Thứ Hai, 17 tháng 7, 2017

Youtube daily Jul 18 2017

-♪ Do not play, do not play ♪

♪ Do not play these songs, these songs ♪

-Now, before we start, I want you to know that every artist

and song that I'm about to play for you is 100% real.

These are actual bands and actual songs.

[ Laughter ] Questlove, they are.

They really -- They're not us.

-I still think you make them up. -It's not a bit.

-Behind our backs. -This is not a bit.

-They're real? -You can even download them

on iTunes or Amazon or see if your local music store has them.

They are real.

Let's see what's on my Do Not Playlist.

This first one is from an R&B group

called WeAre1TV.

[ Laughter ]

Great font, by the way. They picked a great font.

[ Laughter ]

Really easy to read.

Very easy to read. WeAre1TV.

-Wow. -But the "V" on TV

looks like a "W." But doesn't matter.

-Yeah, doesn't matter. -And they hashtagged it

and they put it twice. [ Laughter ]

So it makes sense. -They just make sure.

-Well, it just makes sense. -Yeah.

-So this is WeAre1Television. -TV.

-This is 1TV.

Let's take a listen to this song that's called, "Gotta B 50."

-♪ She can't be 18, can't be 19 ♪

♪ Can't be 20, can't be 21 ♪

♪ Can't be 22, can't be 23 ♪

♪ Can't be 24, can't be 25 ♪

-All right. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.

[ Laughter and applause ]

That's the entire song. -I don't know what he --

-The woman he wants to date has to be 50.

-Right, oh, 50 years old?

-Yeah, and he started -- yeah. -Oh, I thought --

-So you got to be 50, but -- -Thank God.

-I mean, can you play a little bit --

-♪ 37, 38, 39 ♪

♪ 40, 41, 42, 43, 44 ♪ -All right.

Stop, stop, stop, stop. -♪ 45, 46 ♪

-Anyways, that's -- please stop it. Please stop it.

I'm so happy he's not into 100-year-old women.

-Yeah. [ Laughter ]

They maybe they'd be 2TV. -This next song

is from a country singer. I love country music.

-Oh, wow. -This is called

"The Legendary Stardust Cowboy."

-Oh. [ Laughter ]

-No, I've never heard of this gentleman.

So I looked him up on his Wikipedia page.

[ Chuckles ] So you know that's real.

[ Laughter ] -And, uh...

-Is there a whole page? -But the Wikipedia page said

that he started playing music in high school

to impress the girls. -Oh.

-Let's see if it worked.

Let's take a listen to a song

called "Paralyzed."

♪♪

-[ Indistinct sing-shouting ]

[ Whooping ]

[ Whooping continues ]

-Oh, my God!

-Stop, stop, stop, stop.

[ Laughter, cheers, and applause ]

-Awful! -What are you talking about?

What are you talking about?

You just didn't get to the good part yet, man.

-Yeah. [ Chuckles ]

But, hey, maybe it impressed the ladies.

I don't now. -Yeah, it did!

-Yeah, right? It sounded like -- [ Laughter ]

You liked it? -Yeah.

-It sounded like somebody poured, like,

hot coffee on his lap. -Yeah.

-[ Whooping ] -All right, stop.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. [ Laughter ]

-Uh, this next song is from a Brooklyn-based hip-hop duo...

-Oh. -...called Cool Company.

-Ooh. -Yeah. I like the cover.

-Fancy. -Quest you know --

Ever heard of Cool Company? -Nah.

[ Laughter ] -Let's take a listen.

This is called -- "Call You Back"

is not the name of the song.

Well, it's called "Call You Back --

(I Ain't Gonna)." -Oh, I see.

-In parentheses. -Parentheses.

-"(I Ain't Gonna) Call You Back."

Here we go, let's take a listen.

-♪ I ain't gonna call you back ♪

♪ I ran out of love when the clock hit midnight ♪

♪ I ain't gonna call you back ♪

♪ Is you serious thinking that this was real life? ♪

♪ [ Distorted ] When you gonna let me come scoop that ass ♪

♪ That ass, mm, mm ♪ -♪ Yeah ♪

-♪ Da-da-da-da-da-do the nasty ♪

-Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop. [ Applause ]

What happened? What happened?

It was great for a little bit. -For a little bit.

-That beginning was -- -It was fantastic.

