What makes Thomas Jefferson so controversial? - Frank Cogliano

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @moist_spinach
    @moist_spinach Год назад +2532

    I love how they don't have a final answer by the end of the video. It's up to us to form our opinions

    • @tecpaocelotl
      @tecpaocelotl Год назад +63

      That's how the series is established.

    • @moist_spinach
      @moist_spinach Год назад +29

      @@tecpaocelotl yeah, and I appreciate it

    • @PramkLuna
      @PramkLuna Год назад +30

      Agreed, it's much more meaningful when you get to decide for yourself

    • @ZOCCOK
      @ZOCCOK Год назад +13

      @@PramkLuna yup, enables us to think and form a decision for ourselves, after noting the merits and demerits of the said person.

    • @berlotti
      @berlotti Год назад +12

      Or not… and we just stay with the facts without judgement.

  • @maxleroux
    @maxleroux Год назад +2154

    I'm really glad you brought this series back. History is often a lot more complicated and messed-up than most people realize. Maybe you guys should put George Washington on trial next time. For a guy who was historically famous for being unable to tell a lie... he really lied a lot.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Год назад +42

      That story most likely never happen. If it did, Washington would have said that at any point in his life. He is not Abe Lincoln who did put on record his honesty...

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Год назад +42

      And from what I've heard Washington treated his slaves on Mount Vernon pretty horribly.

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 Год назад +13

      I’m really glad this series got brought back too

    • @Fingolfin3423
      @Fingolfin3423 Год назад +42

      Adam Ruins Everything is incredibly bias and has a strong political narrative to it. I would recommend not watching his content for educational purposes.

    • @maxleroux
      @maxleroux Год назад +8

      @@Fingolfin3423 You're not wrong. I've noticed that they focus a little to much on topics related to the U.S.A.

  • @Imperiused
    @Imperiused Год назад +408

    A new History Versus?! Like your best series? On my birthday? It's too good to be true!

  • @brankin421
    @brankin421 Год назад +803

    I think the answer is obvious:
    We should appreciate the good things Thomas Jefferson did but not idolize him for them.
    We should also condemn the bad things Thomas Jefferson did but not vilify him for them.
    People are complicated. No one is perfect, especially when you look at them from a modern lens.

    • @lizycole8999
      @lizycole8999 Год назад +30

      a much better conclusion than the actual video

    • @snakey934Snakeybakey
      @snakey934Snakeybakey Год назад +35

      That's how historical figures should be viewed in general. Unfortunately, we are taught a dumbed-down version of history today. Case in point; ted-ed's video on the Civil War

    • @vincegreen973
      @vincegreen973 Год назад +9

      We shouldn’t condemn the bad things about Jefferson dude. He’s a hero and we SHOULD idolize him

    • @vincegreen973
      @vincegreen973 Год назад +1

      @@lizycole8999 not

    • @vincegreen973
      @vincegreen973 Год назад +1

      @@snakey934Snakeybakey That is NOT how historical figures should be viewed in general

  • @bakhtawartaimoorahmed5602
    @bakhtawartaimoorahmed5602 Год назад +539

    I'm glad they brought this series back. Another thing I am happy to see is that someone finally mentioned the point of measuring historical actions with the measuring stick of today doesn't paint these folks in the best light

    • @ultimatebishoujo29
      @ultimatebishoujo29 Год назад +1

      I’m with you there

    • @terry_the_terrible
      @terry_the_terrible Год назад +40

      It's a weasel argument.
      For one thing, if we stopped judging people because they had different values then we would never get anything done. The point of law is to judge with a common measuring stick and Andrew Jackson himself wrote that slavery was "a atrocious blight on society" but he was part of the system, he knew how to benefit from this system and the system rewarded him.
      Secondly, his face is still on the bills and his face is on Mount Rushmore and young kids are still taught about his heroics and his ideals are touted as the holy grail of USA democracy. Which means that he's very much part of modern society.
      But you're right. We should judge him according to both his standards and modern standards and not blindly follow propaganda that was taught to kids since the 1800s.
      And the conclusion should be something like this:
      Andrew Jackson:
      Important president, successful president, popular president*
      *But only for white voters at the time. Had the chance to make a difference but kept quiet so he could stay in power.

    • @andrewclarke7368
      @andrewclarke7368 Год назад +12

      Applying today's standards is wokism at its worst. Enough already. It's nonsense.

    • @callnight1441
      @callnight1441 Год назад +15

      Its a bit of a double-edged sword. On the one hand, yes, one should jugde a person by the standards of the time rather the the ones today as many standards are a product of the common perception of morality. On the other, just because something was a standard, doesnt mean its good. You can still be a terrible person, even if the actions you are committing are seen as normal. Certain things, even if legal, are just too horrible to justify.
      F.e., wifebeating was legal for a long time and even in some cases seen as a husbands right. But, not once am i going to forgive someone for doing it, because thats just something you can't justify

    • @liamgavinwells
      @liamgavinwells Год назад

      I'd say the best course of action is teaching kids that tells of their heroics and injustices from both our point of view and, more importantly, the views of the people in their region and culture at that time. It was sort of like how I learned about Andrew Jackson. He did defy the Congress causing the Trail of Tears and filled his cabinet with yes-men, but he also got rid of the national bank and was the only president to get rid of the national debt. Racism and misinformation aren't only reasons he was on the $20 bill for so long

  • @Pillzpop
    @Pillzpop Год назад +629

    "Well, I hear Mount Rushmore has a problematic past, too!" Now that's a great line for the Judge to end on.

