Gettysburg Address

Поделиться
HTML-код

Комментарии • 228

  • @mikehughes4969
    @mikehughes4969 Год назад +123

    Mr. Lincoln was wrong about one thing in this speech. "The world will not note nor long remember what was said here." I beg to differ, sir. It is my firm belief, my absolute conviction that the world will remember your words as long as the human race exists.

    • @stevelukoski7152
      @stevelukoski7152 Год назад +10

      I do so concur...

    • @mrm64
      @mrm64 Год назад +11

      @@stevelukoski7152 And I third this emotion. Gives me goosebumps, and a tear to my eye watching this over and over. Especially a black man myself...Lincoln was one of a kind...can't thank him and all those soldiers enough..

    • @crispincoque
      @crispincoque Год назад +3

      Not for much longer, then. 🤦

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад +3

      Actually, there were HOURS of other speeches given that day, not a syllable of which is recalled by ANYONE. It is only these brief 'remarks' by the president that are remembered. But, as Lincoln said, the sacrifices of the tens of thousands of Americans who 'struggled' there at Gettysburg remain memorialized in both the soil and the souls of America.

    • @glendagaskin151
      @glendagaskin151 Год назад +1

      We should pray for that. God is angry with America. We are under His judgement.

  • @cent-kz2ti
    @cent-kz2ti Год назад +37

    they probably dont teach this in school anymore. i remember having to memorize it. Such an important piece of history

    • @stevevanorsouw5272
      @stevevanorsouw5272 9 месяцев назад +3

      I'm teaching this in my History class today.

  • @kenbott5612
    @kenbott5612 Год назад +116

    This should be read before every new congress. To keep our representatives grounded and to do for the people they represent not for their political parties or self interests.

    • @wyattmcgee1
      @wyattmcgee1 Год назад +1

      100%.

    • @m.j.9318
      @m.j.9318 Год назад +2

      Thats a brilliant idea. And im not even american. But its really a great idea. Would surely do something for the better.

    • @Carlos-sd6cz
      @Carlos-sd6cz Год назад +1

      “Yes is the people who intrusted this power, to the people, therefore, it belongs!
      Edward Bulwer Lytton. Rienzi; The last of the Roman Tribunes.

    • @Martin_L478
      @Martin_L478 Год назад

      Amen

    • @tomgebarowski8156
      @tomgebarowski8156 Год назад

      Amen!

  • @vmarc4682
    @vmarc4682 Год назад +11

    My understanding is that the crowd was so moved that there was no applause. Lincoln left thinking that he had bombed.

  • @atcguy77
    @atcguy77 2 года назад +98

    Perhaps the greatest and most meaningful rendition of the Gettysburg Address I've heard.

    • @studentoftheword6115
      @studentoftheword6115 Год назад +2

      What about the 2nd inaugural address by Lincoln? What do you think of that address?

    • @suave-rider
      @suave-rider Год назад +3

      so glad it was captured on film all those years ago

    • @tobiolopainto
      @tobiolopainto Год назад +4

      try Charles Laughton in "Ruggles of Red Gap" (1935) This reading is very famous. Laughton did it when he went on the road, lecturing. The one good thing about this reading is that Lincoln's voice is high. Too many of the representations of Lincoln have him as a low voiced person. Loughton's pitch is about right.

    • @markproulx1472
      @markproulx1472 Год назад +1

      @@studentoftheword6115 Equally moving.

    • @sftommy01
      @sftommy01 Год назад +2

      @@tobiolopainto Looked it up..anthoher Laughton Great, Thanks! Gettysburg Address was my warmup for typing class.

  • @chattiermike140
    @chattiermike140 Год назад +38

    Love how modern interpretations of Lincoln are capturing his correct historical voice.

  • @steveford8999
    @steveford8999 Год назад +27

    Perhaps the greatest speech in American history.

    • @Matthew-sw4ie
      @Matthew-sw4ie Год назад +1

      F lincoln. God bless John Wilkes booth

    • @USMC-cv5sd
      @USMC-cv5sd Год назад

      Along with his 2nd inaugural speech.

    • @Roslerox
      @Roslerox Год назад

      ​@@Matthew-sw4ieThis guy 😂

  • @jacksonfl
    @jacksonfl Год назад +67

    Greetings from Jacksonville Florida USA. I believe that this rendition is the closest to Lincoln's delivery that I have ever heard. I particularly appreciated the actor's high-pitched voice, which reportedly is how his sounded. Well done.

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад +1

      Truly epic, authentic and inspiring. Perfection.

    • @allencollins6031
      @allencollins6031 Год назад

      Jacksonville Skynyrd #1

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад

      @ByWayOfDeception Newspaper accounts indicated that NO ONE applauded ANYTHING.

