JFK ...was a hero to all ! I love the inauguration speech, it breathes 🔥
@littlerinemustfall16 күн бұрын
I love the Korean delegate speech! But, I'm still amazed to all of them and wished to hear more from other delegates!
@NerdsMakeMedia16 күн бұрын
We created a documentary and reunited some of the students - 62 years after their Forum: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fHndnYuCpK-Lr9Usi=04Q5m2FHgN9TL7gY
@NerdsMakeMedia16 күн бұрын
Here is the project's webpage: www.nerdsmakemedia.com/films#/the-world-we-wanted/
@NonahAlyss26 күн бұрын
Great analysis, thank you! I need some advice: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
@AlisonCassidy26 күн бұрын
Notable is the complete lack of women! It would be 1955 before my own country (Ireland) would join.
@NerdsMakeMedia26 күн бұрын
@@AlisonCassidy we noticed that as well. Those were not the good old days.
@jm0072729 күн бұрын
Grew up on the western shore, just across n way south. Plenty of fish, crabs crawling everywhere n grass shrimp in the 60's. Changed rapidly after around 1974. Their was a terrible red tide or some poison thrown into it is what it seemed. Killed most everything, the reads n grasses too. What's growing now is a hybrid that was planted. I miss the beauty, the quiet n all the crabbing n fishing I did. Thanks for the remembrances. ❤
@KayinnaStraughter-jx7dhАй бұрын
Pennsylvania's electric chair that's all they want to see that's good
@luistpuigАй бұрын
My father Tomas Puig, my mother Mirta Puig, my paternal grandmother Carmen Puig, my little brother Leonardo Puig, and I came during the Mariel Boatlift, I was almost 15 years old. Ten years later now a sailor in the US Navy I was driving a nuclear powered, nuclear armed ballistic missile submarine, the USS Henry M. Jackson SSBN-730 Blue Crew (1990-1994). The greatness of this nation where someone like me, a communism escapee can accomplish great achievements.
@NerdsMakeMediaАй бұрын
Bless you for sharing your story with us. The reason we post these U.S. Government films is to hear stories like yours. How wonderful.
@felicitytoadАй бұрын
🥁🎅
@patrickross3391Ай бұрын
Nadia
@unbreakable7633Ай бұрын
This man wrote some excellent books. I consider his WEALTH AND DEMOCRACY the truth about the US government and how both parties let the rich use the US treasury as their piggy bank, proving Andrew Jackson right in his Veto of the Bank of the United States Bill.
@BluesUrbano22Ай бұрын
Woooow! Great doc! You asked for help to identify the people in the film, so here are my 2 cents. The radio announcer is “Sunshine” Sonny Payne. Thanks for sharing! What a find!!!
@snertsterАй бұрын
Very cool. Lousy sub titles though.
@NerdsMakeMediaАй бұрын
@@snertster sorry about that. I will check them. It takes a great deal of time to correct the auto generated subtitles.
@graemebowring49962 ай бұрын
Probably because they would be a death trap on today's roads!
@warrenrobinson15252 ай бұрын
My mother was born I’m Maryland. When I was in my early 20’s I used to visit my relatives in Dundalk during the summertime . we would take their boat and go hard crabbing in the bay. We dropped eel tied to a long line with a weight on each end and a float in the bay. After waiting the boat returned to the line. My job was to man a net on a long stick scooping any crab that came up as the boat ran parallel to our line and bait in the water. We filled a bushel basket with crabs. They said I was a natural. Later we Cooked them in my uncles back yard, had a feast in the kitchen cracking the shells on a table covered in newspapers. It was a warm summer night and We ate like kings. The blood of my ancestors runs in me and I will always remember theses days in warm regard! Long live the memories of the watermen who pulled a living from the Chesapeake bay.
@NerdsMakeMedia2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing your great story with us.
@StarShoemaker-b2g2 ай бұрын
❤🎉❤🎉 Congratulations my King Sure Does ... Is a
@AlisonCassidy2 ай бұрын
Hawaiian-Americans of Japanese descent were treated shamefully during and after WWII. They were fearless in their struggle to defend America yet were not treated as equals. I know people that are hurting to this day, as a result of that injustice.
@jamscout752 ай бұрын
I need to FIND Camp Schmitt. Where is it?
@NerdsMakeMedia2 ай бұрын
@@jamscout75 troop33.takomaparkscouts.org/
@NerdsMakeMedia2 ай бұрын
@@jamscout75 visit their website
@joshturner15913 ай бұрын
This is so so good. Worcester County here
@davidhiggins86973 ай бұрын
That’s my Grandfather and Uncle
@libertycoffeehouse39443 ай бұрын
Well this is not correct. You are using presentism to understand the past you assume the constitution was intended for white people to subdue people of color. You are reading history backwards instead of forwards. Start with Edward the Confessor and then read forward and you will see how flawed your historical research is. The US constitution is an English/British document. The 1600s in America was dominated by white contract slaves not Africans. By the early 1700s, African slavery surpassed white indentured labor but white contract laborers continued until the 1830s. You also leaving out the role Africa played in the slave trade as well as Charles IIs role in starting the African Slave trade. Today the United Nations is taking over the sovereignty of many nations and they believe in unlimited government. You need to appreciate the constitution. Remember we do not follow the constitution anymore. Woodrow Wilson gave his New Freedom Speech claiming a living breathing constitution which is the British system. It is amazing that African Americans are arguing for an unlimited government like the African Slave Kings and the Stuart Dynasty had that started the Royal African Corporation. Unlimited government is the friend of slavery. Start fighting against the UN which is controlled by banking families that want one world totalitarian state.
