Axis of Evil: America’s Three Worst Presidents | Thomas J. DiLorenzo

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • "The American academic history profession periodically publishes the rankings of the greatest presidents, and Lincoln and FDR are always there at the top. And Woodrow Wilson used to be at the top, or near the top, until they discovered about three or four years ago that he re-segregated the US military."
    Recorded at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, on July 28, 2024. Includes an introduction by Joseph. T. Salerno.
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Комментарии • 935

  • @lv4077
    @lv4077 Месяц назад +138

    Sadly things haven’t changed much,in fact the federal government’s overarching hunger for power and control has only increased.

    • @logangodofcandy
      @logangodofcandy Месяц назад

      With Trump passing executive orders to reign it in and having more originalist tax policy

    • @lightcaesar
      @lightcaesar Месяц назад +8

      Time for TEXIT!

    • @thatsthewayitgoes9
      @thatsthewayitgoes9 Месяц назад

      @@lv4077 I guarantee you there was MUCH LESS government control in mid 19th century! Remember, the North ( the United States of America) did not attack the Southern Slave Holding (South’s term) States, CSA. The South began the shooting war that killed > 600,000 people. The CSA was all Democrats. We can debate how parties may have changed; but in reality, they haven’t actually changed that much. The Democrats are still for subjugation of people & Republicans are for freedom & liberty as defined originally in the constitution and the legally passed Amendments.

    • @sherburck
      @sherburck Месяц назад +1

      Alot Of similarities to today! I agree with you

    • @jamming8519
      @jamming8519 Месяц назад +8

      due to Democruds!

  • @jimparker7778
    @jimparker7778 Месяц назад +35

    Americans born after FDR cannot conceive of an America so small. Prior to the consolidation, states held all the authority and had considerable autonomy. Nothing like that exists today

  • @mfredcourtney5876
    @mfredcourtney5876 Месяц назад +39

    Wilson also destroyed the German culture in the US. It was a once thriving community that was terrified into oblivion.

    • @Bambino_60
      @Bambino_60 Месяц назад +2

      Good

    • @JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese
      @JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese 27 дней назад +7

      ​@@Bambino_60bigot

    • @joelspivey5615
      @joelspivey5615 23 дня назад +3

      @@mfredcourtney5876 two world wars may have had something to do with that.

    • @kevinmcinerney1959
      @kevinmcinerney1959 21 день назад +2

      Woodrow Wilson died in 1924. A sense of German community in the US was still very strong in the 1930s. Unfortunately this was expressed in the form of the German American Bund. The organization mimicked the Nazi regime in Germany, dividing the USA into gaue led by a gauleiter, and had a fine old romp setting up training camps, parading under swastikas, and attacking President Roosevelt's New Deal as "Frank D. Rosenfeld's Jew Deal". This organization, together with some unpleasant things done by the Germans to some of their own citizens in Germany and the territories they enslaved, took some of the zing out of the sense of German community pride in the USA after 1945, You really think it was all down to Woodrow Wilson?

    • @JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese
      @JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese 21 день назад

      @@kevinmcinerney1959
      The war on hypennatedAmericans was a success. You don't know the history

  • @aaronchustz8531
    @aaronchustz8531 Месяц назад +42

    I'm from Louisiana. I was taught what was said here. All the younger folks I met think I am insane when I mention any of this. Are they teaching lies now or what? If we don't have a truthful foundation, we have nothing

    • @timmotel5804
      @timmotel5804 Месяц назад +3

      "We" have less & less each year... Thanks. Best Regards.

    • @johnreynolds2512
      @johnreynolds2512 Месяц назад +4

      You were taught poorly then. This guy is shoe-horning historical figures through his political biases.

    • @DrPhilGoode
      @DrPhilGoode Месяц назад

      @@johnreynolds2512President (Fill in the blank) was the best/worst president in the history of time and space. The best week in the history of all that is holy and righteous. 🤣🤣

    • @DrPhilGoode
      @DrPhilGoode Месяц назад

      @@johnreynolds2512This guy was a guest behind the golden EIB microphone of the Rush Limbaugh Show. If you don’t agree with everything he says, than you hate America good sir. 🤣🤣 jk

    • @bobbarclay316
      @bobbarclay316 29 дней назад +3

      You should know that this man's arguments are nothing more than a repetition of the opinions of Northern Democrat supporters of slavery.
      Some wars are worth fighting. Even the most well intentioned conflicts cause horrible actions by folks on all side.

  • @Jimbo898
    @Jimbo898 Месяц назад +30

    Woodrow Wilson by far. 1913 Federal Reserve Act

    • @therealthreadkilla
      @therealthreadkilla 18 дней назад +2

      Let's not forget how Wilson got elected. If not for Teddy's bull moose party would we have had to deal with Wilson?
      Much like how we got Clinton. Ross Perot played his part.

    • @huwhitecavebeast1972
      @huwhitecavebeast1972 18 дней назад

      Yup. For that and ww1. If we had not gotten involved, not only would we have saved over 100,000 American lives, but there would have been no ww2. And a the evil that has emanated from his administration. The Fed is the key. Without it, they could not have funded their agenda.

    • @robertfischer380
      @robertfischer380 17 дней назад

      Segregated the military also.. yeah, wilson did terrible damage to the country.

    • @LightYagami-rz6su
      @LightYagami-rz6su 11 дней назад

      He also gave women rights to vote. Which secure his second reelection when he did that federal reserve act.

    • @DavesArtRoom
      @DavesArtRoom 9 дней назад

      Yes, and which led to the illegal income tax via payroll tax by withholding in 1943, through the victory tax. So employers were persuaded to be tax collectors. To this day a non ratified 16 amendment had evolved into an authoritative unconstitutional IRS.

  • @broark88
    @broark88 Месяц назад +47

    Most rank presidents by their "greatness". The correct way is by how faithfully they held to their oath to defend life and liberty.

    • @tritium1998
      @tritium1998 Месяц назад

      Life and liberty of everyone other than rich white guys.

    • @d-day67
      @d-day67 Месяц назад +3

      And how EVIL they were by how well they served their father. (how many they killed as an offering to him)

    • @SumoOrange1776
      @SumoOrange1776 23 дня назад +3

      which is why the best were the ones who did nothing and let the country do it's thing

  • @LK-mo8bj
    @LK-mo8bj Месяц назад +47

    Woodrow Wilson is to blame for our bureaucratic unelected class

    • @covertops19Z
      @covertops19Z 29 дней назад

      I concur, but TR made that happen by running as his Bull Moose third party candidate. Which threw the electoral vote to Wilson. And TR, by executive order, started the organization that would become the FBI. Congress was dead set against a government spy/secret police force.

    • @LightYagami-rz6su
      @LightYagami-rz6su 11 дней назад

      Yup! He even gave women rights to vote. Horrible idea! Pushing for egalitarianism and feminism.

  • @thumbob
    @thumbob Месяц назад +134

    In my lifetime. Biden Carter and Obama.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Месяц назад +12

      YESSSS!!!!!! Yep, and before us, it was FDR & Woodrow Wilson

    • @thumbob
      @thumbob Месяц назад +18

      @@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Ever wonder why there are no democrats on mount rushmore?

    • @lancatemujhin187
      @lancatemujhin187 Месяц назад +1

      Jefferson founded the democratic party. Drumpf, Bush 43 and Carter. Dumbasses!

    • @mrbill2600
      @mrbill2600 Месяц назад +7

      A good list, but I was born in 1939 so I've had to deal with the socialist policies of FDR and the racism of LBJ.
      Trump 2024, or another unmitigated disaster.

