Secular Talk: YouTube Wipes Out Chris Hedges 6 Year Archive

Bro, this is a war between democracy and autocracy, democracy and oligarchy, liberty and oppression, good and evil, light and dark, right and wrong, the Free World and tyranny, state sovereignty and imperialism, the truth and Russian lies and disinformation. Abby Martin and Chris Hedges are too dangerous to be heard.

18 Comments

  1. The truth is no longer allowed, only lies and propaganda is excepted otherwise you will be censored or silenced.

  2. It was to spite the Russians not you, you rubbery eyed sellout.

    This guy has got a persecution complex. There are plenty of videos of this guy still up on youtube, if any one cares.

  3. The Obama years successfully integrated the American left with neoconservative globalism. And they pay losers like Vaush other anarcho-whateverists to advocate American imperialism and subjugation of the third world to the anal empire.

  4. Today Anglin over at the Daily Schmear explained why he simps for Russia, will Wallace do the same?

    • Anglin openly states he’s pro-Russian while you simp for Globopedo but don’t admit it. HW like nearly everyone here simply advocates no involvement. The ones making all the moves are all on your side, Schlomo.

    • Hey kyke you and Anglin got something in common, you both put out for the Moshiach. You love you Big Mo don’t you kyke and you would do anything to please him right or wrong?

  5. “We now live in a nation where doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, governments destroy freedom, the press destroys information, religion destroys morals, and our banks destroy the economy.” ? Chris Hedges

    • @Rob157—come on Rob you know Chris put out for the Moshiach, stopping being a Jew for two seconds would you please kyke?

  6. Chris Hedges did another very “bad” thing (although not as bad as supporting the BDS movement) that enraged the Elites: He went to Julian Assange’s wedding in the Belmarsh Political Prison last week.

    The bride, Stella Moris, entered the prison alone and she came out alone after the ceremony. Hedges was admitted as one of the witnesses, but the other witness, Craig Murray who had travelled a long way to be there was not allowed in “because he is a threat to security.” Murray had been a political prisoner himself recently, for his free speech. The REAL “gulag” is in the West.

  7. However Pepe Escobar is back (but for how long?) on Twitter:

    “The Empire of Lying Cowards, out of revenge, STOLE Afghan savings and left 90% of the population starving. Only in the first 3 months of 2022, THIRTEEN THOUSAND AFGHAN NEWBORNS died of malnutrition”: https://twitter.com/RealPepeEscobar/status/1506028254729322500

    China, Russia and other neighboring countries held a meeting this week to make plans to help Afghanistan survive the U.S.’s crippling sanctions and theft of its bank reserves. As I said before, the U.S. will never give up attacking Afghanistan.

  8. Fanatics of the New Religion. No threat is even in the same ballpark. Not getting this is a disqualifier. Everything must be seen through this lens.

  9. Those YouTube and Twitter personalities think they will never get banned from those platforms and as a result fail to back up years of accumulated material.

  10. Bro, this is a war between democracy and autocracy, democracy and oligarchy, liberty and oppression, good and evil, light and dark, right and wrong, the Free World and tyranny, state sovereignty and imperialism, the truth and Russian lies and disinformation.

    But not as bad as a war between Johnny Rebs and Billy Yanks. Who needs any enemies when you have Yankees trying to destroy you and your whole country.

    In NC, in late 1863 early 1864, some Union officers had to be reminded that the tables could be turned on them to make them get back in line and conduct the war in a more civilized manner. General Pickett had to hang one of the Union Black USCTs from the same beam that the Union troops had hanged a suspected white Confederate guerrilla weeks earlier. Union General Butler took the “hint” and affirmed his intent “to carry on this war according to the rules of civilized warfare.” No wonder race relations soured in this country when Yankees started siccing Blacks on Southern Whites and they seem to enjoy doing it even though they themselves were actually more “racist” than the South.

    Despite the mixed results, Wild’s raid stood out as particularly noteworthy for its aggressive conduct. In a December 17, 1863, dispatch to Captain John T. Elliott, Wild warned that he would treat guerrillas as “pirates” and tell them, “you will never have rest until you renounce your present course or join the regular Confederate Army.” At one point during the raid, Wild captured and executed Daniel Bright, “a man of about thirty, a rough stout fellow . . . dressed in butternut homespun [who] looked the very ideal of a guerrilla.” Bright died at the end of a rope, but not until he had dangled for twenty agonizing minutes. A slip of paper pinned to his back bore the message: “This guerrilla hanged by order of Brig.-Gen. Wild, Daniel Bright, of Pasquotank County.” Union soldiers left his body where it hung as a warning to “bushwhackers.”