@libertycoffeehouse39443 ай бұрын
Looks like he was right!
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
@@libertycoffeehouse3944 I wish more people knew about him. It’s difficult to get the word out, but we’re trying. Thanks for watching
@libertycoffeehouse39443 ай бұрын
@@NerdsMakeMedia He tried to keep the government limited. My favorites are people like Luther Martin, John Dickinson, Roger Sherman, John Rutledge and others who saved us. Madison wanted a national not a federal government. We owe gratitude to these individuals because the Federal Republic would have consolidated even quicker than it has. It is utterly corrupt today. We do not follow the constitution at all today.
@speedrunner99073 ай бұрын
I don’t agree with all of Noam’s assertions, and I highly recommend just reading Wealth of Nations for yourself. Do 1 chapter a month, maybe a page or two at breakfast, and you’ll get through it.
@baltimoreluke3 ай бұрын
that screen door @0:59 is legit.
@Rogers_Ranger3 ай бұрын
Grandma had crab boats , Wards of North Beach , They changed over to smoke bluefish and a seafood shack.
@homeyleclerk46323 ай бұрын
This is the best argument against AI I've heard. Thank you for posting, knowing I'll never have the balls to commit to this incredibly hard work and life of these men. Amen to them.
@JAKECOT_CENTER3 ай бұрын
Nice little behind the scenes of Sesame Street and Emmet Otter’s Jugband Christmas
@glendapeterson11803 ай бұрын
My husband returned from Vietnam just in time to meet Camille. He was a Seabee, and they were just told a big storm was coming. He looked around the base at Gulf Port and herded his platoon into a tank. They spent the night there. The next morning the base was gone and the tank had been moved quite a ways. He and some pals immediately began giving out water and MREs to survivors. He also checked on the many people he knew in the destroyed city. He told me about finding bodies high in the trees. One he caught the smell of death, which he knew well, and followed it until the found an old lady in a tree. RIP, Hubby.
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
@@glendapeterson1180 thank you for sharing your amazing story.
@awjenning3 ай бұрын
...and he will save this country.
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
@@awjenning it is up to all the people working together to make the country better, not one person. Counting on “saviors” is dangerous. Beware false prophets as the scripture says.
@Call-me-Ishmael3 ай бұрын
Beautiful restored film - the story of the mighty Mississippi.
@gc21613 ай бұрын
No one knows, except Noam.
@j4b4j4b53 ай бұрын
I love this little slice of Americana. Two things, however, I must say. The description in the information section of the "sea of Whiteness" was completely unnecessary. It's just another sign of the ignorance portrayed by many of today's current crop of self-important media, and their obsession with virtue-signaling. Many people of all races attended these State Fairs, and continue to this day. Secondly, yes, the Kennedy assassination was right around the corner - about one month away. HOWEVER, a little known fact is that at this very state fair, an exhibit known as 'How Hollywood makes Movies' was run and operated by a man named Jacob Rubinstein - AKA Jack Ruby - the nightclub owner who shot and killed Lee Oswald, the believed assassin at the time. AND, at this location (and it's IN THIS FILM) is the "Women's Building," which was originally set to be the location President Kennedy would speak after the motorcade was set to conclude. At the last minute, the locale was changed to the Trade mart. Of course, Kennedy never made it. I will try now to view some of the other videos, hoping I won't be beaten over the head by those attempting to demonstrate their moral superiority.
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
@@j4b4j4b5 thank you for your very informative comment. I never heard that story about Ruby. To explain why I wrote sea of whiteness: your comment proves my point. If a great variety of people attended the fair you could never learn this from watching this U.S. government film. Why? Because these films tended to whitewash American culture and ignore minorities. We have a two hour program titled Whitewashing US history that is a survey of this problem particularly in classroom films of the time. I felt compelled to add that line in this description because the film is great, and fun, and entertaining but it is also Cold War propaganda that depicts an America that never really existed. But please check out our collections of films and thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts. Also , my description of the program does seem a bit over the top now as I read it. Thanks for calling me on the language. I'm not really a member of the "media" but I will try to be more thoughtful in the future and allow people to come to their own conclusions, unless a film is being very dishonest.
