The Chris Hedges Report: The monstrous myth of Custer

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 ม.ค. 2025

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  • @mikehart8281
    @mikehart8281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +364

    I read Bury MY heart at Wounded Knee, and recommend it to everyone. one quote in the book by an Indian chief said, The white man made us many promises and of all of them, they kept only one. They promised to take our land and they took it. Im also sad to say that Custer was my first hero when I read a biased account of his life. I was only aprox 12, im 70 now. I realize now that he was just a butcher. The Indians had way more honor than the U.S. military.

    • @janetcohen9190
      @janetcohen9190 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes. There are many revelations in historical facts that contradict 'pop-culture', urban-legends, 'official' & msm narratives, and so called 'Hollywood' history.
      Also, revelations by everyday people whether conscripted, volunteered, swept-up in euphoria, and same for people on opposite side of agendas that either before, during, or later even much later realize they were misled into beliefs, agendas, and being the array 'good' to 'evil' of doings.
      Political & financial agendas can be masked under, e.g., Saving the Savages. Purging Evils. False Flag Events. Repeated Lies to demonise one culture /race against another & vice-verso. Concoct Boogiemen. etc. So, to usurp lands, foods, goods, minerals, etc, to be controlled by a few.
      Eerily, akin is happening now by creating distresses, frustrations, antagonisms, red-tape, opening paths to 'buying farmlands, etc' by the 'super-wealthy' under guise of philanthropy, preventing Climate Change/ Global Warming, jobs, prosperity, health and human welfare.
      Sometimes, revelations arise out of being an being rational critical thinker, an awakening, hindsight, an examination of conscience, or getting close to meeting one's maker.
      History offers us the people and their revelations/ confessions among many such people is, i.e., ''War is a Racket'' by Smedley D Butler, Major General USMC although he spoke and wrote in 1930's it is applicable to prior generations and to now.
      Ever wonder why the Middle classes are under great stresses and in physical & fiscal decline?
      Why 40%+ of US, and First World, population do not have $400.00 in savings or in cash?
      Ever wonder why number of poor is increasing?
      Why homelessness in increasing?
      Why mortgages, loans, credit-cards, student loans, reverse mortgages, equity loans, etc supported by usury are vigorously promoted under myths value and prosperity?
      All the while propagating inflation of currency based on nil more than entries on spreadsheets and printing money at whims of politicians, financiers, bankers assuring the 97% of population are chattel.
      The combination of the latter and laws of taxes, levies, fees, usury that allow seizing /stealing peoples lands, farms, homes, small businesses.
      So, what was done to the Indians aka First Nations of the Americas in Custer's 1870s' and earlier certainly in what became USA & CAN still holds true only camouflaged, subtle, 'following Laws' but still vigorously existing and applied to 97% of population. In short chattel, serfdom, and slavery are alive only rebranded and vigorously thriving.

    • @barquerojuancarlos7253
      @barquerojuancarlos7253 2 ปีที่แล้ว +39

      Yes, that quote is from Chief Red Cloud of the Oglala Lakota.

    • @stevenr5149
      @stevenr5149 2 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      yeah a human life is not long enough for most to get past the lies and to arrive at truth, then have enough time to do anything about it. and so it goes…

    • @janetcohen9190
      @janetcohen9190 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@stevenr5149 Yes, keep sleeping, so you can believe, embrace, be in bliss and live the Americn Dream.
      Life is a great gift, please avoid squandering it.

    • @tapptom
      @tapptom 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      They have no respect for anyone anything that gets in their way!
      I say this as a former military Officer candidate!

  • @kristinleigh07
    @kristinleigh07 2 ปีที่แล้ว +180

    Have yet to read his book, but it’s important to note that it was actually a female Cheyenne warrior named Buffalo Calf Road who killed Custer. The Natives wanted to avenge the barbaric slaughter at Washita. They knew exactly what they were doing when they annihilated Custer and his command.
    The Battle of the Little Big Horn was the first time a sacred medicine bundle was ever brought onto a battlefield in ceremony, according to my Cheyenne-Arapaho Grandma Margaret Behan.
    Crazy Horse & others felt that Custer and his men wouldn’t expect a native woman to kill him. During battle, Custer used the women and children as shields. Being close to him, Buffalo Calf Road Woman charged Custer, grabbed his saber, knocked him off his horse & killed him. Afterward, Cheyenne-Arapaho women stabbed their awls in his ears, chanting "you will listen to our people in the next world.”
    Exactly 10 years ago, the International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers held council on Northern Cheyenne. A four-day ceremony took place, during which, completely out-of-the-blue, Custer’s great, great, great, great niece showed up and made a formal apology to the entire Cheyenne Nation, on behalf of her Uncle, Custer & her entire family. She was pregnant at the time. We miraculously have the apology on film. We shared it on the 5th and final webseries as part of The Ride Home.
    vimeo.com/channels/348513/64830728
    Powerful & otherworldy to say the least.
    Thank you Chris.

    • @Jay_Hall
      @Jay_Hall 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Kristin,,clearly U know nothing of the history or times U speak of, thus U have zero credibility. Custer Lives forever.!

    • @lynnwood7205
      @lynnwood7205 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Thank you for posting this.

    • @crowdedcrow3098
      @crowdedcrow3098 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      Yes, I will watch the footage you provided. Thank you so so much, for providing this link, but also for sharing the truth about who killed Custer. What a poor education too many Americans receive; I had no idea, none. I'm in awe and ready to leap out of my chair at the same time.
      It's difficult, I shouldn't celebrate anyone's death, but I do celebrate what sure as hell feels like justice to me.

    • @aaron4wilkins
      @aaron4wilkins 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Which one is it? There are several videos on that link

    • @Jay_Hall
      @Jay_Hall 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@crowdedcrow3098 Do not be deceived, you are falling for lies from ignorance on this subject. Custer lives forever! :)

  • @rezmetisll1163
    @rezmetisll1163 2 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    Thanks! Good interview! As a Native American from North Dakota we always thought it was odd for Custer to be considered a hero. Also, I visited fort Abraham Lincoln, last week, south of Bismarck/Mandan north Dakota where the Custer house is located. It was an interesting visit and took me back in time. We all need to learn this history and understand it's essence of Man's inhumanity to man and apply it to improving our life today. God bless you all! Keep up your work for peace and love and knowledge and understanding.

    • @rickgarza4167
      @rickgarza4167 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I agree with you. True history must be learned. As a youth I always thought the this POS monster was a hero because that was the lie my history teacher taught me. I learned the truth in 1975. I'm 69 and will be 70, God willing, February 16th.

    • @benmcfee
      @benmcfee ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm not sure if I'm in the minority or not, but I'm white, and even as a kid, I was confused when I learned Custer was often painted as the hero of this story. When I was a kid, I heard an admittedly sanitized version of this story; but still I assumed, from the body count alone, that Custer was the villain of the piece; Sitting Bull was the underdog hero, and that Custer's end was just the bad guy getting his just deserts.
      Now naturally, real life isn't as simple as heroes and villains, but in this case, it seemed that dichotomy was easier to apply than in many others. Yet, to hear my peers, in elementary school, talk about Custer in the hero's role confused me to no end. It was only as I got older that I realized that they had heard an entirely different story than I had, and even later still that I learned that even the version I'd heard had been significantly sanitized to ease the guilt of its white audience.
      History is written by those who benefit from the slaughter.

    • @EnwardSnowman
      @EnwardSnowman ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@benmcfee Yeah... I was born in the 80s and I've NEVER heard a version of Custer's story that depicts him as anything but a villain.

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@benmcfee
      Well. I live 90 miles from Wounded Knee and I can tell you that there is plenty of history on the "losing" side. I know these survivors personally. Just because they were butchered doesn't mena they have no history.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      rez: Yea. He sure didn't help the Native Americans. And he didn't help his own soldiers much either, since he led them all tho their death.

  • @mikehart8281
    @mikehart8281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    Libby Custer helped her husband reached the stage of celebrity by writing books about her husband and having speaking engagements about her husband after he died at the battle of The Little Big Horn. She promoted her husband tirelessly.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      And got paid for it.

    • @eileenmc4746
      @eileenmc4746 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Whitewash of his sins

    • @tneita3166
      @tneita3166 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Mike Hart,they say that the poor start to make money when someone else See's where they can make money off them,, what iam trying to say is?, could it be that she was just a front piece,, at the same time enjoying the financial benefits that comes with the show. JUST SAYING that's all,😁 😁 😁,,, l

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah well A girl's got to do something to survive lol..

    • @i.p.knightly149
      @i.p.knightly149 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Always a market for bullsh**

  • @hhheee3939
    @hhheee3939 2 ปีที่แล้ว +95

    The military also mocks natives to this day with the names of the weaponry and operations such as apache, tomohawk, geronimo. Its not a coincidence.

    • @obsoleteelite8258
      @obsoleteelite8258 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It’s a definite twisted perversion.

    • @lukeolson5177
      @lukeolson5177 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I served in a platoon called crazy horse while I was in the US army

    • @doubleugly1594
      @doubleugly1594 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      I dont know if thats mocking persay... im sure they present it as a misguided "respect for a worthy adversary" kind of thing

    • @hhheee3939
      @hhheee3939 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@doubleugly1594 raul peck has a movie series called exterminate the brutes and he has a pretty good take on this.

