Christopher Hitchens about Reparations for slavery ( 2001)

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  • @jn6305
    @jn6305 Před 4 lety +418

    “If you can’t write well, you can’t think well. If you can’t think well, then other people will do your thinking for you.” -George Orwell

    • @OLR1337
      @OLR1337 Před 4 lety

      a fascist writing the basis of much of our anti-fascist ideology

    • @rodneykent8023
      @rodneykent8023 Před 4 lety +2

      You don't have to be highly educated to know bullshit when you see it. Some intellectuals are very obtuse in certain ways.

    • @dr.2335
      @dr.2335 Před 4 lety +23

      Owen Ryan a socialist that fell away from his ideologies in later life. He wrote about totalitarianism and warned against it in any form. Read further, think better.

    • @anab0lic
      @anab0lic Před 4 lety +2

      very true, you can tell a lot about a person by the way they write, its a glimpse into the inner workings of their mind... and the strength or lack there of their mental faculties.

    • @dr.2335
      @dr.2335 Před 4 lety +5

      anab0lic glimpse*, thereof of*, mental*.

  • @tsunchoo
    @tsunchoo Před 3 lety +116

    "Anyone can have thoughts.. many people content themselves with feelings"

    • @johnrobinson4445
      @johnrobinson4445 Před 3 lety +6

      Hence the popularity of 'fake outrage' on the part of conservatives.

    • @jjammmees
      @jjammmees Před 3 lety +1

      I don't think so.

  • @ghates
    @ghates Před 4 lety +331

    Damn you Hitch, why did you have to die on us when we need you so much

    • @ghates
      @ghates Před 4 lety +3

      @@Melville1800s Haha! Blubbering..If you ever listened to Hitchens, which iam guessing you do because you commented on his video, you would know that that is exactly what he teaches " It's not what you think, it's how you think" so your point is garbage, especially the troll ass way you said it..

    • @NFawc
      @NFawc Před 4 lety +1

      If that were the thinking, he'd probably have to stay alive for eternity ;)

    • @NFawc
      @NFawc Před 4 lety +12

      @Marlon Quintana-Nieto The comment was a tribute to the man, not a literal statement. Sheesh...

    • @ToraTiger26
      @ToraTiger26 Před 4 lety +1

      God took him

    • @NFawc
      @NFawc Před 4 lety +2

      @@ToraTiger26 I think he'd wish you didn't say that - czcams.com/video/jiIA188QnIk/video.html

  • @njits789
    @njits789 Před 3 lety +33

    "Beware of making the best the enemy of the good." Wonderful.

    • @mja91352
      @mja91352 Před 3 lety

      and not even close to being original with Hitchens

    • @Chardonbois
      @Chardonbois Před rokem

      Originally a Napoleon quote I believe.

    • @kstar1489
      @kstar1489 Před rokem +1

      @@mja91352duh? Hitched himself said that. And the comment didn’t claim that originated with him.

    • @wyskass861
      @wyskass861 Před 8 měsíci

      @@mja91352 You bring up another example of bad faith argument. Thanks for arguing against something else you yourself set up in order to demean the first thing by association. Great irony and your lack thereof, you demonstrate oh clever one.

  • @MrCocksuckme
    @MrCocksuckme Před 5 lety +85

    "Contenting yourself with feelings"

  • @leegoodwin9312
    @leegoodwin9312 Před 4 lety +127

    I may not always agree with this legend, but i always listen

    • @sebastianbernardo9900
      @sebastianbernardo9900 Před 3 lety

      ok

    • @bens5859
      @bens5859 Před 3 lety +3

      @@sebastianbernardo9900 your comment reminds me of a quote about non-sequiturs...wish I could recall the source

  • @padzzz9377
    @padzzz9377 Před 4 lety +57

    You can't force people to change their opinion, but you can educate yourself and present what you learned in a manner that is acceptable to anyone willing to listen without compromising your own principals and beliefs. I'm so grateful to have lived and learned from one of the best teachers this world had to offer.

    • @SoLaRe60
      @SoLaRe60 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @padzzz9377, You meant principles, not principals. Principals are headmasters of schools.

  • @dirtyhobo4252
    @dirtyhobo4252 Před 5 lety +581

    Christopher, we need you now more than ever.

    • @Sinclair80
      @Sinclair80 Před 4 lety +10

      Absolutely.

    • @scan865
      @scan865 Před 4 lety +7

      Absolutely someone needs to put HRC in her place

    • @DouglasGross6022
      @DouglasGross6022 Před 4 lety +4

      @@scan865 Hitch certainly would have done that effectively and with style.

    • @__Stitchy
      @__Stitchy Před 4 lety +11

      @@scan865 maybe 3 years ago, when she was still relevant... Why her? Why not your orange angerpresident?

    • @scan865
      @scan865 Před 4 lety +3

      @@__Stitchy still a rotten bag, not my president lad, not american. I'm from a country with worse politicians than anywhere!

  • @andrewmcdonald1812
    @andrewmcdonald1812 Před 4 lety +55

    What this man would say about the world now

    • @arthurrimbaud7287
      @arthurrimbaud7287 Před 4 lety +5

      He’d still be saying that the Iraq war was a great idea.

    • @user-vx1wq4nx5y
      @user-vx1wq4nx5y Před 4 lety +2

      Arthur Rimbaud 😭

    • @SuperUnknown1967
      @SuperUnknown1967 Před 3 lety +2

      @@arthurrimbaud7287 pay attention dummy, he changed his mind on that. Quite a few clips of him saying so.

    • @SgtAndrewM
      @SgtAndrewM Před rokem

      @@SuperUnknown1967 link?

  • @RedStarBelgradefan
    @RedStarBelgradefan Před 9 lety +977

    I disagree with Hitchens here, reparations for slavery is taking money from people who didn't own slaves and then giving that money to people who werent slaves.

    • @SheafferGordon
      @SheafferGordon Před 9 lety +48

      There is a likely chance that the people sacrificing the money had ancestors who wore blue during the Civil War.

    • @TrippyKenpachi
      @TrippyKenpachi Před 9 lety +108

      Slavery and its effects are far-reaching and still visible today... And the country still benefits from it.

    • @TheRakk24
      @TheRakk24 Před 9 lety +75

      Rachel C Please elaborate. How exactly do I benefit from black slavery?

    • @Warpig9
      @Warpig9 Před 9 lety +60

      David Wright
      Ordinary white folk do not benefit at all from the past effects of slavery dear. Quite the opposite actually.

    • @Warpig9
      @Warpig9 Před 9 lety +63

      mbbroker79 Haha you've got to be joking right? You want to hold out your hand now and demand reparations from the American people who are of different backgrounds and had Nothing to do with slavery 100 years ago?

  • @staytuned9320
    @staytuned9320 Před 5 lety +393

    Being a "Black American ", I've always had respect for Hitchens and his views but now he gets nothing but my respect.
    May he never be forgotten!

    • @CFox.7
      @CFox.7 Před 4 lety +10

      @Factual Fox ..nothing else..
      lol

    • @josephgadaleto3211
      @josephgadaleto3211 Před 4 lety +13

      um.. your a racist....jews were enslaved in history many many times...where is your voice for thier reparations...oh wait... i forgot, you already stated your black and only care about blacks....

    • @sunnydlite-t8b
      @sunnydlite-t8b Před 4 lety +5

      So because you agree with him, NOW, he is totally worthy of YOUR respect.

    • @morleyhausbloodlines6791
      @morleyhausbloodlines6791 Před 4 lety +5

      What the fuck does being a black American have to do with it

    • @MarkyMark1221
      @MarkyMark1221 Před 4 lety +1

      MorleyHaus Bloodlines being biased
      I’m black as well

  • @tcpip9999
    @tcpip9999 Před rokem +6

    Superb, fluent, compelling

  • @johndallara3257
    @johndallara3257 Před 4 lety +184

    Hitchens always makes a reasoned case, how he is missed.

    • @Davieboy-dovbear
      @Davieboy-dovbear Před 4 lety +1

      STFU Dumbass!

    • @aneily
      @aneily Před 4 lety +13

      Wow.
      Somebody triggered someone with words

    • @sudo_nym
      @sudo_nym Před 4 lety +10

      @@aneily
      Davieboy did a White Whine...

    • @johndallara3257
      @johndallara3257 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Davieboy-dovbear Judging by your well thought out reply you are probably an english teacher from California, tenured?

    • @Davieboy-dovbear
      @Davieboy-dovbear Před 4 lety +3

      @@johndallara3257 - all the pro-Hitchens arguments (and Hitchen's himself), *not that you have made any!* .. are subjective and lack essence. What Hitchens is doing to you all (has been doing), is solely for the purpose of selling his books. Hitchens is a conman with a rich vocabulary that can manipulate the minds of people like you (the uneducated and the misinformed). I believe too, Christianity is a fake religion but is the easiest to debunk and that's why Hitchens attacks Christianity all the time, it makes him look good! But trust me when I tell you this, there's hardly any difference between the du mb christians who give money to the Church, and you bu ms who give money to Hitchens (or show support for him) .. this is what I meant when I said _"S T F U,"_ I just wanted to save space & time and being that you all Hitchens fan[atic]s are so _”smart”_ (LOL), I was expecting you gonna understand.

  • @nonamenomoreno4211
    @nonamenomoreno4211 Před 5 lety +15

    I miss this guys takes on things, and his subtle humor!

  • @st3ppenwolf
    @st3ppenwolf Před 4 lety +120

    It escapes words to explain how this man is sorely missed.

    • @jugheadsrule
      @jugheadsrule Před 4 lety +5

      Let me help you. His advocacy of the Iraq war is not missed by millions of Iraqis. His serial plagiarism is not missed by numerous authors. There I did it for you!

    • @OmniphonProductions
      @OmniphonProductions Před 3 lety +8

      @@jugheadsrule But is his advocacy of the Iraq war missed LESS than Saddam Hussein himself...or the 3/4 MILLION Iraqi's in whose death or "disappearance" Saddam was directly implicated? By the way, out of curiosity, are YOU an Iraqi, or simply an anti-war activist who presumes to speak on their behalf? As for serial plagiarism, I'd be more than happy to examine any evidence you'd care to present.
      Either way...See Also: Ad Hominem.

    • @jugheadsrule
      @jugheadsrule Před 3 lety +1

      @@OmniphonProductions It can't be ad hominem if it's true can it, you supercilious clown. Saddam was a lame duck by 2003. NFZs had wiped out most of his airforce and air defences so he wasn't a threat to anyone. In any case, the justification for the invasion was that he was connected with 9/11 and that he had WMD. Both provably false.
      And the result of that invasion? 1million plus dead, the birth of ISIS and the destabilisation of the whole region.
      As for his serial plagiarism, it's well documented, get off your arse and research it yourself. Here's a starter, and his most well known plagiarism, his book on Thomas Paine had copious amounts lifted from a book on Paine written by John Keene, who has personally acknowledged my publicizing Hitchens copying of his work.

