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@Bibidybobidy6 ай бұрын
I have to say, you have the best biographies. If I want to know about someone, I go straight to your channel. Excellent production.
@davidcisco40367 ай бұрын
“Since I entered politics, I have chiefly had men's views confided to me privately. Some of the biggest men in the United States, in the field of commerce and manufacture, are afraid of something. They know that there is a power somewhere so organized, so subtle, so watchful, so interlocked, so complete, so pervasive, that they better not speak above their breath when they speak in condemnation of it.” ― Woodrow Wilson (Perhaps he was ordered to do all those horrible things out of fear for himself / loved ones.)
@Clonetrooper11398 ай бұрын
The Epitome of the old "Dixiecrat".
@familykaplan13418 ай бұрын
Overrated
@familykaplan13418 ай бұрын
Set Civil Rights back 50 years!
@andrejamison27237 ай бұрын
@@familykaplan1341that's depends
@ericholdsworth66117 ай бұрын
Except he was from NJ. Democrats have always danced with the devil to maintain power, they do it now and they did it then. The most vile party is history.
@trump45and2zig-zags7 ай бұрын
So today's dem, like joe bribem? Lol
@bob_sled_94678 ай бұрын
"I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit." - Woodrow Wilson. Wilson himself realized how awful the Federal Reserve Act was in his dying days, but this documentary praises it and glosses over how it was passed in the Senate two days before Christmas, with only a few Senators present.
@memorymeme518 ай бұрын
In hindsight it was still a good thing it passed no matter what
@ttrippa12958 ай бұрын
@@memorymeme51why
@shirleygooch95258 ай бұрын
No it wasn't.
@electronicsworkshawp8 ай бұрын
sit down
@a.leemorrisjr.92558 ай бұрын
Really has little to do with the Feds, those guys are private bankers. Jefferson had warned of the dangers of a centralized national banking system & Jackson opposed it with a passion. All I know is "American Dream" began turning into nightmare in the '70s.
@ethanramos44418 ай бұрын
“The government, which was designed for the people, has got into the hands of the bosses and their employers, the special interest. An invisible empire has been set up above the forms of democracy.” Woodrow Wilson
@SuperGreatSphinx7 ай бұрын
Avarice
@tonycorn54337 ай бұрын
@@SuperGreatSphinx jews
@tonycorn54337 ай бұрын
communist jews
@matthewbigelow50967 ай бұрын
On his deathbed he would regret all the horrible things he did. Far too late. He had no humility until death. The opposite of what God wants from us humans
@thekingofkingsrp6 ай бұрын
@@matthewbigelow5096I don't even believe he regretted it. I think he was just scared of his fate.
@danielsantiagourtado34308 ай бұрын
Thanks For this! Love your content guys!❤❤❤❤❤
@miyojewoltsnasonth21598 ай бұрын
Ah, the good 'ol Woody Wilson. As I begin watching this, the first thing I'm thinking about is how much of the *NOT* so good Woody Wilson will get talked about.
@justinekalezi2125 ай бұрын
I adore your voice ❤️
@AlanRoehrich96517 ай бұрын
He started the "administrative bureaucracy of experts" that has been the downfall of the nation. He should be reviled, and universally loathed.
@LorenEpperson7 ай бұрын
Théodore Roosevelt Was Right When He All But Called Him Yellow
@Redjoekido6 ай бұрын
How so?
@mznxbcv123455 ай бұрын
He was Bernard Baruch's boy
@effewe25 ай бұрын
And the Income Tax. Ripping off hardworking Americans!
@andrewfrancis72725 ай бұрын
@@effewe2 Oh ffs. Income tax is a feature of every civilised country. Sure there's room for criticism on details but how else are basic services we all enjoy paid for.
@Goodnewsglobal7 ай бұрын
Super videos. Really enjoying the US presidents ones and the James Connolly episode was very informative. I'd love to see a Michael Collins episode. Ireland's greatest man. 😊
@landsea73327 ай бұрын
Woodrow Wilson's 14 points Clemenceau said the Good Lord himself only had 10 . .
@Cjephunneh8 ай бұрын
In 1919 Ho Chi Minh made a special appeal to Wilson so that the USA would help Vietnam achieve independence. Woodrow Wilson refused to take Ho Chi Minh seriously or even respond.
@lochdedy86748 ай бұрын
I bet Woodrow Wilson was thinking: "I don't care for a poor man's coolie," when reached out from Ho Chi Minh.
@elwin387 ай бұрын
Bit America in the ass decades later.
@andrewwhite19687 ай бұрын
This is why I love the Internet. Ho was a 20-something year old nobody in 1919. It was to Eisenhower he wrote in the 1950s asking for help, to no avail.