  • @blusheen378
    @blusheen378 3 месяца назад +1

    Great performance and delivery of speech. Just like the "Lincoln" movie, this is the second time I feel Lincoln come alive. Daniel Day Lewis, in his acting and embodiment of the subject and person; remarkably gave the feeling and sense that Lincoln was walking around in our midst in that movie.

  • @dclark142002
    @dclark142002 Год назад +16

    Astonishing in its simplicity, brilliant in its capturing of the essence of a battlefield dedication, pointed in its call for further efforts to accomplish the goal.

  • @makhetefall8003
    @makhetefall8003 Год назад +21

    Simply Great. Lincoln's spirit is still there.

  • @kyrg
    @kyrg Год назад +5

    This is the best rendition of his speech I've ever listened to.

  • @brianstamm1314
    @brianstamm1314 Год назад +17

    Historically Lincoln received no applause during and after the speech. He felt that he had failed with his "few appropriate remarks". After the ceremony, Edward Everett, who railed for almost two hours before the President, came up to him and said that Lincoln said more in his 90 seconds than he had.

  • @higgme1ster
    @higgme1ster Год назад +13

    I'm impressed they gave him a high pitched voice like the historical record described it. If I had heard an actor with a low timbre I would have been calling them out. Good on you Mister President.

  • @edwardmcdermott9948
    @edwardmcdermott9948 Год назад +7

    Lincoln was a great orator , I especially like the letter home to Mrs Bixby .

    • @lauriecook2399
      @lauriecook2399 4 месяца назад +1

      for me, as a non-american mind, the Mrs Bixby letter is more touching than this address because of how personal it is in its scope.

  • @pranavreddymolugu7866
    @pranavreddymolugu7866 Год назад +28

    one of the best renderings of abes speech

    • @michaelhanson7545
      @michaelhanson7545 Год назад

      If it wasn't for slavery would we still have gone to war just have let the south be their own nation

  • @theindian2226
    @theindian2226 Год назад +17

    Fantastic
    May God Bless the American people

  • @jasongoodman3428
    @jasongoodman3428 2 года назад +9

    Thank you for adding this, have wanted to be able to rewatch.

  • @brianfreeman8290
    @brianfreeman8290 Год назад +5

    This needs rereading in the House right now.

  • @brookswalker6859
    @brookswalker6859 Год назад +3

    GGG grandfather was a drummer boy at Gettysburg. In a story passed down to his son then on to my Uncle. He claimed that the audience was holding their breath, vomiting, gagging. The smell of the dead, not too far away, was that bad.

  • @dragonrabbit7410
    @dragonrabbit7410 Год назад +7

    this and the series about us grant remind me of the good old days. when the history channel was about history.

  • @MrKmoconne
    @MrKmoconne Год назад +5

    It was a great portrayal of Lincoln.

  • @gopalakrishnanv2290
    @gopalakrishnanv2290 Год назад +5

    What hardship did the US have to overcome! Had it not been for Lincoln, the US would have ceased to be. How great was his leadership. God bless and long live America

  • @benjsmithproductions
    @benjsmithproductions Год назад +5

    I would give anything for Daniel Day Lewis to have given this whole speech at Lincoln....... but this is about as damn close as anyone could hope for. Well done!

    • @Egilhelmson
      @Egilhelmson Год назад +1

      Hal Holbrook made his career giving this speech in something close to Lincoln’s voice. I’d like to have heard Orville Redenbacher or David Letterman do it.

  • @fredrickmarsiello4395
    @fredrickmarsiello4395 Год назад +17

    Lincoln was ill with variola when he read this; he was bedridden when he returned to Washington.

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime Год назад +1

      Thats not the worst of his ailments. He also got a splitting headache at the theater.

    • @B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont
      @B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont Год назад

      @@zombieregime I remember one time Johnny Carson made a "Lincoln Joke" (probably early 1970s) and the audience gasped. Johnny looked around and said, "too soon?".

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime Год назад

      @@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont Some people like to get fired up, like a rail car full of polymerizer, over just about anything......

    • @Stardweller1
      @Stardweller1 Год назад

      I thought it was smallpox.

  • @bobapbob5812
    @bobapbob5812 Год назад +9

    Excellent rendition.

  • @zam6877
    @zam6877 Год назад +4

    We now fight a battle that is aimed at the heart of this nation...the very republic itself

    • @equine2020
      @equine2020 Год назад

      This administration is taking our freedom. Will a civil war surface to save our country?

  • @pedrozaragoza2253
    @pedrozaragoza2253 Год назад +4

    God bless President Lincoln.