    • @UlulvarCape
      @UlulvarCape Год назад +13

      Yeah having a history vs for Lincoln and Washington is something I'd like to see, and I have a positive opinion of both so I wanna see how they go at it

    • @MKassa
      @MKassa Год назад

      No, it's a subversive turd.
      What's "problematic" is socialist history & its millions of deaths that it's caused.
      It's all about subverting a culture from within to destroy it so that tyrants can usher in yet another failed dystopia just like all the rest.
      Afterall, a revolution is just a circle - you always come back to the same problems that every other ideology has failed to correct as well. It's never about "power to the people" but convincing fools to take power from the people & giving more to tyrants & robbers.

    • @vincegreen973
      @vincegreen973 Год назад +1

      No it isn’t

    • @yetekt6953
      @yetekt6953 Год назад +3

      @@UlulvarCape Lincoln and Washington aren’t controversial so there won’t be a video on them.

    • @ErminDedicNT
      @ErminDedicNT Год назад +7

      @@UlulvarCape And here we go again having Roosevelt playing base 😁

  • @chrisn7986
    @chrisn7986 Год назад +521

    It's been a while

  • @SirToaster9330
    @SirToaster9330 Год назад +859

    I like how the lawyer isn't trying to demean Jefferson's deeds he's just trying to explain how he wasn't perfect

    • @goldenvulture6818
      @goldenvulture6818 Год назад +57

      Nobody's perfect

    • @DragonGoddess18
      @DragonGoddess18 Год назад +57

      Yeah,a lot of people worship the Founding Fathers and ignore the fact they did anything wrong,much less thought they had unpleasant flaws

    • @night6724
      @night6724 Год назад +20

      @@DragonGoddess18 They we’re products of their times

    • @MKassa
      @MKassa Год назад

      @@DragonGoddess18 - No, that's what the socialist, revisionist tyrants are trying to claim - as if they dug up all this "secret", past info themselves to expose their natures...
      As with anything else, you don't want to scar small children with history's unpleasantness so you start out with small facts, then as people get older, they're exposed to more info to form a more complete picture.

    • @lizycole8999
      @lizycole8999 Год назад +5

      you're being sarcastic, right?

  • @LudicrousTorpedo
    @LudicrousTorpedo Год назад +175

    It took us 500 years to wait for another History on Trial video...

    • @yourethatmantis5178
      @yourethatmantis5178 Год назад +11

      I can imagined a History on Trial video 500 years in the future. The judge is a robot, and the two lawyers are Futurama heads in jars.

  • @mangagor
    @mangagor Год назад +387

    Hold It! As a non-american and not exactly an historian, I would just like to say that I think some of the songs in 1776 and Hamilton with him are really good.

    • @lizbizwiz1238
      @lizbizwiz1238 Год назад +21

      Oh yeah, those songs are a bang for sure

    • @l.n.3372
      @l.n.3372 Год назад +39

      They're good, but I wish some people remembered that it's just a musical and as such, fictional. There's a lot the musicals don't cover in history.

    • @SlightyLessEvolved
      @SlightyLessEvolved Год назад +12

      To borrow from another musical:
      "Elphaba, where I'm from, we believe all sorts of things that aren't true - we call it history.
      A man's called a traitor, or liberator.
      A rich man's a thief, or philanthropist.
      Is one a crusader, or ruthless invader?
      It's all in which label
      Is able to persist.
      There are precious few at ease
      With moral ambiguities,
      So we act as though they don't exist!"

    • @5-1biggiebagextrafries
      @5-1biggiebagextrafries Год назад +9

      Facts😂😂😂😂 Daveed really helped Jefferson’s PR😂😂😂

    • @PramkLuna
      @PramkLuna Год назад +9

      Daveed Diggs is one of the best actors in Hamilton

  • @plume231
    @plume231 Год назад +548

    Hello, can you make History vs. Woodrow Wilson or History vs. Oliver Cromwell, please! By the way, I learned a lot about Thomas Jefferson, thanks!

    • @Ttegegg
      @Ttegegg Год назад +20

      Woodrow Wilson isn’t really like by contemporary standards. Ronald regan, that Chilean dictator, and argentinas would be more reasonable. (Oh yea president Marcos exist I guess)

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Год назад +21

      I would like History vs…
      Oda Nobunaga
      Richard Lionheart
      Leonidas
      Pericles
      Alexander the Great
      Walt Disney

    • @Username12038
      @Username12038 Год назад +30

      history vs woodrow wilson would be literally overkill for the defense. like, how do you even defend such a person

    • @Dude-xb3xh
      @Dude-xb3xh Год назад +2

      Richard the lionheart would be very good because he bankrupted England and almost never stayed in it to rule over it.

    • @thetaaaa
      @thetaaaa Год назад +16

      I'd love to see a vid about Cromwell!

  • @BelcarrigFarm
    @BelcarrigFarm Год назад +280

    I'd like to see a history versus on Eamon de Valera. He's quite similar to Jefferson in that he helped found his country but also made many mistakes and is quite controversial

    • @jezalb2710
      @jezalb2710 Год назад +3

      Very controversial

    • @_TehTJ_
      @_TehTJ_ Год назад +2

      Irish history is very interesting for me, I hope so too

    • @whideoreviews573
      @whideoreviews573 Год назад +2

      Oooh yes. VERY much agree on a History vs. de Valera...

    • @mankytoes
      @mankytoes Год назад +8

      Great shout. Even a lot of Irish nationalists despised de Valera.