-♪ When the clock hit midnight ♪

♪ I ain't gonna call you back ♪ ♪ Da, da, da, da ♪

And then... -[ Vocalizing in a deep voice ]

-It sounds like, dude -- -Grimace from McDonald's.

-It sounds like -- it sounds like one

of the teachers from "Charlie Brown."

[ Muffled honking ]

♪ I ain't gonna call you back ♪

[ Humming ] ♪ After midnight ♪

♪ I ain't gonna call you back ♪ -[ Vocalizing in deep voice ]

-♪ Call you back ♪

♪ Talking 'bout I ain't gonna call you back ♪

-[ Vocalizing in deep voice] ♪ Midnight ♪

-♪ Till midnight ♪ -Stop, stop, stop.

-Sounds like Chewbacca. [ Cheers and applause ]

That's Chewbacca's ex-girlfriend.

-[ Chuckles ] We're down to our last song.

-Aww. [ Audience groans ]

-It is by a French artist named Philippe Katerine.

-Ooh. -And here's a picture.

This is Philippe in the middle. [ Laughter ]

I'm guessing. -We think.

-I'm guessing that's his parents.

-We think. -I'm guessing, I don't know.

-We think that's Philippe. -Anyways, let's take a listen.

Since I just recently got rid of my moustache.

This is a song called "Moustache."

[ Laughter ]

-♪ Vas y mets ta moustache ♪

♪ Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh ♪

♪ Ah-ha-ha-oh-oh ♪

♪ Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha ♪

♪ Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh ♪

♪ Ah-ha-ha-ho ♪

♪ Oh-oh-oh-oh ♪

♪ Ah-ha-ha-ha ♪

♪ Oh-ha-ha-ha ♪

♪ Ha-ha-ha-oh ♪

-All right. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.

-That's a great song! -He laughs.

I actually dig it.

Roots, can you play that jam?

We'll be right back, everybody.

That's all the time we have for "Do Not Play."

-♪ Ah-ha-ha-ha, ha-ha-ha-ha, ha-ha-ha-ha ♪

If you have any suggestions,

send them to donotplay@tonightshow.com.

For more infomation >> Do Not Play: Gotta B 50, Moustache - Duration: 5:15.

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Trump's Long Handshake with Macron, World Emoji Day - Monologue - Duration: 7:40.

-Let's talk about what people are talking about,

what's going on in the news right now.

Over the weekend, it came out

that President Trump's approval rating is at 36%.

[ Audience groans ]

But Trump defended the number, saying that it was "almost 40."

[ Laughter and applause ]

-Come on! -He did.

"Almost 40."

36%.

Then he said, "And if you read 36 upside down,

it looks like 93, which is almost 100.

So I'm doing amazing.

Almost 100. In Upside Down World."

But did you see that last week, Trump's son Don Jr.

tweeted screenshots of e-mails from the Russian lawyer

who offered sensitive info to his dad's campaign?

When he heard that his son

tweeted about an ongoing investigation,

Trump was like, "The student has become the master."

[ Laughter and applause ]

-That's it.

-"Wax on. Wax off."

[ Laughter ]

[ Laughs ]

In the meantime, the president has hired a new lawyer.

Did you see this guy? -Yeah.

-[ Laughs ] It's unbelievable.

He's hired a new lawyer. His name is Ty Cobb.

[ Laughter ]

It's his real name.

Dude, Quest, I swear, man. -Come on!

-His real name -- His name is Ty Cobb.

To oversee the White House response

to the Russia investigation.

Show a picture. This is real. That is the lawyer.

[ Laughter ]

Because nothing says "My client's innocent"

like a lawyer who looks like he's wearing a disguise.

What is going --

[ Cheers and applause ]

"He's innocent!"

I don't know if he's giving Trump legal advice

or talking to him about "diabeetus."

[ Laughter and applause ]

[ Laughs ]

"Come over to this side of the porch."

Trump just had his first trip to France,

and at the end of his visit -- Did you see this?

He shook hands with French President Emmanuel Macron

for a really long time.

Did you see? It's pretty strange.

We didn't do anything to this. Watch this video.

Here he goes.

"How you doing? Nice to see you.

Pleasure to meet you. Yeah. How you doing?

All right. Good. Yeah." Tap, tap, tap.

There you go. Pull. A little yank, a little yank.

Yeah, that's good. And he's still holding.

He's like -- This is real.

And then the French First Lady --

He gets her involved, and they're grabbing.

Now it's the circle of life.