    • @thumbob
      @thumbob Месяц назад

      @@mrbill2600 then you know the only socialist clap trap is the Democratic Party just like it always was. Trump has 20 promises. None of it is socialist. It’s common sense.

  • @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj
    @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj Месяц назад +108

    There was no Pearl Harbor before 1938. The Pacific Fleet would anchor at Lahaina Roads while the harbor was being constructed. When FDR ordered the Fleet to be stationed at Pearl Harbor, his top admiral argued against, saying that San Diego was a far better place to station the fleet. The Admiral feared how the Japanese might react and told FDR that the USN was not in fighting shape. FDR fired the admiral.

    • @knockoutfever4
      @knockoutfever4 Месяц назад

      FDR knew of the Pearl Harbor attack prior to it happening.

    • @Mistrinho
      @Mistrinho Месяц назад

      Because FDR wanted to bring America into the Pacific theater of war. Like Mike Ruffalo said: They knew about it (the attack) and they let it happen!"

    • @tiahenry4743
      @tiahenry4743 Месяц назад

      The U.S. let the attacks at Pearl Harbor happen in order to get into WWII for geopolitical reasons.

    • @Swede2of3
      @Swede2of3 Месяц назад +1

      Wow....just wow.

    • @arranpattison5809
      @arranpattison5809 Месяц назад

      It seemed FDR knew about the pearl harbor attack in advance... Hmmmm... I wonder why? War maybe?
      Where else have we seen this? 🤔

  • @Calico_Jim
    @Calico_Jim Месяц назад +15

    I strongly disagree with a lot of his viewpoints but I’m proud that the university I attended was at least open minded enough to have someone like this as a faculty member

  • @kimchee94112
    @kimchee94112 Месяц назад +179

    In my lifetime the ones who made us suffered the most (ie economy, safety, embarrassment) are Biden, Obama, daddy and baby Bush, LJB, Clinton.

    • @evaristmilian7826
      @evaristmilian7826 Месяц назад

      Clinton was a statesman compared to Carter.

    • @Powertuber1000
      @Powertuber1000 Месяц назад +29

      LBJ was evil

    • @damianwilson391
      @damianwilson391 Месяц назад +5

      Everybody calls him daddy because he loves you, makes you embarrassed, and makes financial blunders with pretending that they are victories

    • @patrickharper9297
      @patrickharper9297 Месяц назад +10

      in my lifetime we have only had one decent president

    • @geoycs
      @geoycs Месяц назад

      Biden isn’t even close to the worst, and Trump is very obviously the worst president ever. He actually tried to steal a democratic election.

  • @vernonpurdy8607
    @vernonpurdy8607 Месяц назад +36

    Makes me completely rethink my understanding of history. I’ve been familiar with Gen. Smedly Butler for years but the first time I’ve heard why he came to the conclusion that he did. Thanks for sharing.

  • @user-wn6ls4xt4w
    @user-wn6ls4xt4w Месяц назад +9

    WOW! I did my own research to confirm with what he said. Incredible, when you don't know histories failures you are doomed to repeat them. The same things are going on right now. Wake up not woke up !

  • @MS-ig7ku
    @MS-ig7ku Месяц назад +109

    LBJ was the worst no redeeming qualities.

    • @jackbryan4676
      @jackbryan4676 Месяц назад +16

      True, but it should be Kennedy/Johnson...LBJ retained almost all of JFK's retinue of advisors ("best and the brightest"), the Great Society was an expansion of JFK's own New Frontier legislation, and the ruinous Space Race wouldn't have been such a spending boondoggle without Kennedy's Moon speech.

    • @MS-ig7ku
      @MS-ig7ku Месяц назад

      Even the 1965 immigration act was something Kennedy had pushed since he was a congressman.

    • @MS-ig7ku
      @MS-ig7ku Месяц назад

      @@jackbryan4676 Johnson was much better at getting things done, JFK was playboy hack.

    • @KHanzo
      @KHanzo Месяц назад +1

      "Worse" meaning "dangerous" here as opposed to corrupt of ineffective

    • @MS-ig7ku
      @MS-ig7ku Месяц назад +3

      One could make a case for Grant and FDR coming after LBJ.

  • @motauman1372
    @motauman1372 28 дней назад +11

    A HISTORY OF CENTRAL BANKING AND THE ENSLAVEMENT OF MANKIND - Steven Mitford Goodson

  • @quovadis5036
    @quovadis5036 Месяц назад +67

    Whoever said he would, "fundamentally change America".

    • @Smokr
      @Smokr Месяц назад +17

      That would be Barak Hussein Obama - or Barry Sotoro if you don't care for his MUSLIM name.

    • @joaov.m.oliveira9903
      @joaov.m.oliveira9903 Месяц назад

      Whoever says the American Government and institutions should NOT fundamentally change also.

    • @quovadis5036
      @quovadis5036 Месяц назад +5

      @@joaov.m.oliveira9903 the Constitution

    • @a.johnvandyke825
      @a.johnvandyke825 Месяц назад

      Trump is the ​worst@@Smokr

    • @alecfoster4413
      @alecfoster4413 Месяц назад

      BO loved to quote the depressive, degenerate Lincoln. Both presidents made purdy speeches full of bromides that did not match their actions.

  • @Nicolas-fd4wy
    @Nicolas-fd4wy Месяц назад +23

    Even though I'm an Austrian by nationality and not by economic philosophy I found the talk very interesting. Especially about Wilson who destroyed the German Empire and Austria-Hungary and brought so much pain to Central Europe...

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Месяц назад

      He was a racist and a Democrat very similar to the Democrat party. We have now in the USA that are always getting involved in war and breaking the bank spending too much money.. Joe Biden has been a dictator for four years and I can’t wait to get Kamala and that bunch out of office because they have no morals!! I pray to God Trump gets reelected, and that’s before Joe starts World War III. General Pershing, who was in charge of the American expeditionary forces in Europe, in World War I, did not agree with the treaty of Versailles, and he said before they left “ we will be back!”. He knew that the treaty was going to leave the German and Austrian all on the table, porn, starving, and the United States was anything, but. Sad!! The USA had more than enough resources to help Germany to get back up on their feet and help feed those people. The general wanted a surrender so what happened during World War II would not get to the point where it destroyed Berlin & the entirety of Germany. The US government knew that the European empires were starving, and had been dying by the millions for three years. My gosh, for the love of God Americans would’ve sent food if they would’ve been able to see the conditions over there. The people in the USA are very generous and then there are the elite and that are really snobby and I think there’s a do-gooders, but they’re really just nosy. I hate to say it, but it’s true and I don’t know what it’s like to go through any kind of suffering or I have to go without a cell phone or any modern technology and if they had to add with a pen and paper they couldn’t do it. They need technology to do everything and I think the millennials were probably the last group to learn how to do mathematics found paper after elementary school

  • @emilybaumann5835
    @emilybaumann5835 Месяц назад +12

    Can you imagine a semester in a course of his?! Those people should consider themselves blessed!

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther 17 дней назад

      @@emilybaumann5835
      DiLorenzo is a congenital fabulist

  • @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj
    @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj Месяц назад +66

    History is written by the victors.

    • @uhlijohn
      @uhlijohn Месяц назад +2

      Ain't it the truth, pal?

    • @Snowb-u5i
      @Snowb-u5i Месяц назад +3

      History is not yet known but it will forever be in truth, while failures will not be revered as history in as much as only losses are the sum.

    • @danielfrancoismalherbe6803
      @danielfrancoismalherbe6803 Месяц назад +2

      And nobody asked if the VICTOR is a liar or not. Just look at Zionism after WW2.

