people dont be mean i think the video had good info its good she explained stuff about civil rights its mean to say stupid and crap she was just trying to help cheezzz people these days need to take a chill pill
Where's the part about Alabama? Wow, no mention of the muscle shoals sound that changed music in America...., mobile, birthplace of hank Aaron, yea, also the first French permanent settlement in the Americas, NASA, the gulf shores area that has now made travel channels top ten beaches list. I doubt these folks ever heard of Alabama before they made this. They sure don't know much about the place. Typical Yankee propaganda. Basically, everything in the south is dark. No history or culture but bad history and culture. I'm sure this video would have been much longer and more informative had it been about the northeast or west coast.
J Smith After the Treaty of Cusseta (1832) it was still legal for Amerindian Alabamians to live in the state. The only stipulation in 1832 was that any Indian (mostly Creek and Cherokee) who chose to stay in Alabama would have to become a citizen of the State of Alabama and be subject to Alabama's laws and not the laws of the Creek Nation. There are still thousands of descendants of the original Creek in Alabama, with many full bloods living on the Poarch Creek lands
My family is Cherokee that were mainly in NW Alabama in The Warrior(Bankhead) Forest, I have a cousin(Ricky Butch Walker) that has published many books to help people of the area learn of their Native American background because many of our people hid in the mountains,took on their spouses last names(Flanigan)Irish Great grand Mothers name.
Not all hid but many did an never registered with the State, When The War of Northern Aggresion started Alabama had the worst kept records of any Southern State thats why there will never be a true count on the men that served or died for the state.. I trust what my family has taught me though the years rather than a Northern History book that STILL TODAY teaches our kids BULLSHIT !!!
I like, me gusta, j’aime
Me gusta, i like, j’aime
This isn't even about Alabama just Civil Rights
Thank you for your interest! No, we do not have a video on Georgia yet. But stay tuned since we plan to have a video about all 50 states.
Nothing here about culture: What are people there like and what are they interested in?
Yep it's the home of the revolution, so we still have massive parties and shite too
the old Catawba was the first state catioile
Good vid. At least this one is open and honest.
Also, we have a monument to a bug.
people dont be mean i think the video had good info its good she explained stuff about civil rights its mean to say stupid and crap she was just trying to help cheezzz people these days need to take a chill pill
For real, nobody is out to get u Americans breathe...
This video is about representing the state of Alabama. Not a very good job of doing that. There seems to be a perception which is being put forth.
Roll Tide
Dark history.
Hunter Phelps
Anyone watching this please don't buy into this horse crap
thats mean
Never could, never would, but into this crap.
This isn't about Alabama this is about MLK
Where's the part about Alabama? Wow, no mention of the muscle shoals sound that changed music in America...., mobile, birthplace of hank Aaron, yea, also the first French permanent settlement in the Americas, NASA, the gulf shores area that has now made travel channels top ten beaches list. I doubt these folks ever heard of Alabama before they made this. They sure don't know much about the place. Typical Yankee propaganda. Basically, everything in the south is dark. No history or culture but bad history and culture. I'm sure this video would have been much longer and more informative had it been about the northeast or west coast.
Im sorry that Alabama's history was pretty dark....didnt mean for it to hurt your Alabama feelings.
what about all the white people?
And if you were NATIVE AMERICAN it was against the law to live in Alabama until the civil rights act took affect...
J Smith After the Treaty of Cusseta (1832) it was still legal for Amerindian Alabamians to live in the state. The only stipulation in 1832 was that any Indian (mostly Creek and Cherokee) who chose to stay in Alabama would have to become a citizen of the State of Alabama and be subject to Alabama's laws and not the laws of the Creek Nation. There are still thousands of descendants of the original Creek in Alabama, with many full bloods living on the Poarch Creek lands
My family is Cherokee that were mainly in NW Alabama in The Warrior(Bankhead) Forest, I have a cousin(Ricky Butch Walker) that has published many books to help people of the area learn of their Native American background because many of our people hid in the mountains,took on their spouses last names(Flanigan)Irish Great grand Mothers name.
Not all hid but many did an never registered with the State, When The War of Northern Aggresion started Alabama had the worst kept records of any Southern State thats why there will never be a true count on the men that served or died for the state.. I trust what my family has taught me though the years rather than a Northern History book that STILL TODAY teaches our kids BULLSHIT !!!
And a lot of our people in 1832 didn't believe much in Stipulations and Treaties, some reason they had trust issues.
Any Confederate state is least interesting.
I can tell u don't live here, cause u would be more of an Uncle Tom
Kalandus, you are showing your prejudice.