    • @KaliMaaaaa
      @KaliMaaaaa 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Many of the tribes mentioned here were "modern" groups that developed after the arrival of the horse from Europeans, they were the worst of any with their violence, rape and slaughter. Selective history never tells the real story.

  • @williambrennan1507
    @williambrennan1507 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    So glad to see Chris Hedges at The Real News!!

  • @DrBill-zv5dx
    @DrBill-zv5dx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +92

    I’m predicting you’ll have over 1 million subscribers before June. You’re the most maligned journalist in the USA. I personally think you’re the best due to your integrity , honesty and content . All the best .

    • @jasonlacroix6083
      @jasonlacroix6083 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Chris's channel gets about 30k views per video. Thirty minutes is far too taxing on the mind for many. He's willing to tell the stories nobody wants to hear. That's exactly what I like about him.

    • @Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism
      @Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Most American settlers don't want the truth. This is the problem.

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Integrity and honesty don't pay the bills. They never have, never will.
      Human nature is rotten.
      We're a broken, highly damaged, irrepairable species.
      Pray for a mega virus with a 99.9% lethality rate. When we're finally gone, life on Earth shall thrive.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Hes a pacifist in a militarist world.

    • @mediawatcher1945
      @mediawatcher1945 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism
      We are indeed Settler-colonists.
      I would venture to say squatters.
      What many of my fellow Americans fail to realize is, we do Not own this Land, this Continent, or this Earth.
      We are, at best, just visitors.
      It would behoove us to behave accordingly.

  • @oleeb
    @oleeb 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Does anyone still actually think of Custer as a hero? I always saw Custer as nothing but a loser and a showboat. Everyone knows the army treated the natives in unnecessarily brutal ways. I find the details presented here fascinating nonetheless.

    • @patrickroy3380
      @patrickroy3380 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Funny we always thought of you as a loser also 😂 I guess it takes one to know one , Garryowen mary

    • @rapier1954
      @rapier1954 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@patrickroy3380 Quit trying to sound smart people like you the way you are.

  • @brianjacobsen8878
    @brianjacobsen8878 2 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    Chris you should do a story about Fort Spokane at the turn of the century. The Army rounded up the local tribes turned Fort Spokane into a prison camp. Children were split up from the parents. Hair cut given christen names taught told to speak English learn Christian ways. They resisted kids went to the hole for the weekend. The cells are still there for display. And the adults were given blankets infected with TB. After all it was the middle of winter. How kind of the army.

    • @barquerojuancarlos7253
      @barquerojuancarlos7253 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Yes, not to lessen the atrocities at Spokane, but it was following a policy with a long history of what was called "Indian boarding schools" in the US and "residential schools" in Canada (because of the recently discovered gravesites at these Catholic schools in Canada the Pope issued a few words of "apology". All is ok now?). It was also a method of indoctrination of the young used by the British colonists in India.
      i didn't know about the blankets infected with TB, but i do know that blankets infected with small pox virus were given to Native Americans (Native American scholar Ward Churchill wrote about this). It was an early form of biological warfare, which is what US research scientists were working on today in the biolabs in Ukraine (before war started recently) and Georgia.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@barquerojuancarlos7253 Yeah the colonialist system is just the precursor of the modern-day Corporation,, and the idea of infecting millions of Russians with a strange pathogen that thrives in Winter conditions of people being inside most of the time which the Russian winter obviously necessitates,, is not outside the interest of the current American corporation which is aimed at weakening Russia as much as it can.. it all goes back to the natives having a more Equitable and therefore productive life pattern, it all goes back to the Russians and then the Soviets and now the Russians again refusing to let their country be cut up by wall street,, most people don't bother to realize how much Wall Street got out of the industrialization of the west, basically they were inventing booms and bonanzas as fast as they could with the accompanying bust being handled by other people.. but the big Financial realizations back then were made by Robber Barons and their descendants make money off Mining rights and Timber concessions and all sorts of other things..

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar ปีที่แล้ว

      @@barquerojuancarlos7253 an attempt to break up the culture of raiding - robbery and murder in the dominant culture. Argue if you like, but don’t romanticize it.

    • @jacquesstrapp3219
      @jacquesstrapp3219 ปีที่แล้ว

      The infected blanket story is a fabrication of Ward Churchill, a Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado. In early 2006, the University investigated Churchill on seven allegations of research misconduct, one of which was Churchill's smallpox blankets hoax. The committee unanimously found Churchill guilty on all seven counts, and the Chancellor recommended his dismissal from the university. In the words of Cherokee sociologist Russell Thornton, "History is bad enough-there's no need to embellish it".

    • @ceciler6534
      @ceciler6534 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😢

  • @rjbjr
    @rjbjr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    I put Custer up there with president Andrew Jackson. And to think both are still revered by so many people.

    • @mikehart8281
      @mikehart8281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      The trail of tears enacted by Andrew Jackson was a tragedy

    • @leethunderhill7002
      @leethunderhill7002 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@mikehart8281 My ancestors were one of the 5 tribes of the southeast that were forcefully removed from their homeland at gunpoint at the order of Jackson. My tribe is Muscogee Creek and along with the Choctaws, Chickasaws, Seminoles, and the Cherokee. They were forced to walk to present state of Oklahoma. Many perished along the way.🪶

    • @mikehart8281
      @mikehart8281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@leethunderhill7002 I apologize for the actions of my for fathers sir. It was horribly cruel to do that to your ancestors. Please forgive us.

    • @leethunderhill7002
      @leethunderhill7002 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@mikehart8281 🤝

    • @jasonlacroix6083
      @jasonlacroix6083 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@leethunderhill7002 we're not all like them. My family arrived in America early 20th century. I've long admired the native cultures and traditions. The life experience must have been so fulfilling.

  • @penhdog2207
    @penhdog2207 2 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    This reminds me of the book "Fours Hours at My Lai" of which the thesis is that the massacre in Vietnam can be traced via family lineage of military leaders, tactical tradition and US military practices back to the time of 1860s. So, the My Lai massacre was a simply a continuation of US military subjugation that has long existed.

    • @williambrennan1507
      @williambrennan1507 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Also kudos to investigative reporter Seymour Hersh who published the truth about US troops slaughtering hundreds of innocent men, women, and children at My Lai...

    • @thebishopoftherailway4719
      @thebishopoftherailway4719 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      That is the stupidest thing i ever read.

    • @PRH123
      @PRH123 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I think that’s quite true, including the tradition of the American soldiers cutting off body parts and keeping them as souvenirs.

    • @vladimir0700
      @vladimir0700 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      And continues to this day……

    • @thebishopoftherailway4719
      @thebishopoftherailway4719 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@vladimir0700
      Cutting of souvenirs isn’t unique to any culture. The indians did too, as well as many middle eastern cultures.
      And I haven’t heard of any modern American soldiers taking flesh souvenirs, and it being widely approved of.

  • @Salman-sc8gr
    @Salman-sc8gr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    The Perfidious Brits did similar in taking over Australia.

    • @RobertPentangelo
      @RobertPentangelo 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Perfidious Albion also at work in getting the Zionist project in Palestine going in the 19th century.

    • @ceciler6534
      @ceciler6534 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I'm Australian, and I agree with you entirely. The bs of the Brits was that Australia was terra nullous. Somehow, that absolved them from decimating the indigenous people (who didn't exist).
      It took decades for me to learn the truth rather than the lies we were taught in school.

  • @tomjohn8733
    @tomjohn8733 2 ปีที่แล้ว +57

    I’ve know about Custer being a monster for some time, this was just icing on the cake, and one of my favorite books was also “ Bury my heart at wounded knee”, like Howard Zinns history books, all highly recommended reading, but I suppose those who don’t like history, Are the descendants of those who profited from the Indian wars, land wise etc, the hidden shame of one family wealth is written in politics, like profiting from the slavery trade…history is almost always written by the victors, seldom do we hear both sides of the story until years later…

    • @Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism
      @Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Words of truth, my relative!

    • @tedmusson5179
      @tedmusson5179 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      In that regard Tom John... how long if ever to find the lowest and darkest of all truths... the CIA, bU$h cabal, Mossad, PNAC, JCoS, larry "pullit" silverstain and U$M$M, vs humanity, false flag battle of 911

    • @tomjohn8733
      @tomjohn8733 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@tedmusson5179 well, I’m not sure of you cryptic message, I’m not a cryptologist, perhaps you could clarify your last, thank you!

    • @mikehart8281
      @mikehart8281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I always remembered one indian chief said, The white man made us many promises, and of ALL of them they kept only one. They promised to take our land, and they took it. Bury my heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown

    • @brianwoodbridge88
      @brianwoodbridge88 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I agree with everything you said except for Howard zinn. He writes hate filled propaganda not history!!!!