    • @OmniphonProductions
      @OmniphonProductions Před 3 lety +2

      @@jugheadsrule WOW! Defending an ad hominem with another ad hominem. Impressive. In RETROSPECT, you're right that Saddam was not a threat to anyone by 2003. However, his refusal to allow UN weapons inspectors to actually do their jobs...as well as no small amount of sabre rattling and his consistent violation of no fewer than 14 conditions of the Desert Storm Cease Fire Treaty...indicated otherwise AT THE TIME. For that matter, American, British, and French Intelligence agencies all concluded that he DID likely have WMD. I have no choice but to agree that this proved false, but we didn't know that BEFORE going in.
      Moreover, while Saddam had nothing to do with 9-11, that event began a Global War On Terror, and...considering the 3/4 million Iraqis in whose deaths Saddam was directly implicated (complete with mass graves discovered only AFTER the Iraq invasion), his military strikes on Iraqi Kurds in the north, and the billions of U.N. Oil For Food dollars that were diverted to...among other things...building palaces FOR Saddam, the man was (by any objective metric) a terrorist, AND the world is a better place without him. As for the total body count, if groups like Al Qaeda and the Taliban hadn't IMPORTED combatants INTO Iraq (from Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Iran...for starters), it would have been over far sooner with far fewer casualties. That said, the biggest failure of the U.S. in that respect is that nobody ANTICIPATED such importation of enemy combatants DESPITE the events of 9-1-1, and nobody ANTICIPATED the rise of ISIS (or any other terrorist group) to fill the power vacuum left by Saddam's removal. In that respect, you and I actually agree that it was tragically ill-planned, ill-conceived, and not _immediately_ necessary. HOWEVER, as mentioned earlier, we didn't know that BEFOREHAND.
      As for the plagiarism, thank you for actually providing somewhere to look. Far too many people online would leave it with the rude and unproductive, "Get off your arse and research it yourself." The person MAKING the claim is responsible for providing EVIDENCE. It's not the job of the person HEARING the claim to research whether its true, and in the ABSENCE of such provided evidence, the rational position is NOT to believe the claim. In this case, you have, at least, given me something. Actual links would be better, but anything is better than nothing. With that in mind, what did Keene specifically say about your efforts? ("...personally acknowledged," doesn't tell me much.)
      P.S. You still haven't answered whether you're Iraqi or not. Call me a racist, but your deep knowledge of Thomas Paine literature leads me to believe you're not.

    • @poozer1986
      @poozer1986 Před rokem +3

      @@jugheadsrule while I agree with the Iraq pay of your comment (Hitchens himself regretted his backing) is love to see a citation for the second part of your comment

  • @Buildings1772
    @Buildings1772 Před 4 lety +30

    seems pretty clear that alot of people down here in the comments didn't watch the video.

    • @carpballet
      @carpballet Před 3 lety +1

      I watched the video. I’m still unaware of the method/system of reparations.

  • @stephdegoede8316
    @stephdegoede8316 Před 5 lety +393

    "... to the principles of free inquiry and open debate, that goes up to make a great university..."
    For his sake I am glad he is not still around to witness the disaster that we are experiencing now.

    • @beavwarius
      @beavwarius Před 5 lety +26

      I would love to see him eviscerate the people in power today. None could withstand his sharp wit and scathing remarks regarding their corruption.

    • @jehjeh37111
      @jehjeh37111 Před 5 lety +16

      Not do sure about that. He absolutely hated the Clintons.

    • @MajorVanBloodnok
      @MajorVanBloodnok Před 5 lety +36

      @@jehjeh37111 Which is precisely why he'd be so effective today. As odious as Trump clearly is, the bigger problem is in the Liberal establishment, over which the Clintons wield so much power. They're the ones directing the identity politics community towards utterly destroying discourse in the Left.

    • @hughtubecube
      @hughtubecube Před 5 lety +14

      He himself was a political agitator in his years at Oxford. A Marxist no less. I suspect, though we will never know, and I humbly admit my conclusion is speculative (something I note incidentally that you haven’t done), you might have been disappointed with his views on the current campus activism. What irks me most about internet commentators is how righteously they claim to know the thoughts of the dead. We see this everywhere: F1 fans claim to know what Senna would have thought of the current grid, film fans claim to know what Walt Disney would have thought of his company’s current output, and here we see Hitchens fans simply assuming he would have agreed with them no matter what. It’s wrong-headed, and demonstrates the same unthinking fatuousness he is on record as having opposed through his life.

    • @MajorVanBloodnok
      @MajorVanBloodnok Před 5 lety +26

      ​@@hughtubecube You appear very much to assume most Hitchens fans are from the right - attacking so called 'Marxist' agitators on the left. For all Hitchens' contradictions over Iraq and The War Against Terror, he did so from the Trotskyist tradition of opposing the Stalinism of Saddam and a Marxist rejection of Theocratic Islamism. That this lead him into the cul-de-sac of supporting US imperialism is the great shame that he could never admit to.
      His Neocon admirers tried to own him but he stated many times he'd never been any kind of Conservative, he supported the US as the only successful revolution still standing.
      It's not enough to simply say Hitchens would have opposed identity politics activism due to his disgust at the Clintons or anything so fatuous. I strongly suspect he would have recognised the religious fervour in SJW puritanism leading to public denunciations without evidence and so on. The fetishization of identity is something Marx would have said allows the bourgeoise to divide and rule. It's built purely upon a perceived level of oppression in contrast to level of privilege - disabled/muslim/black/lesbian vs straight/white/male.
      Such a politics takes all the struggles and injustices people face, the energy that might be used to fight for a better world, and channels that all away from defeating class structures towards correcting 'privilege'.
      At this point it's worth noting that your class is abstract which means it can be challenged and dismantled, whereas privilege is inherent to you if you're a straight white male - whether you like it or not.
      And in this video, Hitchens identifies injustices that can be set right, especially as they continue to hold sway over the globe - while being very clear he opposed the fundamentalist mindset of repaying all debts throughout history - to empty the museums as it were.
      As he would have put it - it's crucial to understand how to think, not what to think. Hitchens would most likely have eviscerated the Orwellian nightmare of SJW activism and the Kafkaesque campaigns of MeToo/TimesUp. But equally if he were still around I'm sure the lightweights such as Jordan Peterson would not have come to prominence.
      Peterson wouldn't stand a chance against Hitchens, something he got a taste of while being effortlessly taken apart by Slavoj Zizek recently..

  • @coreyc1685
    @coreyc1685 Před 7 lety +143

    Even when I disagreed with him I couldn't help but be impressed by the strength and articulation of his arguments.

    • @hausofone
      @hausofone Před 5 lety +1

      Seems like common sense what are you disagreeing with?

    • @ischar23
      @ischar23 Před 5 lety

      Corey C disagree??? How?????

    • @Gotenks7Kid
      @Gotenks7Kid Před 5 lety +17

      Ischar Holloway-are you guilty for the sins of the father, and is anyone alive in the US today that was ever actually a slave?

    • @ischar23
      @ischar23 Před 5 lety +4

      James Brewer that’s not the point!!!!!!!!!! There has been WRONG done to a people of the ABSOLUTE worst kind and continues today. No there fathers aren’t alive but they’re decedents who are DIRECTLY affected by the actions of MANY countries and should be made whole. I mean this isn’t even a hard one. Did you watch the video???!!!! “Was there a rape a theft a wrong done?, can and should it be made whole?” Simple!!!!!!!!! Wtf dude

    • @jeffsim4191
      @jeffsim4191 Před 5 lety +15

      @@ischar23 Western society is built on the idea of the individual. As soon as you start punishing individuals based on what group you think they belong to every thing would collapse. Do you go to jail if your father steals a car? If you did, damn near everyone would be in prison. The whole innocent until proven guilty idea is out the window also. Plus, in this scenario, it is actually impossible even if you attempted to do it. I'm second generation here, my ancestors were surfs in Europe. Most slaves from West Africa were originally captured and sold by other African's. I'm white, no slaves owned by my family. Many Black people's ancestors were slave traders. Gonna try to figure out everyone's family history to see if they were the guilty or the victims?!? Or just say they are guilty or victims based on skin tone?

  • @user-tz5uq2bt1s
    @user-tz5uq2bt1s Před 4 lety +6

    I put it to you, ghost of Hitchens, that whosoever has owned a slave owes both reparations and liberty to that slave.

  • @domsjuk
    @domsjuk Před 4 lety +59

    I think dismissing the generalization of his argument about the Parthenon Marbles is not as easy and as he states. Is there really that stark of a difference between classic Greek artifacts and Pharaonic Egyptian ones (or something you might imagine in between)? There are no Pharaonic Egyptians around, but neither are there Ancient Hellenic polis-dwellers, so how can modern Christian Greeks claim that piece justly as their own, but modern Islamic Egyptians respectively can't? In both cases the artifact's meaning is symbolical, not religious anymore, their meaning far from their original context, and there is a difficult case for historic civilizational continuation and claims to heritage. Sure, details can make a crucial difference, but with regards to his argument in general terms they may not at all.

    • @nikolalangov6084
      @nikolalangov6084 Před 3 lety +11

      If someone stole your great grandfather's property which had been passed down the generations to more immediate family, you would have a just claim to demand it to be restituted. However if your great grandfather robbed someone else and seized their property and in return that property got taken away by a third party, then that claim becomes a bit weaker, although you are still allowed to make it. While modern day Greeks aren't Hellenistic Greeks, they are still largely their descendants due to the continuous process of shaping Greek society as we know it today. Historical evidence suggests the process was a lot less smooth in Egypt as Arabs were not just conquerors, but also forced the local population to assimilate into their society, through enforced Islamisation, rape, murder, etc. Admittedly, both modern day countries would still like their artifacts returned due to the economic benefits of increased tourism, but ultimately only the Greeks can play the culture card.

    • @LancesArmorStriking
      @LancesArmorStriking Před 3 lety +7

      In some sense I do understand, but you're dealing with a Ship of Theseus problem here, and everyone's answer varies bases in what they think constitutes a continual identity.
      In my case, I think both the Greeks and Egyptians should be returned their artifacts-
      not necessarily because they were taken from the exact same people as those who sculpted the original artworks, but because they were taken from Greeks and Egyptians (1800s) who are arguably the same today.
      Whether or not they can claim heritage, they can certainly claim lost revenue from tourism and sovereignty over whatever is dug up on their territory.

    • @domsjuk
      @domsjuk Před 3 lety

      ​@@LancesArmorStriking & @Nikola Langov Mhmh, both valid points. Thanks. I wonder how this relates to the question of seized land, and "formal" reasons why and how people in general were dispossessed of somthing, e.g. during a war. I guess, giving some symbolical items back is easier and the sentimental value of having had them lying around in a museum for a few generations weighs much less than settlers' claims to land, which was conquered in an "unjustified" war (obviously a never-ending question in itself), and then been occupied for a similar time. Psychologically, people are loss averse, and in this case having lived on and "owned" land passed down from your grandparents is practically something else, and involves living individuals much more immediately than ownership of some items by a trust or a state or a museum (simply in psychological terms), but I think there is still a problem of distinguishing these things categorically, if we regard lost ownership, potential, revenue etc. in that way. Seems to be a slippery slope.

    • @googleisskynet7312
      @googleisskynet7312 Před 3 lety +6

      I think the analogy is rather devoid of logic in its entirety. Some artifact that some state (or state's agent) seized from another culture centuries ago could be returned as restitution. In this case, there would not be collectivized guilt. It would be understood that the entire English ethnic group, for example, was not collectively guilty of stealing the Parthenon Marbles and bringing them to London. They were taken by the English monarchy and brought there. The English may have benefited from it being there, but it was by no inherent collectivized fault of their own that it was there.
      Taking this example and comparing it to the enslavement of Black Africans by Europeans is filled with a multitude of logical inconsistencies. First, it was not the entire "white society", as Hitchens argued, that is responsible for the slave trade, slavery, racist laws, etc. 98% of European American families did not own slaves, and many among them were not supporters of slavery as an institution. It benefited the wealthy aristocracy almost exclusively. As an institution, it actually hurt poor European immigrants because there was less need for cheap labor as a result of it. Moreover, many European Americans are the descendants of immigrants who came to the U.S. after emancipation. Some came from countries that didn't even partake in colonization or the slave trade, such as Poland. Add on top of this that not all African Americans are descended from freed slaves. Some of their descendants even partook in slavery themselves against their own people in the New World.
      So at the end of the day, what reparations represents is the notion that ALL European Americans, regardless of their ancestry, are guilty. It is not just "sins of our father," it is sins of our neighbor, our kings, our Congress, of ANYONE who belonged to our racial group who partook in these historical actions. It is a form of transgenerational racialized guilt against those of European descent and transgenerational racialized victimization of those of African descent.
      That said, how could reparations ever be justly implemented? Just think of the logistics of such an endeavor and how fraught with incompetence and injustice it would be. If using tax dollars, then the African Americans would essentially just be paying themselves reparations. If a racial tax was assessed, it would be a gross and obvious violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment, which, ironically, is the amendment which also naturalized freed slaves as American citizens.
      That is why reparations for slavery can never be just...or legal...in the United States. Hitchens would minimalize and mock my argument as "white whining," but really, there is just simply no logical or justifiable way to implement reparations based on race, even if the idea seems virtuous at face value.