  • @LoveThatRod
    @LoveThatRod Год назад +2

    I have been to:
    his home in Springfield, IL
    The White House
    Gettysburg Battlefield
    Ford’s Theatre
    Petersen home across the street where he died, and
    The Lincoln Memorial
    He was a man that rose to the enormous need of the Nation - even at his own personal peril. I don’t think I have experienced a President in my lifetime who committed so much - and I remember Eisenhower when I was in Kindergarten.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Год назад

      I have been to the Lincoln Memorial. It was the most powerful of any I have visited in stirring an emotional response. Only one other comes close - the Hero Cities memorial at the wall of the Kremlin.

  • @AndySaenz
    @AndySaenz Год назад +2

    Lincoln is my favorite President!

  • @markwoldin162
    @markwoldin162 Год назад +5

    Beautiful.

  • @maureencora1
    @maureencora1 Год назад +7

    a Great Speech

  • @richardcobey9415
    @richardcobey9415 Год назад +3

    And this government OF THE PEOPLE BY THE PEOPLE FOR THE PEOPLE shall not. Perish from the earth😢

  • @robert8738
    @robert8738 Год назад +17

    The Greatest President of All Time!

    • @joshuazarate9780
      @joshuazarate9780 Год назад

      GW, TJ, AJ, TR, FR, JK. What makes Lincoln the greatest? That he kept the Union together, that he freed the successionist state slaves, that he finally realized Grant could brutally win the war?
      Challenge: what makes Lincoln the greatest president?

    • @juliosoto6566
      @juliosoto6566 Год назад +3

      @@joshuazarate9780 He was the tallest.

    • @USMC-cv5sd
      @USMC-cv5sd Год назад +2

      ​@@juliosoto6566
      Lol, good funny answer to an ignorant question.
      Obviously, Lincoln was the greatest because his vision of America and his absolute view of justice & righteousness for all men is slowly, slowly, slowly toppling the old oppressive ways of thinking and doing things......I might not get there with you, but we as a people shall overcome.

    • @juliosoto6566
      @juliosoto6566 Год назад +1

      @@USMC-cv5sd I'm guessing I could've said that he got rid of a systemic infection in society that resulted in the cultivation of the world's greatest economy. Sure, slavery would've ended eventually without interference. Much bloodshed was spent, but I'd argue that even a year or 2 more without the ratification of the 13th would've had massive negative impacts on the prosperity of the nation. It's always a rat race and the fastest way forward was unfortunately with war.

    • @USMC-cv5sd
      @USMC-cv5sd Год назад

      @juliosoto6566
      That's false revisionist history. The South was clearly trying to expand slavery into Latin America , like they did in Texas when slavery was illegal under Mexico.
      /he South tried to expand slavery into New Mexico and other territories.
      After the Civil War, the South enslaved 700,000 to 800,000 African Americans through those vagrancy laws.
      Watch the whole video, SLAVERY BY ANOTHER NAME.
      The South enslaved African Americans up to December 8th, 1941.
      After Pearl Harbor was attacked, FDR signed an executive order to end that slavery so as not to look bad morally to Japan or the rest of the world. THIS IS DOCUMENTED FACTS !!
      Enslaved African Americans after the Civil War worked as slaves to build the brick streets in the South and work for the steel companies.
      AND NO THESE WEREN'T REAL CRIMINALS, but the South loved the 13th Amendment because it allowed slavery of prisoners. The South made criminals out of African Americans, and a few others who obviously were not criminals.
      Teddy Roosevelt actually tried to end this enslavement first and got some convictions, but America didn't have the moral will to end it.
      SO SLAVERY WAS NOT GOING TO END WITHOUT A CIVIL WAR BECAUSE IT NEVER ENDED WITH A CIVIL WAR.
      HERE ARE THE FACTS .
      ruclips.net/video/UcCxsLDma2o/видео.htmlsi=TFfR4CkMI8CUKZd9ruclips.net/video/UcCxsLDma2o/видео.htmlsi=TFfR4CkMI8CUKZd9
      ruclips.net/video/KPlk41mNDuM/видео.htmlsi=qQQ_wRUu7KEcGZRk

  • @stevelukoski7152
    @stevelukoski7152 Год назад +2

    All the cemeteries that fill our fields today are testament . The " full measure of devotion " is recognized ! Freedom is NOT free. But to those who have paid the ultimate , having been your brethren in the struggle , i will continue to , with every breath GOD blesses me with , fight against the injustices that plague us. VOTE BLUE !!! 💙💙💙 Take Mr Lincolns words to heart .

  • @JoeHuntsman-k5u
    @JoeHuntsman-k5u Год назад +1

    Abraham Lincoln wasThe greatest Patriot of all time.
    I also think George Washington was a real Bad Ass

  • @allanboyer2769
    @allanboyer2769 Год назад

    Out of humbleness comes greatness. Words inspired by Almighty God that will live forever.

