My grandpa told me once “one day there will be a black president. Me and your grandma won’t live to see it but you will” my grandpa died in 2006 three years before but my grandma who is still alive lived to see it. When he was elected that conversation came back to me. I said grandpa you said it and I know your smiling.
It is sadly uncommon to see content with such amazing quality. It is worthy of respect how you take your time to explain history and not rush through it like many content creators do. Especially considering you do not put obnoxious music over such serious topics. I also believe that you did great in adding contrasting opinions as it showcases not only how much you have researched but also how you want the viewer to actually learn the whole story. Thank you so much for providing such a service for free. Cheers from Uruguay.
I'll start by saying, growing up in Utah. At first I thought this was the end to racism. Thst he could do it. It was finally gonna happen. But I didn't understand race in middle school. In high school, I was so shocked. That he wasn't American, thst police officers were going missing looking into him, he was gonna take our guns away!!! I lived in a world where raido men wouldn't lie to me, that adults knew what they were talking about, and good people were always my neighbors and leaders. What a small world I lived in. I'm glad I know better now, I'm glad I escaped those kinds of people in my life. I hope this trend will oneday continue. We need more men like him in leadership.
Sort of off-topic, but since you mention Utah and trusting people, it reminds me of Evermore Park. I just watched a new video about that, and it seems to show how some people are blindly trusting. (Not trying to promote, and I have no affiliation).
I’m a 40 year old conservative white American. I’m not ashamed to say that. I’m also not ashamed to say that my generation elected Obama president. Despite disagreeing with almost all of his political views, i was still proud of what our country did electing him. I have really enjoyed this series and have enjoyed telling my young children about the things i have learned. I can try to be as “ least racist” as possible but this series helped me understand that I will never understand what it is like to be a black man in America.
As a British person, whose never been the the USA, I find it bizarre how Americans refer the Obama as 'black'. Over here many seen him as mixed-race. Not to step on his accomplishment as being the first person of colour to become president, but it does show devide when he and many others see him as a black man instead of a man with both black and white ancestry. Obama being a product of people from both sides, I would have thought it would have created more unity, not more divide. I am mixed-race and the only time I'm reffered to as black is by people who don't know better, and I'm very quick to correct them on their terminology. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe I sit in the clouds, but he wasn't black, he wasn't white. He was both and neither
Deep, and technically right. But in the USA, if you have so much as one drop of blood from a black person, you're black. It came from many years of prejudice. We have a long way to go to get away from that idea.
He is neither black or white. He is brown. I saw him when he came to London in 2009 for a quick visit. Yes in America there are a lot of issues regarding race and I don't fit into a nice little neat box, so I know first hand how it feels when people try to label you. We all have to remember that people will see you the way they want to see you regardless of race.
I remember Obama's 2008 win like it was yesterday. I was 13 and living in Alabama at the time, and I got tired of waiting for the results, so I went upstairs to go on the family computer. Suddenly, I heard my mom screaming from downstairs. Running up the stairs to where I was, she joyfully yelled "OBAMA'S GONNA BE THE PRESIDENT" and we both started dancing and jumping for joy. After years of Bush and having a brother-in-law in Iraq and Afghanistan, we were so excited about a smart, kind black man finally getting his chance at the white house
The thing with Obama himself, Black Americans got happen base one the fact he was Black but he didn’t have any attention on fixing up the Black community in my opinion, he made life much harder.
as a non American, it seems he promised alot and delivered little. He was to willing to compromise, he had little experience to get things done in Washington. Alot of things mentioned in this video he did, he did not . Torture remained at black sites or on navy ships, Guantanamo bay still open, drone war expanded, troop escalation in Afghanistan. Recovery act, he wanted 3 trillion, got 800 billion. Obama care had to be wated down, he did some good things domestically in the first 2 years, what about the other 6. Americans thought they would get a FDR or LBJ to radically change america, instead they got clinton 2.0
Scary to think this is already history. I still remember being in a restaurant for dinner on holiday as an 8 year old and my dad trying to explain to me the significance of a black man becoming president over there when he was elected.