    • @antmanatthemoment7233
      @antmanatthemoment7233 Год назад

      What was so controversial about him? I'm asking genuinely, I don't know

  • @theeth3242
    @theeth3242 Год назад +148

    "Even if some people considered him a great man in his time, he doesn't have to be an icon in ours", is a fantastic line about the balance of honoring the figures of the past with contemporary morals

    • @night6724
      @night6724 Год назад

      You realize blacks and Indians owned slaves too right?

    • @Mimi-mq2wj
      @Mimi-mq2wj Год назад +2

      he was the prime definition of barking no biting. preached but never did

  • @_CrissoN
    @_CrissoN Год назад +58

    Do everything in your power to ensure this History vs series never comes to an end. One of the best i've seen anywhere, unique and forces us to ask important questions about the past and about past historical figures that are celebrated

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Год назад +6

      Plus, the judge's reactions are hilarious!

  • @afrikasmith1049
    @afrikasmith1049 Год назад +63

    Thomas Jefferson is a prime example of the phrase "If it's only one person who wants to change things for the better then that goal will never come true."

    • @lebarondevalois605
      @lebarondevalois605 Год назад +3

      Nope. If he did want to change things 500 people would have been a way he could've.

  • @danielarivera4412
    @danielarivera4412 Год назад +136

    I’m glad Sally was in this video. She really deserves to be recognized.

    • @centurionzen1005
      @centurionzen1005 Год назад +2

      Hear, hear

    • @bunnybird9342
      @bunnybird9342 Год назад +17

      Yeah even though her depiction (and children's depictions) were historically inaccurate because she was 3/4 white and her children were 7/8 white

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Год назад +2

      @@bunnybird9342 I guess reality is really unrealistic.

    • @slushy711
      @slushy711 Год назад +3

      i kinda feel like they shouldve at least mentioned that she was only 14 years old, iirc

    • @historywatch-4U
      @historywatch-4U Год назад +4

      Y'know the evidence for the existence of that relationship is really shabby.

  • @Joshua_Graham2281
    @Joshua_Graham2281 Год назад +38

    I like this because it’s a place where both points of view can listen to the other without it turning into a screaming match.

    • @GeneralDonato
      @GeneralDonato Год назад +3

      I hope this comment section will be the same as well.

  • @donovansausomeshow1178
    @donovansausomeshow1178 Год назад +42

    You should History vs Martin Luther! (the monk) Or also History vs Shi Huangdi!
    This is a great and educational series which you should do more often!

  • @サイゼロ-y2m
    @サイゼロ-y2m Год назад +87

    I'm a Japanese student and reviewing American history for the Common Test for University Admissions next weekend, so it's exactly timely!

    • @CloroxBleachCompany
      @CloroxBleachCompany Год назад +5

      Ganbatte friend!

    • @sorban5352
      @sorban5352 Год назад +2

      Good luck for your Tests and I wish you to succeed on it ! ^^
      (From a French) 🥖🟦⬜🟥

    • @splitfries69
      @splitfries69 Год назад +3

      good luck

    • @splitfries69
      @splitfries69 Год назад +1

      @@100c0c they love america

    • @Marsfi16
      @Marsfi16 Год назад

      Good luck! You can do this!

  • @nebraskaninkansas347
    @nebraskaninkansas347 Год назад +24

    Actually Jefferson did attempt to end slavery in Virginia and newly acquired NW territory. But was unsuccessful. Yes he was not strong enough in his opposition, but does not mean he didn't hold those ideals.

    • @yellowstarproductions6743
      @yellowstarproductions6743 9 месяцев назад

      True

    • @Saurophaganax1931
      @Saurophaganax1931 Месяц назад

      Counter argument: if he really held to those ideals, he would have freed more than just 10 of his 600 slaves. How could he be expected to end slavery in Virginia when he wouldn’t even end it in his own household?

  • @markvincentbonachita8950
    @markvincentbonachita8950 Год назад +55

    "Can we judge historical figures by modern standards?"
    That's powerful.

    • @highcouncil1302
      @highcouncil1302 Год назад +4

      I would say no but the more closer to modern times they are it's easier to do so

    • @Axelgear2006
      @Axelgear2006 Год назад +16

      We can, yes. But we don't have to. We can judge them by historical standards too, of Jefferson's contemporary Thomas Paine. Or, heck, why not judge them by the standards of the slaves he kept and ordered whipped and beaten? Can we judge him by their standards?

    • @Atleastihavemydog
      @Atleastihavemydog Год назад +2

      Right. Do better is our motto.

  • @Azerinth
    @Azerinth Год назад +59

    Glad to see this series again. My favoriter factoid regarding Jefferson is the quote on the Southeast portico of the Jefferson Memorial which refutes the 'Originalism' I feel is too often used today to excuse regressive policies.
    "I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions, but laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered and manners and opinions change, with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as a civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors."

    • @vincegreen973
      @vincegreen973 Год назад +1

      It doesn’t refute anything dude

    • @caelumvaldovinos5318
      @caelumvaldovinos5318 Год назад +6

      @@vincegreen973 Read that again. He is *literally* saying that his views and policies will become obsolete as history marches on and therefore the documents & laws that were made in his time should be relegated to obsolescence

    • @royalraptorgaming8501
      @royalraptorgaming8501 2 месяца назад

      @@caelumvaldovinos5318 Originalism advocates for reading the constitution as it is and was. making amendments and changing laws to suit changes in circumstances does not conflict with originalism.
      in effect, originalism aims to prevent the misrepresentation of the constitution, which is actively occurring, as words in the English lexicon have their meanings adapted, broadened, and changed. when this happens, a modern individual reading the constitution can and will have a different interpretation of the meaning due to these discrepancies.
      Thus, nothing about that quote from Jefferson contradicts Originalism, unless you somehow think that he's saying its acceptable to misinterpret and misrepresent the constitution he helped make.
      His quote is nothing more than a cautionary warning against the risks of stagnation while clinging to the old way, when the old way may no longer be the right way.

