Episode One: AMERICAN PATRIOT

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 192

  • @vintagebrew1057
    @vintagebrew1057 3 года назад +16

    Excellent documentary. Thanks from London UK.

  • @allenraysmith7889
    @allenraysmith7889 4 года назад +22

    Enjoyed your documentary on Jefferson Davis. I love history and especially American history.

  • @leonedethebes
    @leonedethebes 5 месяцев назад +3

    Grant was a true american hero
    God bless his soul

  • @BobGumbs
    @BobGumbs 5 месяцев назад +5

    As a Disabled Veteran who served this country - I can see Davis as a historical figure of interest - but I can never call Davis a Patriot. A person that can see a fellow American as mere chattel because of the color of my skin is symbolic of the madness that plagues our nation to this very day.

    • @areopagitican7403
      @areopagitican7403 4 месяца назад +1

      In Congress, Davis proposed that they should allow slaves to disperse into the territories as a means of emancipation, which would not add one slave to the total number and would reduce the power of large plantation owners. Wanting to keep as many slaves in the south as a de facto reservation for black slaves, Northerners rejected his proposal. They did not want to expand slavery into the territories because they wanted to preserve as much of the country as possible for whites. This is the same reason Lincoln wanted to emigrate as many as he could back to established colonies in Africa or South America. In August 1862, Lincoln invited a delegation of five Black Washingtonians to the White House. During this meeting, he discussed the idea of voluntary expatriation for African Americans to either Africa or Central America. In this meeting he told them that their people would never adapt to life in America. Don't believe me, look it up.

    • @traditionalbowhunter473
      @traditionalbowhunter473 3 месяца назад

      That is True ​@@areopagitican7403

    • @onestarabove7027
      @onestarabove7027 2 месяца назад +1

      Perhaps you should read what Jefferson Davis wrote himself.
      Georgia and South Carolina prohibited the importation of any more slaves. The federal government, which had illegally given itself powers to enforce such mandates refused to do so.
      The North made far more money from the importation of slaves than the south did.
      The south paid seventy five percent of the taxes.
      The North reaped the
      benefits.
      What Jefferson Davis said was that slavery would die out on its own, especially in the new territories where the land was not conducive to farming.
      Abraham Lincoln laughed when questioned about slavery.
      If Jefferson Davis had not resigned his seat in Congress, he most likely would have been President rather than Lincoln.
      If you read The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government you would think the author was talking about the current state of politics.
      Everything Davis said has come to pass. He knew that when the federal government stole the states rights to govern themselves that the centralized power would fall into the hands of the wealthy and unscrupulous.
      Only three percent of Southerners owned slaves.
      Jefferson also fought for Indians in his military days out west. The Indian tribes fought with the Confederates.
      Abraham Lincoln tried to have Jefferson Davis assassinated on three separate occasions. Yet, Lincoln was shot and Davis lived almost to seventy years old.
      Slavery was wrong but the North was very guilty in this way of life and refused to stop the importation of slaves against the wishes of Georgia and South Carolina. There were places in the South, in Georgia, that did not have slavery until the Civil War.
      The earliest black church in America, Springfield, in Augusta, Georgia was founded by non slaves and their descendants are still members today. One man there was asked what it felt like to be descended from slaves. He said he wouldn’t know be cause he wasn’t descended from slaves.
      The white men frequented the black run barber shops and businesses.
      You just can’t fit everything neatly in a box.
      The atrocities of the. Northern troops to all people in the South was unspeakable.
      Ex slaves were just turned out “like cattle”. They had no place to go and did not have the skills to take care of themselves.
      You still have a certain class of people who don’t know how to buy groceries with cash.
      Never trust a federal government with overwhelming power.
      The power that should be yours as represented by your state has been stolen. Nothing good can come of this.

  • @BrianJosephMorgan
    @BrianJosephMorgan 4 года назад +18

    This is one of the finest documentaries I have seen on any subject.

  • @johnnyroma1408
    @johnnyroma1408 3 года назад +12

    Hey don't blame me I voted for Jefferson Davis.

  • @bluestrife28
    @bluestrife28 4 года назад +9

    Fascinating. Loved every second.

  • @yvonnegrivas5589
    @yvonnegrivas5589 4 года назад +11

    Enjoying this documentary as I never learned anything about Jefferson Davis being from NY. Very informative.