@elvisii42206 ай бұрын
@@andrewwhite1968hes right, calm down
@andrewwhite19686 ай бұрын
@JohnSmithNadowa what, a 20-something year old expat living in France is entitled to an an answer from an American president? Ha Ha. The Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam 30 years later is a different story. Leave Wilson out of that, he was dead.
@annamaedevlin17138 ай бұрын
The board of trustees at Princeton removed his name on campus in 2020. I wonder hoe many of todays politicians will meet the same!
@andrewfusco85808 ай бұрын
If Wilson wasn't such a squalid and overt white supremacist (back when this was still a thing), his name would still be up there. The rest of his agenda and legacy are unproblematic to America's elites.
@joep20608 ай бұрын
@@Jason-gg4lmwell you seem to be moonbat
@robertcottam88248 ай бұрын
@@Jason-gg4lm You do, poppet. You commented. Toodles
@krggallagher82008 ай бұрын
Great President...
@JamesSmith-dg5ny4 ай бұрын
Why did Princeton remove his name ?
@ruthie-U4y8 ай бұрын
He ,for me, was one of America's worst president list
@AJP_178 ай бұрын
Let’s not forget Jackson’s treatment of the natives
@goldentaco49707 ай бұрын
@@AJP_17omg I get so tired of hearing this sob story. That was the way of the world and it helped create our vast Nation.
@patrickgrove34697 ай бұрын
@@goldentaco4970 Sob story,you need help
@elvisii42206 ай бұрын
@@goldentaco4970yes so the flood of immigrants is the way of the world too so i dont want to hear any sob stories 😂😂😂
@MrThumbs636 ай бұрын
@@goldentaco4970 oh, so segregation is the way of the world now? You progressives never quit.
@brokenbones786297 ай бұрын
Damn the health deterioration in the lead up to his death made me think he was like 86 by the time he died 😂
@MaWa-pw6fg4 ай бұрын
if only it would have been before he was 5 instead of 67
@SW27998 ай бұрын
I absolutely agree with the comments. In 2024, with the hindsight that we have Woodrow Wilson would have been a bad president for today’s times. But he wasn’t President today, he was president well over 100 years ago. What he did was remarkable for his time. I know many of you have never studied it in school, but this is what history is about. Sure, in June 2024, he seems like a repulsive person. In today’s standards, he likely is. But by the standards of that day, and that time, he was a well respected diplomat, and World leader, who came up with the idea of a League Of Nations, 20+ years before the actual United Nations Unfortunately, or fortunately, we cannot change what has happened in the past. Woodrow Wilson and his times were what they were. We can learn from what happened in his times so that hopefully we don’t make the same mistakes again, but we can’t cancel the period in which he influenced the world. Again, that is wha history is all about. It’s not a pretty story in many cases, but it is what it is.
@andrejamison27237 ай бұрын
I disagree. Morals are Morals.
@erikriza71657 ай бұрын
The criticism of him that I remember, when i had history class in school many years ago, was that he spent so much time in Europe, and little time in the United States. The League of Nations was a good and noble idea. History should give him credit for that. WW I was supposed to be the war to end all wars.
@patland17627 ай бұрын
@@andrejamison2723 Time you learn some history. It will be good for you. Morals change with time, change drawmatically.
@andrejamison27237 ай бұрын
@@patland1762 I know history. History and time changes. Making good character decisions based off of morals don't. Anytime you accept bad morals decisions and pass them off as law or normalize the behavior, the civilization or society will be eventually destroyed.
@heyhandersen58027 ай бұрын
And that's why it must be taught in the schools. Who wants to repeat some of this stuff.
@The1cdccop8 ай бұрын
You would think someone with his means would have visited a dentist. The man had rotten teeth which probably led to his poor health.
@SuperGreatSphinx7 ай бұрын
Saint Apollonia
@Fliegerabwehrkanone-re1ty8 ай бұрын
this man's policies helped lead to WW2.
@Loe_Jist8 ай бұрын
No, it wasn't Wilson's fault. The European Entente powers would've slammed Germany with even more punitive measures in the wake of the war if he wasn't involved. Though it didn't mean much in the grand scheme, Wilson actually convinced some of the delegates to scale back those various retribution clauses in the Treaty of Versailles. The League of Nations WAS an excellent idea and the precursor to the UN, but they didn't give themselves enough power to take active steps to curb the possibility of a war. Their lack of collective power combined with the Treaty of Versailles all set the stage for WWII.
@andrejamison27237 ай бұрын
@@Loe_Jistyes it was. The reason we got into world war I in the first place was because of Firestone Henry Ford and the other businessmen who had foreign interests.
@TheLastAngryMan016 ай бұрын
@@Loe_JistIndeed. Georges Clemenceau once said that Wilson bored him with his Fourteen Points on reconstruction of the European order after the war, as “God Almighty has only ten”.