  • @onlymoschops3923
    @onlymoschops3923 Год назад +97

    Hey Ted-ED, as a history geek myself, I really enjoyed this video! :D Loved how you tackled the controversy behind Jefferson.
    By the way, being a Chinese person myself too, do you think you can make a video about the Chinese philosopher Confucius (c. 551 - 479 BC) too? I think he'd be a good candidate. On one side, his philosophy has been credited with achieving peace for ancient China. He's also known for teaching kindness, humaneness, sincerity, and the Golden Rule. He's also known for encouraging education and meritocracy. But on the other side, critics have accused his philosophy of promoting blind obedience, child abuse, and sexism against women. In fact, a lot of intellectuals and Communists hated his guts in the 20th century and accused him of promoting an outdated feudal system that held Chinese society back. And even in the modern day, some critics blame his teachings for producing modern-day issues in East Asia such as a mental health crisis and an outdated education system. Do you think you could tackle that sometime? Thanks!

    • @aaronTGP_3756
      @aaronTGP_3756 Год назад +8

      Being so influential and with huge positive and negative aspects, he's a perfect candidate for History vs.

    • @curranfrank2854
      @curranfrank2854 Год назад +6

      Confucius would be an excellent person to do a video on

    • @vincegreen973
      @vincegreen973 Год назад

      Bruh controversy? No it isn’t. This video is wrong

    • @ryancarter1080
      @ryancarter1080 Год назад +2

      How could they accuse him of creating an outdated feudal system from over 2000 years ago? Of course its going to be outdated 2,500 years later just about everything from back then is outdated now. That's like blaming the person who invented the first wooden canoe for not inventing a steel engine powered ship with compass and radar, at the time the idea was revolutionary but things change and its up to the people after him to improve, change or discard it, not the man himself.

    • @trungduong4040
      @trungduong4040 9 месяцев назад

      that's a great suggestion.

  • @oryoruk
    @oryoruk Год назад +8

    I think we are overlooking the most relevant contribution of Jefferson, which is injecting the idea of equality into the founding. The same text, the Declaration of Independence, was tremendously influential in both the movement to abolish slavery, and the civil rights movement.

    • @sisjsjwjwjsjsmjsjssj6285
      @sisjsjwjwjsjsmjsjssj6285 6 месяцев назад

      No, no we’re not overlooking that. He said those words but didn’t believe them completly; he didn’t consider slaves to be people, and thus didn’t believe the rights of people established in the Declaration of Independence applies to them.
      Also, he didn’t invent those ideas. Plenty of enlightenment thinkers, most notably John Locke, were a great inspiration to Jefferson. Jefferson’s whole rights of life Liberty and the pursuit of happiness were a near replica of Locke’s ideas of life liberty and property. If Jefferson didn’t write those ideas, they still would’ve existed.

    • @CausticSpace
      @CausticSpace 5 месяцев назад

      @@sisjsjwjwjsjsmjsjssj6285massive freudian slip when you said “didn’t believe slaves were people” instead of saying african-amercians

    • @royalraptorgaming8501
      @royalraptorgaming8501 2 месяца назад

      @@CausticSpace that's not a slip, slaves are social class.

  • @thewingedhussar4188
    @thewingedhussar4188 Год назад +14

    Their is also one context they forgot to mention.
    The founding fathers legitimately thought slavery was going to end naturally

    • @sisjsjwjwjsjsmjsjssj6285
      @sisjsjwjwjsjsmjsjssj6285 6 месяцев назад +1

      That doesn’t change the fact that most of them owned slaves themselves. I can get why they didn’t want to do anything in the government to stop slavery - it would’ve prevented the US from being able to form, and they felt it was going to end anyway. But if they did actually see slavery as wrong, they could’ve at least freed their own slaves or something like that…

    • @thomasallister3446
      @thomasallister3446 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@sisjsjwjwjsjsmjsjssj6285Jefferson was deeply in debt throughout his life. Slaves were considered valuable property and a significant part of his wealth. Freeing them would have meant a substantial financial loss.

    • @ej28
      @ej28 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@thomasallister3446 Yeah a bunch of people would be freed, but what about his bank account?

  • @urphakeandgey6308
    @urphakeandgey6308 11 месяцев назад +5

    One thing I find interesting about American history is how unapologetic it is. Most other countries have long histories and it's very romanticized. After all, most leaders of other countries only had to directly deal with "their people," whereas American leaders had to deal with multiple ethnicities and races from the get go... And they completely fumbled it despite many of them being conscious of their own hypocrisy.
    Americans like to point out their own shortcomings and go "look how far we've come." Most other countries would rather pretend it never happened.

    • @randomcenturion7264
      @randomcenturion7264 9 месяцев назад +3

      It's one of the things I love about the USA. We will happily cheer "USA No 1" to celebrate, but when it comes down to it, we know we are far, FAR from perfect and that the best we can hope for is trying to do a little better each generation.

