I'm still a pro-choice woman, as I know many women who have NEEDED abortions. However, I could NEVER condone Margaret's idealogy or actions. I'm grateful for birth control and planned parenthood, but I refuse to overlook the founder. I truly have never had a bad experience there, but then again I've never had an abortion. I've only gone there for exams, tests, birth control prescriptions, or for information and resources. I'm truly baffled by how awful Sanger was, and that I never knew this before!!
@historyandhearsayКүн бұрын
@@emeliak555 thanks a for watching! :)
@eyetukafatshet6246Күн бұрын
Let me just say.. what a fucking icon✨
@historyandhearsayКүн бұрын
@@eyetukafatshet6246 😆 Thank you for watching!
@leslieh1446Күн бұрын
So much fun! I had no idea about any of this.
@historyandhearsayКүн бұрын
@@leslieh1446 glad you enjoyed it! :)
@LindaHarmon-u5jКүн бұрын
Why are there always all these objects but they never make contact. It also seems like they happen is spurts. You hear a lot about them and then nothing. During current times we seem to be in one of these slack periods. Kind of like Bigfoot.
@historyandhearsay14 сағат бұрын
Yeah, it does seem odd. Some people think it’s probably as distractions from other things… I dunno but it is weird how it always comes in “waves” and then nothing for years
@aprilknerr4443Күн бұрын
This episode made me laugh. History is fun! You could do a whole 30 minute episode on DaVinci.
@historyandhearsayКүн бұрын
@@aprilknerr4443 It really is! Glad you enjoyed it :) Yes! Some of the DaVinci stories/theories are pretty wild to look into!
@vancraven76882 күн бұрын
Leave the family alone
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
@@vancraven7688 agreed!!!
@jannetteberends87302 күн бұрын
Lincoln being a wrestler amazed me. In the Netherlands we know him as a serious Protestant. And Protestants here usually don’t do wrestling.
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
@@jannetteberends8730 I thought this was so cool to find out! I’m sure the American frontier probably broke a lot of the “rules” of tradition.
@eyetukafatshet62462 күн бұрын
Your channel is so underrated girl keep it up your work is amazing
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
@@eyetukafatshet6246 thank you so much! That means a lot :)
@TheSkydancer282 күн бұрын
her name was Virginia tann and she started out in massachusettes i know because my mother was one of the babies she stole from its rightful parents with the help of a dirty cop and two dirty lawyers she was never in Georgia and she was never in hollywood.
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
So sorry about your mom! But I can tell from your comment that you didn’t watch the video. The subject of the video’s nickname was Georgia, her name was: Beulah George "Georgia" Tann. I talked about how she is mostly known for her work in TN, I never said she was working out of Hollywood, I explain why she got the nickname of the ‘Hollywood baby snatcher’, in the video & how certain celebrities got children from her. Let me know your thoughts, if you go back & watch the video :)
@anniej18342 күн бұрын
Love it when u post a fantastic video 📸 I'm loving your channel 😁 see u next time u post
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
@@anniej1834 thank you!
@tedeibeakawaii2 күн бұрын
Thank you for speaking up for history and truth.
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
@@tedeibeakawaii 💕💕
@mothgeb58293 күн бұрын
Another great video ! Thank you !Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter is one of my favorite movies. Love the mix of history & fantasy.
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@mothgeb5829 thank you! I really need to sit down & watch that! I’ve heard such great things! 😆
@mothgeb58292 күн бұрын
Lincoln & Harriet Tubman in it ! 2 of my heroes & this movie blends in folklore & makes them superheroes ! History & folklore I both love. Plus the costumes are great. Mr. Cooper & Mr. Sewell are nice to look at also.
@mothgeb58292 күн бұрын
In the movie Fight Club they ask which historical character would you fight ? One reply is Abraham Lincoln. 😂 Would they really want to though ?
