Was GENERAL SHERMAN a WAR CRIMINAL?!?!?!?!

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  • čas přidán 10. 08. 2020
  • Episode 5 of Checkmate, Lincolnites! Debunking the Lost Cause myths surrounding William Tecumseh Sherman during the American Civil War, including the Atlanta Campaign, the March to the Sea, and the burning of Columbia - and tackling the "slavery would have gone away on its own" thing while we're at it. Surprisingly, Johnny Reb gets in one or two really solid points.
    Support Atun-Shei Films on Patreon ► / atunsheifilms
    Leave a Tip via Paypal ► www.paypal.me/atunsheifilms
    Buy Merch ► teespring.com/stores/atun-she...
    Official Website ► www.atunsheifilms.com/
    Original Music by Dillon DeRosa ► dillonderosa.com/
    ~REFERENCES~
    [1] Charles Royster. The Destructive War: William Tecumseh Sherman, Stonewall Jackson, and the Americans (1991). Vintage Civil War Library, Page 127
    [2] Nathan Johnson. “Could Slavery Have Died a Peaceful Death?” (2015). Civil Discourse History Blog www.civildiscourse-historyblo...
    [3] John Majewski. Modernizing a Slave Economy: The Economic Vision of the Confederate Nation (2009). University of North Carolina Press E-Books
    [4] Jennifer M. Murray. “Hard War in Virginia During the Civil War” (2010). Encyclopedia Virginia www.encyclopediavirginia.org/...
    [5] Stephen Davis. All the Fighting They Want: The Atlanta Campaign from Peachtree Creek to the City’s Surrender (2017). Savas Beattie, Page 37-38
    [6] Royster, Page 95
    [7] Royster, Page 117-118
    [8] Royster, Page 342
    [9] William T. Sherman. Memoirs of General William T. Sherman, Vol. II (1889). Project Gutenberg www.gutenberg.org/files/4361/...
    [10] Royster, Page 79-82
    [11] Royster, Page 34-41
    [12] Davis, Page 31, 112
    [13] Daniel A. Pollock. “The Battle of Atlanta: History and Remembrance” (2014). SouthernSpaces southernspaces.org/2014/battl...
    [14] Royster, Page 328-329
    [15] Royster, Page 5-25
    [16] Jeff Wilkinson. “Who Really Burned Columbia During the Civil War?” 2018). The State www.thestate.com/news/local/a...
    [17] Royster, Page 26-27
    [18] Royster, Page 346-347
    [19] Royster, 388-397

Komentáře • 11K

  • @AtunSheiFilms
    @AtunSheiFilms  Před 3 lety +2151

    Buy some merch ya filthy bluebellies! teespring.com/stores/atun-shei-films

    • @johnwall7968
      @johnwall7968 Před 3 lety +54

      I can give you $30 Confederate

    • @LadyTylerBioRodriguez
      @LadyTylerBioRodriguez Před 3 lety +21

      I'm now a fancy bluebelly thanks to this shop! *where's my paycheck*

    • @ftv2376
      @ftv2376 Před 3 lety +4

      YES

    • @johnwall7968
      @johnwall7968 Před 3 lety +6

      Just ordered me a dank checkmate Lincolnite tank to ride out the summer in historical style. Even cost me fewer than $30 confederate!

    • @LadyTylerBioRodriguez
      @LadyTylerBioRodriguez Před 3 lety +8

      @@johnwall7968 Union or Confederate dollars?

  • @adonisparts1343
    @adonisparts1343 Před 3 lety +10698

    They didn't name the tank after him, Sherman heard the nazis were using slave labor and reincarnated in tank form.

    • @atfyoutubedivision955
      @atfyoutubedivision955 Před 3 lety +1131

      Whats even better is there was a flame thrower version.

    • @atfyoutubedivision955
      @atfyoutubedivision955 Před 3 lety +510

      @@razerfish 1. Nodody said he did
      2. No he didn't
      3. Nobody said he didn't

    • @razerfish
      @razerfish Před 3 lety +9

      @@atfyoutubedivision955 He allowed his troops to rape and abuse women and children on his march through Georgia.

    • @atfyoutubedivision955
      @atfyoutubedivision955 Před 3 lety +473

      @@razerfish While rape and murder did happen (it's inevitable in a conflict where one army marches through another country, even today) it wasn't common and he didn't allow it. Its not as if he said "men,ill have you one extral dollar for every child beat, woman raped and murder commited".

    • @razerfish
      @razerfish Před 3 lety +29

      @@atfyoutubedivision955 His reputation might have been sanitized since i read up on ole Sherman. You get better PR when you're the victor, but there's still enough about him to show him for the monster he was. He wanted to inflict terror on civilians and a type of total war that they South would remember for 50 years. He allowed his men to burn homes, farms, and kill livestock of civilians in their path, which were often occupied by women and children or even slaves. This is a war crime and even more unacceptable when done to fellow Americans. Seems like wikipedia cleanses Sherman's reputation because liberals seem to accept war crimes against those horrible "traitorous" Southerners. I wonder if they'll be so accepting of Sherman's treatment of the Indians he fought against. I have a feeling they won't.

  • @demomanchaos
    @demomanchaos Před 3 lety +8631

    The problem with the flamethrower variant of the Sherman tank is that they kept escaping the test range and heading for Georgia."

    • @LeProsterOf999
      @LeProsterOf999 Před 3 lety +351

      away down south in the land of traitors rattlesnakes and gatorade momento B)

    • @cybubhm
      @cybubhm Před 3 lety +244

      And Grant tank crew was just getting drunk all the time.

    • @LeProsterOf999
      @LeProsterOf999 Před 3 lety +56

      @@cybubhm This is why we need prohibition.

    • @demomanchaos
      @demomanchaos Před 3 lety +123

      @Harvey Dustin You mean the most survivalable tank of the war, the most reliable tank of the war, one of the only ones to see every theater, the tank that later variants could quite happily take of Tigers/Panthers even through their frontal armor, and also proved itself superior to the T-34 during the Korean War?

    • @cybubhm
      @cybubhm Před 3 lety +19

      @Harvey Dustin Red Army tank crew members were desperate in getting M4 tanks because they were having somewhere around the T-34 in terms of weapon s and armor, but far more comfortable.
      About the "sameness" - consider looking in Wiki for T-34-76 and T-34-85. They are exact "bigger gun and increased armor" kind of upgrades.

  • @RafaelSCalsaverini
    @RafaelSCalsaverini Před 2 lety +3001

    Honestly? Former slaves capturing and flogging their former enslaver should really make anyone smile.

    • @Razorgeist
      @Razorgeist Před rokem +164

      Yep though the fact that they killed the dogs made me cringe.

    • @RafaelSCalsaverini
      @RafaelSCalsaverini Před rokem +287

      @@Razorgeist it's unfortunate, but people swept up in rage do some stupid shit. Even if the rage is righteous.

    • @goofygoober779
      @goofygoober779 Před rokem +354

      @@Razorgeist The dogs were probably racist too.

    • @USSEnterprise6126
      @USSEnterprise6126 Před rokem +304

      @@goofygoober779 well considering who trained them yes

    • @lucasf6946
      @lucasf6946 Před rokem +282

      @Razorgeist to be fair it wouldn't surprise me if the dogs were specifically trained to attack them, so I could imagine it being a self-defense or security measure on the part of the former slaves

  • @ShellyTheSeal
    @ShellyTheSeal Před rokem +1110

    To compare what the Imperial Japanese Army did to the people of Nanjing to what the Union did to the Confederacy is like comparing a compound fracture to a scraped knee

    • @jonasastrom7422
      @jonasastrom7422 Před rokem +11

      The killing of innocent people will always be comparable, he never once tried comparing the number of people who died

    • @ShellyTheSeal
      @ShellyTheSeal Před rokem +183

      @@jonasastrom7422 I never said I was comparing the amount of people who died either. You clearly have no idea what the IJA did in Nanjing.

    • @jonasastrom7422
      @jonasastrom7422 Před rokem +8

      @@ShellyTheSeal They murdered innocent people, that's the main takeaway, and yes I do know they were more brutal

    • @ShellyTheSeal
      @ShellyTheSeal Před rokem +193

      @@jonasastrom7422 understatement of the century

    • @hannahdyson7129
      @hannahdyson7129 Před rokem +89

      ​@@jonasastrom7422Not comparable at all

  • @zachplummer625
    @zachplummer625 Před 3 lety +4723

    Remember, don't hate Southerners hate Confederates.

    • @dcavic6157
      @dcavic6157 Před 3 lety +389

      I agree but it doesn't help if most southerners remember the confederacy as a system that "stood up to oppression." When really they were the ones oppressing.

    • @tskmaster3837
      @tskmaster3837 Před 3 lety +131

      No. If they want to pretend that they didn't lose the Civil War but rather the War of Northern Aggression or that their loss gave them the right to act like Southholes towards everyone they deem necessary then I'll pretend the Civil War didn't properly end.
      Because obviously it didn't.

    • @trauko1388
      @trauko1388 Před 3 lety +13

      Why choose?

    • @SarsTheSecond
      @SarsTheSecond Před 3 lety +15

      @★ Froggie Animation ★ No confederates should be put in camps as traitors!

    • @colemanstarr5404
      @colemanstarr5404 Před 3 lety +149

      I'm a Southerner, not Black, and i hate Confederates.

  • @TheDarthbinky
    @TheDarthbinky Před 3 lety +2905

    Johnny Reb: No Southerner ever did anything bad to any Indian ever!
    Andrew Jackson: Am I a joke to you?

    • @netrolancer1061
      @netrolancer1061 Před 3 lety +127

      I think he was referring to the Southerners during the Civil War, but regardless that statement was overly generalized.

    • @looney9105
      @looney9105 Před 3 lety +22

      I'm pretty sure Jackson was from the north (I'm not entirely sure but I can't imagine him being from the south)
      Edit: stop fucking replying to me I wanna watch leafy
      please stop replying to my stuff this was almost a year ago

    • @netrolancer1061
      @netrolancer1061 Před 3 lety +161

      ​@@looney9105 Jackson was born in Waxhaws between the borders of North and South Carolina, however his permanent residence was in Tennessee. So he is a Southerner.

    • @eatmedrinkme9628
      @eatmedrinkme9628 Před 3 lety +84

      @@looney9105 Andrew Jackson was born on March 15, 1767, in the Waxhaws region on the border of North and South Carolina. The exact location of his birth is uncertain, and both states have claimed him as a native son; Jackson himself maintained he was from South Carolina.

    • @looney9105
      @looney9105 Před 3 lety

      @@netrolancer1061 hm. not the deep south I guess

  • @thatoneguywiththevoice328
    @thatoneguywiththevoice328 Před rokem +1727

    "Sherman did nothing wrong"
    "Yes he did... He stopped"
    Love it

    • @aaronlaughter6471
      @aaronlaughter6471 Před rokem

      I agree, he should have wiped out the native Americans.

    • @avataraarow
      @avataraarow Před 11 měsíci +27

      Facts

    • @TheMilitantMazdakite
      @TheMilitantMazdakite Před 11 měsíci +20

      BASED!!!!!

    • @girlgarde
      @girlgarde Před 10 měsíci +24

      He had to stop because the Confederates gave up which was quite wise of them to do given that the heartland of the South was occupied and badly ravaged.

    • @avataraarow
      @avataraarow Před 10 měsíci +26

      @bastiat4855 idk pretty sure my family’s not gonna be fighting for the rights to enslave people, so shouldn’t be an issue. If it us they have it coming

  • @Sam-bv7vk
    @Sam-bv7vk Před rokem +1750

    It's great how lost causers call Sherman a war criminal but are perfectly happy to defend Nathan Bedford Forrest.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Před rokem +244

      Slave owners bleating about war crimes is so ‘bless your heart’ 😂

    • @powersimp666
      @powersimp666 Před rokem +188

      Everytime I hear someone start whitewashing Grand Wizard Forrest's legacy, I start wishing Sherman had started the fires in Tenessee.

