Explaining the American Civil War

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  • čas přidán 15. 04. 2024
  • Link to turpentine: www.turpentine.co/
    Link to this podcast on Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/36Kqo3B...

Komentáře • 216

  • @ZontarDow
    @ZontarDow Před 3 měsíci +35

    Something I'm surprised wasn't mentioned was the fact Lincoln almost died at Bull Run, he like many decided to watch the battle (which for civilians was common until the civil war) and the man standing next to him was fatally wounded by shrapnel.

    • @jatuttable
      @jatuttable Před 3 měsíci +2

      In years of reading about the Civil War, I've never heard of this. Thank you for sharing!

    • @ZontarDow
      @ZontarDow Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jatuttable it's something that I'm surprised gets ignored given how radically different things would have likely played out had he been hit instead.

  • @DarthHoosier3038
    @DarthHoosier3038 Před 3 měsíci +46

    Good to have you back! Gonna be taking a custodial job this summer to help pay for college. Season 2 will be excellent as to listen to in background as I work! Couldn’t have come at better time.

  • @jamesbohling4864
    @jamesbohling4864 Před 2 měsíci +11

    You nailed it. The South was at heart aristocrats with slaves. The north was a different ethnic group and cultural base. The South didn't really believe in rights for non nobles.

  • @BlueGamingRage
    @BlueGamingRage Před 3 měsíci +16

    8:45 New Jersery. They had changed their definition of slavery so that slaves were "apprentices for life"

  • @gonfreecss6002
    @gonfreecss6002 Před 3 měsíci +44

    Congratulations on your pregnancy, Mr. Rudyard! I hear you start to feel the baby writhe and kick around 5 months in!

  • @ncarmstron
    @ncarmstron Před 2 měsíci +5

    One correction: the slaves were freed by the 13th Amendment. The Emancipation Proclamation only freed slaves in the states in rebellion, where Lincoln was powerless to enforce it. The slaves in border states (Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware and Missouri) weren’t legally freed until December 1865.

  • @trillz31
    @trillz31 Před 3 měsíci +22

    Would have to disagree that people from the Midwest are "Yankees". As someone from Wisconsin, Yankees typically are people from New England. In my experience and the general immigrant background being different, the Midwest is distinct from New England and their culture.

    • @pleaseenteraname.pleaseent4518
      @pleaseenteraname.pleaseent4518 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Agreed. As a fellow Wisconsinite, I can safely say that there is just as much of a difference between the Midwest (especially Wisconsin) and the Northeast as there is between the Midwest and the South.

    • @BlueGamingRage
      @BlueGamingRage Před 3 měsíci +17

      "Yankee" is region-based. For midwesterners, it's New Englanders. For southerners, it's northerners. For Brits, it's all Americans

    • @EveryCarpet
      @EveryCarpet Před 3 měsíci +1

      850 here, anybody east of the Miss and not a Confederate State is a Yankee. Willing to bet Yankee terminology changes as you get to the Border States.

    • @quipalco
      @quipalco Před 3 měsíci +5

      This was 160 years ago. Most of the nordic migration to the western midwest happened after the civil war. Most of the settlers of the upper midwest back then were new englanders believe it or not. There are maps that show the migration westward, and for the most part, everyone moved straight west. Virginians ended up in Kentucky and then Missouri etc... The midwest today is not the midwest of the early 1800s.

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Před 3 měsíci

      @@BlueGamingRage yankee doodle dandy

  • @andylu6150
    @andylu6150 Před 3 měsíci +13

    Hey Rudyard. Could you bring back Dave and do the Common Ground podcasts again? I really enjoyed having a different guest each time, it helped introduce me to many creators. I still enjoy history but I was hoping that when this series is finished you would go back to the Common Ground podcast.

    • @Izadirad1995
      @Izadirad1995 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah what happened to that? I was so confused when history102 started showing up.

  • @marcellbabo4112
    @marcellbabo4112 Před 3 měsíci +7

    More maps please! Awesome conversations on this channel and it would help to visualize if you’d include more maps.

  • @jackvicchio4426
    @jackvicchio4426 Před 3 měsíci +10

    14:31 Actually, it was a Congressman beating a Senator with a Cane, but your point remains the same here. Just being ultra-specific.

