La France Blanche
Mentor
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2016
- Messages
- 1,740
In no particular order:
Andrew Jackson - most underrated U.S. president, a true man of the people and the best leader working-class Americans ever had, vilified for being a "rayciss" slave owner and mean to Indians - some of his anti-Indian policies actually did go too far but overall he was a great president and wrongly vilified - classic example of so-called "historians" wrongly and hypocritically judging a 19th century figure by 21st century "standards"
Christopher Columbus - explorer, merchant, leader, changed the world forever, should have been awarded title of Person of the 2nd Millennium AD, vilified because of his 15th century values being judged by 21st century "standards," treated the Indians better than most of them treated each other
Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain - Columbus' sponsors, known and vilified for (rightly) kicking the Muslim and Jewish invaders out of Spain, but their more important achievement was uniting the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula, ending centuries of war, and laying the foundations for a great empire
Charles Martel - savior of not just Western civilization, but civilization itself - without him, no Renaissance, no Age of Discovery, no Reformation, no Enlightenment; certainly the Person of the 1st Millennium AD
James Watson and Francis Crick - co-discoverers of DNA, two of the most brilliant and most important scientists of all time, vilified for politically incorrect views, falsely accused of racism, sexism, and "stealing" research
Harrison Schmitt - One of only twelve human beings to walk on the moon, and the only one who was a scientist by profession (the other eleven were all test pilots). Vilified for believing that climate change is caused by nature instead of humans.
William Bligh - Captain of HMS Bounty, falsely accused of cruelty (the real reason for the mutiny was the fact that the crew had just spent several months living the easy life in Tahiti collecting breadfruit and didn't want to go back to shipboard work). More than half the sailors remained loyal to Bligh during the mutiny, and he and his loyal men were set adrift in an open boat. Every single man in the boat (except for one killed by natives on an island) survived an ocean voyage of thousands of miles thanks to Bligh's leadership. Meanwhile, the mutineers ended up turning on and killing each other.
Brendan Eich - inventor of the JavaScript programming language (an essential tool of the modern Internet, necessary for enabling interactive webpages, far more than just a "brand" - all major Internet browsers have a dedicated JavaScript engine). Forced to resign his position as CEO of Mozilla simply because he opposed homosexual marriage. Like Schmitt, Watson, and Crick, was persecuted by morons who had literally less than half his IQ.
Dietrich von Choltitz - German general, commander of the German garrison in Paris in 1944 when Allied troops approached the city. Refused to obey Adolf Hitler's orders to burn the city to the ground when it was about to be captured; by surrendering the city peacefully, von Choltitz saved the priceless level of White culture that had been collected in Paris over thousands of years. Little known among the general public, vilified by left-wing "historians" as "just another Nazi."
Albert Speer - architect, industrialist, Minister of Armaments for Germany during World War II. By refusing to obey Adolf Hitler's orders to destroy all infrastructure as the German army retreated at the end of the war, Speer saved the lives of millions of Germans. Falsely accused of "war crimes" at the Nuremberg Trials, wrongly convicted and sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment. Post-war, initially correctly acknowledged as a decent human being whose only "crime" was being born in the wrong country, now the target of a vicious left-wing smear campaign aiming to falsely portray him as a mustache-twirling Nazi villain.
Andrew Jackson - most underrated U.S. president, a true man of the people and the best leader working-class Americans ever had, vilified for being a "rayciss" slave owner and mean to Indians - some of his anti-Indian policies actually did go too far but overall he was a great president and wrongly vilified - classic example of so-called "historians" wrongly and hypocritically judging a 19th century figure by 21st century "standards"
Christopher Columbus - explorer, merchant, leader, changed the world forever, should have been awarded title of Person of the 2nd Millennium AD, vilified because of his 15th century values being judged by 21st century "standards," treated the Indians better than most of them treated each other
Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain - Columbus' sponsors, known and vilified for (rightly) kicking the Muslim and Jewish invaders out of Spain, but their more important achievement was uniting the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula, ending centuries of war, and laying the foundations for a great empire
Charles Martel - savior of not just Western civilization, but civilization itself - without him, no Renaissance, no Age of Discovery, no Reformation, no Enlightenment; certainly the Person of the 1st Millennium AD
James Watson and Francis Crick - co-discoverers of DNA, two of the most brilliant and most important scientists of all time, vilified for politically incorrect views, falsely accused of racism, sexism, and "stealing" research
Harrison Schmitt - One of only twelve human beings to walk on the moon, and the only one who was a scientist by profession (the other eleven were all test pilots). Vilified for believing that climate change is caused by nature instead of humans.
William Bligh - Captain of HMS Bounty, falsely accused of cruelty (the real reason for the mutiny was the fact that the crew had just spent several months living the easy life in Tahiti collecting breadfruit and didn't want to go back to shipboard work). More than half the sailors remained loyal to Bligh during the mutiny, and he and his loyal men were set adrift in an open boat. Every single man in the boat (except for one killed by natives on an island) survived an ocean voyage of thousands of miles thanks to Bligh's leadership. Meanwhile, the mutineers ended up turning on and killing each other.
Brendan Eich - inventor of the JavaScript programming language (an essential tool of the modern Internet, necessary for enabling interactive webpages, far more than just a "brand" - all major Internet browsers have a dedicated JavaScript engine). Forced to resign his position as CEO of Mozilla simply because he opposed homosexual marriage. Like Schmitt, Watson, and Crick, was persecuted by morons who had literally less than half his IQ.
Dietrich von Choltitz - German general, commander of the German garrison in Paris in 1944 when Allied troops approached the city. Refused to obey Adolf Hitler's orders to burn the city to the ground when it was about to be captured; by surrendering the city peacefully, von Choltitz saved the priceless level of White culture that had been collected in Paris over thousands of years. Little known among the general public, vilified by left-wing "historians" as "just another Nazi."
Albert Speer - architect, industrialist, Minister of Armaments for Germany during World War II. By refusing to obey Adolf Hitler's orders to destroy all infrastructure as the German army retreated at the end of the war, Speer saved the lives of millions of Germans. Falsely accused of "war crimes" at the Nuremberg Trials, wrongly convicted and sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment. Post-war, initially correctly acknowledged as a decent human being whose only "crime" was being born in the wrong country, now the target of a vicious left-wing smear campaign aiming to falsely portray him as a mustache-twirling Nazi villain.
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