  • @jodycarrithers6160
    @jodycarrithers6160 2 месяца назад

    Seems that so many of us know so much about Lincoln yet, very little about Jefferson Davis. I have enjoyed this documentary and learned so much more about him. He seemed like a man who was just trying to do the best he could with what he thought was right. Most of these beliefs, as they are for all of us, are formed by the way we grew up, what time in history and what our environmental and societal norms were. I would have never been in agreement with him or anyone else regarding secession or slavery. But, I wasn't born and raised in the south nor during the earlier decades of the 19th century either.

  • @savasbeatie7675
    @savasbeatie7675 3 года назад +5

    Outstanding history.

  • @redtomcat1725
    @redtomcat1725 2 года назад +3

    Well done!!

  • @camoss3724
    @camoss3724 Год назад +7

    Who was the first North American chief executive to appoint a Jew to his cabinet? Jefferson Davis. (Judah Benjamin, Attorney General)

  • @sartainja
    @sartainja 3 месяца назад

    Superb documentary.

  • @paulmccarthy1527
    @paulmccarthy1527 3 года назад +9

    Excellent documentary and very fair

  • @JRobbySh
    @JRobbySh 4 года назад +7

    American slavery was out of joint with the Age. William Wilberforce , an ardent evangelical, was leading the moral revolution that helped shape Victorian England. The slave trade was abolished and the Royal Navy began to enforce efforts to end it. In the 1830, it was abolished in the Empire. Yet American cotton had become a mainstay of the textile industry and the principal export of the United States. Plantation were in effect factories manned by slaves. In many respects , the textile factories were no better than the plantations, but at least the workers were free to live and starve out of the sight of their employers. This in an age when the revolutionary idea of the autonomous individual was beginning to take hold. Even in America, there were many free blacks. The notion of human being kept captive and unable to keep anything they owned, although common to all civilization since time immemorial was now being more and more challenged.

  • @EmpireNerd19BBY
    @EmpireNerd19BBY 4 года назад +15

    What a wonderful series

    • @wendypollock8168
      @wendypollock8168 3 года назад

      Your profile pic should be taken down, and your name is an insult to every non-wh___ person in this country.

    • @EmpireNerd19BBY
      @EmpireNerd19BBY 3 года назад +4

      @@wendypollock8168 Grow up.

    • @wendypollock8168
      @wendypollock8168 2 года назад +1

      @@EmpireNerd19BBY grow as a human, stop being full of hate.

    • @williamstocker584
      @williamstocker584 Год назад

      Wendypollock8168 look in the mirror and you’ll see someone full of hate

    • @OldHeathen1963
      @OldHeathen1963 10 месяцев назад

      Totally one-sided. Ask a PhD Historian !!!

  • @kerrick7621
    @kerrick7621 3 года назад +8

    Never forget. Regardless of your option of the CSA, they were Americans, same as the Union and they sacrificed their lives and limbs for what they believed in. The Civil War was the single greatest tragedy this country has ever seen.

    • @wendypollock8168
      @wendypollock8168 3 года назад

      No, they seceded from the union, losing their rights to be called Americans. Here's an example : A 1st generation American born person of middle eastern ancestry decides to leave America and go to the country of their parents and then becomes a legal citizen of that country. They opt not to do dual citizenship, they only want to be considered a citizen of that country. They have now given up all rights afforded to them by the constitution of the UNITED STATES. I'm sure you agree with that, as I'm sure you would agree with my example as long as the person in the example is a poc of any country of color. It seems like you only want to afford citizen's rights to wh___ people who voluntarily give up their citizenship.

    • @kerrick7621
      @kerrick7621 2 года назад +2

      @@wendypollock8168 That is a lot to infer based on my statement, I was just saying to honor the Confederates who bravely fought for their cause, they are American Veterans who deserve the same reverence and respect as their Yankee counterparts, in 1958, Congress passed a law giving Confederate veterans the same legal status as U.S. veterans.