  • @tomfrombrunswick7571
    @tomfrombrunswick7571 Год назад +1

    The speech reads better than it sounds in this clip

  • @kevinwaters5872
    @kevinwaters5872 Год назад +21

    To have scripted this speech himself , Lincoln really rivals Shakespeare. An unparalleled grasp of the English language. I fear that a majority of TODAY’s Americans actually could not explain just what Lincoln was saying .

    • @danielbrown9202
      @danielbrown9202 Год назад

      Sadly, I agree.

    • @christophera556
      @christophera556 Год назад

      I'm not American but I will say this it is a long time since the US has had a capable President like Abraham Lincoln the last one who was on that level was probably Franklin Delenore Rosevelt and he died in 1945 .The US ever since FDR's death has had more and more mediocre President's. Abraham Lincoln as well as been a great speaker was also a skilled politician sadly his life was cut short by that idiot Booth if Lincoln hadn't been assinated by Booth and say Lincoln went on to do a second term then the US likely have been a slightly better place people like Johnson who I believe succeeded Lincoln may not have become President and Grant may not have become President either both Johnson and Grant if I'm correct were both tainted by corruption no doubt the policies used by Lincoln's immediate successors Johnson and later Grant were probably a continuation of some of Lincoln's policies the thing is if that idiot Booth hadn't done what he did then Lincoln would have implemented his policies over a second term would have done it more skilfully with better results for the American people in the long run but as we all know Lincoln's life was sadly cut short by a idiot with derringer pistol.

    • @juliosoto6566
      @juliosoto6566 Год назад +2

      Rivaling Shakespeare is a stretch. I'd say most Americans will understand what was said after listening/reading the address just once (most definitely the vast majority of college educated peers). This is my favorite speech of all time. That said, it has little to do with Lincolns mastery of the language (there were other politicians in that time much stronger in rhetoric) and more to do with the circumstance.

    • @danielh4032
      @danielh4032 Год назад

      Rivalling Churchill certainly

    • @juliosoto6566
      @juliosoto6566 Год назад

      @@danielh4032 This I agree! "Blood, toil, tears, and sweat" as well as "This was their finest hours" are some of the best English orations in history.

  • @ErichLRuehs
    @ErichLRuehs Год назад +1

    Are you still here Mr. Lincoln? As a child, I would not have to ask that question. But, alas, as a mature man, with wife, and child, and fellow Americans suffering, I must know.

  • @moserr11
    @moserr11 Год назад

    What marveling healing words.

  • @bubbatheking9225
    @bubbatheking9225 Год назад

    'Got that right! I'm tellin; ya. I have always read it off the page. I memorized the first paragraph when I was a kid. I have never heard it portrayed this way.

  • @wolfeyes9357
    @wolfeyes9357 Год назад +4

    Abraham Lincoln should see his country now, today, this night....I wonder what he would say, or maybe think....would he be happy, or fall to his knees and pray in despair?

  • @ardalla535
    @ardalla535 Год назад +1

    From the historical descriptions of Lincoln's voice, it was much higher and shrill and more unpleasant than this.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Год назад +2

      There are limits to what an actor can do in that regard.

  • @colinlatham5566
    @colinlatham5566 Год назад +2

    We sometimes forget that so many of the men who died at gettysburg died to keep slavery

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад +1

      But none of them are buried there (officially).

  • @jrnumex9286
    @jrnumex9286 Год назад +15

    kamahala harris 1863: "it was a long war, lasted a long time. many died here and all were killed fighting the long war here"

  • @robinrobyn1714
    @robinrobyn1714 Год назад +1

    Edward Everett spoke before Lincoln that day...

  • @raidenneo9370
    @raidenneo9370 Год назад +1

    I always kiss his face on 5 dollar, as my respect and love to him. Also on behalf on my sadness on his tragic death.

  • @patttrick
    @patttrick Год назад +3

    Superb

  • @Poolverine580
    @Poolverine580 Год назад +1

    I say that Lincoln (George Washington's great successor) have a unique voice

  • @IntelligentMrToad
    @IntelligentMrToad Год назад +3

    Would have been better without the cheesy music.

    • @davedunbar8884
      @davedunbar8884 Год назад

      ain't that the truth? i wanted the speech, not the background noise.

  • @letolethe3344
    @letolethe3344 Год назад +2

    The music is intrusive, distracting, and unnecessary--in fact, it is detrimental to the effect of the speech.

    • @davedunbar8884
      @davedunbar8884 Год назад

      I wanted Lincoln, not annoying background noise.

  • @Aaron-ef9dz
    @Aaron-ef9dz Год назад +2

    Our greatest president

  • @Tony762x39
    @Tony762x39 2 месяца назад

    Shall not perish from the earth.