@historyandhearsay2 күн бұрын
@ shows they don’t REALLY know him!!🤣
@mothgeb58292 күн бұрын
😁👍
@AaronD873 күн бұрын
😯 so they weren’t always buttoned up statesmen then… 😆
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@AaronD87 I guess not 😆
@Navyyy93 күн бұрын
Please make a video on queen Elizabeth, if she was drinking humans blood to stay young😅
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@Navyyy9 ohhh I’ll have to look into that one 😆
@meridaskywalker78163 күн бұрын
Mote details of about her later life: as a teenager, she got addicted to alcohol and cigarettes she would steal from her father. As her mental health deteriorate, she also became aggressive towards her little brother, so much so that the family decided to make him move with their eldest sister. Her parents kept taking her to different doctors and psychiatrists, but none of them managed to help her. At 20 years old, she was placed in a mental hospital in Tworki. Her family would visit her regularly, but as years passed she became more and more detached from reality. She died at 38 years old by choking on food she stole from another patient.
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@meridaskywalker7816 yes! I had all of that written down, I don’t know how I missed sharing it!! (I must have mistakenly deleted it from my notes) Such a sad ending to her life 😭
@kaseyharless63243 күн бұрын
I'm a big pro wrestling fan. I knew since middle school Lincoln was also big into wrestling, I also know wrestled for money too. Love Abraham Lincoln stories.
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@kaseyharless6324 so cool! This was new to me & I was like “HOW have I never heard this??”
@lindabarnes41283 күн бұрын
You bring out the fun and interest, along with relevance in history.
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@lindabarnes4128 thank you Linda! :)
@nadiabarrett51953 күн бұрын
"blowing off steam" 😂
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
😆
@serahloeffelroberts99013 күн бұрын
I kept a lock of my late husbands hair and don't think it strange at all.
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@serahloeffelroberts9901 yeah, I think it can seem strange in the abstract, but when I put think about it from the perspective of a grieving loved one, I don’t think it’s strange AT ALL 💕
@Noel-s1c3p3 күн бұрын
Great upload 👌 👍, thank you from Australia and Stay Safe ✌️ ✌️
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@Noel-s1c3p thank you for watching :)
@meghanjohnson95843 күн бұрын
Your shiny hair is so distracting 😅
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@meghanjohnson9584 🤣 probably had my lights in the wrong spot LOL
@meghanjohnson95843 күн бұрын
@ lol nah, you just have pretty hair!
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@ oh, well thank you! ☺️
@lovesred39983 күн бұрын
Yay! Another great episode. Thank you for all you do, we need history more now than ever. ❤
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@lovesred3998 thank you! :)
@clarencedavisiii14123 күн бұрын
Thanks Christina ❤❤😂😮
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@clarencedavisiii1412 thanks for watching! :))
@lesliedupre43573 күн бұрын
🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
@@lesliedupre4357 thanks for watching! :)
@tony121653 күн бұрын
I love your pretty eyes
@historyandhearsay3 күн бұрын
Thank you :)
@racheldueck81004 күн бұрын
I have never heard this topic covered in so much detail. ❤ This story should be more well known.
@historyandhearsay4 күн бұрын
@@racheldueck8100 it really is a wild one that should be discussed more!
@LuckySpinster.4 күн бұрын
'anorexia nervosa' is an eating disorder characterized by food restriction, or restricting your own food, 'anorexia' is simply food restriction
@historyandhearsay4 күн бұрын
They specified ’anorexia nervosa’ in her diagnoses, I just didn’t fully say that, because we I originally recorded this, I didn’t realize there was a distinction between the two. But I think that maybe they blamed the restriction done by her family on her OR her mental health was so bad, she had started to refuse food on her own
@LuckySpinster.4 күн бұрын
@@historyandhearsay possibly. These days the nervosa isn't used as much anyway.
@historyandhearsay4 күн бұрын
@ yeah I left it out when speaking here, because I knew I would mispronounce it 🙈but some people have informed me in the comments of the differences, because of my speculations about why she was diagnosed with that… but in the source material it does say anorexic nervosa
@lajoswinkler4 күн бұрын
The idea that she looked all rosy and started decaying after it was opened is a blatant lie. The picture you shared is a fabrication from some disinformational Facebook page worthy of praise by gullible people on social networks.