Now -- And then you again. You get tapped.

That's it. 30 seconds. 30-second handshake.

That looked like a lame sitcom where two characters

accidentally glue their hands together.

You know? It's like, "Ugh, ugh! What are you going to do? Heh!"

[ Applause ]

You guys, last night was the season premiere

of "Game of Thrones."

[ Cheers and applause ]

No spoilers. No spoilers.

But I saw that HBO's streaming site crashed during the episode.

[ Audience oohs ]

That's how crazy this show has gotten.

They're killing off websites now.

-Really?

Everything -- -They don't care.

-You don't know who's going to survive.

-Winter is here.

-I saw that today is World Emoji Day.

Did you guys know that? Yeah, of course.

So in honor of that...

[ Laughter ]

...we did some research and found out

what was the inspiration behind some popular emojis.

-Really? -Yeah, for example,

this emoji was inspired by Angela Merkel

when she was listening to Donald Trump.

-Wow. Wow.

[ Applause ]

-This emoji was inspired

by Ben Carson at an important meeting.

[ Laughter and applause ]

And finally, this emoji was inspired by Donald Trump

when he's asked about Russia.

[ Laughter and applause ]

More trouble for United Airlines.

-Oh. -Yeah.

The rapper ScHoolboy Q says

that they actually flew his dog to the wrong city.

Yeah. Then I guess on the flight back,

the dog had a fight over a seat with Ann Coulter.

-Really?!

[ Cheers and applause ]

-That's right.

-Ah. -Yeah.

-"This bitch gets my seat?"

[ Laughter ]

It's a dog.

[ Laughter ]

It's a dog.

Get this. On Friday, a group of 40 turtles

caused delays on the runway at JFK Airport.

On the bright side, the turtles were moving so slow,

they got hired to work at LaGuardia.

"That's amazing.

They're that slow. They're that slow.

It's amazing. -Hey-yo!

-They're that slow!"

This isn't good, guys.

Millions of Sabrett's hot dogs --

I love Sabrett's hot dogs.

Millions of Sabrett's hot dogs

that are sold here on the street in New York City

are being recalled because they contain small pieces of bone.

[ Laughter ]

While the foreman at the factory was like,

"Hey, has anyone seen Jeff?

[ Cheers and applause ]

When you see him, tell him he's fired!"

-[ Laughs ]

"He hasn't been here since the machine clogged up!"

-[ Laughs ]

"Oh, Jeff's wedding ring.

He must have dropped it in the hot-dog mixture!"

-"He's eloping with a different lady!"

-"I'll go bring it to his house.

I'll take the same shortcut home that Jeff takes."

Whoa-ah!

[ Laughter ]

[ Laughs ]

-"Where's Gary?!"

-"When you see Jerry, tell him he's fired!

Hey, Jerry's hat. He must have dropped it in the hot dogs.

I'll take the same shortcut that Jerry takes!"

[ Laughter ]

[ Laughs ]

It's just -- Okay. I don't know.

[ Laughter ]

Guys, millions of hot dogs have been recalled

after small pieces of bone were been found in them.

Street vendors are doing their best to keep sales going.

Just check out some of the new signs that they've been using

I saw today on the streets of New York.

-You saw them? -I walked around.

I brought my camera. I took photos.

-Of all the times? -All the vendors.

-All over the city? -Yeah.

-Well, how nice of you.

-I have one of those nice Kodak Brownie cameras.

-Oh, my gosh!

-Yeah. It's a beautiful old camera.

I got to get it developed. -132-millimeter film.

-[ Laughs ] I walked around today,

and they're trying to keep business going.

-God bless them.

-So let's take a look at some of the signs they have.

This first one says, "Relax. These hot dogs were made

years before the bone problem started."

Don't worry about it. -Yeah.

-Years ago. -Yeah.

-This next one says, "So what? You got bones inside you, too."

-Yeah.

What's your problem?

[ Applause ]

I like this one.

This one says, "You want a boneless hot dog?

What are you, the queen of friggin' England?"

"What are you?" -No!

"The queen of friggin' England."

Here's the last one here.

It says, "This cart is the original

famous bone-filled hot dog cart."

That's the one to be at. That's the one.

[ Applause ]

Oh, this really made me laugh, guys.

Last week, a man in Texas got himself trapped inside an ATM.

Did you hear about this? This is insane.

This is a movie. This is fantastic.

This is finally my one-man show. I get to do this.

