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Mr. Beat is a teacher, video producer, podcaster, and musician who specializes in making history and geography more engaging. He has written songs about all of the Presidents and has created music videos for all of them. Beat’s specialty is American history, but he also has a big passion for geography and economics. His channel features the series Presidential Elections in American History, Supreme Court Briefs, and Compared. Subscribe for a new video every week.
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I grew up in PA and had to take PA history in 9th grade but still learned a lot from this video! I knew what the Mason-Dixon line was and what it represented as far as slave vs free states, but that was about it. Also, now I know why West Virginia has a panhandle! I also am enjoying this recent trend of shooting videos on location. 😊
My biggest issue with cannabis is not its effect on the user. It is the impact on those around you. It has a more immediate impact than most other drugs even for sensible users if consumed as a vapour / smoked. I can choose to sit next to someone drinking coffee, alcohol, shooting up heroin and not be impacted by what they're doing. If however someone chooses to smoke or vape I end up getting second hand effects. The problem is with some, if its legal they don't care if you don't want to partake as it spoils their fun (this applies to smokers and vapers too).
You’re trying so hard to create some small spark of interest in history with those kids, and they’re just not having it. I think most of us dads feel that pain. Lol adorable
My mom was little when the French got kicked out of Vietnam. The nun who was her teacher at the time said, “this won’t be the last you’ve heard of Dien Bien Phu.”
Pretty sure you dont have to be sorry for your Dad. He'd be proud you did a conscious decision thinking on your own feet. And he must be damn happy to not waste his life in a tropical jungle believing a bunch of lies- well more likely 'forced to' because the draft.
As a Jewish I can tell you that this theory very much makes sense, because the Islam and the Quran and the khalifats all have a theory and an agenda or you can call it ideology or theology, to replace the culture of the West and totally eliminate the Christianity and Judaism and to rule Islam everywhere on the planet. This will eventually they believe bring the rice of the mahadi, did you have this prophet. Immigration is one strategy to do it quietly but eventually they will rise. So you can keep on closing your eyes and sleeping while the Islam spreads all over the West.
Interesting how Europe has been white for thousands of years. But now we're supposed to believe that all these non-whites coming in purely to get government handouts is somehow a natural occurence. And race is real btw
There is no scientific basis of race. Every group of people are mixed. Almost all immigrants emegrate to find better life in a better country. And europe was always diverse. Yes there were no black people in norther europe till recently, but every empire that existed have all been a mix of cultures and ethinc groups (rome, byzantine, frankish, british, frech, ottoman, ect. Ect.).
2:10 he was not appealing to authority; just suggesting a knowledgeable source of information. He was neither arguing a point, nor using their authority as evidence. 3:00 is definitely an appeal to authority. 3:38 Quoting MLK is not an appeal to authority by itself. See above. 4:14 for the "either-or" fallacy examples you don't show enough of the clips to show that something specific is being argued on an "either-or" assumption. In the example you give at 4:30 Shapiro is specifically indicating two plausible, non exclusive causes of something. Already it isn't a dichotomy because of the non-exclusivity. We also see no arguments based on the assumption of a dichotomy either. If there are, this isn't a complete example of the fallacy without that part. 6:16 No, giving an example, or an anecdote is not inherently a logical fallacy. Again, it depends on what one does with that anecdote. Again I didn't see Rogan argue anything from his first anecdote. And they give multiple anecdotes. Each anecdote is a data point. It is in general bad to argue much of anything from a single datapoint. But you get enough datapoints you are being empirical. I can't watch anyore.
I don't get why that interview is supposedly "so bad". He has broken English, was a child at the time, and clearly the type of person that says what he's thinking as plainly as he can.
I have FDR as a D honestly. He was a good war time president, but overall the negatives outweigh the positives. You mentioned the Japanese internment camps. That’s a major issue for me. His Great Depression policies left a lot to be desired. He also tried to pack the courts. He was way too authoritarian for me.
Two genius thank you two, fellow young scholars. Whether you get your thanks or not thank you for spreading the inspiration knowledge and hope for a better future
the south and north were aggressors to themselves. it was a civil war that we got dragged into over the containment policy, not some colonial conquest like you're playing it up to be.
@@economicallyunviablekitten the separation of the north and south was a colonial move. containment was an evil strategy. killing more civilians than soldiers died is evil and deserves hell forever.
@@TheMntnG the north and the south had been divided for most of Vietnam’s very existence, as they were vastly different places with different temperatures and cultures, and often times different ideologies (like how the war even started with the communist north and non-communist south) it wasn’t just because of colonialism, but also making it so they wouldn’t tear each other apart in another civil war moments after independence (which they did anyways) that they were split up.