@schoolofgrowthhacking6 ай бұрын
1:00:55 "on the issue of the size of reparations that Germany was expected to pay, Wilson proposed a modest sum of some 30 million while Clemenceau and his British counterpart David Lloyd George advocated much larger sums. Wilson wanted to show some mercy to the defeated nations."
@Gregoryking-e9q5 ай бұрын
First people forget that America is a democracy so he have to ask the American people do they want this certain things like the treaty of a side or the or the League of Nations is the American people decision because they don't want to vote him in and they can also vote him out if they don't like the way our president do things in the next four years we can vote him out
@alyviaashley6 ай бұрын
Good timing on this Bio!
@TomMason-io1yn6 ай бұрын
The crazy part about his decision is if the American people truly felt disgruntled about the federal policies about gov. oversight and central banking, then why do they continually support those policies today. This wasnt prez Wilsons decision but Americans alone. When will Americans begin to accountable for their own mistakes? And until we do we dont deserve the freedoms we've been so graciously given!
@chisomongongola94937 ай бұрын
He was a giant of his time. Complete with prejudices of hos time. He could have done more for black Americans but thats his story.
@tomm75058 ай бұрын
Just a little clarification: Texas was not "conquered" by the US from Mexico. Texas fought a war of independence against Mexico in 1835 - 36 and became an independent nation from 1836 to 1845. Texas was then admitted to the US by treaty at the very end of 1845 and formally annexed into the US. The remaining states of the Southwest came into the US as a result of "conquest" but Texas did not.
@sebastiaanvandervalk68698 ай бұрын
A war where the USA did also fight on. If you look for a example in the current age, the Krim annexation of Russia is good example.
@allenraysmith68858 ай бұрын
❤Great documentary! Thanks for posting!❤
@alexcrosbie3167 ай бұрын
Unfortunately Woodrow Wilson has been overshadowed by FDR but this doesn't detract from the proposition that he started the country on its path to the creation of the administrative state.
@marlinda68516 ай бұрын
How's that a good thing?
@matthewhedrichjr.54455 ай бұрын
I still prefer FDR better. So is Coolidge
@markopinteric8 ай бұрын
He is considered an absolute hero, a liberator, for the small nations of Europe. Streets and institutions are named after him, he is one of the few US presidents who is taught about in schools... For example, I just checked and he is the only American (both in North and South America) who has a street named after him in my hometown.
@canman50608 ай бұрын
His so called 'liberation' in Europe has given rise to the birth of one of the world most terrifying tyrant Adolf Hitler.
@Fliegerabwehrkanone-re1ty8 ай бұрын
better listen to the Great war channel post WW1. See what those new liberated nations did to each other.
@abraxasjinx52076 ай бұрын
It's crazy when you notice the birth to death years of everyone mentioned in this documentary: almost no one lived to see 60 years. Almost all died in their 50s, what is now considered later middle aged. And this is less than 100 years ago. Will we see an average adult live to 120 or longer in the next century?
@MrNiceGuyHistory13 күн бұрын
Life expectancy has been trending back downwards the past several years. I doubt there will ever be an average of 120 without some serious biological, mechanical or genetic augmentations to the majority of our bodies.
@CAMERONHAOL4 ай бұрын
I'm have been surprised and a little puzzled at this renewed interest in Wilson, a man whose 2nd term ended over 100 yrs ago!😮
@toddmcghee22079 күн бұрын
The people are curious about the Democrat and Republican history. Not much has changed. We're just as evil but at a much larger scale.
@MarcPlaysDrums8 ай бұрын
You can tell this guy is British. At 6:03 he mentioned Hamilton but shows a painting of Thomas Jefferson with Hamiltons name under it.
@xdanbo18597 ай бұрын
You need to look closer, since that is a famous painting of Hamilton. Its in the National Gallery in DC.
@Gordon-hx8cp6 ай бұрын
Even stevie wonder could tell its not Jefferson
@abraxasjinx52076 ай бұрын
Regardless of who the painting is of, you can tell he's British cause he talks like that. 16:30 he pronounces "sexual" as "sect-sual", like Woody was an ape in a nature documentary.
@MarcPlaysDrums5 ай бұрын
@@Gordon-hx8cp actually, the guys right. I googled it. I think the people who own the painting miss labels it because it’s clearly not Hamilton.
@XOPOIIIO8 ай бұрын
I better remember him as one of the suspects in Heisenberg case.
@Romaboo6808 ай бұрын
What a terrible president.
@christopherrobertson77238 ай бұрын
What a terrible person!
@LimerickWarrior18 ай бұрын
He will always be the gutless coward that sat back and excused Britain's actions in ireland.
@DesmondThibeaux8 ай бұрын
@@MMerlyn91You are the dumbest person I have ever heard
@LucasIsBossNo218 ай бұрын
@@MMerlyn91yeah right Versailles Treaty was a half baked treaty that directly led to WW2 breaking out but whatever stay in your ivory tower.....
