@CPenn5 I briefly glanced at your "channel." Conclusion: you impeach your own credibility and thus merit no response from me ("rasist"?) At least my previous interlocutor was semi-literate and occasionally worthy of a response.
Why are you arguing on YouTube. It is just plain foolish. You will never understand the south. You can argue against Robert E. Lee but you are stupid to speak bad about Churchill. He said that comment in the 1946 btw.
@bcartner Funny. When these "Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" things materialize hereon and I improbably receive notice of them, I can't resist mixing it up with the odd admixture of crazies, illiterates, neo-Nazis, skinheads, Klansmen, nostalgia freaks, "Get Your Heart in Dixie or Get Your Ass Out" peckerwoods, and, lest I forget, superannuated, southern-fried ex-frat rats who mourn the "good old days of our glawruss region," a time when "them people knew their place and called us Bawss." Bye.
@bcartner Are you certain about that? I think that if you rested on the evidence adduced thus far, you would be begging for a malpractice suit and perhaps even a slap-on-the-wrist letter from "The Board." Reading your latest screed, a tableau vivant forms in my mind: a trio of aging or aged "roaring boys," what Disraeli might call "exhausted volcanoes," swilling overpriced whiskey and belting out off-key renditions of "The Bonny Blue Flag." It's akin to being trapped in a surreal "time warp."
@bcartner That was how Lincoln evaluated the exigencies facing him shortly after he took office. Of course, all of that officially changed after Antietam. The real purpose of "The Proclamation" that followed was to reformulate the true aim of the conflict, viz., the eradication of Dixie's cherished "pee-culiar institution" and the state laws and political structure which undergirded the whole rotten edifice. Small wonder that Marx dubbed Lincoln "this noble son of the proletariat."
Amazed by your marveled by your vocabulary. Stop looking down on us as if you know by default that we are all ignorant racist.
CPenn5 5 days ago
You need to get over yourself. I highly doubt anyone on here Is
CPenn5 5 days ago
@CPenn5 I briefly glanced at your "channel." Conclusion: you impeach your own credibility and thus merit no response from me ("rasist"?) At least my previous interlocutor was semi-literate and occasionally worthy of a response.
shaneu1 5 days ago
Why are you arguing on YouTube. It is just plain foolish. You will never understand the south. You can argue against Robert E. Lee but you are stupid to speak bad about Churchill. He said that comment in the 1946 btw.
CPenn5 5 days ago
Well shaneu1, if you consider yourself intelligent then why are y
CPenn5 5 days ago
@bcartner Funny. When these "Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" things materialize hereon and I improbably receive notice of them, I can't resist mixing it up with the odd admixture of crazies, illiterates, neo-Nazis, skinheads, Klansmen, nostalgia freaks, "Get Your Heart in Dixie or Get Your Ass Out" peckerwoods, and, lest I forget, superannuated, southern-fried ex-frat rats who mourn the "good old days of our glawruss region," a time when "them people knew their place and called us Bawss." Bye.
shaneu1 1 week ago
@Redneck3141 I'm certain that, from his little corner in the hottest spot in Dante's Inferno, Marse Robert thanks you.
shaneu1 1 week ago
@bcartner Are you certain about that? I think that if you rested on the evidence adduced thus far, you would be begging for a malpractice suit and perhaps even a slap-on-the-wrist letter from "The Board." Reading your latest screed, a tableau vivant forms in my mind: a trio of aging or aged "roaring boys," what Disraeli might call "exhausted volcanoes," swilling overpriced whiskey and belting out off-key renditions of "The Bonny Blue Flag." It's akin to being trapped in a surreal "time warp."
shaneu1 1 week ago
@bcartner That was how Lincoln evaluated the exigencies facing him shortly after he took office. Of course, all of that officially changed after Antietam. The real purpose of "The Proclamation" that followed was to reformulate the true aim of the conflict, viz., the eradication of Dixie's cherished "pee-culiar institution" and the state laws and political structure which undergirded the whole rotten edifice. Small wonder that Marx dubbed Lincoln "this noble son of the proletariat."
shaneu1 1 week ago
HAPPY 205th BIRTHDAY GENERAL LEE
Redneck3141 1 week ago