@historyandhearsay4 күн бұрын
I guess, you will have go back to original sources I shared and let them know that. It’s all in the description. Thanks for watching!
@robertanewsom93575 күн бұрын
These are my family and life was so incredibly hard for them without people making fun of their skin tone. Still to this day calling them" smurfs" just doesn't sound funny to me at all 😢
@historyandhearsay4 күн бұрын
Yeah … I didn’t mean any disrespect, but I could see how that is insensitive, with they went through so much hate from people over their skin & also seemed to be ashamed of it :/
@Navyyy96 күн бұрын
A big shoutout how beautifully you have mentioned that the actual owners were not the reason for the scandal.. Before watching your video I thought Nestle was a mean man making profit..
@historyandhearsay6 күн бұрын
@@Navyyy9 ☺️ Thank you for watching!
@Navyyy96 күн бұрын
The actual owners/ founders would actually start up a business for a benefit of people Post them who ever acquires the business they will always be a culprit 😢
@historyandhearsay6 күн бұрын
@@Navyyy9 it’s sad when things start out so well intended & get so far off track!
@Navyyy96 күн бұрын
@@historyandhearsay yeah:(
@dancingdingo6 күн бұрын
I'm telling you those aliens crashed when they were trying to find my Grandma's house in a neighbouring town close to Roswell. They smelled the aroma from her cooking and unfortunately crashed! 😂
@historyandhearsay6 күн бұрын
Darn grandmas cookin! 🤣
@Miso_Soup_16 күн бұрын
Great video! Sorry about some of the Polish people in the comments being offended by the smallest things. WW2 is still VERY fresh in our collective mind, so this topic always brings a lot of strong emotions. I think it'll take at least a couple more decades to heal this national trauma. So please don't take any of those comments too personally. You're doing a great job and your videos are very fun to watch :)
@historyandhearsay6 күн бұрын
@@Miso_Soup_1 thank you so much! I feel bad when people get so upset because I truly do spend a lot of time on trying to get it right! Making these types of videos has caused me to realize how fresh this still is to people! 💕
@susannahedwards82307 күн бұрын
Breaks my heart that now familys in Gaza are dealing with this fear. What ever side you fall on I think we can agree war is no place for children.
@historyandhearsay7 күн бұрын
@@susannahedwards8230 yes my heart breaks for any child caught in war 💕
@trollhunter69347 күн бұрын
It breaks my heart how grown men and women can treat little children so badly
@historyandhearsay7 күн бұрын
@@trollhunter6934 it truly is heartbreaking 😭
@historyandhearsay7 күн бұрын
Since I keep getting the same responses, I will put it here … though I’m not sure most will see it. I work very hard on my pronunciations, looking up native speakers & repeating the way they say things, over and over - among other things… However, I clearly still struggle to get it right. I hope that I will get better over time, but If this enrages you, then this is probably not the KZbin channel for you. And that’s okay, not every channel is for every person. But for those who are kind about it - just know that I AM trying my very best, yall wouldn’t even want to see how bad it would come out, if I wasn’t trying 😆🙈
@melindaclifton17326 күн бұрын
You do alright. I loved the information. Great job 👍
@Stefunny826 күн бұрын
Mispronunciation of some words, especially those in your native language shouldn't be what triggers anger here...the horrors of WW2 should.
@historyandhearsay6 күн бұрын
@ I agree 😭💕
@Stefunny825 күн бұрын
@@historyandhearsay I meant to say *not* in your native language! 🤦♀️😂
@orangeoog17665 күн бұрын
Tbh I thought it was giggly and not offensive when you said you had previously said Romanian but meant Romani people, and still pronounced it wrong- I related to this big time, I'm always trying my best to pronounce stuff correctly, still get it wrong and hearing this made me smiley
@--Skip--7 күн бұрын
Sweetie, your knowledge of history needs a bit of a brush-off. The children of Narnia were war refugee children, mostly from London. The writer of the Narnia series was Clive Stapleton "Jack" Lewis, an Oxford University don (professor). He and his brother took in children evacuated from London. These were British children, not Jewish refugee children from Europe. Second, if you are going to talk about Auschwitz, then learn how to properly say the name, "Ausch-witz." Google the correct pronunciation, will you? You are trying hard but would never pass my world or military history class with such poor research. 👎👎👎👎👎
@duppsydaisy7 күн бұрын
History repeats itself. Im sure this will happen again and will be much worse! Gr8 reset incoming!!!