@Thor133328 ай бұрын
@@MMerlyn91🤡
@zeroconsequences7 ай бұрын
This documentary thinks Wilson playing Birth of a Nation at the White House was worse than creating the Federal Reserve. I beg to differ.
@effewe25 ай бұрын
The Income Tax was the worst.
@MrNiceGuyHistory13 күн бұрын
I would say his bungling of the post war peace for his personal vanity projects was worse than both. These mistakes set the pieces in place for the expansion of communism, fascism and the Second World War along with the hundreds of millions of deaths and unimaginable horrors these events would bring over the next several decades.
@miyojewoltsnasonth21598 ай бұрын
Ah, the good 'ol Woody Wilson. As I begin watching this, the first thing I'm thinking about is how much of the *NOT* so good 'ol Woody Wilson will get talked about.
@kenlodge33995 ай бұрын
In spite of Wilson's glaring "Black" Stain on his Presidency, as far as world history goes, always considered the World Wars a making of European snobbery and hubris. Wilson had foresight and courage that almost bordered on naivete when he introduced his, 14 Points. After saving their bacon by winning the War, he was summarily pushed aside and crumpled under that malignancy which ruled Europe for centuries. Is my opinion payback finally arrived big time with Eisenhower crushing the "Powers" of Europe, England and France, when he squashed their (1956) Suez Crisis, giving them both a good swat on the nose before sending them scurrying in shame all the way home.
@armychapmike6 ай бұрын
Booker T!!!!! Finally
@katherinecollins46857 ай бұрын
Presented well
@maureenjackson20418 ай бұрын
Hitler would have admired woodrow wilson,he was truly obnoxious. Posted from 🇬🇧
@maryjones-ellis102Ай бұрын
I’m gonna tell you something and hopefully you’ll get something out of this but Hitler and Wilson is burning in hell right now. There’s been the rest of the life in hell don’t make the same mistake. Learn to love people and stop with the hatred the first commandment in the Bible is to love love thy neighbor as you love yourself, don’t make the same mistake. They did your eyeballs open up in hell there’s no coming out of it. Ask the Lord to give you a new heart as you need one before you leave this world. Love you.
@MrNiceGuyHistory13 күн бұрын
No "would have" about it. Hitler and the Nazis took direct inspiration from Wilson's segregationist policies.
@Fourwedge8 ай бұрын
Federal reserve smh
@Lily-gq9ky8 ай бұрын
I really appreciate this video. He was a brillant individual, had many good policies which are intact today. He has my respect for thinking of the workers and poor. 1:16:22
@matthewhedrichjr.54455 ай бұрын
The mastermind behind the Great Depression because of the interest rates going poor in the Federal Reserve.
@Randy-Snorton8 ай бұрын
Seeing a lot of ppl in the comments saying how bad he was as president. In short can anyone tell me why ? I’m British so I don’t have the same understanding as an American would
@ttrippa12958 ай бұрын
Privately owned federal reserve act, owned(at least in part) by the same people who own the bank of England
@eduardogutierrez46987 ай бұрын
Income tax, Federal Reserve, ...etc
@alanaadams74407 ай бұрын
Progressive socialist
@creid75377 ай бұрын
He was a furry
@MrNiceGuyHistory13 күн бұрын
Passing and enforcing the Espionage Act to prosecute thousands of people who were critical of the war or conscription.
@dbhgray7 ай бұрын
I've stood beside Wilson's crypt in the National Cathedral in DC. He DID accomplish many 'progressive' reforms in the U.S. and tried to form a world alliance that MIGHT have gained world peace, and maybe prevented WW2 if his opponents had agreed to it. It's true he had the poor opinions on race that were very common in his day, but he TRIED to do what he could. He was a far cry better than many (most?) politicians today.
@mznxbcv123455 ай бұрын
He was Bernard Baruch's boy
@effewe25 ай бұрын
BS.
@jessehowell-t2m5 ай бұрын
He hated Black people and had no plans to improve their living conditions
@tlrlml8 ай бұрын
I won't say anything for or against him (yes I actually do have a position, but it isn't necessary to speak it), I will just say that he would be perfectly happy with where the country has gone since his Presidency, and where it is right now. He was a man that can understand that you need a few bumps in the road if you want an excuse to tear it up, move it, and repave it......
@marie_h11047 ай бұрын
Wilson was one of the worst Presidents we had the misfortune of electing.
@dennismerlijn74596 ай бұрын
If you elect him it cant be a misfortune, its just stupid. Big chance there be stupid again in 2025. We are laughing oure asses of here in europe what a circus
@effewe25 ай бұрын
And black folks continue to vote Democratic.....SMH!
@Dana_inc5 ай бұрын
@@dennismerlijn7459you think this is funny?! What an idiot!