Trapped in an ATM machine.

And he was slipping people notes through the receipt slot

that said "Help."

People taking money out were like,

"I knew my balance was low, but what?

What do you mean, 'help'?

Oh, man. I'm in trouble, man."

[ Applause ]

That's right. The guy got stuck in an ATM.

The man said that he was excited to finally eat

then got himself trapped in a vending machine.

He's like, "Press B12!"

Guys, we have a great show tonight.

It's really fun! The Roots right there!

For more infomation >> Trump's Long Handshake with Macron, World Emoji Day - Monologue - Duration: 7:40.

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2017 marks the 40th anniversary of WLKY's Bell Awards - Duration: 0:27.

For more infomation >> 2017 marks the 40th anniversary of WLKY's Bell Awards - Duration: 0:27.

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Former Bardstown football player drowns - Duration: 1:50.

For more infomation >> Former Bardstown football player drowns - Duration: 1:50.

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Plans for gun range in busy shopping complex move forward - Duration: 2:02.

For more infomation >> Plans for gun range in busy shopping complex move forward - Duration: 2:02.

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Family of Sam DuBose anxiously awaits Tuesday's decision about possible 3rd trial - Duration: 2:05.

For more infomation >> Family of Sam DuBose anxiously awaits Tuesday's decision about possible 3rd trial - Duration: 2:05.

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Veterans Count Golf Tournament played on Monday - Duration: 0:40.

For more infomation >> Veterans Count Golf Tournament played on Monday - Duration: 0:40.

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The Village residents feel signs to mow laws are meant to shame seniors - Duration: 1:40.

For more infomation >> The Village residents feel signs to mow laws are meant to shame seniors - Duration: 1:40.

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Legend's Addiction Battle - Duration: 3:02.

For more infomation >> Legend's Addiction Battle - Duration: 3:02.

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Monday Overnight: More waterspouts possible Tuesday - Duration: 3:37.

For more infomation >> Monday Overnight: More waterspouts possible Tuesday - Duration: 3:37.

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Liberty Chronicles, Ep 12; Bacon's Rebellion & the Invention of Race - Duration: 20:31.

Anthony Comegna: In the early 1660s, England's restored King Charles the Second harbored

a bit of a grudge.

Parliament showed the world that kings, too, could die if and when the people demanded

it and that was a scary precedent if ever there was one.

Charles rounded up the most dangerous regicides and dissenters, executed [00:00:30] the worst

offenders against royalty and banished many more to servitude in the new world.

Once in Virginia, though, they almost immediately began conspiring amongst themselves to revive

the old battles between slavery and freedom.

This is Liberty Chronicles, a project of libertarianism.org.

I'm Anthony Comegna.

[00:01:00] Virginia's Burgesses and Cavalier governor William Berkeley used the Restoration

period to double down on long standing policies of persecution.

Charles the First had appointed Berkeley in 1641 shortly before the heavy fighting started

at home, but the Commonwealth's forces compelled Virginia's submission by 1652 and Berkeley

temporarily retired.

Re-appointed by [00:01:30] Charles in 1660, the governor and the House of Burgesses determined

to consolidate control over the colony and reassert Cavalier power in Virginia.

The Chesapeake lordlings feared above all else combinations of black and white laborers

inspired by antinomian ideas.

In 1662, a New Model army vet named George Wilson shared chains and a post with an American

Indian.

Wilson was guilty of organizing mixed sects [00:02:00] religious meetings but his makeshift

congregations included black and white skins.

The next year at Poplar Spring, Virginia white indentured servants and African slaves combined

forces into what's called the Servant's Plot or the Gloucester County Conspiracy.

Sources on the proposed rebellion are scarce and almost nothing survives from the conspirators

themselves.

It appears their numbers included Muggletonians and Fifth Monarchists, veterans from the New

Model [00:02:30] Army, men and women, white and black.

The Poplar Spring conspirators planned to revolutionize the colony, revitalizing the

Commonwealth spirit in the New World.

Their first stop would be Lieutenant Colonel Francis Willis' plantation to steal arms and

drums, essential tools when raising spontaneous armies from the countryside.

Whatever language you spoke, whichever you or your ancestors were ripped from, everyone

in Virginia knew the sound [00:03:00] of war drums.

Most of them also knew the sting of betrayal.

When a servant Birkenhead revealed the plot to the House of Burgesses they awarded him

5,000 pounds of tobacco and declared a colonial holy day.