  • @hannibal-rb3go
    @hannibal-rb3go Před 3 měsíci +6

    Forgot to mention Wilmer Mclean. War started on his farm and ended in his house. Also funny thing about the meeting I enjoy is Grant was happy to finally meet Lee, but Lee remembered they actually met before in the Mexican-American war.

  • @cowboydup
    @cowboydup Před 3 měsíci +8

    happy to see the lego lion knights castle in your background

  • @phillipmcgarry
    @phillipmcgarry Před 3 měsíci +13

    Sherman didn't win Chattanooga, Grant did.

    • @Mcfunface
      @Mcfunface Před 3 měsíci +6

      Fun fact, my great great grandfather Andrew Danielson was drafted to fight under Sherman's March to the sea was shot multiple times lightly enough to continue on but with a bullet left in his thigh the rest of his life 😅. He wasn't happy about his time in the army.

    • @advent-expedition
      @advent-expedition Před 3 měsíci

      My butthole aches.

  • @johnparks4345
    @johnparks4345 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Oklahoma wasn’t neutral, many tribes fought under the Confederacy because they believed that the Union wouldn’t keep to their word, in fact, the last General to surrender was Cherokee
    And they were right

  • @Slasher1294
    @Slasher1294 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I'm making the assumption that the south didn't have as much of an population thus north can control what laws gets passed thus since the north agreed on banning slavery this would hurt the the south economy. And it's no surprised that the north had the most industrial locations for its time period that they were able to control the economic markets

  • @AryanAncap1087
    @AryanAncap1087 Před 12 dny +1

    The idea that the war of northern aggression (I.e, the civil war) was about slavery can be disproven quite easily, Abraham Lincoln explicitly stated in his inaugural speech that he intended to preserve the institution of slavery, saying that he had no right to alter it, but he did state that he intended to increase tariffs, and that he was willing to wage war with any state that opposed him in this regard, secondly, after the states seceded to form the confederacy, the union attempted to lure them back into the country by proposing the corwin amendment, which was specifically designed to protect slavery from being touched by federal power, if the confederacy was only interested in preserving slavery they would have rejoined the union and used their voting power to ratify the corwin amendment instead of fighting a war for 4 years and having hundreds of thousands of southerners killed for no reason, saying that the civil war was about slavery makes zero logical sense

  • @MartelSays
    @MartelSays Před 3 měsíci +3

    Excellent video as per usual!

  • @chanaidokoordom8744
    @chanaidokoordom8744 Před 3 měsíci +2

    You guys should do the New Deal, FDR or the American homefront during WWII

  • @aasifazimabadi786
    @aasifazimabadi786 Před dnem

    Funny how you talk about the “Rust Belt” taking over after the Civil War. The Steel Belt took over; it had not rusted yet. Maybe that’s an intentional joke, but yeah, thanks for another historical recap. This was the 12th video in the playlist of 18 dialogues in chronological order.

  • @cadaversnotebook
    @cadaversnotebook Před 3 měsíci +5

    Another great video Mr alt history

  • @dusanstanisic-im4go
    @dusanstanisic-im4go Před 3 měsíci +4

    36:17 baisically entire podcast from his side

  • @shawnwilson8256
    @shawnwilson8256 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I love this podcast you guys got going. I'm hoping you guys do Napoleon at some point. I'm a really big fan of his.

    • @SeanyeMidWest
      @SeanyeMidWest Před 17 dny

      I have only recently begun learning about Napoleon. I knew existed before: I knew he was a general of the French, i knew he lost at Waterloo, but not too much more than that. This is probably because he doesn't come in contact much with US history, other than the Louisiana Purchase. I have recently realized my knowledge of history is pretty US centric. So, I really began diving into European History, especially the Napoleonic wars.

  • @hanschitzlinger3676
    @hanschitzlinger3676 Před 3 měsíci +1

    These are my new favorite CZcams videos

  • @HanSolosGaming
    @HanSolosGaming Před 3 měsíci +1

    Excited for season 2 Rudyard. But where are the book recommendations?

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior Před 3 měsíci

    Nice, thought provoking video. Would love to see you guys do a video on the Russian Revolution & Soviet Union.

  • @Bogfrog1
    @Bogfrog1 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Haven’t seen the whole video but topics like the Era of Good Feelings and the Reconstruction period would be rly good bc of how poorly understood they r in America
    I took AP US history and I can rly only give a one sentence description of basic characteristics for each which should say something

  • @Maverick-ne3mr
    @Maverick-ne3mr Před 3 měsíci +2

    "our greatest enemy is ourselves" this is the story of the Aryan people since our beginning.