@Donny_Shoes5 ай бұрын
He helped set the tone, destroying the American aborigine 😢
@Backwoods_8708 ай бұрын
Grand Wizard
@calfiger5 ай бұрын
Two words frightening in their accuracy
@effewe25 ай бұрын
His hatred of black people, who suffered so much with the Lynching that was going on back then, is second to none. He promised to do something to end lynching and did nothing. If he is in heaven, then send me downstairs. Eff him.
@martinalarcon31085 ай бұрын
And a democrat like bubba Clinton and crooked Hillary
@BeeKool__1138 ай бұрын
Shout out to my dude, Eugene V. Debbs!! Terre Haute remembers!!
@andrewfusco85808 ай бұрын
The only presidential candidate in 1912 worth voting for. Naturally, he finished in 4th place.
@BobBob-eb4io8 ай бұрын
@andrewfusco8580 roosevelt was a far superior choice to him
@BeeKool__1138 ай бұрын
@@andrewfusco8580 Prisoner 9653 ran for presidency in 1920 too
@andrewfusco85808 ай бұрын
@@Kruppt808 agreed. Debbs, Roosevelt, and Taft each had their flaws, but Wilson was a madman convinced of his own moral and intellectual superiority -- a far more dangerous and authoritarian character than the othe three.
@stephenheath84658 ай бұрын
I don't think the country would have voted a Socialist POTUS,still a fringe Ideology
@christopherrobertson77238 ай бұрын
The 20 Dollar Bill should have been changed long ago.
@familykaplan13418 ай бұрын
Absoeffinlutely
@familykaplan13418 ай бұрын
@@Jason-gg4lma hate monger shouldn’t be lionized!
@partysugar5197 ай бұрын
$20 cent piece ?
@ChuckHolland-i4b7 ай бұрын
That's Andrew Jackson not Woodrow Wilson....?
@christopherrobertson77237 ай бұрын
@@ChuckHolland-i4b You are absolutely right about that, but I still think that it’s past time for that change. I think that Wilson is on the 1,000 Dollar Bill which should also be changed for the same reason.
@aarondemiri4868 ай бұрын
Always enjoy studying this man.
@DevonDumpling1237 ай бұрын
If anyone asked me about Wilson all I know is the League of Nations
@theresalaux56558 ай бұрын
Good video! Terrible person!😢
@martinalarcon31085 ай бұрын
And a democrat no surprise there
@AloisTasiya7 ай бұрын
By my time for my old parish the next year to be there
@AloisTasiya7 ай бұрын
The 19th-23 is the first that you have anything for the excellent team
@johnweber45778 ай бұрын
I mean, “Illiberal Reformers: Race, Eugenics, and American Economics in the Progressive Era” by Thomas C. Leonard really illustrates that the whole racism thing was hardly exclusive to this particular progressive and even rather common.
@CAMERONHAOL4 ай бұрын
Colonel Edward House as always been a political mystery man..😮
@fritzbasset86458 ай бұрын
I'm an FDR Democrat but Wilson had his head screwed on backwards. TR, Taft or Charles Evans Hughes would have been better choices as US President, Hughes in particular. Throwing a hand grenade into the map of Europe in 1918 with the phrase of "self determination" merely established a whole lot of countries that weren't nations and fell apart once Adolf came around. The old monarchies weren't that terrible when one saw what replaced them. Woodrow's arteriosclerosis hit his brain first.
@jb-vb8un6 ай бұрын
Klansman on the Court In 1937 FDR appointed Alabama Senator Hugo Black to the Supreme Court. Black was a member of the Ku Klux Klan and built his career campaigning at Klan meetings. Black was well known for his anti-Catholic viewpoints. In Korematsu v. the United States, Black voted to uphold President Roosevelt's mass arrests and incarceration of Japanese men, women, and children based on race. President Roosevelt called Democrat Klansman Sen. Theodore Bilbo "a real friend of liberal government. Bilbo claimed himself to be "100 percent for Roosevelt...and the New Deal."[107] In a 1938 filibuster against anti-lynching legislation, Bilbo said on the Senate floor that the bill would “open the floodgates of hell in the South” by encouraging Black men to rape white women. Franklin Roosevelt nominated James F. Byrnes to the Supreme Court and was confirmed by the Democrat Senate in 1941. The NAACP opposed his confirmation in a telegram to the White House: “If Senator Byrnes at any time in his long public career failed to take a position inimical to the human and citizenship rights of 13 million American Negro citizens, close scrutiny of his record fails to reveal it.