  • @jjinphilajjinphila
    @jjinphilajjinphila Год назад +2

    "We pass over the silly remarks of the President. For the credit of the nation we are willing that the veil of oblivion shall be dropped over them and that they shall be no more repeated or thought of." Editorial, "Patriot and Union," Harrisburg, PA 11/24/1863

    • @Stardweller1
      @Stardweller1 Год назад +3

      In 2013, they then printed the following:
      "Seven score and ten years ago, the forefathers of this media institution brought forth to its audience a judgment so flawed, so tainted by hubris, so lacking in the perspective history would bring, that it cannot remain unaddressed in our archives.
      "We write today in reconsideration of 'The Gettysburg Address,' delivered by then-President Abraham Lincoln in the midst of the greatest conflict seen on American soil. Our predecessors, perhaps under the influence of partisanship, or of strong drink, as was common in the profession at the time, called President Lincoln's words 'silly remarks,' deserving 'a veil of oblivion,' apparently believing it an indifferent and altogether ordinary message, unremarkable in eloquence and uninspiring in its brevity.
      "In the fullness of time, we have come to a different conclusion. No mere utterance, then or now, could do justice to the soaring heights of language Mr. Lincoln reached that day. By today's words alone, we cannot exalt, we cannot hallow, we cannot venerate this sacred text, for a grateful nation long ago came to view those words with reverence, without guidance from this chagrined member of the mainstream media.
      "The world will little note nor long remember our emendation of this institution's record - but we must do as conscience demands:
      "In the editorial about President Abraham Lincoln's speech delivered Nov. 19, 1863, in Gettysburg, the Patriot & Union failed to recognize its momentous importance, timeless eloquence, and lasting significance. The Patriot-News regrets the error."

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад +1

      You sure that wasn't CNN (Confederate News Network)?

    • @jjinphilajjinphila
      @jjinphilajjinphila Год назад +1

      @@c.a.g.3130 No, but they were a copperhead newspaper.

    • @Zzyzzyx
      @Zzyzzyx Год назад +1

      ​@@Stardweller1love this! 😄

  • @maryannfiebelkorn743
    @maryannfiebelkorn743 Год назад +1

    Father Abraham

  • @nickyl9040
    @nickyl9040 Год назад

    This is almost good
    What would have made it much better Is an overhead panoramic shot of the battlefield so that we could see what Lincoln was

  • @petechimney6755
    @petechimney6755 Год назад +1

    President Lincoln was the 2nd speaker this day -- who was the first?

    • @DonaldWMeyers-dwm
      @DonaldWMeyers-dwm Год назад +2

      Edward Everett Hale, considered one of the great orators of the 19th century. After Lincoln's speech, Hale told Lincoln that he got closer to the point of the event in two minutes than Hale did in his two-hour speech.

    • @petechimney6755
      @petechimney6755 Год назад +1

      @@DonaldWMeyers-dwm Yes, and only those steeped in US history know his name, and almost no one knows what he said. At this time manty thought Presidents Lincoln's speech was a failure, but today we know how important this speech was.

  • @TheBerylknight
    @TheBerylknight Год назад

    Watching Daniel Day Lewis play Lincoln has ruined all other impersonations for me. No one else comes close.

  • @GH-oi2jf
    @GH-oi2jf Год назад

    It seems to me that the audience would not have interrupted the address with applause. I wonder if that is historically accurate.

  • @mikebradt8080
    @mikebradt8080 Год назад +1

    Our greatest President by far, regardless what Trump says. Lincoln was so hated by many both north and south. That hatred was personified in Booth. Why are the greatest of men that fight for human dignity always taken down by hatred? MLK, Gandhi, Chávez, Lincoln, Christ. This hatred is filling our goverment. Don't vote for hate anymore.

  • @sftommy01
    @sftommy01 Год назад +1

    the John Wayne version runs to 45 minutes

  • @sallaurie2751
    @sallaurie2751 Год назад +6

    Amen

  • @johnflo-grif2639
    @johnflo-grif2639 Год назад +4

    Reparations? The blood of the fallen on a hundred battlefields are reparations enough!

  • @roccodonato6236
    @roccodonato6236 Год назад

    At the beginning of the speech, does anyone else remember "Our forefathers" instead of "Our fathers?"

    • @jonmt12
      @jonmt12 Год назад +1

      actually it was "Our fathers"

    • @Zzyzzyx
      @Zzyzzyx Год назад +1

      No.

    • @roccodonato6236
      @roccodonato6236 Год назад

      @@jonmt12 See. Now this is where I have a problem.

    • @roccodonato6236
      @roccodonato6236 Год назад

      @@Zzyzzyx But I remember "Our forefathers."

    • @Zzyzzyx
      @Zzyzzyx Год назад

      @@roccodonato6236 Maybe your teachers told you wrong in school. Or maybe you just substituted the word in your mind and it got stuck there. Our memories are imperfect.