  • @neolithictransitrevolution427
    @neolithictransitrevolution427 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I don't think it's "ironic" that the Union attacked the rebel strong holds in Tennessee.
    I mean, taking where you have support makes sense too, but taking the Mississippi makes it a no brainer.

  • @park_actual
    @park_actual Před 3 měsíci

    Yo Rudyard! Do you have an episode on the French Revolution/Napoleonic era coming up?

  • @effexon
    @effexon Před 3 měsíci

    thats still relevant good point how civil war had 60year old tactics and doctrines that still shows today and repeats often in history.... society cant afford to fight but every 60 or 80 years and many places in europe last war was 80 years ago WW2.

  • @mitchelllukovsky6197
    @mitchelllukovsky6197 Před 3 měsíci

    Can we get a video on the French Revolution / Napoleonic Wars?

  • @ribps289
    @ribps289 Před 3 měsíci

    I wanna see Korea Civilization. Can we vote like in the main channel on what would you explain next?

  • @Glawackus-1600
    @Glawackus-1600 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The abolition of slavery in the context of the Civil War was just as much an economic as a political change. Slavery was basically an economic system that was replaced by industrialization because it altered the nature of agricultural development. The mechanization of farming effectively made slaves unnecessary.

    • @terranceramirez4816
      @terranceramirez4816 Před měsícem

      But that didn’t take effect until about 100 years after the Civil War ended, hence why neoslavery/“sharecrop” serfdom/Jim Crow happened as Rudyard alluded to at the end of the video. The direct consequence of the introduction of mechanized farming to the cotton South was the Second Great Migration of blacks to Northern cities, a ridiculously underrated aspect of history that feeds into modern race relations and inner city culture as the book Promised Land by Nicolas Lemann details.

    • @Glawackus-1600
      @Glawackus-1600 Před měsícem

      ​@@terranceramirez4816 You make a great point. Yet one must keep in mind that my comment also refers to Europe. Which was also beginning to industrialize and which had abolished slavery and later serfdom. However, some colonial powers did revive the practice in the plantations of the New World.

    • @josephstalin839
      @josephstalin839 Před 48 minutami

      Nt just unnecessary but outdated and obsolete. Remember the old folklore John Henry? He beat the Railroad machine sure, but died at the end and he had border inhuman in endurance. Which black slaves did not. Anyways, the point is machinery and heavy machinery will always beat and outlast humans.

  • @mpm1125
    @mpm1125 Před měsícem

    They did not run out of men. There was still a giant Confederate army in existence in Tennessee.

  • @BouncingHen8756
    @BouncingHen8756 Před 3 měsíci +2

    It's been a while!

  • @UriahVoltaire
    @UriahVoltaire Před 3 měsíci +4

    Didnt maryland support the Union and they had slavery?

  • @michaelmoore4269
    @michaelmoore4269 Před 3 měsíci +1

    It is interesting how California was admitted as a free state despite their use of Chinese and American Indian slaves

    • @joshuamitchell5018
      @joshuamitchell5018 Před 3 měsíci

      They were workers and they were always meant to be paid. There’s maybe something to say of them being exploited but at no point could you call them explicitly enslaved.

    • @terranceramirez4816
      @terranceramirez4816 Před měsícem

      @@joshuamitchell5018Chinese yes, but there most certainly were Native American slaves in California prior to American conquest. Johan Sutter even made use of them on his plantation and had plans to invite pro-slavery Southerners to move to the Sacramento Valley before gold was discovered. Had that not happened there is a pretty good chance that Cali would have been a slave state.

  • @addisonhunter9760
    @addisonhunter9760 Před měsícem

    I like the lecture but I would like a bit more engagement from cohost more- ask questions that can really help the viewer understand the implications of the events the lecturer describes.
    The maps are always great, albeit logical. Let’s explore the perspectives of different peoples at the time, such as poor white folk in south, slaves in south, runaway slaves in north, white folk in north, southern sympathizers, immigrants, neighbor countries. These perspectives are crucial to understanding the complexity of history.

  • @Avinkwep
    @Avinkwep Před 8 dny

    South Carolina and Massachusetts voted together against Herbert Hoover

  • @AndreiCostache-kh9mv
    @AndreiCostache-kh9mv Před 3 měsíci

    0:23 great to hear that Rudyard. Who is the lucky guy?

