Anonymous wrote:I’m sure PBS took k liberty with the truth..
Anonymous wrote:Mind you, I’ve only seen the first episode, but, my take away is that we have always been a country where the wealthy manipulate the poor to get richer.
Anonymous wrote:I keep emphasizing that Republicans pretend to be the party of "freedom" but are most likely to take away rights - they revere religious conservatives who would repeal the 19th and take away women's right to vote.
They do not believe in freedom of religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Takeaways from PBS The American Revolution (2025) that relates to our time now?
My first insight:
Democrats (or either major party) needs to focus on
Rights of people are inherent
Humans are important
No one is entitled to pain-free life, but entitled to basic rights
A right/entitlement we deserve better is freedom from corruption.
Take this and apply to to AI, to healthcare, to immigration, careers and jobs.
Rather ironic when Conservatives have argued for many of these, but Progressives have elevated the collectivism over individual liberty.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, you all took a different message than I did. I never quite realized just how awful Washington was to the Natives, personally and in his own hand ordering the genocide of tribes on the western frontier. Or how terrible the Colonists were to each other. The Quakers - noted pacifists - were run straight out of their homes in a city that was literally built for them.
How when the South changed hands the Loyalists and the Patriots took turns wreaking vengeance on each other.
The rapes and pillaging.
How the English actually kept their end of the bargain and did what they could to deliver runaway slaves who served the king off to safety in Canada, despite the Patriots demanding their property back.
How the Patriots barely paid the poor and property-less who fought a war that made many rich.
If there was ever a time when Americans were civil to each other and could reasonably disagree, it wasn’t at our Founding. People had some wildly different ideas about “freedom” and “liberty”.
Kind of amazing that our country came out of that, but in it we are already seeing the seeds of our demise.
Anonymous wrote:Takeaways from PBS The American Revolution (2025) that relates to our time now?
My first insight:
Democrats (or either major party) needs to focus on
Rights of people are inherent
Humans are important
No one is entitled to pain-free life, but entitled to basic rights
A right/entitlement we deserve better is freedom from corruption.
Take this and apply to to AI, to healthcare, to immigration, careers and jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, you all took a different message than I did. I never quite realized just how awful Washington was to the Natives, personally and in his own hand ordering the genocide of tribes on the western frontier. Or how terrible the Colonists were to each other. The Quakers - noted pacifists - were run straight out of their homes in a city that was literally built for them.
How when the South changed hands the Loyalists and the Patriots took turns wreaking vengeance on each other.
The rapes and pillaging.
How the English actually kept their end of the bargain and did what they could to deliver runaway slaves who served the king off to safety in Canada, despite the Patriots demanding their property back.
How the Patriots barely paid the poor and property-less who fought a war that made many rich.
If there was ever a time when Americans were civil to each other and could reasonably disagree, it wasn’t at our Founding. People had some wildly different ideas about “freedom” and “liberty”.
Kind of amazing that our country came out of that, but in it we are already seeing the seeds of our demise.