The True Story of All History in 4 MINUTES.

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  • čas přidán 5. 03. 2024
  • Thing is, we have these truly false conceptions of reality, and not until recently, has race ever been a factor, at least not so far in as legitimate grievances are concerned. Now, sadly, race has become an excuse and an entitlement, whereby at no other time in human history was race allowed to be perceived in such a way. The truth is, humans have always operated through a power structure, and only recently was it convenient for the loser to cry about race without admitting inferiority. Does a second place winner get to receive a 1st place trophy in any pursuit in life they didn’t win? And would a claim of race even be considered legitimate without that 2nd place opponent admitting it was something outside of him/herself, that was the reason for the loss that wasn’t a loss, but rather just an unfair game or outcome to begin with? The universe doesn’t care. 2nd is always the first loser. Even on an individual level, there is ALWAYS someone, better at some aspect, of some thing, “at”, life. And even if you could claim race without admitting your own inferiority, how would that serve you or anyone of your said race? That’s a self full-filling prophesy of a lifetime, or an eternity even, of losing. Maybe in some regard it’s better to be dead than to make excuses for your failures, especially if that’s where you’re going to throw in the towel and, not only gives up, but also let your excuse for failure be the excuse for failure of you’re entire, “race”. It’s dumb. There are no reparations for history, there’s just moving forward. There’s becoming a winner at the individual level, and allowing all individuals the right to do the same without being held to the standard that each group gets an excuse for perpetual failure so to absolve them all of the divine responsibility of ever having to try at all in the first place. It’s an absolute crime against humanity to subject any individual, created by God, and connected individually to God, to be subjected to another individual’s affinity for an entire group’s excuse. Go live the best you can now. And if you see something that will make all people losers, then say something, do something!! History is important to learn from, and human nature is immutable in my estimation, at least at the level of species. But goodness all starts with the Man in the Mirror. PS, this is also why I don’t believe in taxation as anything more than slavery itself.

Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @ghillieguy52
    @ghillieguy52 Před 3 měsíci +1284

    "It says here in this history book that luckily, the good guys have won every single time. What are the odds?” -Norm MacDonald

    • @donHooligan
      @donHooligan Před 2 měsíci +9

      BRICS vs The Reich

    • @ChallisVenstra
      @ChallisVenstra Před 2 měsíci +31

      Damn but I miss Norm. We need more people these days that have the balls to say what needs said.

    • @ddinosaur5762
      @ddinosaur5762 Před 2 měsíci +10

      Odds are the good guys lost

    • @JohnnyRico118
      @JohnnyRico118 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Usually history is written by the victors, but there are some notable exceptions to this, the best example in American history is the CSA.

    • @bobs182
      @bobs182 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Might makes right.

  • @obscuremusictabs5927
    @obscuremusictabs5927 Před 3 měsíci +2012

    I think most people just assume that Indians had been riding horses for ages. The Europeans introduced them to horses. An Indian on a horse with a gun was already a huge leap from their traditional culture into the world of the Europeans.

    • @rainyvideos3684
      @rainyvideos3684 Před 3 měsíci +68

      And too late of a leap too.

    • @mikeszz5
      @mikeszz5 Před 3 měsíci +33

      The did not have horses at all? Didnt they get horses from the Spain and Portugal when Colombo discovered the continent couple of hundred of years before the action in this movie?

    • @alienlife7754
      @alienlife7754 Před 3 měsíci +143

      @@mikeszz5 my god man. Read a book.

    • @alg7115
      @alg7115 Před 3 měsíci +130

      There were no horses in the Americas until the Spanish showed up.

    • @issstari954
      @issstari954 Před 3 měsíci +44

      Columbus never visited north america

  • @apatheticallyconcerned6574
    @apatheticallyconcerned6574 Před 3 měsíci +1799

    On the Trail of Tears, Cherokees took about 4000-5000 slaves with them. Nobody ever talks about Native Americans owning slaves, but they did.

    • @hint0122
      @hint0122 Před 3 měsíci +144

      And that they didn't free them until a year after the confederacy did.

    • @dillonhunt1720
      @dillonhunt1720 Před 3 měsíci +99

      They also were told 3 years ahead of time that they would be getting moved but never prepared. That was before Andrew Jackson even became President but he is always the popular one to blame.

    • @koikat3708
      @koikat3708 Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@dillonhunt1720 Why were they moved?

    • @dillonhunt1720
      @dillonhunt1720 Před 3 měsíci

      @@koikat3708 Friction with white settlers. As more and more moved in there was occasional violence. When gold was discovered under the Cherokee's feet it was pretty much over as the government knew no matter what they did whites were going to swarm the territory leading to a massacre. I won't sugar coat the decision that was clearly in the white settler's favor but it was better than doing nothing or naively thinking they could stop the gold rush any more than Great Britain thought they could stop settlers crossing into Ohio even without the promise of gold decades before.
      I lived in that part of Georgia for a few years and there are quite a few historical markers of Indian massacres of white settlers. If the government didn't do something the settlers surely would have done something much worse.

    • @therovingrobin5938
      @therovingrobin5938 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@koikat3708Indian culture and values were incompatible with white one...stealing horses for example, would get you a position as chief in Indian society, yet it got you hanged in white society...

  • @HorrorTactico
    @HorrorTactico Před 3 měsíci +965

    Here in Mexico we are the children of 2 conquerors; The Aztecs who were the most powerful empire in the entire continent at the time and The Spanish Empire. Both empires clashed. One lost.
    Then after independence, The Mexican Empire Clashed against The American Empire, they fought above the bones of american natives that they themselves were already fighting before both great civilizations clashed. Again, one lost.
    That's history, and pseudo-intellectuals trying to paint a narrative of good vs evil do a disservice of it.

    • @sgtmtrush
      @sgtmtrush Před 3 měsíci +84

      And we Anglo Americans come from Celtic lands conquered by Anglo Saxons, before being conquered by Normans. Everyone has a right to expand. Everyone has a right to resist being encroached upon. Well said friend.

    • @therovingrobin5938
      @therovingrobin5938 Před 3 měsíci +36

      And in Mexico, the clash of those two culture lead to the creation of a beautiful new culture...that's what I admire about Mexico: it embraces both cultures/ empires just as depicted in the figures of the Aztec warrior and conquistador on the presidential palace!

    • @HorrorTactico
      @HorrorTactico Před 3 měsíci +42

      @@therovingrobin5938 Yes and one of the benefits of the mixing of races is that none of us can fall into "white guilt" bullshit or any of that, we are both white and native. European and American. This is our legacy and gives us an objective view of the past.

    • @therovingrobin5938
      @therovingrobin5938 Před 3 měsíci +8

      @@HorrorTactico amen to that! And it makes Mexico such a wonderful place...I've got several Mexican friends and in fact, plan on living there soon

    • @pauldonvito6169
      @pauldonvito6169 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@HorrorTactico great comment, sadly.

  • @romancandle416
    @romancandle416 Před 3 měsíci +984

    Some say the white man is the savage, and some say the Indian is the savage. In truth, they were both savage.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +235

      Mankind is savage. Always has been. Ethnicities needn’t apply.

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Před 3 měsíci +85

      The Europeans who came were not savage, they were brutal, but in the grand scheme of things, quite civilized.