  • @slickjack2618
    @slickjack2618 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I gave this video a thumbs down because it presented falsehoods as though they were truth.
    1) Missouri Compromise - per the video "in the 1830's." Truth: the Missouri Compromise was dated 1820 - at least a full decade prior to the time referred to by the video.
    2) "A Southern Senator beat a Northern Senator with a stick." As stated by the video. In fact, a northern Senator (Sumner) was beaten on the floor of the US Senate by a southern member of the House (with no business in the Senate chamber) using his walking stick - a heavy, largely decorous cane.
    3) According to the video, Lincoln "ran on an abolish slavery platform." (around 27:45, in the video) In fact, Lincoln did not run on an abolish slavery platform. The platform opposed the addition of new slave states to the Union - not the abolition of slavery in existing states such as MO, KY, MD, and DE. Each of those states remained in the Union, albeit with certain military pressure.
    4) At 28:56, the video states that "Richmond (Va) was the only city large enough and developed enough to be the Confederate Seat of Government. Fact, Richmond had a population of about 38,000 in 1860. Charleston, SC had about the same (40,000) and New Orleans had a population of 168,000! Obviously, the size of the city was not the determining factor in the location of the Capital.
    You are, of course, able and welcome to air your opinions on CZcams. However, presenting falsehoods as truth is not the same thing.
    - sj

  • @danielwatcherofthelord1823
    @danielwatcherofthelord1823 Před 3 měsíci

    I love the deep dive! I do have a correction, though. Licoln did not run on abolishing slavery! He ran on leaving the slavery borders where they were at the time. He didn't support expanding slavery, which the south would view as a threat to slaverys existence.

  • @jeremybouteller7143
    @jeremybouteller7143 Před 18 dny

    Sorry Buddy, Sherman wasn’t even at Chickamauga. And the South won that battle, only to lose at Chattanooga

  • @Knite_el6767
    @Knite_el6767 Před 3 měsíci

    Rudyard, this guy looks exactly like one of the guys on the Moment of Zen podcast - but theyre different people?

  • @timothymeinhardt2536
    @timothymeinhardt2536 Před 29 dny

    Believe it or not a large majority (i think even right up to the civil war) of the north was unfortunately not opposed to keeping slavery around in the south. Like you said the abolitionists were considered the extremists. The north relied on the south and by extention slavery to some extent for very cheap raw materials for the new industrialized factories to create new products to use domestically and overseas. Many northern elites knew this and used this system to get rich. Even escaped slaves and freed slaves were not treated well in the northern cities and often faced discrimination. People act like the northerners were champions of freedom when in fact most of them really were not

  • @dominicbabbitt4529
    @dominicbabbitt4529 Před 2 měsíci

    Missouri was half free half slave. Oklahoma was a slave territory thanks to the 5 civilized tribes. Kentucky was a free state that often fought for the south

  • @Euph0rical
    @Euph0rical Před 3 měsíci +2

    37:50 Wouldn’t you say that the Western front generals were more warrior like as they were frontier people? Compared to the city slicker generals from the North East?

  • @Trad-Am
    @Trad-Am Před 2 měsíci +1

    The south fighting, without significant outside backing, from another industrialized country, was doomed, from the jump. The north had all the steel manufacturing, railroads, and general infrastructure.

  • @natel9019
    @natel9019 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Europe had serfs and indentured servants.

    • @Mcfunface
      @Mcfunface Před 3 měsíci +2

      Eastern Europe especially.

  • @sickbubble6059
    @sickbubble6059 Před měsícem

    Should've talked about how Lincoln wanted to deport all the blacks to an African or South American colony
    Also, didn't talk about the Prussians the north allowed to immigrate taking war numbers from 2:1 to 4:1

  • @barrackobama2422
    @barrackobama2422 Před 3 měsíci +62

    I've always hated how you overgeneralize the south. We did produce guns, we did feed our soldiers, we had amazing generals, and we even produced submarines in an attempt to take back the seas. The south is not nearly as incompetent as you frame us to be. Yes the north produced more, yes the north had better infrastructure, but you act like the south were less advanced than the indians. I liked your discussion on the battles and I love your insights into cultures and history but I just think you could work harder on your presentation. Regardless I'm happy you're back and I'm still hoping you debate Vaush again.