Between the Restoration in 1675, Berkeley's generation of Cavalier, aristocratic gentleman

adventurers in Virginia was gradually replaced by new waves of eager upstart landholders.

The most important of these [00:03:30] was Nathaniel Bacon.

Whereas Berkeley was a long established Virginian, Bacon only arrived in the colony in 1674.

Within a year, Berkeley appointed him to the Council of State and by 1676, Bacon was leading

campaigns against Occaneechis, Pamunkeys and other neighboring Indians.

Bacon, like Berkeley was a sophisticated Englishman.

He graduated from Cambridge and traveled widely in Europe, but after allegedly trying to cheat

another young man out of his inheritance, [00:04:00] Bacon's father purchased him a

new life in Virginia.

In his reflections on the rebellion a year later, Berkeley argued that Bacon's followers

encompassed Virginia with rebellion-like waters in every respect like that of Masaniello except

their leader.

Masaniello led a short-lived proletarian leveling revolution in Naples in 1647, just a few months

before the Putney Debates in England.

Throughout the English world Masaniello became a symbol of the [00:04:30] threats posed to

propertied interests when common people developed a sense of class consciousness.

Berkeley saw Masaniello's everywhere in Bacon's race, but Bacon himself was undeniably a fellow

aristocrat and all the more fearsome because he was willing to reach across class boundaries

to enlist the poor, the dissenter and the slave in his cause.

Few contemporary or historical accounts of Bacon's Rebellion agree [00:05:00] in every

particular about the movements motivations and outcomes.

For the Jacksonian Democrat and America's first real professional historian, George

Bancroft, Virginians had enjoyed free government for three generations on the edge of the wilderness.

For Bancroft and nationalist historians, this was the prelude to the American Revolution.

It was the people, seizing their government, its policy making apparatus and its legitimacy,

so that the popular interest might once again govern Virginia.

[00:05:30] For more disinterested observers, including planter and merchant Thomas Matthew

of Cherry Point, Northumberland County, Bacon's Rebellion was a bizarre and violent event

with few truly heroic figures on either side.

Matthew recalls a mysterious scene in which one Robert Hen was discovered in his doorway

with a dead Indian lying beside him.

Hen implicated Doeg and immediately died.

The English [00:06:00] treated this murder mystery as a mandate to unleash war on the

entire frontier zone.

Bacon's Rebellion had officially begun.

Announcer: The beginning, progress and conclusion of Bacon's Rebellion 1675 to 1676 by Thomas

Matthew 1705.

About the year 1675 appeared three prodigies in that country which from the attending disasters

were looked upon as ominous [00:06:30] presages.

The one was a large comet every evening for a week or more at southwest 35 degrees high

streaming like a horsetail westwards until it reached almost the horizon and setting

towards the northwest.

Another was flights of pigeons in breadth nigh a quarter of the mid-hemisphere and of

their length was no visible end whose weights break down the limbs of large trees whereon

these rested at nights of which the fowlers shot [00:07:00] abundance and ate 'em.

This sight put the old planters under the more portentous apprehensions because the

like was seen as they said in the year 1640 when the Indians committed the last massacre

but not after until that present year 1675.

The third strange appearance was swarms of flies about an inch long and big as the top

of a man's little finger, rising out of spigot holes in the earth, which eat the new sprouted

[00:07:30] leaves from the tops of the trees, without other harm, and in a month left us.

My dwelling was in Northumberland, the lowest county on Potomac River, Stafford being the

utmost where having also a plantation, servants, cattle, et cetera, my overseer there had agreed

with one Robert Hen to come thither and be my herdsman who then lived 10 miles above

it, but on a Sabbath day morning in the summer Anno 1675, people on their way [00:08:00]

to church saw this Hen lying thwart his threshold and an Indian without the door both chopped

on their heads, arms and other parts as if done with Indian hatchets.

The Indian was dead, but Hen when asked who did that answered Doegs, Doegs, and soon died.

Then a boy came out from under a bed where he had him himself and told them Indians had

come at break of day and done those murders.

From this [00:08:30] Englishman's blood did, by degrees, arise Bacon's Rebellion with the

following mischiefs which overspread all Virginia and twice endangered Maryland as by the ensuing

account is evident.