    • @brianjones9780
      @brianjones9780 Před 3 měsíci +69

      ​@@sid2112civilization is only a quiet form of savagery

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Před 3 měsíci

      A matter of perspective, really. Judge them not by the standards of today, judge them by the standards they lived in.@@brianjones9780

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +17

      @sid2112 can’t argue with that.

  • @MrJustonemorevoice
    @MrJustonemorevoice Před 3 měsíci +593

    I like how the Colonel doesn't even try and justify his own actions.
    He basically points out. "Yeah, this is war, its terrible. Complaining doesn't make it any better and we just happen to be winning now"

    • @Moving_Target65
      @Moving_Target65 Před 3 měsíci +27

      The colonel should have also talk about the Apache-Comanche Wars of Annihilation.

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Před 2 měsíci +17

      Yup. Hebwas essentially saying you're exactly the same as us.

    • @jeffswail8446
      @jeffswail8446 Před 2 měsíci +12

      Except that we don't slaughter our foes to the last man , woman, and child.@@armynurseboy

    • @SiouxW4rrior3856
      @SiouxW4rrior3856 Před 2 měsíci

      @@jeffswail8446 the Calvary massacred many tribes before the Sioux even the Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples so to be honest the Calvery are just as sick as the Germans from WW2 because the Calvary killed millions of native people compared to how many thousands of jewish people the germans killed which is pretty ironic considering some of the settlers and Calvary were German settlers

    • @MrJustonemorevoice
      @MrJustonemorevoice Před 2 měsíci

      @@SiouxW4rrior3856 Yes, and the North American tribes were enslaving, murdering, raping and sometimes eating each other for thousands of years before Europeans ever even wondered if there was a landmass to the west.
      The only reason we don't have a full account is that they never bothered writing down their full history.

  • @kettch777
    @kettch777 Před 3 měsíci +1767

    Brutal, but true. The first Sioux didn't even arrive in the Black Hlls until 1776. It was theirs for only a century, yet they claim it is their 'sacred land" that has always been theirs. History does not agree. Was what happened to the Sioux right and just? No. But neither was what the Sioux did to the Kiowa, the Omaha, the Pawnee and the other tribes.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +112

      Well said.

    • @CurlousCam
      @CurlousCam Před 3 měsíci +151

      I am from the Pawnee natives, my ancestors fought multiple tribes to keep their land, and even aided the US government in removing these other tribes.

    • @underarmbowlingincidentof1981
      @underarmbowlingincidentof1981 Před 3 měsíci +55

      I mean enough the americans also call the US their sacred land now...
      how long does one have to live in a place to call it home??

    • @brianjones9780
      @brianjones9780 Před 3 měsíci +89

      ​@@underarmbowlingincidentof1981 only takes one moment. It's your home when you make it yours, and it's yours until you die or you leave it or you lose it.

    • @underarmbowlingincidentof1981
      @underarmbowlingincidentof1981 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@brianjones9780 yeah but these people are saying it wasn't the home of the sioux...

  • @theduke7539
    @theduke7539 Před 3 měsíci +745

    Truth is that no matter the pageantry, war and greed are traits universal to all human societies

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +33

      Yep. 100%

    • @InsanitysApex
      @InsanitysApex Před 3 měsíci +11

      Not all... Just the successful ones. It's mother nature's ballgame and you have to adapt and compete just to keep your head above water.

    • @bluedragontoybash2463
      @bluedragontoybash2463 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Does it have to be that way ? why are we are still around then shouldn't be all dead ?

    • @InsanitysApex
      @InsanitysApex Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@bluedragontoybash2463 Have to? for the time being yes. Capitalism, politics, and other systems that integrate the competition help embed and redistribute the animosity (as opposed to wars/rebellions).
      No, we shouldn't be dead since most forms of it aren't seeking absolute annihilation. Competition, aggression, status dispute's are part of essentially all social species, millions of years old, and help establish equilibrium. They just weren't evolved for species of this magnitude, with this much leverage/resources at play. It can make aspects of society very 1-dimensional without the ability to reset.

    • @theduke7539
      @theduke7539 Před 3 měsíci

      @@bluedragontoybash2463 because we aren't completely stupid. Only a complete idiot would consider the destruction of the entire race more preferrable to surrender, and it would take an army of idiots to carry out those orders

  • @JamesHock
    @JamesHock Před 3 měsíci +657

    "Violence is the supreme authority from which all other authorities are derived"
    -Robert Heinlein

    • @donHooligan
      @donHooligan Před 2 měsíci +12

      the message of the anti-Christ

    • @tristandeleglise3924
      @tristandeleglise3924 Před 2 měsíci +22

      Lies ! It was the great Jean Rasczak who said it.

    • @bill6732
      @bill6732 Před 2 měsíci +4

      ​@@tristandeleglise3924like most quotes, it's impossible to find who said it first, relax.

    • @JustExperience101
      @JustExperience101 Před 2 měsíci

      So cool 😎👍

    • @MasterNecrosis
      @MasterNecrosis Před 2 měsíci

      However jean didn't write an entire political system based on the quote.

  • @siliconvalleyengineer5875
    @siliconvalleyengineer5875 Před 3 měsíci +605

    Wow, just 100 years later in 1976 American Indians would be driving Pontiac Trans Am's

    • @timbuktu8069
      @timbuktu8069 Před 3 měsíci +35

      Well, Pontiac was an Indian Chief and Trans Am means across America.
      So did they win?

    • @somefuckstolemynick
      @somefuckstolemynick Před 3 měsíci +23

      @@timbuktu8069lol, no. Cool names though

    • @timbuktu8069
      @timbuktu8069 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Pontiacs Mom probably gave it a lot of thought.@@somefuckstolemynick

    • @salguodrolyat2594
      @salguodrolyat2594 Před 3 měsíci +3

      The Hoff is American Indian?😯

    • @McBigFisher
      @McBigFisher Před 3 měsíci +4

      I laughed.

  • @Tadicuslegion78
    @Tadicuslegion78 Před 3 měsíci +1994

    College professors: *triggered*

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +220

      Definitely. But it’s the reality of mankind, like it or not.

    • @gentlemanvontweed7147
      @gentlemanvontweed7147 Před 3 měsíci +155

      A true "professor" would likely have interesting views on this.
      Unfortunately, here in the US we define a professor as anyone who teaches a class in a "university".

    • @thelostcosmonaut5555
      @thelostcosmonaut5555 Před 3 měsíci +50

      My archaeology professor did not sugarcoat anything when discussing the Aztecs. I doubt you've ever even been to college.

    • @nocturnalrecluse1216
      @nocturnalrecluse1216 Před 3 měsíci

      ​​@gentlemanvontweed7147 woke culture fucked everything. They own the universities now. They own the movie industry. History is literally being remade by those assclowns to fit their agenda. What a time to be alive! 🤦‍♂️

    • @waynechen852
      @waynechen852 Před 3 měsíci +87

      @@thelostcosmonaut5555 "My anecdotal experience agrees with my ideology therefore you wrong"
      I doubt you have internal monologue

  • @jebbroham1776
    @jebbroham1776 Před 3 měsíci +413

    I've been to Little Bighorn and stood on the same hill that Custer and many of his men died on, and in that moment it gave me a perfect understanding of why the battle ended with he and his entire regiment massacred. The area is nothing but an endless sea of humps, small hills that can easily hide forces behind them, which is what happened. Custer believed that he was facing a numerically inferior force when in fact he was the one outnumbered by a factor of over 3 to 1. Almost from the beginning, the outcome of the battle was never in doubt.