    • @advent-expedition
      @advent-expedition Před 3 měsíci

      Pee pee man

    • @monso7871
      @monso7871 Před 3 měsíci

      The south was less civilized than the north

    • @monso7871
      @monso7871 Před 3 měsíci

      The south was less civilized than the north

    • @gaytea2437
      @gaytea2437 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I didnt know barrack obama was a og democrat aswell

    • @DarthHoosier3038
      @DarthHoosier3038 Před 3 měsíci

      He probably shouldn’t debate Vaush again. When both sides enter a debate thinking the other is both evil and an idiot who has no idea what they’re talking about, nothing good is accomplished. It’s not a good faith discussion. It’s a sports game with each side cheering on their gladiator.

  • @danielwatcherofthelord1823
    @danielwatcherofthelord1823 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Wasn't New Orleans the biggest city in the south? Why wasn't New Orleans made the capital of the Confederacy?

    • @BradyR2020
      @BradyR2020 Před 5 dny

      Because with the naval blockade and the Mississippi River as a transport system, New Orleans fell quickly back into Union control

    • @danielwatcherofthelord1823
      @danielwatcherofthelord1823 Před 5 dny

      @@BradyR2020 yeah that's true. I guess my follow up question would be why didn't they make fortify the city better? If they had put up a fight like Vicksburg did then it probably would've played out a little bit differently, possibly.

  • @gryn1s
    @gryn1s Před 2 měsíci

    The unpreperadness of one of guys is just unsettling. Figure it out for gods sake

  • @uberjoe-08
    @uberjoe-08 Před 3 měsíci

    0:24 , 😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹 nice one

  • @jamesorth6460
    @jamesorth6460 Před 3 měsíci +1

    can't believe you skipped over Bleeding Kansas my homestate. where it all started. Kansas was the only state to join the union while other states were trying to leave in 1861. Besides that Nebraska was never a state until after the war

  • @joshuacollins5022
    @joshuacollins5022 Před 3 měsíci

    The death of Stonewall was huge

  • @tuckerbugeater
    @tuckerbugeater Před 3 měsíci +1

    Talk more about Benjamin Judah

  • @tacituskilgore8747
    @tacituskilgore8747 Před 3 měsíci +10

    I like turtles. 😎

  • @amn1308
    @amn1308 Před 3 měsíci +4

    24:44 the south nearly won at the beginning, and could have taken DC without a fight but retreated after their victory, because for the common man it was a war of defense.
    31:49 what happened was Sherman...
    37:44 "best" is a strong word for Sherman, he was just a murderer. Lee, Grant, and Jackson those were great military leaders.
    54:08 possibly better, possibly far worse, Lincoln was the first Emperor of the US, suspended congress and the bill of rights.

    • @Aceman52
      @Aceman52 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Sherman was not a murderer. Sherman was more realistic about what he was doing when it came to fighting a war. Lee and Jackson and Longstreet, and all the other southern generals are held up as these paragons of tactical brilliance when the. The fact of the matter is that they were essentially still holding to a napoleonic way of war. To an extent, the north was as well until you get to Grant and sherman, who fought the war the way you're supposed to, and that is to win.

  • @Mcfunface
    @Mcfunface Před 3 měsíci +2

    42:15 God's Intervention to save the United States any more bloodshed.

  • @Atlas5-jk8fy
    @Atlas5-jk8fy Před 3 měsíci +2

    Hooker, what a legend!

  • @NoID42069
    @NoID42069 Před 3 měsíci +2

    You're glowing mamas 🥰 ✨️🤰

  • @ramjam720
    @ramjam720 Před 2 měsíci

    You are from PA but you now reside in TX. You are by definition a "damn" Yankee. A good Yankee would return to the north.

  • @aloysiuswojocockowicz3855
    @aloysiuswojocockowicz3855 Před 3 měsíci

    Rudyard,
    There's a few things I hoped you would have mentioned.
    Delaware
    In school in the 80s and 90s they told us Delaware was a "Neutral State".
    Since leaving school, I've read that Delaware was a pro-slavery state that stayed with the Union.
    I was hoping you had something interesting to say on that topic.
    I also thought you night have pointed out similarities between the South seceding, and Lincoln saying Oh no you di'int! and taking the south back by force, and Ukraine seceding from the USSR and Putin attempting to take Ukraine back by force.
    If Putin is successful in reassembling the Soviet Union, do you think he will have to cripple Ukraine to make sure it can never exist on it's own again without the Soviet Union, the American Union did to the south?
    Do you think People in Europe put signs in their yards that said stuff like "Pray for the Confederacy"?