    • @loganross1861
      @loganross1861 Месяц назад

      @@danielfrancoismalherbe6803
      Israel was the actually winner of WW2. Everyone else lost EVERYTHING

    • @alfredpaquin3563
      @alfredpaquin3563 Месяц назад +5

      History is myth agreed upon. Napoleon Bonaparte.

  • @justb8706
    @justb8706 Месяц назад +39

    I just want a 24h stream of DiLorenzo, never get tired of his lectures! 🤴

  • @PortlandsTransport
    @PortlandsTransport Месяц назад +71

    You mean they’ve been lying about EVERYTHING ? Who knew? 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад +1

      Actually, it's DiLorenzo who tells a bunch of whoppers here.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад +1

      I had only watched about 1/4 of the video when I wrote my response just above. Now that I finished it, I can confidently say that DiLorenzo is the most dishonest human being I have ever heard give a speech. His falsehoods numbered over 100. Absolutely shameless.

    • @David-fm6go
      @David-fm6go Месяц назад

      Let's be real. This is ideological historical revisionism. Its the same thing the Marxists do, just from the opposite side of the gov't spectrum. There is no "universal truth" to be found in the utterances of an ideologue who forces history through a cheese grater to validate the textbook dogma.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Месяц назад +2

      Yes, the ones they love so much for some of the words except for George, Washington and Jefferson Madison. Reagan was great and he was president when I was in junior high and high school. I was a kid and I knew Carter was horrible and I was only eight when he got elected😂😂

    • @timishere1925
      @timishere1925 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@jimwertherGive us the most egregious five examples please.

  • @Powertuber1000
    @Powertuber1000 Месяц назад +76

    The Lincoln plan to colonize back to Africa would make him the greatest president in my book.

    • @allistairlicorice310
      @allistairlicorice310 Месяц назад +12

      It certainly would have gone a long way towards making up for all the other terrible things he did.

    • @MS-ig7ku
      @MS-ig7ku Месяц назад

      @@Powertuber1000 Grant was worse than Lincoln, he started the Liberal Deep State. It was Grant who started the "Justice" Department.

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Месяц назад

      @@allistairlicorice310 Such as?

    • @allistairlicorice310
      @allistairlicorice310 Месяц назад +12

      @@coleparker Income tax, arresting political opponents including journalists and sitting politicians without trial, creating the draft, ordering the army to fire upon civilians who protested said draft. I would go on but your attention span probably isn't the greatest.

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Месяц назад

      @@allistairlicorice310 First of all the Income Tax was a recognized Constitutional measure under the Federal Revenue act to pay for emergency measures, and was removed after the war. But was reenacted again 1894. Secondly, the establishment of a draft was not prohibited by any Constitution, but enforce compliance to a service was first done by George Washington himself at Valley Forge. As for the Army firing on the NY protesters, yes that was done, but do not forget that protest was not peaceful by any means. Lynchings of black men was done and black childrens orphanage was burned down, and troops were attacked. FYI since the local Militia AKA was already called up Federal troops took their place, and such actions they took, still take place even today, eg. George Floyd Riots. As for arresting political opponents, and sitting politicians. I will have to really check into that.
      Finally, with respects to your comment, you are reflection of this lecturer. No real research behind it, just charges and statements. Also FYI, my some of my ancestors fought for the Confederacy, one of whom, was a Brigadier General at the Battle of Shiloh, so I have no reason to be particularly fond of Lincoln.

  • @Kaatu-barada-nikto
    @Kaatu-barada-nikto Месяц назад +10

    Bush signed the patriot act.

    • @user-wm4mb8vu5r
      @user-wm4mb8vu5r 5 дней назад

      How did that work out for the people??? Not. It was to be monitored or spied on terrorists who wanted to harm the US. Instead, they used it to spy on American people. Wrong!!! I do not like agree a secret court to get permission to spy on American people. It needs to be stopped. The government, as usual, takes advantage of it own people.

  • @browngreen933
    @browngreen933 Месяц назад +4

    American doughboys went to France in 1917 to save the world for Democracy. When they came home they couldn't buy a beer. 😢

  • @Tom-kt8lu
    @Tom-kt8lu Месяц назад +69

    People’s eyes are opening when it comes to the Civil War.

    • @pretorious700
      @pretorious700 Месяц назад +15

      Some idiot on RUclips stated that "360,000 Union troops died to end slavery"
      I had a hard time figuring where to start debunking that bullshit.

    • @JosephOlson-ld2td
      @JosephOlson-ld2td Месяц назад

      Lincoln never freed a single slave in northern states of Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware and District of Columbia

    • @chomnansaedan4788
      @chomnansaedan4788 Месяц назад

      @@pretorious700 That bullshit is taught in all public schools. What more people need to get behind is abolishing public education.

    • @jsc3739
      @jsc3739 Месяц назад

      @@pretorious700 They ended their own slavery to the union...

    • @karlstrauss2330
      @karlstrauss2330 Месяц назад +7

      The Real Lincoln was the book that opened my eyes and exposed Yankee propaganda for what it was

  • @AndyFL64
    @AndyFL64 4 дня назад +1

    Excellent lecture. My family and I just missed you at the First White House of the Confederacy in Montgomery. You really left an impact on the hosts.

  • @petmensan
    @petmensan Месяц назад +63

    Biden deserves an honorable mention on this list.

    • @leuallen3000
      @leuallen3000 Месяц назад +7

      He is the leader.

    • @shermanowens1225
      @shermanowens1225 Месяц назад

      Are you aware that 10 out of the last 11 recessions were started when a Republican was in the White House since 1953.

    • @modernretroradio993
      @modernretroradio993 Месяц назад +4

      ... and Trump ... and Obama .... and Dubya ... and can't forget ol' Slick Willie.
      All have done contemptible things as President.
      This is why I'm Agorist in my principles.
      You can't fix something that is inherently corrupt.

    • @graemekrone6436
      @graemekrone6436 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@modernretroradio993I consider myself a Voluntaryist, close yeah?

    • @modernretroradio993
      @modernretroradio993 Месяц назад

      @@graemekrone6436
      Voluntary society is ideal. But, of course, our devil-worshiping government would never allow that.

  • @ryanmckenzie3627
    @ryanmckenzie3627 Месяц назад +8

    I remember an article some years ago after it came out Lincoln was still planning colonization in 1865 that asserted that Lincoln still had a change of heart before the end. The end was only a few weeks later.

  • @chrislee176
    @chrislee176 Месяц назад +16

    I learnt from Lincoln.
    My spouse thought I was abusive and tried to leave, so I pulled out my guns and forced them to stay.
    I preserved our union.
    I deserve a statue in my honour as the Saviour of Marriage.
    I learnt from Lincoln.

    • @Smokr
      @Smokr Месяц назад

      So you kept your slaves?

    • @mani8512
      @mani8512 Месяц назад +4

      @@Smokr What? Lincoln supported slavery, but kept no direct slave. Rather, he aggressed against the southern people, shaking them down as tax livestock -commanding them to pay up, or face invasion, bloodshed, and force.
      About this, Lincoln said in his First Message to the U.S. Congress, on July 4, 1861:
      "My policy sought only to collect the Revenue (a 40% federal sales tax on imports to South under the Morrill Tariff Act of 1861)."
      "I have no purpose, directly or in-directly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so."