  • @Traderjoe
    @Traderjoe Год назад

    Little did anyone there know that it would take another 150 years for the nation to finally dissolve. All those lives were in vain. We are about to become separated again and this time it’s going to be permanent, and based on ideology.

    • @Stardweller1
      @Stardweller1 Год назад

      They were only in vain if we allow them to be. It's up to us to prevent that dissolution.

  • @wbwilhite
    @wbwilhite Год назад +1

    I wonder how all these people would feel looking at America as it is today.

    • @arnoldzyphill3167
      @arnoldzyphill3167 12 дней назад

      they might dispair that there are still democrats around and still the problem.and blacks just love them.

  • @winter4953
    @winter4953 Год назад +1

    😳

  • @tekannon7803
    @tekannon7803 Год назад

    Daniel Day-Lewis is one of the most iconic and incredible actors to ever grace the silver screen, but he was miscast in this movie for one very stark reason---he does not have the voice of Abraham Lincoln. We, of course, have never heard Lincoln, but Day-Lewis' attempt at capturing 'the voice' of the American President the most revered and renowned across the world fails miserably. In this film, Day-Lewis sounds more like a subordinate than Abraham Lincoln would have sounded. It's only an opinion...

    • @Zzyzzyx
      @Zzyzzyx Год назад

      What are you talking about? This isn't Daniel Day-Lewis.

  • @MrDeedoyle
    @MrDeedoyle Год назад

    Agree ... got a bit messed up re SO CALLED Red Indian Tribes et al

  • @stevenjbeto
    @stevenjbeto 2 года назад +43

    Where is the Lincoln among us? Where is the Theodore Roosevelt to drive Trump and the 1% merchant class back into service to this nation not in control of it?

    • @robadcox5405
      @robadcox5405 Год назад

      Steven James Beto. Where is the spirit to drive the doddering old criminal from the White House, along with the rapacious swamp sow Kamala Harris?

    • @garyowen9044
      @garyowen9044 Год назад +5

      Sadly, you’ve not been paying attention.

    • @Malbeefance
      @Malbeefance Год назад

      Look to the members of the MAGA, Patriot, and America First Parties. Look to those the biden regime oppresses with the nazisfied federal agencies. Look to those vilified by the corporate media machine.

    • @YoWhatGoesHere
      @YoWhatGoesHere Год назад +4

      How is it possible to be this out of touch with reality? 😂 Geezus man, do some research outside your bubble.

    • @markwoldin162
      @markwoldin162 Год назад

      His name was Mario Cuomo, and he failed to stand up when called upon.
      Like Sanders.

  • @danielbrown9202
    @danielbrown9202 Год назад +2

    Now we are trying year down what was saved in the Civil War.

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад

      Suffocating central government? Denial of self-determination? Tear it down!

  • @howardleekilby7390
    @howardleekilby7390 5 месяцев назад

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @jaggonzales4673
    @jaggonzales4673 Год назад +6

    "The Gettysburg speech is at once the shortest and the most famous oration in American history...the highest emotion reduced to one graceful and irresistible gesture...But let us not forget that it is oratory, not logic; beauty, not sense. Think of the argument in it! Put it into the cold words of everyday! The doctrine is simply this: that the Union soldiers who died at Gettysburg sacrificed their lives to the cause of self-determination - “that government of the people, by the people, for the people,” should not perish from the earth. It is difficult to imagine anything more untrue. The Union soldiers in that battle actually fought against self-determination; it was the Confederates who fought for the right of their people to govern themselves." - H. L. Mencken, "Prejudices: Third Series" (1922)

    • @claudioproteo3039
      @claudioproteo3039 Год назад

      Those slaver traitors tried to cut the nation asunder because they had lost an election and were afraid to lose them again, so they wanted to let the majority of the Americans apart from them. There is no self-determination built in denying the results of democracy to perpetuate the enslavement of human beings.

    • @timwood225
      @timwood225 Год назад

      Refer to Daniel Webster's 2d Reply to Hayne speech, 1830. Mencken could not have not known it, which makes his comment at best viciously disingenuous, at worst stupidly ignorant. The attribution of motive to Confederate soldiers is just self-serving, racist and anachronistic, revisionism. And it would seem that from Mencken's time it's being sold now to a third or fourth generation of suckers. The remedy is to do little research, learn, and think for yourself!

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад +1

      Mencken was wrong.

    • @c.a.g.3130
      @c.a.g.3130 Год назад

      @@veramae4098 No; he was absolutely right. Lincoln started a war that ended the great experiment in republican government and created the vast central tyranny that rules over the States now. And black men are more enslaved today than ever, having lost their nobility and abandoned the God of their salvation.