@jb-vb8un6 ай бұрын
Opposition to anti-lynching law Segregationist senators Tom Connally, Walter F. George, Richard Russell, Jr., and Claude Pepper filibustering the Wagner-Van Nuys Act, an anti-lynching bill, in 1938; all four were liberal New Dealers. Despite insistence by leftists that the Democrat opposition to civil rights legislation (including anti-lynching legislation) was exclusively from "conservative"/Southern Democrats, it's important to note that a 1937 anti-lynching bill passed the House with opposition from both the Southern bloc in addition to 15 Northern Democrats.[112] Of those who voted on the legislation by party, it got 96% support from Republicans and only 62% from Democrats. In late July 1937, Senate Democrats successfully tabled an anti-lynching effort (introduced by pro-civil rights DINO Royal S. Copeland) twice. On July 26, the Senate voted 41-34 to kill an anti-lynching amendment,[113] with the "Yeas" including future Supreme Court justice Hugo Black and future Vice President Alben Barkley. Over a dozen Northern Democrats voted with the Southern bloc to kill the amendment. 61% of Democrats voted in favor of tabling. Five days later, the majority of Senate Democrats (66% of them) voted yet again to kill the amendment in a 46-39 vote.
@robertpolityka84648 ай бұрын
Wilson was an accidential President, who wouldnt have been elected by todays standards. 1) It would be more unlikely that The New Jersey party bosses would choose Wilson as their nominee, in 2024. They could see footage of Wilson on the internet. 2) Even if he won the Governorship, it would be unlikely that he'd get the nomination. Presidential Primaries would have a greater impact. Would Wilson's speaking skills come off as too condescending? Would Wilson's views on race be a hindrance to his nomination? 3) Could Wilson even get the nomination? The Democrats of 1912, had the infamous "two-thirds " rule, which is required for nominees. The Democrats of 2024, only required a simple majority of delegates. Speaker of the House Champ Clark had a simple majority of delegates in 1912. But, in an alternate 2024, that simple majority would get him the nomination. (An alternate 2024 would also give Clark, a strong support from Superdelegates. ) 4) Even if Wilson won the nomination, The Republicans would have had a more unified front. 2024 standards would have kept TR from being a candidate, because of the 22nd Amendment. (The 22nd Amendment came into effect in 1951.) TR would have likely supported Taft. But if the 22nd Amendment was not a factor, TR would have won the Republican Nomination, because of his victories in the primaries. Taft would have endorsed him. A unified Republican ticket would have the nominee with about 57 percent of the popular vote. The GOP nominee would have also won a majority of the Electoral College. (The only reason Wilson won the bulk of his Electoral Votes, in real timeline, outside the South, was because of the TR-Taft split in the popular votes.)
@DarthDread-oh2ne8 ай бұрын
Basically, Wilson couldn’t beat TR or Taft in a the fair fight.
@robertpolityka84648 ай бұрын
@DarthDread-oh2ne He couldn't win on a one-on-one match. Also, the Republicans had control of the White House for sixteen years. Other than the TR-Taft split (or fatigue of the Republicans being in charge for too long), were there any other factors that could have contributed to a Wilson victory?
@Loe_Jist8 ай бұрын
Wilson's victory in 1912, along with Debbs finishing as high as 4th place, essentially sent a message to both political parties: don't split the vote. Don't break rank. Nominate a candidate and go all in. We're stuck with the two party system as it is today thanks to that election. You don't see serious 3rd party contenders because neither party's members break rank. Actual competition on the same political side gets suppressed. A rogue politician from one party running as a 3rd party candidate siphons votes from the main candidate. In that scenario, like in 1912, the other guy wins. Nowadays, people know how it works so they keep their party members in line.
@Contessa63638 ай бұрын
There are NO STANDARDS TODAY IF YOU CAN ELECT 45!!!!!!
@marlomirre1617 ай бұрын
@@Contessa6363omg your TDS is hanging out all over🙄trust and believe bumblebiden wont be remembered fondly in history.
@agold21257 ай бұрын
Johns Hopkins. Not John
@basedtheologiangaming43188 ай бұрын
Please do Baruch Spinoza
@Gigantor30008 ай бұрын
What a horrible human being.
@JimmyWheel8 ай бұрын
Right you are
@mznxbcv123455 ай бұрын
He was Bernard Baruch's boy
@effewe25 ай бұрын
Beyond evil. That man is right up there with Hitler. I hate him forever!
@martinalarcon31085 ай бұрын
And a democrat like Barack Hussein Obama
@effewe25 ай бұрын
@@martinalarcon3108 Yes, the number race hustler was Obama.
@richardturner76645 ай бұрын
Thats o.k....🙄 For a moment. his Dirty Ass, done got it. Can't hurt Nobody else. he too, gonna give account for his deeds. isn't it Lovely 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@lucasrackley2507 ай бұрын
He’s like Obama but white.
@mznxbcv123455 ай бұрын
Woodrow Wilson AKA Bernard Baruch's emissary.