    • @brucemeyers400
      @brucemeyers400 Před 3 měsíci +28

      The entire 7th cavalry wasn't massacred. Only the men with Custer. The units under Major Reno and Captain Benteen survived. The 7th would show up again to do the Wounded Knee massacre.

    • @edwardherbert882
      @edwardherbert882 Před 3 měsíci +8

      6 to 1 or even more

    • @Ospery157
      @Ospery157 Před 3 měsíci +23

      I still remember my father's words when we also visited the Little Bighorn. And my father also graduated from West Point, in 1951, as Custer. He said, "He deserved what he got!!!".

    • @captainkyperplayz1162
      @captainkyperplayz1162 Před 3 měsíci +20

      He was reckless. Left his Gatling guns behind cause he thought they slowed him down. The Gatlings were a force multiplier that could have changed things

    • @Ospery157
      @Ospery157 Před 3 měsíci +23

      @@captainkyperplayz1162 My dad told us at West Point they tell cadets that the Little Bighorn is a good example of what not to do.

  • @mcmax571
    @mcmax571 Před 3 měsíci +243

    Colonel Miles not taking any Sitting Bull shit.

    • @joelellis7035
      @joelellis7035 Před 2 měsíci +22

      He was done sitting for that bull shit?

    • @jameswhite3415
      @jameswhite3415 Před 2 měsíci

      Eh Indians didn't have the tech to effectively genocide other Indians thus proving the white man was worse once and for all.

    • @amitkenan3878
      @amitkenan3878 Před 19 dny +2

      Nice 👌 😂

    • @johnmartlew5897
      @johnmartlew5897 Před 9 dny +1

      Sitting Bull converts Miles to metric.

    • @chriswihulu
      @chriswihulu Před 5 dny

      Ok, I didn't personally think of that, good job man 😂😂😂

  • @andrem7718
    @andrem7718 Před 3 měsíci +296

    Something no one realizes about the Indians is just how incredibly difficult it is to ride a horse bareback.

    • @jonathonengel5027
      @jonathonengel5027 Před 3 měsíci +59

      Bareback costs extra. I learned that in Las Vegas.

    • @NM123sid
      @NM123sid Před 3 měsíci +14

      Stirrups changed human history, funny to see guns a bareback

    • @riverman6462
      @riverman6462 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Not an American, but can anyone tell me why the Indians refuse to adapt to stirrups that the white men had?

    • @annep.1905
      @annep.1905 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@riverman6462 I think they wanted to be "one with the horse," or something like that.

    • @Hungabrigoo
      @Hungabrigoo Před 3 měsíci +26

      ​@@annep.1905 It is still a bad idea. Steppe nomads were more "one with the horse" than anyone in history and they invented the stirrup. It just gives you a lot more stability and that makes you more effective.
      I don't want to speculate in bad faith but it seems to me such rigid thinking and unwillingness to adapt was exactly the reason the Natives lost so often.

  • @dkeith45
    @dkeith45 Před 3 měsíci +179

    This scene was not only true then, it has been the case in every country, in every part of the world forever. No country has remained static with an original people who moved in to virgin land and still hold it today. The history of the world is full of people, tribes, clans, Kings, Countries raiding and attacking each other. Sometimes to steal possessions, sometimes to take the land, sometimes to take slaves, sometimes simply because of boredom. It's the sad fact of humanity.

    • @bdarth51
      @bdarth51 Před 2 měsíci +2

      What is this scene from?

    • @bigtomboye
      @bigtomboye Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@bdarth51Also curious, am surprised to see this in a movie 😮

    • @mikemelina7395
      @mikemelina7395 Před 2 měsíci +2

      "No country has remained static with an original people who moved in to virgin land and still hold it today."
      Mongolia and Polynesia.

    • @dkeith45
      @dkeith45 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Movie: Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee. Sitting Bull meets Colonel Miles Scene.@@bdarth51

    • @dkeith45
      @dkeith45 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Bury my heart at wounded knee. Scene where Sitting Bull (played by August Schellenberg) meets Colonel Miles (played by Shaun Johnston) @@bigtomboye​

  • @jesusrivera2970
    @jesusrivera2970 Před 3 měsíci +147

    They both were dropping some historical-fire ass bars

  • @jaytowne8016
    @jaytowne8016 Před 3 měsíci +162

    And the Mandan joined the USA when Lewis and Clark came through, flew the American flag, had land office platted land, and have more wealth than other tribes and ride their combines farming grain going on 100 plus years( working up to the combine as technology came) They were militarily powerful and allied with the US and nobody hears about them

    • @mustangbrand1159
      @mustangbrand1159 Před 3 měsíci +14

      Mandan, huge part of the Lewis/clark success & the western expansion of the US

    • @annep.1905
      @annep.1905 Před 3 měsíci +11

      You're correct. Who are or were the Mandan (besides helpers of Lewis and Clark), and do they still exist today? From what you say, it sounds like they chose to adopt ways that would allow them to keep their land.

    • @SockieTheSockPuppet
      @SockieTheSockPuppet Před 3 měsíci

      Because unfortunately some people are just determined to make the USA out to be wholly Evil.

    • @jaytowne8016
      @jaytowne8016 Před 3 měsíci +39

      The Mandan were farmers, not hunter gatherers/ nomads. They were militarily the most powerful tribe in the northern plains, and by some measures technologically ahead of their neighbors. They had the beginnings of metal smelting. They recognized the superiority of the weapons and tools of Lewis and Clark s expedition and more or less said " count me in!" And adopted any technical improvements they saw. They were already good farmers, and had a strong social order, so they when seeing a better way to farm picked it up. The guy riding a combine on a 2000 acre wheat farm in North Dakota with black hair is odds on a Mandan. And probably still doesn't like the Sioux very much.

    • @annep.1905
      @annep.1905 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@jaytowne8016 Thank you! I want to learn more about this history. This is pretty cool!

  • @flechette3782
    @flechette3782 Před měsícem +56

    My history professor taught me long ago that a rightful claim to property needs three things:
    1: You occupy it
    2: You use it for something
    3: You can defend it.
    If you do not have those three things, it is yours in name only.

    • @Luci_S
      @Luci_S Před 18 dny

      Your professor is a literal grade A maroon.
      Does "defending " also constitute lies and betrayal? How about honoring the treaties?
      As far as I am concerned, and because no peace treaty was never reached, we are still at a political war against Europeans.

    • @aarayfett8349
      @aarayfett8349 Před 18 dny

      I've been telling people on the Internet that for years. No land is yours by birthright, superstition, historical claim, etc.

    • @chuckhardage5268
      @chuckhardage5268 Před 16 dny

      Your professor forgot to mention that you pay taxes on it.

    • @Luci_S
      @Luci_S Před 16 dny

      @@aarayfett8349
      LMAO
      Yeah, ever heard of point roberts!? So why does U.S. have a land claim that clearly (geographically speaking) is part of Canada?
      You can tell yourself whatever you want, but the evidence is clear. Someone wanted it more and genocided us for it!
      We simply want the land back to protect it. We are stewards. Not land owners.