I appreciate finally learning what the TEA Party actually was. That whole situation happened when I was a little kid, so I had heard about it but never understood what was going on.
While it’s wonderful and historic that Obama was the first Black man to be President, we must not overlook his greatest crime: that one time he wore a tan suit
I was excited about Obama. It was the first campaign I did anything other than vote for, canvassing and the digital equivalent of envelope stuffing mainly. He was a good president and he did his best for us but, despite the radical hope he inspired, there's only so much one man can do. Even if that man is the president.
To those who don't already know, keep in mind Obama was born 3 whole years before the the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Yes he was toddler at the time, but it's still a little crazy crazy to think about. Imagine telling someone in 1961 that the first black president will be born that year.
I have watched this series religiously. As someone who is well versed with the history of the African continent it has been extremely useful to get a well guided history of the American continent. I have cried through some episodes, asked myself waht if things had gone differently, met some highly interesting people and movements and just overall really appreciated your effort. Thankyou very much.
A couple of tidbits missing from this video that I'm willing to give the benefit of the doubt was due to time restraints. 1. The death of Trevon Martin and the BLM uprisings of 2014 and 2015 were a pretty clear result of the militarization of police through the "1033 Program". This was a program started under Pres Clinton to give cops the hand me downs of the US military. This was a fairly small trickle until Obama became president, with him opening the floodgates of all the surplus equipment from the post-Surge occupation of Iraq. It took those two uprisings to force the Obama admin to issue of "review" of the 1033 Program. The program is still ongoing. 2. The Dodd-Frank and Obamacare bills were more political and policy half-measures that were more focused on staving off the total collapse of the banking and healthcare systems, respectively, than actually making life all that much better for people. These acts were meant to quiet movements to break up the banks (and bring criminal charges to the bankers who's criminal negligence caused the mess) and finally drag the US into the civilized world of people being able to get healthcare without turning into a debt slave for the rest of your life. The Obamacare bill especially is an absolutely monstrous example of "public-private partnerships" just being that Trailer Park Boys bit about paying someone to fuck off. Instead of challenging the Health Insurance industry, the Obama admin just took Mitt Romney's idea of heavily subsidizing (paying off) health insurance companies in order to make poor people profitable for these companies. The rest of a universally hated system was kept mostly as is.
Obamacare is definitely not great and not ideal, but it's the best that anyone could get. You call it "monstrous", but it's better than if it didn't exist. Still, you are right that it is a half(or less) measure that doesn't solve the problems. If the system was "universally hated" then it would already be gone. If there were no Republicans in Congress, the system would be gone.
Thank you for the series, it really helped me organize the stuff I already knew and allowed me to better understand a perspective on US history that I wouldn't otherwise have access to.
As a white registered republican...I can tell you that I loved President Obama and pray that we get another president one day that has his empathy, intelligence, humor and wisdom.
Are we just not gonna talk about Kunduz hospital? And the escalation in the war on terror. And the drone strikes personally approved by Obama which lead to the deaths of at least 324 civilians.
No cus den we need to go an talk about all the bad stuff all the other presidents did no president is perfect it is wtf it is dont try to discredit the fact that he was the first black president this video ain’t bout dat keep it pushing
This is a great video, I always learn so much from these. It’s worth noting also that Obama did also allow for the continued mistreatment of some prisoners despite the laws he passed against it, notably the detention of Chelsea Manning, but also others. Overall, he did a lot of good, but it’s never a cut and dry situation. History is always messy.
Though you inform, educate, enlighten and empower you also INSPIRE. Thanks Mr. Smith...yes I had to put RESPECT on your name !!! Though you mentioned 50 episodes at the start of this journey, I TRULY WISH for 50 more !!! Thanks again for your wonderful work my brother...best wishes with all that your future holds !!!
CLINT!! So glad you are partnering with the Greens on Crash Course to reach more folks than those of us who know and love you from Pod Save the People and other media. Yay!