    • @NeiasaurusCreations
      @NeiasaurusCreations Před 10 měsíci

      @@powersimp666 I can't get over the fact the leader of the most racist group in the US is literally called a 'grand wizard'. Like broooo...I'd hang myself if I unironically called myself a grand wizard.

    • @ntfoperative9432
      @ntfoperative9432 Před 10 měsíci +13

      I think they’re both War Criminals

    • @raulisrael7342
      @raulisrael7342 Před 9 měsíci +12

      well tbh, not ALL of southerners were slave owners but that didn't stop sherman or his boys, no im not a southerner I just have common sense, slaves were a comodity, the average working dirt poor southerner couldn't afford them but they were still affected, a war crime is a war crime, regardless if union or confederate forces did it.@@CorePathway

  • @elbruces
    @elbruces Před 3 lety +4127

    The South: "our military strength is backed by our agriculture."
    Sherman: (lights a torch) "we can fix that."

    • @JollyOldCanuck
      @JollyOldCanuck Před 3 lety +118

      The North had superior agricultural capabilities compared to the South due to their larger population and higher level of industrialization which led to more efficient farms.

    • @thekommunistkrusader3921
      @thekommunistkrusader3921 Před 3 lety +13

      @@JollyOldCanuck smaller farms that have the same yield; yes...

    • @MondayNightHugz
      @MondayNightHugz Před 3 lety +165

      @@JollyOldCanuck You can't feed an army on cotton and tobacco. Plus the majority of the midwest was in northern hands which is a breadbasket for the world.

    • @MondayNightHugz
      @MondayNightHugz Před 3 lety +11

      @@TheWhale45 This is why we always keep a Sheridan around.

    • @hexa3389
      @hexa3389 Před 3 lety +91

      "good luck eating cotton"
      - U. S. Grant

  • @willerwin3201
    @willerwin3201 Před 3 lety +3661

    After the war, Sherman and Johnston became such good friends that Johnston, as a pallbearer at Sherman's funeral, refused to wear a hat in the bitter cold out of respect. Johnston then came down with pneumonia and died a few weeks later.
    *tl;dr: Even in death, Sherman killed a confederate.*

    • @alex_roivas333
      @alex_roivas333 Před 3 lety +406

      lmao! and doesn't let friendship get in the way of traitor killing XD

    • @akumaking1
      @akumaking1 Před 3 lety +323

      That's hilariously tragic

    • @willworkswood3215
      @willworkswood3215 Před 3 lety +4

      Johnston the boot licker who was for sale from the womb! How surprising!

    • @wcornell74
      @wcornell74 Před 3 lety +147

      Lol that's kind of sweet..
      Same thing happened in the scopes trial. The two lawyers battling it out over evolution vs. Creationism became life long friends. They often drank together.

    • @TheStapleGunKid
      @TheStapleGunKid Před 3 lety +89

      @@willworkswood3215 Johnston was so dedicated to defending the CSA that he returned to lead its armies after taking a bullet at Seven Pines. How amusing to see someone calling him a boot licker from the safety of their computer screen.

  • @sickby85
    @sickby85 Před 9 měsíci +631

    In first of all, English is not my native language, but I hope you understand.
    My favorite Sherman joke is this one.
    What is the difference between the CSA and Nazi Germany?
    It took more than one Sherman to defeat Nazi Germany.

  • @mwilkins1644
    @mwilkins1644 Před rokem +773

    Interesting that they Confederate defenders get mad about the raping of Southern women like it's an unspeakable and horrible crime (and yes it is), but don't say anything about the raping of black and enslaved women.

    • @ComradeOgilvy1984
      @ComradeOgilvy1984 Před rokem +6

      Nothing is sweeter to a "proper southern gentleman" than to bed the pretty daughter of his father's favorite servant girl.

    • @williamlancaster5136
      @williamlancaster5136 Před 10 měsíci

      What else do you expect from those bigoted idiots?

    • @AmericanBrit9834
      @AmericanBrit9834 Před 9 měsíci +156

      They don't see the slaves as human so it's okay. I gave you the reasoning, I never said it was good.

    • @fkboyStalin
      @fkboyStalin Před 6 měsíci

      nah not even just the explicit rape, they had fucking breeding farms man, which yes, technically rape but most of the women probably wouldn't have called it as so as the farms took women from birth raised them and told them that if they had enough kids they could be free, you'd have to have 15-20 kids before freedom was given though, that is the type of shit we do to animals we farm and they did it to other humans, how the fuck am I supposed to care when they bring up southerners being raped but they don't care about the literal breeding farms for slaves, it's selective care and I simply don't care about their arguments, whine all you want that a few of your women were raped cause you started a war, those women got to exist happy normal lives their whole life up to it meanwhile the south has literal farms for girls to be enslaved and mass raped and I'm to care for the argument of a person who only cares about one? I wanna say, I'm not saying Idc they were raped, that is shitty, and those who did it are condemnable, but it's crocodile tears to care about one which is incredibly minor if compared (which we shouldn't, comparing these things is mostly irrelevant but the reality is the farms were worse) when I see southererners crying and talking about all the slaves who were raped and put into breeding farms etc then I'll believe that they actually care that women were raped, until then to me it's just another talking point they are throwing out they could care less that humans actually experienced that shit.

    • @RK-ej1to
      @RK-ej1to Před 6 měsíci +27

      Well remember, from what I can garner from peoples arguments are that they recognize slavery is wrong, but this war wasn’t about slavery so there’s no point in revisiting the horrors of this clearly bad thing. But these poor white women who may or may not have been raped in the name of states rights is a tragedy. How could these poor women be subjected to such horror for simply wanting states rights, regardless of what rights they were concerned about keeping. Did I mention states rights? I may have forgotten to…….STATES RIGHTS!!!

  • @pcprincipal9517
    @pcprincipal9517 Před 2 lety +7947

    "If you could describe the Confederacy in one word what would it be?"
    Lincoln:" Treasonous"
    Robert Lee:' Righteous"
    Sherman:" Flammable"

  • @ChainGangDude100
    @ChainGangDude100 Před 3 lety +8440

    I’m starting to realise that the release of this series is probably dictated by the rate of facial hair growth.

  • @willbxtn
    @willbxtn Před 2 lety +1209

    "Looting houses and reveling in people's misfortune is the terrible, lowest form of terrible act. We're trying to have a nice clean fight so we can continue to own and trade black people".

    • @SephonDK
      @SephonDK Před rokem +123

      Well put - Sherman was brutal, but it pretty much breaks down to the point that Sherman did what he did to people seceding because they wanted slavery to be a thing. And very brutal form of slavery too. The CSA was a nightmarishly unjust state.

    • @spacemanx9595
      @spacemanx9595 Před 5 měsíci +16

      Sherman is a total Chad

    • @vidurbutalia2130
      @vidurbutalia2130 Před 2 měsíci +6

      I love the line in Union Dixie that describes the South as the place where “cotton’s king and men are chattel”. Seems to me there was a country on that continent that hated kings 😎

    • @filmandfirearms
      @filmandfirearms Před měsícem +7

      @@vidurbutalia2130 "Cotton's king" is referring to "King Cotton", a term used by southerners to refer to their economic policy. It has nothing to do with a hatred of kings, it's just using the enemy's own rhetoric against them, which is a classic propaganda tactic

    • @daniellewillis2767
      @daniellewillis2767 Před 23 dny

      Wait...Sherman

  • @daehr9399
    @daehr9399 Před 7 měsíci +357

    My great x5 grandfather fought for the Confederacy. Upon his return at the end of the War, he found his farm had been usurped from him. Not by Yankees, but by fellow Southerners. Can confirm your points.

  • @danishfarrell4653
    @danishfarrell4653 Před 3 lety +2722

    The last comment: "I'm escaping to the ONE place that hasn't been corrupted by the North...
    SPACE"

  • @Lepper36
    @Lepper36 Před 3 lety +2545

    Random note. Sherman HATED the song "Marching Through Georgia". Because they would play it every. Goddamn. Time. He showed up.

    • @krautreport202
      @krautreport202 Před 3 lety +307

      Even on his funeral...

    • @DietrichvonSachsen
      @DietrichvonSachsen Před 3 lety +259

      To be fair, that sounds more like a loathing from overplaying it than any dislike of it's content or context...

    • @firebird4491
      @firebird4491 Před 3 lety +257

      DietrichvonSachsen He wasn’t a fan of glorifying war so he probably also took issue with the cheery tone.

    • @theanderblast
      @theanderblast Před 3 lety +43

      I only know two tunes, ‘Yankee Doodle’ and ‘Marching Thro’ Georgia’ - that’s two more than Grant knew

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před 3 lety +139

      @@firebird4491 Of all the Union Generals I've read of, Sherman seemed the most to understand the hell of modern war over the horizon. While Grant was throwing handfuls of men at Southern defenses, Sherman was trying to get around them. Can't say too much for Sherman but I can say that at least.

  • @beplanking
    @beplanking Před rokem +467

    To be fair, whatever they did to that John C. Calhoun statue was almost certainly an aesthetic improvement

  • @captain4595
    @captain4595 Před rokem +408

    "Victors write the history"
    Well the Dixie states proved this wrong

    • @morsmordre3
      @morsmordre3 Před rokem

      This happens when you have complacent victors and very sore losers. The losers write history.

    • @squidward5110
      @squidward5110 Před rokem +5

      ​@True Dixie boy, Texan Texas isn't dixie lmao 😂 brisket eating cowboy desert dwellers are NOT dixie boys

    • @mguy5923
      @mguy5923 Před rokem +36

      @@GerMFnU1848Sax If the Confederacy is never outmatched, then how did they lose so quickly? I have nephews who have lived longer than that country.

    • @GerMFnU1848Sax
      @GerMFnU1848Sax Před rokem +1

      @@squidward5110 my family is still in the Deep South. My girl and I moved near West Texas to settle on a ranch. Texas is Texas. I love Texas. Women, horses, bbq and beer. But I'm still Dixie* in the heart and blood

    • @kingorange7739
      @kingorange7739 Před rokem

      @@mguy5923 I wouldn't find a 4 year war losing quickly.

  • @paytonmanningfan6387
    @paytonmanningfan6387 Před 3 lety +3378

    I don’t want to talk about it...

    • @generallee4637
      @generallee4637 Před 3 lety +232

      lol

    • @bobbrown5460
      @bobbrown5460 Před 3 lety +106

      Its ok general

    • @bobbrown5460
      @bobbrown5460 Před 3 lety +73

      @@generallee4637 thanks for being understanding General

    • @generallee4637
      @generallee4637 Před 3 lety +65

      I respect both sides of the war :D

    • @generallee4637
      @generallee4637 Před 3 lety +23

      @@bobbrown5460 atun shei films is simply a righteous causer
      civilwarchat.wordpress.com/2014/08/25/righteous-cause-mythology/

  • @thewestisthebest6608
    @thewestisthebest6608 Před 3 lety +3092

    Wait the North wasn't perfect? Well dang, I guess we have to bring back slavery then

    • @cowbeanboi412
      @cowbeanboi412 Před 3 lety +22

      @Harvey Dustin it was passed by congress not ratified
      Lincoln supported it cause he wanted to prevent the rest of the south from secceding and escalating the situation he want to abolish slavery but he supported it as a last act hoping to repeal it later

    • @cowbeanboi412
      @cowbeanboi412 Před 3 lety +56

      @Harvey Dustin he always wanted to preserve the union first
      With abolitionist of slavery second

    • @zkittlezthabanditt604
      @zkittlezthabanditt604 Před 3 lety +12

      Your damn right the west is best!