    • @DaronMahdessian
      @DaronMahdessian Před 13 dny

      @@aarayfett8349 ok by that logic, canada has right to occupy usa

  • @EN-Fitz
    @EN-Fitz Před 2 měsíci +89

    “The strong do what they will and the weak must accept”
    -Thucydides, the Peloponnesian War

    • @prostation3844
      @prostation3844 Před měsícem

      How un-American.

    • @labrynianrebel
      @labrynianrebel Před měsícem

      Good, "American" is pretty cringe​@@prostation3844

    • @Erik-qx6km
      @Erik-qx6km Před 26 dny

      @@prostation3844 I disagree. It's take it as a understanding to stand up for what you believe in.

    • @randomyankee8923
      @randomyankee8923 Před 23 dny

      ​@@prostation3844what?

    • @nofilter.906
      @nofilter.906 Před 14 hodinami

      That's how N word think.....

  • @fierylightning3422
    @fierylightning3422 Před měsícem +27

    I'm ethnically Romanian. both of my Parents came from Communist Romania. For centuries Romania was ruled by the Romans, Pechenegs, Bulgarians, Hungarians, Avars, and Turks. but did we complain about it? No. we fought for independence. Many times we lost. and more recently we won. if you want to keep your land, fight for it!

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Před 12 dny +3

      To be fair we TURKS didn't genocide romanias as the Yankees genocide the native American

    • @yilus7142
      @yilus7142 Před 9 dny +2

      ​@@islammehmeov2334 they didn't. but they did genocide the arnenians .

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Před 9 dny

      @@yilus7142 this is about the TURKS and the romans

    • @kiwiincool609
      @kiwiincool609 Před 8 dny

      I agree, but why do you have a pony for your profile picture? That is the real question.

    • @SirOreo_
      @SirOreo_ Před 7 dny

      @@islammehmeov2334most deaths came from diseases

  • @koderamerikaner5147
    @koderamerikaner5147 Před 3 měsíci +85

    It gets even more ironic when you consider both the natives and the Indo-Europeans share ancestry from the Ancient North Eurasians. This is kinda like a weird cultural family reunion where they're both accussing eachother of being violent war cultures. We both migrated from Siberia as violent warbands conquering and subjugating others. They (natives, Q haplogroup) went east, we (Indo-Europeans, R1 haplogroup) went west. We're fairly similiar, and the lands we now settle belonged to unique cultures who we replaced. Also, native tribes that are closer to the north are from later migrations, so they admixed with east asians and mongolics (thus why they have less prescence of the Q Y-DNA haplogroup than lower parts of the americas) before invading the americas that had direct ANE/ANS descent. So, yeah, the natives were kinda the direct opposite of a peaceful society; They had a violent warrior caste and raiding style of warfare that is pretty reminiscent of the Indo-European Kóryos tradition, which I personally speculate is as old as the ANE.

    • @Teufer2
      @Teufer2 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Native Americans have pretty much the most white washed history in the world or at least of how is it taught here in Europe. We were taught already in Kindergarten of how the white man came to the Americas. Took their land and throwed them into reservations who tended to be the most baren land.
      What is of course certainly true.
      But no mention of the Native Americans fighting each other in brutal tribal warfare taking each others land, no mention that every healthy adult male was considered a warrior, basically being the most militarized society that ever existed, no mention that they practiced slavery, no mention of mutilating their defeated enemies corpses and decorate their homes and belts with their body parts to impress the ladies (basically wearing a scalp around your belt was equal to a military medal, it was to show of your capability as a warrior) no mention that they killed almost every single person in a defeated tribe, small children, men, the elderly except the non-pregnant young women (maybe the 8-12 year old children too were spared if they were lucky to be adopted into the tribe) and kept them as sex slaves, no mention of ritually torturing prisoners to death for hours or even days and in some tribes even ritual cannibalism was practiced.
      You should watch "How Hollywood stereotyped the Native Americans" on CZcams. Basically it's a video of how Hollywood negatively "stereotyped" the Native Americans in old Western movies. Of how the movies showed the Native Americans attacked settler caravens, attacked settlements and kidnapped people, executed people by burning the on the stake, while footage shows US Soldiers and Native Americans fighting inside a fort one of the commentars even said "they talk about (the moves) indian ferocity, they talk about Apache atrocities, historically it was quite the opposite, it was the Native Americans wo where overwhelmed by white population and settlement" So what does this mean? Apache didn't execute prisoners of war, scalped them and left their corpses to rot because they lost in the end? Did the Holocaust not happen because the Germans lost?
      Certainly those old western movies are quite biased on the view of the main characters who were white. But those this make it untrue? They did all this things mentioned in the movies. In fact they are probably depicted as more tame than it actualy was, if they would portray uncensored Native American warfare with of how they cut peoples, ears, nose, lips and eyelids of and buried them head deep to die by exposure or how they cut small parts of someones arm of, to cauterize the wound only to cut of another piece and than repeat the process, it would not even allowed to be aired at that time. Of how those movies are racist because they portray only the bad side of the Native Americans?
      Was torture and genocidal war all that Native American culture had to offer? Certainly not.
      But is it racist to present day Norwegians to portray Vikings as raiders and slave traders? Because that is what they did!
      I actually understand why the Native Americans protest those movies. Because they want to keep the current day view of Native Americans being the poor victims of European Imperialism.
      As a very small minority in the US they basically have no economical or political weight. Heavily relying on Native Americans Sympathizers helping them to ensure that their own interests are heard.
      To keep the the legend of the "Noble Savage" alive. Because if the view changes from "innocent victim" to "the Native Americans were as worse as the European Colonizers" could disillusion their Sympathizers and lose their already very limited political voice.
      It's still a shame though what happenend to the Native Americans in the end. A modern, independent Native American state were they kept their interesting culture and traditions but left their warlike nature behind would be a lovely place to go as a tourist. Like a post WW2 Japan.

    • @EnlightenedBro105
      @EnlightenedBro105 Před 3 měsíci

      Very interesting. So which native americans would be considered the ones who came here first? I'm guessing the ones from South America generally?

    • @koderamerikaner5147
      @koderamerikaner5147 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@EnlightenedBro105 Correct. The more southern american natives like the Mayans and Incans are mostly descendents from the first migrations east (there's many thousands of years and several ancestor cultures between them), making them the true natives of that land as far as I'm aware. The more northern parts of the americas are from later migratory warbands. Though, it's worth noting even those first peoples conquered eachother and made empires, as you'd expect from cultures with emphasis on warriors. Prehistory and early history is pretty fascinating.

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Teufer2 ... took their lands and threw* them ("throw" is an irregular verb). ​​⁠​⁠/ settler caravans* / burning them* on the stake / who were* overwhelmed / but those things* make it untrue? / cut people's* (body parts) off*. You need to spell check before posting such elaborate posts. Other than that, great research.

    • @Teufer2
      @Teufer2 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@einundsiebenziger5488 English is a second language for me mate. And I don't really think I need to spell check. This is a CZcams comment not a scientific research paper. As long as it's understandable and not to unpleasant to read it's good enough in my opiniopn.
      Still a thank you for the corrections, still got some room left for improvements on grammar.