    • @bunnybird9342
      @bunnybird9342 8 месяцев назад +3

      The "greatest country on Earth" doesn't exist. Countries shouldn't compete with each other to see who is the best, but rather each country should try to be the best it can be.

  • @Boman751
    @Boman751 Год назад +10

    I do love the balance between the rights and wrongs that both sides point out about Jefferson. Both admitting the good, and conceding the flaws of Thomas Jefferson, letting the viewer understand he wasn’t perfect, but he wasn’t a tyrannical figure either. In my view, he was a complicated man in a complicated time. There was so much one man can do, but in the time he lived and what he had to deal with in it, I can say for certain that he has done much more good than bad in his life. Could he have done better on some issues? Sure, absolutely. But in a time where so much was against him, he fought tooth and nail to do the best he can with whatever he had and help granted many new freedoms and rights for many people. And he was without a doubt, one of the most important figures in American history and one of the most impactful founding fathers.

    • @bunnybird9342
      @bunnybird9342 Год назад +3

      I agree with you 100%. Thomas Jefferson was very flawed and honestly does deserve all of the criticism he gets but I still have lots of respect for the guy and I agree with him on lots of things.

  • @carlstawicki1915
    @carlstawicki1915 Год назад +11

    “Well, nobody’s perfect.”

  • @Porthos240
    @Porthos240 Год назад +22

    Seriously missed these. No.3 is definitely a tough one.

  • @TIME12308
    @TIME12308 Год назад +16

    Next History vs Otto von Bismarck please.
    Thank you

  • @alejandrosakai1744
    @alejandrosakai1744 Год назад +17

    History vs. Ideas:
    -Julius Caesar.
    -Ramesses II.
    -Caligula.
    -Hannibal Barca.
    -Julia Maesa.
    -Pericles of Athens
    -Simón Bolívar.
    -Kösem Sultana.
    -Cyrus the Great.
    -Alexander the Great.
    -Kublai Khan.
    -Pocahontas.

    • @stegotyranno4206
      @stegotyranno4206 Год назад +3

      Cyrus was a pure soul never did anything wrong

    • @awake6009
      @awake6009 Год назад +1

      they already did a History vs Augustus, and covered the assassination of Julius Caesar in a separate video

    • @alejandrosakai1744
      @alejandrosakai1744 Год назад +1

      @@awake6009 but never about his conquest of Gaul or his conflict with Pompey!

    • @awake6009
      @awake6009 Год назад +1

      @@alejandrosakai1744 I know, just saying it's unlikely they'd get around to Julius Caesar any time soon

    • @pauselab5569
      @pauselab5569 7 месяцев назад

      @@alejandrosakai1744both were very well justified. The Gauls revolted for literally no reason despite Cesar and Labienus being very kind to them since they garrisoned at local tribes. Many swore to help the Romans but ended up betraying them to join Vercingetorix. His conflict with Pompey was also well justified. Pompey was trying to remove him from power in Gaul in direct confrontation with a law passed a decade ago. He then refused mutual disarmament and so Cesar was forced to return to Rome.

  • @henrylivingstone2971
    @henrylivingstone2971 Год назад +37

    I think it’s very difficult to pass judgement on Jefferson on his inaction against slavery whilst president. The state of the union following the revolutionary war was rather shaky. While all the states signed the Declaration of Independence some members of the union were growing concerned with the seemingly endless powers of the central government and the sense of losing autonomy.
    So if Jefferson had tried to abolish slavery during his presidency, it is likely that the union would’ve dissolved. Especially since many states stilled relied on slavery as their primary source of income whether it be direct or indirect. No state would abide by policy changes that would threaten their economic independence.
    So you can’t really blame Jefferson solely for the inaction against slavery.

    • @erozionzeall6371
      @erozionzeall6371 Год назад

      What's your opinion on Lenin?

    • @henrylivingstone2971
      @henrylivingstone2971 Год назад +9

      @@erozionzeall6371
      He probably had his heart in the right place in the beginning considering what he saw during the Tsarist regime, political suppression was fairly common and it wasn’t uncommon to see people carted away for speaking ill of the ruling class.
      So he much like many other liberally minded young men and women incensed by the decadent and superfluous upper class grew resentful and bitter, as one rightfully would. However, killing the Tsar and his family was probably not the best move he could’ve done to showcase his humanity though that order was not entirely his own.
      Lenin is a weird character in the sense that while he was a dictator he isn’t a dictator that we would expect. He wasn’t totalitarian, his regime might be totalitarian but the man Lenin certainly was not since not all of his orders were carried out in full. Though he was still the first amongst equals.
      But considering political suppression, state sanctioned executions, and armed conflict was common in the newly minted Soviet Union and this all occurred under Lenin’s jurisdiction it can be reasonably argued that Lenin did not start with bad intentions but eventually succumbed to the temptations of power and the inability to maintain his visions for society without using brutal tactics, the same tactics he criticized the Tsars for.

    • @jackluck2538
      @jackluck2538 Год назад +3

      I agree he couldn't abolish it, but he could have easily freed his own slaves.

    • @henrylivingstone2971
      @henrylivingstone2971 Год назад +6

      @@jackluck2538
      I agree. Jefferson of course not without his faults. He clearly could’ve cleared his own stock of slaves had he adhered to his own reservations concerning the institution of slavery by he didn’t. For that he will always be remembered.
      However when it comes to the context in the video casting him as an engaged supporter of slavery and his inability to abolish slavery, I think it takes a little more understanding of the political climate of the US in that time to make an informed opinion.