    • @domsjuk
      @domsjuk Před 3 lety

      @@googleisskynet7312 Hey, this wasn't really what I was discussing, but I'll just accept your point here. However I have to say, I think you make a bit a categorical error. Reparations in the case of US-American slave descendant or in many other cases, are not intended (by any sane person) as a punishment because of some alleged inherited collective guilt. If this were so your point would be correct, but without rewatching this video, I would say generally such propositions including that of Hitchens' would frame them as a form of affirmative action, to make up for past discrimination, which has implications to this day. I don't want to discuss the intricacies of such policies at all, but I think at least in that regard your point is correct: Ethnic boundaries are blurry and the burden of past wrongs is difficult to quantify and account for not only on an individual level, but on a level of group or "racial identity". Should one attempt it nonetheless, and how? Different questions.

  • @DarrenH001
    @DarrenH001 Před 4 lety +38

    Such effortless panache. Also, don't know what more striking: How warm he looked or the fact that wasn't johnnie walker black label in his hand.

    • @Salamattder
      @Salamattder Před 4 lety

      3:40 he was drinking that white wine 🤣😎

  • @matthewbittenbender9191
    @matthewbittenbender9191 Před 5 lety +17

    It sad to have lost such a clear, sober mind and courageous spirit when we need him he most. I could listen to him talk all day.

  • @sunofsotep8265
    @sunofsotep8265 Před 4 lety +57

    I'm overwhelmed with admiration for this man. His tact, his poise, his candor and honesty. His incredible eloquence, and here his piercing cognizance of an important issue that is often mistreated by the ignorant and biased. I would commend his consistency, but I've less respect for consistency after reading Emmerson's Self Reliance. I've never before felt in my life that person was gone too soon. My eternal admiration and respect to you Hitch!

    • @sunofsotep8265
      @sunofsotep8265 Před 4 lety +1

      @ what???

    •  Před 4 lety

      @Miki sadly hitch just got awakened to the fact that life was eternal, that he was wrong about God and misled many, all is not over for him as he will know no rest that’s very sad 😔. Should one respect and admire a lost sinner who confused many and stood on the throne of life denying his creator, well no, one should empathise for one that is so lost and deceived and who sadly apart from a deathbed conversion perished in his sins and trespasses, hardly something to celebrate.

    • @sunofsotep8265
      @sunofsotep8265 Před 4 lety +4

      @ Ah! Now I see. Well then, much good may all of that do you sir. Good day.

    • @familyjermihov2503
      @familyjermihov2503 Před 4 lety +1

      robert marshall nah hitchens was right. Because of him I regained my senses regarding superstition and the harm that a bad metaphysic (such as a belief in the eternal under the guise of a mind) can do.
      Youre incontrovertibly incorrect about Hitchens and its a damn shame you dont have the senses to see otherwise. This is just backhanded nonsense. Keep your religion to yourself. It’s foolish as was as pretentious and senseless.

    • @lovely-shrubbery8578
      @lovely-shrubbery8578 Před 4 lety +1

      @ oh

  • @demoninepro99p
    @demoninepro99p Před 4 lety +25

    An amazing man, with a an astute vision.

  • @samuelbaah7061
    @samuelbaah7061 Před 5 lety +16

    can we get the entire debate please?

  • @sophisticated_patter
    @sophisticated_patter Před 5 lety +5

    Oh, how I wish we were here now.

  • @davidraymondbennett
    @davidraymondbennett Před 3 lety +16

    Brilliant brilliant man. And courageous in his assertions. So badly missed.

    • @adamsmith3413
      @adamsmith3413 Před 3 lety +1

      This is quite a stupid argument from analogy.

  • @john.john.johnny
    @john.john.johnny Před 5 lety +123

    "Torrent of bad faith...lolllll "when people begin to introduce the irrelevant the non sequitur and the generalizations .. you can tell you're onto something". Lollll the Hitch

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered Před 4 lety +6

      When he said that all I could think of was some of the bad rationalizations in the youtube comments. I've read a few times what about the Arabs who practiced slavery in the same time period.

    • @probinson8296
      @probinson8296 Před 4 lety +2

      @@writerconsidered Hmm. Arabs have practised slavery since Sumerian times, as have many, if not most others. Slavery of one sort or another is still widely practised today. During the times that the American slave trade was going, Arabs, Europeans and other African tribes participated.

    • @Cryptonymicus
      @Cryptonymicus Před 4 lety

      @@SkinnySkates Frankly, I think it should be "laugh aloud."

    • @googleisskynet7312
      @googleisskynet7312 Před 3 lety +2

      @@writerconsidered
      They aren't bad rationalizations. They are arguments intended to contextualize reparations as totally illogical and unjust.

    • @googleisskynet7312
      @googleisskynet7312 Před 3 lety +3

      I don't think that people who are being collectively assigned the guilt of historical events based on their race can be automatically dismissed as bad faith actors. Hitchens is basically just dismissing all arguments which attempt to contextualize the absurdity and injustice of the notion of transgenerational race-based reparations which I think is intellectually dishonest at best, and plainly malevolent at worst.

  • @paulroos1015
    @paulroos1015 Před 5 lety +15

    My Irish ancestors came to the u s in the 1840s. If, if. They had food stamps ,subsidised housing and interest free loans i would probably be very wealthy,

    • @HeathWatts
      @HeathWatts Před 5 lety +3

      Probably not. Being on welfare is not as wonderful as evil nut cases such as Ronald Reagan would like us to believe.

    • @HeathWatts
      @HeathWatts Před 5 lety +3

      @Mikkel The Red. Ah, but did the Irish have to go through slavery, then share cropping, then Jim Crow, all at gun point and threat of lynching, my racist little friend? I'm just kidding, I would never be your friend. I hope no one else is either, because you're a terrible person.

    • @MarcoPolo-lb8up
      @MarcoPolo-lb8up Před 5 lety +2

      No, none of those things can make you smart, they are designed to just keep you alive.

    • @3rduncle
      @3rduncle Před 5 lety

      @Erik Mikkelsaar because, as white people, they would have been permitted to do so. To buy property wherever they could afford and participate in business. They were permitted to build an economic base. To be properly educated. They werent just "freed" in rags and told to pull up their bootstraps. But you already knew that. You just chose to ignore it.

  • @malvolio01
    @malvolio01 Před 8 lety +719

    Damn, I miss this guy. So few real thinkers left these days, and even fewer willing to speak up the way he did.

    • @apemanstreetwalker
      @apemanstreetwalker Před 8 lety +14

      +Sean L. oh man....it hurts....I do miss him.

    • @malvolio01
      @malvolio01 Před 8 lety +20

      Jeff Thompson I can only imagine what he'd have to say about the left in its current state at the moment. And, I agree... one of the most intelligent, articulate and outspoken defenders of TRUE liberalism. Have you heard Douglas Murray? He's not Hitchens but he's not bad, either.

    • @augustinehourigan7453
      @augustinehourigan7453 Před 8 lety +10

      +Sean L. How do you know that there are SO FEW "REAL" THINKERS left these days, there are 6.6 billion folk on this planet now!

    • @LD-qj2te
      @LD-qj2te Před 7 lety +18

      Sean L. Hitch was one of a kind ! His fluid logic and silky presentation was priceless

    • @KoreeMichael
      @KoreeMichael Před 6 lety +10

      Sean L. yeah. we need more people like this that aren't afraid to tell the truth to the public

  • @ermingtonplumbing442
    @ermingtonplumbing442 Před 4 lety +12

    My earliest Ancestors in My home country of Australia were sent here against their will as Irish Convict slaves.
    Do I deserve Reparations or does the colour of my skin make me not eligible?

    • @devinmichaelroberts9954
      @devinmichaelroberts9954 Před 4 lety

      liar.

    • @ermingtonplumbing442
      @ermingtonplumbing442 Před 4 lety +4

      @AridMy oldest ancestor was sent here for the charge of " uttering unholy oaths" meaning he was suspected of belonging to an organisation sworn to resist and oppose British rule in Ireland. (eg like the ribbon men)
      If membership could be proven death was the sentence.
      For Suspected resistors confiscation of property, Transportation, whipping and slavery was dished out by the English.
      He would have hated the British Empire as much as any Indigenous Australian ever has.

    • @jacksynth271
      @jacksynth271 Před 4 lety +2

      Arid Ned Kelly's father was sent half way round the world to break rocks in the scorching sun because he stole pigs to feed his family, so you think he deserved it because he was a criminal or is it because he was white?(hint: it's the latter)

    • @moffettcoates6455
      @moffettcoates6455 Před 4 lety

      Arid had nothing to do with race but vulnerability instead.

    • @Weirwood256
      @Weirwood256 Před 4 lety

      The Irish actually do deserve restitution from the British dude, because they KILLED a bunch of them

  • @AN-cy7xm
    @AN-cy7xm Před 4 lety +4

    Regardless of what you think of him, he's got a first rate mind and he's one of the great speakers & teachers...

  • @tomwolfe6063
    @tomwolfe6063 Před 8 lety +533

    Finally, Hitchens said something with which I disagree. Reparations is just about the worst idea I've ever heard.

    • @questioneverything2077
      @questioneverything2077 Před 8 lety +8

      +nthnpark0 I was going disagree til your second comment. Why cant we give reperations in form of college education for blac americans??

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 Před 8 lety

      Not agreeing or disagreeing. Just curious for your reasoning.

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 Před 8 lety +18

      GodlessComedy What happened in the slave trade can never be repaid.
      "black criminals" well you do have to realize that some grow up in crime. Police would´t dare to cross their territories, school useless, parents useless. You have to give them a perspective or nothing will ever change. Can throw them in prison and pay for the rest of their lives in there.
      That´s simply less effective than making sure that they get a perspective. The war on drugs ruined a lot of lives. Some black people got into prison for very minor things. And once you are in there...
      War on drugs created a lot of misery. It also fucked up south america. USA basically did the best thing a criminal could ask for. Making drugs illegal and punished hard makes sure that drug cartels profit the most. And the US citizens paid for it.
      Did you know the CIA financed, armed and sold information to drug cartels? It´s not a tin hat foil story you can look it up for yourself.
      War on drugs is as effective as the war on alcohol was. Please read up on it, every interesting. Racism is what hurts your country the most without understanding the circumstances.

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 Před 8 lety +14

      GodlessComedy Also what about "white crime" the billions in financial fraud? And political corruption, legal tax evasion tactics created by white politicians?

    • @GodlessComedy
      @GodlessComedy Před 8 lety +5

      If it can't be repaid. Then conversation over. Now go tell the BLM movement that!

  • @hughtorrance8819
    @hughtorrance8819 Před 5 lety +138

    One thing you must take away from this if nothing else is the difference in the college/university students who are listening quietly and possibly respectfully while Christopher speaks. What a difference in the habits of the students now. 14-15 years later and they now chant and protest and hurl abuse and disrupt speakers they don't want to listen to. All this in less than 15 years!

    • @lawsonj39
      @lawsonj39 Před 5 lety +8

      I don't know what students you're talking about; the ones I know are good listeners and careful thinkers.