As a latin-american, I am disappointed that this video did not address the president's extreme aggression towards latin-american immigrants, especially those who had no proper documentation.
I might have missed it; but what aggression was shown towards Latin-American immigrants? How did you expect him to act towards those with no proper documentation?
It would be hard to imagine that if you grew up in Alabama or Mississippi, if your grand dad lived in any other part of the country meh not so much. Hell most people thought Colon Powell would have been Americas first Black President and he was a Republican.
9:10 the tea party was 100% astroturfed. Some of these "large" rallies were like 20-40 people screaming outside an event or building. Media gave them 100x more attention than what they deserved.
I look forward to chapter two where he buys a huge mansion by the sea, even though he told everyone that the sea was rising and would flood properties near the sea.
I’ll never forget the night of his election. My family cried and cried so happy. When he walked out with his wife and daughters I had never felt more proud then that moment to be both black and American. I felt like anything was possible and that the future was bright
I have a lot of mixed feelings about the Obama years, but I can't deny in retrospect that they were some of the best years of my life. When he was president, anything seemed possible, even when there were difficulties. The Bush years for me were all about the War on Terror, and the Trump/Biden years have been about partisan unraveling, but even though the partisanship began getting into high gear during the Obama years, he always seemed above it all in a way that I miss.
Crazy cause I was only 6 when Obama got elected and I remember sitting on the floor next my parents watching TV and my father saying how I was living in history
I find it weird how important race is Obama isn't just a black man he was a man with many ideas who just happened to be black one thing I never hear about is barrack ideas or how he worked hard how he basically aged 10 years in 3 he looked so worn out just in 3 years
I was born in 1969, but I was also astounded. Some a moment I felt maybe the human race will not destroy itself with hatred. The way the country is headed now, backwards, I am ashamed for having such hope.
At the end of the day, Obama was able to achieve one thing that he promised in the campaign trail: to give people hope… at least for those that are capable of feeling it.
Obama was the first president I got to vote for when I turned 18 in 2008. I think he did a lot of great things, including pushing through the ACA, but did not do as much for the LGBTQ+ community despite the promises he made while campaigning. Overall, a solid ‘B’ president, which for a US president is S-tier. Perhaps no one in the last 60 years has been as good of a president.
I love this series so much! However, I do wish there was more nuance to this episode, in the same way there was with Jesse Jackson. The fact that Pres Obama's international policy allowed for the death of so many civilians abroad by drones. That he didn't support gay marriage at first, and other ways in which he was unable to escape Assimilationist thinking when it came to criminal justice reform. Intersectionality and nuance alway have to be at the forefront, so that we can continue improving as we move forward, learning from our past missteps. President Obama must always be remembered for the barriers he broke and the hard work he did, but imo we have to avoid looking at his presidency through rose-tinted glasses.
Some people being killed by drones is an odd thing to pick out to criticize. Under every leader that any country has ever had, there will be many, many injustices. So you would be fine if they weren't killed by drones? Very strange.
Yes, to me it seems the same way. Bush was not really in charge, Clinton seemed to just cruise through good times, and for any outsider Trump is obviously not a good president at all.
It is ironic how Indians who migrated to the USA have benefitted from the civil right movement in the USA but continues to discriminate against their fellow citizen in India with varna ashrama dharma a so-called divine sanctioned rigid caste system perpetuating the most heinous and inhuman form of discrimination for centuries and what's obnoxious it continues till date with same insanity.
Is that gonna change or relax a little in India you think? From an outside perspective it seems like a caste system is not the way forward in the 21th century.
My grandpa told me once “one day there will be a black president. Me and your grandma won’t live to see it but you will” my grandpa died in 2006 three years before but my grandma who is still alive lived to see it. When he was elected that conversation came back to me. I said grandpa you said it and I know your smiling.