    • @AJNpa80
      @AJNpa80 Před 3 lety +6

      Another radical California Supremacist I see.
      The East is.....Beast. Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont etc. in the summertime will haunt your dreams forever calling you back. And during the winter, so beautiful it hurts.

    • @zkittlezthabanditt604
      @zkittlezthabanditt604 Před 3 lety +46

      @@AJNpa80 California supremacist? All the supremacists in California are in those small militia groups along the border and in white prison gangs

  • @christianvennemann9008
    @christianvennemann9008 Před 9 měsíci +320

    "I'm a cartoon character, not an idiot." For whatever reason, that killed me 🤣🤣

  • @Turtleboilol
    @Turtleboilol Před 4 měsíci +46

    The fact Johnny Reb has a semi-realistic, panicked, silent reaction after being threatened at gunpoint by Billy Yank definitely shows that this guy can do a lot more talented stuff.

  • @kiwi_the_kiwikiwi6366
    @kiwi_the_kiwikiwi6366 Před 3 lety +4159

    “It’s not a war crime if it’s funny”
    -General Sherman

  • @LUR1FAX
    @LUR1FAX Před 3 lety +5652

    "They lost because the other side had overwhelming resources" That just sounds like losing to me.

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 3 lety +443

      And the resouces were from industrialization which seems to have had an inverse correlation with slavery....oops?

    • @minhducnguyen674
      @minhducnguyen674 Před 3 lety +196

      They should be grateful the USAF didn't exist back then or every major city in the South would smell like napalm and burning magnesium

    • @paulcoy9060
      @paulcoy9060 Před 3 lety +487

      "I lost the race because some other guy was faster!"
      "I lost the chess game because the other guy was better at chess!"

    • @razerfish
      @razerfish Před 3 lety +22

      The South did surprisingly well for being so outmatched. I think they actually more union troops than they had killed.The number I saw at the end was 300K killed to 200K, but I see all kinds of figures about total death so I'm not sure of the final tallies.

    • @razerfish
      @razerfish Před 3 lety +11

      @@dynamicworlds1 Also mass immigration which allowed for fresh recruits often right off the boat from Ireland. The South would have been better off fighting an insurgency I think, yet they did much better than you'd expect. They killed more union troops than the union killed of theirs.

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder Před 2 lety +557

    The idea that "slaves had it good" is STILL prevalent in cities like St Louis. i've personally heard well educated people with fancy degrees talk about how "slaves didn't have it so bad." it's pretty sad. have a good education doesn't save you from ignorance

    • @dipokane-5321
      @dipokane-5321 Před 2 lety +53

      Yea, its fucking awful. I live near St. Louis and a lot of the rural / Small towns still wave confederate flags even though we're literally in a Union state. Its awful.

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 Před rokem +35

      like bruh I can concede that SOME slaves had actually "good" masters who gave them educations, proper housing, proper food, never beat them, and didn't overwork them... but even regardless no man should EVER own another and neither should a man's master be anything or anyone but himself. Also the amount of slaves that were actually treated like humans were in the minority. It was also a privilege only allotted to the slaves of the extreme rich who could afford to treat them properly. The vast majority were instead treated horribly as nothing more than cattle. (we call it chattel slavery for a reason)

    • @Killzoneguy117
      @Killzoneguy117 Před rokem +17

      It depends a lot on the time period, the place, the master, and the slave is the thing. To say all slaves had it bad or all slaves had it good frankly does not do justice to the frankly fascinating complexities around the history of slavery. Not American slavery, but slavery as a global historical reality.
      To give you an example: in Ancient Rome, if you were an educated Greek slave, you had it pretty good. You were basically a glorified secretary and confidant of some rich Patrician, trusted with managing his affairs and generally living a fairly decent life, more as a trusted friend than a slave.
      And if you were an uneducated Thracian warrior captured in a campaign, you probably didn't have it as good. But most likely you were probably a gladiator. Which certainly meant a meager diet of porridge, hard hours of constant training, and painful (but not lethal contrary to popular belief) fights in the arena for the amusement of others. Humiliating, yes, degrading, absolutely. But if you did well, you lived relatively well. Loved by people, rewarded by your master with wine and gold.
      And if you were an uneducated Gallic farmer, captured by a Roman legion raiding your farm. Then... God help you. Because you were barely a beast of burden. if you were REALLY lucky, you'd be sold to a Latifundium and work long hours harvesting crops for some rich plantation holder. But if you were not lucky, then you'd likely be sent to the mines. With no daylight, locked in a damp, musty, tunnel, with little clean air, worked until your hands were bleeding, and you could no longer breath. Day after day after day until your body finally gave out and you died on the spot. Your body thrown to dogs to be devoured.
      The top most example was the reality for many slaves. Yes. But the overwhelming majority of slaves in Ancient Rome lived the reality of the bottom-most example. A harsh, brutal, horrible existence of suffering and cruelty. And so was it with American slavery. Yes, some slaves did well for themselves. Lived comfortably in the big house as secretaries or confidants, valued by their slave owners. But many worked long and brutal hours picking crops, from dawn to dusk, malnourished, tortured, raped, brutalized in horrific ways. Not even beasts of burden because no one treated their horses or their cows or their goats so horrifically.

    • @computergamescritical6917
      @computergamescritical6917 Před rokem +7

      @@Killzoneguy117 ​ I see what you mean, however, this comment is on a video about the American Civil War, and the comment itself is about people living in St. Louis. People often talk in unspecific generalizations, what they probably meant by “slaves” was specifically slaves in the southern United States and Confederate States.
      I suppose it’s hypothetically possible for a slave to have been treated decently by their master in these conditions, but that would be extraordinarily unlikely, but if that were true, it wouldn’t mitigate the overall racism of the time, and if these slaves were imported from Africa, rather than the descendants of African slaves in the New World, then they would also have to bear being separated from their community, family, and life, and being placed in an unfamiliar, foreign land where they had to do intense agricultural labor.
      However, I’ve heard arguments against slavery that don’t have anything to do with their treatment, but specifically the state of being subordinate to another human being overall. I’m not sure if I agree, but you can argue that for a human being to be someone’s personal property, rather than merely working as an employee or servant, is to mistreat the dignity of that person by rendering them as your property, the same way you might do with an animals, plant, or item. *This* *argument* *isn’t* *about* *the* *treatment* *or* *conditions* *of* *the* *slaves* , *but* *about* *the* *inherent* *dignity* *of* *a* *person* *and* *the* *honor* *and* *respect* *their* *status* *deserves* .
      St. Gregory of Nyssa was a 4th century Christian who wrote against slavery argued (and I’m paraphrasing here) that since humans had a right to rule over the Earth and its animals, because humans were masters over the Earth and animals, that to master over a human being the same way you master over the Earth and its animals was to wrongly treat one’s human dignity as if they were the same of an animal or object, he writes: “How is it that you disregard the animals which have been subjected to you as slaves under your hand, and that you should act against a free nature, bringing down one who is of the same nature of yourself (a human being), to the level of four-footed beasts or inferior creatures...?”
      I’d like to state I know very little about slavery, you seem like you know more about it than I do, but that doesn’t mean that I don’t have opinions about the little I’m aware of, if I made any mistakes I’d like to be made aware of them.
      Edit: I made a mistake in this comment, in the first paragraph I had originally stated “St. Louis, an American city in the South.” But St. Louis is actually located is Missouri, not in the South, I somehow got in confused with New Orleans, a city in Louisiana, so my bad.

    • @rick7424
      @rick7424 Před rokem +14

      Having a degree in engineering does not make you a historian.
      Lots of intelligent people tend to think they can form a better opinion than an expert on a subject they themselves have no familiarity with.

  • @notninelivesbrian8471
    @notninelivesbrian8471 Před 9 měsíci +79

    President Carter once visited a school in Arizona where they welcomed him by playing "Marching through Georgia". He winced and whispered to his aides, 'Don't they know that isn't a southern song?'

  • @EmperorTigerstar
    @EmperorTigerstar Před 3 lety +9608

    When in Georgia, say "Look! It's Sherman!" and you have a guaranteed getaway distraction.

  • @murphyrutledge5590
    @murphyrutledge5590 Před 3 lety +2734

    “We only lost because the north had more recourses.” Yes, that’s a factor in war.

    • @freestate208
      @freestate208 Před 3 lety +208

      So was the South's antiquated concepts of how to make war that did not keep up with modern technology and mass conscription.

    • @bobsmoth-iv3sp
      @bobsmoth-iv3sp Před 3 lety +70

      some thing to think of before you smack a 6 foot 6 man

    • @JimRFF
      @JimRFF Před 3 lety +192

      "The sinews of war are infinite money." ~Cicero
      It's almost like having more resources than the opponent has been one of the single most helpful factors in winning wars throughout all of human history xD

    • @armorsmith43
      @armorsmith43 Před 3 lety +24

      Jimbo Slice tell that to the North Vietnamese

    • @antthomas7916
      @antthomas7916 Před 3 lety +18

      @@armorsmith43 and Afghanistan.

  • @DieNextInLINE
    @DieNextInLINE Před 2 lety +273

    I will never understand Lost Causers pointing out that some Union Generals didnt support abolition or were racists to somehow say that the CSA didn't fight to preserve slavery. The Unions motivations dont change the CSA's motivations.

    • @vonLowenstein
      @vonLowenstein Před rokem

      I know this was posted 5 months ago, but this is a very effective debating technique, called whataboutism. Basically, the idea is that by answering to your valid point with some unrelated incident from "your side", they change the subject and no longer have to defend their indefensible position AND forcing you to defend yours.

    • @MendTheWorld
      @MendTheWorld Před rokem

      It's just 'Whataboutism". They had a " drinking game" over it in an earlier episode.
      Whataboutism is a " red herring" style argument intended to shift attention away from a particular point that is a source of embarrassment or cognitive dissonance. Whataboutism is nearly always an indicator that the person taking a particular position feels vulnerable and/or uncomfortable with some aspect of that position, and hopes that by shifting the focus to attacking the "other side", they can avoid confronting the point of shame or embarrassment.

    • @MendTheWorld
      @MendTheWorld Před rokem

      @@fredrickfrederickson5246 If you remove your opening sentence, your Reply sounds plausible, rational, and reasonable. As it stands, however, it makes you sound like a reactionary right wing, WE-are-the-real-victims-here, they're-out-to-get-us, they-hate-us-because-we're-white, Tucker-style, MAGA-style idiot.
      I would _still_ wonder what you're basing your comments on, as I don't know how you could know all those factors in detail without providing any citations or source. I'm just saying that your argument _sounds_ plausible, aside from the first sentence.
      Regarding the first sentence, why do people on the political right (which I'm guessing you are) see conspiracies against white people everywhere. This, to me, is one of the really offensive aspects of right-wing politics, leading to so much of the b******* that's been working its way through Republican led legislatures over the past 2 years. Why taint an otherwise good answer with right wing conspiracy theory? Makes no sense to me.

  • @termsconditions1513
    @termsconditions1513 Před 7 měsíci +66

    I'm sorry, but the idea of a Hitler time traveling to escape Berlin only to end up in the Salem witch trials sounds like a syfy 2 am b-rated masterpiece waiting to happen and I'm fully on board with it.

    • @termsconditions1513
      @termsconditions1513 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Also, I'm mad now cause this was for the last episode, but it went onto this one while I was still typing XD

  • @MultiMal3
    @MultiMal3 Před 3 lety +4049

    "I'm a cartoon character, not an idiot!" *applause* Well played, suh. Well played.

    • @MilkmanOfTheApocalypse
      @MilkmanOfTheApocalypse Před 3 lety +68

      That line got a good laugh out of me.

    • @kirkoscircus
      @kirkoscircus Před 3 lety +33

      I've gone back to listen to his amazing delivery of this line so many times. Best part of the video.

    • @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat
      @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat Před 3 lety +44

      @@kirkoscircus personally I liked the part were Atun-Shei pulled a gun to Confederate Atun-Shei for saying that Sherman was only good for burning the houses of widows. Almost made me feel sorry for the slavery apologist, almost.
      Your line is a great line though.