    In his official report, Wild candidly admitted he had “adopted a more rigorous style of warfare” that included burning houses and barns, consuming livestock, and taking hostages from the families of suspected guerrillas. THE HOSTAGE TAKING, PARTICULARLY THE SEIZURE OF WHITE WOMEN, STRUCK A RAW NERVE AMONG CONFEDERATES. The symbolism conjured by the operation caught the attention of many. Dr. William Porter Ray, a correspondent for the New York Times writing under the pen name “Tewksbury,” accompanied Wild and prepared a lengthy account of the raid that was published in early January 1864. Ray reminded readers that Wild’s expedition ranked as one of the war’s first large-scale operations conducted solely by BLACK TROOPS. The reporter recognized the revolutionary nature of the event: “It is an instructive turn of the tables that the men who have been accustomed to hunt runaway slaves hiding in the swamps of the South, should now, hiding there themselves, be hunted by them.”

    The raid ignited outrage among Confederate officials and North Carolina politicians. Major General George E. Pickett, head of the North Carolina Department and the scion of an established slaveholding family in Virginia, was beside himself. “Butler’s plan, evidently, is to let loose his swarm of BLACKS upon our ladies and defenseless families, plunder and devastate the country,” Pickett complained. “I will not stand upon terms with these fellows any longer,” he fumed, and “against such a warfare there is but one resource—to hang at once every one captured belonging to the expedition, and afterward any one caught who belongs to Butler’s department.” HE UNDERSTOOD THAT THE LINCOLN ADMINISTRATION’S EFFORTS TO ARM FORMER SLAVES WOULD STRENGTHEN THE UNION ARMY WHILE WEAKENING THE REBEL LABOR FORCE, and he urged the War Department to transfer all slaves in exposed areas into Confederate lines. He passed on his correspondence to his subordinates in the Albemarle region, and in turn, these men acted. On January 12, 1864, state troops under Captain John T. Elliott seized Private Samuel Jordon of the 5th USCT from his confinement in northern Pasquotank AND PROMPTLY HUNG HIM FROM THE SAME BEAM USED TO EXECUTE DANIEL BRIGHT WEEKS BEFORE.In an effort to quell this escalating violence, Butler wrote to Confederate Colonel James Hinton, a prominent lawyer in Pasquotank who commanded a unit in the region. Butler announced that he did not wish “to conduct the war like a fishwoman in Billingsgate by calling hard names, such as ‘brute,’ ‘beast,’ &c.” and affirmed his intent “to carry on this war according to the rules of civilized warfare.” However, Butler’s word did little to reduce the bitterness.
    — Newsome, Hampton. The Fight for the Old North State, pp. 30-31).

    In his travels with Sherman’s army, reporter David P Conyngham had seen much destruction in Georgia, but when he gave his general impression of the operations in South Carolina, he stressed how much worse was than Georgia:

    We marched, on the whole, four hundred and fifty miles, our wings extending some thirty-five or forty miles. This would give an area of over fifteen thousand square miles which we operated over, all the time supporting men and animals on the country. Indeed, the loss we inflicted on the enemy is incalculable, and all at a trifling sacrifice of life…

    As for the wholesale burning, pillage, devastation, committed in South Carolina, magnify all I have said of Georgia fifty fold, and then throw in an occasional murder, “just to bring an old, hard-fisted cuss to his senses,” and you have a pretty good idea of the whole thing.

    — Stokes, Karen. South Carolina Civilians in Sherman’s Path, Introduction, pp 9-14,17.

    Despite South Carolina’s important role in the beginning of the war, and a long unsuccessful attempt to take Charleston from 1863 onward, few military engagements occurred within the state’s borders until 1865, when Sherman’s Army, having already completed its March to the Sea in Savannah, marched to Columbia and leveled most of the town, as well as a number of towns along the way and afterward. South Carolina lost 12,922 men to the war, 23% of its male white population of fighting age, and the highest percentage of any state in the nation. Sherman’s 1865 march through the Carolinas resulted in the burning of Columbia and numerous other towns. The destruction his troops wrought upon South Carolina was even worse than in Georgia, because many of his men bore a particular grudge against the state and its citizens, whom they blamed for starting the war. One of Sherman’s men declared, “Here is where treason began and, by God, here is where it shall end!” Deprived of the free labor of the formerly enslaved, poverty would mark the state for generations to come.
    — Wikipedia: “South Carolina in the American Civil War”

    And this is what was waiting for the white South after the war, euphemistically called Reconstruction. Yankees/carpetbaggers just loved it. They made money off it and watched the South being ruined even more.