    • @user-fm4hd3zw3q
      @user-fm4hd3zw3q Před 2 měsíci

      You got the analogy the wrong way round. The slave owners are putin and his clique and various clients. The former slaves refusing to be enslaved again is Ukraine.

    • @kevinlawler3252
      @kevinlawler3252 Před měsícem

      Both of the takes here are missing key facts.. when comparing Russia and Ukraine to the American civil war. Lol
      The United States and NATO and their constant provocation of Russia must be acknowledged. They wanted this war in Eastern Europe.

    • @user-fm4hd3zw3q
      @user-fm4hd3zw3q Před měsícem

      @@kevinlawler3252 Hi Kevin. Obviously I’m not sure what provocation you’re referring to. I can address the usual suspect. The main “provocation” is usually attributed to NATO allowing new members to join the alliance that had previously been under the soviet yolk.
      We need to recognise 2 things about that.
      1) These former Eastern European Nations have agency. These people have a right to determine their foreign affairs.
      2) All the new NATO members of former Eastern Europe wanted to join NATO.
      And they wanted this for very good historical reasons that folks who have never experienced life under communism or kremlin control may not appreciate.
      From what I can gather, folks who identify with the confederacy against the Union can’t put themselves in the shoes of the slaves. Perhaps if the ‘us vs them’ could be removed from the equation one would see that the institution of slavery cannot be defended. Just as the institution of authoritarianism also cannot be defended.

  • @macknittle1121
    @macknittle1121 Před 3 měsíci +1

    What?!?! I thought you said you were on the pill.

  • @ZontarDow
    @ZontarDow Před 3 měsíci

    The fire of the Confederacy lives on in Quebec. Notre lute, One Struggle

  • @tmmr.4054
    @tmmr.4054 Před 2 dny

    Slavery is why the south lost the war. It socially and economically stunted the south so they did not develop industrially or in population as much as they could have. It set them apart culturally and economically from the north making them vilifiable and exploitable. However. it was the political and economic corruption associated with Lincolns party with their "internal improvement programs" and biased taxation that started the war. The north did not enter the war to end slavery. Lincoln was a nationalist concerned with preserving the American empire with complete disregard to the previously accepted right to session previously supported by northern states. PS I'm a Northerner born and raised. Very rarely do I see things differently than you concerning the reasons for events in history.

  • @thatguys4341
    @thatguys4341 Před 3 měsíci +1

    You’re a d4mn yankee…, but I respect your opinion enough to hear you out.

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior Před 3 měsíci

    I however doubt that the US/South would have joined the European alliances. I think the US would have gone a history similar to Latin America or Spain.

    • @terranceramirez4816
      @terranceramirez4816 Před měsícem

      The South most certainly would have allied with Britain and France, at least at first, to maintain its independence. French puppet Mexico would also have been part of the alliance. I do believe that the alliance structure would have been different, though. There would have been a maintenance of the Prussian-Russian alliance with Union mediation, who was friendly with both. I also think that France would have been quicker to back Austria’s play in the Brothers War, which would have either prevented the conflict and with it the Second Reich, or would have resulted in a Franco-Austrian victory unless Russia joined in. I think the North German Confederation would have formed organically without Bavaria, Baden and Württemberg.

  • @cyruscheng499
    @cyruscheng499 Před 6 dny

    23:47 what if the nzis won the civil war and what if the south won ww2?

  • @Bittamenbittamen
    @Bittamenbittamen Před 3 měsíci +2

    Can’t stand the cohost honestly. 0/2, shame really. Find someone who shares the interest and excitement and at least some base level knowledge to bounce off of please.

  • @micahskirvin
    @micahskirvin Před 3 měsíci +1

    dude please wear a collared shirt, you look a little sleazy

  • @benduncan4027
    @benduncan4027 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Didn’t start watching but already expect it being so based.

  • @NickT1861
    @NickT1861 Před 2 měsíci

    Deo Vindice

  • @diegoyanesholtz212
    @diegoyanesholtz212 Před 3 měsíci +10

    The Civil War was all about slavery. Basically, the South became scared that Abraham Lincoln would stop the expansion of slavery in the territories.