    • @johncronin9540
      @johncronin9540 Месяц назад

      @@mani8512. Biput Lincoln ran as the nominee of the newly formed Republican Party, which was adamantly opposed to the EXPANSION of slavery into new territories. This was enough for those first seven deep southern states to secede (unconstitutionally) from the Union before Lincoln ever took office. Lincoln within his party was a moderate, not yet an abolitionist.
      Personally Lincoln hated and despised slavery, in part because of his own personal history- his father used to hire him out for heavy manual labor, for which he never received any of the money his father was paid.
      And in his “house divided” speech, he made it clear that he didn’t think the nation could forever be half slave and half free. He said that in the end it would all become one or the other. Lincoln’s first inaugural speech was an attempt to prevent a civil war, which is why he stated that he had neither the power legally, nor the intention of disturbing slavery in those STATES (not US Territories) where it already existed.
      But he, and most Union states never accepted the opinion that secession was legal in the way that the seven, and later four more states seceded. To dissolve the Union, the process had to be the same as that which amended the Constitution. Namely, a 2/3 vote in both chambers of Congress, and then 3/4 of the states would have to vote in favor of dissolution. The only other option was through constitutional conventions, but again, it would need the agreement of 3/4 of all the states, something that wasn’t going to happen.
      That is the ONLY process for revoking the Constitution, and dissolving the Union.
      As for the Emancipation, Lincoln undertook that as a war measure, and it is very clear that it applied to those states, and portion of states still in a state of active rebellion. It was as the war went on that Lincoln gradually came to realize that there had to be “a new birth of freedom” and that slavery, the underlying cause of the war (look at the seceding states Ordinances of Secession), would have to go. Lincoln’s position on slavery gradually moved toward abolition, and the cause of that movement was the incredible carnage of the Civil War.

    • @Bgrosz1
      @Bgrosz1 Месяц назад

      Did your spouse want to leave because she held slaves and you wanted to free them?

  • @broark88
    @broark88 Месяц назад +9

    Lincoln, Wilson, F. Roosevelt, L. Johnson, Nixon, Biden. They line up chronologically because they each expanded on the damage the previous ones did.

    • @broark88
      @broark88 Месяц назад

      @@aradlatifi2524 Did you even listen to the talk? FDR took a wrecking ball to the economy, through overtly authoritarian means, the legacy of which burdens us today.

    • @timmotel5804
      @timmotel5804 Месяц назад

      There won't be Any More Presidents if tRump-Publicans and their Project 2025 ever control the White House Again! Add them to Your List.

    • @chuckcribbs3398
      @chuckcribbs3398 Месяц назад

      Nixon? Obama was way worse. And Clinton was a disgrace to the office.

    • @sheilagraber5577
      @sheilagraber5577 Месяц назад

      Clinton was terrible. He signed NAFTA and all of our good jobs were outsourced to other countries

  • @Kaatu-barada-nikto
    @Kaatu-barada-nikto Месяц назад +16

    He called it "civil war". I always thought it was "war between the states".

    • @a.johnvandyke825
      @a.johnvandyke825 Месяц назад +1

      Why not call it the treason if 1861 ?

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Месяц назад

      @@a.johnvandyke825 It was the third revolution in United States early history.

    • @meals69
      @meals69 Месяц назад

      Thus a Civil War....

    • @tradeprosper5002
      @tradeprosper5002 Месяц назад

      Only the confederate states call it the "war between the states".

    • @FRWHELAN
      @FRWHELAN Месяц назад

      It was actually the "war against the states."

  • @StairwayToHeavenOnEarth
    @StairwayToHeavenOnEarth Месяц назад +6

    Partly true stuff. There is strong ideology here. All three men were s mixed bag. Wilson was a fool with Secretary of State House running the show. FDR both saved the country and created a huge welfare state. Lincoln killed slavery. The south and Jefferson Davis envisioned a slave empire with Cuba, Mexico and all the West slave. Yes, these three increased the government; crime. But we're evolving towards libertarianism. We've got maturation to do. This includes seeing the other side. I agree with all facts here, and caution against polemics and speak for really hearing the other side.

  • @zeroconsequences
    @zeroconsequences Месяц назад +17

    Any president whose been a member of the CFR.
    Oh wait, that's all of them.
    Except Trump lol

  • @alfredpaquin3563
    @alfredpaquin3563 Месяц назад +3

    We didn't find out until the Soviet Republic collapsed that the 2 nominations for Secretary of State and Secretary of the Treasury by FDR were both spies for Stalin. Thank God, FDR died, and Truman became President.

  • @KAZVorpal
    @KAZVorpal Месяц назад +3

    I think we once discussed, back in the day, that a key point to make in regards to the war not being about slavery is:
    That while the secession documents by the southern states did mention slavery, secession is not war.
    The secessions WERE often about maintaining slavery, but the actual WAR was about, as you say, conquest to maintain an empire.
    Secession does not automatically, or even excusably, lead to war.
    The UK seceded from the EU, without war. Which wasn't an example yet when we talked about this in the nineties.

  • @robertfischer380
    @robertfischer380 Месяц назад +15

    Didn’t the South suffer from high tariffs for decades before the war?

  • @JamieZero7
    @JamieZero7 Месяц назад +47

    Teddy Roosevelt he brought about the civil service and created the big government you have. Murray Rothbard progressive era explains it.

    • @barfo281
      @barfo281 Месяц назад +8

      TR also credited Lincoln as his "progressive" (big-government) inspiration.

    • @michaelroberts7770
      @michaelroberts7770 Месяц назад

      Kennedy unionized the feds and doomed us all... Even Franklin Roosevelt thought that was a bad idea....

    • @theodorejohnson8580
      @theodorejohnson8580 Месяц назад

      Teddy Roosevelt also used the Government to break up monopolies in the market that lead to Crony Capitalism. He did expand Government but major powers like government should be big enough to prevent rule of corporate monopolies as well. Not to mention the national parks and conservation of natural resources from him has blessed us today so not up there with people like Woodrow Wilson and FDR who seemed to only put administrative state Bureaucracies for Power sake. I also think speak softly and carry a big stick is one of the most effective Foreign policies to this date and is why Trump was able to settle down all the wars during his presidency. But yea we definitely have Government over reach from TR especially because people agreed with a lot of his policies which made the ground fertile for power creep from the Presidential seat.

    • @Duranous.
      @Duranous. Месяц назад

      Teddy Roosevelt also deserves a dishonorable mention for third-partying Taft which directly led to the election of Wilson. Why did he third party Taft? Taft was deregulating the federal government...

    • @nicolaslatorre810
      @nicolaslatorre810 Месяц назад +3

      Teddy one of best presidents

  • @miller4980
    @miller4980 Месяц назад +22

    Yes. It appears that the establishment spit shines and polishes the greatest enemies of Americans with the most brilliant luster.

  • @onceamusician5408
    @onceamusician5408 Месяц назад +44

    I'm sorry but at 30:23 HE IS WRONG.
    Russia had entered WWI AT THE VERY BEGINNING, august 1914. in fact it was Russian mobilization to support the Serbs that helped start it
    maybe Wilson paid the provisional govt to STAY in the war in 1917 , but NOT to enter it.
    but that is not what he said
    besides the provisional govt in Russia was only in power for a few months from Feb to October 1917. and it was not "before the Revolution" but after the first Revolution which had the Tsar deposed, and before the Bolshevik oct revolution which seized power from the provisional govt
    there was no provisional govt when Russia did enter WWI at the very beginning of it for the tsar was still in po0wer
    Dr DiLorenzo is shaky on Russian history ( which is one of my specialty interests)
    this is understandable but he really should remedy this

    • @redsix5165
      @redsix5165 Месяц назад +18

      This was far from a historical lecture. He just threw out facts and did not cite much or provide historical context for any of his critiques. Glad that you wrote this bc it seemed to me he made a few unsubstantiated claims.