  • @ellysetaylor5908
    @ellysetaylor5908 Před 3 měsíci +106

    So basically, wrongs were done on both sides. And we need to stop treating history like a fairytale in which one side was all good and the other all bad. It's time to have the maturity to accept that history is created by the joint efforts of good, bad, and conflicted individuals together. It's time to grow up

    • @setsen337
      @setsen337 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Wrong. The point is to learn that it is wrong to subjugate others. Why is this so hard for Americans to understand?

    • @doctordank
      @doctordank Před 3 měsíci +18

      ​@setsen337 as long as resources are a finite thing, men will compete with each other for them. Thinking otherwise is a pipe dream.

    • @setsen337
      @setsen337 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@user-iv1po3rr8g whats your point exactly? Are murder, rape and theft okay or not? Pick one, and stick to it.

    • @setsen337
      @setsen337 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@doctordank You don't have to justify something just because it exists. The moment you justify horrific acts, you've sold your soul. We have a choice in how we act. If we each choose to act violently, because other people are violent, we will forever live in a violent world. Oddly, this is the message of Christianity, and its one that no Christian since Christ has ever understood.

    • @brainplay8060
      @brainplay8060 Před 3 měsíci +9

      @@setsen337It's wrong...now... It wasn't wrong for thousands of years beforehand. It was the norm before. Technically it's still the norm today but we hide it under laws that require violence to enforce. Slavery and conquering lands are always just one generation away from becoming the norm again.

  • @atom7216
    @atom7216 Před měsícem +13

    "What is History, but a fable agreed upon?"
    -Napoleon Bonaparte

  • @Lizard11ify
    @Lizard11ify Před 3 měsíci +84

    Territory belongs to those who are capable to defend it and hold it.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +7

      True. Possession is 9/10th the law.

    • @setsen337
      @setsen337 Před 3 měsíci

      So you're pro-rape, nice. Lots of pro-rapists in these comments

    • @chardtomp
      @chardtomp Před 3 měsíci

      That's really the truth of it. That same land saw the dinosaurs come and go in a reign that lasted 160 million years! It saw another 65 million years go by before the first hominids crawled up out of the dust. I hardly think it cares that some smart, naked apes have been squatting on it for a few thousand. Any part of the earth belongs to whoever is standing on it at any given time. If you get pushed off, guess what, it's not yours anymore. That's why, if you're in possession of valuable land, you'd better be on the cutting edge all the time. If you aren't, someone who is, will take it away from you. It's not even a question of if. It's just a matter of when and who does it.

    • @seanmacguire6898
      @seanmacguire6898 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@setsen337
      He did say anything about rape though?

    • @toddsummerwind
      @toddsummerwind Před 2 měsíci

      So if someone beats you up and takes your house you are okay with it? Kind of flies in the face of the idea of private ownership of land.

  • @blank557
    @blank557 Před 2 měsíci +67

    It the movie, "Dancing with Wolves", it makes the Pawnee the bad guys bullying the Lakotas. But in reality, the Pawnee where the smaller tribe, constantly harassed by the stronger Lakotas. In 1873, the Sioux of Lakota tribe attacked the Pawnees at what became known as "Massacre creek". The Sioux raped, tortured, killed, and mutilated over 150 Pawnee women children, and old folk. So much for the brave & noble warrior image portrayed in the Kevin Costner film.

    • @joelellis7035
      @joelellis7035 Před 2 měsíci +2

      A Kevin Costner film being historically accurate? Have you seen Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves?

    • @scottbright595
      @scottbright595 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@joelellis7035 very few films are historically accurate, most movies are not history lessons

    • @timothyjones1906
      @timothyjones1906 Před 2 měsíci

      Can’t believe the CZcams fascist allowed you to post the truth . How long did they ban you from CZcams.

    • @neglectfulsausage7689
      @neglectfulsausage7689 Před 2 měsíci

      robin hood was a documenary, and the events were filmed in real time @@joelellis7035

    • @benjamincary5526
      @benjamincary5526 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@scottbright595 Thank you, Captain Obvious.

  • @wyluli-dt9wv
    @wyluli-dt9wv Před 3 měsíci +162

    The strong have always conquered their weaker neighbors. That hasn't changed even today where we see conflicts in eastern Europe and the Middle East. Peoples will still be fighting 1000 years from now. Its what we do.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +11

      Yep. That’s the truth.

    • @donaldberry822
      @donaldberry822 Před 3 měsíci +7

      This is also why with the machines of war advanced as they are today,we are heading for extinction.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +5

      @donaldberry822 could be. I forget who said that WW3 would be fought with bombs and WW4 would be fought with sticks and stones.

    • @donaldberry822
      @donaldberry822 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@mikeuptegrove
      Whomever suggested there were to be a WW 4 is very optimistic.

    • @brianjones9780
      @brianjones9780 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@mikeuptegroveit was Einstein who said that. I'm leaning more towards the very real possibility of a WW3, but no matter how things play out, it will end in a singularity-type event where modern life, historical life, are entirely ancient in comparison. My guess is a technocratic nobility gains control of whatever's left and rules the planet like it's one giant organism. The world we know IS ending, what comes after is the big question.

  • @outdoorlife5396
    @outdoorlife5396 Před 3 měsíci +142

    It is brutal but true. Look at the Comanches, they ruled the plains. It was the same all over the continent

    • @dastemplar9681
      @dastemplar9681 Před 3 měsíci +11

      They even would raid American, Mexican, and other Native settlements outside their territory just to set “an example” for foreigners. Anyone who was lucky to have survived was often captured and enslaved by the Comanche.
      Comanche were also known for getting creative in how they would torture and kill their victims, and they very much would take their time and make sure every second was an episode of agony.

    • @outdoorlife5396
      @outdoorlife5396 Před 3 měsíci

      @@dastemplar9681 Yea, in Hell on Wheels, the whore and the black man were both slaves and I think that was the attraction for the two characters. I was explaining her face to my youngest son. Who is a college grad, don't get me started.

    • @brainplay8060
      @brainplay8060 Před 3 měsíci +3

      The funny part about the Comanche is that they were almost exterminated themselves by other natives. They came from the north east after being kicked out of their lands by the Sioux. They headed south. It was after they discovered horses that they became masters of the saddle and dominated the entire south west area. Other tribes feared them.
      I remember reading a description of them by a Spanish priest. He said on foot they were unimpressive in stature and in body. But on horseback they were one with the horse.

    • @brainplay8060
      @brainplay8060 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@NzbdjcnxThe only tribes that were peaceful were the ones that already dominated an area. Being able to hold land is as important as being able to conquer it.

    • @outdoorlife5396
      @outdoorlife5396 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@brainplay8060 Here in the east, we have tribes that seem like they are peaceful. But back in there day, they dominated other tribes, by taking their lands. From what I see, it is kind of the same way in the west. The tribes, fought over hunting lands for the most part.

  • @mihailokuveljic2832
    @mihailokuveljic2832 Před 3 měsíci +233

    Finally the truth has been spoken.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +23

      Exactly. It’s a very concise dialogue of the reality of mankind’s existence.

    • @susanndrake3838
      @susanndrake3838 Před 5 dny

      Like the Bible..it's mans truth..not spiritual truth..war is the devil's tool of control.. unconditional love is the greatest power..but ego rules the world..