  • @charlesmiller6281
    @charlesmiller6281 Год назад

    Second greatest performance of historical reading ruclips.net/video/AKHYc-lHMzo/видео.html

  • @algodonriveravazquez1611
    @algodonriveravazquez1611 Год назад +1

    mis.respeto que.dira ahí*# en ese.discurso÷/ ya lo.se.[,la.ipocresia es.fundamental en este momento gracias a mis allegado emos dado un comienzo con todo los.que aman por que TODOS amamos sin [ "remedio"] a."defraudarnos" unos.alos [otro] poreso en este día le.doy las.gracia amis
    fríós sentimientos y a mÍs Calidos ,DIAS, que CON LA DICHA DE.QUERER UN DIA MAS DE SOBRA PARA.PODER REALIZAR terminamos QUE FLULLEN LA ESPERANZA DE TRASGUARDAR UNA ENMANDA EVOLUSIATIVÁ QUE RESGURDA ,DIAS, Y ,AÑO, PARA PODER TENER INISIATIVA SIN LÍMITES A LAS.GRANDEZ CAIDA DE.TODOS NOSOTRO SIN AUN SER REALIZADA CONPLEJOS LOGROS.
    BENIFISIARIO PARA.TODOS, QUE NOS LLEVAN A SALIR CON PROPOSITO DE UN EXISTIR NO DE DESAPARESER PUES AL ESTAR AQUI ANTE DE TODOS USTEDEZ CON LAS MISMA HERRAMIENTAS TERMINAL LO EMPESADO AUNQUE TODOS NOSOTRO "'FALTEMO "' PODAMOS.DEJAR AIRE Y RESPIRO PARA REALIZAR MEJORES OBRAS SIN FINES DE LUCRÔ PUES SEMEJORA PARA.LOS.DEMAS NO PARA NOSOTROS, NUNCA LO OLVIDEN QUE TENGAN EXELENTE DIA EXELENTE.TARDE.EXELENTE.NOCHE
    RECORDAR.QUE TODO LO GRADO NO ES PARA NOSOTRO ES ENSEÑANSA PARA.CUANDO NOS.CANSEMOS DEJAR ALGO.COMO LOS.PRIMEROS PASO DELA.VELA.🕯📜 LA.GRAN LLAMA.QUE EVOLUCIONO HOY CONOSIDO COMO LA LUZ💡 EVOLUCION DEL FUEGO 🕎
    🌋☄️🌊☄️🌋☄️mis.respeto abran LINCON contra el.anbre y la.desesperacion QUE TODOS TENEMOS YO TANBIEN AGO LO MISMO Y
    ME.INRESPETAN

  • @Tridentine
    @Tridentine Год назад

    This is actually a freemasonic and naturalistic parody of the traditional Roman Catholic common preface of Mass. But what can ya do.

  • @tubularfrog
    @tubularfrog Год назад +3

    This was recorded using a hand held camera in front of a TV screen. It's crap, and probably a copyright infringement.

    • @robadcox5405
      @robadcox5405 Год назад

      DW X. Wow, what a stupid comment.

    • @tubularfrog
      @tubularfrog Год назад

      @@robadcox5405 OK, $hit for brains.

  • @Thekennel177
    @Thekennel177 11 месяцев назад

    I wonder how many soldiers on that battlefield has bone spurs?

  • @owenjinxy
    @owenjinxy Год назад +1

    He was and is a GIANT..an orator of excellence...a great soul. But...he would be bitterly ashamed of the the state of the GOP now. Time for those who follow this man's resolve to stand up against the MAGA faction and hold up to the truths of the constitution...and democracy.

    • @arnoldzyphill3167
      @arnoldzyphill3167 Год назад

      the maga ""faction"" is our best hope for the REPUBLIC this is not a democracy................article 4

  • @garypiont6114
    @garypiont6114 Год назад

    A misfit destroyed a country. Sad

  • @lynderherberts2828
    @lynderherberts2828 Год назад

    Well, that was one sided.

  • @steveharvey7712
    @steveharvey7712 Год назад +1

    Lincoln was a over rated President.

  • @BrokenneckYgor
    @BrokenneckYgor Год назад +2

    Actor looks like Amish dentist

  • @Braylon18
    @Braylon18 Год назад

    Propaganda!

  • @zsedcftglkjh
    @zsedcftglkjh Год назад +1

    Meaningless piece of collectivist propaganda. On the other hand, John Wilkes Boothe gave Lincoln's mind something to think about.

  • @robertnicholson1409
    @robertnicholson1409 Год назад +2

    He didn't say anything about slavery because the issues being fought over was not slavery.

    • @jamesdiaz793
      @jamesdiaz793 Год назад +4

      Yes he did. When he quoted the reference to; "All men are created equal." If you missed that you are ignorant or have an agenda.