    • @theodorejohnson8580
      @theodorejohnson8580 Месяц назад

      Yeah, and it may be true the Bolsheviks and Lennon claimed to want peace but the Marxist call for revolution and bloodshed wasn't exactly a peaceful ideology and just because a party says that one thing, doesn't mean that is what they believe. Totalitarian regimes need war in order to unite unhappy populace against an "other" in order to prevent criticism of the regime and it likely always would have lead to the bloodshed of the Soviet Union and rise of Communism regardless. The United State over inflates their contribution to European Affairs during that period especially because we anachronistically assign our world influence from today into the 1920s and we just did not have the kind of influence back then as we do today.

    • @JosephOlson-ld2td
      @JosephOlson-ld2td Месяц назад +4

      Woody was inaugurated on March 05, 1917 and declared war on Germany on April 06, 1917

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Месяц назад +3

      @@JosephOlson-ld2td 1913

    • @goldenhawk352
      @goldenhawk352 Месяц назад +7

      @@TheDuckofDoom. I believe March 5 was a reference to his reelection, a result of his campaign of "He kept us out of the war".

  • @georgiezocean
    @georgiezocean Месяц назад +3

    OMG I'm not quite finished listening to this yet, but I hope he ends by saying, how much of what he is talking about in history is also happening NOW!! Paying farmers to stop farming, making rules for them to reduce the amount of stocks they can make, to protect the environment. Alright so maybe they don't come in to our homes physically to search through letters to see if we're opposed to their agendas, but they don't have to physically enter, they just monitor social media. So much of what he sites, there's a close equivalent happening right now!!

  • @edkonstantellis9094
    @edkonstantellis9094 Месяц назад +5

    It is almost obvious that Roosevelt knew of Pearl Harbor.
    All US aircraft carriers were absent from Pearl without their escorts.

  • @PiedFifer
    @PiedFifer 6 дней назад +1

    States don’t have rights. Only individuals have rights. No state may claim the right to abrogate the rights of some individuals for the economic benefit of others. Any state that claims such a “right” is a threat to the individuals of the U.S.

  • @christophercollins9751
    @christophercollins9751 Месяц назад +9

    All his allegations about Lincoln and the Union army are accurate, but the assertion that the American civil war was "about taxes" is overly simplistic and frankly not true. Certainly the tariff was a major motivating factor behind Lincoln's prosecution of the war, but the overriding reason why the deep south seceded was fear that the US government would infringe on the right to own slaves. This is indisputable; just look at contemporary primary sources, written by southerners in positions of power. Look at the official declarations of secession from the lower south states. The primary motivation behind secession was slavery, and it is undeniable. The speaker cites a speech by Jefferson Davis as evidence that the war was "not about" slavery. I don't know how to interpret this in any way other than dishonest. Davis made it painfully clear in plenty of speeches and writings--at the time of secession, not after the war was over--that the reason for seceding was to preserve the institution of slavery.
    Lincoln was a tyrant and a sociopath. The oligarchs in the Confederacy were no better. You don't have to pick a team.

    • @hottuna7
      @hottuna7 17 дней назад

      I call BS! If you remove the humanistic aspect of "slavery" out of the equation, then all you are left with is the monetary aspect. Many northern businesses could not compete with the extremely low labor cost enjoyed by slaveowners.
      Even Lincoln admitted in a letter that he only "freed the slaves" to save the union. The humanistic aspect has been completely overplayed; after all, the US constitution says that Black people only count as a three fifths vote. What does that tell you?
      Humans have been using/abusing each other for power/money since the very beginning. When will people open their eyes to the reality that all life is a competition and *HAS NEVER BEEN FAIR.*
      Currently, in the country of Liberia, where you have to be Black to be a citizen, 92% of the people live at the poverty level. You obviously can't blame racism for that. I repeat, humans have always used/abused each other, which is why any competent detective will tell you that you first look at "cui bono" (who benefits) to understand/solve a crime.

  • @Richard-ki4nk
    @Richard-ki4nk Месяц назад +25

    The paradox seems to be How do non centralized groups defend against powerful centralized groups without centralizing

    • @mikesheppard5241
      @mikesheppard5241 Месяц назад

      You're going to have to stop eschewing the wielding of power, until you can retrain another generation of youth to the truth

    • @David-fm6go
      @David-fm6go Месяц назад +3

      Abstract utopian ideology meets the real world. Austrians/Libertarians share the same utopian flaw of so many other ideologies, because it branches out from the same tree of classical liberalism and inherits its utopian world view, optimistic view of human nature and abstract approach to the human experience. A traditional conservative, who understands the human nature/anti-utopian angle can see right through Libertarianism and thus sees little difference between it and modern liberalism on the core fundamental level (regardless of the polar opposite approach to government power).

    • @darktimesatrockymountainhi4046
      @darktimesatrockymountainhi4046 Месяц назад +1

      @@David-fm6goThis is pretty much why I’m no longer libertarian. My conscious decision to set aside my optimism has opened me to see other likely possibilities, caused me to more strongly mistrust government (though it is already a feature of libertarianism), and prompts my family to worry about me! 😆 Sometimes anarchy seems just as attractive to me as so-called social order.

    • @johnx983
      @johnx983 Месяц назад

      New technology

    • @David-fm6go
      @David-fm6go Месяц назад

      @@darktimesatrockymountainhi4046 For me it is a tendency to view the world as chaotic, which (cutting out all the American New Right crap) is the core of traditional conservative thought when it comes to foreign policy and the world at large. The world is chaotic and dangerous, but at the same time "most" actors on the world stage are rational (rational does not mean good or reasonable mind you).
      Take trade for example, the libertarian and neoliberal dogmatist would assert that free trade is superior because of efficiency, freedom of choice and competition. The realists would counter that there is no such thing as "free trade" and that the world market is dominated by cartels, heavy handed state influence, and concerted efforts to suppress competition through a variety of tactics. Ironically libertarians agree that what presently exists in the world is not free trade either, however they play the "Not real real x" game that socialists also play in this regard. Both agree that the present dynamic is not free trade, libertarians because it hasn't been tried yet, realists/traditional conservatives because free trade is a utopian fantasy that can never exist in a real world.
      China cheats on trade because they have every rational incentive to do so, it is hard to argue that they have not benefitted from doing so (but also are and will pay a price for how far they have took it). The fact that the country that does this, is a surveillance state that is shown every willingness to leverage its economic ties to silence criticism of it's oppressive regime only adds to the dynamic. Free trade with a country like China, is a recipe for becoming dominated by a foreign power.
      In the ideal world, free trade is suppose to liberate everyone. In the real world, it makes you the prisoner to most manipulative and domineering regime. and yes, you could make this same case against the US itself, which doesn't refute my point, it only strengthens it.
      Early American nationalists like Alexander Hamilton, Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln were not globalists as they are so often maligned by libertarian ideologues, they were the exact opposite. They saw the world as a dangerous and domineering place and that the only way to secure the victory in the American Revolution was to avoid being dependent on the leading super power of the time (Great Britain). Typically those three are maligned because of their support for the American financial system and the establishment of a national bank, which is the big boogeyman for the libertarian.
      However, at the time global finance was dominated by the British and the mindset of the nationalist and realist was that the development of domestic financial capability would lessen the dominance of the British over the American Economy. Britain was keen to use its vast financial resources to dump cheap iron at a loss onto the American market and work through agents to assist pro-free trade elements (usually rail executives and plantation owners) to remove the tariffs on iron. Once the mills of Pennsylvania and Ohio were closed, the British would jack up the price since there was less supply on the global market.
      This is how free trade works in reality, its a game that is always manipulated by the cartel with the biggest capital reserves and the most ability to project foreign influence to manipulate the domestic affairs of other countries. Britain in the 1800s, the US in the 20th century and the Chinese in the 21st century.