That was a beautiful memory. ❤ i definitely teared up 😢
It is sadly uncommon to see content with such amazing quality. It is worthy of respect how you take your time to explain history and not rush through it like many content creators do. Especially considering you do not put obnoxious music over such serious topics. I also believe that you did great in adding contrasting opinions as it showcases not only how much you have researched but also how you want the viewer to actually learn the whole story. Thank you so much for providing such a service for free. Cheers from Uruguay.
I'll start by saying, growing up in Utah. At first I thought this was the end to racism. Thst he could do it. It was finally gonna happen.
But I didn't understand race in middle school.
In high school, I was so shocked. That he wasn't American, thst police officers were going missing looking into him, he was gonna take our guns away!!!
I lived in a world where raido men wouldn't lie to me, that adults knew what they were talking about, and good people were always my neighbors and leaders.
What a small world I lived in. I'm glad I know better now, I'm glad I escaped those kinds of people in my life.
I hope this trend will oneday continue. We need more men like him in leadership.
Sort of off-topic, but since you mention Utah and trusting people, it reminds me of Evermore Park. I just watched a new video about that, and it seems to show how some people are blindly trusting. (Not trying to promote, and I have no affiliation).
I do wonder if that kind of life still exists. It does feel save and calm.
You should do an episode on Obama's foreign policy, especially in the Middle East.
Totally glances over it! Pretty much Bush 2.0 but with more drones!
I know he could have been more balanced, highlighting Obama’s failures - drone program, Lybia, ISIS resurgence.
When they say “divisive,” they mean, “ this is true but it makes me feel uncomfortable.”
💯
As someone who missed out on a lot of history and had a misinformed upbringing, I'm happy you're making these.🙂
Yes, I do have many issues with Obama's presidency, but you cannot deny the historic nature of his election, and that feeling when it happened.
I’m a 40 year old conservative white American. I’m not ashamed to say that. I’m also not ashamed to say that my generation elected Obama president. Despite disagreeing with almost all of his political views, i was still proud of what our country did electing him. I have really enjoyed this series and have enjoyed telling my young children about the things i have learned. I can try to be as “ least racist” as possible but this series helped me understand that I will never understand what it is like to be a black man in America.
It really blows me away how much Republicans hated that man. They still hate him too.
Obama changed politics forever. We seeing the aftermath of a Black President still in 2022. That’s why this vote is important
As a British person, whose never been the the USA, I find it bizarre how Americans refer the Obama as 'black'. Over here many seen him as mixed-race. Not to step on his accomplishment as being the first person of colour to become president, but it does show devide when he and many others see him as a black man instead of a man with both black and white ancestry. Obama being a product of people from both sides, I would have thought it would have created more unity, not more divide. I am mixed-race and the only time I'm reffered to as black is by people who don't know better, and I'm very quick to correct them on their terminology. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe I sit in the clouds, but he wasn't black, he wasn't white. He was both and neither
Deep, and technically right. But in the USA, if you have so much as one drop of blood from a black person, you're black. It came from many years of prejudice. We have a long way to go to get away from that idea.
He is neither black or white. He is brown. I saw him when he came to London in 2009 for a quick visit. Yes in America there are a lot of issues regarding race and I don't fit into a nice little neat box, so I know first hand how it feels when people try to label you. We all have to remember that people will see you the way they want to see you regardless of race.
I remember Obama's 2008 win like it was yesterday. I was 13 and living in Alabama at the time, and I got tired of waiting for the results, so I went upstairs to go on the family computer. Suddenly, I heard my mom screaming from downstairs. Running up the stairs to where I was, she joyfully yelled "OBAMA'S GONNA BE THE PRESIDENT" and we both started dancing and jumping for joy. After years of Bush and having a brother-in-law in Iraq and Afghanistan, we were so excited about a smart, kind black man finally getting his chance at the white house
The thing with Obama himself, Black Americans got happen base one the fact he was Black but he didn’t have any attention on fixing up the Black community in my opinion, he made life much harder.