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
@@j4b4j4b5 The "Whitewashing" program, fyi: kzbin.info/www/bejne/e3LIkmuLoK1nec0si=RzJ65NhWcV4O718Z
@j4b4j4b53 ай бұрын
@@NerdsMakeMedia I agree with you that there was absolutely a cold war propaganda that pervaded the media at the time; however I don't believe "race" was the at the centerpiece of that propaganda. It was simply Americanism, and anti-Communism. That whites were featured prominently was not, I would argue, an intentional whitewashing, but rather an appeal to the people whom they figured was their main audience. Although there were true horrors in the 'deep south'- where firehoses were being turned on Americans - we need to remember that blacks were advancing far better in American society in 1963 than in any year since. What the Civil Rights Act did in 1964 to the African American population was immediately reverse this trend, cause dependence on government, ignite the meteoric rise in single-parent households and out-of-wedlock births. It fostered a culture of distrust and the rise of the Black Panthers, upward trends in urban violence and more. You tube videos from the day of JFK's assassination are striking in their in-the-moment revelations as to what streets in most American cities actually looked like.
The Catholic Church supported the Nazis and gave them lots of money
@KOFAKEDEM3 ай бұрын
The Taiwanese welcome was most orderly. Korea used more Chinese characters in 1960.
@trith723 ай бұрын
This reeks of low IQ marxist propaganda and stupidity. Be better people, if that's possible for you guys on the left. You do realize you have way more in common with the nazi party than anyone on the right does.....grow up.
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
So the US Army made this film in 1946 and you are calling them Marxist and low IQ for trying to battle bigots? This isn’t a leftist film. This is an anti fascist, anti racism film. That should unite Americans.
@nbrado3 ай бұрын
what is this leftwing cringe!!!! pathetic.
@jackgrimaldi86853 ай бұрын
Channel should be called Nerds Fake Media. Wrapping yourself in the American flag doesn't make you a patriot. Try harder! 😂
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
It’s a peace flag, not an American flag. What makes this fake?
@64MDW3 ай бұрын
Nice try, liars. When are you going to pull your head out of your collective rear end and quit gas lighting. It's anti ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION. No one is against legal immigration. I write as the descendent of both maternal and paternal immigrants who came to the US legally. They obeyed the law and didn't come here to work the system and turn the country into a giant ATM. Jeez, you're truly despicable.
@NerdsMakeMedia3 ай бұрын
The Haitians in Springfield are legal immigrants. The city has been turned upside down because of bullshit lies like in the 1947 film. Don’t pretend this is only about illegal immigration. When people seek asylum from a dangerous situation it is not illegal.
@debtshredder49283 ай бұрын
No comparison to what's going on today
@ominousparallel38543 ай бұрын
Really?
@jackgrimaldi86853 ай бұрын
@@ominousparallel3854 Yeah, really! This is a tds coping channel.
@WakeupPR3 ай бұрын
"they eating dogs" sounds familiar? or its okay in your world?
@ominousparallel38543 ай бұрын
@@jackgrimaldi8685 I just think it triggers people with TMS.
@ominousparallel38543 ай бұрын
@@jackgrimaldi8685 (Trump Mindlessness Syndrome)
@NerdsMakeMedia4 ай бұрын
Such a tragedy now. Violence only makes things worse. Thanks for watching.
@stischer474 ай бұрын
I had the fortune of visiting Lebanon before the civil war of the 70s. Beirut was known as the Paris of the Middle East for good reason. Beautiful country, beautiful cities, beautiful history, beautiful people. What a sadness now.
@michelbisson66454 ай бұрын
In fact Soros have done a closed society destroyed free speech free medias, justice and de mocracy as Soviet union Mussolini and Heather did
@NerdsMakeMedia4 ай бұрын
Huh? You must be referring to the evil Heather and her goons Rosemary and Basil?
@sammyvh114 ай бұрын
Hard hard work. Dwindling supply and pollution have taken its toll. I'm 66 and my dad used to tell me in 1910s Oysters and Crabs kept poor people fed. Now they are for the rich. We ate Oysters every Friday night in the winter 1960s. Crabs in the summer. Bought our stuff from an 80 year old guy on Water Street Baltimore City and can't remember his name. He used to say to me ..."Son there ain't a crab in that Bay worth more then 25 cents. But if people will give me more I'll take it!!"
@eprohoda4 ай бұрын
Nerdsmkemedia. interesting trip!catch ya later. :))
@LBS44 ай бұрын
Born & raised on the Eastern Shore, thank you!
@ChesapeakeDan51505 ай бұрын
You have anymore of these, keep them coming. Thanks for posting this.
@NerdsMakeMedia5 ай бұрын
I don't have any other films on the Chesapeake Bay, but I will search around and see what I can find. Thanks for watching!
@finscreenname5 ай бұрын
Lived on Kent Island as a kid during the 1970's and was up at 4am many Saturdays to go out bluefishing. It was a different world back then.
@blurblarted5 ай бұрын
My dad came during this he was alone and 19 and had been allowed to leave as he was a political prisoner at the time for fleeing the mandated cuban military where he was being treated like a slave cutting sugar cane. They did in fact empty the prisons and the mental institutions by sending them to the united states along with all of those who chose to come to be with family in the US. It's a tragedy. His story is long and amazing. Thank you for uploading.
@blurblarted5 ай бұрын
He never fails to mention how amazing the US government was to them upon arrival, offering them apples and coca cola which he had never had either of before. God bless america
@tarikabaraka22515 ай бұрын
En 1969, Kevin Phillips publicó el revolucionario libro “The Emerging Republican Majority” (La mayoría republicana emergente)