  • @hazchemel
    @hazchemel Месяц назад +18

    Thanks for that. First time I've heard this stuff about Lincoln.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад

      Don't believe what you heard here. DiLorenzo is a well-known "Lost Causer", who twists history around to fit his narrative. Just as it relates to Lincoln, consider the fact that he made no mention of Marbury vs. Madison, the Articles of Secession of every single state of the Confederacy, every one of which focused on slavery, and Alexander Stephens's Cornerstone Speech. That's just a start. DiLorenzo is a propagandist at best, and a full blown liar at worst.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад +2

      Now that I finished watching the video, I can confidently say that DiLorenzo is the most dishonest person I have ever heard give a speech. The man is utterly shameless. Not a word of truth contained therein.

    • @joakimandersson3884
      @joakimandersson3884 22 дня назад

      ​@@jimwertherBS your liar!🤡

    • @ram76921
      @ram76921 18 дней назад

      ​@@jimwerthercrap comment, Wilson and FDR were atrocious

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther 17 дней назад +1

      @@ram76921
      See, facts are wonderful things. I'm no fan of Wilson or FDR, but DiLorenzo is a congenital fabulist.

  • @darthnatas953
    @darthnatas953 Месяц назад +44

    Before I watch, let me guess:
    1. Lincoln
    2. Wilson
    3. LBJ
    Honorable mention: FDR

    • @harrymills2770
      @harrymills2770 Месяц назад +14

      Lincoln did the most damage to federalism. Wilson's downstream of that, FDR's downstream of Wilson, and LBJ's downstream of FDR.

    • @mystifiedoni377
      @mystifiedoni377 Месяц назад +1

      3:18 You were right

    • @barfo281
      @barfo281 Месяц назад +1

      Dishonorable mention: DJT.

    • @WasFakestCenturyAesthetics
      @WasFakestCenturyAesthetics Месяц назад +7

      ​@@barfo281you voted for the guy who helped start the Iraq war?

    • @WasFakestCenturyAesthetics
      @WasFakestCenturyAesthetics Месяц назад

      ​@@barfo281the one whose senility has been concealed by the people around him for years, while taxpayers gave hundreds of billions to the corrupt country where his son had a cushy fake job?

  • @curtissnow9546
    @curtissnow9546 Месяц назад +82

    Wilson is garbage, but Lincoln and Fdr make my blood boil.

    • @jn71000486
      @jn71000486 Месяц назад +26

      LBJ should be way higher on everyone’s list. Signing the civil rights act rapidly accelerated America’s decline.

    • @michaelmisczuk1188
      @michaelmisczuk1188 Месяц назад +2

      Can you give a short example of Lincoln ? TX. Fdr, yes.

    • @chasekemmerling1676
      @chasekemmerling1676 Месяц назад +5

      why Lincoln

    • @scottstallings5029
      @scottstallings5029 Месяц назад

      They are all evil war mongering sociopaths. God help us 🙏

    • @Individual_Lives_Matter
      @Individual_Lives_Matter Месяц назад +4

      @@chasekemmerling1676He was a tyrant and he centralized power, which always leads to corruption and arbitrary or even unintentional tyranny/injustice.

  • @RogerPence-cg2oo
    @RogerPence-cg2oo 5 дней назад

    LBJ was instrumental in passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, significantly expanding the rights and freedoms of non-white Americans. These expansions of freedoms should be praised and celebrated

  • @MaxPower-11
    @MaxPower-11 Месяц назад +4

    First let me say that although I disagree with many of this historian’s ‘interpretations’, I am appreciative of the fact that he’s given the right to freely express his opinions. As for the Civil War… his main argument is that “hey, the South voted to succeed and it was their right to do so under a voluntary union”. Well, while nominally that is true, he does seem to forget the fact that there were millions of human beings, born in those southern states, which were totally disenfranchised from having any say in such a decision by virtue of being in bondage. If we are to take a retrospective look at history then would I argue that their rights and wishes should have been considered. After all, I do seem to recall that minor little item in the Declaration of Independence about all men being created equal and everything.

  • @graemekrone6436
    @graemekrone6436 Месяц назад +3

    This is exactly why I despise all governments around the world, hence I consider myself a Voluntaryist!

  • @btspyglass4077
    @btspyglass4077 Месяц назад +6

    Every Democrati from Wils o n to FJB

  • @homewall744
    @homewall744 Месяц назад +12

    Would love to see these stories in a debate among contrary scholars to see how they'd respond/react.

    • @SheepWillbeSheared
      @SheepWillbeSheared Месяц назад

      Dilorenzo debated Harry Jaffa on Lincoln's legacy. Jaffa just repeated all the clichés you would expect.

    • @goldenhawk352
      @goldenhawk352 Месяц назад

      @@SheepWillbeSheared The only geed thing I ever saw "Honest Abe" Lincoln do was when he looked at the camera in despair as his wife asked him if she looked fat in her dress. Truly one of history's greatest commercials.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад

      DiLorenzo has been debunked more times than we can count.

  • @friendlyone2706
    @friendlyone2706 Месяц назад +5

    Censorship still reigns

  • @brianschwatka3655
    @brianschwatka3655 Месяц назад +1

    I relate the civil war to a broken marriage. Person goes to their spouse "hey this isn't working I am going to leave". The spouse says "If you leave I will kill you". The individual leaves and the spouse does in fact kill their partner. Doesn't matter why the other person wanted to leave the partner is wrong for killing that person for leaving.

  • @manueldeabreu1980
    @manueldeabreu1980 Месяц назад +15

    I haven't looked at the video but my three would be:
    1) Woodrow Wilson - Ironically if Teddy Roosevelt doesn't pick Taft as his successor, who was a disaster, and runs as a third party, Taft or ANY OTHER candidate beats Wilson. Roosevelt and Taft voters combined beat Wilson more than Bush Sr. would have beat Clinton if Ross Perot doesn't run.
    2) FDR - He is the ONLY President to break with Washington's precedence to run and win more than three terms. He also created the super government we have today with all the entitlements.
    3) Buchanan - Completely ineffective and just ran out the clock on tough issues with his presidency leaving a Civil War for his successor.
    Update: I got two out of the three. Lincoln took the hit for cleaning up Buchanan, Pierce and Fillmore though Buchanan did the most damage.

  • @jscottupton
    @jscottupton Месяц назад +2

    "The Truth" is very difficult for the average person to find...much less accept.

  • @TexasIndependenceNow
    @TexasIndependenceNow Месяц назад +9

    Dr. D. shuts it down again... 🤭💪

  • @brotherfred2669
    @brotherfred2669 14 дней назад +1

    To ignore unconstitutional moral failure of The practice of Slavery is disingenuous

  • @randallsmith5631
    @randallsmith5631 Месяц назад +4

    3 worst Prez pre-civil war Franklin Pierce, Mallard Fillmore & James Buchanan. 8OO,OOO estimated civil war dead

  • @johngeverett
    @johngeverett Месяц назад +2

    Very informative. The three presidents he lists were never my favorites, though i did hold Lincoln in high regard until judge Napolitano spoke of his abuses. Plenty of specifics in this presentation to support his position. Much to think about.

  • @howelltaylor6774
    @howelltaylor6774 Месяц назад +10

    God bless Thomas DiLorenzo the "Stonewall" of southern literary vindication of the Confederacy. Deo Vindice

  • @sammyhagger12
    @sammyhagger12 Месяц назад +2

    I like this guy already.

  • @TheLifesentence2278
    @TheLifesentence2278 Месяц назад +26

    How many 10s of millions of children were never born because their forefathers were killed in lincolns war.

    • @MarikHavair
      @MarikHavair Месяц назад +3

      Lincoln played no role in the causality of the war.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад

      ​@@MarikHavair
      Not none, but very limited.