@EverydayWisdom8 ай бұрын
Hank and walter white debunking WW, says 'woodrow Wilson'
@johnharris66557 ай бұрын
Ruined this country with two amendments, 16th and 17th.
@effewe25 ай бұрын
100% . He was Evil.
@gsandy52355 ай бұрын
If Wilson had resisted the temptation to become involved in the war, the brutal outcome of the conflict may well have led to a more lasting peace. His ego couldn't resist the limelight of the postwar talks.
@chaimnisan28415 ай бұрын
‘It’s importance (of the FED) has been firmly demonstrated in recent times, in its role combating inflation in the 2020’s’ 🤣 ROFL LMAO 😂
@CommieGobeldygook7 ай бұрын
7:05 SHOCKER
@briansmith16336 ай бұрын
A monster
@jokerz79368 ай бұрын
WILSON!
@jakebate15338 ай бұрын
Nice reference to Cynical Historian.
@robertcottam88248 ай бұрын
Aha! You’re a fan of ‘The Inbetweeners’. Respect.
@drmodestoesq8 ай бұрын
@@robertcottam8824 I thought it was a reference to the volleyball guy in Castaway with Tom Hanks.
@jokerz79368 ай бұрын
I'm a fan of the Inbetweeners and Castaway, but I was referencing the Cynical Historian.
@mirzadzomba98527 ай бұрын
Well, it is fine that Wilson is called out for his obvious racism. But how about his disgraceful contribution (as a historian) to lending academic credibility to the 'lost cause' myth (that still plagues the controversies around the American Civil War)? And how about his responsibility for the 'red scare' of 1919 - leaving a toxic legacy of curtailing civil rights in the face of political hysteria? The latter is probably the most regrettable omission in this documentary.
@pickledblowfish61786 ай бұрын
Given the soviet union spent millions a year since 1920 trying to subvert American culture and politics, while sending trained agents to take job in middle management of Washington, papers, and Hollywood, it's not really a hysteria, is it?
@andrewfrancis72725 ай бұрын
I don't defend those views but he was a man of his times. It does little good to judge anyone a century ago by the standards of 2024.
@mirzadzomba98525 ай бұрын
@@andrewfrancis7272 Oh, Wilson was horrendously prejudiced even by early 20th century standards. You should not worry about that. And the 'lost cause' myth was always flying in the face of established historical facts, no matter the calendar year.
@nikolai907 ай бұрын
Worst president ? Has no one heard of Warren Harding, Richard Nixon or James Buchanan?
@TheLastAngryMan016 ай бұрын
Andrew Jackson, Martin van Buren.
@effewe25 ай бұрын
Nixon was a GREAT president...he brought our troops home from the mistake that Wilson, JFK and LBJ created! OK!
@cpersiani4466Ай бұрын
@@TheLastAngryMan01Andrew Jackson was certainly controversial because of his treatment of native Indians However he was the only president to get us out of debt and was against the central banks and really took steps to eliminate that. And this was after the Rothchild war of 1812. Andrew Jackson was a pretty good president. If you look up what he did. Who cares about the Native American shit they did it to themselves anyway. Throwing out Central banks could’ve saved humanity from the New World Order
@LAbigsnoopac8 ай бұрын
Big reason why Japan became a hostile country
@25djkaysay7 ай бұрын
The damn income tax, come on man
@johnslovinsky8 ай бұрын
He’s the reason for income tax. Automatic L
@effewe25 ай бұрын
I will hate him forever and so will my kids and their kids....that man unleash hell on hard working Americans!
@jeancaron93257 ай бұрын
He was One of the Worst Ever.
@steve72205 ай бұрын
“Hold my beer”- Joe Biden 2024
@kithaha64918 ай бұрын
He was a great supremacist.
@martinalarcon31085 ай бұрын
And a true white privilege democrat 😮😢
@TrrrollinCuzItsFun-Relax4 ай бұрын
🤔Did I miss it OR did this totally omit the Spanish Flu of that time frame🤔 💯🤡💯🤡💯🤡💯🤡
@DietrichToepfer5 ай бұрын
America's economic weight was AS strong in 1918 AS that of all the Others combined. America Had the Power to decide what the Peace was to be Like. So America was responsible for what happened at Versailles.
@ZavionBooks-dk4hq4 ай бұрын
I find it interesting that a large degree of people are rendering opinions most of criticism woithout considering what were the political issues of the time. And applying his administration’s policies to the issues of today. Its insanity.
@Avatar1977Ай бұрын
His inability to read at an early age possibly contributed to him missing the bit where "all men are created equal"
@ronaldzent63217 ай бұрын
He was just basically, a product of his time.
@jameskpolkastronomyhistory59848 ай бұрын
I have a biography of Wilson it's by HW Brands
@bruno_loves_hops85948 ай бұрын
I’m currently reading about Franklin Delano Roosevelt by H.W. Brands. I plan on reading about Wilson, by the same author, next. Happy Reading to you!
