@@SLGJerry exactly, i have heard this EXACT song without the nightcore. This video is just sped up. BUT there are some amazing nightcore songs out there, just check out Samuel farina's channel
Technically female Marines are allowed to have long hair, but they have to tie it up in a bun. Her hair isn’t out of regs, just the fact that it came loose.
This song is a banger and much more patriotic than SSB but it's a church and state thing. The ideal America is a melting pot, this song representing us would homogenize it.
We are legally obligated to only put marines over battle hymn, soldiers over when johnny comes marching home and airmen over stars and stripes forever.
Hi bro, it's Frankszky here with my Spanish channel. Just wanted to let you know i'm not the owner of Frankszky anymore, i sold the channel, but i opened another account from where i will keep uploading my nightcore videos, it's www.youtube.com/@Huszky
First you have no proof it “explicitly excludes” them, so pick your words more carefully in the future. Second. When this song was made none of those things you listed were as prevalent nor as abundant in America as they are today. Christianity was the main religion and almost every single person followed it. Third. This songs message is that faith (in any form) will always destroy evil and wrongdoers as the people who have faith will carry that out. You cannot look at history from a modern perspective and expect to dictate the actions of past people as morally correct or incorrect.
3 points 1 There are almost as many Buddists, hindus and pagans combined in the US as there are Jews. Listing off every minor demographic doesn't make you sound thoughtful, it makes you sound like a teenager. 2 Noone is excluded by Battle Hymn, except for slavers. Just because the song is Christian does not require that it explicitly exclude any other religious group. 3 This is the National Hymn, it is a patriotic song. Even if it did explicitly exclude other groups, this would not prevent it from being a patriotic song. Apparently you missed the memo, but noone cares about edgy athiests anymore and everyone is very done with the tortured inclusivity now. Next time you may want to think for at least as long as it take to type your banal comments.
This song was written in the 1860s by Julia Ward Howe, when a majority of Americans on both north and south, white and black, had Judeo Christian beliefs. It's dated. Go cry at some college protest or something if it's not inclusive enough.