    • @robertnicholson1409
      @robertnicholson1409 Год назад

      @@jamesdiaz793 he still didn't say anything about slavery. All men being equal was not inclusive. When it comes to ignorance I'll leave that up to people like you, there are plenty of you !

    • @juliosoto6566
      @juliosoto6566 Год назад

      Technically, you are correct. It was a fight for something much greater than slavery abolition. It was a fight for same sex marriage, abortion rights, women's rights to vote, the use of nuclear weapons, and whether Google/Microsoft should continue doing ai research.
      On a serious note. He was fighting for freedom. It wasn't about The Union. It wasn't about slavery. Plain own liberty. But if on an exam they ask you, "What did Lincoln fight for?"
      A) Preservation of the Union
      B) Abolition of Slavery
      The correct answer is B.

    • @robertnicholson1409
      @robertnicholson1409 Год назад +1

      @@juliosoto6566 I'm not correct on a technicality, I'm simply correct.
      In Lincoln's inaugural address delivered on March 4, 1861 he stated;
      He wasn't interested in ending slavery wherever it existed, it was about preserving the Union.
      Now that is a matter of historical record and contradicts your A and B statement.

    • @juliosoto6566
      @juliosoto6566 Год назад +2

      @@robertnicholson1409 In the 2nd inaugural he explained otherwise lol. You are right though. At FIRST it was just about Union preservation. His "thought process" changed sometime after the Gettysburg Address.

  • @valeenoi2284
    @valeenoi2284 Год назад +1

    "All 'men' created equal"
    You see! It doesn't say "women".
    - Alt-Reich/Trumpist

    • @valeenoi2284
      @valeenoi2284 Год назад +2

      @Yakov Shani Dude! I was being sarcastic. Sorry my subtleties didn't catch on with my prose.

    • @henryhall9623
      @henryhall9623 Год назад

      Yeah, and those who disagree with Grandpa Brandon are "semi-fascist."
      Democrat = enemy.

    • @valeenoi2284
      @valeenoi2284 Год назад +1

      @@henryhall9623 You mean like DeathSantis who literally went after a private company for "disagreeing" with him over his unconstitutional law which was rammed through everyone's throat by gerrymandering the hell out of the entire state?
      Alt-Reichs = Iranian mullahs = Putin regime

  • @Lumotaku
    @Lumotaku Год назад +1

    this guy dont sounld like lincoln

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Год назад +1

      Were you there?

  • @artandchill2480
    @artandchill2480 Год назад +5

    Translation: FAM we go way back, our grand fam knew freedom was just a gift that keeps on giving, we cannot forget, it was paid in blood from both sides to give birth to a new form of humanity. not perfect but close compared to the rest of the world.

  • @tronghai55
    @tronghai55 Год назад

    True liberty is the inner calling of humanity of all men .the ginstition guaranty the freedom of the entitlement if the supreme laws enactments for a citizen .but cessionnists imported from another world lost liberty came to usa and want to reimplements their learn past concepts of enslavement rulings .any citizen caméléon invested as a supreme judge and work the constitution to be prepared if the true faith to'theses supreme laws and bias prejudice enactment black robe yo bend at will it's commitments to the constitution is a stain mark oblivion if his faith country and duty.a citizen abused used quartered and triple lynch cause that Panetta is a crook using his immunity to commit his personal ambition eat the costs if innocents lives .nit fir free but fir gullinesses and abuse if power .killing a young girl innocent at 16 staged as an accident to free bodily violence for bodily exploitations et racketerrings explouttion by enslavement if entrapment of sex predators if that nazie Soviet rda Michael strang a pure nazie child predator and boost about it that he us untouchable cause the judges let him free to commit viscious crimes cause he us royalty of pervert ways .goerges 6 the mad predator king .no gentleman my father us the constitutional lawyer of France and we are not your prejudice animals fir you to game to death upon as some enslayer from Holland Gus van Sant .that strang lit mathematician is a huscious predator child abuser 50 years later to cover his perverts insiders killers serial ways he resolute to kinapp my kin and tortured them to death by perversions if sadistics ways rehearsal .no sir I am not your bullied kid for you to incess your talents if predators gay intentions as a royalty coward in shadows .cowardice silent perversion and violents tutoring to abused if kids are the signs of nazies RDA of his origin asamass grave kids killers .you ordered the serial viscious staged rape if my ex wife less than an gorillas black marines disguise by home invasion and like a nazie you heat her to death and kick her bowels lower end .we will see that you will paid fir your free ride monster deeds if a monster killer Gilbert strang the nazie Treblinka kapots survivor .

  • @thewaryears
    @thewaryears Год назад +1

    A country divided in two cannot be a country

    • @TUCAN99999
      @TUCAN99999 Год назад +2

      And a country without borders is not a country.

    • @thewaryears
      @thewaryears Год назад

      @@TUCAN99999 Beware North Korea