    • @susanndrake3838
      @susanndrake3838 Před 5 dny +1

      Like the the Bible is mans truth..not spiritual truth.. unconditional love is the highest power, but ego rules the world.., for it's the devils tool.

  • @Oct14cya
    @Oct14cya Před 3 měsíci +49

    Crazy Horse has surrendered. They then joined Neil Young and put out some fine music.

  • @WieldingEminator
    @WieldingEminator Před 2 měsíci +86

    "...for no less noble a cause." I do miss when writing in the movies was good.

  • @fishyc150
    @fishyc150 Před 3 měsíci +103

    Theres a scene in "custer of the west" between custer and dull knife that's very similar:
    "Gen. George Armstrong Custer: I'll make it very simple for you. The fact that we seem to be pushing you clear off the earth is not my responsibility. The problem is precisely the same as when you Cheyenne decided to take another tribe's hunting ground. You didn't ask them about their rights. You didn't care if they had been there a thousand years. You just had more men and more horses. You destroyed them in battle. You took what you wanted, and right or wrong, for better or worse, that is the way things seem to get done. That's history. I'm talking about history. You are a militarily defeated people. You are paying the price for being backward. And whatever my personal feelings, and I don't say I have, there's nothing I can do to change all this. Do you understand?
    Chief Dull Knife: I understand."

    • @snowdroog1
      @snowdroog1 Před 3 měsíci +13

      Custer was actually a terrible person though

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +4

      Exactly. Very important dialog! And so true. No one said it’s nice. Doesn’t have to be. It’s the cold, hard, reality. We can strive for better, but at the end of the day, it always returns to more of the same as things get scarce, or feel that way.

    • @stevenrubisch629
      @stevenrubisch629 Před 3 měsíci +10

      ​@snowdroog1 So was hitler. But if hitler states that 2+2=4 is he wrong by virtue of his name? Stop being foolish.

    • @snowdroog1
      @snowdroog1 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@stevenrubisch629 friend, I didn't say the conclusion was wrong. What you even posting for?

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +3

      @snowdroog1 we’ve heard that many people are/were terrible. We’ve also learned that all it takes is to repeat something over and over until even lies become true. What if all the, “terrible”, people of history are actually the good people? What if we’ve all been lied to?

  • @basicprogrammer6147
    @basicprogrammer6147 Před měsícem +6

    The name of this movie is:
    Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (2007)

  • @CarrinaCarrillo
    @CarrinaCarrillo Před 2 měsíci +58

    The Native Americans were not a bunch of innocent nature lovers. They were brutal to each other and tortured their enemies over thousands of years before Europeans arrived. This is not a 'hit' on Native Americans. It is human nature.

    • @osagenative1791
      @osagenative1791 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Source: "Trust me bro"

    • @CarrinaCarrillo
      @CarrinaCarrillo Před 2 měsíci

      Much of this I learned from Native Americans and also from archeological evidence. There is also increasing evidence that the Native Americans may have butchered people who existed on this continent before the arrival of the Native Americans. There were other people who were her before the Native Americans! @@osagenative1791

    • @ConsumptiveSoul
      @ConsumptiveSoul Před měsícem +7

      @@osagenative1791 what source it’s true there’s records of native Americans were brutal to each other. They had slaves as well.

    • @osagenative1791
      @osagenative1791 Před měsícem

      @@ConsumptiveSoul many of these "records" you speak of were written by white colonizers who had a vested interest in portraying Native people as mindless savages who were undeserving of the land, so of course many accounts are going to say that. Did tribes fight each other? Sure. Was it on the same level as the Europeans during the 100 years war? Nope. When tribes fought each other it was more like a street fight between gangs with wooden clubs. We didn't see wars of attrition and fields littered with dead bodies until Europeans arrived. As for slavery, there were some "upper elites" within 5 tribes in the Southeast (out of 600 tribes spread across the country) who engaged in chattel slavery because they were assimilating into European value systems and were intermarried with Wh1tes, so you can take a guess as to who introduced this system of slavery to those particular tribes. Hint: it was Wh1te ppl.

    • @Luci_S
      @Luci_S Před 18 dny +2

      Ahh the colonizers justifying their pitty existence in one's home and still bending over their corporate overlords.

  • @jody6851
    @jody6851 Před 3 měsíci +21

    Interestingly, I also read that Kevin Kostner's film "Dances With Wolves" is totally inaccurate. In the film, he portrays the Lakota Sioux as peaceful compassionate people who made friends with Kostner and raised the White orphan girl played by Mary McDonald who eventually becomes Kostner's wife, whose family was brutally murdered by the Mohawk-hairstyled Pawnee and their savage leader played by Wes Studi. Studi also killed and scalped Kostner's guide into Indian country early in the film. In the film, the Lakota later had to go to war against them in total self-defense with Studi going down last in the final battle. In fact, the Pawnee were allies of the US and the 7th Cavalry and they were terrified of the Lakota Sioux who brutally attacked them on numerous occasions to force them off prime hunting grounds in the Dakotas and in Nebraska.

    • @davidweston4077
      @davidweston4077 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Costner... :)

    • @jody6851
      @jody6851 Před 2 měsíci

      LOL! Costner. I stand corrected. Must be the German in me.@@davidweston4077

  • @TuxedoMedia
    @TuxedoMedia Před 3 měsíci +24

    Up till this point justification for conquest and brutality wasn't really a thing. The kings of Syria, Mongolians, Romans and all other powerful people's conquered, enslaved and committed genocide because they could.

    • @georgecoventry8441
      @georgecoventry8441 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yes, they took whatever they had the strength to take, and they didn't feel the least bit guilty about it. They were, of course, hated by the people they conquered, which is not surprising. No one enjoys being conquered by a foreign power...and all populations mourn being conquered. Meanwhile, the conquerors celebrate their victory. So it goes.

    • @jessiemeisenheimer8675
      @jessiemeisenheimer8675 Před 2 měsíci

      Technically the Roman Senate and later Emperors would need justification for further conquests.

    • @Zuwze
      @Zuwze Před měsícem

      @@jessiemeisenheimer8675 "Technically the Roman Senate and later Emperors would need justification for further conquests." They needed explain to themselves why they should go to war, they didn't need to justify it to the people they attacked.

  • @trickydicky2908
    @trickydicky2908 Před 3 měsíci +17

    "All for property" A line from a character in the book, "The Thin Red Line" to remind himself why he was on Guadalcanal.

  • @mattmattmatt131313
    @mattmattmatt131313 Před 3 měsíci +20

    Damn, now that's a movie scene that would not be made today!

  • @user-pz7tf1cj2y
    @user-pz7tf1cj2y Před 2 měsíci +9

    Anyone remember how Disney Pocahontas opens? Powhatan's first lines boil down to: "we just thrashed the tribe downriver! You should have seen Kocoum!" the truth of the matter is, man has been conquering each other for ages. Whether he does it with a rock, a sword, or a gun, conflict has been much of the story of man. The briefest of looks at history tells you what you need to know.