This intro brought me to tears. Thanks for this.
as a non American, it seems he promised alot and delivered little. He was to willing to compromise, he had little experience to get things done in Washington. Alot of things mentioned in this video he did, he did not . Torture remained at black sites or on navy ships, Guantanamo bay still open, drone war expanded, troop escalation in Afghanistan. Recovery act, he wanted 3 trillion, got 800 billion. Obama care had to be wated down, he did some good things domestically in the first 2 years, what about the other 6. Americans thought they would get a FDR or LBJ to radically change america, instead they got clinton 2.0
Scary to think this is already history. I still remember being in a restaurant for dinner on holiday as an 8 year old and my dad trying to explain to me the significance of a black man becoming president over there when he was elected.
I'd just like to take a moment here to say; Thanks Obizzy.
"damned if you do and damned if you don't". such is the game of politics.
I love how you gathered both perspectives of Black opinion about Barack Obama. Love this series!
I live in Mississippi Jackson to be exact 🎉
I appreciate finally learning what the TEA Party actually was. That whole situation happened when I was a little kid, so I had heard about it but never understood what was going on.
Do your own research.
While it’s wonderful and historic that Obama was the first Black man to be President, we must not overlook his greatest crime: that one time he wore a tan suit
I have been watching six episodes of this a day to catch up. This series has been enlightening to watch.
Only six? I’ve been watching like 15 a day
I was excited about Obama. It was the first campaign I did anything other than vote for, canvassing and the digital equivalent of envelope stuffing mainly. He was a good president and he did his best for us but, despite the radical hope he inspired, there's only so much one man can do. Even if that man is the president.
To those who don't already know, keep in mind Obama was born 3 whole years before the the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Yes he was toddler at the time, but it's still a little crazy crazy to think about. Imagine telling someone in 1961 that the first black president will be born that year.
The Boondocks episode about the election was really excellent, showing the generational opinions of Obama
I was in AF basics training when heard Obama won. I was shiny the metal in the doorway when a girl read off the news in disgust...I just smiled.
Last night, met a woman who thought the former president's name is 'Baracko Bama'
Excellent video. Same for my 105 year old Grandpa who was born in Tennessee.
Hey Minster Mallory!
Wow, that's really old. Still in good shape?
I have watched this series religiously. As someone who is well versed with the history of the African continent it has been extremely useful to get a well guided history of the American continent. I have cried through some episodes, asked myself waht if things had gone differently, met some highly interesting people and movements and just overall really appreciated your effort. Thankyou very much.
I absolutely love these videos, your work is phenomenal!!
I’m only 33 and my dad thought that he would never see a black president
Very helpful for a second grade school homework. Thanks for this video.
A couple of tidbits missing from this video that I'm willing to give the benefit of the doubt was due to time restraints.
1. The death of Trevon Martin and the BLM uprisings of 2014 and 2015 were a pretty clear result of the militarization of police through the "1033 Program". This was a program started under Pres Clinton to give cops the hand me downs of the US military. This was a fairly small trickle until Obama became president, with him opening the floodgates of all the surplus equipment from the post-Surge occupation of Iraq. It took those two uprisings to force the Obama admin to issue of "review" of the 1033 Program. The program is still ongoing.
2. The Dodd-Frank and Obamacare bills were more political and policy half-measures that were more focused on staving off the total collapse of the banking and healthcare systems, respectively, than actually making life all that much better for people. These acts were meant to quiet movements to break up the banks (and bring criminal charges to the bankers who's criminal negligence caused the mess) and finally drag the US into the civilized world of people being able to get healthcare without turning into a debt slave for the rest of your life. The Obamacare bill especially is an absolutely monstrous example of "public-private partnerships" just being that Trailer Park Boys bit about paying someone to fuck off. Instead of challenging the Health Insurance industry, the Obama admin just took Mitt Romney's idea of heavily subsidizing (paying off) health insurance companies in order to make poor people profitable for these companies. The rest of a universally hated system was kept mostly as is.