    • @GG-mi3bu
      @GG-mi3bu Před 3 lety +2

      i cant find it again aarrgggg time stamp me please!

    • @treighburrell1946
      @treighburrell1946 Před 3 lety +8

      @@GG-mi3bu at 0:24

  • @thejoester1011
    @thejoester1011 Před 3 lety +1855

    The South seceded from the Union.
    This enraged General Sherman, who punished them severely.

    • @DarkestKnightshade
      @DarkestKnightshade Před 3 lety +22

      Smh you guys are all over the place lmao.

    • @thejoester1011
      @thejoester1011 Před 3 lety +43

      @@DarkestKnightshade We see all...

    • @TJ-lh7xg
      @TJ-lh7xg Před 3 lety +63

      @@jameseverett5904 The problem with that statement is that there was no set process for secession. The constitution was basically a contract that binds all states to the Union. You wouldn't be able to null it without the consent of both parties.
      There's also the fact that the south acted like rebels rather than a sovereign entity when they attacked federal buildings and forts.

    • @TJ-lh7xg
      @TJ-lh7xg Před 3 lety +36

      @@jameseverett5904 1. It was a contract between a state and the union. The U.S constitution. You are using technicalities for no good reason, but since you like using them :
      Article 7: _The Ratification of the Conventions of nine States, shall be sufficient for the Establishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the Same. DONE in Convention by the Unanimous Consent of the States present the Seventeenth Day of September in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and Eighty seven and of the Independence of the United States of America the Twelfth. In WITNESS whereof We have hereunto subscribed our Names_
      2. Even if the 10th amendment did apply to seceding, it wouldn't have i the south's case.
      Article 1 section 8:
      _the Constitution of the United States grants Congress the power "to provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions_

    • @TJ-lh7xg
      @TJ-lh7xg Před 3 lety +36

      @@jameseverett5904
      1. Article 3 section 3:
      _Treason against the United States, shall consist of levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort. No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the Testimony of two Witnesses to the same overt Act, or on Confession in open Court._
      The confederacy raided Union facilities; would this not be levying war against them. Even if they seceded, they still willfully provided casus bellis.
      2. No, the constitution was specifically between the states and the union. Why do you think that this particular contract is still valid today? The constitution was ratified by *states* it wasn't between senators or governors, but between states. The federal government proposed it, and the states ratified it.
      ps: I'm a Mississippian.

  • @commandershepard5450
    @commandershepard5450 Před rokem +186

    I will never get tired of how enthusiastically Johnny Reb says “checkmate Lincolnites!”

  • @benhaney9629
    @benhaney9629 Před 2 lety +342

    My fathers uncle used to tell him stories about the Southern officers he knew during WW1. That their common attitude (and they weren’t afraid to voice it loudly and often, but especially while drinking at the officers clubs) was that they were going to go ahead and pitch in to help the free world defeat the hun, but as soon as WW1 was over they were going to organize and finally finish the job of succession as a risen Confederate States of America’s. It’s hard to imagine how strong the Lost Cause myth and the, The South Will Rise again mythos was in the minds of many Southerners for long after the Civil War. Funnily enough, the whole, “the war wasn’t about slavery but taxes,” and the “war of northern aggression,” and basically everything you discuss in Checkmate... These things were these Southern officers most commonly repeated talking points.

    • @benhaney9629
      @benhaney9629 Před 2 lety +34

      I forget what book it was... Cold Sassy Tree maybe. But the turn of the century southern boy in it talks his southern public schools history curriculum. That the teacher would do a month on the ancient Egyptians. A month on the Indians. A month on the American Revolution. And the other half of the year on the Civil War. And you don’t have to strain very hard to imagine what exactly they taught the kids...

    • @GerMFnU1848Sax
      @GerMFnU1848Sax Před rokem +1

      We will free Dixieland one day. And I will face the yankee horde. Proud Dixie boy.

    • @GerMFnU1848Sax
      @GerMFnU1848Sax Před rokem +1

      It is a fact that most bankers were in the North and thus wanted to expand their influence on our soil and by supporting the lincolnite and his federal government, we would lose our states rights. 90% of us Grays never had slaves.

    • @OGRamrod
      @OGRamrod Před rokem +25

      It's fun for me to point out there were guys in the early 20th century with living memory of that time, it makes you see it all so differently. For example there was an artillery officer under Pershing who was an Antietam and Fredericksburg veteran. There's photos of him at the Western Front... still wearing the Union field coat and Shako over his field uniform.
      Just imagine living through those fights and being like, "Damn, it can't get any worse."
      Then you witness Verdun.

    • @Axterix13
      @Axterix13 Před rokem +22

      ​@@GerMFnU1848Sax 70%. And it is also a fact that most slave owners were Southerners, and thus wanted to expand their influence into other, new states, and also tried to use the Federal government to accomplish this. And a decent chunk of that 70% of non-slave owners supported this. It makes sense that they would do so, as people attempting to abolish it would be seen as attacking their society, their values, and so on. And so the state's rights they were most interested in protecting was the "right" to have more states who allowed for slavery, so that they could keep a good solid slavery-state voting block going, so they could keep their society as it was, and stop others from meddling with their slave-based society. And then, when they lost, they went out of their way to keep as much as that status quo as possible.
      You might not like it, but that's reality. They weren't the good guys.

  • @jpa5038
    @jpa5038 Před 2 lety +1253

    I didn't know that about the drunk Union soldiers deciding to hold a vote to repeal secession in the state capital. That's fucking hilarious.

    • @burninsherman1037
      @burninsherman1037 Před rokem +132

      It really is. I want that in a civil war movie.

    • @NormDeMoss
      @NormDeMoss Před rokem +224

      "YOU GUYS WANNA JUST UNCONFEDERATE THE CONFEDERACY AND GO HOME? SAY AYE. AYES HAVE IT. GONNA GO TO BED."

    • @davidvasquez08
      @davidvasquez08 Před rokem +30

      I wouldn’t mind being one of those Union soldiers

    • @williamlancaster5136
      @williamlancaster5136 Před 10 měsíci +33

      I would give my soul to go back in time and be one of those drunk soldiers. I'd LOVE to the guy running the meeting.

    • @davidvasquez08
      @davidvasquez08 Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@williamlancaster5136 to be that guy, ummm right?

  • @recklessted
    @recklessted Před 2 lety +1027

    It needs to be stated that Sherman's post-war conduct against Native Americans unquestionably rose to the level of genocide.

    • @Eye_Of_Odin978
      @Eye_Of_Odin978 Před 7 měsíci

      So what you're saying is that Lincolnite bootlickers love a war criminal of TWO wars running?
      Yeah, sounds about right.

    • @rebeccaorman1823
      @rebeccaorman1823 Před 7 měsíci +93

      Fair enough but not his Civil War conduct.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Před 6 měsíci +20

      He was a sadist who liked to kill, especially unopposed .

    • @rebeccaorman1823
      @rebeccaorman1823 Před 6 měsíci +36

      @@marknewton6984 no more so than any other solder through out history.

    • @rebeccaorman1823
      @rebeccaorman1823 Před 6 měsíci +89

      @@marknewton6984 you seem to be confused. We are discussing Sherman not Nathan Bedford Forest. Now Forest killed Black Union troops after they surrendered and founded the KKK.

  • @hitomisalazar4073
    @hitomisalazar4073 Před rokem +194

    I love that bit about how Sherman's army would just... evade any concentrated defense.
    Because to me, that's something I noticed a lot of in the early Civil War. A lot of it was "The Rebels pull a massive army together from multiple units to try some big dick Jacksonian sundering of the enemy forces". And a lot of Union Generals just... let them. They never put the pressure on. They never tried to stop the Confederacy from fighting the war basically 1 (Or 2) battles at a time across the entire war.
    Sherman, and Grant, both understood that to leverage the industrial and manpower advantage the Union had, they had to stop it. Grant did it in the Overland Campaign, always punching at Lee's face, never letting him retreat, regroup, send troops to another front (like he did at Chickamauga, etc). And Sherman did it by just refusing to offer them battle. If you're going to gather for your big dick swinging decisive battle doctrine... he'd just turn around and sack another city instead.
    Same idea, two different executions, all existing to put the pressure on the Confederacy until it cracked.

    • @butula13
      @butula13 Před rokem +34

      And Sherman's strategy also prevented the towns and cities he was threatening from sending reinforcements to Lee, like a more aggressive land-bound version of a fleet-in-being.

    • @hosvet_animation
      @hosvet_animation Před 6 měsíci +12

      It's like the invading version of Fabian Tactics. Yes I'm invading, no I won't fight you.

    • @Charles-wu3lh
      @Charles-wu3lh Před 6 měsíci +3

      1864 was an election year in the North. By avoiding direct confrontation, Sherman minimized casualties. Had the Atlanta campaign turned into a meat grinder it could have effected the election.

  • @James_Hough
    @James_Hough Před 2 lety +212

    "Sovereign nation"...that one gets me every time. You can't say the Lost Causers don't have a sense of humor.

    • @YOSSARIAN313
      @YOSSARIAN313 Před rokem +18

      Basically the whole world hated the confederacy. Even countries like Russia, the ottoman empire and even Siam and the kingdom of Hawaii all openly supported the union

    • @pabloulloa2091
      @pabloulloa2091 Před 10 měsíci +7

      ​@@YOSSARIAN313big oof for Hawaii in the end, wasnt right how we took them

    • @dr.aisaitl7439
      @dr.aisaitl7439 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@YOSSARIAN313 I wouldn't say that, Britain was actually pretty reliant on cotton and had been for about 2 decades due to the textile industry, it was in their business interests for trade to continue. But after the emancipation proclamation had explicitly made the war about slavery in front of the whole world, they couldn't justify support anymore

    • @YOSSARIAN313
      @YOSSARIAN313 Před 8 měsíci

      @@dr.aisaitl7439 the nobility and merchants cared about that but most british people hated slavery and wannabe aristocratd

    • @dr.aisaitl7439
      @dr.aisaitl7439 Před 8 měsíci

      @@YOSSARIAN313 I wont say that the British outright supported slavery but it's objectively true that many supported the confederacy. Since the Union had a naval blockade across the entire southern/confederate coast it would eliminate all trade which would cause factories throughout England to close. There was famines in the cities and thousands of lives were affected by it
      A sect of Manchester workers would support Lincoln's decisions dealing with the south though which he did send a letter and food gift of appreciation

  • @thanos6346
    @thanos6346 Před 2 lety +2525

    Pretty sure anyone who thinks that what Sherman’s boys did in the South is worse than the Japanese in East Asia or the Germans in Russia hasn’t read a damn thing about Nanking, the Eastern Front, or just WW2 in general.

    • @bruh-cp2nq
      @bruh-cp2nq Před 2 lety

      Exactly. And there’s nothing bad about killing traitorous confederates.

    • @scotch4890
      @scotch4890 Před 2 lety +212

      Well Thanos I must defer to you on the subject of decimating populations. You are the expert.

    • @henrypaleveda7760
      @henrypaleveda7760 Před 2 lety +97

      or the history of Asia in the 30s, honestly a lot of the crimes in the second world war happened before with more regularity and scale than people realize.

    • @ArchOwl
      @ArchOwl Před 2 lety +162

      NSFL - to anyone who thinks the Union soldiers were crueler to the South than Japan was to other nations in WWII, look up Unit 731. even as someone who's partially Japanese, it's... inexcusable.

    • @Bloodinhoo
      @Bloodinhoo Před 2 lety

      @@ArchOwl Or the Bataan Death March. Unit 731 is chilling and makes the nazi experiments look like a fucking kid's party, but the Death March of Bataan and the Rape of Nanking were absolute atrocities and they fuck up Chinese x Japanese relationships to this day.
      EVEN NAZIS when faced with the abhorent siege on Nanking went "Jesus Christ, you idiots are going too far."

