HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Part 5 - FULL AudioBook | Greatest AudioBooks

HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Part 5: Sectional Conflict & Reconstruction - FULL AudioBook | Greatest AudioBooks
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Пікірлер: 23

  • @godswarriors7543
    @godswarriors75436 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @artofmusic303
    @artofmusic3032 жыл бұрын

    Very good reader.

  • @darenedorton1771
    @darenedorton17713 жыл бұрын

    Great text books on all things history and other subjects keep up the good work no matter what life brings you don't stop making them prayers for and to you and your family

  • @londonnoel7336

    @londonnoel7336

    3 жыл бұрын

    a trick : watch series at flixzone. Been using them for watching a lot of movies recently.

  • @kharisterling550

    @kharisterling550

    3 жыл бұрын

    @London Noel Yup, have been watching on flixzone for since december myself :)

  • @ikeremanuel9005

    @ikeremanuel9005

    3 жыл бұрын

    @London Noel Definitely, have been using Flixzone for since december myself :)

  • @baylorzander4577

    @baylorzander4577

    3 жыл бұрын

    @London Noel definitely, been watching on Flixzone for since december myself =)

  • @barbielist9564

    @barbielist9564

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fffdfdfdffdfffdfdffffffff FF ffffffdfffffffffzzzzzDDDDDDDDDD DD

  • @armandopineda2845
    @armandopineda28452 жыл бұрын

    The Union outgunned the Confederacy right there shows economic advantage over the South

  • @aliqazilbash5231
    @aliqazilbash52312 жыл бұрын

    when the law is fully capable of mediating any and all legal relationships, across the board, and is able to ensure orderly settlement of dispute, and it also gives legitimacy to the governing regime serving its term, then it is counter productive to rely on superstitions and older governing models, to predict the outcomes of this discourse, right? in our time, we have the benefit of using regulation as the basis of our planning, the law does a good job with classification and defining our rights and freedoms, that is enough to rely on and act independently and be responsible member of society?

  • @PolishPony57
    @PolishPony572 жыл бұрын

    did you really say "Jeffersons' and Jacksons' LITTLE philosophies"??!! really?

  • @lakakl3787
    @lakakl37873 жыл бұрын

    6 minutes in. This is not what I were taught. The South in 1860 was bringing in several times more revenue to America than the factories up north.

  • @kittenritty7959

    @kittenritty7959

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah probably before the industrialization of the north which the south refused to do because it would get rid of their free labor aka slaves. Adapt or die. Industrialize or cry.

  • @lakakl3787

    @lakakl3787

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kittenritty7959 at the time there were more money in cotton than steel. You can put slave labor in factories ad easily as the fields,,, sorry, slaves are not the issues here. As far as the industrialized beginning of the north, sorry, that also was already in full swing. I am not defending the south for its slavery. Only defending against false claims of our history. Slavery was an issue of the civil war, but to most southern people and a lot of northern people it were not the cause of the civil war. States rights. And it is happening right now, again.

  • @kittenritty7959

    @kittenritty7959

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lakakl3787 what the “north” is winning again and people in the north were paying workers to work. Kinda sounds like a lot of people were left in the dust in the south for their precious cotton but even during the civil war other great powers like France and Britain didn’t find it feasible to find them because they were moving into industrialization and could make cloth cheaper without cotton even. Also could you see why the south wanted to keep things the same they didn’t want to pay their slaves for their fruits of labor. They stuck their guns up to save their plantations which were there moneybags came from. But they didn’t want any slaves to go but no one talks about that. Underground Railroad ring a bell with that? Weird how the south fell because people left for the north for American workers to get there fair share. And idk if you read the confederate “constitution” but it’s basically an aristocratic government so have fun being a bootlicker for families that would just use you so they can get more money no matter how bad the work is.

  • @kittenritty7959

    @kittenritty7959

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lakakl3787 lmao and guess what steel built all the skyscrapers you see today and steel built the twin towers. Steel is everywhere so we can see who won economically. Building more spaces for more work was better than having a simple farm. The American economy was just about to boom thanks to the industrialization of the north and look where we’re at today technology everywhere. Not some inbred dogs that work on a plantation so pop can get his gold ole dollar.

  • @lakakl3787

    @lakakl3787

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kittenritty7959 your right in a lot of this. But not all in the south owned slaves or was willing to fight for the slave owners. Yes, the future of cotton was going down but also at this time, the freeing of the slaves were already underway before the war. The South, minus the Democrat big Whigs were working on this and actually had asked the north for help. They (the south) were denied any help unless the southern states gave up their states rights. States rights under the US constitution was not an issue. The fact that they were denying this to the south was. Slavery was an issue, but was not the main issue for succession.

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