    • @hughtorrance8819
      @hughtorrance8819 Před 5 lety +10

      @@lawsonj39 You should watch more videos and Ben Shapiro, Milo, Charlie Kirk, Candace Owens, Dinesh D'Souza, etc. etc., always seem to have hecklers/protesters in their speaking engagements. Except for one which was done just recently by Ben where I didn't hear a single shout which was really a surprise.

    • @hannibalthe1st565
      @hannibalthe1st565 Před 5 lety +7

      @@hughtorrance8819 i think this is largely because he is taking a far left position right now. If he were taking a far right position there would be more resistance.

    • @hughtorrance8819
      @hughtorrance8819 Před 5 lety +9

      @@hannibalthe1st565 You could be right, I just think it's because the college/universities haven't started the far left sh*t they're doing now. A wonderful and horrifying example of this is a college professor who said the Steven Crowder was abusing him and this professor went off the deep end threatened Crowder via tweets and Crowder confronted him in the classroom where the professor got mightily embarrassed and ran away to the Dean's office for protection. The Dean of course, supported the professor despite all the evidence against him and in a follow up program Crowder was showing the tweets that the nut bag professor was sending to the college - very strange. This is what I mean about the time difference. Look what's happened at Berkeley in 2017 with the Antifa/student riot about Milo speaking - they went nuts and I just can't imagine the students in this video doing that.

    • @ZackTheGopher
      @ZackTheGopher Před 5 lety +2

      They probably didn't disturb Hitchens because they were on his side, I would like to see the other fellow's reception.

  • @ilkos853
    @ilkos853 Před 4 lety +13

    how is this poppin in recommended right now :D

  • @KilgoreTroutAsf
    @KilgoreTroutAsf Před 3 lety +29

    "white whine" just made my day

    • @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023
      @anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah how dare white people "whine" when somebody wants to confiscate parts of their wealth solely for being white? Truly shocking display of immature "whiners".

    • @user-mq8xg5sp9c
      @user-mq8xg5sp9c Před 3 lety

      Racist

    • @will_the_warlord8913
      @will_the_warlord8913 Před 3 lety +1

      and white rage

    • @Zachd500
      @Zachd500 Před 3 lety +1

      @@anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 nothing would be confiscated the US government would pay reparations.

    • @voxomnes9537
      @voxomnes9537 Před 2 lety

      @@anarcho-boulangistllamaent2023 Their wealth?

  • @dittbub
    @dittbub Před 5 lety +11

    does cspan still air stuff like this?

    • @aaront.7932
      @aaront.7932 Před 4 lety +2

      Sadly, aside from rebroadcasts (which I haven't seen) there's no stuff quite like Hitchens to air. He was one of a kind.

  • @Savantjazzcollective
    @Savantjazzcollective Před 4 lety +19

    What does Mr Hitchens actually believe should be done? I saw not a conclusion nor a resolution...

    • @georgebyrne3825
      @georgebyrne3825 Před 4 lety +5

      haha I know sometimes he thinks on so many levels at once u walk away with no idea what he's talking about

    • @georgebyrne3825
      @georgebyrne3825 Před 4 lety +2

      having said that I'd argue he was suggesting was taking a chunk of money from the treasury and distributing it (to African American people who were descendants of slaves)

    • @OsidiustheEmphatic
      @OsidiustheEmphatic Před 4 lety +3

      @@georgebyrne3825 Exactly that. It's a logical acknowledgement of the role slavery paid in paving the US.

    • @Savantjazzcollective
      @Savantjazzcollective Před 4 lety +5

      @@georgebyrne3825 i get that argument, but what about the 99% who never owned a slave? is taking their money away a righteous act? In my mind, compensation to long lost ancestors is too far, welcoming them fully into society allowing them to play by the same rules is justification enough... Allowing them to buy cheap government land might be a good step however...

    • @georgebyrne3825
      @georgebyrne3825 Před 4 lety

      @@Savantjazzcollective yea super complicated thing to roll out. I think it'd have to be hashed out within the back community.

  • @petersonscottb
    @petersonscottb Před 5 lety +22

    For me to be for reparations for slavery, someone needs to answer the following questions.
    Why should I pay for the sins of my ancestors?
    If I should pay for the sins of my ancestors who were slave owners, why should I not receive credit for my ancestors who fought against slavery?
    Why should I pay for reparations to those black people who are better off than I am?
    What about people who are half white and half black such a Barack Obama and Mariah Carey? Should they pay reparations to themselves?

    • @clash74jm
      @clash74jm Před 4 lety +5

      @Omar Savory There are many factors to consider (petersonscottb brought up some of them), however, to consider the Civil Liberties Act of 1888 as a precedent is not correct. This Act gave reparations to SURVIVING Japanese individuals affected, not their descendants.

    • @clash74jm
      @clash74jm Před 4 lety

      @Omar Savory Nowhere did I mention statute of limitations. Also, to equate inheritance with reparations shows ignorance on your part. Due to the logistics involved with distributing wealth to those affected by slavery, it will never happen. The best thing would be to do something similar to what you mentioned, Georgetown. Handing out money to the affected masses will only serve to lower their socioeconomic status even further. Thus, the best action would be to provide financial support to higher education, or perhaps even a lower interest rate on business loans. Increasing the education level of the masses affected, will have the result of increasing their socioeconomic level in the long run. It's not that I disagree with helping those affected, but just handing out lump sums of money is illogical. But, and this is a very big "but", how do you propose determining who can receive the financial support?

    • @clash74jm
      @clash74jm Před 4 lety

      @Omar Savory Okay, but how would you suggest going about determining who gets what? If you decide to use DNA to exclude those that don't meet a "minimum threshold", you are going to open up Pandora's box, regarding unsolved crimes. So, again, what would you use to determine eligibility?

    • @pappy374
      @pappy374 Před 4 lety

      @Omar Savory I'd prefer that we work towards a nation that doesn't need reparations because there is no longer such a great inequality that they are needed.

    • @pappy374
      @pappy374 Před 4 lety

      @Omar Savory You have data that proves we shouldn't work towards a more equal society? I'll take a look at that, because if you think just giving some people some money is going to fix anything then you're nuts.

  • @snowflakemelter1172
    @snowflakemelter1172 Před 5 lety +38

    Wouldn't a fundamental principle of law be broken by paying compensation to someone for just being a relative of a person who suffered injury ?

    • @kingirisnetwork9847
      @kingirisnetwork9847 Před 5 lety +1

      Rufus Chucklebutty it’s more about the wave of economic and social damage that had been done by Jim Crow, slavery, ect.. All people of color have been affected by these things. Couldn’t get jobs, buy homes ect..

    • @dickiebhee4711
      @dickiebhee4711 Před 5 lety +3

      when people die, do their homes and cars go with them into the grave?

    • @chadmueller1784
      @chadmueller1784 Před 5 lety +4

      Your question implies that the only blacks who have suffered in america did so as slaves, when I'd argue that slavery was just the initial injury (Jim Crow, etc.) and more importantly that damage is still being done to this day (the ridiculously high numbers of African Americans incarcerated in this country, etc.) and thus the reasonableness of reparations to that race of humans.

    • @renaissancemarinetv3536
      @renaissancemarinetv3536 Před 5 lety +4

      @@chadmueller1784 then perhaps the democratic party as an entity should pay reparations.

    • @rodstarcke5423
      @rodstarcke5423 Před 5 lety +6

      @@kingirisnetwork9847 , but how is throwing money at the problem going to solve it. Wouldn't a better solution be for the black community to first gain self responsibility for the crime that exists in their neighborhood?

  • @HeathenGeek
    @HeathenGeek Před 5 lety +45

    Today's word boys and girls is. . . Mendicant

  • @m.f.b7144
    @m.f.b7144 Před 3 lety +6

    Christopher you were born in the wrong year. You belong to our present and future. You are just amazing. 💖

    • @likerofvideos4534
      @likerofvideos4534 Před 3 lety +1

      I don’t know if the present and future would be the same if he hadn’t already been here. A truly brilliant mind, and I agree with the heart of your statement, we need him now more than ever

    • @poozer1986
      @poozer1986 Před rokem

      Why thank you, comrade

  • @TheUrgleBurgle
    @TheUrgleBurgle Před 4 lety +62

    I wish he was still with us.

    • @lutherblissett8780
      @lutherblissett8780 Před 4 lety

      He would be horrified at how far we've fallen.

    • @timmorodgers4271
      @timmorodgers4271 Před 4 lety

      Luther Blissett but not surprised

    • @zigababnik8780
      @zigababnik8780 Před 3 lety

      @@lutherblissett8780 I'm not sure, Dawkins and DeGrasse totally disappointed, they're completely synchronized with mainstream propaganda.

  • @VolvoImpala
    @VolvoImpala Před 4 lety +10

    I'm kinda convinced if every grievance anybody ever had were repaid the world would just end.

    • @terrancehall9762
      @terrancehall9762 Před 4 lety

      So make excuses for evil?

    • @VolvoImpala
      @VolvoImpala Před 4 lety +1

      @@terrancehall9762 A grievance based society is evil.

    • @terrancehall9762
      @terrancehall9762 Před 4 lety

      @@VolvoImpala so more excuses for evil

    • @himehomemi5642
      @himehomemi5642 Před 4 lety +1

      Haha with the amount of heinous shit everyones done to everyone else we'd probably end up with ww3 fighting to see who's picking up the tab

    • @KLRCAT
      @KLRCAT Před 4 lety

      "If you give a man a fish he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will eat forever"
      Reparations will cause more damage, as it will only make people more dependent on the government. This is standard Marxist/Communist thinking. Now you understand why he addressed the audience as "Comrades" 🤦‍♂️

  • @dimbulb23
    @dimbulb23 Před 5 lety +43

    The Devil is in the details.
    How do you calculate how much each victim class member was harmed in terms of dollars and how much each individual oppressor class member is culpable and how much he must pay.

    • @jeffsim4191
      @jeffsim4191 Před 5 lety +13

      Moreover, which members are actually within the oppressor class and which were the victims. West Africans captured and sold the majority of the slaves that ended up in America. Gonna do Ancestry DNA to try and figure out if you came from one of the people that got captured or one of them that did the capturing? Or what if your mother's side was black slave trader, but your Dads side was a slave? what the hell you gonna do them? Or are we just going by how much melanin you've got and whites with ancestors who were surfs or another oppressed people that came to North America have gotta pay also? And on and on it goes.

    • @dubsspilly5864
      @dubsspilly5864 Před 5 lety +1

      @Dra O 2 weeks

    • @TheSonwu39
      @TheSonwu39 Před 5 lety

      Duke Economics Professor William A Darity has some good starting points.

    • @juanlambda27
      @juanlambda27 Před 5 lety +6

      Did Hitch say the reparations have to actually be monetary? He does talk about the Federal Reserve and America's wealth but I don't believe he ever actually mentioned actual money. I think he is making a far more important point. One that still needs to be made and we need to be reminded of every time a Black person is killed unjustly by cops, every time a Black person is profiled by White civilians, every time a Black person is given a harsh punishment disproportionate to the crime they committed. Yes perhaps some money is in order but the question goes far deeper than mere money.

    • @2Brian
      @2Brian Před 5 lety

      DNA analysis.

  • @Drahthaar422
    @Drahthaar422 Před 9 lety +11

    Have to disagree with Hitch here. There's a reason it was called the slave trade and not the slave theft. It's not like the slave traders were hunting down Africans and snatching them up. It would be one thing if that was the case, but the way it happened is that African warlords and chieftains rounded up their subjects and sold them to slave traders for rum. The slave traders were buying slaves, yes, but the African chieftains were selling them. So let's not act like white Americans (many of whom have zero slaveowners in their ancestry) are entirely responsible for slavery in North America.

    • @johnpliskin8759
      @johnpliskin8759 Před 6 lety +2

      Wade Perkins
      what the fuck? so calling it "trade" makes it not a horrible thing? what the actual fuck?