  • @tiernanwearen8096
    @tiernanwearen8096 Před 3 lety +2541

    "what Sherman did to the South make what the nazis did to Russia sweet and pleaseant"
    That nearly had me fall off my chair

    • @victorconway444
      @victorconway444 Před 3 lety +406

      Yeah, the Soviets lost up to around 15% of their total population in both military and civilian casualties in WWII. 20 million people is one of the lower estimates. The loss was so dramatic that for decades the Soviets had an actual tax for not having children in an attempt to regrow their population. The Confederates didn't have anything close to that percentage in the entire civil war, let alone just Sherman's activities.

    • @mysteriiis
      @mysteriiis Před 3 lety +272

      Germany was going for a second Holocaust of the Slavic peoples; as Hitler considered them little better than Jews.

    • @tiernanwearen8096
      @tiernanwearen8096 Před 2 lety +224

      @@mysteriiis yep and the people who made that comment have no idea of what the nazis did to Russia

    • @nukclear2741
      @nukclear2741 Před 2 lety +233

      The worse one in my opinion was the way they absolutely downplay the Japanese offensive into China. It’s one of the least talked about parts of the war, despite having some of the biggest armies in the entire war.

    • @mysteriiis
      @mysteriiis Před 2 lety +33

      @@nukclear2741 That'll happen when nobody involved is white. I think this silence is one of the big reasons why everyone considers nuking Japanese cities a heinous war crime; while not giving two shits about what we did to Germany.

  • @irighterotica
    @irighterotica Před 11 měsíci +54

    "I'm a cartoon character, not an idiot."
    Golden. 👌

  • @gamerstheater1187
    @gamerstheater1187 Před 6 měsíci +14

    For anyone wondering about Johnny's comment on Native Americans, The Confederates also mistreated Native Americans, and only allied with slave owning tribes since they knew those tribes would be the only ones who'd actually work with them

    • @RonDiani
      @RonDiani Před 5 měsíci +2

      Yes exactly I looked it up

  • @davidcanadian3153
    @davidcanadian3153 Před 3 lety +1669

    “You talk a lot of shit for someone in burning distance”-Sherman to the CSA probably

    • @brucewhitehead2808
      @brucewhitehead2808 Před 3 lety +5

      The Union army developed the tactic of mass destruction in ga and South Carolina . Then they employed the same against the Indians ! Talk about war crimes Custer was king of it !

    • @bruhmoment-wq5cy
      @bruhmoment-wq5cy Před 3 lety +12

      "You talk a lot of shit for someone in bombardment and warcrime distance".
      -Democrats to Libya,probably

    • @jakemitchell6578
      @jakemitchell6578 Před 3 lety +14

      @@brucewhitehead2808 civilian casualties are a certainty for a losing nation that has been invaded. While some war crimes were very well committed, it brought the war to an end sooner. The real question is why do some doubt the necessity of Sherman’s March? He effectively scattered multiple Confederate forces and took many valuable resources for Union supply

    • @ManiacMayhem7256
      @ManiacMayhem7256 Před 3 lety

      And to Native Americans

    • @clusterflick6333
      @clusterflick6333 Před 3 lety +10

      @@bruhmoment-wq5cy Or Republicans to Iraq. Warmongering and war-profiteering are among the few things with 100% bi-partisan support in Washington.

  • @kaiserwilliams6833
    @kaiserwilliams6833 Před 3 lety +991

    Oh man. Suggesting what Sherman did was worse than the Nazis in Russia? That's a take spicier than a mouthful of wasps.

    • @TigerRifle1
      @TigerRifle1 Před 3 lety +151

      Or the Japanese in China.

    • @DrTssha
      @DrTssha Před 3 lety +176

      @@deepseeshell8926 He's literally quoting a post on one of his videos. It's fair game to call that out. You may distance yourself from that position, but someone posted that fully believing it. It needed to be addressed.

    • @bonniea8189
      @bonniea8189 Před 3 lety +98

      @@deepseeshell8926 That was literally a comment someone posted on one of Atun-Shei's videos. He put it up on the screen so you can see that Johnny Reb is delivering the words of an actual viewer.

    • @jacksoyson4713
      @jacksoyson4713 Před 3 lety +67

      @@deepseeshell8926 No he doesn't portray them all like that, he just takes every talking point they have and explains why they are wrong, regardless of how many people believe them.

    • @jacksoyson4713
      @jacksoyson4713 Před 3 lety +72

      @@deepseeshell8926 All the ships they sail are inherently wrong

  • @WoAiTuMadre2698
    @WoAiTuMadre2698 Před 7 měsíci +77

    8:28 The fact that this comment compared Sherman's March with Japanese warcrimes in SouthEast Asia completely offends me as a Chinese-American citizen.

    • @thebandage5422
      @thebandage5422 Před 6 měsíci +26

      It offends me as a reasonable being, and I am neither Chinese nor American. Sherman did bad shit, but Imperial Japan was five levels of terribleness above Sherman.

    • @flickcentergaming680
      @flickcentergaming680 Před měsícem +1

      It offends me as a casual history nerd. That guy had no idea what they were talking about.

    • @jdotoz
      @jdotoz Před 19 dny +2

      It needs to be remembered that Japanese brutality in Nanking offended *Hitler's personal representative* so much that he became a minor hero by sheltering many people from them. Let that sink in.

    • @jeffreygao3956
      @jeffreygao3956 Před 16 dny +1

      Asian Nazis enough to make Sherman look like a saint.

  • @theangryholmesian4556
    @theangryholmesian4556 Před rokem +98

    I don't know why it's so hard to acknowledge that sometimes bad things are done in the name of good causes. And it's okay to point out the bad things while acknowledging the overall good cause and greater evil being fought against.

    • @liljimmy8248
      @liljimmy8248 Před rokem +1

      Because to do that you have to admit Stalin was right for this exact reason

    • @theangryholmesian4556
      @theangryholmesian4556 Před rokem

      @@liljimmy8248 Right about what? Ethnically cleansing indigenous minorities and expelling them from their lands? That's what Nazis do. There is no comparison.

    • @liljimmy8248
      @liljimmy8248 Před rokem +1

      And also North Korea

    • @theangryholmesian4556
      @theangryholmesian4556 Před rokem

      Attacking whole minorities because you think they're "inherently Nazis" or backwards or whatever BS logic Stalin used when they were fighting against his colonialism is not the same as attacking Confederate cities.

    • @lordfelidae4505
      @lordfelidae4505 Před rokem +19

      @@liljimmy8248 not necessarily. While I will not speak on North Korea as I don’t know it’s history well enough to judge, I will say that Stalin was not acting in good faith as far as I can tell.

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 Před 3 lety +3266

    I guess my favorite Sherman quote was to a Columbia, SC woman who cried hysterically that he was to blame for its burning. Sherman denied ordering it but then said, "your husbands and sons started the fire when they fired on Ft. Sumpter. It's just finally caught up with you."

    • @povotaknight2063
      @povotaknight2063 Před 3 lety +121

      @@chainmail5886 I mean yeah if it's war it's war.

    • @theletterl8948
      @theletterl8948 Před 3 lety +72

      @@cade8702 Ok?

    • @jaysenkov1574
      @jaysenkov1574 Před 3 lety +18

      @@chainmail5886 nah cause the Cherokee won't enslaving their fellow man

    • @Ltdayman1000
      @Ltdayman1000 Před 3 lety +133

      @@cade8702 but the nazis didn’t have a reason to attack basically half of Europe other than their own gain

    • @wecx2375
      @wecx2375 Před 3 lety +15

      @@povotaknight2063 labeling murder and destruction "war" never makes it right.

  • @Treklosopher
    @Treklosopher Před 3 lety +1416

    "War is cruelty. There is no use trying to reform it; the crueler it is, the sooner it will be over." - W.T. Sherman

    • @drewstaser9726
      @drewstaser9726 Před 3 lety +30

      World War 2 doesn't exactly follow that logic, but other than that is checks out

    • @sparetime2475
      @sparetime2475 Před 3 lety +133

      @@drewstaser9726 the Japanese called atomic bombs “cruel bombs” in their surrender letter I think it checks out.

    • @thewrustywrench21
      @thewrustywrench21 Před 3 lety +98

      @@sparetime2475 Yeah and imperial japan raped and murdered thousands of Chinese but that cruelty didn’t really make the war progress faster

    • @TheSpaceship2nowhere
      @TheSpaceship2nowhere Před 3 lety +49

      @@thewrustywrench21 To be fair, if you asked the Japanese why they did that, they probably would point out how fast they were able to take that massive amount of territory without having to worry about little things like war crimes.

    • @thewrustywrench21
      @thewrustywrench21 Před 3 lety +21

      @@TheSpaceship2nowhere Maybe but rape and infanticide wasn’t what made them take the place over faster.

  • @Reformedhillbilly369
    @Reformedhillbilly369 Před 5 měsíci +19

    “I’m a cartoon character. Not an idiot.”
    (Looks at Florida governor) My god, he’s worse than Johnny Reb

  • @notfreeman1776
    @notfreeman1776 Před 8 měsíci +41

    The long and very realistic part of Johnny regaining composure after having a gun pointed at his head was entirely needless and magnificent. i love this channel

  • @Danox94
    @Danox94 Před 3 lety +635

    Confederates: Hey, let's go to war.
    Also Confederates: Hey, Sherman's doing a War. How dare he!

    • @jennbaker6964
      @jennbaker6964 Před 3 lety +42

      Cops: Hey let’s go to war also cops: AAAH A WATER BOTTLE RUN AWAY

    • @kmaher1424
      @kmaher1424 Před 3 lety +5

      One reason Sam Houston advised Texans to avoid Secession and war was the North's greater population and industry.

    • @jennbaker6964
      @jennbaker6964 Před 3 lety +2

      CSR Official you aren’t a confederate

    • @4mazIngxXGamEr
      @4mazIngxXGamEr Před 3 lety +4

      Well, to be fair he is considered "the first modern general" by some historians because of his tactics of scorched earth. But scorched earth and foraging was not uncommon in warfare, I mean I just think of the Russian retreat in 1812. Although scorched earth was at the time a defensive tactic however it was done to stop foraging so.

    • @petriew2018
      @petriew2018 Před 3 lety +2

      be careful what you wish for, you just might get it...
      And Sherman really was one of the first of the modern generals, in the sense that he was a professional soldier who looked at war purely from a winning and losing perspective. Granted that's not new in the context of history, but this was at a time where most officers still came from the upper classes and war was still viewed in 'gentlemanly' terms. Generals like Grant and Sherman, who were more than happy to win through logistics than valor, were a stark change from the generals leading both armies at the beginning of the war.

  • @AaronFraser-vs5cy
    @AaronFraser-vs5cy Před 5 měsíci +13

    That last 'spiritual space warfare' comment was a wild one to catch while painting miniatures. Especially my immediate thought was that someone liked 40k too much with no self awareness of what I was painting at the time.

    • @filmandfirearms
      @filmandfirearms Před měsícem

      Liking it is fine. Liking it too much is concerning

  • @antonnurwald5700
    @antonnurwald5700 Před rokem +101

    When they both turn to the audience, that's just pure magic. Well done.

  • @dave271
    @dave271 Před 3 lety +3923

    He plays the two different characters so well I actually view them as two legitimately different people at this point.

    • @theseus0467
      @theseus0467 Před 3 lety +169

      tbh I cant even tell if he is playing two different people due to the beards.