@PrincessRuth-sj6lt8 күн бұрын
I love the recounting of this history however your pronunciation is pretty bad. Romany is pronounced row-muh-knee not row may knee. 1"a" would indicate an uh sound. There are several other spaces where your pronunciation is way off. I am a native Hawaiian who lived in Europe I speak German in French and I am always amazed at how Americans fail at pronouncing things properly. Please take the time challenge yourself. Cuz when you come to Hawaii you murder our mother tongue. Take the time to look it up in the dictionary the pronunciations are always right there. I failed to understand why this in my lifetime is an observation I make only of Americans who seem to pretend not to understand the sounds of alphabet letters.
@historyandhearsay7 күн бұрын
@PrincessRuth-sj6lt I spend a lot of time trying to learn the correct way to say things. Even listening to native speakers & repeating it back. But it doesn’t come naturally to me. I also have a southern accent, which can make it more difficult. That’s one thing about us “Americans” it’s part of our culture that we all pronounce things very different, based on where we live. Which I think is beautiful:) (within our own language) But I’m not good at other languages, I know I will get better over time, but if it bothers you that much, you can click off. Im sure you can find plenty of other channels that are better linguists. Thank you for watching this one anyways :)
@jeanhawken44828 күн бұрын
So interesting
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
@@jeanhawken4482 I thought so!
@robertc21218 күн бұрын
Amazing presentation, so fascinating
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
@@robertc2121 thank you! :)
@sushiinmotion8 күн бұрын
All that drama! It was normal to lock people with mental ilnesses and it was normal to not talk about it. No family would want to admit that there was something wrong with their 'blood'. Who would want to marry the crazy ones? This case is interesting because it was made public.
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
Yeah, I guess you are right! So very sad!😞
@toddsmith16178 күн бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
@@toddsmith1617 glad you enjoyed the episode! Thank you for watching!
@RayMair-m1l8 күн бұрын
I've been to Auschwitz. Horrific.
@sumthingsgottagive8 күн бұрын
Heard about this from Bailey Sarian and I needed to learn more about the queen tofana. 👀
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
@@sumthingsgottagive yussss so wild!🤪
@HeatherCheddarZ8 күн бұрын
I love this channel so much! It's amazing that you tell so many people's stories. I live in dallas, texas and i was wondering if you’d ever look into the murderous clowns that lived in the tunnels under downtown during the great depression? The tunnels used to be used by ranchers and cattle bc texas is so dang hot. It was abandoned and during the great depression a circus basically set up shop there. As food ran out, they started killing people and selling their body parts. Wild shit. Now homeless people just live there. :)
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
@@HeatherCheddarZ thank you so much! Oh wow! 🤯 I will have to look into that one! I’m in the DFW area now, so that’s extra interesting to me!
@historyandhearsay6 күн бұрын
Hey girl! I was trying to research this today and I cannot find any information on it! Do you have a website or a book or anything that you can refer me to? I would love to do a video on it!
@marcicerqueti90258 күн бұрын
I am not going to be watching this video. The first minute has made it impossible. Having some stupid woman so happy and jovial when about to start describing Shoah is disgusting. Respect and care should always be at the forefront when making such historical presentations.
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
Sorry you feel that way. You would probably have to watch the whole video to see that I take this very seriously.
@tell-me-a-story-8 күн бұрын
It feels weird that her body has gotten so much attention. I wish we knew more about her when she was alive.
@historyandhearsay8 күн бұрын
It really is sad :/
@tell-me-a-story-8 күн бұрын
It feels weird that her body has gotten so much attention. I wish we knew more about her when she was alive.