  • @heathcliffearnshaw1403
    @heathcliffearnshaw1403 2 ปีที่แล้ว +90

    After watching the film Soldier Blue at a cinema in South London many years ago - about Custer - after seeing the vile things done to the Indians during this battle , I felt so angry I went out and stopped the traffic in Elephant and Castle. It’s the only time a judge has ever let me go Scot free with a warning to ‘behave’ . Maybe he too saw the injustice of this event …

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I was brought up on the film "Little Big Man" where Custer is betrayed as insane from start to finish.

    • @Jay_Hall
      @Jay_Hall 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@rogersmith7396 Roger, so you are saying you were brought up on lies and U depended on Hollywood for your education! LOL!!

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@Jay_Hall I have three 4 year science degrees, have worked in scientific and legal research and have extensive personal research experience. You are projecting and talking about yourself.

    • @Jay_Hall
      @Jay_Hall 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@rogersmith7396 No Roger, U made that shocking and silly statement, not me.LOL!! When it comes to history, research, and an inquiring mind, U have come up short. Point made. :) Good day.

    • @mediawatcher1945
      @mediawatcher1945 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@rogersmith7396 I think you mean portrayed.

  • @louislamboley9167
    @louislamboley9167 2 ปีที่แล้ว +54

    A very good book about the battle is Keep the Last bullet for Yourself. Thomas B. Marquis. The book is composed of testimonials of the Indians that actually fought. Taken from many Indians from various reservations back in the 1920's. Apparently the government has suppressed this book since it describes contagious suicide after Custer was killed early on.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Not surprising,, it was pretty well known that the Comanches for one would torture captives as long as they could.. since there was no formal War declared and none that the natives would recognize anyway, the fate of prisoners was pretty horrible,, of course there were many people both white and black who just wandered around the Nations and were taken in by the tribes just because they were willing to work and weren't hostile.. they became hostile however when the nations were taken over and rather than going to what they knew were going to be prisoner of war camps they became probably the first members of the permanent criminal underground in the present day United states..

    • @31terikennedy
      @31terikennedy ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Rain in the Face, while drinking at a bar in Coney Island in 1902, said he was the one that killed Tom Custer. On his death bed, he said he killed Custer. Since Rain was there, so much for Custer dying earlier or committing suicide.

    • @louislamboley9167
      @louislamboley9167 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@31terikennedy The Indians had said there were soldiers killing themselves but they were only doing that when things began to break down. If Custer was killed early on then order might have collapsed and panic set in.

    • @31terikennedy
      @31terikennedy ปีที่แล้ว

      @@louislamboley9167 The problem is not (how) Custer died, we will never know, but (why) he died and that is why the LBH is such a huge scandal.

    • @louislamboley9167
      @louislamboley9167 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@31terikennedy He died because he did not listen to orders which were to wait at the fork in the road for the Army. Instead he dispersed his force and rode into more than he bargained for.

  • @rogersmith7396
    @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    Custers wife Libby was the main author of his mythical status. She wrote an over the top book which invented his mythos to make money for herself. At the time of his death he was thought an incompetent fool.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      He WAS an incompetent fool so his wife writing that so-called biography would be perfect for the myth they wanted to build.. she learned the lesson Big Joe Kennedy taught his son's a long time before Joe Kennedy thought of it, image is what people think you are and image is enough if people want to believe it.. and it's the exact reason behind Trump's so-called fame, that people like to identify with the blustering fool who tells you what you want to hear..

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 ปีที่แล้ว

      At the time of his death he had the same thought.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jasonbrown372 See "Little Big Man".

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@rogersmith7396 Seen. Scene?

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jasonbrown372 The death scene when Custer thinks Hoffman is president grant and is going to shoot him.

  • @davidletasi3322
    @davidletasi3322 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Born and raised in Monroe Michigan my grandmother is buried less than 50 feet from George's two brothers killed at the Little Big Horn Massacre Site. He and Libby were married in the church one block west from our Monroe 1828 home where we lived in the 1980s. He was well known to be a hellraiser with his brothers especially in Dundee Michigan 10 miles west of Monroe where many drunken incidents were recorded. Many residents families here in Monroe have many memories handed down of the Custers behavior. He became even more reckless during the Civil War just to win the favor of the Bacon family to gain fame and rank to marry Libby. Once married he still became notorious in DC frequently hitting every house of prostitution. His historical battle in 1868 is well know as a massacre against native Americans. Half of our hometown community regards him as a icon and just as many consider him a black spot on our history. There has been a strong movement to remove his equestrian Statue from the city.
    Libby spent the rest of her life after his death petitioning congress to immortalize his public image. His Monroe childhood home still exists on North Custer Drive from the 1840s and the Monroe County Historical Musem now housed in the old Monroe Post Office has exhibits featuring his life and many personal belongings. This Post Office building site sits where Libby's childhood 19th century home was located. Custer and Andrew Jackson are highly disdained by the Native American community for their hostility but the Lakota warriors still considered him to be a renowned warrior and adversary. The controversy rages on.

  • @rogersmith7396
    @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    I don't think Custer was a General at Little Big Horn. He was a temporary brevit General in the Civil War but reverted to Colonel after.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      True I always thought he was a general but he was reverted after the Civil War ended, common practice in the US military when a war ends after massive mobilization.. So he was a lieutenant colonel in charge of a battalion... still vastly over ranked by his actual ability although he was initiative-ly aggressive to a fault,, when McClellan and some other General were sitting on their horses at the side of a stream on the peninsula in virginia, wondering how deep it was, Custer rode his horse to the middle of the stream, sat it, and said this is how deep it is general.. So if you have a guy who isn't afraid to get his horse and himself swept away in a river with you,, I guess you promote him lol

    • @paulmentzer7658
      @paulmentzer7658 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The term "Bevert" was never a true rank, given as an honor that you acted like an officer of that rank.
      At the time of the Battle of Little Big Horn, Custer was a Lieutenant Colonel. Custer was actually not even the Colonel of the Seventh cavalry, that was someone else who was on detach service in Washington.
      Custer had been a General of Volunteers during the end of the Civil War, but his permanet rank was never higher then Lieutenant Colonel. Post Civil War, all "Volunteer" units were dissolved along with officers, thus Custer had to revert to his permanent regular Army rank post Civil War (Custer was one of just a few Civil War Volunteer Generals that even retain a "Field Grade" officer instead of the return to the rank he was in 1861, a second Lieutenant).

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@paulmentzer7658 Great. Well I know some people get field promotions in combat. Lt. killed sarge advanced to acting Lt.

    • @Eadbhard
      @Eadbhard ปีที่แล้ว

      He was reverted to a Captain, then was eventually given a Lieutenant Colonelcy in the Seventh Cavalry, you dumbass.
      How great would it be if commentators in the TH-cam "comments" section knew what the hell they were commenting about? That would be refreshingly different, sure.

    • @thomas-marx
      @thomas-marx ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Colonel Custer on the prairie

  • @BudahOfBirmingham
    @BudahOfBirmingham 2 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    We have all been fed propoganda about the goodness and bravery of the American forces. Turns out, they were the badies

    • @rickydee5863
      @rickydee5863 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Right up to this day

    • @benmcfee
      @benmcfee ปีที่แล้ว

      Storm Trooper: *[scratches chin]* Wait a second... are _we_ the bad guys??

    • @allenhill1223
      @allenhill1223 ปีที่แล้ว

      I've was taught he was a baby killer. Yes in school he was great. But at home we knew better. Potowatmi.

    • @zemog1025
      @zemog1025 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@allenhill1223 I was taught that the Sioux stole their "sacred" land from the Arikara and others, the Indian were humans just like the whites that later took their land. Read history.

    • @redbroke1331
      @redbroke1331 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Read how the Cammanches treated people captured from other tribes. Seems like people were just people even back then.

  • @HighRisksatx
    @HighRisksatx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Child and woman killer, wasted by real warriors.

  • @AudioPervert1
    @AudioPervert1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    We non americans know so much better the history of this rotten empire (hopefully the last empire).. Thanks to folks like Chris Hedges, Sheldon Wolin, Chomsky, Ralph Nader, Howard Zinn, David Stannard. Kudos and utmost respect love to all these guys, that American zombie turds never listen to.

    • @reidwhitton6248
      @reidwhitton6248 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I'll add one great American historian and teller if truth, Gore Vidal. I have a book of essays next to me entitled, "The Last Empire".

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Some Americans aren't zombie turds but rather have been pushing Chris for years,, but unfortunately he only suggests going so far -- he uses an instance from the American involvement in the Vietnam war, when protesters were outside the White House and buses were being placed into barricades and Richard Nixon was ringing his hands and saying in tears literally, Henry they're going to break through and get us.. Chris says that's where we want people in positions of power, but it wasn't Nixon and Kissinger who were actually in positions of power, they are only the public relations vehicle of the corporation.. and if we're not supposed to go against the corporation, where does that leave us? They will allow dissent, to a point, they will allow protest, to a point, just because it doesn't matter.. the corporation goes on as always because it is above the law it always has been in the United states.. the presidents like to make a big show out of being able to use the military, but that's only in the interest of corporate power or else the corporate heads do not supply the military.. and if the Corporation stops supplying the military with weapons, what kind of a military do you have?