    • @Hunt-nu1pq
      @Hunt-nu1pq Před 2 lety +23

      Is it two different ppl or not

    • @targetdawg
      @targetdawg Před 2 lety +168

      @@Hunt-nu1pq it is. it’s just him going into union uniform saying his lines for the union guy. Then him going into his confederate uniform and doing his lines. then he edits its to make it look like a convo. i think at least

    • @balazsbalazs1885
      @balazsbalazs1885 Před 2 lety +14

      @@targetdawg yep,at one point the flags differ

    • @WisteriaDrake
      @WisteriaDrake Před 2 lety +106

      Honestly, edited and acted so well that I wouldn't bat an eye if you told me he was acting against his twin brother like in Terminator 2.

  • @qbertq1
    @qbertq1 Před 3 lety +1606

    Georgia State Trooper after pulling over someone with a New York license plate: "Son, we don't let Yankees speed through the South."
    New York driver: "Really? Sherman did."

    • @edgarblackwell1474
      @edgarblackwell1474 Před 3 lety +125

      *proceeds to write $1000 ticket, like Georgia State Troopers are apt to do.*

    • @trial_with_an_error9687
      @trial_with_an_error9687 Před 3 lety +168

      @@edgarblackwell1474 *Proceeds to set it on fire, like Union boys are apt to do.*

    • @trial_with_an_error9687
      @trial_with_an_error9687 Před 3 lety +19

      @@DrMFoster7 Calm down kiddo it's a joke

    • @FakeSchrodingersCat
      @FakeSchrodingersCat Před 3 lety +3

      @Rusty Shackleford Nothing will happen, but mainly because almost no one will get the references

    • @who0icu812
      @who0icu812 Před 2 lety

      He took his time actually

  • @JohnDoe-sd8nb
    @JohnDoe-sd8nb Před rokem +31

    "YOU... WILL FALL... BY THE SWORD!"
    Dude, I already fell laughing, WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM ME?!

    • @Krensharpaw
      @Krensharpaw Před 11 měsíci +1

      I died at that point also... jesus.

  • @matthiasnagorski8411
    @matthiasnagorski8411 Před rokem +60

    Let's not forget that Johnny Reb knows for a fact that Billy Yank would pull that trigger.
    He's done it before.

  • @509Gman
    @509Gman Před 3 lety +943

    “I’m a cartoon character, not an idiot.”
    😂😂😂

    • @tinnagigja3723
      @tinnagigja3723 Před 3 lety +20

      He's my favourite strawman :D

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 Před 3 lety +2

      @@tinnagigja3723 I'd put him just behind Ray Bolger personally, but its close.

    • @CommieApe
      @CommieApe Před 3 lety +34

      @@tinnagigja3723 a strawman is a misrepresentation. If anything his depiction makes confeds seem intelligent.

    • @tinnagigja3723
      @tinnagigja3723 Před 3 lety +3

      @@CommieApe Good point.

    • @GeraltofRivia22
      @GeraltofRivia22 Před 3 lety +7

      @@CommieApe especially since he uses actual comments his videos get

  • @funnyvalentinedidnothingwrong

    "If Stonewall Jackson had been in charge, the south would have won the Civil War in weeks" Gotta love when people treat reality like a game of Risk, or Civilization, or HOI, as if Jackson had some kind of crazy OP Passive buff that made him win more.

    • @maryamazad9910
      @maryamazad9910 Před 3 lety +35

      Well Jackson was much more competent than many northern generals and was only ever defeated once in a campaign he ultimately won but he couldn’t win the war by himself

    • @TwiggyBoy
      @TwiggyBoy Před 3 lety +200

      +20 attack
      +35 speed
      +50000 To friendly fire

    • @Terminalsanity
      @Terminalsanity Před 3 lety +86

      Most of Jackson's success was down to his superior knowledge of the local geography over his Union opponents in every battle he fought without that advantage his performance was unremarkable. Frankly what really did the south in was US Grant. His competence as a field commander combined with his masterful eye for strategy doomed the confederacy the moment he was given command of the union army.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 Před 3 lety +74

      @@Terminalsanity No one in the South really had a strategy for winning the war other than hoping the North to get tired of fighting. Lee and Jackson both won some impressive victories but neither really had a mind for grand strategy. They're in good company, though: Hannibal had the same fault.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Před 3 lety +42

      Bruce Tucker
      Except even though Hannibal was undone by his own Senate’s lack of support, he ran wild across Italy for about fifteen years.
      Lee and Jackson managed to stave off defeat by about two
      Anyways, Hannibal was still far more impressive as a strategist than your comparison implies - the Alpine march, turning Rome’s allies against her, making alliances with Macedon and Gallic tribes, etc.
      Hannibal was really screwed due to the failure/unwillingness by the Carthaginian Senate to support the Italian war, instead sending reinforcements to Spain and attempting to conquer Sardinia and Corsica when they did make an effort

  • @LilMissSEC
    @LilMissSEC Před 11 měsíci +46

    I cannot stop laughing at Johnny Reb's reading of these tweets! *REBEL YELLLLL!!* Lord have mercy 😂

  • @latrodectusmactans7592
    @latrodectusmactans7592 Před 21 dnem +4

    When I saw people saying “The South will rise again,” I didn’t realize they meant into space.

  • @imjugg4573
    @imjugg4573 Před 2 lety +1799

    “We only lost bc the union has overwhelming resources”
    Winning is winning, cope.

    • @tlee51ftw
      @tlee51ftw Před 2 lety +199

      What war ever had both sides get together and balance troops out before fighting?

    • @imjugg4573
      @imjugg4573 Před 2 lety +124

      @@tlee51ftw exactly, war is never balanced

    • @Ratstick58
      @Ratstick58 Před 2 lety +88

      These comments in here are from people who think that war is team death match. They are the kind that are courted to sign their lives away army by recruitment ads mimicking videogames and comic books.

    • @graceneilitz7661
      @graceneilitz7661 Před 2 lety +85

      In war if your not cheating, than your not trying. Playing fair is for games not war.

    • @confederatetearsaredelicious
      @confederatetearsaredelicious Před 2 lety +4

      @@graceneilitz7661 agreed 👍

  • @Resentius
    @Resentius Před 3 lety +874

    Man, I love the notion that one of the worst human tragedies in history, a series of events characterized by wanton slaughter intended at wiping out an entire group of people, an occupation which wiped out a quarter of Byelorussia’s entire population, campaigns which included large scale and widespread massacres and deportations aimed purely the annihilation of Slavic Jews, Romani, and many others, is at all comparable to Sherman’s March, a military action which destroyed a series of military infrastructural complexes in the south. Mistreatment of civilians occurred of course but I find the idea that nazis in Eastern Europe and Sherman in Atlanta are even in the same zip code, no forget zip code, the same galaxy, absolutely absurd.

    • @susanmaggiora4800
      @susanmaggiora4800 Před 3 lety +30

      AjaxTheMediocre Word

    • @langhamp8912
      @langhamp8912 Před 3 lety +36

      Like an idiot, I bought Bloodlands years ago which is industrial genocide in Eastern Europe during WWII. It's a very depressing book. Modern people who have guns and are just itching for a fight because they disagree with others are just nuts.

    • @kadecase7470
      @kadecase7470 Před 3 lety

      langhamp8912 Should I get Bloodlands?

    • @polishmapper5968
      @polishmapper5968 Před 3 lety +21

      Ikr? My family lived through that war (they were Jewish, most either got caught by the Nazis or fled into Siberia) and the brutality of the Nazis was purely genocidal. Sherman's March to the Sea is always presented as this unbridled terror and bloodshed against civilians, even in NJ classrooms. I genuinely didn't know about a lot of this before watching this video

    • @samuelsansculottes8093
      @samuelsansculottes8093 Před 3 lety +10

      @@kadecase7470 ​ @Dad Ee I actually took a history course in college that was essentially structured around entire book. It's *fine* as far as pop history goes, but it isn't held in the highest esteem by actual historians. He emphasizes the geographical point more than he should, has some trouble with numbers, uses some anecdotes as more concrete than he should, throws in some fairly strange offhand conclusions, and does a good amount equivocating between the USSR and Nazi Germany (including the conflation of the Holodomor with the Holocaust which is pretty Not Great).
      It does, however, do an effective job of conveying the scale of destruction and death, which is overall the point of the book. If that's what you're looking for and can treat it as more of a guided tour of destruction than a comprehensive historical analysis, then it's probably worth a read. Just don't treat it as historical gospel.

  • @aidanlutz8106
    @aidanlutz8106 Před 2 lety +123

    The whole slavery going away on its own argument is quite similar to an argument I hear about Rhodesia how “They were planning to give the natives rule eventually”

    • @jacksonfitzsimmons4253
      @jacksonfitzsimmons4253 Před 2 lety

      That probably wasn't true. And neither should it have been. Zimbabwe is an absolute shithole and Rhodesia was livable.

    • @aidanlutz8106
      @aidanlutz8106 Před 2 lety +24

      @@truenorthgames well they did, so cope.

    • @Houndskullcrownemoji
      @Houndskullcrownemoji Před rokem +7

      ​@@aidanlutz8106and how well have the "Zimbabweans" been doing ever since?

    • @lungeranon7645
      @lungeranon7645 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@Houndskullcrownemoji😂 Ended this little thread with that request for observation. Comparing white Rhodesian farmers existing to slavery is a moronic comparison. Rhodesian farmers claim to the land they cultivated for generations was just as legit as any Massachusetts farmer to any former Algonquian lands.

    • @diltzm
      @diltzm Před 5 měsíci +3

      Rhodesia had a black PM and other members of parliament during the Bush War which wasn't a civil war but a war against non-Rhodesian terrorists. They were in fact removing their apartheid government.

  • @thegorlnextdoorhere
    @thegorlnextdoorhere Před rokem +52

    i was born and raised in rural and costal SC; and i can tell you from first-hand experience, most people are just people just wanting to live their lives and rarely even think about the confederacy.
    there is a very small but very loud group in the south, thats always screaming the "the south will rise again" rhetoric. which is a sad fact of any fringe ideals.
    awesome video as always

    • @lucavalerio3336
      @lucavalerio3336 Před 10 měsíci +5

      That’s very good to hear from a southerner! Im not american but i really love the american south and I never had a bad experience talking to a southerner online. It upsets me that good southerners end up being victims of steryotypes because of a small, ignorant minority.

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Před 6 měsíci

      Then why is everyone moving South now?

    • @ethancorsmeier1110
      @ethancorsmeier1110 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@marknewton6984taxes are low, not super populated, still has strong moral values, less crime, and lastly politicians who care about their cities. Also I'm a kentuckian and can say what this guy said was absolutely true, there's a small minority who is still a dixie kid and he needs to mind his uncle same

  • @SidheKnight
    @SidheKnight Před 3 lety +770

    I love how Union Guy and Johnny Reb have to be forced to promote Atun-Shei's merchandise _at gunpoint_

    • @Autumnlight91
      @Autumnlight91 Před 3 lety +62

      Billy Yank I believe his name is

    • @SidheKnight
      @SidheKnight Před 3 lety +11

      @@Autumnlight91 Thanks!

    • @randomboy3m98
      @randomboy3m98 Před 3 lety

      I wonder why he was fine when he was held at gunpoint the first time but not the second time.

    • @elenacienfuegos8450
      @elenacienfuegos8450 Před 3 lety +2

      Random Boy 3 m He couldn’t show that we was scared the first time.

    • @drachepumpernickel7056
      @drachepumpernickel7056 Před 3 lety +12

      honestly the best shilling in videos like this are where they show that it is very obviously shilling and have fun with it, which makes me laugh and more likely to actually check out the product in the ad as opposed to some generic fake-enjoyment bullshit that I just don't pay attention to

  • @thegreatskinkpriest8104
    @thegreatskinkpriest8104 Před 3 lety +1260

    “Total War” by definition is actually a great PC strategy game series.

    • @redpanda7967
      @redpanda7967 Před 3 lety +53

      You obviously haven’t played total war in awhile.

    • @RomulusDeTroys
      @RomulusDeTroys Před 3 lety +53

      Such a shame how the franchise has changed... makes a man miss the Total War Empire and Total War Napoleon days.