    • @wendypollock8168
      @wendypollock8168 2 года назад

      @@kerrick7621 wow, republicans really hate to do fact checks. That lie was started because of wh___ su_____cists mad about all of the statues being taken down. Here is some truth for you:
      The 1958 legislation cited - Public Law 85-425 - says nothing of Confederate veteran legal status, graves, or monuments. Instead, it covers government pensions. The purpose of the act was “to increase the monthly rates of pension payable to widows and former widows of deceased veterans of the Spanish-American War, Civil War, Indian War, and Mexican War, and to provide pensions to widows of veterans who served in the military or naval forces of the Confederate States of America during the Civil War.”

    • @kerrick7621
      @kerrick7621 2 года назад +2

      @@wendypollock8168 is the word White really that offensive to you? That you need to block out half of it?

    • @wendypollock8168
      @wendypollock8168 2 года назад

      @@kerrick7621 not at all. I am a white person, but when used in conjunction with the other word, RUclips seems to think I'm a psychotic trumper (a wh___ su____cist) and delete my comment.

  • @stevenblythe8360
    @stevenblythe8360 Год назад +5

    What about Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman? Heros and role models that we can be proud of. We should have statutes and celebrate their legacy and contribution to our great country.

  • @psilocybemusashi
    @psilocybemusashi 2 года назад +9

    what a wonderful man that so few will ever know to appreciate.

  • @GoldAndSilver988
    @GoldAndSilver988 2 года назад +5

    So sad that he and the greatest of the name Jefferson both lost their wives at such a young age and after only a relatively short time of marriage.

    • @fiveiron2547
      @fiveiron2547 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, but he nailed some other chick after and she knew her shit.

    • @GoldAndSilver988
      @GoldAndSilver988 11 месяцев назад

      @@fiveiron2547 total myth that has been thoroughly debunked

  • @kip8890
    @kip8890 11 месяцев назад +9

    As an african american I enjoy watching this documentary for the sole purpose of hearing how he lost most of his kids, lost his "country", lost his wealth and property, lost his slaves, land destroyed and he struggled for the rest of his years all blind and sad....just brings joy to my heart 😊😊😊

    • @aidanphillips6760
      @aidanphillips6760 11 месяцев назад

      you do realise that many blacks free and slave fought for the Confederacy and that many blacks owned slaves?

    • @irockuroll60
      @irockuroll60 9 месяцев назад

      Dude. Y’all need to get over slavery. Every country in human history had slavery. White ppl were enslaved. Jews were enslaved. Yet, black ppl are the only ones who want something out of it. You are celebrating the death of someone’s spouse when this guy lived 200 years ago and had zero effect on you or your parents.

    • @brettharris6391
      @brettharris6391 6 месяцев назад +1

      The fact that you revel in the fact that he lost most of his kids is sociopathic and sick. Your comment here is unhelpful. Frankly, you should be ashamed and embarrassed that you even posted it.

    • @random-J
      @random-J 3 месяца назад

      ​@@brettharris6391 owning people is psychopathic

  • @lisalasoya2898
    @lisalasoya2898 7 месяцев назад

    Good day, and your description of this book is long-winded but here goes: In 1942 George "Bud" Day, then a scrawny 17 year old, defied his parents wishes and went to his local post office to enlist in the Marine Corps. He was 5"2 short and tipped the scales at just 116 pounds. This did not stop him, who says you have to be tall to be a hero....

  • @ae1586
    @ae1586 Год назад +11

    God bless Jefferson Davis and God save the south ! We just raised a 120 foot tall 30x50 confederate flag along interstate 85 In Spartanburg SC to honor our southern soldiers and men like Jeff Davis !
    Serviam !
    Deo vindice !

    • @timothymeehan181
      @timothymeehan181 Год назад +2

      Lincoln kicked his ass, cuz God was on the side of Lincoln and the Union. There’s your Deo Vindice! The southern states that seceded did so to extend, perpetuate & eternalize slavery all over this continent. They wanted Cuba, the Caribbean, Central America, and more of Mexico, and couldn’t grab up all that land as long as they were part of the Union. Open your eyes, & mind, you unreconstructed lost causer….🙏🇱🇷

    • @leonedethebes
      @leonedethebes 5 месяцев назад +1

      You are a supporters of kkk
      Go to the toilet dude

    • @leonedethebes
      @leonedethebes 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@timothymeehan181I agree

    • @janellmahood7166
      @janellmahood7166 4 месяца назад

      Nothing wrong with the confederate flag as long as the people flying it understand exactly how many different ones there were and why, I don't agree with the old souths way of life but I do know that most southern soldiers were not slave holders and they just wanted to fight for their states, honoring their courage to give their life is a good thing as long as you are not celebrating it for the racial aspect it's become known for!