    • @Soloong_Gaybowzer
      @Soloong_Gaybowzer Před 3 měsíci +3

      What are the most ignorant comments I've ever heard in my life.
      Easily disproven by both historical records and the context.

    • @flatlander3027
      @flatlander3027 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@Soloong_Gaybowzer The Confederates themselves made it clear in their constitution and their articles of secession that they were seceding in order to preserve the institution of slavery.
      They said so themselves. Clearly and repeatedly, in their own founding documents.

    • @natel9019
      @natel9019 Před 3 měsíci

      States rights

    • @Mcfunface
      @Mcfunface Před 3 měsíci +5

      ​@@Soloong_GaybowzerIt also ignores that the Union didn't begin fighting the civil war to end slavery, but rather to "preserve the union" aka bring the southern states under federal control. It wasn't until the Emancipation Proclamation after Gettysburg that the official narrative would change to ending slavery.

    • @TombaFanatic
      @TombaFanatic Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@natel9019 The states rights to practice slavery ane secede. The CSA constitution then explicitly forbade the formation of free states and secession. The states didn't want to ensure their rights, they wanted to exercise their supposed right to leave to secure the foundation of slavery and then make sure the states didn't have the right to challenge slavery in their new federation.

  • @JL12800
    @JL12800 Před 9 dny

    This is a very yankee view of the civil war

  • @jeremygair4007
    @jeremygair4007 Před 3 měsíci +3

    14:40, remind you if today just a little?
    The woke are the South of today.

    • @WhatifAltHist
      @WhatifAltHist Před 3 měsíci +2

      I actually have thought this for years but it was too controversial too drop on this podcast lol

    • @jeremygair4007
      @jeremygair4007 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @WhatifAltHist I know you deftly dodged it at the end, I do recall you saying a part earlier about paralleling to today.
      Wise still

    • @f-84jthunderjet60
      @f-84jthunderjet60 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@WhatifAltHistI did not expect to see you comment here. This surprised me.

  • @michaelmoore4269
    @michaelmoore4269 Před 3 měsíci +2

    "If you went back and asked, no one would say that the war was about slavery. But it was about slavery." Hmm

  • @Neon-Puritan
    @Neon-Puritan Před 3 měsíci +7

    "Abraham Lincoln: American Dictator" is an excellent video that's somewhat related.
    Edit 1: On machine guns: I believe the first machine gun was the Chambers Flintlock, which America used to mow down Redcoats in the 1812 War. However, the Gatling Gun invented for the Civil War is closer to the modern style of machine guns.

    • @onionfarmer3044
      @onionfarmer3044 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I kinda want whatif to do a history review of popular history videos. Maybe collaborate with another history channel.

    • @doronaznible7298
      @doronaznible7298 Před 3 měsíci

      That video is actually very inaccurate and does misinterpret a lot of its own sources.

  • @Tremont24
    @Tremont24 Před 3 měsíci +1

    You did not mention the enlistment of black soldiers giving the Union an advantage with man power. The Emancipation Proclamation was really a wartime document because Lincoln, courtesy of Frederick Douglass’s pressure, realized that the enlistment of enslaved and free black soldiers could offset the war. Lincoln was initially against it because he feared slave rebellion (much like other presidents before him). But black regiments played a pivotal role in turning the tide of the war.

    • @ZontarDow
      @ZontarDow Před 3 měsíci

      The union had a significant manpower advantage even without using black soldiers.

    • @Tremont24
      @Tremont24 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@ZontarDow Even so, the presence of black regiments was still significant in the latter years of the war and should be recognized. It is an aspect of the Civil War that should not be ignored. Doing so contributes to historical erasure and doesn’t tell the full history.

    • @MyTruth1771
      @MyTruth1771 Před 2 měsíci

      Just imagine how hard the Black Regiments fought given the stakes

  • @thomaswatson1739
    @thomaswatson1739 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Southerners were right to secede!!!!

  • @westonsimmons561
    @westonsimmons561 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I wouldn't call the American civil war the most humain war i also think both sides where at fault

  • @chrisbelvedere6653
    @chrisbelvedere6653 Před 3 měsíci +3

    This dude (allegedly) should debate Ryan Dawson on the civil war. I already cant listen to this historical nonsense any longer.

  • @cefalopodo5717
    @cefalopodo5717 Před 3 měsíci +1

    if only you were this... hinged (!!!) in your main channel!