    • @domc2909
      @domc2909 Před 6 lety +1

      No John, calling it a "trade" means somebody was doing the selling. Who do you think that was?

  • @jrbr549
    @jrbr549 Před 5 lety +4

    This is the first time I've heard Hitch make absolutely no sense whatsoever. He's not even addressing the two basic questions: who pays and who gets paid?

    • @johnorona99
      @johnorona99 Před 4 lety

      Way to broadcast to the world that you missed the point

    • @Russyda1
      @Russyda1 Před 4 lety

      I wonder why this is the first time u disagree with him lol

    • @jrbr549
      @jrbr549 Před 4 lety

      @@Russyda1 I don't understand what you are trying to imply. And I definitely don't understand the "lol."

  • @Jenbug123
    @Jenbug123 Před 4 lety +13

    He would love talking to college right now...lol

    • @curtmacquarrie
      @curtmacquarrie Před 4 lety +3

      I'm sure he would, what point do you think you've made?

    • @TheRiboka
      @TheRiboka Před 4 lety

      He'd get branded as a racist and white supremacist

    • @curtmacquarrie
      @curtmacquarrie Před 4 lety +4

      @@TheRiboka no, he certainly wouldn't.

    • @TheRiboka
      @TheRiboka Před 4 lety

      Just Google Evergreen college and watch the mayhem, you'll get what I mean

    • @curtmacquarrie
      @curtmacquarrie Před 4 lety +4

      @@TheRiboka ok... What is your point?

  • @alkinboo
    @alkinboo Před 5 lety +31

    If the English Navy protected the Atlantic Slave Trade shouldn't they also be liable to pay Reparations? Tell me instead about the great slave revolt and how they earned their freedom, OH wait that never happened. Instead, 350,000 whites gave their lives to win their freedom. That sounds like reparation enough.

    • @ianman6
      @ianman6 Před 5 lety +1

      You mean the constant slave revolts? They never happened?! Ever heard of Haiti?

    • @wilgarris
      @wilgarris Před 5 lety +1

      You can't say that, it goes against the liberal dogma and you will be hunted down and silenced for having an opposing opinion and thinking for yourself.

    • @ianman6
      @ianman6 Před 5 lety

      @@wilgarris Lol, it's funny that factually incorrect statements are "opposing opinions" fiercely rejected by some liberal boogie man.

    • @michealwillis
      @michealwillis Před 5 lety +3

      Those lives given were not to free the slaves, but to keep the Union intact. And I’m guessing you also don’t know or care to know, about all of the other injustices blacks were subjugated to after those lives were “given” and well up to today as well. Pick up a book and learn history before you shoot off at the mouth.

    • @wilgarris
      @wilgarris Před 5 lety

      I'm sure that you care little about the lives given to free slaves and would rather dwell on the evils of the whites but the fact remains that the freedom of the slaves was a direct result of the civil war and the men and women (mostly white) who died. I've studied my history perhaps you should as well before you shoot off your mouth.

  • @againsteternity110
    @againsteternity110 Před 4 lety +24

    In order for a fight to stop and peace to ensue, one has to be okay with being hit last, and the other live with being the one who hit last, or the fight will simply never cease.

    • @acarpentersson8271
      @acarpentersson8271 Před 4 lety +2

      Yes, and when victory is won, it is crucial that the victor declares victory and ends the war. If you win, but continue waging war, you will either begin the process of genocide, or provoke the other side to return to the war. Neither is good. It shows that peace and equality are not the prize, but domination, and utter destruction.

    • @Slimbones125
      @Slimbones125 Před 4 lety

      Terrible morality here

    • @againsteternity110
      @againsteternity110 Před 4 lety +7

      @@Slimbones125 It's an objective statement, not a morally virtuous position.

  • @TheMonkeymonkeyking
    @TheMonkeymonkeyking Před 4 lety

    Anyone have a link to the full debate?

    • @kylescheller122
      @kylescheller122 Před 4 lety

      www.c-span.org/video/?167191-1/reparations-slavery

  • @antoniodicaprio7792
    @antoniodicaprio7792 Před 5 lety

    Beautifully spoken

  • @lavawingsplays1627
    @lavawingsplays1627 Před 3 lety +40

    America needs this man so much right now. RIP Christopher.

    • @captur69
      @captur69 Před 3 lety +1

      And the planet....

    • @Longtack55
      @Longtack55 Před 3 lety +1

      "Be assured I am resting as I AM AN ATHEIST!" (Message from the crematorium.)

    • @captur69
      @captur69 Před 3 lety

      @@Longtack55 interesting quote....?..

    • @Longtack55
      @Longtack55 Před 3 lety +1

      @@captur69 I was presumptuously projecting through the medium of Imagination. I've seen so many admirers of Hitchens wishing him "RIP" and I'm momentarily apoplectic at the meaninglessness to an Atheist. He's not "resting" - owing to a sudden attack of death.
      Hitchens' wisdom was imparted universally and The Planet was better for him.

    • @captur69
      @captur69 Před 3 lety

      @@Longtack55 definitely.....death is final.. I never really get the "rip" brigade....

  • @matthewlane9071
    @matthewlane9071 Před 4 lety +15

    Hitch rarely lets me down. So happy to hear his thoughts on this. A (mostly) morally consistent man he was.

    • @suarezguy
      @suarezguy Před 4 lety +4

      A pretty big exception being advocating that other people go to war.

    • @matthewlane9071
      @matthewlane9071 Před 4 lety +1

      @@suarezguy huge, yeah.

    • @Davieboy-dovbear
      @Davieboy-dovbear Před 4 lety

      @@matthewlane9071 - STFU Dumbass!

    • @matthewlane9071
      @matthewlane9071 Před 4 lety +4

      @@Davieboy-dovbear thanks for weighing in with your envious skill for debate, Davie.

    • @Davieboy-dovbear
      @Davieboy-dovbear Před 4 lety

      @@matthewlane9071 ​ Matthew Allen Lane - all the pro-Hitchens arguments (and Hitchen's himself), *not that you have made any!* .. are subjective and lack essence. What Hitchens is doing to you all (has been doing), is solely for the purpose of selling his books. Hitchens is a conman with a rich vocabulary that can manipulate the minds of people like you (the uneducated and the misinformed). I believe too, Christianity is a fake religion but is the easiest to debunk and that's why Hitchens attacks Christianity all the time, it makes him look good! But trust me when I tell you this, there's hardly any difference between the du mb christians who give money to the Church, and you bu ms who give money to Hitchens (or show support for him) .. this is what I meant when I said _"S T F U,"_ I just wanted to save space & time and being that you all Hitchens fan[atic]s are so _”smart”_ (LOL), I was expecting you gonna understand.

  • @zSchreckensszene
    @zSchreckensszene Před 4 lety +2

    I miss this man so much

  • @manbearpig7521
    @manbearpig7521 Před 4 lety +1

    Who was the AG he refers too?

    • @macharper8214
      @macharper8214 Před 4 lety +1

      John Ashcroft. Before he was AG he was a governor of Missouri..

  • @FreakishPower
    @FreakishPower Před 5 lety +83

    that was the weakest argument I've ever seen from him. 95% was fluff (he just mesmerized the audience with his skills of speech and history), and his real answer came down to the US Treasury made money off of it? Really? Glossed over the answer completely.

    • @gravypatron
      @gravypatron Před 5 lety +4

      I think you just put into words the floating mist in my mind that I've been thinking of since I've seen this video. I won't go so far as to say I'm disappointed with his answer as it was, he's human too, but rather- I feel bad for being irritated with his shenanigan.

    • @elmoblatch9787
      @elmoblatch9787 Před 5 lety +3

      You nailed it, and that is so un Hitchens-esque. He blew it here and was not convincing. How often can you say that about Hitch? Not often.

    • @kc1487
      @kc1487 Před 5 lety

      So, no reparations for you descendants of slaves in America? Because we can't find you? Because it's not practical? Because it's not merited? Discuss.

    • @SpywareEverywhere
      @SpywareEverywhere Před 5 lety +3

      The man is good but certainly not flawless. He really failed here.

    • @D00kerT
      @D00kerT Před 5 lety +5

      I think he was asked to defend the opposing argument, by the event organizers, for reparations and this was the best strategy he came up with. I think Hitchens would ultimately agree that there is no way to justly implement the idea and further policy, of reparations. I think he would agree that it is completely unworkable and that any vague and etherial links to "white privilege" (really in-group preference which all human beings can be subject to) are unworkable.

  • @altratronic
    @altratronic Před 5 lety +25

    Hitchens here speaks eloquently and at length about the issue without explicitly declaring his position.

    • @metromoppet
      @metromoppet Před 5 lety +2

      There is one thing ,I observe, which is the statement that these ' so' unfortunate soles were wrenched from some sort of Utopian freedom to an indeterminate slavery... Stop.! These peoples were no more free than were captives taken in their incessant wars working in their own domain. It is a proven state that the captives taken in dispute were no less captive than those non captives living in their own home environment's ,that is to say subjects of the KIng?Queen Whichever. The middle passage is the nightmare to which all succumbed and there should be recompense, but to whom?

    • @scottnineteen
      @scottnineteen Před 5 lety +9

      Did we watch a different videos? He couldn't have been clearer- pay reparations.

    • @jesseatwater393
      @jesseatwater393 Před 5 lety

      @@metromoppet Not just the soles but the toes, the ankles, the arms and legs. And the torsos. And let us not forget the heads!

    • @v-town1980
      @v-town1980 Před 5 lety +6

      @scott_ I'm not paying; my family owned zero slaves, and didn't arrive in the US until the 1920s. So stick your "pay reparations." Making an entire generation who've committed no crimes pay an entire generation who've never been enslaved is ridiculous. Should we blame today's German's for the Holocaust? No.

    • @acetate909
      @acetate909 Před 5 lety

      @@v-town1980
      Today's Germans have very much recocsiled with their past. Personal responsibility is not the same as cultural responsibility. I don't personally use the things that a portion of my taxes go to but I pay them because it's not an elacart system. That said, I don't believe that we should pay reparations but for different reasons than you stated.

  • @cullenmott7614
    @cullenmott7614 Před 2 lety +11

    *REPARATIONS: “BACK-PAY. OWED. AND IT’S OVERDUE.”*

    • @robertopistone1179
      @robertopistone1179 Před rokem

      I agree but the question is to whom. Every person of that era is dead. Do we give reparations to every person of color????

    • @cullenmott7614
      @cullenmott7614 Před rokem

      @@robertopistone1179 Yes, to every person of color. That era is only half-dead.

    • @johnnicol64
      @johnnicol64 Před rokem +1

      Go see the AFRICANS, who committed the original sin of enslaving them . Easy ...

  • @chriswhited
    @chriswhited Před 4 lety

    so what's the number per relation whatever that is?

  • @sophomoremd
    @sophomoremd Před 5 lety +16

    It's weird I always hear so much about how great this guy was but I don't think I've fully agreed with a single argument he's ever made. Yet I enjoy watching him make them.

  • @jklxn
    @jklxn Před 9 lety +6

    My ancestors came from Norway, and some joined the Union Army straight away. So, what of that? I have one that died while serving. So, who owes here?
    How do people who have no ancestors that were slaves deserve reparations?

    • @robertvernon4826
      @robertvernon4826 Před 9 lety

      Typical european thinking,...so called.

    • @jklxn
      @jklxn Před 9 lety +4

      robert vernon
      what, not wanting to pay for something to some one else for no good reason? How about reparations for my ancestors dying..?
      If your ancestors werent slaves? No reps. That would take care of a good majority of it.

    • @robertvernon4826
      @robertvernon4826 Před 9 lety

      I am european just like you, you idiot

    • @jklxn
      @jklxn Před 9 lety +4

      well wth was i supposed to think?