  • @rynor7132
    @rynor7132 Před 2 měsíci +11

    Law of Conquest. It is only your land if you can keep it

  • @edwardherbert882
    @edwardherbert882 Před 3 měsíci +11

    that soldier didn't even blink.....tough fellow

    • @d.owczarzak6888
      @d.owczarzak6888 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Nelson Miles was wounded 4 times during the Civil War and won the Medal of Honor for gallantry at Spotsylvania.

    • @edwardherbert882
      @edwardherbert882 Před 2 měsíci

      he didn't nor does he play at all@@d.owczarzak6888

    • @jaydunno8266
      @jaydunno8266 Před 2 měsíci

      @@d.owczarzak6888 He was also the last commanding general of the US Army.

  • @shionkreth7536
    @shionkreth7536 Před 3 měsíci +16

    The truth is usually simpler than we make it out to be, indeed.

  • @leeleonard2746
    @leeleonard2746 Před 3 měsíci +41

    Nailed it.

  • @larryedwards9501
    @larryedwards9501 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Man that paragraph in the description, wow! Well said❤

  • @thegeneralmitch
    @thegeneralmitch Před 2 dny +2

    Native Americans: How DARE you call us savages!
    White Man: Bro were holding these negotiations on an animal hide!

  • @marksheen4873
    @marksheen4873 Před 3 měsíci +41

    Imagine this movie being made now lol

  • @DagwoodDogwoggle
    @DagwoodDogwoggle Před 2 měsíci +7

    You could never get this mini-series made today.

  • @thatsmygrogdd984
    @thatsmygrogdd984 Před 5 dny +2

    As a Native American this is so true lol. We were fighting each other for land and power. Ain't nothing spiritual about that.

  • @bruscifer
    @bruscifer Před 2 měsíci +17

    We visited the Comanche museum a few years ago. I had already read "Empire of the Comanche Moon". Moving through the exhibits I chuckled to myself. They were making themselves out to be peaceful, and caring people while ignoring the facts of their brutality to other tribes as well has Mexican and Texan settlers. I don't blame them really. Too bad we can't get a really honest and well made movie about that time, or better yet that book.

  • @GRecon1
    @GRecon1 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Is this a clip from a full movie or show? If so can anyone provide the info or link, thanks

  • @julietlima5564
    @julietlima5564 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Wow... this was really good!
    What movie is this from?

    • @grussgott0768
      @grussgott0768 Před měsícem +1

      The movie is called Bury my heart at wounded knee

  • @odysseusrex5908
    @odysseusrex5908 Před 2 měsíci

    That was very well done. Excellent writing, directing and acing and the production values were absolutely fabulous.

  • @DBXClanOfficialYoutubeChannel
    @DBXClanOfficialYoutubeChannel Před 3 měsíci +20

    what is this film called?

    • @aetius7139
      @aetius7139 Před 3 měsíci +21

      Bury my heart at wounded knee (2007)

    • @stevenjericho
      @stevenjericho Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@aetius7139thank you

  • @books4739
    @books4739 Před 2 měsíci +4

    when chief sitting bull himself is being played by a European man you know it is not a fair argument.
    The fact is there are no Natives left to argue their case.

  • @roderickreilly9666
    @roderickreilly9666 Před 3 měsíci +6

    The Sioux of the Black Hills, after Lewis and Clark, literally became a "most favored nation" to the US. They were granted control of their region's fur trade, and were even innocculated against smallpox.

  • @pwilki8631
    @pwilki8631 Před 7 dny +2

    I'm on a jobsite that the owner spent over a half million for native monitors because we found one Injun bone. What a joke. Guess they get the last laugh.

  • @DiogenesDworkinson
    @DiogenesDworkinson Před 5 dny +1

    What movie is this? I want to watch it so bad right now, and I got 4 days off to do it.
    EDIT: found it, it's called Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee from 2007

  • @michael76137
    @michael76137 Před 2 měsíci +4

    What movie is that from - would love to see it?

  • @jackmorgan8931
    @jackmorgan8931 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Hey, Mike....
    Only this: Bravo! And no, not for the video...but yes, oh it is indeed a classic.
    But what impressed the hell out of me were your comments.
    I'm tempted to tell you that I'll be 72 in a couple of months and I could tell you how and why I started keeping a journal back on Wednesday 11/21/79 which is now over 9 million words long and how I have indeed always been fascinated by simply standing back and watching the human condition play out. And the only point would be to say you summed it all up perfectly and as succinctly as possible. But I won't.
    Mike, again: Bravo!

  • @j.6378
    @j.6378 Před 3 měsíci +37

    Germans when the allies give Poland its land back.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +10

      Yeah, it’s every script for history. Just change a few names around and the story works like every time.

    • @wotanragnarok59
      @wotanragnarok59 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Allies never gave Poland any land back, they handed the country to Stalin🤔
      That worked out well for them and the whole of Eastern Europe.
      DYOR

    • @kaletovhangar
      @kaletovhangar Před 3 měsíci +1

      So Truman should have went to 3rd world war for the sake of Poland? ​@@wotanragnarok59

    • @j.6378
      @j.6378 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@wotanragnarok59 true.

    • @therovingrobin5938
      @therovingrobin5938 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@wotanragnarok59oh dear...the Soviet Union was part of the allies! And it took polish land and gave it to Ukraine and in turn rewarded Poland with East Prussia!

  • @evanaltman9286
    @evanaltman9286 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Imagine you're an Aztec and you see a guy, covered in iron armor, on a horse, with a gun for the time

    • @jessiemeisenheimer8675
      @jessiemeisenheimer8675 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Funnily enough, the Spanish preferred using Aztec armour becauae it provided more comfort and mobility and the same level of protection as their own armour.

  • @sonofashepard130
    @sonofashepard130 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Movie is called Bury my heart at wounded knee.

  • @rankoorovic7904
    @rankoorovic7904 Před 3 měsíci +33

    I am surprised how many people see this for the first time and this is in a movie that was on HBO

    • @alg7115
      @alg7115 Před 3 měsíci +1

      What movie is it

    • @rankoorovic7904
      @rankoorovic7904 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@alg7115 Bury my heart at Wounded knee from 2007 or 2008 HBO production

  • @aladrasullivan9018
    @aladrasullivan9018 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Is this clip from a movie, if so whats the name of it?

  • @noahjohnson935
    @noahjohnson935 Před 3 měsíci +21

    I wish humans wouldnt kill each other senselessly. We just need to remember past wrongs to not forget, and learn going forward.

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +9

      Yeah, that’s the thing…the past is never wrong, it’s just the past. At the time, the people then did as they believed they must. It’s the same now, only we will ever understand the context of the times we live in, and no matter what, posterity will view our decisions through their lens in the context of their reality then. But there seems to be certain things that define all species that are immutable. This scene captures that, for better or worse.

    • @aetius7139
      @aetius7139 Před 3 měsíci

      Peace is just a prelude to greater war. War is in human nature. Since dawn of time. Human tribes are at war with each other. For land, wealth, glory, or just petty grievences. That was what it is for 10,000 years of human existence. And will continue to be so for how long humans will exist.....

    • @MnemonicHack
      @MnemonicHack Před 3 měsíci

      Humans have been killing eachother for thousands of years, for a variety of reasons. Who are we, only a handful of decades old, to question the means?

    • @Vandicoup
      @Vandicoup Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@mikeuptegrove Those who ignore history, are doomed to repeat it.