Of this horrid action, Colonel Mason who commanded the militia regiment of foot and Captain Brent

the troop of horse in that county, both dwelling six or eight miles downwards, having speedy

notice, raised 30 or more men and pursued [00:09:00] those Indians 20 miles up and four

miles over that river into Maryland where landing at dawn of day, they found two small

paths.

Each leader with his party took a separate path and in less than a furlong, either found

a cabin which they silently surrounded.

Captain Brent went to the Doeg's cabin as it proved to be, who speaking the Indian tongue,

called to have a [matcho komitchaw weewep 00:09:26], i.e. a council called presently

such [00:09:30] being the usual manner with Indians.

The king came trembling forth and would have fled when Captain Brent catching hold of his

twisted lock which was all the hair he wore told him he was come for the murder of Robert

Hen.

The king pleaded ignorance and slipped loose whom Brent shot dead with his pistol.

The Indian shot two or three guns out of the cabin.

The English shot into it.

The Indians thronged out of the door and fled.

The English shot [00:10:00] as many as they could, so that they killed 10 as Captain Brent

told me and brought away the king's son of about eight years old, concerning whom is

an observable passage at the end of this expedition.

The noise of this shooting awakened the Indians in the cabin which Colonel Mason had encompassed

who likewise rushed out and fled of whom his company supposing from that noise of shooting

Brent's party to be engaged, shot as the Colonel informed me, 14 before [00:10:30] an Indian

came who with both hands shook him friendly by one arm saying "�Susquehannas netoughs�

(i.e., �Susquehanna friends�), and fled.

Whereupon he ran amongst his men crying out "For the Lord's sake, shoot no more.

These are our friends, the Susquehannas."

The Susquehannas were newly driven from their habitations at the head of Chesapeake Bay

by the Seneca Indians down the head of the [00:11:00] Potomac where they sought protection

under the Piscataway Indians who had a fort near the head of that river and also were

our friends.

These escaped Indians, forsaking Maryland, took their route over the head of that river,

and thence over the heads of Rappahannock and York Rivers, killing whom they found of

the upmost plantations, until they came to the head of James River, where (with Bacon

and others) they slew Mr. Bacon�s overseer, whom he much [00:11:30] loved, and one of

his servants, whose blood he vowed to revenge if possible.

In these frightful times the most exposed small families withdrew into our houses of

better numbers, which we fortified with palisades and redoubts; neighbors in bodies joined their

labors from each plantation to others alternately, taking their arms into the fields, and setting

sentinels; no man stirred out of door unarmed.

Indians were ever and [00:12:00] anon espied, three, four, five or six in a party, lurking

throughout the whole land, yet (what was remarkable) I rarely heard of any houses burnt, though

abundance was forsaken, nor ever of any corn or tobacco cut up, or other injury done, besides

murders, except the killing a very few cattle and swine.

Frequent complaints of bloodsheds were sent to Senior William Berkeley, then governor,

from the heads of the rivers which were as often answered [00:12:30] with promises of

assistance.

These at the heads of James and York Rivers (having now most people destroyed by the Indians�

flight thither from Potomac) grew impatient at the many slaughters of their neighbors

and rose for their own defense, who choosing Mr. Bacon for their leader sent oftentimes

to the Governor, humbly beseeching a commission to go against those Indians at their own charge,

which his Honor, as they promised but did not send.

The mysteries of these delays were wondered at, and which [00:13:00] I never heard any

could penetrate into, other than the effects of his passion, and a new, not to be mentioned,

occasion of avarice, to both which he was, by the common vogue, more than a little addicted:

whatever were the popular surmises and murmurings, viz., - �That no bullets would pierce beaver

skins;�, �Rebels� forfeitures would be loyal inheritances,� etc.

During these protractions and people often slain, most or all [00:13:30] the officers,

civil and military, with as many dwellers next the heads of rivers as made up 300 men,

taking Mr. Bacon for their commander, met, and concerted together the danger of going

without a commission on the one part, and the continual murders of their neighbors on

the other part (not knowing whose or how many of their own turns might be next), and came

to this resolution, viz., to prepare themselves with necessaries for a march, but interim

to send again [00:14:00] for a commission, which if could or could not be obtained by

a certain day, they would proceed, commission or no commission.

Anthony Comegna: Twentieth century historians with a more global perspective on British

imperial activity recognize Bacon's Rebellion as a racialized conflict against the Indians

which transformed into a vehicle for the expression of popular discontent.