The USA has been the richest country for many decades, so the system works. Don't fix what is not broken. Once the US falls to 10th place, people will be open to experiment with different things.
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DYGaHCOllIg.html The way you savaged your younger brother like this is absolutely consistent with bigger brother behavior. Carry on.
Even though GW Bush was a terrible president, it seems like he was still a nice man and he actually supported equal rights for whites and blacks, which is why I'd rank him min last place on this list. Otherwise, you were spot on, Mr. Beat.
My great grandpa delivered groceries for him and his wife. Heard many stories that they would just go about in town like normal people. I hear they were very humble and kind people.
For those who saw “An American Tail”. It’s an animated cartoon movie of a Mouse (not Micky) but named Fievel Moskowitz. In the movie. The immigration took place at the Castle Garden (before Ellis Island was a thing). There was a scene where someone was speaking a different language. Then you heard the Officer say “Name?” Immigrant: “Smovolodny-Dhromovichsky. Officer: “Okay Mr. Smith”
No mention of the bloody land reforms or brutal political purging of political opponents by the communists that made the South wary of joining with them before 1954? Or the political, cultural, and economic repression carried out by the victorious communists in the decades after it took over the South? After Saigon collapsed, my father and uncles were one of 1 million former soldiers, politicians, artists, and intellectuals who were sent into re-education camps where they were starved and abused sometimes for as long as 17 years. The communists carried out a cultural purge where they burned an entire generation of South Vietnam's music, literature, and art. They also carried out a misguided collectivization scheme that nearly collapsed the economy and the country today is still recovering from it. They persecuted ethnic minorities such as Hmong, Montaignards, people of Chinese descent, and anyone associated with the former South Vietnamese government despite promising reconciliation, and this discrimination continues to an extent even today. Between 1.5-2 million refugees fled this repression of which 30-40% died out at sea. Vietnam today is still a one-party totalitarian regime rife with corruption that still uses propaganda, censorship, intimidation, and incarceration to suppress dissidents, activists, and journalists to maintain the Communist Party's monopoly on power. It's rated as the 3rd worst country in the Press Freedom Index and described by Human Rights Watch as having "human rights record remains dire in virtually all areas." There are more than 2 million Vietnamese in America, and the fact that American mainstream is still pushing this shallow US-centric discussion of this war and still turns a blind eye to these details in the past and the present of that country is mind-boggling. Also, there are millions of Vietnamese who do not think this war was pointless, because if South Vietnam had survived, it would have very likely been a western-style liberal democracy like the one achieved by South Korea and Taiwan in the late 80's and early 90's.
Hi Mr Beat. I love your channel and this video covered almost everything. I say, almost because there wasn’t a single mention of the allies that followed the US into the Vietnam war. A total of six nations sent combat troops to fight in South Vietnam against North Vietnam and the southern-based Viet Cong insurgency in the 1960s and 1970s. These nations were the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Republic of (South) Korea, Thailand, and the Philippines. My country, Australia were in it with the US for the long haul. From the time of the arrival of the first members of the Team in 1962 over 60,000 Australians, including ground troops and air force and navy personnel, served in Vietnam; 523 died as a result of the war and almost 2,400 were wounded. The war was the cause of the greatest social and political dissent in Australia since the conscription referendums of the First World War. Many draft resisters, conscientious objectors, and protesters were fined or jailed, while soldiers met a hostile reception on their return home. And while our contribution pails compare to the US efforts, it saddens me that when American historians speak about the war today, Australia just doesn’t rank a mention. But we showed up and we stayed for a long time. In the fine Errol Morris film “the fog of war”, even Robert McNamara states that none of America’s allies followed them into the Vietnam war. What a slap in the face for those countries that committed troops and lost lives. Hopefully Australia and others contribution will be noted in future www.awm.gov.au/articles/event/vietnam
This is a man was a bad business man( &:a horrible battlefield strategist)simply because of his HONESTY! REVOLUTIONARIES LIKE JOHN BROWN ARE THE RIGHTEOUS PEOPLE AMONGST US! Make NO MISTAKE though people just like him STILL EXIST, EVEN NOW!
If we somehow did abolish the electoral college, how would we deal with candidates that won a plurality but not the majority of electoral votes because that has happened 19 timesover the previous 59 elections. I really wouldn't want the House to decide that many elections especially due to the stupid rules it has to vote
If dumb ass bush would have listened to the CIA in the first place this wouldn’t have happened. But it still would have because this was all done for military propaganda!