    • @CJ87317
      @CJ87317 Год назад +3

      Even freeing some of his slaves would have been difficult for him financially. Jefferson was land rich, but actually always in financial debt. Really, the only reason his estate wasn't repossessed at some point was his fame/stature. He needed the plantation to produce or he would have gone into poverty. Or, he could have sold some/most of his slaves off to get back to even, but that wouldn't exactly endear him to modern audiences either.
      Complicated, but essential, man.

  • @joed7547
    @joed7547 Год назад +10

    Thanks for bringing this back, as an Aussie going into the histories of James Cook and Lachlan Macquarie, would be interesting, some great deeds, and absolute atrocious actions, (such as the hanging of aboriginal's on trees for Macquarie's case.

  • @WeeWeeJumbo
    @WeeWeeJumbo Год назад +17

    Judge went "Pardon?!" and I guffawed

  • @TheRevanchrist
    @TheRevanchrist Год назад +9

    been a while since the last case. I love this format when analyzing controversial icons in history.

  • @aidanrogers4438
    @aidanrogers4438 Год назад +13

    Glad to see another video from this series! History vs. Saladin would be an interesting one to do in the future.

  • @cormorantcolors
    @cormorantcolors Год назад +22

    I can’t believe I’ve never watched this series before, it’s such an interesting way to look at these historical debates! I’ll be sure to catch any future episodes.

    • @boymeetworlf3433
      @boymeetworlf3433 Год назад +1

      Omg this so nice to watch I don't hate Jefferson he did some bad things but nobody perfect we need to look at their historical significance than morals

    • @bunnybird9342
      @bunnybird9342 Год назад

      @@boymeetworlf3433 I don't hate him either but tbh I really think he had no self-awareness

  • @Hellysal
    @Hellysal Год назад +11

    I like the question at the end - can we judge historical figures by modern standards? The answer is - yes AND no. It's important to realize in what times they were living in to try understanding their reasons and actions. But it's also important to notice all the flaws in them so to not put all their views on the pedestal as an example for future generations.

  • @missshaolina7286
    @missshaolina7286 Год назад +7

    It’s so awesome to see this series come back!

  • @grovercleavland2698
    @grovercleavland2698 Год назад +8

    Should we judge past leaders and hero’s by modern standards? No. If we did that we would run out of people to look up to.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Год назад +3

      But they shouldn't be absolved of guilt either.

  • @amethystsavage4018
    @amethystsavage4018 Год назад +6

    Love it how the music just stopped after he said “flesh and blood”, almost like the orchestra was dumbstruck to hear that he had secret children with his slaves

  • @jarekwrzosek2048
    @jarekwrzosek2048 Год назад +5

    You gotta make one about Emperor Nero: A promising, strong leader with artistic soul, or a matricidal tyrant?

  • @thematthew761
    @thematthew761 Год назад +7

    Jefferson had many personal problems, but he still is one of my favorite historical figures of the time.

  • @junayedbostami2330
    @junayedbostami2330 2 месяца назад +2

    If we don’t judge historic figures by modern standards then how are we supposed to know if we’ve grown as a civilisation.

  • @HereWeald
    @HereWeald Год назад +11

    This series is finally back.

  • @jepong1768
    @jepong1768 Год назад +2

    when the world needed this series the most, it come back still as ever great

  • @micow9951
    @micow9951 Год назад +7

    I'd love a history vs Marie Antoinette video this series is great

  • @RealFoxTrotFox
    @RealFoxTrotFox Год назад +16

    I like videos like this. We get to see the bad side of historical figures as well as the good, so we can understand how and why they acted and what they did

  • @Soundwaves-fi8dn
    @Soundwaves-fi8dn Год назад +6

    "I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." --Thomas Jefferson

  • @asperRader
    @asperRader Год назад +2

    I'll admit to coming into many of these videos with an opinion already formed and set, but it is good to figure out what the opposing side thinks, what their arguments are. Please continue this series!

  • @themuffinman8936
    @themuffinman8936 Год назад +14

    I would love to see you do History vs Huey Long, he’s a very important figure in American history and very contentious to this day.

  • @nathanpaulbonzon1670
    @nathanpaulbonzon1670 Год назад +5

    Can you do a video of History vs. Alexander the Great please, I always wanted to see what was Alexander's life and background

  • @cwolvie
    @cwolvie Год назад +9

    As Frederick Douglass said in his Epic Rap Battle with TJ: "Man, you did some good things; I ain't denying your fame/I'm just saying they need to put an asterisk next to your name!"

    • @bunnybird9342
      @bunnybird9342 Год назад +2

      Epic Rap Battles of History so cringe.
      Also IRL Frederick Douglass didn't hate Thomas Jefferson

  • @ebonysoldier
    @ebonysoldier Год назад +13

    Epic Rap Battles of History said it best. You (Thomas Jefferson) let freedom ring, but never picked up the phone" - Fredrick Douglas erb

    • @pisces2569
      @pisces2569 9 месяцев назад

      Followed by the second best “you did some good things. I ain’t denying your fame. I’m just saying they need to put an asterisk next to your name.”

  • @weizhanghao5126
    @weizhanghao5126 Год назад +8

    This is an insane series; hope to see more of it. Thanks TED-Ed!

  • @bunnybird9342
    @bunnybird9342 Год назад +6

    Videos I would like to see:
    History vs Winston Churchill
    History vs Confucius
    History vs Mother Teresa
    History vs Gandhi
    History vs Robespierre
    History vs Huey Long
    History vs Malcolm X
    History vs Yuri Kochiyama
    History vs Catherine the Great
    History vs Karl Marx
    History vs Mustafa Ataturk

  • @GG1Productions
    @GG1Productions Год назад +28

    I've missed this series! Fingers crossed for History v. Ronald Reagan!

