • @baliyae
    @baliyae 2 года назад +9

    He was a great man, despite the fact he had polio. And his wife did remarkable things as well, including getting a woman in her husband’s Cabinet.

    • @dr.barrycohn5461
      @dr.barrycohn5461 2 года назад +3

      Perhaps he was great because of his polio. It gave his a sense of suffering.

    • @MarcPagan
      @MarcPagan 2 года назад +4

      He was an authoritarian hack, and caused the Great Depression.
      The best thing FDR did for the USA, from an Economist's review?
      Die.
      His policies turned a recession, into the Great Depression.
      Imparting unneeded misery upon millions.
      Plus,
      he tried to pack the Supreme Court after his unconstitutional, immoral, and authoritarian polices got spanked.
      History books are written by Leftists
      ....every mainstream Economist has eviscerated him...justly.
      If your child's history book praises FDR...fire your school board.
      Better yet, vote for School Vouchers, and destroy Teacher Unions.
      Choice is good, right Leftists?

    • @suprcrip2002
      @suprcrip2002 2 года назад +7

      @@MarcPagan The Great Depression started in 1929., under the presidency of Herbert Hoover. FDR became president in 1933.

    • @baliyae
      @baliyae 2 года назад +1

      @@MarcPagan Geez, dude, harsh much?

    • @136dtown
      @136dtown 2 года назад +2

      @@MarcPagan sorry Marc your trump will never be on a dime

  • @r.c.miller6161
    @r.c.miller6161 2 года назад +3

    What a tacky, gossipy presentation. Historically immaterial.

  • @leibue1
    @leibue1 2 года назад

    Thanks scolding east Europe to a bloody vampire!
    I personally recommend to all poore little nations to see this mouvie.
    By the way did you know that at Yalta Churchill sold yes yes sold Poland
    to Stalin to take Greece!
    Learn people learn!!!!