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@reidwhitton6248 ..him and the vanity fair guy,, excellent writers with all the problems laid out and CAN'T BRING themselves to try and turn the page,, to get the financial charlatans out of positions where they control massive militaries and Nation states.. can't remember his name but he did the documentary The American ruling class,, Louis Lapham, both Gore and Louis seem to be under the impression that the American ruling class can be changed somehow.. as long as Supremacy rests on money, it obviously won't be able to be..

    • @romaskincare9138
      @romaskincare9138 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What a filthy thing to say. If Americans had cancer as a result of the government infusing toxic chemicals into every aspect of their infrastructure, would you call them cancer-patient turds?
      .
      That's exactly what happened. This shouldn't suprise you, but the US government lies has hides EVERYTHING from the American people. The US government controls the schools, every single texbook, every single curriculum, the media, the military is the strongest force the world has ever seen, the alphabet agencies control every aspect of the American people's lives, every bit of information the American people see, hear or consume from the minute they're born to the minute they die is controlled by the US government. And you're shocked that they somehow only know the narrative projected to them? In reality, what's shocking is the number of people like Chris Hedges out there because the FAR majority of people who've tried to tell the American people the truth have been killed.
      .
      Just look what they're doing to Julian Assange, Edward Snowden and Daniel Hale. There are hundreds more exactly like them.
      .
      How brave it is of you to sit there and criticize the people who are being manipulated and robbed of the truth and of their lives. It makes you feel superior when you call them names because it's not happening to you.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar ปีที่แล้ว

      Many listen, but don’t agree with Chomsky, zinn, et Al. But their fringe fanboys gather here, it seems.
      You have seen Chomsky’s recent attacks on Ukraine. Predicted in ‘The Anti-Chomsky Reader’. I read most of the junk thinkers you mentioned (thanks for telling me about Wolin). Go on, read the critiques. The above ‘Reader’ is a good place to start.

  • @JSB1882
    @JSB1882 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I think Custer is the greatest example of the arrogance and psychopathic behavior of the USA. The only difference is we have expanded his personality to other places around the world. Ukraine for instance - few US citizens understand our involvement there, but they hoot and holler about how evil Russians are as they did with the Native American. The thing I'm most proud of is the rest of the nations are beginning to understand this about the USA and the USA is having its Last Stand currently.

  • @obsoleteelite8258
    @obsoleteelite8258 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    I’m in the American Indian Movement.
    Custer had it coming.

    • @leivabernie
      @leivabernie 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Oh yeah, if anybody had it coming, it was him.

    • @nonyabiz550
      @nonyabiz550 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, neither of you ever took colonial history in college and it shows. They respected him. They didn't turn him over to the women or shove sewing awls in his ears. Sherman set him up. And no native Americans stole land, killed each other, ate one another, or took slaves or if they did, they treated them kindly and won them over, huh? Yeah, poor Matilda Lockhart was loved to death. 🙄

    • @jaydinledford6990
      @jaydinledford6990 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Custer wrecked 🦞🦞🦞

    • @Adam-kf6lr
      @Adam-kf6lr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Fair enough, warriors live and die by the sword. The only noble death VALHALLA CALLS!

    • @jasonclark1966
      @jasonclark1966 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Custer?
      Custer had a real 'bad hair day'. But he had it coming, that blond, blue eyed criminal fuck. - - George Carlin

  • @barquerojuancarlos7253
    @barquerojuancarlos7253 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    There's something very basic, fundamental, integrated America's cultural psyche about, what Chomsky calls "America's original sin", America's genocidal wars against its own indigenous people. Take for instance, a recent report (8 March '22) from the US Congressional Research Service. This important and highly regarded research service found it necessary from the very start to divide domestic wars from foreign wars. The report titled "Instances of Use United States Armed Forces Abroad" found the US was involved in 469 wars since 1798, excluding from the very start, as if it were to be accepted by all, the 100s of wars the US military fought against the Native American Nations

    • @patthebaker2156
      @patthebaker2156 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If you care so much why dont you give everything you have inherited to your local indigenous peoples support group

  • @danhaywood5696
    @danhaywood5696 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    They cant teach us the truth about anything or we'd hate ourselves.

  • @biff408
    @biff408 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    many people in my family lived long lives even over 100. My Great Great Aunt was 108. She was born during reconstruction in the South right after the Civil war. I was able to meet her and talk to her about the "old days". I also met many of my relatives as a boy that lived in the Old West era. They were all in their 90's or above, and what struck me then as now so many decades later was the matter of fact way of doing the dirty work to get ahead without second thoughts, the meanness, and the "I'm getting mine for me and my family and to hell with anyone else attitude. People from the 19th century that I met as a boy were not kind, gentle sentimental types as portrayed in "Little House on the Prairie" People need to wake up to what we were and still are to a certain extent. That is ALL of us regardless of race, creed, etc.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      When the going gets tough the tough get going. Its alive and well today, maybe the number one problem in this country. Masichism.

    • @tneita3166
      @tneita3166 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Biff,umm,wow,what else can I say,,,. lol,try & have a good day,,,.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Some were and some weren't,, obviously in 1862 at Lake Shetek the natives anger at being lied to after their being brought to their prison camp boiling over and 300 and some settlers including women and children being killed,, this happened with Custer's Superior General Pope being sent out to basically kill as many military age young Native males as they could.. and Lincoln's so-called compassion can be seen in his ordering the execution by hanging of 29 of them at Mankato in one day.. one can imagine the situation coming out differently if the settlers around Lake shetek would have been sympathetic and just given the natives what food they needed, unfortunately yes as the original poster said, a lot of homesteaders were pretty racist people themselves..

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว

      They were hard. They had to be. Everyone who ended up here in Dakota Territory and settled ranch country came here due to oppression of some sort, Hutterite, Mennonite, Methodist, Mormon, etc. The Indians aren't histories only victims.

  • @phyllisthompson4207
    @phyllisthompson4207 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Thank you Chris. Another great segment.

  • @rangerk9
    @rangerk9 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Career soldier here. Infantryman and Ranger. 28yrs. Combat deployments were all in Iraq with Operations Desert Shield/Storm and Iraqi Freedom. We are and were the colonizers once again from my perspective. I am ashamed of my "service" to the corporations and a government that caters to them. I ask for forgiveness every damn day for what myself and others did there. I don't deserve it!
    I grew up working on a sheep and goat ranch through high school and college. I felt greater affinity and connection to the Iraqi people that we waged war with, than the politicians that sent us off to do the corporation's bidding. I now do volunteer work on the Pine Ridge Reservation and love the Lakota people. They are hardy, strong, resilient, loving and warm. As the great Chris Hedges says, they are living in one of "America's Sacrifice Zones." Shame on all of us for generational persecution and genocide!
    I highly recommend an author that is Sicangu Lakota from the Rosebud Reservation named Joseph Marshall III. His perspective of history is from the Lakota, Nakota, and Dakota peoples. He is precise in his studies and writings. He also possesses deep wisdom and is willing to share. His perspective of historical events are eye opening and truthful. Long live Crazy Horse!

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Sorry you have bought into this. Butthanks for helping get rid of Saddam in your sane phase.
      If you are real, of course. Anyone can be anything on the Internet.

    • @JohnnylMr
      @JohnnylMr 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The courage of your reflections. Thank you.

  • @michaelvance1118
    @michaelvance1118 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I appreciate this one!! I've always hated Custer!!! As a a kid I always rooted for the " INDIANS "! in western movies!!! I like the way John Trudell put it... He said they don't even like being called Native american because they were HERE WAAAAAYY BEFORE AMERICA WAS EVEN A WORD!!!

    • @eileenmc4746
      @eileenmc4746 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Long live the spoken words of Trudell

  • @lynnwood7205
    @lynnwood7205 2 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    I remember as a boy in the 1950's in the Black Hills, my parents related to homesteaders of South Dakota, veterans of the Union Army proofing out their homesteads, excited at the Old West, being a part of this history.
    And then in a small watercourse, having walked off from my parents, surrounded by what had always been there, suddenly knowing that ancient gods were of that land and water, and not of what God my parents tried hard to reconcile to but who felt too the ancient ones from time to time were still to be acknowledged.
    And then later, the great 1950's wonder of TV, bringing Errol Flynn's "They Died With Their Boots On" and the rousing strains of Gary Owen, again part of the great march of progress
    And then later that one day understanding the bitterness that song also carried to so many.
    Myths die hard,

    • @AudioPervert1
      @AudioPervert1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Your whole nation is a graveyard...... Oh wait, so is mine (India) and the rest of the world at large.

    • @rickydee5863
      @rickydee5863 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@AudioPervert1 suttle but savage .

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar ปีที่แล้ว

      With any luck, this one will as well.
      You suddenly started believing in superstion? I think there must have been an alienationfir other reasons.

  • @peterbalogh8138
    @peterbalogh8138 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As a non-American/US, non-colonizer European, I merely ask - what is the difference between white men killing natives, and various native tribes doing the same? Why is the mass murder (which it was) perpetrated by US denounced in a much stricter (retrospective moralizing) way compared to the Apache-Comanche wars?