  • @John-g1g9x
    @John-g1g9x 4 месяца назад +1

    There’s nothing heroic about this guy … what did he do that distinguishes him as great …this is just sentimental nostalgia

  • @Temujin1991
    @Temujin1991 3 года назад +53

    No matter what anyone else says about him. To me, Jefferson Davis will always be a man of outstanding courage and honor. And to those who would argue this case, let me assure you that I don't care about your opinion on the matter.

    • @MisterGuyMan
      @MisterGuyMan 3 года назад +11

      Pretty sure Davis didn't care about the opinions of all the slaves either. Took a lot of courage to fight a war to force those slaves to remain slaves.

    • @dannygherzgiher8430
      @dannygherzgiher8430 2 года назад +6

      @@MisterGuyMan Seethe yankee

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 года назад +4

      @@MisterGuyMan
      Their minds were I in a whole other concept of their idea of reality.
      There were several powerful values that this war was about. Few likely saw 8t more than "States Rights" + "Right to enslave", thus these were the greater focus energies.
      It is about Concept and Human Higher Mind vs Lower or Ego Mind.
      His family certainly are portrayed as unique to their peers.
      It's hard to accept a reality other than that we are raised to believe, thus the Social diversity and variance of "prejudices, fears, and observable adolescent emotional development, even today.
      ...and the, yet to mature 9f mind, behaving as if all are team sports and with no real concept of the subjects.
      Patience, empathy, and compassion, are necessary.

    • @boorendorff3655
      @boorendorff3655 2 года назад +2

      @@bethbartlett5692 I think you were a bit "high" minded when you wrote this comment

    • @boorendorff3655
      @boorendorff3655 2 года назад +3

      Lots of honor in the slave trade

  • @GoldAndSilver988
    @GoldAndSilver988 2 года назад +2

    Davis, like John C. Calhoun, was a true unionist in the sense that the Founders had established, i.e. a compact of sovereign States, those States being equally burdened and equally blessed. This was vastly different than what the concept of "union" came to be by the time of the War for Southern Independence, i.e. a struggle for power by regional factions, with political and economic dominance being established in the North, and all States being subservient and obedient to the unconstitutional measures of a dominant general government.

    • @timothymeehan181
      @timothymeehan181 9 месяцев назад

      Lincoln had a thing or two to say on this subject, and boy did he ever. Clearly, articulately, and wisely. He threw Calhoun, Davis, Toombs, Alexander Stevens, etc., and everything they stood for and fought for onto the dustbin of history-And we’re all better people, and a better country because of it & him…🙏🎩🇱🇷

  • @whoamarshrobert2781
    @whoamarshrobert2781 2 года назад +1

    Good doc except the name.
    It was called " The War of the Rebellion ".

  • @savasbeatie7675
    @savasbeatie7675 4 месяца назад

    Does anyone know when this was made?

  • @ricksamericana749
    @ricksamericana749 3 года назад +3

    Awww man, I was hoping they'd get to the part where Davis backs his ol' drinkin' buddy Braxton Bragg (the worst general in the Confederacy) over Bragg's division commanders. After getting the lieutenants to recommend Bragg's removal, in front of Bragg's face, Davis removed all of the generals of the Army Of Tennesee, except Bragg. I just love that part. Thanks for saving the Union Jeff, it wouldn't have been done without you.

  • @nicklipman2423
    @nicklipman2423 2 года назад +1

    Intro song?

  • @jakeb.512
    @jakeb.512 4 года назад +24

    Anyone who could "own" people and be okay with that aren't okay people js

    • @DylanfollowerofYah
      @DylanfollowerofYah 4 года назад +5

      I hear you but thats an ideology mainstream way after his time. During the time people weren't as opposed to this as now...including slaves

    • @carolbell8008
      @carolbell8008 4 года назад +1

      Jacob Bellamy yeah, absolute power always corrupts

    • @carlosmedina1281
      @carlosmedina1281 3 года назад

      @@DylanfollowerofYah Ehhh abolitionists were a thing.

