I literally can’t say enough about how great this video is. Great, interested narrative. Great theme on historic event whose impact is still felt, as well as still reminding us of something we proudly thought made us special. Thank you. I look forward to more, and if I’m ‘late for this party, better late than never, as they say.
Excellent video of an event that deserves more attention in high school history classes. The illustrations are vibrant but not always too accurate. I live in the southwest and among pueblo culture and adobe buildings, but some of those burning stone citadels in the illustrations were disingenuous at best. But hey, it's the internet and eye candy draws viewership. It's a great video of a subject that needs telling - to keep us all in that historical context, so we can better understand how history repeats itself. Thank you!
😳🤔, A good example of the timeless African Proverb- Until the Lions 🦁 have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter 😳🤔
Likely a “good catch”. And I’m assuming the criticism implies the number of instances must be great. I can only assume the only reason I didn’t even notice the common sin committed, is that I was far more focused the provocative narrative.
Informative. Dramatically illustrated, but in a way that undermines the history - similar to the inaccuracy of the paintings related to the Little Bighorn series. One issue is numbers. Many illustrations look as if populated by a cast of thousands rather than hundreds. The clothing looks wrong. I'm not an expert, but the outfits worn by both sides seem questionable to me. The fortress pueblos look more like monasteries in Tibet than those in the North American southwest. The image of noble indigenous warriors overlooking a sunset over a vast body of water romanticizes a harsh and brutal climate. Such liberties devalue the historical content of the narrative. Truth, not grandeur.
I respect your opinion. Our difference is that I the storyline presented for this event is so compelling, and rich with all the things that great literature, great! But enjoyed in the context of a RUclips video? And, moreover (this matter to me, far more than most, I’ve learned), I believe the main details surrounding the story and all the ironic-ironies that help make it so compelling, are factual (even if some photos are not). Love it, and do believe thar there exist many people will love to see more. Respect.
Please drop the AI artwork as much of it is so error-filled as to be distracting to those with some knowledge & terribly midleading for those with no knowledge. AI artwork is the bane of truth.
This is an excellent example of the need for secure borders for all nations otherwise the nations are not sovereign Multiculturalism doesn’t work just ask these Indians. Sadly, even the native Indian tribes were warring against each other. Another example of different cultures, ideologies, etc, etc have challenges to get along. The whole world is like this for thousands of years So face reality to this reality 😂
You state that "each village was an independent Nation". Nation is not the correct term. They were never Nations. They were nothing more than individual villages or tribes. That's why it was so easy to push them out.
@percival1137 I ve studied native culture my whole life,40 + yrs.painted the real Americans n so details matter to me n they ve had enough taken from them for sake of greed.Why would I even care otherwise.typical misleading disrespect!
I literally can’t say enough about how great this video is. Great, interested narrative. Great theme on historic event whose impact is still felt, as well as still reminding us of something we proudly thought made us special.
Thank you. I look forward to more, and if I’m ‘late for this party, better late than never, as they say.
Excellent video of an event that deserves more attention in high school history classes. The illustrations are vibrant but not always too accurate. I live in the southwest and among pueblo culture and adobe buildings, but some of those burning stone citadels in the illustrations were disingenuous at best. But hey, it's the internet and eye candy draws viewership. It's a great video of a subject that needs telling - to keep us all in that historical context, so we can better understand how history repeats itself. Thank you!
Reminds me of Pontiac and Tecumseh and their efforts to unite many tribes to throw off European domination.
😳🤔, A good example of the timeless African Proverb- Until the Lions 🦁 have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter 😳🤔
Likely a “good catch”. And I’m assuming the criticism implies the number of instances must be great. I can only assume the only reason I didn’t even notice the common sin committed, is that I was far more focused the provocative narrative.
Informative. Dramatically illustrated, but in a way that undermines the history - similar to the inaccuracy of the paintings related to the Little Bighorn series. One issue is numbers. Many illustrations look as if populated by a cast of thousands rather than hundreds. The clothing looks wrong. I'm not an expert, but the outfits worn by both sides seem questionable to me. The fortress pueblos look more like monasteries in Tibet than those in the North American southwest. The image of noble indigenous warriors overlooking a sunset over a vast body of water romanticizes a harsh and brutal climate. Such liberties devalue the historical content of the narrative. Truth, not grandeur.
I respect your opinion. Our difference is that I the storyline presented for this event is so compelling, and rich with all the things that great literature, great! But enjoyed in the context of a RUclips video? And, moreover (this matter to me, far more than most, I’ve learned), I believe the main details surrounding the story and all the ironic-ironies that help make it so compelling, are factual (even if some photos are not). Love it, and do believe thar there exist many people will love to see more.
Respect.
Please drop the AI artwork as much of it is so error-filled as to be distracting to those with some knowledge & terribly midleading for those with no knowledge.
AI artwork is the bane of truth.
This is an excellent example of the need for secure borders for all nations otherwise the nations are not sovereign
Multiculturalism doesn’t work just ask these Indians. Sadly, even the native Indian tribes were warring against each other.
Another example of different cultures, ideologies, etc, etc have challenges to get along. The whole world is like this for thousands of years
So face reality to this reality 😂
You state that "each village was an independent Nation". Nation is not the correct term. They were never Nations.
They were nothing more than individual villages or tribes. That's why it was so easy to push them out.
your images aren't correct!
Amazing...so...you were there...
@percival1137 I ve studied native culture my whole life,40 + yrs.painted the real Americans n so details matter to me n they ve had enough taken from them for sake of greed.Why would I even care otherwise.typical misleading disrespect!
Cameras were very rare back then
@@markhertlein4726 Yes, you are correct sport, but people did drawings and paintings back then. Google The Renaissance.
Shit wasn’t that long ago wtf?!
The commentary was good but the illustrations were absurd. They were distracting and really diminished the professionalism of the presentation.
Rewriting history is funny as fuck 😅
Dramatic images but rubbish nonetheless. You really need to have a word with your art department...the images have to match the narration.
I see many paralells to Palestine