  • @joymahiko
    @joymahiko ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Custer initiated the attack which got him killed. There's a moral lesson in that which applies in many common areas of life. Thank you Custer!

  • @LonelyRanger902
    @LonelyRanger902 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    George Armstrong Custer was a real life Civil War hero. He volunteered for the Michigan cavalry and became the youngest general in United States history. He basically fought in every major engagement of the Civil War on the East Coast, and due to his almost mythological bravery, won every medal for gallantry available at that time. He was a man of his time, and let’s not kid ourselves - those were very brutal times. If you came across entire wagon trains that had men, women and children, tortured and slaughtered, I’m sure your violent response would merit examination as well.

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 ปีที่แล้ว

      If you came across a scene of women, children, and the elderly mowed down to test out the new-fangled "Gatling gun", acres of scattered corpses left by the US Army at Cavett's Station (1793), Sand Creek (1864), Camp Grant (1871), Wiyot Massacre (1860), Bridge Gulch (1852), Three Knolls (1865), Marias (1870), Yontocket (1853), Clear Lake (1850), Bear River (1863), Autossee (1813), Skull Creek (1823), Dressing Point (1826), Battle of Bad Axe (1832), Amador (1837), Johnson (1837), Council House (1840), Red Fork (1840), Fort McKenzie (1844), Sacramento River (1846), Klamath Lake (1846), Kirker (1846), Taos Pueblo (1847), Brazos River (1848), Battle at Ft. Utah (1850), Mariposa War (1851), Old Shasta Town (1851) Hynes Bay (1852) Wright (1852) Howonquet (1853), Achulet (1853), "Ox Incident" (1853), Nasomah (1854), Chetco River (1854), Asbill (1854), Harney (1855), Lupton (1855), Grand Ronde River Valley (1856), Round Valley Settlers (1856-1859), Jarboe's War (1859-1860), Spring Valley (1859), Pit River (1859), Indian Island (1860), Horse Canyon (1861), Keyesville (1863), Swamp Cedars (1863), Oak Run (1864), Washita (1868), Wickenburg (1871), Skeleton Cave (1872), Sappa Creek (1875), Battle of the Big Hole (1877) Ft. Robinson (1879), Wounded Knee (1890)

    • @brucefournier2391
      @brucefournier2391 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, at Appomattox General Grant used this small spool-turned table to sign the document setting forth the surrender terms. After the signing, Lieutenant General Philip H. Sheridan presented the table to Elizabeth B. Custer, the wife of Major General George A. Custer. This being truth, it is hard to question or argue against Custer's Civil War record and his impact on the outcome. Of course, the plains war was a completely different animal.

  • @rosstisbury1626
    @rosstisbury1626 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    what a hero hiding behind women and children so the men wouldnt get to grips with him . . what a role model

    • @rickydee5863
      @rickydee5863 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      He had no honor .how could he have he was an imperialist mass murderer.can you imagine how that end felt for him .and at the hands of a women too.

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The women and children were in camp, not on last stand hill.

    • @danielblackburn1241
      @danielblackburn1241 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@rickydee5863 probably felt painful

    • @rickydee5863
      @rickydee5863 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@danielblackburn1241 haha yeah things got down to earth for him real quick..he never for a moment thought that was going to happen .he was on the recieving end for a change. You reap what you sow.

    • @MichaelMansi-is4pc
      @MichaelMansi-is4pc 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ranchodeluxe1 I believe they are referring to the woman and children he massacred at Black Kettles camp.

  • @maestoso47
    @maestoso47 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    that monument at Little Bighorn (in Montana) should be crumbled…

    • @williamtackett-r1l
      @williamtackett-r1l 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The monument is more for the 265 men who died there because of Custer's arrogance and incompetence which caused him to make his egregious mistakes.

  • @billfrenger8955
    @billfrenger8955 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Thank you Chris. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz's book "An Indigenous People's History Of The United States" also presents an excellent account of what this country is about.

    • @dookahan
      @dookahan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The multiple genocides in the Western Hemisphere are chronicled in American Holocaust by David Stennard . Heavy reading. It’s a must read though.

    • @Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism
      @Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      That is a book EVERY American and Canadian of say, age 15 and up should read.

    • @dookahan
      @dookahan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@Warrior_Resisting_Colonialism our cousins all the way down to the islands off of what they call Cape Horn suffered a genocide at the hands of spainish and portogees butchers. Who knows how many millions of human beings suffered terribly and virtually wiped out of existence. The invaders meant it, this was their intention, to steal the Western Hemisphere by murdering and infecting us with their filthiest of plagues. The systematic torture of an entire people, rape, the basest debaucery David Stennard estimates 100 million on turtle island alone. He cites his sources on how he arrived at his estimate. Reading this book hurt me deeply. It changed me. You know the rest.

    • @billfrenger8955
      @billfrenger8955 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Reading Dee Brown's "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" also makes one weep and feel deeply ashamed to be a part of this vile nation.

  • @cargotrailerkenny
    @cargotrailerkenny 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    thanks Chris. you're the best in the business.

  • @verbalkint1770
    @verbalkint1770 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Just imagine how Custer and his brothers spoke about the natives privately.

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Just imagine how they talked about African-Americans in private. 🙈🙉🙊

    • @007nadineL
      @007nadineL 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      They didn't hide anything back then

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@007nadineL
      Good Point.
      It would be the reverse then.
      If they wanted to say anything positive about Black folks, they would do so in private.

    • @icemike1
      @icemike1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Openly

    • @lesterarbusto3535
      @lesterarbusto3535 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      They probably used the same piously hypocritical language they used in public. Think about what that says about them.

  • @spartacusjonesmusic
    @spartacusjonesmusic 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Yeah, man. The United States has been on a long-running "Manifest Destiny" World Tour ever since.

  • @54000biker
    @54000biker 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    A while ago I read a book about a certain tribe that was relegated to a reservation which was rock & desert so no-one else wanted the land. Then oil was found on the land and all the Indians became rich. The Governor then decided to allocate a minder to each Indian family to 'help' them with their finances. The thing is, if the Indian landowner died then the land, and the oil therein, became the property of the minder. Shortly after Indians started dying in increasing numbers. A huge scandal at the time.

    • @sinkpehnarossfire454
      @sinkpehnarossfire454 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      🌎: "The business people had figured out how to use legal paperwork for their 'Wards', and used that legal maneuver in oil business. Oklahoma and Texas are full of uncapped wells. Where are their 'User-Owners'? The money was taken. Many folks know the businesses in Texas are from 'fraudulent behavior'. Any reparations ? Its great Blake Shelton, Garth Brooks and more 'loved' superstars are landowners in Oklahoma. This accurate history will become famous songs. Just a thought ".

    • @sevensages5279
      @sevensages5279 ปีที่แล้ว

      Book is titled "Killers of the Flower Moon" ,
      the Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI.
      Edit: There will be a movie coming out soon based on the book!

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 ปีที่แล้ว

      Louise Erdrich, "Love Medicine"?

  • @scaredy-cat
    @scaredy-cat 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A few Indian women and children were indeed killed by military Indian scouts in this battle. The soldiers were not near the very large groups of women and children

  • @freighthauler7642
    @freighthauler7642 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Custer deserved everything that he got at Little Big Horn.

  • @thebookofearl3303
    @thebookofearl3303 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Thanks Chris! good to see that others have noticed the striking similarities between the U.S government's 'Indian policy' and how they dealt with the press and the truth back then - and Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, and 'the truth' yet today...
    Love and appreciate your work

    • @ceciler6534
      @ceciler6534 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And now Gaza

  • @carolgaribay
    @carolgaribay 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The parallel between the United States and native Americans and Israhell is undeniable.

    • @marianotorrespico2975
      @marianotorrespico2975 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      EXCELLENT NEOLOGISM! | "Israhell" is awesomely accurate!

    • @carolgaribay
      @carolgaribay ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@marianotorrespico2975 I didn't come up with it, but yes. It's hell. I've also heard "isnotreal", which is equally great.

    • @marianotorrespico2975
      @marianotorrespico2975 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@carolgaribay CORRECT, INNIT? | Yes, it is quite a dilemma to deal with Israel and the racially intolerant religious minority oppressing the racially tolerant majority of Israelis; yet facts are facts.

  • @williamolsen20
    @williamolsen20 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I believe that General George Custer American patriot Indian fighter died with shit in his pants. D. Boon.

    • @LesserMoffHootkins
      @LesserMoffHootkins 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Nobody dies dignified, not even a Noble Savage.

    • @danielblackburn1241
      @danielblackburn1241 ปีที่แล้ว

      You probably would of too if facing that kind of death

  • @4440ch
    @4440ch ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Our guide at Little Bighorn Battlefield was a Cheyenne woman who made it clear that this battle was not a battle between two military powers but an unprovoked sneak attack by a military power on a large gathering of native men, women, children and elderly going about their daily lives.....butchery, extermination averted, delayed. Custer got what he deserved.