    • @rimfire8217
      @rimfire8217 Год назад

      A man who has a bipolar lagacy.

  • @lonehiker6648
    @lonehiker6648 Год назад +6

    are we really applying modern ideas and values upon people 300 years ago??

    • @MutantMonke
      @MutantMonke Год назад +1

      Slavery was bad forever. Many civilizations millennia old were against it, so there's no reason for one to think a person supporting slavery was not wrong.

    • @JacobHimmelhaver-m8g
      @JacobHimmelhaver-m8g 4 месяца назад +1

      Try it with man from 3 thousand years ago.

  • @Mackyle-Wotring
    @Mackyle-Wotring Год назад +5

    I am glad that you brought back the series. Can you do a History vs Jossip Tito episode?

  • @seniorvoltaic3212
    @seniorvoltaic3212 Год назад +1

    In my opinion, we should admire the aspects of a historical individual that are positive but condemn aspects of them that are negative. We shouldn't be completely positioned on only one side of the argument.

  • @aaronbeamesderfer2389
    @aaronbeamesderfer2389 Год назад +5

    Even though Jefferson was contradiction. We still have to remember he did help found a country whose basis of ideals, that up until that point had not happened on a grand scale. And now those ideals have shaped the modern world

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 Год назад +4

    I like that this video series doesn't just present multiple arguments, but steel-mans both sides instead of strawmaning one side.

    • @night6724
      @night6724 Год назад

      It could’ve mentioned how blacks and Indians owned slaves

    • @sindhubhadarge3014
      @sindhubhadarge3014 Год назад

      What does ironmanning mean?

  • @claraallisandra9135
    @claraallisandra9135 Год назад +4

    I am so glad the series is back!
    If you don’t mind could you put Harry Truman on trial?

  • @FortyJester
    @FortyJester Год назад +4

    Im so happy you guys brought this series back!!

  • @whideoreviews573
    @whideoreviews573 Год назад +3

    I hope this can become a frequent series again. Goodness knows how many American presidents probably warrant their own "History vs." videos.

  • @trentonpaul6376
    @trentonpaul6376 Год назад +8

    Hello everybody! I hope you're having a great day 💫💫

  • @pbh9195
    @pbh9195 Год назад +3

    Ahh it's been a while since released one of these. Always love this series

  • @kingkdg3262
    @kingkdg3262 Год назад +2

    I hope the series continues I'm just way too invested in this

  • @dylangergutierrez
    @dylangergutierrez Год назад +8

    This is a fun and engaging framing of historical figures.
    I think that the only utility for assigning value to the actions of people from the past is so we can learn and have their choices inform our own. For that reason, I think it is useful to apply our own standards to them, not to demonize people like Jefferson, but to reflect on how we would like to act if in similar circumstances, and what that might affect.
    Jefferson is dead, and making judgement calls (good or bad) about his character is only useful for deciding whether we want to be like him. Of course, it's reductive to try and assign the label of "good" or "bad" to any person's whole life.

  • @りんご-n2u5b
    @りんご-n2u5b Год назад

    I am a high school student in Japan.
    And I am learning English.
    So, if I may be wrong grammar.,I am sorry.
    I appreciate learning English with this channel ‼️❤

  • @kenan511
    @kenan511 Год назад +3

    Do Woodrow Wilson! That guy has done way more damage than what most of us realize!

  • @jessicajayes8326
    @jessicajayes8326 Год назад +5

    Jefferson in Hamilton: What did I miss?

  • @craigthompson3739
    @craigthompson3739 Год назад +4

    Should Jefferson be judged with modern values? That is the argument of this entire video. Presentism is a ridiculous way to approach history. Judging history is not understanding it.

  • @nicolasgarciagallardo3548
    @nicolasgarciagallardo3548 Год назад +3

    It makes no sense to judge people with todays standards, its like saying that sumerians where incredibly undevelopped because they had no cars or constitutions, its just absurd

  • @samwithsmalleyes5805
    @samwithsmalleyes5805 Год назад +2

    Oh my god, I did not even know ted-ed made these kinds of series, now I need more!!!!

  • @TIME12308
    @TIME12308 Год назад +14

    I love this series keep it up TED :)

  • @TheMedicatedArtist
    @TheMedicatedArtist Год назад +2

    I was hoping this series wasn’t dead. Fingers crossed that we get a History vs. Robespierre video.

  • @grovercleavland2698
    @grovercleavland2698 Год назад +5

    It’s been a while since this series was updated. I’m so glad you guys decided to continue it.
    For your next addition to the series may I suggest History vs Francisco Franco? He was was easily one of the most controversial leaders in Spanish history. Maybe even in the history of the world. He did a lot of good and a lot of bad during his time. He’s the perfect historical character for a series like this.

  • @AYVYN
    @AYVYN 5 месяцев назад +1

    Instead of using criticism to omit history, I believe one should first reach the intellectual level to assess it on an equal level; which many have not achieved with Thomas Jefferson, including myself.

  • @rickseiden1
    @rickseiden1 Год назад +18

    This information is what I think of when people say that we need to bring the country back to what the founding fathers intended. Especially when those people are non-white women or women in general. There are Congresswomen who say this often, and all I can think is, "The founding fathers didn't want you voting, let alone holding office. You really want to go back there?"