  • @ellystripes
    @ellystripes Před 4 lety

    Miss you always, Hitch.

  • @Cttocs1
    @Cttocs1 Před 4 lety

    What university was this at?

  • @Gauge1LiveSteam
    @Gauge1LiveSteam Před 5 lety +13

    I've been paying reparations since LBJ's "Great Society" in 1965.

    • @theodorebrown978
      @theodorebrown978 Před 4 lety +6

      White people was collecting that LBJ check dumbass

    • @anirudhmenon5085
      @anirudhmenon5085 Před 4 lety +4

      @@baddog6003 are you native American? Just curious

    • @user-vl5qg5rf4n
      @user-vl5qg5rf4n Před 4 lety

      @@baddog6003 >not realizing islam at one point conquered half of europe and all of northern and eastern africa.
      >not surprised at all
      basically what I'm saying is, if we had left them alone they'd probably be equal in terms of societal and economic development. Oh and they would all be arab more than likely. perhaps spreading so far that we were too

  • @epicmatt12
    @epicmatt12 Před 5 lety +56

    Here because of the most recent “Making Sense” Podcast. Anyone else with me?

    • @rickybosephus2036
      @rickybosephus2036 Před 5 lety +14

      Dude, reparations do not make sense. Hitchens is a moron in this area. I would debate and destroy him any day of the week and have gone to toe with him in the past. He thanked me even, and said he learned something! Reparations for any group is divisive and pushed by the world wide Marxist communist effort to divide the US and destroy it.

    • @epicmatt12
      @epicmatt12 Před 5 lety +9

      @@rickybosephus2036 I agree with you. Reparations make no sense.

    • @stuboy261
      @stuboy261 Před 5 lety +6

      Yep, here for the same reason, Hitch was so salient and informed about everything I've seen him in I really thought I might come here to find an intelligent argument for reparations... I was very disappointed.

    • @johnorona99
      @johnorona99 Před 5 lety +1

      @@epicmatt12 What part of hitchens argument do you disagree with?

    • @Alacard0malley
      @Alacard0malley Před 5 lety

      Yep

  • @davidjackson940
    @davidjackson940 Před 3 lety

    Is this complete video somewhere?

  • @sudo_nym
    @sudo_nym Před 4 lety +16

    His voice. His mind. Sad loss :(

    • @roquefortfiles
      @roquefortfiles Před 4 lety

      A razor sharp mind with a horrifyingly wicked wit. Good luck to who ever debates him. He will take you apart and you'll thank him for it

    • @Pantano63
      @Pantano63 Před 3 lety

      Meh, we'll manage. We've managed, in fact.

    • @sudo_nym
      @sudo_nym Před 3 lety

      @@Pantano63
      I think you’re confusing irreplaceable with valuable.

  • @KOLDBLU3ST33L
    @KOLDBLU3ST33L Před 5 lety +47

    R.I.P. Christopher.
    You, sir, are sorely missed.

    • @dougwright209
      @dougwright209 Před 5 lety +1

      @@advancedchiropractic667 Isn't there some irony here (if you think he belongs in hell)? An atheist is proposing a very Christian act. It may be as simple as acknowledging the accurate history.

    • @jonfromtheuk467
      @jonfromtheuk467 Před 5 lety +1

      @@advancedchiropractic667 a stupid argument and non sequitur

    • @kindanyume
      @kindanyume Před 5 lety

      and yet another fuktard religious idiot trying topush their shit on others.. even after they are dead... you should be ashamed of yourself but with your delusions youll never grap that fact..@@advancedchiropractic667

    • @nonamemcgillicutty9585
      @nonamemcgillicutty9585 Před 4 lety

      @@advancedchiropractic667 the lowest pit of hell is reserved for people who lead astray the Lord's children... He's certainly getting bent over by Satan right now

    • @nonamemcgillicutty9585
      @nonamemcgillicutty9585 Před 4 lety

      @@dougwright209Christian act? Paying for something u didn't take part in is a Christian act now? Peculiar...

  • @ServingChrist
    @ServingChrist Před 5 lety +10

    Perhaps other speakers ventured into these areas but a few observations:
    1. Mr. Hitchens claims the US should pay reparations for slavery but does not mention England should even though England started the practice in the US as early as 1619. The US was born into this practice and couldn't change things overnight. Yet, not a word about this aspect.
    2. He frames the subject in ways that avoid important questions. For example, slavery was a legal practice. If it had been an illegal practice it would have been much smaller in scale. What precedent do you set if you punish people for doing something that was legal simply based on changing moral grounds? In addition, we have a practice in the West of not punishing the son for the sin's of the father or in this case the sins of the great grandfather being pushed on the great grandson. Except that doesn't even have it right because modern Americans have varying ancestry so only a percentage of their ancestry may have any tie to slavery if at all. This is all major departure from typical criminal and civil law so we would be creating a new precedent.
    3. He ignores that genetic and/or other environmental factors are contributing to the existing divide rather than past issues with slavery.
    4. Perhaps the biggest question avoided is will reparations actually heal the divide or will it widen it? Because if it becomes a practice it will create a lot of resentment and there will be repercussions that may be worse than the issue thought to be solved.

    • @jeffsim4191
      @jeffsim4191 Před 5 lety +3

      Another thing he ignores... Most slaves from West Africa were captured and sold by West African's.

    • @charlesgradle286
      @charlesgradle286 Před 5 lety

      Native Americans were screwed the most because the Europeans came in and took their land and their culture. So with this where does it end? Reparations is a dumb and dangerous idea.

    • @Lodatzor
      @Lodatzor Před 5 lety

      @@charlesgradle286
      *"1. Mr. Hitchens claims the US should pay reparations for slavery but does not mention England should even though England started the practice in the US as early as 1619. The US was born into this practice and couldn't change things overnight. Yet, not a word about this aspect."*
      Probably because the number of slaves owned in English colonies in the US was tiny, and also because the English didn't have slavery IN ENGLAND. It was something only done in the American colonies, and mostly in the Caribbean. So, why would England today be responsible for what American colonists did, especially after they gained independence from Britain before the slave trade even became as big as it was?
      Secondly, the British already paid reparations for the slave trade. It took them 200 years, but the British tax-payer paid off the cost of abolition.
      I agree with everything else you wrote.

    • @monicasuzette
      @monicasuzette Před 5 lety +2

      @@charlesgradle286 naTive Americans already receive reparations. So do Jewish Peoples and japaneese..this is not something that hasn't or isn't being done .it is okay for everyone else but dumb for black desendants of slavery..

    • @BillGreenAZ
      @BillGreenAZ Před 5 lety +1

      Charles Gradle There were only about 10 million Natives in America when Columbus arrived. They didn't claim the whole continent as theirs so very little of their land was stolen. The reason they were put in reservations is because they savagely killed innocent men, women and children who settled on land the Natives didn't claim.

  • @moviesofmathew
    @moviesofmathew Před 4 lety +3

    Does anyone know where the full debate is

  • @desnebula5699
    @desnebula5699 Před 5 lety +1

    I find myself agreeing with Hitchens on every occasion except twice. 1. when he said women cant be funny and 2. now.
    Reparations were paid in blood when North and South fought a disastrous war were thousands upon thousands were killed.

  • @williamjameslehy1341
    @williamjameslehy1341 Před 8 lety +129

    There are no pharaonic Egyptians? But there are classical-era Greeks? Even if you dismiss Egypt's Muslim Arab majority as having broken continuity with their ancient ancestors, the country's significant Coptic minority are unarguably the carriers of their country's ancient culture. Every bit as much as the Greek Christians of today are of their own country's legacy. This is really a terrible analogy, especially coming from Hitchens.

    • @kundakaps
      @kundakaps Před 6 lety +14

      Jacob Hoss
      Modern Greeks at least speak a similar language to ancient Greeks. They have in way or another had continuity in the the same geographical locations.
      The pharaohs ruled over many millenia (some pharaohs were Nubians) and different groups have ruled this part of the world and leaving their legacy, including the Greeks. Modern Egyptians speak Arabic and identify more with Arabs from Arabia in terms of what they hold dear and important.
      Greeks on the other hand still identify with the ancient kingdoms.

    • @darksydesamy
      @darksydesamy Před 6 lety +1

      Coptic and Muslim Egyptians are exactly the same. Just different religion.

    • @ItsameAlex
      @ItsameAlex Před 6 lety +2

      Hey Jacob, murd kk owned you, but you wont reply will you?

    • @robappleby583
      @robappleby583 Před 6 lety +3

      The Elgin marbles were stolen quite recently from Greece, not in the classical period.

    • @alistairmuir5521
      @alistairmuir5521 Před 6 lety

      It is a needless argument too. The Rosetta Stone is not a stolen portion of a work of art. Its historical significance isn't even innate - it's only interesting due to the fact that it permitted the translation of hieroglyphics. Its relevance to the modern population of Egypt is no greater than its relevance to anyone else - regardless of how many Coptics or Pharaohs still live.

  • @Mishkafofer
    @Mishkafofer Před 5 lety +58

    Slave trade, well, it was a trade. This discussion about the reparation from the buyer. What about reparation from the seller?

    • @zak1424
      @zak1424 Před 5 lety

      could you elaborate?

    • @johnnyhogan5880
      @johnnyhogan5880 Před 5 lety +21

      @@zak1424 I believe that comment refers to Africans who sold or traded their own people.

    • @zak1424
      @zak1424 Před 5 lety +5

      simply saying "other people did bad things too, why are they not in trouble?" I think I ridiculous. It shouldn't matter! responsibility needs to be taken for your own actions, and what can be done to remedy the situation must be done.

    • @MNAHN-T.GOF-NN
      @MNAHN-T.GOF-NN Před 5 lety +14

      @@zak1424 "responsibility needs to be taken for your own actions"
      But it wasn't his own actions. There exists no victim nor perpetrator of the crime you speak of in the world anymore. Meanwhile the practice of slavery is nearly abolished and outlawed world-wide today, and Africa has received unimaginable sums of money in charity throughout the last century. I'd like you to explain who is responsible for both of these things, and why they would owe anyone anything.
      You can argue that throwing money at Africa has not changed anything and I might even agree with you, but you must still name who handed over that money.

    • @TheSonwu39
      @TheSonwu39 Před 5 lety

      A good point.

  • @investigate3_11
    @investigate3_11 Před 3 lety +1

    What a great mind. It seems to me that this is the opening statement of a debate. If so, where is the rest of it?

    • @mariosargiropoulos1715
      @mariosargiropoulos1715 Před 3 lety +1

      Search “Christopher Hitchens Reparations”. The entire debate will be listed there.

  • @janderson2709
    @janderson2709 Před 4 lety +7

    Reparations are a terrible idea. Think of the level of scrutiny of people’s history required to properly distribute reparatory money properly. The records of history wouldn’t be adequate for the average joe.
    So, you’d have to have a blanket policy, such as all black Americans receive reparations. But then what of the blacks who’s recent ancestry does not involve slavery, what of the blacks descended from those that themselves sold slaves-what are they owed? What of mixed race Americans descended from slave trader heritage, what of blacks like Oprah Winfrey, who are a hundred thousand times more successful than the average white?
    Morally, there is a case to be made, but sadly there is no practical way that this could be implemented fairly.

    • @janderson2709
      @janderson2709 Před 4 lety

      @Tom Voke Yes, I did. What makes you think that? Also, don't like your own comment--it's cringeworthy.

    • @janderson2709
      @janderson2709 Před 4 lety

      @Tom Voke I left a comment regarding reparations on a video regarding reparations.
      I am saying that morally, as Hitchens argued, there is a good case to be made that descendants of slaves deserve reparations. However, there is no way to implement this fairly. That is my point. If I can't leave that comment on this video then I'm not sure where I could leave it.
      And regarding whether or not I'm 'obsessed' (after one instance, you may want to look that word's definition up) with your comment likes. It was merely a passing comment. It's amusing how when you post a comment it immediately has 1 like, yet none thereafter. You must have one very dedicated fan!