    Caption & image from:

    “A Southern Girl in ’61: The War-Time Memories of a Confederate Senator’s Daughter”
    Wright, Louise Wigfall, 1846-1915, New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1905.

    RADICAL MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATURE OF SOUTH CAROLINA.

    These are the photographs of sixty-three members of the “reconstructed” Legislature of South Carolina. Fifty of them were [Blacks] or [mixed Black-Whites]; thirteen were white men. Of the twenty-two among them who could read and write only eight used the vernacular grammatically. Forty-one made their mark with the help of an amanuensis. Nineteen were taxpayers to an aggregate of $146.10. The other forty-four paid no taxes, and yet this body was empowered to levy on the white people of the state taxes amounting to $4,000,000.

    https://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/wright/wright250.gif

    And the Yankees have never acknowledged their war crimes perpetrated against the South or later against Japan for dropping nukes on civilians and they never will because they are just … Yankees.

  11. Bro, this is a war between democracy and autocracy, democracy and oligarchy, liberty and oppression, good and evil, light and dark, right and wrong, the Free World and tyranny, state sovereignty and imperialism, the truth and Russian lies and disinformation.

    But not as bad as a war between Johnny Rebs and Billy Yanks. Who needs any enemies when you have Yankees trying to destroy you and your whole country.

    In NC, in late 1863 early 1864, some Union officers had to be reminded that the tables could be turned on them to make them get back in line and conduct the war in a more civilized manner. General Pickett had to hang one of the Union Black USCTs from the same beam that the Union troops had hanged a suspected white Confederate guerrilla weeks earlier. Union General Butler took the “hint” and affirmed his intent “to carry on this war according to the rules of civilized warfare.” No wonder race relations soured in this country when Yankees started siccing Blacks on Southern Whites and they seem to enjoy doing it even though they themselves were actually more “racist” than the South.

    Despite the mixed results, Wild’s raid stood out as particularly noteworthy for its aggressive conduct. In a December 17, 1863, dispatch to Captain John T. Elliott, Wild warned that he would treat guerrillas as “pirates” and tell them, “you will never have rest until you renounce your present course or join the regular Confederate Army.” At one point during the raid, Wild captured and executed Daniel Bright, “a man of about thirty, a rough stout fellow . . . dressed in butternut homespun [who] looked the very ideal of a guerrilla.” Bright died at the end of a rope, but not until he had dangled for twenty agonizing minutes. A slip of paper pinned to his back bore the message: “This guerrilla hanged by order of Brig.-Gen. Wild, Daniel Bright, of Pasquotank County.” Union soldiers left his body where it hung as a warning to “bushwhackers.”

    In his official report, Wild candidly admitted he had “adopted a more rigorous style of warfare” that included burning houses and barns, consuming livestock, and taking hostages from the families of suspected guerrillas. THE HOSTAGE TAKING, PARTICULARLY THE SEIZURE OF WHITE WOMEN, STRUCK A RAW NERVE AMONG CONFEDERATES. The symbolism conjured by the operation caught the attention of many. Dr. William Porter Ray, a correspondent for the New York Times writing under the pen name “Tewksbury,” accompanied Wild and prepared a lengthy account of the raid that was published in early January 1864. Ray reminded readers that Wild’s expedition ranked as one of the war’s first large-scale operations conducted solely by BLACK TROOPS. The reporter recognized the revolutionary nature of the event: “It is an instructive turn of the tables that the men who have been accustomed to hunt runaway slaves hiding in the swamps of the South, should now, hiding there themselves, be hunted by them.”