  • @Loweredexpectationss
    @Loweredexpectationss 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    … Now I will tell you buster
    That I ain't a fan of Custers
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    To some he was a hero
    But to me his score was zero
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    … Now Custer done his fightin'
    Without too much excitin'
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    General Custer come in pumpin'
    When the men were out a huntin'
    But the General he don't ride well anymore
    … With victories he was swimmin'
    He killed children, dogs and women
    But the General he don't ride well anymore
    Crazy Horse sent out the call
    To Sitting Bull and Gall
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    … Now Custer split his men
    Well, he won't do that again
    Cause the General he don't ride well anymore
    Twelve thousand warriors waited
    They were unanticipated
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    … It's not called an Indian victory
    But a bloody massacre
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    There might have been more enthusin'
    If us Indians had been losin'
    But the General he don't ride well anymore
    … General George A. Custer
    Oh, his yellow hair had lustre
    But the General he don't ride well anymore
    For now the General's silent
    He got barbered violent
    And the General he don't ride well anymore
    … Oh, the General he don't ride well anymore

    • @kuriadams9138
      @kuriadams9138 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Amazing song.
      th-cam.com/video/F5yW2vTLa2E/w-d-xo.html (my favorite version)

    • @skindianu
      @skindianu 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That's badass. Seems like I've heard that somewhere, unless that's
      something you made up yourself? Either way, I like it

    • @Loweredexpectationss
      @Loweredexpectationss 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@skindianu i replied but i guess it didn’t go through - maybe because i included a link to another youtube video so my apologies if i am repeating myself here.
      Anyhoo, just wanted to mention that i get no credit and that this is a johnny cash song. In my useless opinion its best heard when he sings it live with buffy sainte marie on the mouth bow.

    • @skindianu
      @skindianu 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Loweredexpectationss thanks for the info, brother. And I always tell everyone that I'm not totally useless; I can always set a bad example...

    • @Loweredexpectationss
      @Loweredexpectationss 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@skindianu ahaha! Right on, Saigon. xx lady Panda M ;)

  • @stephenhaegele2297
    @stephenhaegele2297 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Through all I’ve read about Custer & the times in which he lived & died, I’ve formed the opinion that he was neither hero nor villain. He was a soldier in a campaign to subjugate or exterminate the natives. He didn’t make the policy. He made huge mistakes at the Greasy Grass, but they didn’t cause his defeat. The Sioux and their allies simply outgunned & outfought the cavalry.

  • @DC-wg1cr
    @DC-wg1cr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Make the colonizer the victim, like the alamo

  • @tmstms2769
    @tmstms2769 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    America past evil and now no difference. I sorry for the current blind leaders of the EU .

  • @freezoneproject567
    @freezoneproject567 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    "Little Big Man" with Dustin Hoffman seems to portray Custer accurately.

    • @williamtackett-r1l
      @williamtackett-r1l 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Son of the Morning Star is a better portrayal of Custer.

    • @freezoneproject567
      @freezoneproject567 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@williamtackett-r1l yeah I should have made it clear that I was talking about his personality, not the factual events. And really when I think about it, I should walk back accurate because I think Custer in LBM was probably somewhat of a caricature.

  • @ranchodeluxe1
    @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I live two miles from Custer Flats, where the cavalry came through in 1874. We still find cavalry tack and insignias from time to time.

  • @sasachiminesh1204
    @sasachiminesh1204 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Pretty Nose and Buffalo Calf Woman were female warriors at Little Bighorn. Buffalo Calf Woman was a war chief.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar ปีที่แล้ว

      Why this unusual deviation from the norm of Indian culture?

  • @robhead22
    @robhead22 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What a great interview!! Chris Hedges is awesome, as always!!

  • @bernardedwards8461
    @bernardedwards8461 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Custer must have known it was wrong to butcher women and children, even if he thought it OK to murder prisoners. The Geneva Convention came into force in 1864, and although America didn't sign it until 1882 it must have given high ranking oficers food for thought. I find it hard to imagine that Robert E Lee would have behaved the same way, but then he was a more mature character than Custer. No one ever surrendered to me when I was in the Army, but if they had I would have treated them as I would wish to be treated myself. The US has this idea that it is alright for Americans to do things which would not be permissible for other countries, such as invading a sovereign state without provocation or deliberately bombing civilian infrastructure.

  • @larrypetersen427
    @larrypetersen427 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    "History is a set of lies that people have agreed upon," Napoleon
    "It is a misfortune for the dead man , that his enemy survived him , and wrote his story" Friedrich von Schiller
    Regardless of truth or fiction , Custer undeniably had an attribute sorely lacking in most , especially his critics; Courage !
    And for them , I ask this question . . . What were your expectations in a culture clash when a nomadic stone age people came up against a farming iron age people ?

  • @MrJimloveuk
    @MrJimloveuk 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Little big man with Dustin Hoffman...what a great movie
    .

    • @scchs67
      @scchs67 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Right you are. I finally watched it for the first time just a couple of weeks ago. Funnily enough, I was at Little Big Horn in June.

    • @eugenesant9015
      @eugenesant9015 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ya.....I saw it in the theater when it first came out when I was 10. Not something you really should be getting your history from.

    • @scchs67
      @scchs67 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@eugenesant9015 Ya, I didn't think it was a history lesson, just a good movie.

    • @eugenesant9015
      @eugenesant9015 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@scchs67 it was leftist propaganda.

    • @scchs67
      @scchs67 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@eugenesant9015 It's historical fantasy and never pretended to be otherwise. If you were offended by its perspective at the age of 10, that's unfortunate.

  • @markgarrett3647
    @markgarrett3647 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    If you read the Empire of the Summer Moon you'd find that the atrocities go both ways.

  • @davidschlessinger9945
    @davidschlessinger9945 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I know indigenous people who still to this day have the utmost contempt and hatred for Custer

  • @monettebebow-reinhard7613
    @monettebebow-reinhard7613 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    If you don't talk about Grant's role in Custer's death, you still don't have the whole story. Read "Civil War & Bloody Peace."

  • @mikemooney9124
    @mikemooney9124 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This is excellent… up until now I had never really identified Custer as being part of the Imperial war against ethnic minorities but after seeing this and also recently I read about the destruction of the royal palace in Beijing by British forces when the single biggest destruction and sacking and theft of some of the greatest treasures in the world took place… one and a half million precious objects were stolen and destroyed by the British army and sent back to Europe for auction or private collections… scandalous, shameful. And the British now lecture China on human rights. All of this imperial invasion, pillage, rape and destruction was going on simultaneously around the world. And Americans, who had recently achieved independence themselves went on and participated in this destruction and ethnic cleansing…how amazing is that.

  • @ConradHeiz
    @ConradHeiz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Single shot rifle vs repeating

  • @myman3879
    @myman3879 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Spiritually the Indians were Streets ahead as were the Irish. The yanks & Brits have holes in their hearts that can't be filled

    • @jeannovacco5136
      @jeannovacco5136 ปีที่แล้ว

      There's some nice ethnic bias for you masquerading as insight

    • @myman3879
      @myman3879 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@jeannovacco5136 we certainly didn't start it. That insight was very hard earned & that bias is well deserved especially when they have the audacity to look down their nose at us to this day. As I said spiritually lacking with a false sense of superiority when it should be inferiority

  • @bobm3477
    @bobm3477 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can we get a 30 second report on all of the promises the U.S. has kept?

    • @dennisbrock1435
      @dennisbrock1435 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That’s easy…. That would be none.

  • @gogadgetgo3125
    @gogadgetgo3125 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Chris has a great way of thrashing out his subject matter and keeping to bare brass facts.

  • @JohnB5304
    @JohnB5304 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    And as a child we were brainwashed to believe that he CUSTER was a hero, Now we know how evil these people not all them.
    Cheyenne-Arapaho women stabbed their awls in his ears, chanting "you will listen to our people in the next world.” GOOD.!

  • @Christopher_Bachm
    @Christopher_Bachm 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The intro draws me in, everytime.
    Thank you for opening my eyes.
    I was a sucker for the establishment narrative, from my alter boy upbringing.
    Much appreciation!

  • @YoungSantasGroupie
    @YoungSantasGroupie 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Any fans of Blood Meridian here? Before reading that, I had very little knowledge of what western expansion really looked like. I grew up in Canada, so even less history taught here than the romanticized versions taught in America. Not only was that history formative for so much of how the US (and Canada to some extent) proceeded but the "Borderlands" are likely going to be the site of more bloodshed in years to come. I sincerely hope not but it's hard to see how the cartel issue can be addressed without US boots on the ground.

    • @mediawatcher1945
      @mediawatcher1945 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Decriminalize all drugs, disband DEA, cut Police Departments nationwide, and use the money to build educational, medical, and treatment facilities.
      The War On Drugs is a complete and utter failure!

  • @55andamanhills
    @55andamanhills 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great discourse and very entertaining narratives of events during the times of the great Indian battles.

    • @007nadineL
      @007nadineL 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Death and genocide is entertaining to you?
      Indians?

    • @alwaysfourfun1671
      @alwaysfourfun1671 ปีที่แล้ว

      wrong! The great white people battles.

  • @stephenyoung2742
    @stephenyoung2742 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    When Custer thought he had been discovered and had to push on without proper rest for his command he still sent Benteen off following Terrys orders! After Weir Point where he was no longer in view of Reno the first ford had a beaver dam below it deepening the water! Trying to scout for footing and not able to cross made them sitting ducks! Custer's last words were Damn Beavers!