  • @JohnBeijen-hq9ep
    @JohnBeijen-hq9ep Před 3 měsíci +1

    Naw, congrats. You are barely even showing but just you wait til the third trimester 🤰Us fans can’t wait to meet lil althist jr.

  • @notsocrates9529
    @notsocrates9529 Před 3 měsíci +2

    The South did nothing wrong, especially 14:34 lmao

  • @CyrusBluebird
    @CyrusBluebird Před 3 měsíci

    Partial truths there: western/Christian Europe & before that Vikings did human trafficing of non-believers to jumpstart their economies between the 14th & 16th centuries. Mainly targeting Eastern pagan Europe. It was all sold to the muslim world, so that's a bit moo, but we need to adress the diamissed complexity that makea it awkward to talk about.

  • @BrockSamson18
    @BrockSamson18 Před 3 měsíci +4

    One of the greatest failures in history was not sending the freed slaves back to Africa. It was horribly wrong and immoral. They were still effectly slaves post "freedom."

    • @rebeccary637
      @rebeccary637 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Weren't they slaves back in Africa too? As terrible as being a slave in the south sounds, living in Africa sounds even worse. At least by keeping them in America their grandchildren got to enjoy a bit of freedom...

    • @doronaznible7298
      @doronaznible7298 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@rebeccary637to be fair, since they were American, they likely would have been the slave masters, that is if Liberia is an accurate representation of that scenario

  • @reeveetalk1907
    @reeveetalk1907 Před 3 měsíci

    If the north was also racist then why did they oppose slavery?

    • @joshuamitchell5018
      @joshuamitchell5018 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It’s not mutually incompatible to believe all humans have equality under god/deserve equal treatments by the law while simultaneously that racial stocks could be inferior/superior.

    • @joshuamitchell5018
      @joshuamitchell5018 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It’s not a mutually incompatible belief to support equality under the law as a principle and there being discreet racial stocks that can be baseline lesser or superior.

    • @joshuamitchell5018
      @joshuamitchell5018 Před 3 měsíci

      (Sorry, for reposting and re-replying a bunch. CZcams censor bot is probably in effect here. Since I had an error message come back after the first reply I made)
      It’s not a mutually incompatible belief to support equality under the law as a principle and also in there being substantial differences in race.

    • @ibnkhaldoun4319
      @ibnkhaldoun4319 Před 3 měsíci +1

      not all of the union states opposed slavery - 5 practiced it but just didn't back the confederates.

  • @Soloong_Gaybowzer
    @Soloong_Gaybowzer Před 3 měsíci +1

    How in the hell did this show up in my subscription feed when I am not even subscribe to this channel?
    Automatic dislike.

  • @bobbywilson5429
    @bobbywilson5429 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Ten minutes in and this is terrible.

  • @chrisbelvedere6653
    @chrisbelvedere6653 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Lol the war of northern aggression had almost nothing to do with freeing slaves.
    Four northern states owned slaves during the civil war Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland and Delaware.

    • @Bamawagoner
      @Bamawagoner Před 3 měsíci

      It was at least about the slaves in name. Sure, the northern elites wanted to dominate the south and that motivated them, but if nobody cared for slavery, the south would have given up their slaves and there wouldnt have been a casus belli for years to come.

    • @flatlander3027
      @flatlander3027 Před 3 měsíci

      You've got to ignore the CSA constitution and the articles of secession to believe that. The Southern Traitors seceded to protect their institution of slavery.
      And they said so in the own documents. Clearly and repeatedly.

    • @chrisbelvedere6653
      @chrisbelvedere6653 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@Bamawagonerthe South had all but given up slavery as a matter of fact after the war they stated their biggest mistake was not officially and publicly freeing the slaves. Many many free blacks fought for the south a whole lot more than any mainstream historian will ever acknowledge.

    • @chrisbelvedere6653
      @chrisbelvedere6653 Před 3 měsíci

      Look up ex NAACP Ashville NC leader and civil war historian H K Edgerton for more on this topic. Southern blacks fought as hard as Whites and had not to do with slavery. Hell confederate president Jefferson Davis and his brother were helping freed blacks developed their own communities governed by blacks.

    • @threefiveseven
      @threefiveseven Před 3 měsíci

      Kentucky isn't a northern state

  • @hartfordhouse6997
    @hartfordhouse6997 Před 3 měsíci

    This would be better on whatifalthist, since so much of it is made up.