    The raid ignited outrage among Confederate officials and North Carolina politicians. Major General George E. Pickett, head of the North Carolina Department and the scion of an established slaveholding family in Virginia, was beside himself. “Butler’s plan, evidently, is to let loose his swarm of BLACKS upon our ladies and defenseless families, plunder and devastate the country,” Pickett complained. “I will not stand upon terms with these fellows any longer,” he fumed, and “against such a warfare there is but one resource—to hang at once every one captured belonging to the expedition, and afterward any one caught who belongs to Butler’s department.” HE UNDERSTOOD THAT THE LINCOLN ADMINISTRATION’S EFFORTS TO ARM FORMER SLAVES WOULD STRENGTHEN THE UNION ARMY WHILE WEAKENING THE REBEL LABOR FORCE, and he urged the War Department to transfer all slaves in exposed areas into Confederate lines. He passed on his correspondence to his subordinates in the Albemarle region, and in turn, these men acted. On January 12, 1864, state troops under Captain John T. Elliott seized Private Samuel Jordon of the 5th USCT from his confinement in northern Pasquotank AND PROMPTLY HUNG HIM FROM THE SAME BEAM USED TO EXECUTE DANIEL BRIGHT WEEKS BEFORE.In an effort to quell this escalating violence, Butler wrote to Confederate Colonel James Hinton, a prominent lawyer in Pasquotank who commanded a unit in the region. Butler announced that he did not wish “to conduct the war like a fishwoman in Billingsgate by calling hard names, such as ‘brute,’ ‘beast,’ &c.” and affirmed his intent “to carry on this war according to the rules of civilized warfare.” However, Butler’s word did little to reduce the bitterness.
    — Newsome, Hampton. The Fight for the Old North State, pp. 30-31).

    In his travels with Sherman’s army, reporter David P Conyngham had seen much destruction in Georgia, but when he gave his general impression of the operations in South Carolina, he stressed how much worse was than Georgia:

    We marched, on the whole, four hundred and fifty miles, our wings extending some thirty-five or forty miles. This would give an area of over fifteen thousand square miles which we operated over, all the time supporting men and animals on the country. Indeed, the loss we inflicted on the enemy is incalculable, and all at a trifling sacrifice of life…

    As for the wholesale burning, pillage, devastation, committed in South Carolina, magnify all I have said of Georgia fifty fold, and then throw in an occasional murder, “just to bring an old, hard-fisted cuss to his senses,” and you have a pretty good idea of the whole thing.

    — Stokes, Karen. South Carolina Civilians in Sherman’s Path, Introduction, pp 9-14,17.

    Despite South Carolina’s important role in the beginning of the war, and a long unsuccessful attempt to take Charleston from 1863 onward, few military engagements occurred within the state’s borders until 1865, when Sherman’s Army, having already completed its March to the Sea in Savannah, marched to Columbia and leveled most of the town, as well as a number of towns along the way and afterward. South Carolina lost 12,922 men to the war, 23% of its male white population of fighting age, and the highest percentage of any state in the nation. Sherman’s 1865 march through the Carolinas resulted in the burning of Columbia and numerous other towns. The destruction his troops wrought upon South Carolina was even worse than in Georgia, because many of his men bore a particular grudge against the state and its citizens, whom they blamed for starting the war. One of Sherman’s men declared, “Here is where treason began and, by God, here is where it shall end!” Deprived of the free labor of the formerly enslaved, poverty would mark the state for generations to come.
    — Wikipedia: “South Carolina in the American Civil War”

    And this is what was waiting for the white South after the war, euphemistically called Reconstruction. Yankees/carpetbaggers just loved it. They made money off it and watched the South being ruined even more.

    Caption & image from:

    “A Southern Girl in ’61: The War-Time Memories of a Confederate Senator’s Daughter”
    Wright, Louise Wigfall, 1846-1915, New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1905.

    RADICAL MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATURE OF SOUTH CAROLINA.

    These are the photographs of sixty-three members of the “reconstructed” Legislature of South Carolina. Fifty of them were [Blacks] or [mixed Black-Whites]; thirteen were white men. Of the twenty-two among them who could read and write only eight used the vernacular grammatically. Forty-one made their mark with the help of an amanuensis. Nineteen were taxpayers to an aggregate of $146.10. The other forty-four paid no taxes, and yet this body was empowered to levy on the white people of the state taxes amounting to $4,000,000.

    https://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/wright/wright250.gif

    And the Yankees have never acknowledged their war crimes perpetrated against the South or later against Japan for dropping nukes on civilians and they never will because they are just … satanic Yankees.

Comments are closed.