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Месяц назад +1

      My ancestors fought on both sides, but the first shots were fired by the Confederates in SC.

    • @TheLifesentence2278
      @TheLifesentence2278 Месяц назад +1

      @@coleparker why do you think Lincoln garrisoned ft sumpter?

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Месяц назад

      @@TheLifesentence2278 Fort Sumter was a permanent garrison before Lincoln was Elected. What he tried to do was reinforce it.

  • @claygreen4723
    @claygreen4723 Месяц назад +1

    Hard to narrow it down to 3 but I would go with Wilson, FDR, and LBJ. Notice any connections? And if I had a fourth vote I would probably go with Wilson again. The Federal Reserve and WW1 make him the best worst President.

  • @geoffreyweiss3848
    @geoffreyweiss3848 Месяц назад +4

    Lincoln formed the original H.O.A. in 1861.

  • @rogermenendez4052
    @rogermenendez4052 Месяц назад +1

    I really thonk LBJ was as evil as FDR.

  • @notyetsilenced9746
    @notyetsilenced9746 Месяц назад +3

    Fantastic video and a great public service.

  • @danjohnson8556
    @danjohnson8556 Месяц назад +1

    Woodrow Wilson, FDR, LBJ, Carter, Obama, Biden

  • @patriciayohn6136
    @patriciayohn6136 Месяц назад +21

    President James Buchanan is resting in peace knowing now that HE WASN'T THE WORST PRESIDENT EVER!!!

    • @hotrox2112
      @hotrox2112 Месяц назад +1

      250 year average for a Dynasty to fail...

    • @tritium1998
      @tritium1998 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@hotrox2112 What dynasty? What average? It has different presidents every decade, and many regimes like the Confederacy and Germany don't even last 100 years.

    • @ladyjade6446
      @ladyjade6446 Месяц назад

      lol

  • @Importantly-1
    @Importantly-1 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you . ❤

  • @scottstallings5029
    @scottstallings5029 Месяц назад +3

    THIS WAS EXCELLENT! THANK YOU 😊

  • @chuckcribbs3398
    @chuckcribbs3398 Месяц назад +1

    If Union troops had left Fort Sumter, there may have never been a war between the States.

  • @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj
    @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj Месяц назад +23

    I used to think that if the US had stayed out of WW1, there would not have been a WWIi, but now I know that there very likely would not have been a Cold War, either.

    • @BillLaBrie
      @BillLaBrie Месяц назад

      WW2 and the Cold War were continuations of ww1.

    • @tiahenry4743
      @tiahenry4743 Месяц назад

      The Rothschilds have been starting wars since the late eighteenth century.

    • @tritium1998
      @tritium1998 Месяц назад +1

      Implying there weren't cold wars and world wars between your colonial powers before WW1.

    • @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj
      @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj Месяц назад +1

      @@tritium1998 Hardly. We declared war on Spain in 1898 over Cuba. We then smashed the ill prepared Spanish fleet and became an empire which, as it turned us into a modernize Roman Empire. The United States has been at war with someone in many places ever since. Woodrow Wilson just barely got us involved in WWI. Had we not fought in WWI, there would not have been a WWII. No WWII might well have prevented a Cold War between the US and the USSR.

    • @Bgrosz1
      @Bgrosz1 Месяц назад +3

      It's so easy to believe that if you do nothing there will be peace, but history shows otherwise.
      It's like thinking if you never stand up to bullies there will be no bullies or if you never fight crime there will be no crime. Of course, the opposite is true.

  • @tomjiga9397
    @tomjiga9397 Месяц назад +1

    See it started in 1850 a few hundred thousand. Now were 35 trillion in the red. Now what?¿

  • @chomnansaedan4788
    @chomnansaedan4788 Месяц назад +8

    I took for granted how history is written by the winners.

  • @StubbsMillingCo.
    @StubbsMillingCo. Месяц назад +2

    333,000,000 - U.S. population
    83,250,000- 1/4 of population-that would have the artificial limbs after the Civil War….

  • @kennethobrien8386
    @kennethobrien8386 Месяц назад +47

    Obama, Biden, Bush 2, FDR

    • @themaestro3034
      @themaestro3034 Месяц назад

      🤡

    • @d-day67
      @d-day67 Месяц назад

      You only forgot a few: Clinton, Bush 1, Carter, Ford, Nixon, Johnson, Eisenhower, Teddy, Grant, Johnson, Jackson,...and I am sure many others that we just don't have the facts on yet.

  • @johnjacobjinglehimerschmid3555
    @johnjacobjinglehimerschmid3555 Месяц назад +1

    While I'm loathe to hear that information opposed to std school of thinking is refreshing. It is refreshing to hear information that is not in the standard school of thought. I like hearing this kind of information.

  •  Месяц назад +17

    There's another myth which needs to busted here. The notion of a "Unified South" or a "Consolidated Confederacy" against the Union is a total lie. Many (poor) Southern whites actually opposed the war.
    The only reason that so many Southern whites signed up to fight in the first year was ... they had to. Peer pressure was key, along with the initial propaganda surge that the Union was "violating their states' rights." Also the need for food and clothing was so great for so many of them, since many of them were poor, on large account because of the corrosive effects of slavery on free enterprise. A n honest laborer cannot compete with free labor, after all.
    When it comes to desertion rates among soldiers, they were much higher among the Confederate armies compared to Union forces. One of the most remarkable accounts was during Union General William Tecumseh Sherman's "March to the Sea," during which he waged total war from Atlanta to Savannah. His army actually grew in size, to such an extent he had to turn away volunteers. Many of those new recruits were white Southerners, as well as freed blacks.
    This Magnolia Myth of a "Courageous yet Defeated South" filled with liberty-minded people standing up to an abusive Union federal government is simply not true.
    I encourage everyone to read the following books for more information and to verify my comments:
    Vindicating Lincoln: Defending the Politics of Our Greatest President, by Thomas L. Krannawitter
    War Within a War; the Confederacy Against Itself, by Carleton Beals
    Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong, by James W. Loewen

    • @nomadmarauder-dw9re
      @nomadmarauder-dw9re Месяц назад +1

      I worked at Dunleith Plantation. There I got familiar with Dahlgren. He was put in command of Mississippi forces and demoted for refusing to commit his forces to the Confederacy at large. This was a common attitude in the South. How can you have a cohesive strategy when local forces stay local?

    •  Месяц назад +2

      @@nomadmarauder-dw9re EXACTLY, which completely undermines the whole political theory of secession, which Dr. DiLorenzo espouses.

    • @nomadmarauder-dw9re
      @nomadmarauder-dw9re Месяц назад

      If secession is legal, can we kick states OUT?

    • @joedunlap3226
      @joedunlap3226 Месяц назад +1

      “Local forces”, i.e., a decentralized military, requires real consensus building - which severely limits the ability of a national government continually fighting foreign wars. Sounds like a good thing to me. Thomas Jefferson said “he feared a central bank more than a standing professional army”, and he was not alone with this. What does this tell us? Many of the Founders opposed central banking AND a standing professional army [both of which go together, btw]! Why else does the 2nd amendment refer to “a well regulated militia”…? Let’s contend for a decentralized military.., and everything else!

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Месяц назад +2

      The increase in the desertion Rate in the Confederate did not occur until the late winter of 1864 and up through March/April or 1865. As for the Sherman, it was the increase in free slaves marching with his column that forced him turn them away, not white southern men.

  • @Importantly-1
    @Importantly-1 Месяц назад +2

    We used to be free..