    • @anthonyshen6722
      @anthonyshen6722 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@mikeuptegrove well why don't we try to place our current situation in a historical context and think about it as we do early times? Certainly learning and trying to a think differently isn't a bad thing

  • @NathanCooCoo
    @NathanCooCoo Před 2 měsíci +3

    EVERY MAN is alive because he and his ancestors had to slaughter countless other creatures to survive, including other men. Welcome to Samsara.

  • @BillyMinnow
    @BillyMinnow Před 2 měsíci +4

    Dude wrote a book that literally no one will read but couldnt include the name of the movie.

    • @osagenative1791
      @osagenative1791 Před 2 měsíci

      His skate videos weren't trending so he figured a video about race will bump up those views

    • @osagenative1791
      @osagenative1791 Před 2 měsíci

      The films is an HBO series called "Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee" after the book it's based on by Dee Brown.

  • @davincimemes3631
    @davincimemes3631 Před 3 měsíci +4

    What is this from? Which movie?

  • @ianbatkin9632
    @ianbatkin9632 Před 15 dny +2

    Sitting Bull was never a chief, neither did he ever claim to be.

  • @peppertrout
    @peppertrout Před 3 měsíci +14

    This is me and my sister every time we fight over the car.

    • @olalan
      @olalan Před 3 měsíci

      hahahahahahaha

  • @costilla1212
    @costilla1212 Před 3 měsíci +14

    What cracks me up is by the time the Europeans came the Native Americans still hadn't even invented the f××king Wheel 😂

    • @footbalrocks4850
      @footbalrocks4850 Před 3 měsíci

      💀💀🤣🤣🤣 I KNO RIGHT LIKE SHIIIIEEEET!!!!! DEM STUPID AHH INDINS DIDN EVEN ENVENT DA WHEEL!!!! 🤷🏿‍♂️🤷🏿‍♂️ shit got me rollin!!!

  • @ryanunruh2683
    @ryanunruh2683 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Damn. That was one of the most profound yt vids I've seen in a while, and I'm always looking for profound...

  • @lochnessmonster5149
    @lochnessmonster5149 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The fact that any native tribes survived the conquest and settlement of the Americas by Europeans is a bloody miracle.

  • @calebray4168
    @calebray4168 Před 3 měsíci +9

    Such a goddamn amazing scene, love it. So much to learn here.

  • @rangerista3933
    @rangerista3933 Před 3 měsíci +5

    What film is this clip taken from?

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Not so sure. All I know is it’s one of the most important dialogues Hollywood has ever written and produced.

    • @HammerJammer81
      @HammerJammer81 Před 3 měsíci +10

      Its called Bury my heart at Wounded Knee.

    • @HammerJammer81
      @HammerJammer81 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@mikeuptegrove At least look up and watch the movie prior to posting this!

    • @nimairivet777
      @nimairivet777 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@HammerJammer81 Why? He made his point precisely. No need watch the whole movie 😂

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +4

      Why do I need to watch the entire movie? The scene is the point. It’s the point I’m making, that is, that it’s a concise, 4 minute, reality of the entirety of history. That’s what the title of the post indicates. I’m not advertising for a Hollywood film, I’m pointing out something concise and brilliant, as well as saying that even a broken clock displays the correct time twice a day.

  • @doug3819
    @doug3819 Před 2 měsíci +2

    As my late father use to say God would probably hold the European culture more responsible. They had the advantage in they had a understanding of the 10 commandments and the sermon on the mount and other scriptures that has been the foundation of western culture whether someone likes it or not.

    • @erenjeager5290
      @erenjeager5290 Před 2 měsíci

      The foundation of western culture is individual freedoms, not God’s law. America is a secular liberal atheist nation, not a Christian nation.

  • @doug7467
    @doug7467 Před 20 dny

    What is the title of the film this clip is taken from?

  • @michaelsterling2650
    @michaelsterling2650 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Based history vs feelings

  • @AntiDecepticonCampaign
    @AntiDecepticonCampaign Před 2 měsíci +4

    Does everyone forget the French and Mexico were just as if not more brutal? Especially Mexico after the war.

  • @miguelvic3222
    @miguelvic3222 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Name of the movie?

  • @chadlineage
    @chadlineage Před 5 dny +1

    title of this movie/series pls tia

  • @Johannes_Piotr
    @Johannes_Piotr Před 3 měsíci +5

    Which movie is this?

  • @roringusanda2837
    @roringusanda2837 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Yep. Nobody's hands are clean.

  • @thatdarnneighbor
    @thatdarnneighbor Před 2 měsíci +1

    What movie is this

  • @WolfStrife
    @WolfStrife Před 2 měsíci +1

    These comments give me hope for mankind. Respect, logic and wisdom🙏🏻

  • @JMoore-vo7ii
    @JMoore-vo7ii Před 3 měsíci +5

    Interesting that so many of the comments critiquing the sentiment in this video are missing or removed

  • @lenkasauter7400
    @lenkasauter7400 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Absolutely perfect

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman6101 Před 15 dny +2

    I care about the Native Americans today.
    Their own Country Land Homes were so badly taken over.

  • @stevetrevino5346
    @stevetrevino5346 Před 6 dny

    2 very well-spoken individuals with a very high level of intellect and vocabulary. Surprised, they just didn't have a duel to decide the outcome of this well thought out debate.

  • @jasonx-ray3921
    @jasonx-ray3921 Před 3 měsíci +15

    The white guy outsmarted the red guy and won that debate.

  • @trooper18th
    @trooper18th Před 3 měsíci +4

    What a great scene, love it!

  • @lucasxbr6222
    @lucasxbr6222 Před 3 měsíci

    What is the name of this movie? Seems very good

  • @Carneades2012
    @Carneades2012 Před měsícem

    This 4-minute video is a clip from a Hollywood movie, isn't it?--Does anyone know the name of the movie?

  • @marshalmcdonald7476
    @marshalmcdonald7476 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Yes, it was not a pastoral wonderland before Europeans arrived.....

  • @nimairivet777
    @nimairivet777 Před 3 měsíci +19

    Brutal

    • @mikeuptegrove
      @mikeuptegrove  Před 3 měsíci +3

      Reality sadly is, and always has been. Live like this perpetually or with homeless on drugs everywhere with no purpose? Or in families that aren’t unified and have too much leisure time but to complain and look for greener grass when life is right in front of you? Reality is still no different, the context of our perception has changed. Reality hasn’t.

  • @bdarth51
    @bdarth51 Před 2 měsíci

    What is this scene from?

  • @DTroop10thCav.
    @DTroop10thCav. Před 2 měsíci

    What is the name of this film? Thanks

  • @torgrim123
    @torgrim123 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Red Cloud were never a chief.

  • @silent1967
    @silent1967 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I guess we all have blood on our hands, one way or another.

    • @scottbright595
      @scottbright595 Před 2 měsíci

      Are you responsible for what your fathers sins?

    • @silent1967
      @silent1967 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@scottbright595 No, but there is such a thing as a generational curse.

  • @Godsglory777
    @Godsglory777 Před 3 měsíci +1

    What movie is this clip from?

  • @InamberI
    @InamberI Před 2 měsíci +2

    That's the most italian indian I've ever seen before

    • @nledaig
      @nledaig Před 19 dny

      Yep. Pretty comic.