    • @chadtimbs8692
      @chadtimbs8692 3 года назад +3

      washington owned slaves. I'm not saying it was right because it wasn't . It was the world they grow up in

    • @williamstocker584
      @williamstocker584 Год назад

      There’s still slavery going on in Africa and the Middle East but nobody seems to care only worried about what happened 200 years ago

  • @wendypollock8168
    @wendypollock8168 3 года назад +3

    That Cooper guy and his calling it Rio Grand-E is annoying af.

  • @brianwalsh8599
    @brianwalsh8599 5 месяцев назад +2

    Jeff Davis was a traitor

  • @brysonburton5735
    @brysonburton5735 3 месяца назад

    I grew up On Jefferson Davis Highway in Richmond VA it was the first highway made in Richmond just 2 lanes also called Route 1. I go to Hollywood Cemetery many times to see Jefferson Davis and wife memorial I don’t know if it is his grave and go to the Confederate White House

  • @SanJuanCreole
    @SanJuanCreole 2 года назад +7

    No Glory for Racist Slave Owners. RIP JOHN BROWN 🙏

    • @extrahahaha
      @extrahahaha Год назад +2

      RIP Nat Turner

    • @williamstocker584
      @williamstocker584 Год назад

      Slavery is still going on in Africa and parts of the Middle East but for some reason you Americans don’t care about that you’d think the “land of the free” would care 🤔

  • @shiningstaer
    @shiningstaer 4 года назад +2

    @53:32 damn smooth

  • @lisamcandrews5739
    @lisamcandrews5739 11 месяцев назад +1

    They’re trying to rewrite history

  • @LegalesePodcast
    @LegalesePodcast Год назад

    45:47 Davis gave Pemberton a cigar after they would have discussions, and that must mean James Pemberton like cigars as well, You say....
    Does that mean that because Jefferson Davis gave him a job as his plantation overseer, that must mean James Pemberton liked being held against his will to work for no pay in a job he could never leave

    • @OldHeathen1963
      @OldHeathen1963 10 месяцев назад

      He was just helping the guy out....right?
      A cigar every now and then for your inslaved overseer...for a lifetime of servitude! What a fucked deal!!

    • @OldHeathen1963
      @OldHeathen1963 10 месяцев назад

      What kinda job would he have gotten?
      He'd have to leave his "family ". Who knows who'd replace him! How would he be treated?
      The slave overseer was firmly INSTITUTIONALIZE!!!

    • @LegalesePodcast
      @LegalesePodcast 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@OldHeathen1963 I can't tell if you're fucking with me.
      I have a difficult time believing that anyone might still actually think blacks had better lives as slaves than they would have as freedmen.
      In case you are serious, my answer to "What kind of job would he have gotten?"
      My answer is the kind of job where he actually gets paid for his work and would be free to leave that job if he had wanted to.

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 2 года назад

    I can imagine Robert E Lee as a most authentic friend, a "brother-friend", a man of a natural Higher Mindedness, Empathy, and Genuineness, he merely lacked a knowing of his true value and worthiness.
    I remain a loyal Unionist, yet I withhold a "team sport mentality", with regards to Political Party, Civil War, and Humanity, opting for the greater values: *Country, Mankind, and the Collective Consciousness.*
    The Values that are truly Higher Minded and truly holding value.

  • @SKILLIUSCAESAR
    @SKILLIUSCAESAR 5 месяцев назад

    “U hear sometimes that it was discouraged to educate slaves” erm it was illegal to teach slaves how to read/write…

  • @jorgecruzseda7551
    @jorgecruzseda7551 Год назад +1

    His devotion to slavery cost him dearly. Why love that culture more than libertys cause???

  • @janellmahood7166
    @janellmahood7166 4 месяца назад

    I know Jefferson Davis did good before succession, even tried to convince southern states not to, however once the southern states succeeded he went with them and was their President and fought to keep their new government going, to me a man that preaches one thing and then follows the crowd is not a good man, to be a good man u follow what u preach even if its not the popular opinion, not saying he had to become a Union supporter, but he didnt have to be so power hungry that he chose to be the President of the southern states either!! Is he important to hostory yes but only if people stop the craziness of hiding the truth by taking down monuments and teach our children the cold hard facts of what happened and why!
    The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior, hiding the truth and or portraying people in the wrong light is not doing us as a country any favors!