    • @redpanda7967
      @redpanda7967 Před 3 lety +18

      Begon Genesis Rome 2 is miles ahead g
      Of what we have now. Sorry I can elaborate more, I have to go defeat a whole army with 1 unit.

    • @thegreatskinkpriest8104
      @thegreatskinkpriest8104 Před 3 lety +42

      Roman_Valdax I played yesterday man. Warhammer 2 is mechanically the best game in the franchise. Yeah I still love medieval 2 and empire but Warhammer is pretty great too.

    • @thegreatskinkpriest8104
      @thegreatskinkpriest8104 Před 3 lety +24

      Begon Genesis I had no idea people really felt this way. I’m not a fan of 3 kingdoms or Troy but Warhammer 2 is fantastic. They’ve put a lot of effort into it and it shows. And call me crazy but I loved Rome 2, although I admit I didn’t play it until many of the release bugs were patched out.

  • @cathleen6104
    @cathleen6104 Před měsícem +7

    I will happily return to this one particular, sublime, episode whenever I find myself missing Checkmate Lincolnites. Thanks for the memories Atun-Shei!! Looking forward to the next generation.

  • @aztro4010
    @aztro4010 Před rokem +29

    Man i actually hate the argument of comparing Sherman's March to the Sea and the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union. What the Nazi's did was way worse in my opinion, Come and See depicts it so terrifyingly well.

    • @joshuawillis602
      @joshuawillis602 Před rokem

      That’s not even a comparison. The germans at the time despised the Slavic people of the Soviet Union and treated them just as bad as Jewish people

    • @dr.aisaitl7439
      @dr.aisaitl7439 Před 8 měsíci

      Not only that but the Rape of Nanking, unbelievably delusional stuff to compare it to Sherman's March

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones Před 6 měsíci +10

      Considering that the Nazis in a single encirclement captured more Soviets than the total number who died on both sides of the Civil War, and all of those prisoners were immediately sent to either either slave labor camps or death camps; yeah, I think they were just a little bit worse than Sherman’s March. I’m not even going to touch on the Japanese except to say that I don’t think any Union soldiers, Sherman’s or otherwise, had a competition to see how many civilians they could behead, with the results being printed in national newspapers.

  • @whatthe239
    @whatthe239 Před 3 lety +738

    Johnny Reb’s full name is Jonathan Rebellion.

  • @suddendeath2000
    @suddendeath2000 Před 3 lety +713

    I feel like the fact that the Yankee is drinking a wine called Inferno while discussing this subject is not a coincidence.

    • @fumarc4501
      @fumarc4501 Před 3 lety +22

      Pothic Inferno Whiskey Barrel Red to be exact. A california wine if I’m not mistaken.

    • @suddendeath2000
      @suddendeath2000 Před 3 lety +10

      @@fumarc4501 Ypu are mostly correct, but it's Apothic. I find it quite tasty myself.

    • @DrHotWarLove
      @DrHotWarLove Před 3 lety +9

      The Johnny Reb is also drinking a beer called Dixie.

    • @dorkmax7073
      @dorkmax7073 Před 3 lety +5

      @@DrHotWarLove fitting. Dixie+Inferno=Sherman

    • @kostan55
      @kostan55 Před 3 lety

      @@dorkmax7073 imagine a video game based on sherman's march to the sea named
      "D I X I E - I N F E R N O"

  • @auroraofclanborealis
    @auroraofclanborealis Před rokem +9

    I still really love, " *How do you know how large Cornelius' phallus is?* "

  • @arieljackson77
    @arieljackson77 Před 5 měsíci +6

    As a southerner and a student of the history of that horrible time of our nation’s history I have often thanked God that I didn’t have to decide if would defend the right of wealthy people who would have otherwise considered me white trash or would be considered a traitor?
    But more than that I thank God that although it ultimately took the worst possible scenario , finally that most despicable institution of slavery ended.

  • @SuperAsefasef
    @SuperAsefasef Před 3 lety +984

    People often talk about Sherman’s march to the sea and tend to just start with Him already in Atlanta. This however ignores how he got there in the first place. Sherman spent weeks outmaneuvering and out flanking the confederate army forcing them to repeatedly give ground to his troops all throughout Georgia with minimal union losses. This campaign is still studied and taught at military academies worldwide. Sherman was arguably one of the most talented tacticians of the war.

    • @felipedaiber2991
      @felipedaiber2991 Před 3 lety +41

      Also strategic war if not total war became the (un?)official motto of all wars until VietNam, wich is a horrible thing but ig still shows that he was extremely influential as a general

    • @petriew2018
      @petriew2018 Před 3 lety +101

      honestly, people underestimate generals like Grant and Sherman because they were not great tacticians, they were great strategists, and there's a big difference.
      Lee was a great tactician, he was an expert at manuvering armies and controlling a battlefield... he won plenty of battles, but had no idea how to win the war. At Gettysburg he should have disengaged and marched towards Washington after the first day, but his focus was on the battle and not the objective.
      Sherman? mediocre tactician. certainly not the worst the Union had, but not the best when the armies actually clashed. What he was good at was staying focused on his objective, He wasn't there to win battles, he was there to be the biggest nuisance he could for as long as he could stay supplied. If southern armies wanted to chase him around Georgia instead of stopping Grants push on Richmond, he'd already won in every way that counted. You can't make a movie about that kind of general, but that's the people that win you wars.

    • @mjfleming319
      @mjfleming319 Před 3 lety +3

      Petrie W I agree that Lee should have disengaged after the first day of Gettysburg, but how exactly would he have moved towards Washington? The roads he would have used to disengage led away from Washington, and Meade, who turned out to be a pretty good general himself, was very nicely positioned between Lee and DC.

    • @mjfleming319
      @mjfleming319 Před 3 lety +5

      Connor Kennesaw Mountain was an absolute bloodbath that Sherman undertook primarily to get his name in the newspaper. He also repeatedly ignored Thomas, when Thomas’ advice would have ended the campaign in half the time. Grant was a great general but his biggest mistake was underestimating Thomas and not cutting him loose with an independent command. Thomas was twice the general Sherman was...Thomas never lost a battle, and Sherman never won a battle.

    • @ajohnymous5699
      @ajohnymous5699 Před 3 lety +11

      @@petriew2018 Thats a very solid assessment on the difference between tacticians and strategists. I do disagree about the movie thing, though. We've seen so many movies about a single battle or several battles, but how entertaining would it be to have a movie about Sherman's march from the view of a Union soldier where Sherman says "oh, the enemy is there, so lets move away from there and cause mischief elsewhere." and even make it comedic and have it both poke fun at people who think killing the enemy is the only way to win a war by showing Sherman burning down the plantations, factories and railways saying "a bullet will kill a man, a cannon will kill a line of men. These fires killed the confederate army."
      Too many hollywood movies cover a single battle, fantasy setting movies try to copy LOTR, how many have confused guys marching with a leader telling them things like "if war was just about killing the other person, then nations would settle on a place to meet and duke it out" and be done with it already." think it would be a welcome subversion and politely poke fun at people who fanboy over generals that are good tacticians and cite battles as the relevant information in their resume but not thing like how they solved logistics issues or caused problems for others. Make it clear that Grant was the better man to lead the nation's forces compared to Robert E. Lee who is good at conducting a battle rather than a war.

  • @tristan4624
    @tristan4624 Před 3 lety +2225

    Really I find it fascinating how Sherman viewed himself. It was like he was ok with being the necessary evil.

    • @alexbeck8568
      @alexbeck8568 Před 3 lety +135

      He was a fist

    • @Abhishek-sr2pu
      @Abhishek-sr2pu Před 3 lety +24

      He followed the maratha war strategy.

    • @Historyguy-xu5ht
      @Historyguy-xu5ht Před 3 lety +249

      He had no qualms about his job. He was a soldier and his job was to end the war. He needed to weaken the south and he did.

    • @israelisntreal786
      @israelisntreal786 Před 3 lety +12

      He relished in this fact

    • @jacklau2558
      @jacklau2558 Před 3 lety +96

      There are a number of leaders in history who held a similar mindset. Some could say this even if the person themself has no written documents. Like Vlad the impaler a man who while acting in a way that was absolutely cruel cruel to both enemy and innocent. But yet he was a hero to many and still is within Romania. He likely knew what he did was wrong ways he saw it as necessity to protect his Realm and hold power.

  • @tonyjoestar2632
    @tonyjoestar2632 Před 5 měsíci +6

    How many times have I watched this, and only now was I able to make out Johnny saying "How do you know how large Cornelius's phallus is??"

  • @jackkevinbruemmer1956
    @jackkevinbruemmer1956 Před měsícem +12

    General Sherman was like a very strict parent.
    "If you cannot use your cities responsibly I will have to take them"

  • @andrewshepherd1633
    @andrewshepherd1633 Před 3 lety +2199

    Calling out the assholes in your own fanbase...bold. I appreciate the integrity it takes to do that, not many groups/channels/organizations do that these days.

    • @haydenphillips3153
      @haydenphillips3153 Před 3 lety +16

      @HeerKommando I feel like it was real when people were first doing it, but now everyone is following the ritual to maintain appearances.

    • @jamesharding3459
      @jamesharding3459 Před 3 lety +28

      A lot of it is just shitposting, but some of it is definitely hating on the South, as it should be.

    • @DreadPirateRoberts121
      @DreadPirateRoberts121 Před 3 lety +105

      @@jamesharding3459 "it's almost as if that some people can't tell the difference between southern aristocrat slave owners and modern day southerners." 😐

    • @jamesharding3459
      @jamesharding3459 Před 3 lety +39

      @@DreadPirateRoberts121 If they’ll stop idolizing the aforementioned then maybe I’ll bother to make the distinction.

    • @shadow435100
      @shadow435100 Před 3 lety +43

      @@jamesharding3459 ... yes just continue hating them and bashing them that will show them that they are wrong because that will work... or it will cause them to continue tightening the ranks until someone starts doing stupid shit like storming the Capitol again.

  • @vurrunna
    @vurrunna Před 3 lety +1371

    I love how Billy Yankee and Johnny Rebel here feel like they're actually friends. They have actual chemistry, and seem to properly enjoy one another's company and discussion, even if they disagree. Beyond being kinda hilarious, it also feels like some kinda message--something about making friends with your enemies. And occasionally sticking a gun in their face. Y'know, as you do.

    • @jarvis8635
      @jarvis8635 Před 3 lety +124

      I think it could also be used to show how the civil war was one thar divided families and friends.

    • @striker8961
      @striker8961 Před 3 lety +72

      Also a message if you hate to love reb ( cause let's face it we are all here to be entertained by him) that that's okay since even the guy who laws the verbal and moral smackdown on him is his friend and tries to talk him into changing rather than raging and shooting him......except you know....the time he shot him but we'll ..we'll just forget that

    • @joshcain1032
      @joshcain1032 Před 3 lety +33

      @@striker8961 I'm think you'll find that was some other handsom Confederate officer. We have it on the authority of Johnny Reb himself.

    • @striker8961
      @striker8961 Před 3 lety +14

      @@joshcain1032 Oh my sincerest apologize my good sir my sincerest apologize for my mistake

    • @poyloos4834
      @poyloos4834 Před 3 lety +14

      It almost feels like it isn't the same guy greenscreened in next to himself.

  • @grouchypotatowolfpack5580

    Sherman couldn't have been a war criminal. War crimes hadn't been invented yet. Back then, it was just dishonourable.

  • @jamellfoster6029
    @jamellfoster6029 Před 2 lety +97

    I'm a Southern lady but as a Mixed Race person, I'm so thankful for Grant, Sherman, Lincoln, & the rest of the Union... Slavery was hell on Earth... Some deluded individuals were crazy enough to think slavery was beneficial... Just plain asinine...