Obamacare is definitely not great and not ideal, but it's the best that anyone could get. You call it "monstrous", but it's better than if it didn't exist. Still, you are right that it is a half(or less) measure that doesn't solve the problems. If the system was "universally hated" then it would already be gone. If there were no Republicans in Congress, the system would be gone.
Thank you for another excellent, well-balanced lesson!
I love how these videos are educational and explain the differing opinions along with the facts. Very well done
Love this video!
"I thought I voted for Suge Knight, but I got Urkel"
What a powerful intro. I’ve never been more drawn in to a video than I have for this one
Thank you for the series, it really helped me organize the stuff I already knew and allowed me to better understand a perspective on US history that I wouldn't otherwise have access to.
4:37 is it supposed to say Great Recession instead of Great Depression? Might be confusing for some.
Thank you, Clint. And thanks to all the nice people.
As a white registered republican...I can tell you that I loved President Obama and pray that we get another president one day that has his empathy, intelligence, humor and wisdom.
this series had been so insightful and intelligent so far!! hats off to everyone involved
Are we just not gonna talk about Kunduz hospital? And the escalation in the war on terror. And the drone strikes personally approved by Obama which lead to the deaths of at least 324 civilians.
No cus den we need to go an talk about all the bad stuff all the other presidents did no president is perfect it is wtf it is dont try to discredit the fact that he was the first black president this video ain’t bout dat keep it pushing
Is there a way I can like this video harder to make the next one come out sooner?
This is a great video, I always learn so much from these. It’s worth noting also that Obama did also allow for the continued mistreatment of some prisoners despite the laws he passed against it, notably the detention of Chelsea Manning, but also others. Overall, he did a lot of good, but it’s never a cut and dry situation. History is always messy.
Thank you
Though you inform, educate, enlighten and empower you also INSPIRE. Thanks Mr. Smith...yes I had to put RESPECT on your name !!! Though you mentioned 50 episodes at the start of this journey, I TRULY WISH for 50 more !!! Thanks again for your wonderful work my brother...best wishes with all that your future holds !!!
The last president that you'd actually feel like you're meeting the president.
😢Just listening your narrative makes me cry! As a Mexican-American I understand what you’re saying!
CLINT!! So glad you are partnering with the Greens on Crash Course to reach more folks than those of us who know and love you from Pod Save the People and other media. Yay!
Very informative video
Whatever you think of Obama politically, his impact on the country’s history cannot be denied. Great video
Agree 💯
As a latin-american, I am disappointed that this video did not address the president's extreme aggression towards latin-american immigrants, especially those who had no proper documentation.
I might have missed it; but what aggression was shown towards Latin-American immigrants? How did you expect him to act towards those with no proper documentation?
Was able to see him give a speech in Milwaukee a few days ago. He was the last great president in my eyes so far.
Isn't he more Hawaiian American from exclusively wealthy parents, raised by wealthy grandparents?
He looked the part though, I'll give him that.
He he wasn’t born or raised wealthy. He was pretty middle class but I’m those days middle class was like upper middle class today
Good thing there’s still one more episode until this series ends
Love these so much!
Same
It would be hard to imagine that if you grew up in Alabama or Mississippi, if your grand dad lived in any other part of the country meh not so much. Hell most people thought Colon Powell would have been Americas first Black President and he was a Republican.
9:10 the tea party was 100% astroturfed. Some of these "large" rallies were like 20-40 people screaming outside an event or building. Media gave them 100x more attention than what they deserved.
I look forward to chapter two where he buys a huge mansion by the sea, even though he told everyone that the sea was rising and would flood properties near the sea.
I mean he’s from Hawaii so technically any property he buys there is near the sea
I miss President Obama so much.
I’ll never forget the night of his election. My family cried and cried so happy. When he walked out with his wife and daughters I had never felt more proud then that moment to be both black and American. I felt like anything was possible and that the future was bright
Hi, Clint Smith!
Excellent
Great topics 👍
And then we got Trump in my opinion the complete antithesis of Obama when it came to competence, intelligence etc.