  • @2167PhillipM
    @2167PhillipM 3 месяца назад +1

    As one New York politician said “your not going to find a perfect person back in those days” and that’s how we should look at president Jefferson

  • @fernsong8558
    @fernsong8558 Год назад +5

    I loved this series, hope to see more in the future!

  • @luyandzabavukiledlamini4693
    @luyandzabavukiledlamini4693 Год назад +1

    Love this series and good that both sides don't try to demean or belittle each other instead engage in an open argument and actually listen to each other's points

  • @dimamatat5548
    @dimamatat5548 4 месяца назад +4

    We need History vs Hamilton to balance it out.

  • @johnmilner6419
    @johnmilner6419 5 месяцев назад +1

    At 1:38, in the draft version of the Declaration of Independence, in The Ordinance of 1784, and in the Northwest Ordinance, Jefferson tried to ban slavery.

  • @nolanbaglietto1430
    @nolanbaglietto1430 Год назад +6

    Hiya Ted ed, I am from Gibraltar 🇬🇮 and since we were British in 1704, we had (and still have) a lot of political problems from Spain 🇪🇸, especially during the days of the dictator Francisco Franco. I was wondering if you could do History vs Francisco Franco.

  • @DracoTheVish137
    @DracoTheVish137 6 месяцев назад +1

    This video was so helpful for a presentation I've been working on.

  • @jamesgolightly5320
    @jamesgolightly5320 Год назад +4

    Jefferson is an icon, we cannot judge through our modern lens.

  • @samruinseverything
    @samruinseverything Год назад +1

    History on Trial: *uploads*
    Everyone: Its been 84 years...

  • @pouya8221
    @pouya8221 Год назад +5

    I love this series, so insightful and fun to watch. Thank you for making more!

  • @Rudster14
    @Rudster14 Год назад

    I have been waiting for a new one of these for years!

  • @StaySpicy
    @StaySpicy Год назад +3

    This is a super fun concept! I thoroughly enjoyed this!!! Need more!

  • @Meow_Zedong_1949
    @Meow_Zedong_1949 Год назад +2

    History vs. Josip Borz Tito
    The man is often known as the good dictator but still a dictator. He was critical to keeping Yugoslavia together, but the country fell into ethnic violence almost immediately after his death.

  • @swayne1441
    @swayne1441 Год назад +3

    Jefferson is easily the best leader in American history. I don't even think it's close.

    • @bunnybird9342
      @bunnybird9342 Год назад +3

      He's one of the best but not the number one best imo

  • @kat4317
    @kat4317 Год назад +1

    love these videos, please continue this series!

  • @GOODYGOODGOOD789
    @GOODYGOODGOOD789 6 месяцев назад +5

    2:10 Just because an issue is being avoided doesn't mean that the reforms don't mean anything.
    2:51 He didn't have anything to do with that act.
    3:15 The South was going to use any excuse to succeed whether it be something from Thomas Jefferson or anyone else, they just wanted to use whatever excuse they could use, and if Jefferson never said that then they would have just used something else to try and justify succeeding.
    3:46 If you use that against Jefferson you also have to use that against every president from John Adams to Abraham Lincoln (Washington doesn't count because he was running unopposed).
    4:16 Because there was no way to stop slavery from taking over in parts of Louisiana, I'm not trying to defend slavery but it was impossible for it not to spread.
    I think this is the worst History vs. video that there is. First, they bring up the race and slavery issue in places where it isn't even relevant and isn't even a counterargument, and second, they don't bring up a bunch of other ways they could've criticized Jefferson, how about the Embargo Act, how about the fact that he was a free speech advocate but tried to impeach a Supreme court justice (Samuel Chase) for having different political opinions than him, how about the fact that some people (both when he was alive and right now) claim that he killed his political hatchet (James T. Callender), because he wanted to testify what he and Jefferson did.

  • @willfakaroni5808
    @willfakaroni5808 Год назад +1

    Just as I was thinking about this series a new one comes out

  • @AyubuKK
    @AyubuKK Год назад +8

    The founders saw the contradiction of having slaves in a free constitutional republic but they didn’t want to get rid of slavery in fear that it would start a Civil War, but the Civil War over slavery happened anyway. So it was probably still best to have gotten rid of it when the US was founded.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Год назад +1

      Not really gonna happen when the Constitution was made. Slaves up until its abolition in 1865 where huge investments to those who employ them and often constitutes more than half a plantation's worth. Their retention despite their existence bearing glaring hypocrisy of their political values wasn't driven by ideology but by economics: unless the US has a large boatload of free cash lying around when the Constitution was made in 1787, the slaveowners can be persuaded to abandon it... as long as they got compensated for it...

    • @Spaghetter813
      @Spaghetter813 Год назад +2

      Most also wrongly believed that slavery will die out with time.

    • @watching7721
      @watching7721 Год назад

      The founding presidents did kick the issue down the road partially because they feared a Civil War would destroy the country, especially so early in its history

    • @CJ87317
      @CJ87317 Год назад

      Well, the Revolution couldn't have been won if the Colonies went their different ways during the war. And if the States had split up after just defeating the British, it's likely the Red Coats would have reconquered the country.

  • @astyanax905
    @astyanax905 Год назад +2

    YES!!!! I love this series!! please keep making new ones!

  • @lucavalerio3336
    @lucavalerio3336 Год назад +5

    Please do a History vs Getulio Vargas or Juan Peron. The latin american populists of the 20th century are really interesting figures.