  • @judithwyer389
    @judithwyer389 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Read Highly deorated Marine General Smedley Butler's "War is a Racket." He says that his adventures pre-WWI were on behalf of American big business.

  • @michelleconnor3909
    @michelleconnor3909 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    This information is so painful- I can only listen for short periods of time without crying

  • @ConradHeiz
    @ConradHeiz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Tribal wars were constant

  • @Amadeus8484
    @Amadeus8484 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I always felt that Custer was a symbol of American arrogance and stupidity, a man who didn't bother keeping tabs on his enemy and paid for it with his life. But I am not surprised that Americans themselves think of him as a hero, I mean its America, it would be weird if they didn't glorify a monster...

  • @gordonjreeves5651
    @gordonjreeves5651 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    👏 BRAV-OOOOO ⚖️ CHRIS ⚖️ and Welcome Back 🙏 to a venue that foundationally unequivocally supports your ^ Transcendent Commitment to Truth ^.
    As your recent interview with ☆☆ Kick-Ass Kiriakou ☆☆ again so authoritatively demonstrated, you're utterly unique.
    This current interview that exposes the egoholic arrogance that was the REAL - not reel - Custer hopefully will receive the wide audience it so richly deserves.
    He typifies all that's woefully tragically wrong with what 👏 Gore Vidal 👏 so definitively christened 😠 The United States of Amnesia 😡

  • @CommercialArtServices
    @CommercialArtServices 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    subscribed! Good content.

  • @Eadbhard
    @Eadbhard ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As far as books about Custer and the Little Bighorn go, Philbrick's "The Last Stand" isn't that good. He should stick to writing about whales, Cape Cod, and shipwrecks.
    For some really good histories, people need to read: Donovan's, "A Terrible Glory"; Utley's, "Cavalier in Buckskins"; Evans', "Custer's Last Fight"; Sklenar's, "To Hell with Honor"; and Michno's, "The Indian Narrative of Custer's Defeat", just to name a few.
    Some of the inferences Philbrick advances in "The Last Stand" are just way out there; they are questionable, or they are not even worth mentioning; yet, for all of that, he spends a whole chapter or two on them. I've read a tremendous amount of literature about this subject, but Philbrick's book won't leave a mark in my mental library.
    Philbrick is definitely a good writer, and "The Last Stand" is readable, but it's no "Son of the Morning Star", to be sure. James Donovan's book, "A Terrible Glory", came out just two years before Philbrick's book, and it is much better.

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว

      Just as I thought. Everything you know about MY neighbors came from a book.

    • @Eadbhard
      @Eadbhard ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ranchodeluxe1 Books, journals, military records, newspaper archives, personal letters, diaries, documents, biographies, geographies, statistics, specifics, primary sources, censuses...you name it. I've read and studied it all.

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Eadbhard I'm very happy for you. I've lived it all. Perhaps, if you are as book learned as you brag, you could teach others, instead of ridiculing them for their lack of knowledge? Of course, a drunken Irishman may not be the best source of information in any case. Myself, I'm leaving on a motorcycle trip in two weeks, starting at the Slim Buttes Battle site, which is on my cousin's ranch. Then, onto Red Cloud Agency, Fort Robinson, Up Rosebud Creek to Fort Phil Kearney and the Gibbons meeting site on the Yellowstone. Then to Rosebud and Greasy Grass. Then, back to the battle site on our family's five generation ranch. Happy reading.

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Eadbhard "Read and studied it all?" Even the Chief Bald Eagle interview that is one click away? The one that you scorned me for referencing? Ya, a real historian, you are.

    • @Eadbhard
      @Eadbhard ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ranchodeluxe1 I well know the tale of Buffalo Calf Road Woman, you moron, and I scorned you for referencing it, because Buffalo Calf Road Woman is but one of many Natives who claimed to have killed Custer.
      Let's see...the Natives who purportedly killed Custer...Off the top of my head, there was:
      Buffalo Calf Road Woman, White Bull (Sitting Bull's nephew), Rain-in-the-Face, Joseph White Cow Bull, Spotted Calf, Moving Robe, Charging Hawk...
      And for the Cheyenne, there was: Yellow Nose, Brave Bear, Little Horse, Old Bear...there is probably a lot more too, but these are names just off the top of my head.
      In short, since so many warriors have claimed the honour of killing Custer, the historical veracity of any one of their assertions, or any of the stories, must be questioned. From a cultural perspective, it's good to know of these stories, but the reality is, you have to take them with a grain of salt. Logic dictates that when a dozen people take credit for single-handedly accomplishing the same feat, something is obviously awry.
      Ironically, the Natives at the Little Bighorn likely didn't even know who Custer was. Some may have heard of him, but they certainly would not have recognized him. It's not like the Sioux and Northern Cheyenne had photographs of George Armstrong Custer hanging up in their lodges!
      The only exception would have been the Oglala warchief, Rain-in-the-Face. If Rain-in-the-Face saw Custer's body on the battlefield, he very well may have recognized "Long Hair" for who he was.
      Considering the maelovent manhandling of Tom Custer's slain body (George's brother), it is distinctly possible, almost probable, Rain-in-the-Face recognized Captain Tom Custer; and if he recollected Tom, Rain-in-the-Face may have seen and recognized George as well. After all, the Custer brothers died within close proximity of each other.

  • @annmowatt7547
    @annmowatt7547 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I LOVE all your work for which I am most grateful. Seems like Custer was yet another who believed his own publicity. Another great example of the "wonders" of imperialism, typical tactics. Thanks for this fascinating discussion. Must get the book.

    • @tracyleighbasham
      @tracyleighbasham 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Seems the media and politics are inextricably connected.

    • @byronevans1
      @byronevans1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@tracyleighbasham they are, propaganda.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      He was a pure social status climber. He got what he deserved.

    • @jessepowell1891
      @jessepowell1891 ปีที่แล้ว

      Just a thought. Such were the atrocities of imperialism and colonialism that, when confronted with the horrors of the shoah at the end of WWII, 1945, that despite the unspeakable horrors of the camps, that with time, looking for the source of these ghastly crimes, they found their ancestors, including Custer's generation and hit the reset button, starting in the 1960s. Check out Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz's seminal work The Indigenous Peoples history of the United States. The crimes by colonialism in the western hemisphere may pale compared to the raw brutality of the nazi death camps, but point by point, before the final solution carried out by the nazis that an auto reset was hit, ending popular support for colonialism, white supremacy, eugenics, and a whole cavalcade of other injustices which we now contest, in multiple ways breaking up all the horrors seen since 1492. Professor Dunbar-ortiz's book will make, if you haven't read it yet, a good first step of freeing your mind and realizing the horrid deeds done in the name of empire or religion in reality, window dressing removed. Adieu.

  • @davidgamble955
    @davidgamble955 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Read: THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE’s HISTORY OF THE UNITES STATES. Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz

    • @LesserMoffHootkins
      @LesserMoffHootkins 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      There is no indigenous history. They were all prehistoric until Columbus.

    • @LesserMoffHootkins
      @LesserMoffHootkins 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tomasmccauley569
      It’s the easiest way to build a large structure.
      Of course, that “easy way” took a lot of back-breaking work from slaves, and it’s a monumental feat, but it was definitely surpassed in engineering snd architectural achievement, and in usefulness, in other cultures.
      Think of all the supporting mass, diminishing all the way to the point at the top, then consider how much more knowledge, skill, and technology it took to build a castle, a cathedral, a palace, a pagoda, a skyscraper, or even a two-story house.
      Anyway, pyramids were only built in Central America, not in what became the USA.
      Also, the people were literally prehistoric because they had no written history. Only a few cultures in the Americas had written language, and even then it was mostly a rudimentary pictographic system, similar to a comic book, or emojis, although the Mayas had a true written language. Most languages started as simple pictures in the Old World, East and West, until they became truly developed writing systems, so it’s no knock on the Meso-Americans.
      Even so, Natives of America north of Mexico had none of that, and so were prehistoric by definition.

    • @LesserMoffHootkins
      @LesserMoffHootkins 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tomasmccauley569
      But not one written language, so they were prehistoric, by definition. What does “prehistory” mean?

  • @marlbankian
    @marlbankian 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Excellent food for thought

  • @oldhippiejon
    @oldhippiejon 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Truth can be hard to take but who drove the Crow off their land, who pushed the Apache out off their land, accept the truth of Custer but understand their were others at that battle who also bought death and land grabs to that land.

  • @user-wl2xl5hm7k
    @user-wl2xl5hm7k 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Can all in left-YT please start educating people about both: (1) the difference between right-authoritarian vs. right-libertarian; & (2) the difference between left-authoritarian vs left-libertarian? It’s long overdue. People aren’t cattle or sheep: They will understand if we educate them.
    Though we need to educate (& learn) about all the nuance.