@chessmaster7048 ай бұрын
Brands is a fantastic author
@JamesW2257 ай бұрын
Typical democrat
@jean-lucmathurin5663 ай бұрын
He behaved as if he was intellectually superior than most but was truly just a petulant human being loaded with prejudice. A real loser!
@Jupiterxice8 ай бұрын
Thats on guy that needed to be deleted.
@dalesmith47788 ай бұрын
Created income tax, the federal reserve and gave women the right to vote. The beginning of the end of the US.
@dalesmith47788 ай бұрын
@@pedanticradiator yea and look where we are
@patland17627 ай бұрын
@@dalesmith4778 Yes look, largest economy, world's largest oil producer, one of the highest standards of living.
@dalesmith47787 ай бұрын
@@patland1762 the economy is crashing, the dollar is going to shit, mentally ill people are celebrated, communists are in our government and are supported by brainwashed sheeple.
@joep20608 ай бұрын
Who the hell names their child Woodrow 😅 says all you need to know
@jakigogthecleric54618 ай бұрын
First name was Thomas. But yes Woodrow was definitely an interesting name
@paddyseamair63366 ай бұрын
When a nation speaks against its greatest men and ideals,under false slogans ,it is doomed!
@d0bsey8 ай бұрын
The only thing I know about Woodrow Wilson is that Americans refuse to talk about him and you're not allowed to ask & probably more importantly, that Bart Simpson invented an alias using his photo and name 'Woodrow' responding to a personals ad placed by his teacher Edna Krabappel. Eager to listen hoping we'll hit these important points.
@سقراط-ي7ز8 ай бұрын
ويلسن رئيس أمريكي رائع صاحب النقاط ال 14 المثاليه التي لو عمل بها العالم لعاش في سعاده
@maryjones-ellis102Ай бұрын
He was a horrible person now he’s swimming in hell don’t make the same mistake and lift up your eyeballs in hell first commandment in the Bible is love love thy neighbor as you would love yourself we think all that because there’s no coming back from hell you’ll be there for all eternallychange your ways before you leave this earth and your heart
@TrrrollinCuzItsFun-Relax4 ай бұрын
It was as if there was at least two Woodrow Wilsons..... split personality maybe😳 Very conflcted😐 💯🤡💯🤡💯🤡💯🤡
@donnafrflorida568 ай бұрын
Democrat
@ron27601Ай бұрын
A truly dreadful man and president.
@WilliamFlickinger-y8f5 ай бұрын
He was one he🎉was one smarpresidenttpist smartest president he came up with the leagiue of nation that fdrused to es
@WilliamFlickinger-y8f5 ай бұрын
Smartest president only one with a phd
@normanzimmerman50296 ай бұрын
Thou shalt honor god and love others…self fails every time
@nikeboy247 ай бұрын
Lucrative cotton trade?! That’s what we calling it 😂
@GeorgeCaulfield17 ай бұрын
Just another stock standard democrat. He just was willing to say what he really thought about people out loud.
@effewe25 ай бұрын
And the Black folks bought that from him....ignoring the GOP who did so much for them after the civil war!
@steven206537 ай бұрын
In my estimation, the worst President to ever hold the office
@NAHAJI1337 ай бұрын
Biden
@creid75377 ай бұрын
Biden’s trying to take that title - in half the time.
@quarters-eye89228 ай бұрын
When are Democrats NOT divisive.
@Thor133328 ай бұрын
🤡
@adamhunter57668 ай бұрын
Says the party that threw a temper tantrum and stormed the Capitol because they lost
@greengelacid20618 ай бұрын
@@adamhunter5766yep the same party that thinks a rape victim should raise the rapist child…the same party that insist to throw the constitution out to put religion in public schools…the same party that bitches about border security then vote down a reasonable bill addressing that issue…the same party that white supremacy supports now…the GOP is a joke…
@williamstocker5848 ай бұрын
Adamhunter5766 no different from the people who burned down their own city’s. You democrats and republicans are all the same…same clowns different circus
@45jacky778 ай бұрын
@adamhunter5766 compare to the dems summer of love. 43 murders and billions of property damage.
@michaelborror43998 ай бұрын
Alexander Hamilton was his favorite?, well my favorite founding father was my ancestor thomas jefferson and I've got the thick cave lions mane to prove it, and even with people like mtg, I'm sure he'd still advocate for limited presidential power, with ridiculous battles against the insane and inane even amongst the best types.
@tabbydavis99548 ай бұрын
So is he your ancestor through his legitimate family, or Sally? How could he be anyone's favorite anything? Don't idolize slave holders. Or worse, a known slave rapist dude. An his family tried to disinterest and keep his descendants from Sally from having access to what is rightfully theirs. Do better.