Two months into his leadership over the Indian campaigns, a newly elected Virginia [00:14:30]

Assembly passed a series of Bacon's laws which proclaimed and provided for war against the

Indians, prohibited trade with them and declared Indian lands deserted and ready for expropriation.

The laws democratized the vestry or local parish government, expanded suffrage to freemen

and punished tumults or routs, et cetera.

Seeking an official commission against the Indians, Bacon visited Jamestown on June 6th,

1676.

Berkeley arrested [00:15:00] him for his independent actions during the previous month but pardoned

him two days later.

The governor even restored his natural class ally to his seat on the council of state.

Bacon fled Jamestown, gathered his forces and returned to the capitol within two weeks

of the pardon.

The House of Burgesses granted the commission and Bacon's army spent the next several months

once again raiding Indian villages.

Sensing revolution in the winds, Berkeley withdrew to the eastern shore and Bacon returned

[00:15:30] to burn the capitol on September 19th.

A few weeks later, the bloody flux or the lousy disease killed him and effectively ended

his movement.

In England King Charles dispatched a 1,000 man army and a royal commission to investigate

the causes of rebellion.

The Assembly repealed Bacon's laws.

Colonel Herbert Jeffreys assumed the governorship and William Berkeley sailed to England to

deliver a personal report before the king.

Virginia concluded peace treaties with [00:16:00] the Indian tribes by May 29th, 1677.

Berkeley died a few weeks later, successfully returned to England but without having briefed

his king.

Marxist historians, Marcus Rediker and Peter Linebaugh see two Bacon's Rebellions.

The first is a white freeholder's war for even bigger freeholds.

This was the Bacon's Rebellion identified by our earlier document.

The second Bacon's Rebellion however harkened [00:16:30] back to that September night when

exiled dissenters and African slaves joined hands in the Servant's Plot.

By September 1676, Bacon promised slaves freedom and servants land.

These were the Masaniellos everywhere Berkeley feared so much, the rabble, the scum of the

country who were so much more alien than Cambridge's own Nathaniel Bacon.

This abolitionist army was the one pillaging Jamestown and mourning their leader's [00:17:00]

death.

The king's negotiator Thomas Grantham arrived in January 1677 to face a 400 man force of

black and white rebels.

Grantham promised the white servants a better deal if they would desert the African slaves

and sure enough, most of them took the out.

The last Baconian holdouts included 80 African slaves and just 20 white servants, a near

reversal of the original black to white ratio in the army.

Grantham captured their ships [00:17:30] during an attempted escape.

He re-enslaved the lot.

The ancient strategy divide and conquer rose to a new level of sophistication after Bacon's

Rebellion.

Continuing early patterns and building upon a developing cultural distinction between

white liberties and black slavery, Virginia officials consciously used the decades after

the rebellion to drive a permanent wedge between white servants and black slaves.

In 1680, [00:18:00] the Virginia legislature constricted black liberties with a Negro Insurrections

Act.

A 1682 law declared that all slaves imported by water, that is from Africa, were condemned

to slavery for life.

All those imported by land, that is, Native Americans, were bound to a 12 year period

of indenture.

The average term for white indentures remained about four to five years.

Planters and legislators [00:18:30] even shifted to discouraging more poor whites from flooding

the colony and replaced unfree white labor with chattels from Africa.

By 1705, the Act Concerning Servants and Slaves fully institutionalized race.

When once it was merely a set of vague cultural notions about Christian and non-Christian

people's, race was now and indication of your naturalized and necessary position within

a developing new social [00:19:00] order.

Virginia took differences of skin color and made the irrevocable markers of social, political

and economic status.

The Virginia Slave Codes became the model virtually all British colonies adopted in

succeeding decades.

They created the modern concept of race just as they were creating the modern world.

But still, there was the libertarian promise of the commons, the frontier and the world's

remaining ungovernable spaces [00:19:30] where the servant and the slave could escape and

live together on their own terms.

On Roanoke Island, far to the south of Jamestown and the lordly plantations, men and women

of every description from pirates and slaves to escaped convicts clustered together in

Tuscarora Indian country.

They freely fished and picked, traveled where they wilt, married without race boundaries.

It was Virginia's own Merrymount or Rhode Island [00:20:00] and corners like it kept

alike the leveling antinomian flame for later generations of rogues and radicals.

Liberty Chronicles is a project of libertarianism.org.

It is produced by Tess Terrible.

To learn more about Liberty Chronicles, visit libertarianism.org.

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