    • @joeymurdazalotmore6355
      @joeymurdazalotmore6355 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Old dogs can learn new tricks people are dumb downed naturally , simply put, ur in ur bubble as well thinking folks think like you, they don't, most don't think and follow spectacle or find a cause to hate it's easier, path of least resistance are maga red team n team blue there is no difference between which corporate congressional media conglomerate rolls out a few folks born 100 years ago and choose between Darth Vader and Darth Vader lite. If folks have sound mind they notice they have seen this episode before like Joe manchining, etc it's kayfabe and telling folks to get it more understand more about a class of folks without moral fiber integrity the ability to stay on earth behave decent and still have some meaning and fun in life without wrecking the world or imposing any ideology on anyone is out order out there lane and should say less do more actions r facts words r masks to hide actions, everytime, yes every time,

    • @GrandmaCathy
      @GrandmaCathy 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Can you recommend a book on that topic? I have been struggling with the differences.

    • @user-wl2xl5hm7k
      @user-wl2xl5hm7k 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@GrandmaCathy Glad you asked! There’s no particular book that’s good enough yet to my knowledge. Though I’ll share some helpful info in the next few comments that should steer you in the right direction:
      First off, ggl the main terms I used and you’ll find the info to research this. You’ll find excellent sites that distinguish the four corners, and they list main texts from each of the four separate corners

    • @user-wl2xl5hm7k
      @user-wl2xl5hm7k 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@GrandmaCathy I’ll educate here some about right libertarianism, as I’m leftist and it’s important to teach other leftists to distinguish right authoritarianism(fscsm) from right libertarianism (anarcho-capitalism):
      Adam Smith was probably the first right libertarian (late 1700s). There’s also Gustave de Molinari’s Production of Security, written in 1849, a very significant right libertarian work. There’s Ludwig von Mises in early 1900s followed by the economists he influenced. And finally, all of it was influenced by the individualist anarchist writers from throughout the 1800s, mainly Americans.

    • @user-wl2xl5hm7k
      @user-wl2xl5hm7k 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@GrandmaCathy *In researching these distinctions on the right, this is the most important question to guide leftists in their learning* :
      How do you distinguish economic fascism from economic capitalism??
      We live in economic fascism now. We are nowhere near *neither* free-market capitalism _nor_ socialism. _Actually_ reading the true right libertarians is how you learn this. And therefore how one _actually_ & substantially & practically helps the working class by Praxis. Instead of the empty talk without effective practice of mainstream “leftists”.

  • @janetseager4069
    @janetseager4069 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    So glad to see you back

  • @normanbraslow7902
    @normanbraslow7902 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The fact that generals Sheridan, Grant and Sherman all agreed Custer was a suburb soldier in the field has more gravitas than any latter day historian.

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 ปีที่แล้ว

      Superb?

    • @brucefournier2391
      @brucefournier2391 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes, at Appomattox General Grant used this small spool-turned table to sign the document setting forth the surrender terms. After the signing, Lieutenant General Philip H. Sheridan presented the table to Elizabeth B. Custer, the wife of Major General George A. Custer.

    • @gregggordon7798
      @gregggordon7798 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, Grant never thought of him as anything but a show horse, and Sherman had no basis to think anything of him at all, since they spent the whole was in entirely different theaters. But one out of three ain't bad.

  • @terryalanhodgson2559
    @terryalanhodgson2559 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Custer was one good cavalry commander in civil war invasion of the south

  • @vladimir0700
    @vladimir0700 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great man-he helped pave the way to turning the continent into the cesspool that it is today

  • @LawrenceCarroll1234
    @LawrenceCarroll1234 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    From Johnny Horton’s 1960 song, “Jim Bridger”(minor punctuation added by myself):
    He spoke with General Custer and said, “listen Yellow Hair,
    The Sioux have a great nation, so treat 'em fair and square;
    Sit in on their war councils, don't laugh away their pride”;
    But Custer didn't listen, [&] at Little Big Horn Custer died

  • @johnbolger2625
    @johnbolger2625 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    In a side note; does anyone know who sings the theme song for Hedges Report? Sounds very Muddy Water-esc..but I think it’s a different blues artist. I like the tune (now ya talk about terror” 🎶🎸

    • @007nadineL
      @007nadineL 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Willie King’s “Struggling Blues”

    • @johnbolger2625
      @johnbolger2625 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@007nadineL thank you!

  • @annepoitrineau5650
    @annepoitrineau5650 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have read "My Life On the Plains", Custer was abominable and deluded. He was not brave because he was brave, he was brave because he thought of himself as indestructible and was self-agrandising. I also read Bury my heart at Wounded Knee, and that was quite something else. Real bravery and grandeur. I did not know about his sexual escapades, but it fits the personality as presented in his book.

    • @georgejcking
      @georgejcking ปีที่แล้ว

      Hey genius, before you make foolish statements on the internet about someone, you should try reading more than just ONE book!!!! The United States would not exist as a country, if not for guys like Custard. He was very instrumental in the defeat of the Confederate army at Gettysburg and several other critical battles!!!
      Try reading a few more books and please lay off of the public comments until you do.😢

  • @rondecambio7375
    @rondecambio7375 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    In mentioning Washita,I have read many accounts from the event , what struck me was the number of killed is higher according to the Gov.and much lower according to the Native American source estimates, and by a big margine.

  • @westho7314
    @westho7314 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Custer got the point!

    • @skindianu
      @skindianu 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      He also wore Arrow Shirts....

  • @stevensica89
    @stevensica89 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Is Custer the Ariel Sharon of the USA?

  • @mikem820
    @mikem820 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Thank you once again Chris for your truthful telling of what the real history of this country is

  • @blueunicornhere
    @blueunicornhere 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    2:34 they were reduced by way more than 10% dude.
    Words get new definitions because people insist on using them incorrectly.

  • @robmorgan1214
    @robmorgan1214 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Good interview! The book should be subtitled: the making of a true American psychopath. It's completely insane the we continue to tolerate this crap.
    Suggestion for next interview: Whitney Webb please!

  • @raskltube
    @raskltube ปีที่แล้ว +1

    If we are going to keep it 100, the crimes committed by the Commanche, Apache, the Sioux and so on and so forth against settlers on the plains non combatants also included much rape, torture, massacre and it was done a biblical medieval style too. this is a taboo subject.... not saying the Americans were great, but lets keep it 100 and not insult people's intelligence.

  • @Amadeus8484
    @Amadeus8484 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I look forward to all the movies in a post-American empire world which will portray the American empire accurately.

  • @wjdavey3
    @wjdavey3 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    A Couple of Important Facts!! Re: Not All Indian Nations Lost these Wars in the 19th Century, Nor did they All Lose their Rights to Sovereignty!! THAT IS EXACTLY WHY THERE WERE/ARE INTERNATIONAL NATION TO NATION TREATIES BETWEEN NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN NATIONS/TRIBES. AND - NOT ALL INDIAN NATIONS WERE RELOCATED AND/OR FORCED ONTO RESERVATIONS!! EXAMPLE: The Great Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Nations (Non-Indian name: Sioux) at one Time Resided/Lived on ALL OF NORTH DAKOTA, SOUTH DAKOTA, AND EVEN 4 OTHER NEARBY STATES!!!! THIS WAS ALL "THEIR" LAND. Please Study and Read thoroughly the "Fort Laramie Treaty". The Great Sioux Nation was tired of Continuing War with the U.S. Government, and Vice Versa,.... This, the Fort Laramie Treaty!! The Sioux "Gave Up" Vast and Large Acres of its Lands, "RESERVING" A MUCH SMALLER AMOUNT FOR THEMSELVES; IN EXCHANGE FOR REAL PEACE BETWEEN THE USA AND THE SIOUX NATION(S)!!!! THE INDIANS ALREADY OWNED THE LAND THAT BECAME THE RESERVATION(S)!!!! READ THE FORT LARAMIE TREATY. In addition, and in Accordance with the Fort Laramie Treaty; THE BLACK HILLS (PAHA SAPA) WERE PART OF THE RESERVATIONS, THUS WHEN CUSTER AND HIS TROOPS ALONG WITH GOLDMINERS WENT INTO THE BLACK HILLS TO "STEAL" GOLD, THEY WERE (KNOWINGLY!!) IN DIRECT VIOLATION OF THE FORT LARAMIE TREATY!!!! THE U.S. SUPREME COURT RULED AS SUCH IN THE 1970's!!!! IN FAVOR OF THE SIOUX NATION(S)!!!! MANY 100's OF MILLION$ IS HELD IN TRUST AT PRESENT AS PAYMENT THE USA FEDERAL GOVERNMENT "OWES" THE SIOUX TO DATE; FOR STEALING THE BLACK HILLS 'AND' VIOLATING THE FORT LARAMIE TREATY!!!! RESEARCH THIS.

  • @newhorizonscdc8871
    @newhorizonscdc8871 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This shows the viciousness of the caucasian in contact with human beings

    • @newhorizonscdc8871
      @newhorizonscdc8871 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Лоредан I am not....
      Historical data indicates the offending invaders were of Caucasian groups. I apologize if I offended you. Please forgive me

  • @markbujdos584
    @markbujdos584 ปีที่แล้ว

    This presents a great unintended argument that Erroll Flynn was indeed perfectly cast in "They Died with their Boots on."