I have a lot of mixed feelings about the Obama years, but I can't deny in retrospect that they were some of the best years of my life. When he was president, anything seemed possible, even when there were difficulties. The Bush years for me were all about the War on Terror, and the Trump/Biden years have been about partisan unraveling, but even though the partisanship began getting into high gear during the Obama years, he always seemed above it all in a way that I miss.
Partisan unravelling really picked up with Obama.
I love this series and use it regularly in my classroom! Thank you for continuing through to such modern times.
Crazy cause I was only 6 when Obama got elected and I remember sitting on the floor next my parents watching TV and my father saying how I was living in history
Love this
Let's blackwash American history. It sounds like fun. I love it.
nice video
A sacrifice for the algorithm
I find it weird how important race is Obama isn't just a black man he was a man with many ideas who just happened to be black one thing I never hear about is barrack ideas or how he worked hard how he basically aged 10 years in 3 he looked so worn out just in 3 years
I was born in 1969, but I was also astounded. Some a moment I felt maybe the human race will not destroy itself with hatred. The way the country is headed now, backwards, I am ashamed for having such hope.
Never be ashamed of having hope. Just do your best to making them reality 💞
Or is it too ist or phobic of me to ask why he bombed my people?
Ty
obamna 🥺👿
...
SODA 🥤‼️😅😁🥶
At the end of the day, Obama was able to achieve one thing that he promised in the campaign trail: to give people hope… at least for those that are capable of feeling it.
I find it a bit harsh that blm-people are so critical of him.
Thank you for the video. It was very informative!
Don't forget he holds the record for most drone strikes of any president. Quite the accomplishment!
Obama was the first president I got to vote for when I turned 18 in 2008. I think he did a lot of great things, including pushing through the ACA, but did not do as much for the LGBTQ+ community despite the promises he made while campaigning.
Overall, a solid ‘B’ president, which for a US president is S-tier. Perhaps no one in the last 60 years has been as good of a president.
what about the hospital thing
Great video!
Was Obama-care a success after all? As a European I only heard criticism about it. Why was it ended?
Barack O'Bomba.
Yay for Affirmative Action.
I love this series so much! However, I do wish there was more nuance to this episode, in the same way there was with Jesse Jackson. The fact that Pres Obama's international policy allowed for the death of so many civilians abroad by drones. That he didn't support gay marriage at first, and other ways in which he was unable to escape Assimilationist thinking when it came to criminal justice reform.
Intersectionality and nuance alway have to be at the forefront, so that we can continue improving as we move forward, learning from our past missteps. President Obama must always be remembered for the barriers he broke and the hard work he did, but imo we have to avoid looking at his presidency through rose-tinted glasses.
Some people being killed by drones is an odd thing to pick out to criticize. Under every leader that any country has ever had, there will be many, many injustices. So you would be fine if they weren't killed by drones? Very strange.
I concur
Can't believe Crash Course did an entire episode on Barack Obama without mentioning his anger translator Luther
Amazing!!! ❤
I'm not an American so my opinions matter a whole lot less but I have to say, Obama is the best President USA has had in my 40-ish year long lifetime.
Yes, to me it seems the same way. Bush was not really in charge, Clinton seemed to just cruise through good times, and for any outsider Trump is obviously not a good president at all.
A lot to think about. 🤔
War criminal
Every US president since in 1789.
It is ironic how Indians who migrated to the USA have benefitted from the civil right movement in the USA but continues to discriminate against their fellow citizen in India with varna ashrama dharma a so-called divine sanctioned rigid caste system perpetuating the most heinous and inhuman form of discrimination for centuries and what's obnoxious it continues till date with same insanity.
Is that gonna change or relax a little in India you think? From an outside perspective it seems like a caste system is not the way forward in the 21th century.
Keep up with great work.
Through this video it was short enough for me to understand "who Obama is and what stories you can tell others."
Thanks for education, CC!
This video shows that the American society has come a far way but still has more room for improvement.