Posted on 09/21/2009 5:02:53 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
Yet, he was cashiered from the German Navy for refusing to marry a young woman he compromised, and seeking to lay the blame on her. Meteoric rise in the SS, because Himmler thought he was a former intelligence officer in the Navy when he'd been a signals officer. Seems to have been absolutely amoral. Planned thwe Final Solution, ran the Wansee Conference in less than two and a half hours, largely brought the Czechs to heel. Complemented Himmler to a tee. But it seems to come out of nowhere.
Heydrich also had to constantly fight off rumors of Jewish ancestry. There were many, including his replacement, Kaltenbruner, who did not shed a tear over his assassination.
Sepp Dietrich declaimed, “So, now that sow’s gone to the butcher.”
While we're at it, let's go ahead then and refute the British propaganda that they had captured the Bremen and interned the crew. The ship made it safely back to Germany (by a round-about course)
Too late. That one has already gone to press. I was thinking more about new (alleged) errors that find their way into replies. And I should probably leave this topic alone before I get myself in trouble.
That’s very interesting. It’s amazing the motley crew that Hitler managed to assemble around him. Himmler was a chicken farmer if I remember correctly. Even back in the SA days we had Rohm who was a thug, former WWI captain, and a homosexual. Ironically the only thing that seems to fit with Heydrich is that he does not fit. Thanks for the source material by the way.
I’m in the ‘not yet’ camp on the other debate. Even at this point, the Nazis were allowing Jews, mainly from Austria - to make the run down the Danube to try to reach Palestine. And the British were still tying up warships in the eastern Med to try to block them.
Madagascar and Guyana were off the table as practical solutions by this point, and some of the leaders had probably concluded that there would be only one possible solution, but Shirer is reaching if he’s trying to show that it was policy at this point.
Thats a lot of letters to the editor for a Thursday. I guess the war was bound to cause papers to do stuff like that.
Quoting Browning again:
"Poland was thus destined to become a "laboratory" for Nazi experimentation in racial imperialism, an area where they tried to turn into reality ideological slogans such as:
"This would involve much trial and error, for the slogans were not explicit, their meanings were not self-evident, and often the need to choose priorities and make pragmatic compromises forced delays and modification in the Nazis' "realization of Utopia."
To this particular list we might add some other words, like:
From Persico's "Roosevelt's Secret War":
(p 132)"On the evening of December 3, Senator Burton K. Wheeler [Dem. Montana] received a surprise visit from an unidentified officer in the Army's War Plans Division. The officer had with him a copy of the Rainbow five plan. "Aren't you afraid of delivering the most secret document in America to a senator?" Wheeler is supposed to have asked. His visitor was unfazed, replying that Congress had "a right to know what's really going on in the executive branch when it concerns human lives."
"The next day, Wheeler leaked the Rainbow Five plan to Chesley Manly, the Washington correspondent of FDR's fiercest journalistic critic, the Chicago Tribune."
Say wha'?
"Early in 1939, after Nazi Germany had invaded Czechoslovakia, Roosevelt lobbied Congress to have the cash and carry provision renewed. He was rebuffed, the provision lapsed, and the mandatory arms embargo remained in place.
"In September, after Germany had invaded Poland and Great Britain and France had subsequently declared war on Germany, Roosevelt invoked the provisions of the Neutrality Act but came before Congress and lamented that the Neutrality Acts may give passive aid to an aggressor.[6]
"He prevailed over the isolationists and on November 4th the Neutrality Act of 1939 was passed, allowing for arms trade with belligerent nations on a cash and carry basis, thus in effect ending the arms embargo. Furthermore, American ships were barred from entering war zones designated by the President."
CougarGA7 posted a couple of archived radio broadcasts elsewhere on this thread.
It’s gotten real low of late. It’s all even gotten too absurd for the ping list.
Broadcast Schedule WJSV Washington, D.C. Thursday, September 21st, 1939 From: 05:59-06:30 -- Sign On and Sundial - Recorded Music From: 06:30-07:00 -- Sundial - Arthur Godfrey From: 07:00-07:30 -- Sundial - Arthur Godfrey From: 07:30-08:00 -- Sundial - Arthur Godfrey From: 08:00-08:05 -- Arrow News From: 08:05-08:30 -- Sundial - Arthur Godfrey From: 08:30-08:45 -- Certified Magic Carpet From: 08:45-09:00 -- Bachelor's Children From: 09:00-09:15 -- Pretty Kitty Kelly From: 09:15-09:30 -- Myrt And Marge From: 09:30-09:45 -- Hilltop House From: 09:45-10:00 -- Kay Fairchild, Stepmother From: 10:00-10:15 -- CBS News and Mary Lee Taylor Program From: 10:15-10:30 -- Brenda Curtis From: 10:30-10:45 -- Big Sister From: 10:45-11:00 -- Aunt Jenny's Real Life Stories From: 11:00-11:15 -- Jean Abbey From: 11:15-11:30 -- When A Girl Marries From: 11:30-11:45 -- The Romance Of Helen Trent From: 11:45-12:00 -- Our Gal Sunday From: 12:00-12:15 -- The Goldbergs From: 12:15-12:30 -- Life Can Be Beautiful From: 12:30-12:45 -- Road Of Life From: 12:45-13:00 -- This Day Is Ours From: 13:00-13:15 -- Sunshine Report From: 13:15-13:30 -- The Life And Love Of Dr. Susan From: 13:30-13:45 -- Your Family And Mine From: 13:45-14:00 -- News Followed By Albert Warner From: 14:00-15:00 -- President's Address followed by Premier Daladier From: 15:00-15:10 -- Commentary & Analysis On The President's Address From: 15:10-15:25 -- The Career Of Alice Blair From: 15:25-15:30 -- Arrow News From: 15:30-15:45 -- Rhythm & Romance From: 15:45-16:00 -- Scattergood Baines From: 16:00-17:17 -- Baseball - Cleveland at Washington From: 17:17-17:30 -- The World Dances From: 17:30-17:45 -- Arrow News followed by Time Out From: 17:45-18:00 -- Sports With Harry McTigue From: 18:00-18:15 -- Amos 'n' Andy From: 18:15-18:30 -- The Parker Family From: 18:30-19:00 -- Joe E. Brown From: 19:00-19:30 -- Ask-It Basket From: 19:30-19:55 -- Strange As It Seems From: 19:55-20:00 -- Elmer Davis And The News From: 20:00-21:00 -- Major Bowes and his Original Amateur Hour From: 21:00-21:30 -- The Columbia Workshop From: 21:30-22:00 -- Americans At Work From: 22:00-22:15 -- Arrow News & Edwin C. Hill Commentary From: 22:15-22:30 -- Streamline Interlude From: 22:30-22:45 -- The Midweek Review With Albert Warner From: 22:45-23:21 -- Repeat of FDR Speech From: 23:21-23:30 -- Jerry Livingstone & His Orchestra From: 23:30-24:00 -- Teddy Powell Orchestra From: 00:00-00:30 -- Louis Prima Orchestra From: 00:30-01:02 -- Bob Chester Orchestra, News & SignoffThis one day made me a fan of OTR for life. May it be as joyful for all of you, my FRiends. http://www.archive.org/details/OTRR_WJSV_Complete_Day_Singles
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