  • @vitruviuspolio
    @vitruviuspolio Před 5 lety +63

    Not his best moment, by far. Comparing the Atlantic slave trade to the acquisition of the Elgin marbles is so ridiculous as to be insulting. Also, his statement that there is scarcely stone upon stone in Washington, D.C. that was not put there by slaves shows a sad ignorance of the history of the city in which he certainly spent a fair amount of time. Maybe one can make a good argument to reparations, but Hitchens hasn't made one here.

    • @phaedrussocrates7636
      @phaedrussocrates7636 Před 5 lety +12

      His point with that was about shiteaters like you using such stupid comparisons to twist the issue.

    • @ikemreacts
      @ikemreacts Před 5 lety +5

      You typed a lot of words, but did not make a point. What is it, or don't you know?

    • @ronno108
      @ronno108 Před 5 lety +12

      I have to agree, not Hitchens best moment.

    • @ikemreacts
      @ikemreacts Před 5 lety +6

      @@phaedrussocrates7636 What comparison did I use in my statement, virgin?

    • @StephenPaulTroup
      @StephenPaulTroup Před 5 lety +13

      @@phaedrussocrates7636 To paraphrase Hitchens himself @ 3:13, when people start responding to your argument by calling you a 'shiteater', you know you're on to something.

  • @bigsoso20
    @bigsoso20 Před 9 lety +5

    Some people in the comment section are just ridiculous. Can you not see the clear gap between blacks and the rest of america? The living conditions and treatment of black people in america by the system obviously shows that. Stats don't lie. It was this same system that had slaves and benefited from the free labour that has created this massive gap and still continuous to widen the gap. Clearly something has to be done to fix it.

    • @socraytes
      @socraytes Před 9 lety

      Yomamas Nekst And that "something" would be what?

    • @bigsoso20
      @bigsoso20 Před 9 lety

      socraytes Maybe investing more into these communities. Developing better systems of education? I don't know I'm no politician but something better than what the government is doing right now

    • @socraytes
      @socraytes Před 9 lety

      Yomamas Nekst As a nation we pay more now into education now than we've ever paid in the history of the United States yet we're falling further and further down the rankings. Explain how the federal government funding education is helping? As for the communities how can communities thrive when crime is such that business don't want to go into those communities for fear of going under. You can't just dump money on the problem but again if you could who would pay and what would they pay?

    • @BollocksUtwat
      @BollocksUtwat Před 9 lety +2

      socraytes Crime is an economic symptom. On a large scale you cannot distinguish between those.
      In general though the west has gone so far in the wrong direction with the triumph of neo-liberalism in the last 30 years that its not just Blacks that are being stiffed, its everyone in the middle class and the working class. So the whole damned thing is going in the wrong direction so its no surprise that Blacks aren't getting miraculously saved by a system that can't even keep formerly privileged white people from suffering.
      Also, spending money isn't a magic barometer. Its how that money is spent thats the issue, and the policies that go with it. All this standardized testing nonsense that keeps coming up is a lot of money spent on something that doesn't improve anything.

    • @exilfromsanity
      @exilfromsanity Před 9 lety +1

      Yomamas Nekst I have a novel idea on how to fix it.
      How about the blacks in America get an education and a job, marry and raise families, care for their young, eschew the life of crime and drugs and thuggery, and see how that works.

  • @JohnWilliams-channel
    @JohnWilliams-channel Před 3 lety +6

    I think reparations should take the reverse form of Lee Atwater's southern strategy. If we propose to help everyone who suffers from a legacy of poverty, if that helps minorities such as blacks more, then so be it. There is so much injustice in US history, and I think the proof is in the soaring poverty rates of minorities. We need to provide them with opportunities to advance their social class, and do it under the rubric of lifting everyone out of poverty.

    • @NeganLucilleForever
      @NeganLucilleForever Před 3 lety +2

      reparations make no sense for these reasons:
      1. no one who was subjected to slavery is alive
      2. not all black people descended from slaves
      3. not all white people descended from slave owners
      4. there were black slave owners (though very few)
      you can't lift anyone out of poverty by giving them handouts.
      there are more poor white people than black people in America, so why should the black people get help and not the white people? if you want to help, just help those who need help, don't pick and choose based on race, that's racism.

    • @JohnWilliams-channel
      @JohnWilliams-channel Před 2 lety

      @@MrWhodatsay Don't get me started about colonialism in Africa. That is NOT an argument you are going to win.

    • @Atamanxxxvii
      @Atamanxxxvii Před 2 lety

      @@JohnWilliams-channel Lol, I hear this every time I'm about to spank some idiot over colonialism. Give it your best shot.

    • @JohnWilliams-channel
      @JohnWilliams-channel Před 2 lety

      @@Atamanxxxvii Are you going to deny colonialism from the major western powers, England, France, Spain, Portugal, and others? Because that's where you get spanked, Skippy.

    • @Atamanxxxvii
      @Atamanxxxvii Před 2 lety +1

      @@JohnWilliams-channel well do it then, come on I'm waiting

  • @gallaxian
    @gallaxian Před 2 lety +2

    Hitch begins by saying he is going to make an argument by analogy and proceeds to relate some arguments for and against returning the Elgin Marbles. But he then goes on to repeatedly dismisses his opponents’ analogies with respect to the Marbles and reparations as efforts at distraction that reveal their bad faith. I always enjoy listening to him but this is just sophistry.

  • @ampman76
    @ampman76 Před 9 lety +174

    This where the collective mindset is most destructive. You cannot assign an individual responsibility for anything that happened before he was born. You just simply can't, it contradicts reality in every way. Yet you wish to hold an entire society responsible for what happened before any of its individual members were born? When does this magical assignment of responsibility take place? When did I become responsible for slavery? When I was born? That's as absurd as saying I was born with Original Sin.

    • @lifeline_
      @lifeline_ Před 6 lety +8

      ampman76 well, by being born we are all the spawn of those who have sinned. By our very existence we show that our forefathers survived likely at the cost of others.
      But back to you original point, it is not that the forefathers of westerners sinned that gives this argument voice, it is the fact that ONLY westerners understand and continually apologize for the actions of those who came before that gives these arguments power.
      The Japanese do not appologize for the murders and rapes committed during WW2 because they know that those who committed those acts are long dead, though many Chinese still hold Ill will towards them. However they do not often attack, demand repentance or reperations from the Japanese, last I checked.
      To put it simply, if everyone achknowledged the past but did not allow for it to stain them, then we wouldn't see people taking advantage of this guilt that seemingly only westerners have for the sins of their ancestors.
      Of course, when you look at other cultures and people, even some Japanese, who try to hide or discredit the historic atrocities, it's no shock why.
      The only man guilty in the eyes of all around, is the one who confesses to his past crimes, whether "he" committed them or not.

    • @londonspade5896
      @londonspade5896 Před 6 lety +19

      Well said LifeLine, the Barbary and Ottoman slave trades were far more horrific than the Atlantic slave trade conducted by Europeans, but Europeans are the only ones who are targeted for 'reparations', precisely because we are too empathetic.
      I'd love to see Turkey's response to 'reparation' demands.

    • @kyokogodai-ir6hy
      @kyokogodai-ir6hy Před 6 lety +8

      LondonSpade, I think Europeans are targeted because they have money and power (which Turkey does not). Also, the CULTural marxist/Frankfurt School of thought makes White Europeans (and thus White America) the total evil in the world, who must atone for everything ever done, regardless of who else was doing it across the globe.

    • @truthguy7577
      @truthguy7577 Před 6 lety +5

      Why would anyone forfeit their advantage or inheritance if they didn't feel responsible? On the contrary, if you feel you're the benefit of illicit privilege, feel free to give up your inheritance.

    • @pbot6593
      @pbot6593 Před 6 lety +8

      Amateras Uchiha
      How so? Makes perfect sense to me... wait, no not quite; everyone supposedly is born with original sin because of Eve, yet not every white person descends from a slave trader or owner. Total white guilt bullshit. 3% of white Americans owned slaves, and my ancestors did not take part. If I owe a penny for reparations, it will have to come out of whatever I get back from the african invasions of Italy
      Fuck off

  • @chalky6844
    @chalky6844 Před 10 lety +5

    Instead of paying repirations to blacks,why dont they use that money to build great schools in poor areas and educate all the poor how to help themselves

    • @taipan1234
      @taipan1234 Před 5 lety +1

      Typical white supremacist they believe that black reparations should be passed out to all poor people something they would never say to a Jewish Holocaust victims. Fool, you did not enslave poor people you enslaved black people.

    • @user-mq8xg5sp9c
      @user-mq8xg5sp9c Před 3 lety

      @@taipan1234 oh shut up lol. You sound so fucking racist by that statement. Seriously just fucking go away with that shit you dumbass ha.

  • @uptoncriddington6939
    @uptoncriddington6939 Před 4 lety +10

    What a beautiful mind and voice. I may not agree with him, but I can admire his brilliance and fine delivery.

  • @brucestainback1606
    @brucestainback1606 Před 4 lety +8

    I will never think of white wine (whine) the same again!!!!

  • @jamesduda6017
    @jamesduda6017 Před 5 lety +6

    There is a lot I like about this man. I disagree with him quite often but I still have admiration and great respect for him.

    • @ironhazes
      @ironhazes Před 3 lety

      A nobody disagreeing with Christopher Hitchens. Who cares?

    • @jamesduda6017
      @jamesduda6017 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ironhazes you do apparently.

  • @michaelgaspar4324
    @michaelgaspar4324 Před 5 lety +11

    I disagree with Hitch's rationale in that the reference to the Elgin Marbles would only be comparable if the nations of Africa wanted the decendants of it's stolen people back. This was a very poor position to take. I can't see how he could convolute "Reparation" with "Repatriation".

    • @samlandsteiner6237
      @samlandsteiner6237 Před 5 lety

      @Camille Desmoulins Completely irrelevant to the issue at hand and also quite wrong. Whatever the austerity policy imposed by the European Stability Mechanism--or Germany, if you can't do without your own personal Antichrist--foreclosing on art is not how national debt is collected. Nice try at a segue though.
      @Michael Gaspar I agree with the part about Hitchens' conflation of "reparation"/"repatriation", but I think his injunction to not "make the best the enemy of the good" still holds. As far as reparation is concerned, the once-promised forty acres and a mule (or their modern-day value equivalent) might be a good start, since this would have been wealth passed down in the families of former slaves. After all, there are 640 million acres of federal land in the US.

  • @manbearpig7521
    @manbearpig7521 Před 4 lety +6

    Love the 'back pay' argument.

    • @dan4lau
      @dan4lau Před 4 lety +2

      Except that based on it, you would have to pay reparations to everyone who could prove their ancestors were once paid less than their labour was worth surely? If someone committed a crime and got away with it, and the fact was only discovered after their death, would it be fair to ask one of their children to pay a fine or serve prison time? To my mind it's the same logic.

    • @tstcikhthyss
      @tstcikhthyss Před 4 lety

      @@dan4lau No, but the children aren't "enjoying" the fruits of that crime either, presumably. If you're all for destroying all the buildings that were built by the slaves and rebuilding them from scratch, then sure. And even then, it's only scratching the surface.

    • @ReformedHistorian
      @ReformedHistorian Před 4 lety

      tstcikhthys how are they not enjoying the fruits? They live in this country. The poor have access to social assistance. The goods and services are plentiful, and affordable.