    • @kenabbott8585
      @kenabbott8585 Před 2 lety

      "Some deluded individuals were crazy enough to think slavery was beneficial... Just plain asinine..."
      Sherman was one of them.
      He stated repeatedly his belief that ending slavery would be bad for white people and even worse for black people.

    • @brennansmith6474
      @brennansmith6474 Před rokem

      Your not a southern if you believe in big government and not believe in people keeping guns from the government

  • @SunflowerSocialist
    @SunflowerSocialist Před 3 lety +568

    Fun fact: Sherman while not religious, was a baptized Roman Catholic and his son became a catholic priest.

    • @danielcampion251
      @danielcampion251 Před 3 lety +14

      Good ole Shermey was pretty anti-religion from what I heard. So this must have pissed him off something fierce.

    • @gonatas1
      @gonatas1 Před 3 lety +29

      Sherman described himself as a man of “works” not a man of “faith.”
      He seems to have considered his wife’s and son’s devotion to preparing for the next life as a bit morbid.

    • @moooooofy
      @moooooofy Před 3 lety +4

      general sherman was a papist and an idolator

    • @bootybunkerspelunker
      @bootybunkerspelunker Před 3 lety +44

      @uncletigger Dude... It's okay to be antireligious, but advocating for forced "re-education" is pretty fucked up.

    • @SunflowerSocialist
      @SunflowerSocialist Před 3 lety +17

      uncletigger so parents who raise their kids religious or baptize their kids or send their kids to religious education are child abusers?

  • @Akiraspin
    @Akiraspin Před 3 lety +938

    "The north only won because of overwhelming resources"
    Found the guy whose butthurt his mates beat him in Starcraft cus he didn't expand.

    • @comradetovarish7823
      @comradetovarish7823 Před 3 lety +48

      when the 2 basing protoss complains about losing to a 7 base zerg at 20 minutes

    • @toastpuppy3491
      @toastpuppy3491 Před 3 lety +9

      Interestingly enough, Marines in Overwhelming numbers is my main strategy

    • @MyHentaiGirl
      @MyHentaiGirl Před 2 lety +14

      @@toastpuppy3491 sound like WH40k tactic lmao

    • @user-lj5zc7kq2h
      @user-lj5zc7kq2h Před 2 lety +1

      Well Iron Warriors at least

    • @julkarcerum7618
      @julkarcerum7618 Před 2 lety +4

      @@user-lj5zc7kq2h nah, the Iron Warriors are seige masters. Sending in people to be slaughtered for no good is a distinctly Imperial Fist strategy

  • @michaelfernandez3182
    @michaelfernandez3182 Před rokem +36

    The part where he paused and said..."my heart flutters at the thought" - truly killed me. I laughed out loud and had to stop the video. Such great content!

  • @okuno54
    @okuno54 Před 6 měsíci +7

    What I'm getting is that war in general is murderous and vile, northerners and southerners were not angels and demons but simply people, and that while the South was fighting to perpetuate the horrors of intergenerational slavery, the North was to some extent fighting against it, or at the very least ended up stopping that (particular) system.
    I really don't know what people find difficult. Like obviously doing the history is a lot of work, but I find myself completely unsurprised at the results; the US Civil War was nothing exceptional for a war, except perhaps that for once the victors did actually have the higher (but certainly not perfect) moral ground.

  • @sully1492
    @sully1492 Před 3 lety +618

    I love how you are using actual comments, instead of using straw man arguments of confederacy supporters.

    • @alacnaythegreat1054
      @alacnaythegreat1054 Před 3 lety +104

      I'd argue that these are just living breathing straw men

    • @jesusobannon8557
      @jesusobannon8557 Před 3 lety +27

      So just men then

    • @mastermonke1177
      @mastermonke1177 Před 3 lety +12

      I don’t think saying burning civilians alive being wrong is a straw man

    • @alacnaythegreat1054
      @alacnaythegreat1054 Před 3 lety +68

      @@jesusobannon8557 I guess my point was more that these people are clearly exaggerating their personalities to make a point. And so like, they themselves are becoming the straw men. Now, some of them clearly have just been mislead and are trying to have a debate, but then there's also the guy who wrote out "rebel yell"

    • @FieldMarshalYT
      @FieldMarshalYT Před 3 lety +3

      @@mastermonke1177 When did this happen?

  • @diegorincon4673
    @diegorincon4673 Před 3 lety +922

    he attac
    he attac
    but most importantly,
    he attac

    • @evanv7420
      @evanv7420 Před 3 lety +65

      He burn a shacc

    • @dreadedworld8864
      @dreadedworld8864 Před 3 lety +20

      I'm born and raised in Alabama but HELL YEAH BRING THE MAN BACK TO LIFE. We need him back
      Too homophobic here too

    • @duckyz6956
      @duckyz6956 Před 3 lety +3

      And burn

    • @Assassinus2
      @Assassinus2 Před 3 lety +13

      @@duckyz6956 Given the Sherman tank’s reputation during World War II for readily burning (no matter how undeserved) there is some irony here.
      ...I’m about to be beaten with the going-off-on-a-tangent stick, aren’t I?

    • @dreadedworld8864
      @dreadedworld8864 Před 3 lety +1

      @ALSO-RAN ! I know it sucks

  • @kattastic9999
    @kattastic9999 Před 2 lety +24

    Memes aside, yes there are very real prejudices against people from the South, ESPECIALLY Appalachia. But much of it is rooted in left-over racism, or at the very least inexorably tied to issues stemming from the institutional racism so endemic in this country. "Dumb southerner" jokes stem from the critical lack of public scholastic infrastructure in rural areas which is a byproduct of intentional attempts to restrict education to an economic class that was, shortly after the civil war, almost entirely emancipated slaves. The oppressive power structures of classism and racism overlap heavily and interact deeply, but clinging to a false ideology for comfort only worsens things, especially when it's one founded on as much suffering and subjugation as the Confederacy.
    If you see a meme about a guy from two hundred years ago burning down enemy villages and you see it as an attack on you personally, the problem isn't _just_ that people normalize and joke about atrocities once removed from context, the problem is also that you've tied your sense of self to a historical concept

  • @jandrashriker5861
    @jandrashriker5861 Před rokem +23

    Lmao that doofus actually commented "Rebel Yell." 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @sweetpepino1907
    @sweetpepino1907 Před 3 lety +649

    Confederacy: WE SHALL LAY WASTE TO THE NORTH
    Union: *Lays waste to the south*
    Confederacy: *surprised Pikachu*

    • @dylan5113
      @dylan5113 Před 3 lety +9

      i dont think that justifies it. none should have happened

    • @rubman8937
      @rubman8937 Před 3 lety +44

      @@dylan5113 what was the alternative?

    • @stikupartist3698
      @stikupartist3698 Před 3 lety +28

      @@dylan5113 but luckily it did.

    • @ramblinbob1918
      @ramblinbob1918 Před 3 lety +4

      Lol the civil war was not a defensive war for the north

    • @richardobrien8713
      @richardobrien8713 Před 3 lety +24

      @@ramblinbob1918 the first shots fired were aimed at federal troops in fort sumter. that by definition makes it so that the south aggressed, meaning the north defended.

  • @JE-zl6uy
    @JE-zl6uy Před 3 lety +434

    Me: "Ugh my day is terri-" *CZcams: "hey there's a new episode of Check-Mate Lincolnites"*
    ME: GLORY GLORY HALLELUJAH!

  • @TBH-nu2so
    @TBH-nu2so Před 7 měsíci +23

    I view Sherman’s march through the South the way I view Allied strategic bombing of Germany. Cope harder, you had slaves.

    • @ethancorsmeier1110
      @ethancorsmeier1110 Před 6 měsíci

      I prefer to view it like Operation Linebacker II but basically the same thing.

    • @TBH-nu2so
      @TBH-nu2so Před 6 měsíci

      @@ethancorsmeier1110 I wouldn’t necessarily. At least our operations in Germany were fully justifiable.

    • @ethancorsmeier1110
      @ethancorsmeier1110 Před 6 měsíci

      @@TBH-nu2so what I mean is yhe bombing of Germany more to destroy specific military equipment, operation linebacker was to break the spirit of the north vietnamese government. I guess Sherman's march was kinda for both but still.

    • @TBH-nu2so
      @TBH-nu2so Před 6 měsíci

      @@ethancorsmeier1110 That's fair, my apologies

    • @ethancorsmeier1110
      @ethancorsmeier1110 Před 6 měsíci

      @@TBH-nu2so all good, I don't think many people know what operation linebacker II is but there is no need to apologize my friend, you and I had a nice conversation about some history. Have a great day my friend❤️

  • @IvelLlehctim
    @IvelLlehctim Před 5 měsíci +8

    Anyone who says the Confederacy didnt fight primarily to protect slavery by pointing out the majority of soldiers didnt own slaves is a moron. Those soldiers werent the ones in charge making the decisions. The politicians who actually made the decision to secede did so for the purpose of protecting their right to own slaves.
    Not every German soldier during WWII supported the Nazi party or wanted to exterminate Jrws, Gays, and Gypsies, but their personal reasons for fighting had no effect on government policy. And neither did the reasons for common confederate soldiers during the civil war

    • @zenever0
      @zenever0 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Confederate enlisted volunteers in 1861 were 42% more likely to own slaves themselves or to live with family members who owned slaves than the general population.
      More than 50% of Confederate commissioned officers in 1861 owned slaves, and none of them lived with family members who were slaveholders.
      25% of southern households enslaved people. In some states like Mississippi, 50% of households had at least one enslaved person. Enslaving a person in the American South was as common as it is today to own a second car.

  • @AlexeiIgnavich
    @AlexeiIgnavich Před 3 lety +689

    General “Plantation in sight, set it alight” Sherman

    • @minhducnguyen674
      @minhducnguyen674 Před 3 lety +74

      If Georgia wasn't meant to be burned why is it flammable?

    • @teamcastro9187
      @teamcastro9187 Před 3 lety +19

      Arthur “Plantation in sight, set it alight” Morgan

    • @caesarspeaks
      @caesarspeaks Před 3 lety +25

      “See their farm and do them harm” -Sun Tzu

    • @ManiacMayhem7256
      @ManiacMayhem7256 Před 3 lety +4

      General "Native village in sight, set it alight" Sherman

    • @trial_with_an_error9687
      @trial_with_an_error9687 Před 3 lety +1

      @@teamcastro9187 Arthur is just Sherman reincarnated

  • @RamboArminius1
    @RamboArminius1 Před 3 lety +297

    Sherman was so good they named a tank after him.

    • @laso6225
      @laso6225 Před 3 lety +39

      Yes, they even named a decent tank after him. Unlike Lee...

    • @mcamp9445
      @mcamp9445 Před 3 lety +20

      Was actually Britain who named the lee, grant, Sherman, and other civil war general named tanks. Britian used names only where America during the early period just used alphanumerics

    • @jasonsantos3037
      @jasonsantos3037 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah how many times Sherman tanks getting blown up by German made tanks

    • @laso6225
      @laso6225 Před 3 lety +42

      @@jasonsantos3037 Your mind will explode if you find out what the Sherman was made for
      ...
      ...
      ...
      Infantry support!
      The M18, M10 and M36 were designed to deal with the german heavies, where as the Sherman was made to deal with infantry, though its modularity allowed for modifications which made the tank versatile. Adding to that is the Sherman's outrageously good survival statistic.

    • @videogameguy4215
      @videogameguy4215 Před 3 lety +29

      @@jasonsantos3037 Also Hans the transmission broke again

  • @theimperialnord38
    @theimperialnord38 Před 6 měsíci +5

    The absolute hypocrisy to say Sherman "violated Human rights of Southerners," meanwhile Southerners were owning slaves. Smh

  • @Salinated
    @Salinated Před 2 měsíci +5

    As a modern rural southerner and thorough American, thanks for making the distinction between confederates and my culture today! :D