  • @John-g1g9x
    @John-g1g9x 4 месяца назад

    What I find repulsive is the sentimentality that this carries..he first wife died ect,,while his slaves were treated like animals. Perspective please

  • @factsoftheconfederacy7151
    @factsoftheconfederacy7151 4 года назад +13

    Hate that they took his statue down

    • @davetisch574
      @davetisch574 3 года назад +2

      We'll build a much bigger one made of gold

    • @daniellimo4087
      @daniellimo4087 3 года назад +1

      Well you don't see one of Hitler,

    • @factsoftheconfederacy7151
      @factsoftheconfederacy7151 3 года назад +1

      @@daniellimo4087 because Lincoln and his generals inspired Hitler. Your comparison is founded in ignorance.

    • @daniellimo4087
      @daniellimo4087 3 года назад +1

      @@factsoftheconfederacy7151 if you want parallels then Lincoln was like roosevelt. One side chose to fight for the institution of slavery the other chose to fight against it.

    • @factsoftheconfederacy7151
      @factsoftheconfederacy7151 3 года назад +2

      @@daniellimo4087 The Morrill Tariff act of 1861 was put into law March 2nd, 1861. The Corwin Amendment was approved to be ratified on March 2, 1861.
      It reads:
      “No amendment shall be made to the Constitution which will authorize or give to Congress the power to abolish or interfere, within any State, with the domestic institutions thereof, including that of persons held to labor or service by the laws of said State”
      This is proof the “Civil War” was about taxation (and economic differences) over the freeing of slaves. Abraham Lincoln approved of this amendment and rather have made more profit than freeing slaves. (Source: The Civil War Day by Day: An Almanac, 1861-1865
      Book by Barbara Long and E. Long) Lincoln showed his support for the amendment and stated “Holding such a provision [the legality of slavery] to be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable”
      (Lincoln Unmasked: What You're Not Supposed to Know About Dishonest Abe. By Thomas J. Dilorenzo)
      The preliminary emancipation proclamation also gave the CSA the chance to join back into the union and keep their slaves (100 days before the emancipation proclamation). The introduction of the 13th amendment also didn’t necessarily guarantee slave freedom. If the Southern states joined back even as late as months before the war ended, they could’ve stopped the passing of the 13th amendment. Lincoln even knew this and acknowledged that possibility.

  • @asuperstraightpureblood
    @asuperstraightpureblood Год назад

    I share a birth date with Jefferson Davis. Here to learn.

  • @davidkillen2207
    @davidkillen2207 Год назад +2

    The war wasn’t over slavery…

  • @irockuroll60
    @irockuroll60 9 месяцев назад

    Is this true? That Davis loved his slaves and didn’t beat em and taught em how to read?
    Being a lifelong southern (Georgian), I know how southern history can be a little different than we are taught.

    • @leonedethebes
      @leonedethebes 5 месяцев назад +1

      Slaves were treated like animal since the ancient period of babylonia
      Davis was a tyrant like the ancient rome rulers

  • @theblackjfk8190
    @theblackjfk8190 2 года назад +2

    This is why foundational black Americans need reparations

    • @robertmaynard6490
      @robertmaynard6490 10 месяцев назад

      And who pays the families of the White soldiers that gave their lives to free them?

  • @worldsmosthated2006
    @worldsmosthated2006 2 года назад +1

    #ConfederateHistoryMatters

  • @lisamcandrews5739
    @lisamcandrews5739 11 месяцев назад

    I’m very disappointed with this. The whole thing is propaganda.

    • @williamstocker584
      @williamstocker584 10 месяцев назад

      You Americans are such soft sensitive people it’s pretty’s hilarious

  • @OldHeathen1963
    @OldHeathen1963 10 месяцев назад

    Pure List Cause Propaganda.

  • @mint234567898765432
    @mint234567898765432 9 месяцев назад

    Jeff Davis was a gentleman,
    Jeff Davis was no fool,
    Jeff Davis rode a dapple grey and
    Abe Lincoln rode a mule
    😊

    • @leonedethebes
      @leonedethebes 5 месяцев назад +1

      davis was a coward and praised by the idiots and the losers like the kkk