    • @XrayDL
      @XrayDL Před 3 lety +1

      I don’t mind the back pay argument on face value, but it’s more complicated than that. Am I going to be expected to chip in? My family has done quite extensive genealogical research and I can definitively point out that no one on either side of my family tree ever owned a slave. In fact, my mother’s side were originally brought over as indentured servants picking tobacco in Virginia, and the other group was French Hugonauts. My father’s side was nobility from England that surrendered his nobility to marry a commoner, and we ended up a bunch of sweet potato farmers in the Midwest. Since my progenitors never participated in slavery, some fought for the Union, and some fought for a neutral faction (think Free State of Jones) and since I’m only one generation separated from coal miners living in a shack with dirt floors, why should I be expected to pay anything?

  • @thecoderofyoutube
    @thecoderofyoutube Před 4 lety +9

    Around 6:00 is an elegant description of #whataboutery

  • @cnault3244
    @cnault3244 Před 5 lety +209

    Reparations for slavery are a good idea.
    Anyone who was owned as a slave should be paid reparations from the person who owned them.

    • @fungiblenonsense
      @fungiblenonsense Před 5 lety +13

      and, of course, reparations from the state that oversaw the transportation/importation of slaves, oversaw the slave markets, granted license for slave ownership, policed the slaves, hunted down those who escaped, etc.
      and, of course, to the slave and their estates.
      and, of course, from the state to those who suffered under the such state provisions that continued slavery via imprisonment. ... and Jim Crow laws, etc.

    • @cnault3244
      @cnault3244 Před 5 lety +52

      @@fungiblenonsense Sure... paid to any individual who was owned as a slave.

    • @calebwochnick2147
      @calebwochnick2147 Před 5 lety +22

      England should also pay reparations to the United States for 1776 and 1812. While were at it, I'm part Polish, so Germany should give me stuff. There was an "original, traceable offense" and while the situation can't be fully repaired, let's not make "the best the enemy of the good." Give me what you can Germany.

    • @ViLeDeth
      @ViLeDeth Před 5 lety +3

      @@calebwochnick2147 Take another stab at reading the lines again. ;)

    • @FreakishPower
      @FreakishPower Před 5 lety +5

      Agree. People read what his comment actually says.

  • @chrisjensen9709
    @chrisjensen9709 Před 8 lety +18

    Why don't the people who feel reparations are in order, set up a fund, let all those with guilt donate, and then mete-out the proceeds to those who feel they deserve it? This would leave-out those of us who had not a thing to do with slavery alone, and maybe we could finally shut-up the element that has haunted us.

    • @chrisjensen9709
      @chrisjensen9709 Před 8 lety +2

      No, those who have unwarranted "Guilt" donate. NO-ONE alive today had anything to do with North American Slavery.

    • @stephenjoiner3738
      @stephenjoiner3738 Před 6 lety +1

      In the words of the wise man: " Only a fool makes derision of guilt."

    • @maybepumpkins
      @maybepumpkins Před 6 lety +1

      None of us had anything to do with the slavery of centuries past. But many of us have benefited from it nonetheless.
      And as the speaker points out at 8:25, some of the profits of slavery are now held by public institutions.

    • @davidlindsay9564
      @davidlindsay9564 Před 6 lety +1

      only 1 in 10 in south owned slaves. Most of them owned only one. Thats 5% in all of the US then. Of the people alive today only 5% can trace themselves back to pre 1860s America, most have come from immigrants that came after that. so 5% of 5% which means there is almost nobody here who owes anybody anything.

  • @wacharaboy
    @wacharaboy Před 4 lety +25

    "In other words: beware when someone tries to make 'the Best' the enemy of 'the Good'"...

    • @jmisc
      @jmisc Před 4 lety +4

      yeah especially when the president implies that there are fine people in the neo Nazi group

    • @jongbong1912
      @jongbong1912 Před 4 lety +4

      @@jmisc watching this entire video, and the points made, and yet you still misrepresent the real quote and context, for shame sir

    • @jmisc
      @jmisc Před 4 lety

      Fine I edited that, are you happy now Trump supporter who are freaking hypocrites, criticizing Obama and Hillary and now pretty much quiet when confronted with Trump’s lies. Why not ask Trump the same thing. Why lie? You are either lying or ignorant. Which is it?

    • @jongbong1912
      @jongbong1912 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jmisc you could still improve on your edit by just deleting it, you either know you're wrong but still intent on the lie, or just dumb

    • @jmisc
      @jmisc Před 4 lety

      Niall Colbeck get a life you embarrassing piece of shit. I did the edit to make you all happy, and you still sound like a sore loser afraid of facing the truth that the president is a fucking racist and whiny loser. What else do you want to be quoted properly “I don’t take any responsibilities?”

  • @robertsullivan4773
    @robertsullivan4773 Před 4 lety +12

    I can see his argument. But to my defense I say I wasn't here during the time of slavery in this country. My ancestors weren't here either they were starving in Ireland and being persecuted by the crown. You see a bill is due but who is to say who rightly owes the back wages..

    • @TheRealColt45
      @TheRealColt45 Před 4 lety +10

      I struggle with that as well, but I think the answer would have to be we as a nation. We as the United States permitted the practice and as a result, millions of Americans were never paid for their labor.

    • @jandrews6254
      @jandrews6254 Před 3 lety +2

      Doug Colt goodo then, can you now pay all women for their unpaid and lower paid work?

    • @jongreenaway6025
      @jongreenaway6025 Před 3 lety

      J Andrews that’s what Birmingham city council did. That’s why it had to sell all its assets 😂

    • @Octavian2
      @Octavian2 Před 3 lety

      @@TheRealColt45 might seem reasonable if you include white slaves as well

    • @conradblack779
      @conradblack779 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheRealColt45 you live in the most prosperous nation the earth has ever seen that's your reward for your ancestors suffering, every country and civilisation on earth had slavery why would America be the ones to pay?. More Europeans were taken by the barbary slavers than african slaves were taken to the American colonies. Cuba had twice as many African slaves as America. The Vikings enslaved lots of Irish and Scottish approximately 62% of the Icelandic maternal gene pool is derived from Ireland and Scotland. People from Scandinavia do not owe us Irish and Scots anything. During the height of the Irish famine where millions starved to death grain was stolen from Ireland by the Crown and sold to the American colonies Neither the British or the American colonies who benefitted owe Irish people anything today. Everyone could stake a claim that they are owed something butt that's not how the world works we are not on the hook for something our ancestors did or didnt do

  • @araz1977
    @araz1977 Před 4 lety +4

    we need someone like him Now...

  • @jimjuarez3495
    @jimjuarez3495 Před 5 lety +11

    I miss HITCH! I never knew I was a CONTRARIAN until I started "observing" him!

    • @MathTutorVideos
      @MathTutorVideos Před 5 lety +1

      Yes, he sure does believe in ORIGINAL SIN of what our forefather's did.....for someone who doesn't believe in the ORIGINAL SIN concept of Catholicism. I would imagine he justifies this by saying original sin in Catholicism is the original sin of a fictional character whereas the original sin of reparations is a real person from over a hundred of years ago in most places.

    • @darellcanup681
      @darellcanup681 Před 5 lety +1

      He was one confused individual. I would have loved to have a one on one chat with him over a cup of coffee. His views were so backwards and easily refuted that I could have taught him a lot in a very short time.

  • @dicksplat2049
    @dicksplat2049 Před 3 lety

    Where's the full debate please?

  • @donfarlan214
    @donfarlan214 Před 5 lety +1

    In the past you didnt need speakers the world spoke for itself

  • @Chasstful
    @Chasstful Před 5 lety +20

    Here's the problem, 10 years after reparations, the same people are back at the bottom...

    •  Před 5 lety +3

      Why would you assume that? Is there a precedent for this?

    • @Chasstful
      @Chasstful Před 5 lety +3

      @ Just common sense. People who are bad with money will eventually end up separated from their money, People who are industrious will always rise to the top. What do you think poor black people would do with a bunch of government cash?

    • @talldarkhandsome8587
      @talldarkhandsome8587 Před 5 lety +4

      Charles Black 10 years? Try one or two

    • @rationalthought9979
      @rationalthought9979 Před 5 lety +3

      Given that hundreds of billions have already been given to african-americans over the past 50 years, I'd say you're probably right.

    • @talldarkhandsome8587
      @talldarkhandsome8587 Před 5 lety +1

      Rational Thought try trillions

  • @JohnSmith-lm7ez
    @JohnSmith-lm7ez Před 8 lety +19

    Hitch is wrong. He argued there is no longer a Babylon, yet there are contemporary people in Iraq that have a claim. Just because the name we call people, i.e. Babylonian vs citizens of Iraq, doesn't mean the people stop existing. With this said, where do we draw the line for reparations. Should we make the modern Italians, who clearly banked their exploitive nature into capital as Romans, assume some financial responsibility to the many peoples they aggrieved? It is one thing to realize a wrong, like the seizure of property, and try to correct it. It is another to place atonement on things as intangible as past profits.

    • @sstraxx
      @sstraxx Před 8 lety +2

      Lol , Ya, its "intangible " because we choose for it to be. Obviously there's not a dollar amount that can make up for what was done. But you certainly can ( & people have ) put an approximate figure on what dollar amount would be owed for centuries of free labor. In modern dollars we'd be talking about almost 2 trillion dollars . We are really good as Americans at figuring out shit we WANT to do. "If you can put a man on the moon".

    • @JohnSmith-lm7ez
      @JohnSmith-lm7ez Před 8 lety +3

      Are you serious? Look just because I kinda look like someone that allegedly did some past crime doesn't make me accountable. This is an immoral place to begin your argument, because the presumption is racially motivated.

    • @sstraxx
      @sstraxx Před 8 lety +2

      I'm sure a line can be drawn somewhere. But I'm sorry my friend, we dont have to go back but 55 years to find total atrocity in this country in regards to African Americans. We're NOT talking about 2000 years ago. We're talking just 150 years for slavery & not until 1965 did Jim Crow,blatant discrimination, lynching ,inability to vote & real estate red lining begin
      to subside. That's just 50 year. Hitch knows his history & how we're just a generation away ( my father lived under Jim Crow as a boy....& my 101 year old grandmother was born in the deep south 1914)from many horrendous wrongs.

    • @sstraxx
      @sstraxx Před 8 lety

      +Philip Hennen So yes....I would say he's very "serious ".

    • @sstraxx
      @sstraxx Před 8 lety +1

      John Smith​ The whole country was built upon a foundation of "Race" John. There's no way to address the problem WITHOUT the subject being at the center of the conversation. You can blame our country for that one. Slavery & the 100 years of Jim Crow , lynching & real estate red lining, was all based SOLELY on "race". The people who were hugely affected by it ,we're African Americans. Don't know how you address the issue without addressing race. That's nonsensical. It's racist NOT to discuss. Because you're basically saying we should forget all the iniquities that still exist because of that history. Silly.

  • @TheWatchers11
    @TheWatchers11 Před 5 lety +1

    God i miss the hitch. I hope he was wrong about one thing- and you brought him home because you wanted someone [worthy] to converse with.

    • @karlwhalls2915
      @karlwhalls2915 Před 3 lety

      It’s ironic you call on religion in this statement given what he thought of it, and the people who believed in it.

  • @Jay-ro2vn
    @Jay-ro2vn Před 3 lety +2

    I've never agreed with him on this. How do you make a person who never owned slaves pay respirations to a person who was never a slave. Makes no sense.

    • @AndyTomlins
      @AndyTomlins Před 3 lety +4

      Are you for a 100% inheritance tax? After all why should continous generations inherit millions they didn't work for? Funny how we allow what benefits us from the past be inherited but not what is deterimental.

    • @Jin-Ro
      @Jin-Ro Před 3 lety

      @@AndyTomlins That's a red herring. Hitchens just said in the video to not let people like you dodge the subject with what-aboutisms. So the question remains, why should Italians pay me, a Briton, reparations for slavery, when they didn't own slaves, and I was never a slave.