  • @uhlijohn
    @uhlijohn Месяц назад +9

    FDR also moved the Pacific Fleet from San Diego to Pearl Harbor and top admirals objected and called Pearl a "mouse trap" and foolish to base the fleet in such a restricted location well within the reach of a Japansee naval task force. FDR ignored them because he was using the fleet as bait for the Japanese and it worked like a charm. FDR once said "In politics nothing happens by accident. If it happens it was planned that way."

    • @valcaron
      @valcaron Месяц назад

      Same logic as "Those cartoonists at Charlie Hebdo should've known what would've happened when they exercised their rights to draw Muhammad. What happened to them is their own fault."

  • @huwhitecavebeast1972
    @huwhitecavebeast1972 18 дней назад

    This guy left out the most important points and acts of evil of both Wilson and FDR.

  • @crow_poem6369
    @crow_poem6369 Месяц назад +10

    Who does Dr. D think are the 3 best presidents? I have my own opinion but would be interested in other opinions.

    • @TheLifesentence2278
      @TheLifesentence2278 Месяц назад +7

      Jefferson Monroe Coolidge.

    • @friendlyone2706
      @friendlyone2706 Месяц назад +4

      Never underestimate the value of Washington refusing a kingship.

    • @paulcosta8297
      @paulcosta8297 Месяц назад +1

      John Adams, Jefferson, DJT

    • @WastdTrashPanda
      @WastdTrashPanda Месяц назад +4

      @@paulcosta8297 DJT is the best we've seen in our lives but he doesn't stand with people like Jefferson, Washington, and Coolidge.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад +1

      Washington, Reagan, Coolidge.

  • @AJ-lu3wx
    @AJ-lu3wx Месяц назад +1

    What I hate most about talking worst past presidents is that it's past. People are already dead and taxes have already been levied. Famous last words: Read my lips...

  • @patriciayohn6136
    @patriciayohn6136 Месяц назад +3

    Wilson, FDR, Obama/Biden!!!

  • @jefffortney4261
    @jefffortney4261 Месяц назад +1

    Wilson, FDR, LBJ, Jimmy Carter, Obama, and Biden. Notice a trend??? All wanted to expand the Federal Government.

    • @chuckcribbs3398
      @chuckcribbs3398 Месяц назад

      Obama put Muslim Brotherhood members in his cabinet and federal offices. Fact.

  • @cryptoemcee
    @cryptoemcee Месяц назад +3

    Thanks!

  • @steveyi2859
    @steveyi2859 16 дней назад

    I would not have chosen "evil" as the word there - people make choices that are not always pleasant but that doesn't make them evil.

  • @PeterM8987
    @PeterM8987 Месяц назад +6

    This is an awful revisionist version of Lincoln's presidency. The denigration of Lincoln is risible.

    • @ericsierra-franco7802
      @ericsierra-franco7802 Месяц назад

      Totally agree!

    • @DxV04
      @DxV04 26 дней назад

      It isn't revisionist if the words he quoted Lincoln saying were indeed his. The sale of his wife's slaves is a fact! It is also a fact that he didn't care about emancipation.

  • @joeharris3878
    @joeharris3878 Месяц назад +1

    First time I've heard someone matching my 3 worst president list .

  • @karlstrauss2330
    @karlstrauss2330 Месяц назад +4

    The Civil War wasn’t about slavery, it was about preserving economic dominion over cotton production.

    • @pretorious700
      @pretorious700 Месяц назад +2

      Try telling that to the public school indoctrinated hoi polloi

    • @sanniepstein4835
      @sanniepstein4835 Месяц назад +1

      The Underground Railroad never existed, either. /s

    • @user-ij6mn1vj5s
      @user-ij6mn1vj5s Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, what better way to ensure economic dominance than free labor.

    • @rosanneshinkle4133
      @rosanneshinkle4133 Месяц назад +1

      Taxes

  • @ladyjade6446
    @ladyjade6446 Месяц назад +1

    Seems like we’re always fighting communism.

  • @CJinsoo
    @CJinsoo Месяц назад +6

    short list. LBJ has to be 3B.

  • @JakeLeMonde
    @JakeLeMonde Месяц назад +1

    Regarding the Civil War, can you imagine a fractured continent with a foreign power controlling access to the Mississippi River at New Orleans? Imagine an alliance between Great Britain and the Confederacy? The Confederacy was a clear and present danger to the security of the United States. Who knows if the Confederacy would have maintained their own union. Yes it was a northern state and invasion of the South. So what?

  • @josephthorsen2968
    @josephthorsen2968 Месяц назад +3

    I never understood why southern states never pressed their right to succeed in the US Supreme Court. Anu ideas?

    • @friendlyone2706
      @friendlyone2706 Месяц назад

      War sounded glorious?

    • @MarikHavair
      @MarikHavair Месяц назад

      The same as the reason for the secession, they were getting outvoted in elections because there A: were more northerners B: the northerners were increasing in populace faster C: At least in part due to huge incomes of Euro migrants like Germans who were strictly anti-slavery to Northern states. Even if they retained slavery as an institution they would have no political 'capital' in the country and that inevitability made secession even outright war seem desirable.

    • @josephthorsen2968
      @josephthorsen2968 Месяц назад

      @@MarikHavair I understand this position, but it still doesn't directly address the question as to why not press your case - the right of a state to succeed from the union - directly to the Supreme Court.

  • @PiedFifer
    @PiedFifer 6 дней назад +1

    Funny how libertarians fail to recognize the difference between initiated and retaliatory “force”. I think Von Mises knew this crucial distinction.

  • @mtlicq
    @mtlicq Месяц назад +43

    Biden
    Obama
    FDR

    • @dean_l33
      @dean_l33 Месяц назад +3

      I'd add Nixon too but yeah thats about right. Though I'd consider Biden to be Obama 3rd term

    • @barfo281
      @barfo281 Месяц назад

      Leftist Donnie Doe174 Chump is worse than all of those clowns.

    • @barfo281
      @barfo281 Месяц назад

      @@dean_l33 Biden is Obama's 4th term. RINO Trump was the 3rd term; grew government more than Obama, but in half the time, and got you frauds to cheer for it.

    • @theodorejohnson8580
      @theodorejohnson8580 Месяц назад

      Obama should be worse than Biden just because he is the one that has been calling the shots anyway and is the one that actually got all the big government expanded. Biden is terrible but does not have the Historical significance of Obama since most of his nonsense can be reversed with executive orders and fiscal Policy. Everything Obama did we have to go through senates congress and Supreme court for change which means its is practically enshrined for our foreseeable future and we will be struggling with it for decades.

    • @mtlicq
      @mtlicq Месяц назад +3

      @@dean_l33 The 3 limit is too limited. Clinton belongs on the list as well.

  • @ralphl7643
    @ralphl7643 Месяц назад +1

    Wilson didn't wait 3 months to ask to declare war, it was less than one month--March 4 to April 2.

  • @evaristmilian7826
    @evaristmilian7826 Месяц назад +22

    Barry, The Cadaver & Carter.

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад

      LBJ was worse than Barry

    • @evaristmilian7826
      @evaristmilian7826 Месяц назад

      @@jimwerther At least LBJ didn't hate America!

    • @jimwerther
      @jimwerther Месяц назад

      @@evaristmilian7826
      Intentions aside, LBJ likely did more damage than Barry.

    • @evaristmilian7826
      @evaristmilian7826 Месяц назад

      @@jimwerther We ain't seen nothing yet! Barry took race relations back to the 60's. I hadn't heard of the Black Panthers since early 70's. He could have done so much good, instead he brought race hate to America.

  • @mwh3227
    @mwh3227 Месяц назад +1

    My picks - it's hard to narrow down to just three: 1) Obama 2) FDR 3) Biden (probably a puppet of Obama, or whoever controls Obama!